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News / Clark County News

Beast of a breakup infuses Ritter’s ‘Tracks’

The Columbian
Published: January 23, 2014, 4:00pm

What: Josh Ritter, in concert.

When: 8 p.m. Jan. 24 and 25.

Where: Aladdin Theater, 3017 S.E. Milwaukie Ave., Portland.

Cost: Sold Out.

Information: 503-234-9694 or aladdin-theater.com

Josh Ritter has never made a secret that he isn’t much of a fan of writing autobiographical songs. He prefers to be a storyteller. (His previous album, “So the World Runs Away,” for instance, had songs whose characters included an awoken Egyptian mummy and a showdown between murder ballad characters Stagger Lee and Louis Collins, among others.)

“I don’t like writing autobiographical songs,” Ritter said in a recent phone interview. “I like writing songs about other things. There’s so much more to write about in the world than what happens right in front of you on a daily basis. And my favorite books are … they’re flights of imagination. It’s really important, I always feel it’s really important to write those rather than write about yourself because that’s where so much fun stuff happens.”

But with his latest CD, “The Beast in Its Tracks,” Ritter couldn’t avoid writing songs with autobiographical content.

In 2010, his marriage of 18 months to fellow singer-songwriter Dawn Landes came apart.

“To turn around and pretend that it hadn’t happened, I think it would have felt dishonest,” Ritter said. “But it would have also been a huge missed opportunity to write about something that mattered so much to me at that moment.”

What: Josh Ritter, in concert.

When: 8 p.m. Jan. 24 and 25.

Where: Aladdin Theater, 3017 S.E. Milwaukie Ave., Portland.

Cost: Sold Out.

Information: 503-234-9694 or aladdin-theater.com

In talking to Ritter, it was obvious how much pain and sadness the divorce had inflicted.

The end of the marriage came suddenly, while Ritter was on tour in November 2010.

“It did happen in a way that it came about very unexpectedly,” Ritter said. “It was my decision that that stuff was all over. I decided that a line had been crossed that I was not going to be able to come back from. And it was cold. It was hard. It was really bad. It was at times like really, impossible to sleep. It was an awful, awful time.”

Despite being devastated, Ritter went through with the remainder of his fall tour. When he returned home to Brooklyn, he did what always came naturally. He started writing songs. But it took time for Ritter to start feeling good about what he was writing.

“When I first started writing, I was real anguished,” he said. “I wrote for blood. I wrote for real vengeance. And that stuff was just terrible. It was not good. It was badly written.”

But after a few months, Ritter’s mood started to improve and songs softened into sadness and eventually even some hope and forgiveness emerged, particular with “Joy to You Baby” and “Lights,” the two songs that end “The Beast in Its Tracks.”

“Having that time to write and to think really made those songs better, I feel,” Ritter said. “They made them more honest.”

What also helped Ritter to arrive at a lyrical tone that felt right was meeting a new girlfriend, author Haley Tanner, who understood what he was going through and further brightened his life and the lyrics he was writing for “The Beast in Its Tracks.” The couple recently had a daughter, Beatrix.

“I started to think now much less about the divorce and maybe about everything that happens after, which is really what it’s about,” Ritter said. “It’s not about the shame or the pain. It’s about all the stuff that happens after that that’s better.”

Given the strong emotions that inform “The Beast in Its Tracks,” it makes sense that Ritter went for an austere sound. Tunes like “Evil Eye,” “Nightmares” and “Appleblossom Rag” are spare, largely acoustic numbers that put the emphasis squarely on the strong vocal melodies and descriptive lyrics. A few songs get a bit more instrumentation (“Hopeful” and “In Your Arms Awhile”), but they remain in character with the rest of the album.

Ritter has pursued a folk-centric sound on all six of his earlier albums, but “The Beast in Its Tracks” marks a notable contrast from 2010’s “So Runs the World Away,” which was a more studio crafted, sonically and instrumentally bigger sounding effort. The more stripped-down sound should allow the new songs to translate well as Ritter performs them this winter on an acoustic tour with bandmates Zack Hickman and Josh Kaufman. Ritter also thinks the organic and simple sound of “The Beast in Its Tracks” suits the songs.

“I’d say I think I’m really proud of writing about something that I felt like it had a real immediacy to it,” he said. “Also, I’m proud of the playing on this record, which is stripped down, but still feels like it has great momentum and has a real feeling of people I love, like the Everly Brothers or the Louvin Brothers. It feels like it still has a bit of a simpleness to it. I’m really proud of that.”

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