Ritt Deitz - CD Release Party!

Art in the cafe...

Laurel Statz


"The Spectator"


December 2025



Laurel Statz is a painter and Madison area native. Her work, while figurative, is influenced by abstraction and minimalism. The paintings often have a quick and instinctual nature, capturing just what’s needed. While she often times herself to eliminate extra details and over-precision, she has ventured into more detailed works as well. Laurel does not attach narrative to her pieces. Rather, she thinks of them like a journaling process for her scatter-brained psyche. The figures in the pieces are meant to be processing tools for the artist and the viewer. She hopes that seeing these figures helps the...
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Saturday, September 26, 2015
8:00 pm

Come celebrate the release of "Small Blue Green Letters."

Small Blue Green Letters, Ritt's latest recording and his fifth on the Uvulittle label, marks Deitz's return to stringed instruments and voices and recalls his first full-length release, Hillbilly (Bentback 1999, anthologized on the 2006 Uvulittle release Collected 1999-2000), exchanging Steve Burke's mandolin for Deitz's banjo and with the harmonies of backing vocalist Lindsey Hinkel Craig Totten's dobro work.

The small-town feel one often hears in Deitz�s songs shines through. A native of Florence, Kentucky, Deitz lives in a tightly-knit block on the Near East Side of Madison, Wisconsin, which a musician neighbor (who grew up a block from where Deitz lived as a child) has called �Mayberry.� You can hear both of these on the opening track, �Here Comes the Band.� �A float goes by, the FFA / has filled that thing all up with hay / it must have taken them the whole darn day / but I ain�t sure I care / Where�s the band?�

The songs hang together like communities do in small towns, neighborhoods, even workplaces. Deitz writes like a man aware of the forces of Big Data, of consumerism, of individualism, of the have-a-nice-day shallowness that seems to define, ever quickly, what it means to be happy in America. �I know we have these things to contend with,� says Deitz (whose songs the Onion once called �well-wrought�), �but we do have these thoughts, these lives, and each other.