Pat Metheny Group - Still Life (Talking) (1987) 320 kbps
BAND/ARTIST: Pat Metheny Group
- Title: Still Life (Talking)
- Year Of Release: 1987
- Label: Nonesuch [7559-79948-2]
- Genre: Jazz, Jazz Fusion
- Quality: MP3/320 kps
- Total Time: 42:32
- Total Size: 100 MB(+3%)
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
1. Minuano (Six Eight)
2. So May It Secretly Begin
3. Last Train Home
4. (It's Just) Talk
5. Third Wind
6. Distance
7. In Her Family
personnel :
Pat Metheny - synthesizer, acoustic & electric guitars
Mark Ledford - vocals
David Blamires - vocals
Lyle Mays - piano, keyboards
Steve Rodby - acoustic & electric basses
Paul Wertico - drums
Armando Marcal - percussion, background vocals
Pat Metheny's open-hearted odyssey through music has encompassed fleet jazz, garage rock, and avant-garde chaos, but this 1987 hit finds its most significant wrinkle in the band's increased emphasis on Brazilian accents and vocalise choruses, using three singers (including percussionist-vocalist Armando Marcal and singers David Blamires and Mark Ledford) to augment the core quartet of Metheny, keyboardist Lyle Mays, bassist Steve Rodby, and drummer Paul Wertico. Metheny by now comfortably integrates his own guitar synthesizers into Mays's seasoned electronic orchestrations, and Still Life (Talking) is by turns sunny, wistful, and kinetic. The Brazilian aesthetic gives us the lovely opener, "Minuano (Six Eight)" and colors "So May It Secretly Begin." Metheny's instinctive, American sensibility is rooted in his Plains upbringing and the prairie-wide sound that his music has always evoked. The album's best-known piece, "Last Train Home," revives the sound of electric sitar to unexpected emotional effect. --Sam Sutherland
1. Minuano (Six Eight)
2. So May It Secretly Begin
3. Last Train Home
4. (It's Just) Talk
5. Third Wind
6. Distance
7. In Her Family
personnel :
Pat Metheny - synthesizer, acoustic & electric guitars
Mark Ledford - vocals
David Blamires - vocals
Lyle Mays - piano, keyboards
Steve Rodby - acoustic & electric basses
Paul Wertico - drums
Armando Marcal - percussion, background vocals
Pat Metheny's open-hearted odyssey through music has encompassed fleet jazz, garage rock, and avant-garde chaos, but this 1987 hit finds its most significant wrinkle in the band's increased emphasis on Brazilian accents and vocalise choruses, using three singers (including percussionist-vocalist Armando Marcal and singers David Blamires and Mark Ledford) to augment the core quartet of Metheny, keyboardist Lyle Mays, bassist Steve Rodby, and drummer Paul Wertico. Metheny by now comfortably integrates his own guitar synthesizers into Mays's seasoned electronic orchestrations, and Still Life (Talking) is by turns sunny, wistful, and kinetic. The Brazilian aesthetic gives us the lovely opener, "Minuano (Six Eight)" and colors "So May It Secretly Begin." Metheny's instinctive, American sensibility is rooted in his Plains upbringing and the prairie-wide sound that his music has always evoked. The album's best-known piece, "Last Train Home," revives the sound of electric sitar to unexpected emotional effect. --Sam Sutherland
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