Live from Here


Live from Here, formerly known as 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 live on Saturday evenings from 2016 to 2020. The show's initial home was the Fitzgerald Theater in St. Paul, Minnesota, moving later to The Town Hall in New York City, where it remained until its cancellation the next year.
The show was derived from the historic A Prairie Home Companion with Garrison Keillor radio show. The original host, Garrison Keillor, performed his final show on July 2, 2016, and Thile's program began on October 15, 2016. Thile, an American virtuoso mandolinist and singer-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 two 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 2016 performance at the Fitzgerald Theater in St. Paul, Minnesota, continuing as the show's Executive Producer. Thile's new program presented expanded musical and comedic elements, retaining the template of the earlier program, but without such features as its earlier signatures "Lives of the Cowboys" and "Guy Noir, Private Eye" series, and "News from Lake Wobegon" monologue.

Program host

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. A child prodigy in music—self-described as "begging parents for a mandolin from the time was 2" and picking up the mandolin for the first time at the age of 5—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's father in 1989. An acoustic group, it continues as a trio to the present day, with Thile's participation alongside his more recent acoustic quintet Punch Brothers, both variously described using terms such as folk, progressive, bluegrass, "newgrass," and roots music. Thile was awarded BBC's Folk Musician of the Year award in 2007, a MacArthur Fellowship "genius" award in 2012, and eight Grammy Award nominations, four of which he won for Best Album in 1997, 2002, 2013, and 2015. Garrison Keillor's personal opinion is that Thile is "the great bluegrass performer of our time." As well, others have observed that "hough charming and cheery, Thile is by nature deeply competitive," and that he understands the business side of matters: for example, that the size of audiences the show attracts will matter.

History

History with ''APHC''

Guest performances

Thile first performed with Garrison Keillor on A Prairie Home Companion in 1996 at age 15. Over the next two decades, Thile returned to APHC eight times, performing both as a solo artist and as a part of the groups Nickel Creek and Punch Brothers. 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.
When Keillor announced in November 2014 that he would absent himself from APHC for "only the second time in decades," he yielded the host's microphone to Thile for these guest host appearances. Thile began these appearances in 2015 and appeared a total of 4 times in the twelve months thereafter, the final two guest host spots being on January 30 and February 6, 2016.
The guest host appearances gave an indication of the type of crew that Thile would assemble, the kinds of guests he would attract, and the style in which he might host. 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. A special comedy spot was done by comedian Maria Bamford.
  • February 6, 2016, again with Punch Brothers and Sarah Jarosz, with musical guests Paul Simon and Andrew Bird, with special comedy again from Maria Bamford. Thile also covered Kendrick Lamar's song about police brutality, Alright, to some social media criticism, about which he later said, "I would readily admit that my love of the song kind of blinded me," and "I think it was a bad call." Thile is described as having "test dr" his idea for a newly penned Song of the Week, with themes "tailored to current events," in his performance of "Omahallelujah," about Denver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning during this episode.

    Final Keillor program

In 2015, Keillor announced that he would step down from hosting the program and designated Chris Thile as the new host. Keillor's final episode of the show was recorded live on July 1, 2016, at the Hollywood Bowl in California for an audience of 18,000 fans and broadcast the next day. Keillor retained artistic rights and trademark to the show's name as well as some distribution rights and rights to retail items connected with A Prairie Home Companion. Thile made his debut as permanent host on October 15, 2016.

Name change

In November 2017, Minnesota Public Radio severed all business ties with former APHC host Garrison Keillor over unspecified "inappropriate behavior with an individual who worked with him." The Minnesota Public Radio website listed the show under the working title The Show with Chris Thile, as the trademark for A Prairie Home Companion is held by Keillor, not MPR. Thile addressed the situation on the December 2 installment of the series, and Thile began using a new theme, "Radio Boogie".
The show aired under the placeholder title of The Show with Chris Thile for the next two Saturdays. Finally, on December 16, Thile announced the show's new name as Live from Here.

New ''APHC'' format

Thile has referred to the program that Keillor created as a "truly great wor of art" and so "immortal," so that he would "keep using the template created to tell each other stories and to escape from our daily cares. Even so, 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 structure and broadening its reach to younger generations." Hence, the program continued to present a variety of program elements, including music, and storytelling, comedic and otherwise, but Thile had indicated some changes in direction, and others were noted in early reviews. Absent from the new program was the "Lives of the Cowboys" sketch, and the signature weekly "News from Lake Wobegon" monologues from Garrison Keillor; still present as of October 2016 were "old favorites" such as the program's faux sponsorship by Powdermilk Biscuits.
As of the opening month of the program, the planned replacement for the Keillor monologue was a slate of appearances from standup comics, for instance, the Irish comedian Maeve Higgins. New music from the host, and expanded music in general, had been noted as features of the new program. Andrew Leahy of Rolling Stone offers as perspective, that
Thile indicated that the musical variety of the premiere program would continue, with listeners to expect "roots-rockers, folk singers, jazz musicians, soul revivalists and bluegrass bands all taking the stage."

Cancellation

In March 2020, because the escalation of the COVID-19 pandemic forced the shutdown of live music performances, Live from Here switched to a mixture of remotely produced broadcasts and reruns of episodes from 2019. By June, the pandemic had stressed parent company Minnesota Public Radio's finances. Because MPR was uncertain when—or even if—Live from Here could ever resume in-person performances, it diverted resources from the show toward its flagship program Marketplace. Live from Here was immediately cancelled following its June 13 remote broadcast, without affording the show a series finale.

Cast and crew

In addition to Chris Thile, who contributed originally composed music and performances on his various instruments, the musical and acting cast and crew consisted of the following artists:
  • Bodine Boling, creative director and announcer.
  • Serena Brook, actress and voice-over artist.
  • Madison Cunningham, singer and guitarist.
  • Chris Eldridge, Punch Brothers guitarist.
  • Mike Elizondo, musician and songwriter. Musical director of Live from Here from September 2018.
  • Brittany Haas, fiddler.
  • Alan Hampton, multi-instrumentalist
  • Greg Hess, writer, performer, and improviser
  • Sarah Jarosz, singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist.
  • Paul Kowert, Punch Brothers bass player.
  • Julian Lage, guitarist
  • Holly Laurent, comic, improviser, writer, and director
  • Gaby Moreno, vocalist
  • Aoife O'Donovan, singer-songwriter
  • Tom Papa, comedian, head writer.
  • Ted Poor, drummer.
  • Gabe Witcher, Punch Brothers fiddle player.
  • Mike Yard, comedian