Pitch  david   aaron davis   feast %287%29

Piltch, David & Aaron Davis - Feast

Format: CD
Label: EMI, Alert Music Z2-81031
Year: 1997
Origin: Toronto, Ontario
Genre: jazz
Keyword: 
Value of Original Title: 
Make Inquiry/purchase: email ryder@robertwilliston.com
Release Type: Albums
Websites:  No
Playlist:

Tracks

Track Name
Ring Them Bells
The Loon
Newsoundland
Ruwenzori
Black is the Colour of My True Love's Hair
Horizontal Blue
Arpeggio
My Old Friend The Blues
Dissfunktion
Dance From Down Under
Last Day of Summer
Taj

Photos

Pitch  david   aaron davis   feast %286%29

Pitch, David & Aaron Davis - Feast (6)

Pitch  david   aaron davis   feast %285%29

Pitch, David & Aaron Davis - Feast (5)

Pitch  david   aaron davis   feast %284%29

Pitch, David & Aaron Davis - Feast (4)

Pitch  david   aaron davis   feast %283%29

Pitch, David & Aaron Davis - Feast (3)

Pitch  david   aaron davis   feast %282%29

Pitch, David & Aaron Davis - Feast (2)

Pitch  david   aaron davis   feast %281%29

Pitch, David & Aaron Davis - Feast (1)

Pitch  david   aaron davis   feast %287%29

Feast

Videos

No Video

Information/Write-up

There is a sentence in the liner notes that accompany this instrumental jazz album by Holly Cole sidemen David Piltch and Aaron Davis that speaks volumes: "Dedicated to the spirit of ensemble music." Whether playing simply as a duo, with Davis on piano and Piltch on acoustic bass, or with the occasional addition of other instruments such as yanuziello dobro, bamboo flute, percussion, guitar or vibes, the commitment of the musicians to set aside their egos and consummate this collaboration for better, period, comes through -- loud and clear.

Well, not exactly loud. This is gentle music. Music to take the edge off a bad day. To subtly accompany and underpin conversations in a restaurant or coffee shop, or over a cup of home-made cappuccino. It both touches on the familiar (Dylan's "Ring Them Bells" and the traditional "Black is the Colour of My True Love's Hair") and at the same time explores the artists' own musical visions, independently and as co-composers. On occasion the songs, such as "My Old Friend the Blues," cry out for vocal and lyrical accompaniment, but the egalitarianism of the performances would likely be lost. And that would be too too high a cost.

Comments

No Comments