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Conlee also is in the dark, experimental bluegrass band Black Prairie with Decemberists bandmates Nate Query and Chris Funk, and that group expects to produce new material while Meloy works on his projects. Long waits for new songs are nothing new to fans of The Decemberists. It took three years between the band's complicated breakthrough, "The Crane Wife," and the 2009 release of "Hazards of Love." It took another two years for "The King is Dead" to come out. Fans waited patiently and were rewarded with something a little different. "Going into this it felt right to sit down and write some simple, pretty songs, but as it turns out the simple, pretty songs in this day and age are what people are into," Meloy said. And he thinks they'll be waiting for more after ... time away? "I just assume that they'll still be there in three years," Meloy said. "And also we're not a band that's afraid to take risks, and if this seems risky it doesn't really bother me. I think we've taken bigger risks in the past. I'm just following my whim and I think that's what The Decemberists have been all along, and I think that's why we have our audience." ___ Online:
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