Skip to content
Search

Fruition Got Lumped in With ‘Jamgrass.’ The Band Run From It on Their New Album

Fruition Got Lumped in With ‘Jamgrass.’ The Band Run From It on Their New Album

Before the three founding members of Fruition had their first face-to-face encounter after the Covid-19 pandemic, they weren’t sure what the future held for their band. The Portland Americana act were inseparable for more than a decade, but when lockdowns started they didn’t see each other for more than a year. It could’ve all been over.

“There were definitely moments where you just question everything that you’ve done in your life and [ask], ‘Is this a band? Are we done?'” says singer and guitarist Jay Cobb Anderson over a Zoom call with his co-songwriters and lead vocalists, Mimi Naja and Kellen Asebroek. “You know, we’ve been a band for a long time. Do we have anything else to say?”


Meeting up to jam on a friend’s farm in Oregon in June 2021 put all those fears to rest. “The moment we all got back together again and played music together again, I was like, ‘Oh, man, there’s the magic. It’s still there,'” Anderson says. “There’s definitely more to be said and more to be done.”

The band’s new album, How to Make Mistakes, out today, is both a marker of the growth that all five members have experienced in the past four years and a return to Fruition’s harmony-laden roots as a group of scrappy buskers on the streets of Portland. During their time apart, they’d gotten married, become parents, gone to rehab. But, above all, they’d learned to have fun playing music again.

“We’d really achieved a lot of benchmarks: We were making a living out of it; we’d played Red Rocks; we were on tour,” Asebroek, who, like Naja, is a multi-instrumentalist, recalls of the band’s fortunes prior to the pandemic. “But no matter how much we grinded, we were always doing just that: we were fucking grinding.”

It didn’t help that, throughout 2019, the band had begun dispersing across the country. Anderson left for Seattle, Naja to Atlanta. Even their drummer, Tyler Thompson, and bassist, Jeff Leonard, relocated to the East coast. Only Asebroek stayed in Portland. “We had to really fight to stay connected,” Asebroek says.

Their lives took equally divergent paths in the intervening months. While Thompson and Leonard both became fathers, and Anderson was married, Naja got sober. “I went to rehab three-and-a-half weeks into lockdown after, like, my darkest, darkest time,” she says. “And, yeah, it’s the best thing that could have happened to me, both personally and as a band member being able to sustain the touring lifestyle.”

Like so many of their peers, Fruition felt they’d had real momentum going when the pandemic hit. “Dawn,” their most recent single, had gotten airplay on Triple A radio, and they noticed a new influx of fans showing up to their shows. All the same, they’d felt like they’d gotten boxed in.

“We were kind of in this jamgrass scene for some reason that we still don’t fully understand,” Naja says. “And they nurtured us and supported us, but we don’t jam and we don’t play bluegrass. So we really wanted to take this opportunity to present ourselves in a way that we feel like we should be heard.”

That, to their ears, was Americana. They dropped the rock elements that crept in on recent albums — which, they admit, was a conscious effort to differentiate themselves from bluegrass — and focused on plugging back in to one another. For their first run of shows in the summer of 2021, they toured as an acoustic trio, just like when they started 13 years prior.

When it came time to record How to Make Mistakes, the key was that they did everything live in the studio, with no overdubs. In all, they cut 17 songs in seven days, 13 of which made it onto the record. “Part of that was just hit the songs. Go for it, get as many takes as we can of one song, move on to the next thing,” Anderson recalls. “It was just kind of a way to get the ball rolling.”

The sentiment of the album’s title was one the band embraced in the music itself — nothing left hidden, blemishes and all. Loosening that grip on control helped bring them closer together, too. Until now, Anderson, Naja, and Asebroek always came up with their songs independently and brought them to the group. This time, they opted to cowrite.

“It’s always been a very personal thing for each songwriter, and we decided to bust out of that a little bit,” Anderson says. “We had some hard conversations… But, essentially, us getting all together and trying to write together and being more vulnerable with each other made us so much stronger.”

All three agree that “Made to Break,” a line from which lent the album its name, became the cornerstone of this new collection. But that song’s gently cooing harmonies aren’t all How to Make Mistakes has to offer. From the music hall jaunt of “Can You Tell Me” to shimmering hope of “Scars” to the woozy whistles and pedal steel of “Lonely Work,” there’s a brittle wisdom on this album, a sense of having to piece oneself back together and finding strength in a shared voice.

“We’ve just tried to let go of caring what people think this music is and are just writing the songs and making the art that our heart wants to write and make,” Asebroek says. In that sense, the time that Fruition spent apart may well have done them a favor. Rather than hitting the end of the road, they’re convinced that they’re just getting started.

“We really feel like the years leading up the pandemic were the first level of this game, kind of like the training level,” Asebroek adds. “And now we’re in the open world, doing the thing.”

More Stories

Queens of the Stone Age Cancel Remaining 2024 Shows After Josh Homme Surgery

Queens of the Stone Age Cancel Remaining 2024 Shows After Josh Homme Surgery

Queens of the Stone Age have canceled the remainder of their 2024 tour dates — including a string of North American shows and festival gigs scheduled for the fall — as Josh Homme continues his recovery from an unspecified surgery he underwent in July.

“QOTSA regret to announce the cancellation and/or postponement of all remaining 2024 shows. Josh has been given no choice but to prioritize his health and to receive essential medical care through the remainder of the year,” the band wrote on social media.

Keep ReadingShow less
Sabrina Carpenter Is Viscously Clever and Done With Love Triangles on ‘Short N’ Sweet’: 5 Takeaways

Sabrina Carpenter Is Viscously Clever and Done With Love Triangles on ‘Short N’ Sweet’: 5 Takeaways

After Sabrina Carpenter’s summer takeover with “Espresso” and “Please Please Please,” the anticipation for Short n’ Sweet was at an all-time high. On her sixth album, the pop singer keeps the surprises coming as she delivers a masterclass in clever songwriting and hops between R&B and folk-pop with ease. Carpenter writes about the frustration of modern-day romance, all the while cementing herself as a pop classic. Here’s everything we gathered from the new project.

Please Please Please Don’t Underestimate Her Humor

Carpenter gave us a glimpse of her humor on singles “Espresso” and “Please Please Please” — she’s working late because she’s a singer; ceiling fans are a pretty great invention! But no one could have guessed how downright hilarious she is on Short n’ Sweet, delivering sugary quips like “The Lord forgot my gay awakenin’” (“Slim Pickins”) and “How’s the weather in your mother’s basement?” (“Needless to Say”). She’s also adorably nerdy, fretting about grammar (“This boy doesn’t even know/The difference between ‘there,’ ‘their’ and ‘they are!’”) and getting Shakespearian (“Where art thou? Why not uponeth me?”). On “Juno,” she even takes a subject as serious as pregnancy and twists it into a charming pop culture reference for the ages: “If you love me right, then who knows?/I might let you make me Juno.” It’s official: Do not underestimate Ms. Carpenter’s pen. — A.M.

Keep ReadingShow less
RFK Jr. Suspends Campaign, Endorses Trump

RFK Jr. Suspends Campaign, Endorses Trump

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has suspended his 2024 presidential campaign, and according to a court filing in Pennsylvania on Friday will throw his weight behind former President Donald Trump.

Multiple news outlets reported on Wednesday that independent presidential candidate Robert Kennedy Jr. was planning to drop out of the race and endorse Trump. He clarified at an event in Arizona on Friday that he is not terminating his campaign, only suspending it, and that his name will remain on the ballot in non-battleground states. He said that if enough people still vote for him and Trump and Kamala Harris tie in the Electoral College, he could still wind up in the White House.

Keep ReadingShow less
The Chicks’ ‘Not Ready to Make Nice’ Has Somehow Become a MAGA Anthem on TikTok

The Chicks’ ‘Not Ready to Make Nice’ Has Somehow Become a MAGA Anthem on TikTok

One little funny/bizarre/horrifying thing about the internet is the way it offers up everything and, in doing so, makes it possible to strip anything of its history. But to paraphrase Kamala Harris, you didn’t just fall out of the coconut tree. “You exist in the context of all in which you live and what came before you” — wise words worth heeding, especially for all the Trump voters and conservatives making TikToks with the Chicks’ “Not Ready to Make Nice.”

Over the past month or so, “Not Ready to Make Nice” has become an unexpected MAGA anthem of sorts, meant to express a certain rage at liberals supposedly telling conservatives what to do all the time (the past few Supreme Court terms notwithstanding, apparently). Young women especially have taken the song as a way to push back against the possibility of Harris becoming the first female president. 

Keep ReadingShow less
Sabrina Carpenter, Myke Towers, Cash Cobain, and All the Songs You Need to Know This Week

Sabrina Carpenter, Myke Towers, Cash Cobain, and All the Songs You Need to Know This Week

Welcome to our weekly rundown of the best new music — featuring big new singles, key tracks from our favorite albums, and more. This week, Sabrina Carpenter delivers her long-awaited debut Short ‘n Sweet, Myke Towers switches lanes with the help of Peso Pluma, and Cash Cobain moves drill music forward with a crossover hit. Plus, new music from Lainey Wilson, Blink182, and Coldplay.

Sabrina Carpenter, ‘Taste” (YouTube)

Keep ReadingShow less