![]() After 2019’s Tides of a Teardrop, a tender accounting of his mother’s early death, the process became evermore arduous, even exhausting. Still, every night, Andrew especially was paid to relive a lifetime of grievances and griefs onstage. Their rise-particularly crowds that grew first to fill small dives, then the Ryman, then amphitheaters the size of Red Rocks-humbled Emily and Andrew, who became parents to Ruby late in 2018. Our lives, both as people and as a people. With time, they had become new flagbearers of the contemporary folk world, sweetly singing soft songs about the hardest parts of ![]() He was grateful, of course, for the ascendancy of Mandolin Orange, the duo he’d cofounded in North Carolina with fiddler Emily Frantz exactly a decade earlier. By the time 2019 came to its fitful end, Andrew Marlin knew he was tired of touring.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |