Located southwest of Cleveland, Ohio, my alma mater, Oberlin College and Conservatory of Music, enrolls less than 3,000 students annually. Its small size makes all the more remarkable the number of musicians who’ve attended. In just a few short years in the mid-to-late ’90s, indie darling Jason Molina (who led the bands Song: Ohia and Magnolia Electronic Company); Rhiannon Giddens, who just won the Pulitzer Prize in music for her contemporary opera, Omar; and singer-songwriter Josh Ritter, who recently played the Lincoln Theatre with his Royal City Band, all graduated. (Other musicians who went to Oberlin include Marc Cohn, Liz Phair, and Lucy Wainwright-Roche, to name just a few.)
A native of Moscow, Idaho, Ritter caught the music bug listening to his parents’ copy of Bob Dylan’s Nashville Skyline, buying a guitar at K-Mart and starting to play. It was at Oberlin, though, that he dedicated himself to music as a career. He’d planned to study neuroscience (both of his parents were neuroscientists), but he he changed his major to one of his own design in folklore. Before graduating in 1999, he recorded his self-titled in a campus studio.