photo credit: Amy Lumbert |
On October 3rd, Ann Arbor-based singer/songwriter
Mike Vial released A World That’s Bigger,
a full length record of his most poignant and soulful batch of acoustic
folk tunes to date. On October 6th he was struck by a car, crossing
Huron St on foot, making his way to the Ark to play at the Vets for
Peace John
Lennon tribute. “Ironically, my world has gotten smaller since the accident,” said Vial, who has been recovering at
home, since.
Vial is still celebrating the release of A World That’s Bigger with next Saturday’s
performance (10/29) at The Ark, opening for the Appleseed Collective.
The Appleseed Collective & Mike Vial
Oct 29 at The Ark
Read my interview with The Appleseed Collective via Current Magazine online next Monday
“I’d emotionally forgotten that I actually released a
record. I’ve since been a present father at home, spending time with my
daughter. I get really upset thinking she could have grown up without her dad.”
Vial has been releasing music regularly for almost 10 years.
He’s been performing around our state and across the country for more than several
years, having surpassed 1,000 performances. His voice, his performances, his
tuneful guitar strums and his sentimental & ponderous lyricism makes him
one of the most endearing artists of the last decade.
The album is a warm, crisp collage of Americana coiled with
lots of contemplative lyrics narrated by an artist who sounds like he’s
enjoying the radiant sunrise after a
proverbial dark night of the soul.
This is the album that finds the (very
melodic) peacefulness echoing an existential investigation of the
day-in/day-out anxieties so many of us go through. To me, it felt like an album
bathed in the calming light shone down from the exit of a tunnel. But then….just
as he reached that exit point of ease, Vial had the accident.
There are a lot of literary and Biblical allusions within the lyrics of the
record, and they are spinning in my head,” said Vial. “The song “We’re Not Here
Anymore,” which is contemplating fate and death, is on my mind, lately:
“There’s a ghost on the sidewalk, a devil in the street. One will never
welcome, one we’re meant to meet…”
Vial was carrying his main guitar, a Taylor 514ce which he’s had for 15
years, and luckily it survived. This was the guitar he used on the recordings,
produced with Mike Gentry up in a cabin in Indian River. In addressing the lyrics,
Vial said that he could only hope that listeners can find comparable catharsis
through these “universal challenges of adulthood.” Vial is a former school
teacher, and there’s this nuanced affability with the way he presents his
musical ruminations, much like a guide (or teacher) would to a curious class,
but with a humbleness underlying a poet’s submission to certainly not having all
the answers. “This record tackles weighty topics, like miscarriage, leaving one’s
job, losing a family member…doubt…”
“Recording with Mike Gentry was a perfect mentorship and the cabin provided
the best reflective setting,” Vial said. “The cabin is covered in knotty pine.
It felt like recording in the bellow of a guitar-ship. I was chasing a certain
sound with this record, like Captain Ahab chased the whale in Moby Dick.
I was consumed by this record because I had something to prove to myself. All
of my previous recording experiences have been fun, but I have never captured
my live performance’s emotion on tape.”
photo credit: Anne Glista |
A World That’s Bigger was done completely live: no overdubs, no fixing,
no click-track. Vial wanted the same emotion and energy as his live performances
captured on the record. That mean 150, repeat, 150 takes, and collecting the
ten best. “I had road-tested nine of the ten songs, and consumed a lot of
classic 70s era records, especially Nick Drake’s Pink Moon. I knew
exactly how I wanted this to sound. But getting it live was a gamble.”
“I’ve always viewed recording sessions as snapshots of where a musical
artist is at that moment. A World That’s Bigger is very much that type
of snapshot.”
Famously, Vial’s wife, journalist Natalie Burg, said she would not marry him unless he quit his teaching job to pursue music full time. I still
feel like that prior experience informs his charismatic manner and literary
lyrics. “Previously, I was focused on the guitar portion of my shows. Now I’m
in a new chapter—a folk tradition, sense of community, storytelling….”
“I tell a lot more stories in the set. I’m very aware of not becoming A Mighty Wind, but stories can hook people into the song. And being a teacher allowed me to find an animated self. I learned how to keep 36 freshmen students’ attention for 90 minutes. That experience has seeped into my pacing of a gig; and a lesson plan models a set list for me.”
“I tell a lot more stories in the set. I’m very aware of not becoming A Mighty Wind, but stories can hook people into the song. And being a teacher allowed me to find an animated self. I learned how to keep 36 freshmen students’ attention for 90 minutes. That experience has seeped into my pacing of a gig; and a lesson plan models a set list for me.”
Once Vial is fully healed, he knows he’ll feel compelled to make up for
lost time, since he’d previously planned on substantial touring for World. “But, I’ve been doing more than
200 gigs a year for quite a while, and now that I have a family, I’m
discovering how much we can handle. The accident is making me respect time even
more.”
It seems, after the accident, like another journey down yet another tunnel
toward a new source of light is in the works… That said, I’ll add this,
editorially, I adore the way Vial muses on the art of songwriting: “Songs come
in spurts for me, I don’t chase muse. I ran track in high school; the last
thing I need is music to become a race. Don’t get me wrong, I work
on music daily, but if songs ideas don’t come, I don’t force them. Instead,
songwriting for me is like collecting rainwater in buckets, until they
overflow.”
The city of Ann Arbor, where he lives, and the splendor it exudes in the
peak of autumn’s display polychromatic charms, has been particularly
therapeutic for the Vial family at this time. The fine folks of the community
as well, over Facebook through supportive messages, and in person at venues,
are cheering him on… “Normally, I don’t get to see many concerts since I’m
constantly gigging. I’ve been finding time to hobble on crutches to shows
during the fall. I just saw my friends in Sedgewick play at Café Verde, and my
friends Frances Luke Accord play at the Ark. I’ve been reading Nick Hornby’s Songbook,
a set of essays about his favorite songs. I’m reconnecting to music. The
buckets are getting full. I’m going to have a burst of new songs soon.”
Vial said he’s trying to find his way, deeply respectful and
conscious of all of the talent, history here in Ann Arbor, and the energetic
wave of talent, year to year, that serenades its music halls. “I enjoy many fruits because people have invested
in this community for many decades, including the arts. So I want to engage in
a positive manner, and bring something to the table.”
Release Show at the Ark is
still on:
October 29, the Ark
opening for Appleseed Collective
October 29, the Ark
opening for Appleseed Collective
Tickets: $15 on sale here.
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