SOUNDTRACK: GOAT RODEO-Tiny Desk (Home) Concert #73 (September 1, 2020).
Classical music is for serious people. Yo-Yo Ma, probably the best known cellist in the world, must surely be a very serious fellow. False!
Yo-Yo Ma is a hoot. How do we know? The first song of this set is called “Your Coffee Is a Disaster.” And the name of the group is Goat Rodeo, after all.
Yo-Yo man formed this assemblage known as Goat Rodeo nearly ten years ago. It consists of Yo-Yo Ma, Stuart Duncan, Edgar Meyer and Chris Thile and many other folks.
You’ve probably heard Stuart Duncan playing fiddle on albums with Dolly Parton, Robert Plant and Alison Krauss, and he was named the Academy of Country Music Fiddle Player of the Year numerous times. Edgar Meyer has played bass with Joshua Bell, Béla Fleck and Christian McBride, and the Nashville Symphony commissioned his first orchestral work in 2017. And you’d most likely recognize Chris Thile’s vocals and mandolin in the music of Nickel Creek and Punch Brothers.
I really enjoyed their wild (yes wild) Tiny Desk Concert back in 2011.
Fast forward a decade and this collaboration channels that same spectacular frenzy, separately captured in the gorgeous homes of the artists and mixed to perfection.
Thile introduces the song by saying the band is often in the midst of a a coffee war: Yo-Yo, Stuart and Edgar prefer beans that were roasted in a volcano for maybe millions of years, while Aoife and I prefer beans that taste as though the were fashioned by angels. We like good coffee.”
Up next is one of many inappropriate (not scandalous or anything) titles. When we are not arguing about coffee we are punning. This: “Waltz Whitman.” It is a slow piece that feels a lot like the kind of music Punch Brothers play–where it is a fiddle, not a violin. Although the middle section which has some gorgeous slow cello from Yo-Yo Ma makes this song transcendent.
“The Trappings” is a faster song and it’s got vocals! Thile sings lead and there is wonderful backing vocals from O’Donovan and Duncan. There’s fantastic cello trills from Yo-Yo Ma throughout.
It’s good til the last drop.
[READ: September 1, 2020] “That Last Odd Day in L.A.”
This story was really interesting.
We meet a man who goes by his last name, Keller. His girlfriend calls him that, his ex-wife called him that, even his teenaged daughter calls him that.
His wife left him after she had a bit of a nervous breakdown–the squirrels had dug up her bulbs and that was the last straw.
The woman Keller has been seeing, Sigrid, is a travel agent. She has a son and an ex-husband who has gone deep into animal rescue. Keller and Sigrid recently had a first date and it was a disaster. Although they are planning another date after Thanksgiving. (more…)


