Sunlight beams through a pine forest, backlighting flitting bugs, casting long shadows and warming the dirt. Through this yellow filter of nostalgia, bluegrass outfit Chatham County Line nurtures themes of longing. It's not the high, lonesome sound of Roscoe Holcomb, though. Round and sincere, songs find their urgency with heart instead of speed. Vocal harmonies have a melancholic, '70s folk-rock vibe. One month after releasing its best album to date, Wildwood, the quartet gathers around one microphone in one of its state's most gorgeous rooms. Jill Andrews, formerly of the everybodyfields, opens with country-tinged, acoustic meditations that slowly build and release.—Andrew Ritchey