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With the release of The Intercontinentals, Bill Frisell invites us into a lush and verdant
musical world.
On this outing he has chosen to work with five superb musicians from various parts of the planet.
The eclectic range of
instruments employed herein include electric and acoustic guitars, subtle electronics, calabash,
djembe, vocals,
oud, bouzouki, pedal steel guitar, and violin. This music reminds me of the color green in the way
it surges with masterful precision, swells with quiet drama, recedes into mystery, and tumbles back
in upon
itself with self-referential musings that reveal new insights into its true nature.
The aptly-named The Intercontinentals is filled with deep memories of traveling through
time and place.
Overall, I am
struck by the similarity between the feel of this album and, oddly enough, Brian Eno's Another
Green
World : as on Eno's masterpiece, Frisell's compositions tend to turn in on themselves to create
individual
sonic worlds composed of their own inner logic; and, like Eno's pieces, each compostion fits well
with the others and
creates a powerful song cycle that renders the entire album quite compelling. This recording could
have been
called "The Big Green Circle" because of the way it feels--vibrant, shimmering, inviting,
and continually arcing
in upon itself.
Frisell has always had a talent for picking the right people to join him, and most of the time he
achieves
great results from his particular brand of fusion. With the release of The Intercontinentals he
has
reached new ground and expanded his compositional nexus. He keeps pushing the limits of what
he knows in
his own quiet amicable fashion and continues to develop his musical voice in a brave and
accessible direction.
Frisell is a humble and unobtrusive 'guitar hero.' It is obvious from the inspired work of every
musician on
this recording that they can relate to what Frisell had written for them--they also cover tunes by
Boubacar
Traore, Gilberto Gil, Christos Govetas, and Vinicius Cantuaria--and find plenty of room to express
their individual voices within these structures. Every player weaves his part of this puzzle well, and
the results are mesmerizing.
Frisell has given us an album where African percussion, Middle Eastern oud, Brazilian guitar,
Portuguese
song, American country twang, Classical violin, and 'bent beyond repair' jazz harmonies live
together in
harmony. It is a joyful world view, one I am glad he decided to share.
Visit Nonesuch on the web.
~ Farrell Lowe
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Track Listing: Boubacar; Good Old People; For Christos; Baba Drame; Listen; Anywhere Road; Procissao; The
Young Monk; We
Are Everywhere; Yala; Perritos; Magic; Eli; Remember
Personnel: Bill Frisell-electric and acoustic guitars,loops, bass; Sidiki Camara-calabash, djembe, congas,
percussion,
vocals; Vinicius Cantuaria-electric and acoustic guitars, vocals, drums, percussion; Christos
Govetas-oud,
vocals, bouzouki; Greg Leisz-slide guitars, pedal steel guitar; Jenny Scheinman-violin
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