A Dotted Line

AlbumApr 01 / 201410 songs, 37m 58s
Progressive Bluegrass
Noteable

*A Dotted Line* ends a nine-year recording hiatus for the band that brought bluegrass influences into the mainstream in the \'00s. The members of Nickel Creek were in their twenties when this album\'s predecessor, *Why Should the Fire Die*, was released; since then, they\'ve ventured into solo projects and new groups (Punch Brothers, Works Progress Administration). But after all that individual evolution, they\'ve reconvened for a record that pretty much picks up where the trio left off. The cool, classy blend of folk, pop, bluegrass, and rock that made Nickel Creek famous is still the focus here, full of rich vocal harmonies and subtly surprising melodic turns. Within that paradigm, the group retain the eclecticism of old on everything from the hushed ballad \"Christmas Eve\" to the urgent, rock-inflected \"You Don\'t Know What\'s Going On.\" Despite the band\'s considerable chops, the instrumentals (\"Elsie,\" \"Elephant in the Corn\") contain nary an unnecessary note, and covers of tunes by art-pop siren Sam Phillips and Canadian indie rockers Mother Mother show the band\'s still got big ears.

B

Nickel Creek didn’t officially break up when it went on the dreaded “indefinite hiatus” in 2007, but given the prolific and disparate solo/side-project tracks its three members subsequently followed—and the fact that the hiatus capped a nearly 20-year history for the still-young band—the break certainly seemed more…

8.2 / 10

From Sean Watkins’ first commanding acoustic guitar strokes on “The Rest of My Life,” it’s obvious Nickel Creek has grown…

This month's album releases reviewed by the Evening Standard's music critics

To accompany a 2014 tour, the trio recorded the new album A Dotted Line, a record that adhered to the group's traditions so much they wound up whittling away most of their progressive leanings.

8 / 10

80 %

Album Reviews: Nickel Creek - A Dotted Line