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.”