| | Steven Bernstein & Millennial T Mto Volume 1 CD Steven Bernstein & Millennial T Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Steven Bernstein's Millennial Territory Orchestra (Trumpet): Matt Munisteri (guitar, banjo, saxophone); Doug Wieselman (clarinet, tenor saxophone); Ben Allison (bass instrument); Peter Apfelbaum, Steven Bernstein , Ben Perowsky, Clark Gayton, Erik Lawrence, Charles Burnham.
Trumpeter Steven Bernstein's Millenial Territory orchestra is inspired by the leader hearing some of the exciting late '20s and early '30s recordings of territory bands. While some of the music performed by his nonet is taken from that early period, including "Boy In the Boat," "Happy Hour Blues" and "Toby," they alternate with originals that are sometimes only loosely connected to the style. Even the revivals of vintage songs include adventurous solos and plenty of surprises, so MTO, Vol. 1 is more of a tribute than a re-creation. The musicians all show versatility, trombonist Clark Gayton takes particularly impressive solos, and the overall, the music is quite fun. Easily recommended to fans of the Mingus Big Band and other somewhat riotous ensembles. ~ Scott Yanow
Personnel: Doug Wamble (vocals, guitar); Charles Burnham (violin); Peter Apfelbaum (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Erik Lawrence (soprano saxophone, baritone saxophone); Doug Wiselman (tenor saxophone, Clavinet); Steven Bernstein (trumpet, slide trumpet); Clark Gayton (trombone); Ben Perowsky (drums).
Audio Mixer: Andy Taub.
Liner Note Author: Steven Bernstein .
Recording information: Brooklyn Recording, Brooklyn, NY.
Photographer: Michael Didonna.
Arranger: Steven Bernstein . Steven Bernstein & Millennial T Mto Volume 1 Songs Mto Volume 1 Music Review Purchase Mto Volume 1 CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Muddy Waters Folk Singer CD (1964) Remastered
Mto Volume 1 album
$8.49 Ultradiscs are mastered from the original master tapes using Mobile Fidelity's proprietary mastering technique, then plated with 24-karat gold and housed in a stress-resistant lift-lock jewel box.
"You Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had" and "The Same Thing" did not appear on the original version of FOLK SINGER. They were recorded at a separate session in April 1964, three months after FOLK SINGER was released.
The ...
| | Philipp Fankhauser Talk To Me CD (2004)
Mto Volume 1 CD music
$13.05 Talk To Me is the title of the latest album from Philipp Fankhauser, the highly regarded blues artist based in Thun, Switzerland, and his first for Memphis International Records. Fankhauser is well known to European ...
| | John Butler Sunrise Over Sea CD (2004) Digipak
Mto Volume 1 music CDs
$10.65
| | Black Stone Cherry CD (2006)
Mto Volume 1 songs
$15.05
| | Dave Holland Critical Mass CD (2006)
Mto Volume 1 album
$14.19 One word that comes to mind when listening to Critical Mass is generosity. Double-bassist Dave Holland, four decades into his career, could certainly be forgiven for taking the word "leader" at its literal meaning, calling all the shots and keeping his musicians at bay. But that's ...
| | Deuter Koyasan CD (2006)
Mto Volume 1 CD music
$13.15 Composer: Deuter.
| | Keith Ingham New York 9, Vol. 1 CD (1994)
Mto Volume 1 music CDs
$15.05
| | Anouar Brahem Astrakan Cafe CD (2001)
Mto Volume 1 songs
$14.59 The Tunisian oud genius has done it again. Anouar Brahem has issued only five records under his own name over the past decade, each more adventurous than the last, without compromising his original vision: for the music of his region to meet with the other music of Africa and Asia and create a delirious sound that is equal thirds past, present, and future, along the precipice of historical lineage. For Brahem there is no attempt to synthesize the globe, or even the sounds of the East with those of the West. He is content in his knowledge that sound is infinite, and that his tradition, as it evolves and expands into a deeper pan-African/trans-Asian whole, is more than large enough for a master musician to rummage through in one lifetime. Astrakan Café, the follow-up to his brilliant Thimar, is a smaller-sounding recording that reaches farther into the deep crags of the Balkans. With Barbaros Erköse on clarinet and the Indian and Turkish percussion stylings of the professor of somber precision, Lassad Hosni, Brahem's oud enters into a dialogue, musically, that has never before existed (though he has collaborated with both players previously). Erköse is a Turkish clarinetist of gypsy origin. His low, warm, rounded tones are consonant with the oud. Erköse plays equal parts music of the Balkan and Arab worlds with a tinge of the ancient klezmorim whispering their secrets through his horn. Despite the journeying these musicians do here, they never stray far from the takht, a small ensemble capable of improvising to the point of drunken ecstasy. Listening through Astrakan Café, you can hear the gypsy flamenco tied deeply to Indian ragas and even a kind of Eastern jazz. But there is no hyperactivity in it, no need to cram as many traditions as possible into one putridly excessive mix that expresses ...
| | Rita Coolidge And So Is Love CD (2005)
Mto Volume 1 album
$9.99
| | Kenny Burrell & John Coltrane CD (1958) Reissue; Remastered
Mto Volume 1 CD music
$7.89
| | Sharon, Lois & Bram Smorgasbord CD (1979)
Mto Volume 1 music CDs
$7.99
| | Dave Pajo 1968 CD (2006)
Mto Volume 1 songs
$12.69
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