The debut album by former classical guitar professor Fred Thrane (pronounced Trana) belies any perceived notion of stuffiness that might be associated with academe and is instead a sonically rich, cosmic affair.
Backed by Dennis Murphy’s subtle but dynamic bass lines and Jim Norris’s exotic percussion, Thrane unleashes a spectrum of ethereal sounds from his nylon- and steel-string guitars, the signal output of which is processed heavily with lots of chorus, reverb, echo, and delay. The result is a sound that is very much in keeping with the interstellar artwork on the simple but elegant CD digipak. In fact, Thrane’s tones are so luminescent and otherworldly that the music could truly be called space jazz.
Thrane does showcase his more Earthbound classical and flamenco flourishes on the traditional-style tracks “Fandango in Four” and “Farruca,” which also have a bit of a Middle Eastern flavor to them. However, it’s the overall spacey sound of the rest of the album, especially the New Age reverie of “Dawndancer” and the jazz fusion exploration of “Moraga Raga,” that really sets Thrane’s compositions and performances apart from the pack.
Thrane’s masterful command of his instrument and his bold audacity in defying the conventional expectations of traditional nylon-string guitar make this a musical odyssey worth embarking upon.
--Raj Manoharan
Musings on Movies, Music, and Television (dedicated to Steven H. Scheuer and John N. Goudas, and especially and with love to Mom, Dad, and Sammy)
Sunday, June 26, 2011
Friday, June 10, 2011
DVD – United Kingdom of Ipanema, by Roberto Menescal, Andy Summers, and Cris Delanno
In the fall of 2008, shortly after the conclusion of the Police reunion world tour, guitarist Andy Summers was invited by Brazilian bossa nova guitar legend Roberto Menescal to join Menescal and Brazilian vocalist Cris Delanno for a concert performance of bossa nova classics and reinterpretations of Police hits.
The result is this beautifully produced DVD, which features the excellently shot concert as well as interstitial segments and a documentary in which Summers and Menescal reveal their shared passion for Brazilian music and the guitar amid the sights and sounds of Rio de Janeiro.
The program is of such high quality that it would be a perfect fit for PBS, but it seems to be available in Brazil only. Dusty Groove America occasionally stocks the all-region DVD.
Summers was the guitarist for the mega-popular rock band The Police, who were active in the late 1970s and early 1980s and reunited for a 30th anniversary tour in 2007 and 2008. Being a good decade older than his bandmates Sting and Stewart Copeland, Summers began his professional recording career in the early 1960s, playing for Zoot Money’s Big Roll Band (which later became the psychedelic but short-lived Dantalian’s Chariot), Eric Burdon’s New Animals, and Soft Machine. After formally studying guitar at Northridge University in California from the late 1960s to the early 1970s, Summers returned to England and plied his trade as a session guitarist for Joan Armatrading, Neil Sedaka, Kevin Coyne, and Deep Purple’s Jon Lord before achieving monumental success and international stardom with The Police.
After the dissolution of The Police in the early 1980s, Summers scored some Hollywood films (Down and Out in Beverly Hills, Weekend at Bernie’s) and recorded one rock vocal album before establishing himself as an acclaimed and accomplished contemporary instrumental guitarist across a variety of styles, including jazz, fusion, New Age, and world music.
One of Summers' upcoming projects is Spirit Garden, a collection of guitar duets featuring Summers and classical guitarist Andrew York. In addition to acoustic and electric guitars, Summers and York also play other instruments. The duo’s collaboration began on the title track of York’s latest album, Centerpeace, which is available now. More information on Centerpeace and Spirit Garden can be found at www.andrewyork.net.
For a good overview of Summers’ solo work, I highly recommend the following albums: Mysterious Barricades, A Windham Hill Retrospective, Synaesthesia, and The X Tracks. My personal favorite Summers albums are Mysterious Barricades, The Golden Wire, Charming Snakes, World Gone Strange, Synaesthesia, Earth and Sky, and First You Build a Cloud.
--Raj Manoharan
DVD – Andy Summers: Guitar
The 1998 two-volume Hot Licks guitar instruction VHS video starring the Police guitarist is finally on DVD, and it’s worth getting if you’re an Andy Summers fan and/or an aspiring or amateur guitar player.
The two-hour-and-thirty-four-minute program features Summers demonstrating his guitar technique from his years with The Police, as well as from his solo career, interspersed with live studio performances with his band at the time. The result is a good overview of rock and jazz guitar, delivered with Summers’ whacked-out sense of humor, plus a great audio-visual document of Summers displaying his masterful chops as an instructor and a composer-performer.
Summers was the guitarist for the mega-popular rock band The Police, who were active in the late 1970s and early 1980s and reunited for a 30th anniversary tour in 2007 and 2008. Being a good decade older than his bandmates Sting and Stewart Copeland, Summers began his professional recording career in the early 1960s, playing for Zoot Money’s Big Roll Band (which later became the psychedelic but short-lived Dantalian’s Chariot), Eric Burdon’s New Animals, and Soft Machine. After formally studying guitar at Northridge University in California from the late 1960s to the early 1970s, Summers returned to England and plied his trade as a session guitarist for Joan Armatrading, Neil Sedaka, Kevin Coyne, and Deep Purple’s Jon Lord before achieving monumental success and international stardom with The Police.
After the dissolution of The Police in the early 1980s, Summers scored some Hollywood films (Down and Out in Beverly Hills, Weekend at Bernie’s) and recorded one rock vocal album before establishing himself as an acclaimed and accomplished contemporary instrumental guitarist across a variety of styles, including jazz, fusion, New Age, and world music.
One of Summers' upcoming projects is Spirit Garden, a collection of guitar duets featuring Summers and classical guitarist Andrew York. In addition to acoustic and electric guitars, Summers and York also play other instruments. The duo’s collaboration began on the title track of York’s latest album, Centerpeace, which is available now. More information on Centerpeace and Spirit Garden can be found at www.andrewyork.net.
For a good overview of Summers’ solo work, I highly recommend the following albums: Mysterious Barricades, A Windham Hill Retrospective, Synaesthesia, and The X Tracks. My personal favorite Summers albums are Mysterious Barricades, The Golden Wire, Charming Snakes, World Gone Strange, Synaesthesia, Earth and Sky, and First You Build a Cloud.
--Raj Manoharan
The two-hour-and-thirty-four-minute program features Summers demonstrating his guitar technique from his years with The Police, as well as from his solo career, interspersed with live studio performances with his band at the time. The result is a good overview of rock and jazz guitar, delivered with Summers’ whacked-out sense of humor, plus a great audio-visual document of Summers displaying his masterful chops as an instructor and a composer-performer.
Summers was the guitarist for the mega-popular rock band The Police, who were active in the late 1970s and early 1980s and reunited for a 30th anniversary tour in 2007 and 2008. Being a good decade older than his bandmates Sting and Stewart Copeland, Summers began his professional recording career in the early 1960s, playing for Zoot Money’s Big Roll Band (which later became the psychedelic but short-lived Dantalian’s Chariot), Eric Burdon’s New Animals, and Soft Machine. After formally studying guitar at Northridge University in California from the late 1960s to the early 1970s, Summers returned to England and plied his trade as a session guitarist for Joan Armatrading, Neil Sedaka, Kevin Coyne, and Deep Purple’s Jon Lord before achieving monumental success and international stardom with The Police.
After the dissolution of The Police in the early 1980s, Summers scored some Hollywood films (Down and Out in Beverly Hills, Weekend at Bernie’s) and recorded one rock vocal album before establishing himself as an acclaimed and accomplished contemporary instrumental guitarist across a variety of styles, including jazz, fusion, New Age, and world music.
One of Summers' upcoming projects is Spirit Garden, a collection of guitar duets featuring Summers and classical guitarist Andrew York. In addition to acoustic and electric guitars, Summers and York also play other instruments. The duo’s collaboration began on the title track of York’s latest album, Centerpeace, which is available now. More information on Centerpeace and Spirit Garden can be found at www.andrewyork.net.
For a good overview of Summers’ solo work, I highly recommend the following albums: Mysterious Barricades, A Windham Hill Retrospective, Synaesthesia, and The X Tracks. My personal favorite Summers albums are Mysterious Barricades, The Golden Wire, Charming Snakes, World Gone Strange, Synaesthesia, Earth and Sky, and First You Build a Cloud.
--Raj Manoharan
Saturday, June 4, 2011
CD Review – Autumn Sky, by Blackmore’s Night
Blackmore’s Night, a unique musical group led by legendary Deep Purple/Rainbow guitarist Ritchie Blackmore and his wife, singer/songwriter Candice Night, fuses together elements of classical, medieval, folk, and rock music to create a sound unlike any other.
Night’s powerful and pretty vocals bring to mind ABBA and Heart, as well as a little bit of Christine McVie and Melissa Etheridge. Night’s supple voice gets a good workout, roaring through straight-ahead rockers like “Highland” and “Journeyman” and sweetly articulating lyrical ballads such as “Believe in Me,” “Strawberry Girl,” “Health to the Company,” and “Barbara Allen.” Night also plays medieval instruments such as the pennywhistle.
Blackmore’s fiery electric and acoustic guitar playing is as virtuosic as ever, which is no surprise. This guy’s been in the music business for five decades and shows no signs of slowing down. His frenetic fretwork shines on the aforementioned “Highland” and “Journeyman,” the latter of which features an especially killer guitar solo that you just wish would never end. I could listen to an entire album of Blackmore just shredding the way he does on “Journeyman.” The guitarist also shows his softer side on the beautiful, classical-guitar instrumental ballad “Night at Eggersberg.”
Perusing the Web sites of both Night and Blackmore’s Night, it’s clear that the duo have a sincere and deep love for this style of music, even dressing in medieval attire at their shows, often played at medieval-type settings. Blackmore is a rocking Robin Hood, and Night is his singing Maid Marian.
Medieval-style music is generally not my cup of tea, but the combination of Night’s beautiful and formidable vocals and Blackmore’s power chords and licks hooked me from the beginning and never let go. People who like classical and medieval music will enjoy this, and fans of Ritchie Blackmore and rock guitar will not be disappointed.
--Raj Manoharan
Night’s powerful and pretty vocals bring to mind ABBA and Heart, as well as a little bit of Christine McVie and Melissa Etheridge. Night’s supple voice gets a good workout, roaring through straight-ahead rockers like “Highland” and “Journeyman” and sweetly articulating lyrical ballads such as “Believe in Me,” “Strawberry Girl,” “Health to the Company,” and “Barbara Allen.” Night also plays medieval instruments such as the pennywhistle.
Blackmore’s fiery electric and acoustic guitar playing is as virtuosic as ever, which is no surprise. This guy’s been in the music business for five decades and shows no signs of slowing down. His frenetic fretwork shines on the aforementioned “Highland” and “Journeyman,” the latter of which features an especially killer guitar solo that you just wish would never end. I could listen to an entire album of Blackmore just shredding the way he does on “Journeyman.” The guitarist also shows his softer side on the beautiful, classical-guitar instrumental ballad “Night at Eggersberg.”
Perusing the Web sites of both Night and Blackmore’s Night, it’s clear that the duo have a sincere and deep love for this style of music, even dressing in medieval attire at their shows, often played at medieval-type settings. Blackmore is a rocking Robin Hood, and Night is his singing Maid Marian.
Medieval-style music is generally not my cup of tea, but the combination of Night’s beautiful and formidable vocals and Blackmore’s power chords and licks hooked me from the beginning and never let go. People who like classical and medieval music will enjoy this, and fans of Ritchie Blackmore and rock guitar will not be disappointed.
--Raj Manoharan
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