Greensky Bluegrass Benefits from Operating Like a Collective

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Greensky Bluegrass Benefits from Operating Like a Collective
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Greensky Bluegrass, which plays the Agora this month, benefits from operating like a collective

For a band that tours as steadily as Greensky Bluegrass, the pandemic certainly had a huge impact when it brought touring to a standstill in 2020.

“[After touring shut down,] everyone was in their respective homes. We all spread out and went to the places we needed to be for our personal lives,” says Bruzza. “We don’t live in the same place anymore, so we started sharing demos we had recorded at home. At some point, we realized that in that shared folder, we had a ton of songs. Everyone was doing their thing. We decided that if we couldn’t go on the road, we should go make a record.

Another album highlight, the Bruzza-penned “Streetlight” sounds like it could be a track by Dylan/the Band. “I really connected with it,” says Bruzza when asked about the tune. “I went through a divorce a couple of years ago and have been sober for two years now. I was newly sober and we were going to figure out who could sing the songs that Mike wrote. I put my own personal stuff behind it when I sang it. It’s a good song about growth and moving forward. Plus, it was musically interesting. Mike put a challenging section and we play in 7/8 and then go back to 4/4.

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