Jun 30 2022
SPIRE LOBBY SERIES: LYDIA LUCE

SPIRE LOBBY SERIES: LYDIA LUCE

Presented by The Spire Center for Performing Arts at Spire Center for the Performing Arts

This series showcases local and regional musicians in a relaxed and intimate setting. The lobby is transformed into a 70-seat showcase lounge.

About the Artist

The lushness of the orchestration of Lydia Luce's Garden Songs EP is striking on first listen, and fans may hear it as a return to her musical roots. The mystery of why starts to unravel when she explains that she wrote it at an artist retreat on Orcas Island, a tiny destination of some 57 square miles off the coast of Washington state known for vistas of water, forest, rocks, beaches, and blue skies. It was the first writing Luce had done since her 2021 album, Dark River. "It was an opportunity to connect with myself without any pressure because I wasn't writing for a project," Luce explains. "I used the time to reconnect to writing." She found inspiration in the words of Wilco's Jeff Tweedy, using exercises from his book, How to Write One Song, as a jumping-off point. And, as is frequently the case for Luce, being in nature helped stimulate her creative mind. Writing in such a picturesque setting helped her focus her attention on the world around her—quite literally in the case of the EP's first song, "Matter of Time." The summer before Luce landed on Orcas Island, the northwest suffered two brutal heat waves, and the extreme weather killed dozens. It got Luce thinking about the cognitive dissonance of wanting to be present in this remarkable place while grappling with how the same area was deadly to so many during a bout of extreme weather. For a woman who grew up by the ocean, the mountainous water vistas reminded her of her smallness. It also helped to shrink her anxieties and ego down to a manageable enough size to not get in the way of simply writing a song. Luce turned to her impending wedding for "Vow," which is the tale of the next step in a relationship that had been turbulent. The quiet confidence of commitment is captured in her measured singing, while the spectacular feelings of being in love come through in the music with strings that swell into a cinematic instrumental. The song lands on a moment of looking forward, Luce explains, to "what we've built together and all of our hard work in our relationship and also getting to be present and enjoy where we're at." Another love is at the heart of "Air Castle"—that of Luce's great grandparents. Her father shared
a book of their love letters, written between 1909 and 1920, while he was in California and she was in Georgia. The letters begin when they are friends, and the encouraging letters they wrote each other eventually ended in love and a successful shared career with a company they co-created. The song captures how important it can be to feel like someone is in your corner, seeing the best of you and rooting for your triumph. "Cosmic Flower" offers a series of similes, drawing a parallel between nature and love. It folds Luce's passion and inspiration for the vastness of nature with those same feelings in her relationship. Written in a period of separation, Luce penned it on the side of a cliff—more literal than metaphorical. "It's a song about longing and missing someone. After Covid, everybody knows what that feels like," Luce says. The EP ends with a song about persistence. "Yellow Dawn" is a letter to herself that serves as a reminder to keep writing, creating, and believing. Most importantly, to keep going. Persistence in love and living is a theme threaded throughout Garden Songs. Sometimes it emerges as a love story, sometimes a recognition of the world around us. The idea that we'll carry on and keep going as we let hope and love guide us, standing in our grace and embracing beauty and art while facing down an uncertain future is a choice that propels Luce. That feeling propelled the writing and creation of Garden Songs. In addition to her solo work, Luce works with Lockeland Strings. This community arts organization showcases local artists with a string quintet and performances of new contemporary classical pieces from local composers. They've been joined by Kacey Musgraves and Lucie Silvas, among others, and partners with nonprofits, including the ACLU of Tennessee, Girls Write Nashville and The Little Pantry That Could. She also plays viola as a session musician.

Admission Info

$15

Phone: 508-746-4488

Email: info@spirecenter.org

Dates & Times

2022/06/30 - 2022/06/30

Location Info

Spire Center for the Performing Arts

25 1/2 Court Street, Plymouth, MA 02360