โDouble Infinity was one confident brushstroke, very intuitive, and very little thought,โ says Buck Meek, Big Thiefโs Texan lead guitarist, of the alternative rock groupโs 2025 LP. The now-trio has been playing together for a decade, yet each new release strikes a different cohesive tone, their sound seeming to grow alongside its creators.
โIt was a very quick, intuitive process, and an effort to trust our intuition, both improvisationally and also [in the] recording production process,โ Meek says of their September record. Previously noted for their seclusionary recording practices โ holing up in often-remote locales and recording primarily with the four founding band members, as they did for their 2022 album โ the bandโs latest release, recorded at the Power Station in the bustling heart of Manhattan, takes a new turn. โWe were playing with a big band in a room, and everyone was hearing the songs for the first time in front of microphones and responding to that together.โ
Their sixth studio album also marks a dramatic change in the bandโs makeup: Founding bassist Max Oleartchik departed the group last year. On the album, and on the road, Meek, lead vocalist Adrianne Lenker, and drummer James Krivchenia are now joined on bass by Joshua Crumbly, a jazz-trained musician who records improvised ambient tracks under his own name. โWeโve been learning a lot playing with him,โ Meek says.
The change inspired new musical approaches for the close-knit triad even before the tracks made it to the studio. โWe actually wrote a handful of songs together from scratch for the first time as a band,โ Meek says. Penning lyrics as a group for โGrandmotherโ and parts of โLos Angelesโ was a diversion from their typical Lenker-led compositional path and, Meek says, a way of deepening their creative relationship. โIt felt like this new sense of discovery that we were making together, getting to know each other, and a new sense of trust,โ Meek says. Even about 10 years in, the band still finds ways to surprise each other. For example, despite Krivcheniaโs solo work eschewing structure and conventional melody for experimental production and unconventional percussion, heโs now expressed a knack for refrains. โHe has a really poppy compass,โ Meek says. โHe often was really helpful in coming up with the chorus hook.โ
Taking the songs out of the studio and onto the stage, improvisation remains at the forefront of the groupโs playing. โWe change the arrangements on the fly quite a bit,โ Meek says. โWe write a new set list every night, everything we can do to keep ourselves present and really listening with open ears to each other.โ
For the Houston-born, Wimberley-raised guitarist, that impulse for freewheeling playing paired attentive listening and cogent songwriting was cultivated by jazz-influenced Texas musicians and folk songwriters: โSlim Richey was a big teacher of mine, and Django Porter and Brandon Gist.โ Meek credits them and many other Austin-area musicians with establishing his sonic sensibilities. Beyond his stylistic underpinnings, Meek sees the Hill Countryโs hard limestone bedrock and the sun-warmed hospitality of the people living on it as a foundation for his creative expression. Following the bandโs stop in Austin, Big Thief will play at 7A Ranch Opera House, along the Blanco River where Meek spent many childhood afternoons, to support the Watershed Association.
โI definitely feel the most myself in Texas, elementally,โ Meek says. โThereโs this sense of resiliency in that harsh environment that is very humbling and creates this sense of openness and softness in the people that Iโve always really loved. I feel that definitely influences the music.โ
This article appears in October 31 โข 2025.
