Never Going Back Again Npr Live From Here

American radio variety show

Live from Hither
2016-01-30CarlileJaroszThilePunchBrosAPHC.jpg

Chris Thile on mandolin (left of centre), on APHC with guest vocalists Brandi Carlile (center), too as Sarah Jarosz and Punch Brothers. Fitzgerald Theater, 2016

Genre Music, comedy, storytelling (radio variety)
Running time 2 hours
State of origin U.s.a.
Language(south) English
Dwelling station Minnesota Public Radio
Syndicates American Public Media
Starring Chris Thile, Rich Dworsky, Dial Brothers Chris Eldridge and Paul Kowert, Brittany Haas, Sarah Jarosz, Aoife O'Donovan, Ted Poor, Serena Brook, Tim Russell, Sue Scott, Fred Newman, Tom Papa, Mike Elizondo, Mike Yard
Original release October xv, 2022 – June 14, 2020
Opening theme "Fugue State" by Vulfpeck[ane]
Website livefromhere.org

Live from Here , formerly known equally A Prairie Home Companion with Chris Thile , is an American variety radio show known for its musical guests, tongue-in-cheek radio drama, and relaxed humor. Hosted by Chris Thile, it aired alive on Saturday evenings. The show'due south initial home was the Fitzgerald Theater in St. Paul, Minnesota. In 2019, the show moved to The Town Hall in New York City,[2] where it remained until its cancellation the adjacent year.[3]

The prove was derived from the historic A Prairie Home Companion with Garrison Keillor (APHC) radio show. The original host, Garrison Keillor, performed his final show on July 2, 2016, and Thile's programme began on October 15, 2016. Thile, an American virtuoso mandolinist and vocalist-songwriter, had a two-decade history with APHC and is known for his work in the folk and progressive bluegrass groups Nickel Creek and Punch Brothers. After Thile made 2 unprecedented guest host appearances in 2015, Keillor decided on his successor; featured Thile as host again in January–February 2016; and fully ceded his hosting role to Thile in the October 2022 functioning at the Fitzgerald Theater in St. Paul, Minnesota, standing every bit the show's Executive Producer.[4] Thile's new programme presented expanded musical and comedic elements, retaining the template of the before plan (e.g., its then-present acting and sound effect cast, and "sponsorships" from fictitious companies), but without such features as its before signatures "Lives of the Cowboys" and "Guy Noir, Private Eye" serial, and "News from Lake Wobegon" monologue.[v]

Programme host [edit]

Chris Thile, born in 1981, is an American virtuoso mandolinist and singer-songwriter known for his folk and progressive bluegrass work in the trio Nickel Creek and the quintet Punch Brothers.[6] [seven] [8] [9] A kid prodigy in music—self-described as "begging [his] parents for a mandolin from the time [he] was 2" and picking up the mandolin for the start time at the age of five[ten]—Thile was one of a trio, with siblings Sara and Sean Watkins, home-schooled California children from musical backgrounds, who formed the group Nickel Creek with Thile'southward father in 1989.[x] An acoustic group, information technology continues every bit a trio to the present day, with Thile's participation alongside his more recent acoustic quintet Dial Brothers, both variously described using terms such every bit folk, progressive, bluegrass, "newgrass," and roots music.[11] [8] Thile was awarded BBC's Folk Musician of the Year award in 2007, a MacArthur Fellowship "genius" laurels in 2012, and eight Grammy Award nominations, four of which he won for All-time Album in 1997, 2002, 2013, and 2022 (in the categories of Bluegrass, Contemporary Folk, Folk, and Contemporary Instrumental, respectively).[10] Garrison Keillor'due south personal opinion is that Thile is "the great bluegrass performer of our fourth dimension."[12] Likewise, others have observed that "[t]hough charming and cheery, Thile is past nature deeply competitive," and that he understands the business concern side of matters: for example, that the size of audiences the show attracts will matter.[12]

History [edit]

History with APHC [edit]

Guest performances [edit]

Thile start performed with Garrison Keillor on A Prairie Dwelling house Companion in 1996 at age fifteen.[7] [ten] Over the next two decades, Thile returned to APHC eight times (according to the program's website),[10] performing both as a solo artist and as a part of the groups Nickel Creek and Punch Brothers.[ commendation needed ] These guest appearances included performances at the programs home venue, the Fitzgerald Theater, and at tour venues. Programs in which Thile participated that received press coverage or are otherwise sourced and noteworthy appear below.

  • May 11, 1996: At The Fitzgerald Theater in St. Paul, Minnesota. In the Young Artists Showcase, Thile equally a 15-year onetime.[thirteen] With regulars Tim Russell, Chris Forth, Tom Keith and "The Guys All-Star Shoe Band" (Richard Dworsky, Andy Stein, Pat Donohue, Greg Hippen, and Arnie Kinsella), and other guests Kate MacKenzie,[fourteen] Michael Cleveland, and Seamus Egan and Solas (Karan Casey, John Doyle, Winifred Horan, and John Williams). Thile performed his songs Shadow Ridge (1992), What's the Matter with the Mill? (1996), and Faith River (1996), Keillor'southward song Greenland Whale Fisheries (1996), traditional and other songs (east.thousand., past Beak Monroe and MacKenzie) including Stoney Lonesome, Mother the Queen of My Centre (1933), The Sweetest Souvenir A Mother's Smile, Don't this Road look Rough and Rocky, Cycle Hoss, and The Red River Valley (1879), besides equally the Powdermilk Biscuit Theme.[fifteen] [sixteen]
  • June xi, 2016: At the Ravinia Festival, in Highland Park, Illinois. With Punch Brothers.[ verification needed ] [17] [ amend source needed ]

Trial guest hosting [edit]

Thile equally invitee host in January 2016

When Keillor announced in November 2022 that he would absent-minded himself from APHC for "just the second time in decades," he yielded the host's microphone to Thile for these guest host appearances.[12] Thile began these appearances in 2022 and appeared a total of 4 times in the twelve months thereafter,[ citation needed ] [ verification needed ] the final ii guest host spots beingness on January thirty and February half dozen, 2016.[18]

The guest host appearances gave an indication of the blazon of crew that Thile would gather, the kinds of guests he would concenter, and the style in which he might host (see Format and Cast, below).[xix] [ better source needed ] The hosted programs were on the following dates, and featured the following guest artists:

  • January 30, 2016, with Thile's fellow Punch Brothers group members, with musical guests Brandi Carlile, Ben Folds and Sarah Jarosz.[eighteen] A special comedy spot was washed by comedian Maria Bamford.[20] [ verification needed ]
  • February half-dozen, 2016, over again with Punch Brothers and Sarah Jarosz, with musical guests Paul Simon and Andrew Bird,[18] with special comedy over again from Maria Bamford.[xx] [ verification needed ] Thile also covered Kendrick Lamar'southward song about police brutality, Alright, [ when? ] to some social media criticism, about which he afterward said, "I would readily admit that my love of the vocal kind of blinded me," and "I call up it was a bad call."[12] Thile is described as having "test dr[iven]" his idea for a newly-penned Song of the Week, with themes "tailored to current events," in his performance of "Omahallelujah," nigh Denver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning during this episode.[vii]

Terminal Keillor program [edit]

In 2015, Keillor announced that he would step downwards from hosting the program and designated Chris Thile[21] equally the new host. Keillor'due south concluding episode of the evidence was recorded live on July 1, 2016, at the Hollywood Basin in California for an audience of 18,000 fans[22] and broadcast the next mean solar day.[23] Keillor retained artistic rights and trademark to the show'due south name as well as some distribution rights and rights to retail items connected with A Prairie Dwelling house Companion. Thile made his debut as permanent host on Oct 15, 2016.

Name modify [edit]

In Nov 2017, Minnesota Public Radio severed all business ties with one-time APHC host Garrison Keillor over unspecified "inappropriate behavior with an individual who worked with him."[24] The Minnesota Public Radio website listed the show nether the working title The Show with Chris Thile, as the trademark for A Prairie Dwelling house Companion is held by Keillor, not MPR.[25] Thile addressed the situation on the December 2 installment of the series,[26] and Thile began using a new theme, "Radio Boogie".[27] [28]

The bear witness aired under the placeholder title of The Prove with Chris Thile for the side by side 2 Saturdays. Finally, on December 16, Thile announced the show'southward new name as Live from Here.[29]

New APHC format [edit]

Thile has referred to the program that Keillor created equally a "truly great wor[k] of art" and so "immortal," so that he would "go on using the template [Keillor] created to tell each other stories and to escape from our daily cares.[20] Nonetheless, Andrew Leahy of the Rolling Stone wrote that Thile had added to the mandate of "preserving the show's appeal" a further one of "revising its construction and broadening its attain to younger generations."[seven] Hence, the program continued to present a variety of program elements, including music, and storytelling, comedic and otherwise (see following), only Thile had indicated some changes in direction, and others were noted in early reviews. Absent-minded from the new plan was the "Lives of the Cowboys" sketch,[30] and the signature weekly "News from Lake Wobegon" monologues from Garrison Keillor; even so nowadays as of October 2022 were "erstwhile favorites" such as the programme's faux sponsorship by Powdermilk Biscuits.[31]

As of the opening calendar month of the programme, the planned replacement for the Keillor monologue was a slate of appearances from standup comics, for instance, the Irish comedian Maeve Higgins.[31] New music from the host, and expanded music in general, had been noted as features of the new programme.[20] [31] Andrew Leahy of Rolling Stone offers equally perspective, that

Possibly the nearly crucial ingredient in Thile'due south radio-show-revision recipe was his Song of the Week. Every broadcast featured a newly-penned composition, its lyrics and instrumental themes tailored to current events.[7]

Thile indicated that the musical multifariousness of the premiere program (see below) would go on, with listeners to expect "roots-rockers, folk singers, jazz musicians, soul revivalists and bluegrass bands all taking the stage."[7]

Cancellation [edit]

When the COVID-xix pandemic began to escalate and forced the shutdown of live music performances in the United States in March 2020, Live from Hither switched to a mix of remotely produced broadcasts and reruns of episodes from 2019. By June, parent visitor Minnesota Public Radio had encountered major fiscal issues stemming from the pandemic and decided to divert its resources abroad from Live from Hither, uncertain of if or when it could ever resume alive in-person performances, and toward its flagship plan Marketplace. Live from Here was immediately cancelled following the June xiii remote broadcast, without affording the testify a series finale.[iii]

Cast and crew [edit]

In add-on to Chris Thile, who contributed originally composed music and performances on his diverse instruments, the musical and acting cast and crew consisted of the post-obit artists:[32]

  • Bodine Boling, creative director and announcer.
  • Serena Brook, actress and vocalism-over artist.
  • Madison Cunningham, singer and guitarist.
  • Chris Eldridge, Punch Brothers guitarist.[33]
  • Mike Elizondo, musician and songwriter. Musical managing director of Alive from Hither from September 2018.[34]
  • Brittany Haas, fiddler.
  • Alan Hampton, multi-instrumentalist
  • Greg Hess, writer, performer, and improviser
  • Sarah Jarosz, vocalizer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist.[8]
  • Paul Kowert, Dial Brothers bass player.[33]
  • Julian Lage, guitarist
  • Holly Laurent, comic, improviser, writer, and director
  • Gaby Moreno, vocalist
  • Aoife O'Donovan, singer-songwriter[8]
  • Tom Papa, comedian, head author.
  • Ted Poor, drummer.
  • Gabe Witcher, violinist
  • Mike Yard, comedian

Former members [edit]

  • Sue Scott, APHC veteran, actress and vox-over artist. Left in 2017.[35]
  • Fred Newman, APHC veteran, sound effects artist. Left in 2018.[34]
  • Rich Dworsky, composer, keyboardist. Musical director of A Prairie Domicile Companion and Live from Here until September 2018.[34]
  • Tim Russell, APHC veteran, phonation player and impressionist. Left in 2018.[34]

Broadcast data [edit]

Local public radio stations carried the weekly product of Live from Here with Chris Thile at 1 or more broadcast times, varying by station. The NPR Now channel on SiriusXM Satellite Radio carried the program on Saturdays at v p.m. and Sundays at 11 a.m., both Central Fourth dimension (UTC−6).[36] [37] The audio of the program also streamed live online, at livefromhere.org on Saturdays from 5 to 7 p.thousand. Central, and video streams were likewise available when the plan broadcasts from their home venue, The Fitzgerald Theater, or their "home-abroad-from-dwelling house", The Boondocks Hall in New York City.[36] Streaming audio from each show posts following the Saturday circulate at livefromhere.org, as of March 2022 at noon, Primal Time on Sunday.[36]

Highlights from the evidence, including Chris Thile'due south "Song of the Week", are available via RSS, iHeartRadio, iTunes, Stitcher, and TuneIn.[36]

[edit]

In the announcement of the change in host for the programme, American Public Media stated:

One of the well-nigh popular public radio programs will begin a new chapter this autumn every bit musician Chris Thile takes over for Garrison Keillor as the new host of A Prairie Home Companion, bringing a fresh arroyo to an audience favorite. Beginning on Oct 15, 2016, Thile volition host a xxx-week season, including live broadcasts, produced shows and repeats on public radio stations nationwide.[38] [39]

Keillor, who had fabricated diverse statements regarding retirement in the past, was described in June 2022 as beingness "fairly serious this time," and he is quoted as saying "Chris is my man, and I'grand eager to stay home and read books."[40] Elaborating further, Keillor wrote to Abe Streep of The New York Times Mag, indicating that Thile'due south adventurous nature—alongside his high esteem for "the slap-up bluegrass performer"[12]—were reasons for his consideration as Keillor'south replacement, which would exist tested via a trial run of guest host appearances in January–February 2016;[12] Keillor wrote,

I came to this determination myself, without talking to some other soul nigh it ... I could've held meetings, deputed studies, appointed a chore forcefulness, and 6 months later the chore force would've concluded that the show could not go on. Well, I say it can and information technology should. And I decided it should return to its roots as a musical diverseness show and grow from in that location.[12]

Keillor went on to write about Thile, "He takes big chances ... He can be a chameleon, he can swim in every result, and for all his brilliance, nobody sounds better singing old American songs than he. Nobody."[12]

Thile, in discussing the changeover with Minnesota Public Radio, indicated that he would go along to write new musical fabric, every bit he has in initial programs since his debut as host: "I would like to write something new every calendar week ... I've written a new song for each show. I desire to proceed doing that. Information technology's so much fun."[20] In addition, he has highlighted one-act as an element for the new prove, noting the success of appearances of comedian Maria Bamford in shows he had hosted early on in 2022 which gave "five or half dozen minutes of hilarity." With regard to story telling, he noted the success of an appearance by actor Ed Helms, indicating that the new APHC will "have that kind of thing going on." When asked about futurity on-air material from evidence originator and current executive producer Garrison Keillor, Thile replied, "He's such an astonishing writer that if he comes up with an idea that would be good for the evidence ... I imagine we'll become a script here and there."[twenty]

APM business organisation strategy [edit]

While much media focus during the changeover was on the artistry and styles associated with Keillor and Thile, APHC and American Public Media (APM) are businesses as well; at its peak, the original APHC radio plan had garnered in excess of four million weekly listeners, and Rivertown Trading Visitor, the purveyor of APHC-themed products, was sold in 1998 by Minnesota Public Radio for The states $120 million.[12] Sensitive to the potential loss of audience due to the change of the prove's hosting—Thile said that he knew he would lose some listeners devoted to Keillor, stating at the fourth dimension that "[the] goal is to lose one million ... and add two."[12]—the plan's distributor, American Public Media, indicated its intent to ease listeners completely away from experiencing the before Keillor format by "mix[ing] in" more than a dozen of the new APHC programs with Thile, alongside a gear up of reruns where Keillor is at the captain.[31]

Critical response [edit]

Writing for the Chicago Tribune, Steve Johnson noted that the new programme "still rel[ies] heavily on an air of actuality derived from its Minnesota locale, [but] now leans a little more toward music," and "away from storytelling."[31] Johnson concluded that the program remains "an easy, graceful listen" featuring "a killer musical repertoire in the Americana tradition," and "humor ranging from corny to cut."[31]

Jon Bream of Minneapolis' Star Tribune complimented Thile's musical expertise, specially relative to the more amateur Keillor: "Dissimilar Keillor, Thile is a host who can actually sing duets with authorization, not just aspiration" likewise every bit suggesting that Thile's connections to popular music would benefit the product, such as to Jack White, who performed on the show.[5]

Non all critics were as sure that the shift in the show's brand had been a good one. Erik Sherman, writing for Inc. This Morning, observed: "...brands are frail and this i just hitting the basis and shattered. ...the new name is Live From Here. A more anodyne and empty brand would be difficult to achieve. This is the sort of concoction that a satirist mocking such a production might adopt," and points out that the show's listenership was down to 2.six million at the end of 2017.[41]

References [edit]

  1. ^ Live from Hither [@livefromhereapm] (October half dozen, 2018). "New season, new theme vocal! Our new opening number is the song "Fugue Land" by @vulfpeck. / Here's the ring's accept on it from last flavour:http://www.youtube.com/watch?5=AFDq9NK-Bvg …" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  2. ^ "'Live From Hither With Chris Thile' Moves To New York City For 2022 – 2022 Season". JamBase. May 6, 2019. Retrieved May 6, 2019.
  3. ^ a b Wyllie, Julian. "APM/MPR eliminates 28 positions, ends 'Live From Here'". Current . Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  4. ^ "Special Guest Host Chris Thile – February vii & 14, 2015". prairiehome.org. February iii, 2015. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved April sixteen, 2021.
  5. ^ a b Bream, Jon (Oct fifteen, 2016). "Chris Thile Seems Right At Dwelling Every bit New 'Prairie Home Companion' Host". Star Tribune . Retrieved Oct 16, 2016.
  6. ^ Chris Thile & PBS NewsHour Staff (August 5, 2013). Chris Thile Performs for the PBS NewsHour (streaming video). Arlington, VA: PBS NewsHour. Retrieved December 1, 2016. [Quote:] Singer-songwriter and mandolinist Chris Thile performs a song for the PBS NewsHour.
  7. ^ a b c d due east f Leahey, Andrew (October 14, 2016). "Chris Thile on Catchy Chore of Hosting 'Prairie Home Companion'". Rolling Stone . Retrieved December 1, 2016.
  8. ^ a b c d Seida, Linda. "Chris Thile – Biography". AllMusic.com . Retrieved February 13, 2015.
  9. ^ Rice, Wayne (July 24, 2008). "Welcome to Bluegrass Bios on the Spider web: T, Chris Thile (Run across also Nickel Creek)". Archived from the original on March 21, 2009. Retrieved November 30, 2016.
  10. ^ a b c d due east Miller, Ann Arbor (July 22, 2015). "5 Things You lot Didn't Know Well-nigh Chris Thile". MPRNews.org . Retrieved November 30, 2016.
  11. ^ Camp, Zoe (Nov 25, 2015). "Punch Brothers: The Wireless EP [review]". Pitchfork.com . Retrieved December ane, 2016.
  12. ^ a b c d east f g h i j Streep, Abe (September 27, 2016). "What'south 'A Prairie Dwelling Companion' Without Garrison Keillor?". The New York Times Magazine . Retrieved December 1, 2016.
  13. ^ The references provided hither state 14 years old, while the biography for Thile linked therein signal xv years old, equally do all other sources cited in this article, and then the fifteen years is the age stated.
  14. ^ Come across the Musicians section at the Radio Songs (album) article.
  15. ^ PublicRadio.org Staff (2016). "A Prairie Home Companion, May 1996". PublicRadio.org . Retrieved December 8, 2016. [Quote:] Alive from The Fitzgerald Theater in St. Paul, Minnesota / It's the Young Artists Showcase with 14-year-old mandolin virtuoso Chris Thile, and 27-yr-old Seamus Egan, Irish traditional musician, leading the quintet called Solas. See the preceding Note regarding Thile's historic period at this performance, appearing within this bullet point, above.
  16. ^ PublicRadio.org Staff (2016). "A Prairie Habitation Companion, Saturday, May 11, 1996". PublicRadio.org . Retrieved December 8, 2016. [Quote:] Guests:Kate MacKenzie, guitar and vocals; Chris Thile, mandolin; Michael Cleveland, fiddle. Solas, featuring Seamus Egan: Seamus Egan, flute; Karan Casey, vocals; John Doyle, guitar, backing vocals; Win[i]fred Horan,[sic.] dabble; John Williams, push accordion, concertina.
  17. ^ Shefsky, Jay (June ix, 2016). "Chris Thile on Hosting 'A Prairie Home Companion,' Punch Brothers". Chicago This night . Retrieved December 8, 2016 – via WTTW.com.
  18. ^ a b c Kahn, Andy (January 8, 2016). "Paul Simon To Bring together Chris Thile On 'A Prairie Home Companion'". JamBase.com . Retrieved December 1, 2016.
  19. ^ APM Staff (December 1, 2016). "A Prairie Home Companion with Chris Thile: Regular Performers and Cast". PrairieHome.org . Retrieved December i, 2016.
  20. ^ a b c d due east f Wurzer, Cathy (Apr 12, 2016). "Chris Thile Offers Glimpse of the New Prairie Home". MPRNews.org . Retrieved November 30, 2016.
  21. ^ Hughes, William (June 27, 2015). "Garrison Keillor's Reign of Terror over America'due south Airwaves Finally Prepare to Terminate". The A.V. Club.
  22. ^ "Garrison Keillor hosts final A Prairie Home Companion episode". The Guardian. London. Associated Printing. July 2, 2016. Retrieved January viii, 2017.
  23. ^ Justin, Neal (June 18, 2016). "Sun is setting on Garrison Keillor's time on Lake Wobegon". Star Tribune. Minneapolis.
  24. ^ Aiello, Chloe (November 29, 2017). "Garrison Keillor fired by Minnesota Public Radio for alleged improper behavior". CNBC . Retrieved November 29, 2017.
  25. ^ "Weekly On-Air Schedule | Minnesota Public Radio News". www.mprnews.org . Retrieved November 30, 2017.
  26. ^ Justin, Neal (November 29, 2017). "'I think I have to leave the country,' Keillor says afterward firing". Star Tribune . Retrieved Nov 30, 2017.
  27. ^ "Chris Thile addresses scandal around his 'Prairie Abode' predecessor Garrison Keillor". Star Tribune . Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  28. ^ "Rundown – A Prairie Domicile Companion for Dec 9, 2017". Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  29. ^ "Rundown – Alive From Here for Dec 16, 2017". Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  30. ^ AP Staff (July 2, 2016). "Garrison Keillor Hosts Concluding A Prairie Home Companion Episode". The Guardian . Retrieved November xxx, 2016 – via Associated Press (AP).
  31. ^ a b c d e f Johnson, Steve. "'A Prairie Dwelling house Companion' Without Keillor Remains a Comfortable Listen". chicagotribune.com . Retrieved Nov xxx, 2016.
  32. ^ "Performers, Writers and Staff | Live from Here with Chris Thile". www.livefromhere.org . Retrieved January 30, 2019.
  33. ^ a b Ruhlmann, William (December i, 2016). "Kleptomaniacal Nonetheless – Biography & History". AllMusic.com . Retrieved December 1, 2016.
  34. ^ a b c d "Alive from Here announces deviation of iii longtime performers". world wide web.mprnews.org . Retrieved Jan xxx, 2019.
  35. ^ Justin, Neal. "Chris Thile drops final three members of Garrison Keillor's 'Prairie Home' cast". Star Tribune . Retrieved January 30, 2019.
  36. ^ a b c d Live from Here Staff (March 10, 2018). "Listening Information". livefromhere.org. Retrieved March 10, 2018.
  37. ^ Central Fourth dimension is 6 hours behind Coordinated Universal Fourth dimension (UTC). Run into Time and Appointment Staff (March x, 2018). "CST – Central Standard Time (Time Zone Abbreviation)". TimeandDate.com. Retrieved March ten, 2018.
  38. ^ APM Staff (February 3, 2015). "A Prairie Home Companion with Garrison Keillor: Special Guest Host Chris Thile, February 7 and 14, 2015". prairiehome.org. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved April iii, 2015.
  39. ^ APM Staff (November thirty, 2016). "Press Room, Press Clips". PrairieHome.org . Retrieved November 30, 2016.
  40. ^ Hughes, William (June 26, 2015). "Garrison Keillor's Reign of Terror over America's Airwaves Finally Set to End". The A.V. Club . Retrieved Nov thirty, 2016.
  41. ^ Sherman, Erik (December 17, 2017). "Prairie Home Companion'south New Name Is a Terrible Example of Branding". Inc.com.

Farther reading [edit]

  • Woodruff, Judy; Thile, Chris; Dark-brown, Jeffrey (October 21, 2016). 'Prairie Dwelling house' Gets a New Companion (streaming video and transcript). PBS NewsHour. Arlington, VA. Retrieved December 1, 2016.
  • Leahey, Andrew (October 14, 2016). "Chris Thile on Tricky Task of Hosting 'Prairie Abode Companion'". Rolling Stone . Retrieved December 1, 2016.
  • Streep, Abe (September 27, 2016). "What'due south 'A Prairie Domicile Companion' Without Garrison Keillor?". The New York Times Magazine . Retrieved Dec 1, 2016.
  • Justin, Neal (June 18, 2016). "Dominicus Is Setting On Garrison Keillor's Time on Lake Wobegon". Minneapolis Star Tribune . Retrieved Nov 30, 2016.
  • Shefsky, Jay (June 9, 2016). "Chris Thile on Hosting 'A Prairie Habitation Companion,' Punch Brothers". Chicago This night . Retrieved December viii, 2016 – via WTTW.com. Provides further data on the telephone call betwixt Keillor and Thile, wherein the new host was invited to take the helm.
  • Miller, Ann Arbor (July 22, 2015). "v Things You Didn't Know Well-nigh Chris Thile". MPRNews.org . Retrieved November 30, 2016.
  • Seel, Steve (February vii, 2015). "Musician Chris Thile Subs For Keillor on APHC". MPRNews.org . Retrieved November thirty, 2016.
  • Rice, Wayne (July 24, 2008). "Welcome to Bluegrass Bios on the Web: T, Chris Thile (See also Nickel Creek)". Archived from the original on March 21, 2009. Retrieved November 30, 2016.
  • Routh, Michael & Brightwell, Debbie (May xx, 1999). "Chris Thile: Roofing the Bases". Archived from the original on November 21, 2007. Retrieved November 30, 2016. {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)

External links [edit]

  • Live from Here, official website

moorejohum1995.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_from_Here

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