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Winter Grain | Self-titled | Self-Released

Local Review: Winter Grain – Self-titled

Local Music Reviews

Winter Grain
Self-titled

Self-Released
Street: 06.07
Winter Grain = Sara Watkins + Eilen Jewell

Out of the Canyons breakup came Winter Grain—a new folksy bluegrass band consisting of Melissa Collins (cello), Tara Shupe (fiddle, mandolin) and former Canyons’ members Kate Anderson (lead vocals, guitar) Secily Saunders (vocals, guitar) and Tim Neu (guitar). Winter Grain has repurposed three former Canyons songs on their debut five-track EP with help from Ryan Hadlock at Bear Creek Studios, who has worked with bands such as Brandi Carlile, Vance Joy, and The Lumineers.

Both the band and the tracks have undergone adaptation. Anderson’s notable “Solitary Trees” remains on Winter Grain, which lyrically and metaphorically stands for perseverance. This track is perfectly filled with instrumental variation balanced by Anderson’s delicate yet resonant vocals. From subtle notes on the keys, to the soft bowing on the strings coupled with acoustic strums, the song feels matured and more affecting.

The EP opens with a brand-new track, “Breaking Glass,” a country folk track that stuffs the powder in the gun and starts the fire beneath the trees. The first few lines of the track are sung a cappella before the band breaks into a well-structured strumming and plucking on the slide guitar among a bowing frenzy, with a brief moment of softened instrumental to showcase a gusto-filled harmony between Anderson, Saunders and Neu.

“Don’t Force It” is a softer country folk track with Shupe’s mandolin at the forefront and more noticeable drumming. The song is short and sweet, with Anderson crooning over the joyous rhythm and between the dramatic pauses, “We’ve got nothin’ but time.”

Winter Grain honor past and present music by refining old tracks and creating new art. With this new album, and their album release in Clark Planetarium’s dome theater, Winter Grain demonstrate their sui generis undertaking of all that is new and changing. As Winter Grain continue to evolve, there is no doubt that their notable craft will flourish and grow as strong as winter grains. –Lizz Corrigan