


He has also done a lot of composing for a variety of media projects, from his home studio on Vashon Island, in the Puget Sound a short ferry ride from Seattle. Since then he has released four albums under his own name, on his own label. He was part of a short-lived “supergroup” called the Thorns, with Matthew Sweet and Shawn Mullins, which released an album in 2003. Pete Droge had a moment or two back in the ’90s, with a major label record deal and some mainstream radio play Allmusic calls him “one of the most overlooked of the modern-day Americana/rock/folk music movement.” But for whatever reason, probably having nothing to do with his talents and efforts, he faded off the scene as the new century turned. The balance achieved between gentleness and strength, both musically and lyrically, is at the heart of the song’s loveliness and power.

Launched off a concise, ear-catching guitar riff, the song is gracefully crafted, with its crisp, intimate guitar sound and well-placed vocal harmonies.

in truth the song was started in November 2017 and had nothing to do with the pandemic (or, of course, our even more recent crisis). Even as it sounds acutely relevant to our current moment. “Skeleton Crew” is a sad, sturdy song about resilience. Not because I don’t like that kind of thing, but, truth be told, because I just don’t hear a lot that crosses the line from “nice” to “vital.” Because look: most acoustic-guitar-and-voice songs are by definition “nice.” But me, I want and need more from a song than niceness, especially now, and I think we get a lot more than that with this one, from Pete Droge, performing here with his wife and collaborator, the artist and musician Elaine Summers. While singer/songwriters are relatively common here on Fingertips, I don’t end up featuring a lot of “man with a guitar” or “woman with a guitar” tunes. “Skeleton Crew” – Pete Droge (featuring Elaine Summers)
