Imagine it’s early 2016 and you’re Chuck Ragan. You’ve just put out your latest studio record, a unique release called The Flame In The Flood. It not only serves as the soundtrack to the 2017 video game of the same name, but it’s also your fifth solo record in less than ten years, and you got to make it with some of your buds like Jon Gaunt and Joe Ginsberg and Todd Beene in the shed/studio on your property in Northern California. You’ve also got a wife and a one-year-old at home, and your main musical squeeze, Hot Water Music, is getting busy on what will – by my math – turn into their eighth studio record, Light It Up (and pulling together what will turn into the Keep It Together compilation double album). Because of the thematic nature of The Fl...