Chris Thile profile picture

Chris Thile

Punch, Brothers, Punch!

About Me


Punch Brothers
Punch
At the conclusion of The Blind Leaving the Blind, the 40-minute, four-movement suite that is the heart of Punch Brothers’ Punch—the band’s Nonesuch debut—composer-singer-mandolin player Chris Thile conjures up the image of a heartbroken young man nursing his psychic wounds at a bar with his friends. In real life, the 26-year old Thile, who was recovering from his own tattered marriage as he developed the piece, took a more constructive approach, joining four of his own musical buddies to form a kind of super group/support group. The quintet did visit some bars along the way, but, more importantly, over the course of two years, these performers helped Thile to realize the most conceptually daring, emotionally cathartic work of an already impressive career. The line-up of Punch Brothers—whose name is taken from the Mark Twain short story, Punch, Brothers, Punch!—is formidable. Thile released the first of five solo albums when he was just thirteen and, by the time he was 20, he was attracting a following among pop, country, and alternative-rock audiences as a member of the Grammy Award–winning Nickel Creek. A Washington Post critic recently said Thile “may well be the most virtuosic American ever to play the mandolin.”
His equally youthful, prodigiously gifted band-mates are among the most in-demand performers in the worlds of bluegrass, folk, and traditional music. Guitarist Chris Eldridge was a founding member of the Infamous Stringdusters and occasionally sits in with his dad Ben’s band, The Seldom Scene; bassist Greg Garrison has played with trumpeter Ron Miles and Leftover Salmon—along with banjo player Noam Pikelny. Pikelny he has performed and recorded as a solo artist and has collaborated with acoustic music heavyweights John Cowan and Tony Trischka. Violinist Gabe Witcher, a life-long friend of Thile’s, is a sought-after session man whose fiddle-playing has been featured on the soundtrack of films ranging from Toy Story to Brokeback Mountain. Witcher also has recorded with a range of artists from Willie Nelson to Beck to Randy Newman and played in dobro master Jerry Douglas’ band for six years.
Thile has often incorporated pieces by Bach and other classical masters into his live performances, but he’s taken a fearless leap into long-form composition of his own with The Blind Leaving the Blind. Instead of working with a traditional chamber ensemble, though, he employs the instrumentation that has fascinated him since childhood: mandolin, banjo, guitar, violin, and bass. Says Thile, “Ever since I was really little, they are what I identified with. These are very agreeable instruments, so it seems like there are limitless possibilities for them.”
The Blind Leaving the Blind is rigorously structured, yet Thile leaves room for jazz-like improvisation and for the personalities of the players to influence its flow. In fact, Thile only completed the work after he began working with Eldridge, Garrison, Pikelny, and Witcher—performers who were up to its technical demands and willing to become as musically and emotionally invested in the piece as he was.
“I had this idea of a long-form composition that was grounded in folk music,” Thile explained. “But I didn’t have a clear picture of what it would sound like until I met these guys. Then the ideas just started coming. The time it has taken to get the piece into the shape it’s in now has given us the opportunity to let everyone put their stamp on it, which is part of the reason for the piece—the idea that the composer doesn’t have complete control over it. Though much of it reads like a string quintet, there are parts that read like a jazz lead sheet. There is plenty of improvising and lots of stuff that is loosely dictated.” “We had to jump into this head first,” says Pikelny. "We were initially very intimidated by the scope of the piece and its technical demands. We felt vulnerable individually, but the ensemble provided a secure environment for us to take on the challenge. If we got together ten years from now, I think we would have shied away from trying to do something so ambitious. We have enough idealism, naiveté, whatever you want to call it, to be able to attempt something that really seemed impossible considering where we were technically and conceptually when we first started playing together. The respect we had for one another, and the endless hours working together created a trust and camaraderie that really allowed us to take such a leap of faith.”
Witcher recalls, “For several years, Chris Thile and I had been toying with the idea of starting a band, but because of our wide spectrum of influences and interests we were unsure as to what form this new ensemble would take.”
The itinerant Thile then befriended Pikelny at the 2005 Telluride Bluegrass Festival in Colorado, and hooked up with him again shortly thereafter in Nashville. Garrison and Eldridge were also in town; the four of them got together to jam, and the rapport was instantaneous. As Pikelny recalls, “The night we got together, we were playing and talking about what everyone’s next project would be. Chris was telling us about what he was writing and that he was getting to the point compositionally where he wanted to start working on a large scale piece for the bluegrass instruments. I don't think we had any idea that evening that he was hinting that we could be the guys to do it with him. I think while the rest of us were just getting warmed up, Chris began plotting and for him, the evening practically became an audition for the quintet.”
The next day the California–based Witcher got an excited call from Thile: “Gabe, I think we’ve got it!" Witcher quickly made plans to join the quartet in New York City, where they would reconvene to brainstorm and rehearse. This ad hoc group wound up collaborating with Thile on his 2006 solo album, How To Grow a Woman from the Ground, which featured covers of songs by the White Stripes and the Strokes as well as by Gillian Welch and Jimmy Rodgers. With its recurring images of heartbreak and romantic longing and its live-in-the-studio acoustic setting, the album laid the thematic and musical groundwork for The Blind Leaving the Blind. The quintet then hit the road and solidified their union. On March 17, 2007, the quintet, debuted Thile’s completed The Blind Leaving the Blind at Carnegie Hall’s Zankel Hall, as part of the John Adams-curated In Your Ear Redux Festival, an event celebrating young composers and players. (The quintet was still trying on band names and billed itself as The Tensions Mountain Boys.)
When the band went into the studio to record their first effort as a group, they were determined to retain the live feel of that initial The Blind Leaving the Blind performance. They chose Studio A509 at Legacy Recording in midtown Manhattan, a 4,600 square-foot room with a 35-foot high ceiling often used for large-scale film scoring. Explains Thile, “For this recording, the core of the sound came from three mics placed high in the room, kind of the way you’d record a string quartet. We didn’t want to do any overdubbing; nothing was added. That room interacts with sound beautifully, and we feel that the recording captures that.”
Although long passages of The Blind Leaving the Blind are purely instrumental, Thile also sketches the story of his marital breakup and its aftermath through impressionistic lyrics that fall somewhere between a confession (directed, variously, to his listeners, to his ex, and to God), and an impassioned, late night, barstool soliloquy. Thile’s lyrics evoke loneliness, desire, and betrayal as candidly as vintage Joni Mitchell and, as with Mitchell, their specificity gives them the ring of truth. He avoids the familiar verse-chorus structure of a pop song, however, employing his words as recitative: “I wanted the work to be more anecdotal, conversational, and episodic."
The story of Thile’s relationship was the jumping-off point for a broader rumination about the loss of innocence, the sobering transition into adulthood, the sudden disruption of a young man’s spiritual journey. Thile says, “I grew up in a very Christian household and was not a rebellious child. My folks were great, but protective; I trusted people and I thought people would always look out for me as long as I didn’t go around screwing things up. To run into a relationship that wasn’t honest led to disillusionment with my upbringing as well as my marriage. I just wasn’t prepared for the fact that the world doesn’t always have your best interests at heart. Ultimately, The Blind Leaving the Blind isn’t really about how betrayed I felt but the effect that that betrayal had on my worldview.
The four tracks that bookend The Blind Leaving the Blind were co-written by Thile and his band mates, with each musician contributing ideas and riffs to these shorter pieces. Though each track stands on its own, the adventurous, shape-shifting arrangements and Thile’s forthright lyrics often reference the sound and subject matter of The Blind Leaving the Blind.
The album ends on its most traditional note, with the gentle and graceful “It’ll Happen,” which is the release from the mounting tension of “ Nothing, Then.” It’s as if a spell had been broken; Witcher’s violin swells above the simple rhythm and it seems like Thile is finally putting his troubles behind him.
Chris Eldridge -

A guitar player with a heart of gold and fucking papers (bristle not! I quote the Coens). The son of bluegrass royalty, Critter, with his early '50s D-28 and worn tortoise shell pick will surely endear himself to your ears with penetrating harmonic wisdom and iron clad G-runs, c'mon now!

Greg Garrison -

Be warned, your dreams will be brutally crushed by Grigor (keeper of Igor, an old but precocious german factory bass that boasts a new finish), the most experienced and lowest pitched member of the band. I've considered asking his godlike 1 and 3 to be the godfather of my eventual firstborn.

Noam Pikelny -

Before there was pre-war, there was Pickles. That's right, treasured Music Fan, our dexterous five-strung, three-fingered, monotheistic Illinois University dropout comes to you from Behind the Bridge, where he dutifully breeds notes with more soul than Ryno's cleats (do cleats have soles?).

Gabe Witcher -

Though his hat be a smash, ya gotta let the Judge rule on! Whether he's helping the masses bleed for gay cowboys and computer animated automobiles or throwing down the rock in front of nervous acoustic audiences with How to Grow a Band hero, Jerry Douglas, Gabbers is always there for you when nothing but The Band will do.


Innumerable independent rock and roll lyrics, three of which you will find below, alas, without the permission of their creators, whose sheer hipness understandably prevents them from caring whether or not permission should or shouldn't be granted by anyone for anything:
"Watch out for the gypsy children in electric dresses they're insane. I hear they live in crematoriums and smoke your remains." - Stephen Malkmus (Pavement) [note: we do not discriminate against gypsy children, regardless of dress or mental condition. However, as a result of taking this sage piece of advice to heart, we do avoid crematoriums rumored to be inhabited by them at all costs]
"Physics makes us all its bitches." - Kevin Barnes (Of Montreal) [note: true, true, but we're a little surprised that the branch of science concerned with the fundamental laws of the universe has time for such reprehensible promiscuity]
"After the brain ate him it thought hard until it came up with a plan: it would look more inconspicuous if it drove to the town center in a van." - Jeffrey Lewis [note: we're very thankful that Mr. Lewis has documented the incredible life of the Creeping Brain and rejoice in being able to take advantage of its enviable knowledge without having to follow in its homicidal footsteps]

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 12/7/2005
Type of Label: None

My Blog

10 Things You May Not Know About Punch:

1. Punch Bowl grew out of the bass line that now anchors every verse (Greg was playing out his frustration after a long day in Xplorador, Punch Brothers' trusty 15 passenger rental van).2. The lyric...
Posted by Chris Thile on Wed, 16 Apr 2008 12:38:00 PST

Guest Blog: IMPORTANT NEWS FROM THE BAILEY HERALD

Thanks to Pickles for unearthing this special report:     The Bailey Herald September 5, 2007 Arts and Entertainment:     It may come as a surprise to residents of the front range ...
Posted by Chris Thile on Sat, 15 Sep 2007 01:20:00 PST

Blog the Sixth

Friend, let's talk records, shall we? Of Montreal's "Hissing Fauna, Are You the Destroyer?" for instance. There's always a measure more or less than you expected, a recognizable chord progres...
Posted by Chris Thile on Wed, 06 Jun 2007 01:15:00 PST

Blog the Fifth and a Half

Friend, again my sincerest apologies are due, this time for having left you so long with the artless satire of Blog the Fifth. I would promise to never again flood this humble MySpace page with such ...
Posted by Chris Thile on Thu, 15 Mar 2007 03:03:00 PST

Blog the Fifth

"Fat people want what the skinny people's got - the skinny people want what the fat people's got""Where will Foot Foot go, what will Foot Foot do - Foot Foot, I wish I could find you" - The ShaggsGri...
Posted by Chris Thile on Sat, 23 Sep 2006 01:11:00 PST

Blog the Fourth

Friend, The How to Grow a Band's time draws nigh. The Bass Crusher of Dreams (also known as Grigor), The Judge (also known as Gabbers), and Speedhole (also known as Christhile [pronounced crys-TAL]) ...
Posted by Chris Thile on Tue, 29 Aug 2006 07:21:00 PST

Blog the Third

Friend, its been too long! My sincerest apologies for the neglect I've subjected you to this summer, and behold, from behind my back I've produced a bouquet of half a dozen mini-anectdotes (fl...
Posted by Chris Thile on Thu, 10 Aug 2006 04:09:00 PST

Watch'at Breakdown, Dead Leaves and the Dirty Ground

I trust, Friend, that you had a productive and pleasurable first week of June. Mine was spent coaxing "How to Grow a Woman From the Ground" out of my Discman into your car. You see, the little fella...
Posted by Chris Thile on Fri, 09 Jun 2006 02:00:00 PST

Gambling, How to Grow a Woman From the Ground

I write to you, Friend, from (through no fault of my own) a Harrah's casino that squats expectantly on the banks of the mighty Missouri river ten miles north of Kansas City. Ten dollars up on penny an...
Posted by Chris Thile on Fri, 02 Jun 2006 03:01:00 PST