| | Ray Anthony Dream Dancing, Vol. 2 CD Ray Anthony Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
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Arranger: Don Simpson.
Track listing: You'll Never Know, Sentimental Journey, I've Got The World On A String, The More I See You, Again, Dream, An Affair To Remember, Christmas Dreams, Baby Won't You Please Come Home, Deep Purple, Sweet And Lovely, Body And Soul, I'll Walk Alo
Personnel: Ray Anthony (trumpet); John Pisano (guitar); Sal Lozano, Kevin Anthony (alto saxophone); Roger Neumann, Bob Efford (tenor saxophone); Hal Espinosa, Rick Baptist, Wayne Bergeron, Frank Szabo (trumpet); Alan Kaplan, Bill Tole, Lloyd Ulyate (trombone); Carol Anderson (piano); Gregg Field (drums).
Recording information: The Bakery Studio, Hollywood, CA (1994).
Dream Dancing, Vol. 2 Music Ray Anthony Dream Dancing, Vol. 2 Songs Dream Dancing, Vol. 2 Music Review Purchase Dream Dancing, Vol. 2 CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Ray Anthony In The Miller Mood CD (1992)
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Dream Dancing, Vol. 2 album
$14.39 A ballads album is not something one might associate with David S. Ware, the fiery tenor saxophonist. It was recorded in 1999 as Ware was making a series of albums for Aum Fidelity and Japan's DIW label -- in fact, many of the tracks on this set appeared in different versions on those recordings. It's a wonderful thing that this set produced by Steven Joerg (owner of Aum Fidelity) was licensed by Thirsty Ear for release. The seven tracks that appear on this release, split between original compositions and standards, offer a very different side of the saxophonist, without sacrificing his iconic individuality. They are forward-thinking and utterly passionate -- albeit in a lower-key manner. Ware is ably assisted by the ubiquitous William Parker on bass, pianist Matthew Shipp, and Guillermo Brown on drums. Since restraint is not often associated with this group of musicians, the sensitivity with which they reinvent nuggets like "Yesterdays," "Autumn Leaves," and "Tenderly" is not only noteworthy -- it may just make the argument for the standard being a body of music that should be utterly re-explored harmonically to reveal the "otherness" in it, the place where it breaks and turns back on itself to offer some new meaning. "Autumn Leaves" was performed first on Ware's Third Ear Recitation album for DIW in 1992 with Shipp, Parker, and drummer Whit Dickey. His approach here melds Ben Webster and Archie Shepp into his own sound world where chords, scales, and melodies are turned not so much inside out, but are expanded upon to extend the tune's breath -- much like Charles Olson's notion in his 1949 essay in which he spoke of the line in poetry to be carried out to the end of that writer's single breath. Shipp offers a solid ground by extrapolating his chord voicings to include not only the melodic frame, but its outside harmonic as well. In fact, his playing here is so lovely and tender that it's breathtaking.
Ware's own compositions, such as "Dao," present utterly new things. "Dao" takes a modal approach wherein Parker's bass and Shipp's expansive voicings offer the notion of playing in just intonation -- which is not being done, but its feeling across a melody line that begins from the ...
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