| 1. Archipelago |
| 2. Harbor Lights |
| 3. Samba Di Gamba |
| 4. Habor Lights Recalling |
| 5. Tango Blue |
| 6. Autumn Leaves |
| 7. Tango Green |
| 8. Tantric Bartok |
| 9. Tango Red |
| 10. Peppermint Twist |
| 11. Tango Yellow |
| 12. Stairway to Honey - A Taste of Heaven |
| 13. Chamanuet |
| 14. Piazzolla/Getz |
| 15. Walk on the Wild Side |
| 16. Tango Beige |
| 17. Windmills of Your Mind |
Archipelago,Archipelago,Ccn'c,Bop,Int'l & World Music,Jazz,Jazz Music,Pop
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Toru Takemitsu: Quotation of Dream (20/21 series) - London Sinfonietta / Oliver Knussen
Oliver Knussen , Paul Crossley , Peter Serkin , London Sinfonietta , Sebastian Bell , Michael Collins , Andrew Crowley , Gareth Hulse , Joan Atherton , Rebecca Hirsch , and Timothy Lines Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000I0L6 Release Date: 1999-02-09 |
Tracks:
- Quotation Of Dream: Day Signal
- Quotation Of Dream
- Quotation Of Dream: How Slow The Wind
- Quotation Of Dream: Twill By Twilight
- Quotation Of Dream: Archipelago S.
- Quotation Of Dream: Dream-Window
- Quotation Of Dream: Night Signal
Amazon.com
Sometimes, even while you are listening, it can be very difficult to understand how Takemitsu created such exquisitely beautiful music using so much dissonance. As the brief Day Signal opens the disc, for example, you're more likely to think of the glory of sunrise than of the discords. And Quotation of Dream, which quotes freely from Debussy's La Mer, is nearly as beautiful as its source. Rather than waste time figuring out how Takemitsu's spacing of notes and imaginative scoring influences our perceptions, it's much more rewarding just to relax and let the music wash over you. Knussen, who leads amazing performances here, has programmed the disc for a continuous listening experience, although the novice should probably listen only to a couple of pieces at one sitting. --Leslie GerberCustomer Reviews:
More of the bland stagnance of Takemitsu's later symphonic work.......2007-06-03
"Quotation of Dream" is easily one of Takemitsu's worst compositions and an absolute waste of time: a meandering exercise that tediously quotes Debussy's "La Mer" and recycles portions of Takemitsu's own "Dream/Window." Technically, this piece is as expertly constructed as all of Takemitsu's work, but that doesn't make it any less counterfeit of its' source material, or any less embarrassing for it. Why should I listen to this tiresome pablum when the compositions it borrows from are readily available?
"How Slow the Wind," "Twill by Twilight" and "Archipelago S." are typical examples of Takemitsu's late orchestral works: they assume a lovely sound and were composed with ingenious design, but that doesn't make them even remotely interesting or memorable.
There are a few works on this disc that are worth hearing. The aforementioned "Dream/Window" is a brilliant, beautiful twelve-tone composition that's infused with the drifting, dreamlike sonority common of his works - an aesthetic which is almost anathema to the rigorous character of most serialist compositions.
Also notable are "Day Signal" and "Night Signal," a pair of dissonant, evocative fanfares that bookend the album's content. These brass-voiced compositions seem almost facile to the ear at first listen, but repeated plays distinguish the cleverness of these little pieces as antiphonal movements.
None of the negative comments of this review should obscure the fact that Takemitsu was a truly gifted and intuitive composer. But it's inexplicable that so much of his best (and in many cases, most accessible) works of film, piano, chamber and electronic/tape music remain either out of print (often since being released on LP) or entirely unavailable for domestic consumption of his North American and European listeners when the least of his orchestral oeuvre is readily on hand.
There's nothing that I can say against these performances by Knussen conducting the LS. They're excellent, informed executions of mostly mediocre compositions. However, I'd much rather hear Knussen performing the best of his own small (but distinguished) oeuvre!
The production is decent: as transparent and pristine as most of the best digital recordings. These compositions don't demand any venture into extreme registers, but the soft passages are capably, audibly reproduced without any loss of their inherent subtlety.
Really enjoying this one.......2006-04-29
Composition intrigues me perhaps more than any other aspect of music, and this fellow was clearly inspired. I would liken his music to that of Alan Hovhaness, but without some of the more brash moments of that composer. I can also hear the influence of Debussy, but Takemitsu takes the listener in many enjoyable directions throughout this CD.
The playing and recording are also top-notch.
A fine collection of late works and an ideal introduction.......2004-12-11
The disc is framed by two antiphonal fanfares written in 1987, "Day Signal" and "Night Signal", together called "Signals from Heaven". They are closely related, both using dissonance to suggest the changing of the skies, but with one inverted from the other to suggest an opposite tone.
A quip of Takemitsu was "I am self-taught, but I consider Debussy my teacher." The first major work here, "Quotation of Dream - Say sea, take me!" (1991), is a tribute to Debussy using quotations from his "La Mer" as if the composer was trying to recreate the piece he had just woken up from dreaming. The title also refers to its use of some material from "Dream/Window", an earlier composition present on this disc. "Quotation of Dream" is a lovely tribute to the composer's greatest inspiration, but the majority of the work comes only from Takemitsu. His use of a zig-zag of harmony, of orchestral colour that comes forth and recedes like waves is nothing you have ever heard before in orchestral music.
"How Slow the Wind" (1991), inspired by a poem by Emily Dickinson, is rather more brooding. It's most interesting moments occur toward the end, when cascading woodwind sounds and the faintly mechanical notes of two Swiss cowbells transform the work into something different. This is one of Takemitsu's most impressive works,
"Twill by Twillight (in memory of Morton Feldman)" (1988) is an experiment with a musical "tapestry", where a theme "weaves" through the piece. The piece is pretty music, but does little to make itself memorable and for me remains the low point of this collection.
The title of "Archipelago S." for twenty-one players (1993) refers to the landscapes of Seattle, Stockholm, and the islands of the Sato Inland Sea . The piece has an innovative stage layout, with the players grouped into five "islands": a five-person brass group, two mixed seven-piece groups, a clarinet sitting to the right, and a clarinet sitting to the left. The effect is indeed somewhat nautical and this recording exploits the space well.
"Dream/Window" (1985) is probably the most important composition on this disc. Every note of this piece is of the greatest delicacy, and the work as a whole is so crystalline and fragile that one feels one will break it just by listening to it. Though Takemitsu's later works are impressive, they have never seemed to me to acheive the perfection of "Dream/Window". What is surprising is that this work is true twelve-tone music, yet with Takemitsu's skill it does not sound dull or scientific.
If you ever think that modern-classical music is written only by dispassionate ivory-tower robots like Pierre Boulez, the works of Takemitsu will show you that contemporary techniques can, under the right hands, touch the emotions as much as the intellect. While it takes some time to get used to (nearly six months for me), this is probably the single best introduction to the music of Toru Takemitsu. And one should certainly listen to this before getting the other DG "20/21" discs, which are rather more specialised (with, for example, one having traditional Japanese pieces and the other flute and guitar works).
Another world.......2003-10-18
Quotation of Dream includes seven pieces from the last decade of Takemitsu's life (he died in 1996), including the premiere recording of the title piece. The disc begins and ends with fanfares that, while perhaps effective as aural bookends, are to my ears undistinguished. The music that lies in between, however, is extraordinarily compelling.
Takemitsu's style in these works is generally meditative, with frequent slow, quiet passages, strings predominating. But there are dramatic incidents and color as well: flaring brass, rising like a mountainous island from a tropical sea; raindrops of chimes; drawn-out woodwind lines weaving sinuously through swirls of massed violins. The music sometimes pivots around silent pauses, like the empty spaces in Zen painting. In Quotation of Dream, twin pianos (played by Paul Crossley and Peter Serkin, respectively) dominate the foreground with gentle cascades of notes while orchestral clouds form in the background.
The musical language is often reminiscent of Debussy and Ravel; in mood (though not in technique) it can resemble the slowest and most mysterious moments in music of the second Viennese school (Schoenberg, Berg, Webern et al.). The subtlety and elusiveness probably owe something to the composer's Japanese heritage. But this is no cut-and-paste job; the overall impression is startlingly original.
I have not read the liner notes, and have no idea of what Takemitsu is trying to "say," or what these scores "mean." I would also suggest that those considerations are pretty irrelevant: the important thing is the sound world that he has created, which is both other-worldly and bracing.
Oliver Knussen, a contemporary British composer and a friend of Takemitsu, conducted the London Sinfonietta in these recordings. It is apparent that that he helped the players, who sound expert, get "inside" the music.
Anyone who already knows and appreciates Takemitsu's sensibility need not hesitate to acquire this disc. It can also be recommended for all but the most determinedly "mostly Mozart" classical devotees.
The presentation is not ideal. Deutsche Grammophon has never excelled at digital recordings, and the sound of this disc, while detailed and transparent, is a bit bright and clinical. The disc is contained in one of those cardboard containers that some labels are now trying to get you to accept in lieu of the standard jewel case because it's cheaper to produce (but not cheaper for you to buy). The atmospheric sepia-toned photo on the cover has a fat round sticker on it that shouts "World Premiere Recording"; if you try to peel off the sticker, it leaves ineradicable shreds. The plastic tray with the central claw ring is glued to the cardboard. Take care not to break the plastic, because there is no way you can replace it.
Takemitsu draws you into his dream world.......2002-04-07
Recommended without reservation.
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George Antheil: Symphonies 1 & 6
Manufacturer: Cpo Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004SYHF Release Date: 2000-05-16 |
Tracks:
- Symphony No. 1 - Zingareska: Innocente
- Symphony No. 1 - Zingareska: Vivo, all zingaresco, poi 'ragtime'
- Symphony No. 1 - Zingareska: Doloroso Elevato
- Symphony No. 1 - Zingareska: Ragtime
- Symphony No. 6 - After Delacroix: Allegro molto marcato
- Symphony No. 6 - After Delacroix: Larghetto
- Symphony No. 6 - After Delacroix: Allegro
- Archipelago: Rhumba
Customer Reviews:
Early and late Antheil - a significant addition to the ongoing rediscovery of this major American composer.......2007-04-19
Indeed, Bloch and "Schelomo" are very much the driving influence in the first movement, integral with the somber, brooding cello melody (0:12 and again 0:49). The idiom is a late-Romanticism verging on impressionism, with sensuous and sinuous melodies and lush orchestration; composers like Loeffler, D'Indy, Ibert ("Ports of Call"), Suk ("Azraël") also come to mind. The moods alternate between the starkly menacing and the flute-driven pastoral (3:06 - a good candidate for the honeysuckle odor, and for the Delaware River I would elect the passage starting at 2:32). One of Antheil's favorite compositional devices (and not only in the first movement) is to establish a certain mood, merry or pastoral, only to suddenly interrupt it with brutal onslaughts of sinister chords played on low brass (try 0:33, 3:33 and again 6:05 in the 1st movement, 1:25 in the 2nd, 1:51 and 5:17 in the 3rd) - a harbinger of the Antheil soon to come, adept of the "Collage technique" and construction by block juxtaposition.
It is in the 2nd movement "Scherzo" and the Finale "Ragtime" that Antheil's Collage technique and jarring interruptions of one section by another are most in evidence. Of the "Scherzo", Antheil wrote that he composed it "on a number of July nights, with the memory of skyrockets in the sky above and patriot airs sounding dimly over the river waters". One does hear that (along with some whiffs of Debussy's Iberia or Ravel's Rhapsodie Espagnole, and more Bloch - try the viola melody at 2:03), but Antheil's 4th of July sounds very much like Stravinsky's Petrushka's fair, especially at 3:23 (Antheil played by heart the 3 movements for piano in those years), at one point leading directly into "Le Sacre" (5:47). The finale recapitulates and brings to extremes of pounding themes from the earlier movements, but also develops on a new theme of somewhat "Chinese" contour, which also forms the basic motive of the First Piano Concerto (see my review of Piano Concertos of the Twenties) - not surprising, as both pieces were composed at the same time. The movement has an abrupt and explosive ending, as "Le Sacre" (and the Piano Concerto).
Again both the Stravinsky influence and this block construction technique announce the Antheil soon-to-come, who would so often make direct quotations of the Russian composer (his compositional God in those years), but also strike his own personal and inimitable mark by bringing Stravinsky's compositional traits to outlandish extremes of barbaric pounding and block-construction-without-development (see my reviews of the Piano Concerto and of George Antheil: Violin Sonatas 1, 2 & 4). Indeed, Antheil's mischievously biting and sometimes hammering tunes in these two movements point to the savage piano music he will start composing immediately thereafter - and I'll bet that the passage at 4:20 is where the Berlin Philharmonic clarinetist, finding his slightly "jazzy" part "unspeakably funny", burst into laughter, to the young composer's initial dismay. The same kind of pointer to the "mechanistic" Antheil can also be found in 3rd movement's celesta 4-note ostinato that underpins the wistful and sensuous melody of Blochian contour first played by cor anglais (or is it a sweet-sounding oboe?); these wistful melodies ("old sad tunes with heart-breaking memories" Antheil said of them) over various ostinatos circulate throughout the movement, interrupted by sinister and brassy onslaughts.
With all its references and influences the First is not an entirely mature work (how could it?) but it is so full of surprises as to make for a highly rewarding listening.
The Sixth "after Delacroix" and his famous painting "Liberty Leading the People" is Antheil's own "1905" Symphony (Shostakovich's 11th, a tribute to the first attempt at a revolution in Russia). Its three movements depict the Revolutionary Battle, the Mourning, the Victory. The simple and sparse textures of the middle movement (flute and oboe, soon with celesta punctuations, hovering over slow waltz chords on the strings) recall similar movements by Shostakovich. The outer movements are dramatic, urgent, mischievous, even angry - but also pretty bombastic. Even more than Shostakovich, it is here Myaskovsky that comes to mind. There his a passage in his bio in which Antheil pretends to be astounded that composers set so much store on finding a personal "style", rather than expressing "the form". So perhaps the Sixth is a fine realization of Antheil's idea of form, but it is rather impersonal and could not in itself lay any claim on a place in posterity, if it wasn't as an example of the "later" style of the composer whose "style" and peculiar and outlandish sense of form in the 1920s were so inimitably unique.
Two Must Hear Symphonies.......2000-11-21
Anthiel set out to become the bad boy of music, and he succeeded. However, it is the musician and not the bad bod that comes out in these two symphonies. Since this is Anthiel's centenary (July 8) we should become acquainted with his music for it is rich and rewarding, and as entertaining as his life is to read.
Bad Boy just had Bad Rep.......2000-08-23
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McKay Brothers
McKay Brothers Manufacturer: Texas Archipelago ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0001F7USO Release Date: 2004-03-16 |
Tracks:
- When I Reached The Colorado
- Friday Night
- Mi San Antonio
- Harrisburg
- Great Big Oldsmobile
- The South Coast Of Texas
- Las Olas
- Hey Old Man
- Dirty Old Town
- Put Your Money Where Your Mouth Is
- A Pretty Baby Mare
Customer Reviews:
McKay Brothers - Truly Bandera Style.......2006-09-16
A very refreshing twist to country music!
Very talented!
Viva McKays!.......2004-11-20
sound, great lyrics. A second album, please! (actually the joint opinion of Tom and Lynda)
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Roger Reynolds: The Paris Pieces
Manufacturer: Neuma ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000005VXE Release Date: 1996-08-01 |
Tracks:
- Odyssey: I. Others
- Odyssey: They Come/Different And The Same...
- Odyssey: II. Self
- Odyssey: What Would I Do Without This World...
- Odyssey: III. Inquiry
- Odyssey: If I Said, There's A Way Out There,...
- Odyssey: Set Listening Level (Softest Moment Here)
- Odyssey: IV. Credo
- Odyssey: My Way Is In The Sand...
Tracks:
- Summer Island
- Archipelago
- Autumn Island
- Fantasy For Pianist
Customer Reviews:
Music in the Right Era of Manipulated Sound.......2006-05-11
The problem with Reynolds' works, finely composed though they be, is that they often include texts that really must be comfortably well known to the listener in order to hear the music. And he is in need of editing his longer works to remain within the concentration pattern of even the most sophisticated classical music lover. Point of reference is the first CD of this 2 CD set, an entire CD is devoted to 'Odyssey, an opera in the mind, for soloists, ensemble & computer processed sound' in which the complex texts are both sung and spoken in real time as well as with prerecorded excerpts. The work is performed by the always superb InterContemporain Ensemble with soloists Marie Kobayashi and Philip Larson conducted by David Robertson.
At a recent LA Philharmonic concert Esa-Pekka Salonen conducted the World Premiere of 'Illusion', a work commissioned by the orchestra and one meant to explore all of the sound possibilities of this acoustic wonder of a Hall. The piece begins with sounds on speakers in the foyer and steps of the hall and when the audience is seated prerecorded tapes of speakers bounce around the hall giving the text about Agamemnon, Iphigenia and Cassandra and the Greek history of Troy. Then the small ensemble on stage included Agamemnon with three voices (speaker, baritone and cellist!), along with female speaker and clarinet as Iphigenia, and soprano and piccolo as Cassandra! It is an hour-long quasi-opera and mixes acoustical manipulations of spoken word and computer sounds with the whole piece. Complex, mind-boggling, and in desperate need of editing!
The remaining pieces on this recording fit comfortably onto the second CD and are brief and well conceived: 'Summer Island, for oboe & computer generated sound', 'Archipelago, for 32 instruments & computer generated sound', 'Autumn Island for marimba', and 'Fantasy for pianist', each with David Robertson conducting the soloists and the InterContemporain Ensemble.
Stating that Roger Reynolds' music requires work on the part of the audience is in no way a negative statement. Too often we enter a concert or play a recording to be entertained. Reynolds demands we be participants and would that that were the case for all classical music listening, there would be no threat of the extinction of CDs! Food for the soul and the ear is food for the mind. Grady Harp, May 06
the leading edge, too far out ahead for most to see.......2002-01-21
"Odyssey, an opera in the mind" (1989-93) is a difficult work, to say the least. I will be listening to it alongside Nono's "Prometeo" for years, I'm sure, plumbing its depths. Featuring text from a poem by Samuel Beckett, Reynolds, believe it or not, uses equations from chaos theory to organize the computer-manupulated vocals, using the lyrical pitch structures of the voices as the basis for sound reorganization. Some pieces, such as Reynolds' string quartets ("Coconino," recorded by the Arditti Quartet), I find engaging and compelling despite my patent failure to completely understand the compositions' structures. With "Odyssey" I am not as compelled, and hence the 4 stars instead of 5. I remain convinced that Roger Reynolds is one of our most under-recognized contemporary composers. I only wish that all those who think Glass or Gorecki is the epitome of the current composer could hear Reynolds' work!
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Cape Verde: An Archipelago of Music
Various Artists Manufacturer: Ocora ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00003Z9UK Release Date: 2000-01-11 |
Tracks:
- Tabanka de Varzea - Nha Sabadu
- Ma N'Ka Ta Ba Rub Ki TAgu Tx
- Rapazinho Bo Tentadu - Nacia Gomi
- Minina Si Bu Dan N'Ta Cor - Tchota Suari
- Lena - Ano Nobo
- Toque de PilCom Mihlo
- Mino
- Pripe de Ximento
- Mino de Mama - Mino de Mama
- O Galo Ki Tem Se Raz
- Bombena
- Pretu Cor Di N Coladeras da freguesia Nossa Senhora de monte
- N'Kru Fora Di Marka
- Lindinha - Xote
- Cascabullho Tem Baleia - Loussik Totchian
Tracks:
- Nhguel Pulnor - Nha Sabina
- Nha Deosa - Renascimento
- Nhnt' Andr - Nha Sabina
- Coli - Corda do Sol
- Coli - Frederik da Luz
- Coli - Porto Grande
- Dia 15 Grog Tab
- Chuva de 83 - Porto Grande
- Ana Mata Tchuk
- Boas Festas - Grupo de Ribeira Prata
- Contradan
- Maria Qzui Bu Tem
- Compadre Jos Mateus Band
- Solo de Viol- Isidro Gomes Lima
- Rabilona - Os Rabilenses
- Maria Barba - Djalunga
Amazon.com
Cape Verde has attained a fame far beyond what its small geographic stature would seem to justify, in great measure due to the work of morna diva Cesaria Evora. This small group of islands was uninhabited until Portugal settled it with its unwanted poor, its opportunistic pirates, clever business people, and slaves brought from the nearby African coast. Thus the archipelago has a unique, almost artificial culture. It's a true example of how people create culture as much as they are created by it.This two-CD set is broken into two regional collections. Sotavento ("leeward") covers the islands of Fogo, Santiago, Maio, and Brava, where the majority of blacks still live. It features social satire called tabanka, women's social music (batuque), the accordion-driven funana, and work and play songs. Barlavento ("windward") shows the more diverse European elements (not exclusively Portuguese) that mixed with the African to create the roots of the most famous of Cape Verde's musical traditions, the morna of Boa Vista island. Also featured are wedding and festival music, and more formal styles that work with European instruments such as the violin.
Much of this music has been covered in individual discs on the Ocora label, but this collection is one of the best overviews of the region available, with good notes, marvelous pictures, and well-recorded, outstanding performances. --Louis Gibson
Customer Reviews:
only the magic of the music takes u faster to the dreamland.......2001-07-10
All Traditional!! Brings you closer to Cabo Verde.......2000-10-26
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New Band: Dance of the Seven Veils
Manufacturer: Music & Arts Program ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00004RCZK Release Date: 2000-05-23 |
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Archipelago
ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00000IZ2E Release Date: 1997-06-21 |
Tracks:
- On a Twilight Wind
- Point of Departure
- Star Over Cypress
- Passage at Dawn
- The Sea Cliffs
- North Shore
- River's Return
- By Moonlight
- Flight of the Eagle
- Flight of the Raven
- Envoi
Album Description
Solo piano Romantic, thoughtful, intimate, tranquilCustomer Reviews:
Soothing.......2005-02-24
There is a particular ambiance that is soothing about it. When I close my eyes while listening to it, it's like being taken to a quiet place, a dimely lit forrest or garden, where I can safely fall asleep.
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Takemitsu: How Slow the Wind
Manufacturer: Bis ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00005ALI5 Release Date: 2001-03-27 |
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Angel Archipelago
Johan Hedin Manufacturer: Elektra / Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00000AEEG Release Date: 1998-09-29 |
Tracks:
- Kusten
- Skar
- Falt
- Brant Land
- Staden
- Oppet Hav
- Angel Archipelago
- Stenen
- Frid
- Vita Marrn
- Tu
Amazon.com
Angel Archipelago would be highly recommended just for its cast. Hedin, the nyckelharpa (keyed fiddle) innovator, is joined by Scandinavian music luminaries like multi-instrumentalist Ale Möller, accordionist Maria Kalaniemi, electronics man Frode Fjellheim, and horn player Jonas Knutsson. Together they have created a neo-classical album of grace and quiet energy, befitting the glassine nature of Hedin's fiddle. The compositions are mostly gentle, with echoes of 18th-century classical and ecclesiastical music, but they do have occasional bursts of remarkable energy, utilizing baroque lines and heavy percussion to push the music outside the quietude of the bulk of the record. There will be a tendency to place this music into the new age realm, and some of Hedin's other recorded output certainly belongs there, but Angel Archipelago succeeds because there is no category for it. --Louis GibsonCustomer Reviews:
powerfully spellbinding ; a pleasure for the listening soul.......1999-05-26
powerfully spellbinding ; a pleasure for the listening soul.......1999-05-26
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Archipelago
Archipelago Manufacturer: Ccn'c ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00005BI7Z Release Date: 2001-04-24 |
Tracks:
- Archipelago
- Harbor Lights
- Samba Di Gamba
- Habor Lights Recalling
- Tango Blue
- Autumn Leaves
- Tango Green
- Tantric Bartok
- Tango Red
- Peppermint Twist
- Tango Yellow
- Stairway to Honey - A Taste of Heaven
- Chamanuet
- Piazzolla/Getz
- Walk on the Wild Side
- Tango Beige
- Windmills of Your Mind
Customer Reviews:
A joy to listen to.......2002-07-19
classically motivated funk.......2001-06-09
glossy, sleek, rich.......2001-06-01
This album is sumptuous without being burdensome. It is clever without irritation. Kuuskmann, known for his fine work in Absolute Ensemble, is particularly sharp. His bassoon is a weapon against the common. With Rozenblatt and Shimmel he has created that which is all too rare: music that is charged by its creators; its infectious fun threatens to leave an indelible mark on contemporary music.
Brilliant!.......2001-05-03
International Music: