Jerry Granelli - Sandhills Reunion (2004) [SACD]
Artist: Jerry Granelli
Title: Sandhills Reunion
Year Of Release: 2004
Label: Songlines Recordings SGL SA1553-2
Genre: Spoken Word , Americana, Jazz
Quality: DST64 2.0, 5.1 image (*.iso) (2,8 MHz/1 Bit)
Total Time: 48:14
Total Size: 2.36 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Sandhills Reunion
Year Of Release: 2004
Label: Songlines Recordings SGL SA1553-2
Genre: Spoken Word , Americana, Jazz
Quality: DST64 2.0, 5.1 image (*.iso) (2,8 MHz/1 Bit)
Total Time: 48:14
Total Size: 2.36 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
Various band members contribute compositional frameworks as a backdrop of sorts for Rinde Eckert's lyricism and recitations on this idyllically focused jazz work. And it's drummer Jerry Granelli's brainchild as he lays down the rhythms for a potpourri of acoustic-electric tunes structured upon medium-tempo rhythms and jazzy dreamscapes.
Eckert's likeable recitals are cleanly delivered amid a style that draws similarities to American cowboy jargon. Moreover, he converses with his alter ego on "20 Questions for an Outlaw, featuring Canadian clarinetist Francois Houle's bluesy lines, amid dialogues about a desperado's morality and reckoning with death. And while humor and wit comprise a portion of these works, the poet communicates a dappled view of humanity, spanning situations that seemingly occurred during the 1930s and onward. The band delves into a Chicago blues motif and much more throughout this undeniably attractive outing that moves forward with a cinematic flair. It's easily one of the more refreshing and insightful jazz-tinged efforts of 2005.
Eckert's likeable recitals are cleanly delivered amid a style that draws similarities to American cowboy jargon. Moreover, he converses with his alter ego on "20 Questions for an Outlaw, featuring Canadian clarinetist Francois Houle's bluesy lines, amid dialogues about a desperado's morality and reckoning with death. And while humor and wit comprise a portion of these works, the poet communicates a dappled view of humanity, spanning situations that seemingly occurred during the 1930s and onward. The band delves into a Chicago blues motif and much more throughout this undeniably attractive outing that moves forward with a cinematic flair. It's easily one of the more refreshing and insightful jazz-tinged efforts of 2005.
Tracklist:
01 Like a Ghost in the Grass
02 Our Particular Tragedy
03 20 Questions for an Outlaw
04 Nolan
05 River of Glass
06 Your Voice
07 Just Angels
08 Last Night
09 Little White Suit
10 Never to See You
11 Smart Women
12 Spun Like a Spur