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Over The Rhine

at South Broadway Cultural Center
1025 Broadway SE
Albuquerque NM 87102
(505) 848-1320
View Website   |   Other Events at South Broadway Cultural Center

July 28, 2012 8:00 pm - 10:00 pm Add to Cal
Time: 8:00pm     Day: Saturday     Doors: 7:30pm     Ages: All Ages     Price: $20 - $25

Tickets are $21 and $26 (plus $1 service charge). 

Tickets are also available through Hold My Ticket (112 2nd St SW), 505-886-1251, Monday to Friday, 11 AM-6 PM.

- Listen to OTR's Art of the Song special from our Concerts & Conversations show at the Outpost in July, 2010.

OTRAfter more than 20 years making music, it's obvious Ohio duo Over The Rhine is in it for the long haul, and for keeps. Linford Detweiler and Karin Bergquist, named to Paste magazine's list of 100 Best Living Songwriters, began performing together in 1990 in local Cincinnati clubs and gathering places. Their first show drew about 20 people, most of them friends. But even from these somewhat humble beginnings, audiences immediately believed they had stumbled onto something special. Enveloping their listeners like family, Karin and Linford kept them close to the fold with simple candle-lit stages and playful handwritten newsletters. But above all else, it was the band's songs that drew in more and more eager fans. Karin's voice, full of longing and love, seemed to pierce the soul and became the unmistakable focal point of Over The Rhine's richly spiritual music.

The Long Surrender, the most recent studio album from Over the Rhine, is something rare and wondrous—an intimate epic. Shot through with the joys and sorrows of modern-day existence and the unchanging fundaments of the human condition, the album has the feel of a living thing, senses alert, feet planted firmly on terra firma. Paste magazine called it "the most emotionally raw and musically nuanced of the band’s fine career... a lovely, heartbreaking, and ultimately uplifting musical mosaic."

The album title "speaks to our ongoing desire to let go of certain expectations (and much of what we are so convinced we know for sure) in favor of remaining open and curious," Karin explains. "It seems like many of our friends are currently wrestling with various forms of 'letting go,' so hopefully, the ideas conjured by the title feel somewhat universal. And I think the title speaks to the arc of a lifelong commitment to writing and performing regardless of recognition. Learning when to work hard and when to let go. Learning to leave room for grace to billow our sails occasionally. Learning not to white-knuckle everything."

The fan-funded record, to be released on OtR's own Great Speckled Dog label (named after the couple's Great Dane, Elroy), will see the light of day 20 years after their 1991 debut. It's the bountiful result of a collaboration between the couple and producer Joe Henry, whose songs and recordings they've long admired. "Joe has been quietly making records (well, not that quietly; he has won at least two Grammys) that don't sound like other records being made in 2010," Linford points out. "They are a little bit dark and cinematic and funky and unpredictable. It seems like he loves to help performers who have already covered a lot of miles—people like Mavis Staples, Elvis Costello, Allen Toussaint, Solomon Burke, Loudon Wainwright III, Ramblin' Jack Elliot, Mose Allison—rediscover the soul of what they do in new light."


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Photo of Lyle Lovett by Michael Wilson. Photos of the Guerrilla Girls, Suzanne Vega, Cowboy Junkies, Po Girl, Wagogo and Sam Bush by Alan Mitchell.

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