Splendor In The Grass [Digipak]Pink Martini
Release Date: 10/27/2009
Original Release:
2009
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 1095835_CD
UPC # 723721448059
Label: Heinz Music
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Disc: 1
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Performer: Pink Martini
Engineer: Dave Friedlander Producer: Thomas M. Lauderdale Distributor: n/a Notes: Personnel: Timothy Nishimoto (vocals, percussion); China Forbes (vocals); Dan Faehnle (guitar); Maureen Love (harp); Nicholas Crosa (violin); Pansy Chang (cello); Gavin Bondy (trumpet); Thomas Lauderdale (piano); Martin Zarzar (drums, percussion); Derek Rieth (congas, percussion). Audio Mixer: Dave Friedlander. Photographers: Peter Murray; Thomas Lauderdale. Pink Martini follow the around-the-world-in-a-dozen-songs thrills of HEY EUGENE! with SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS, a mellower, simpler set of small pleasures. These are relative terms, however; the group's music is still well-traveled, with China Forbes singing in five languages (English, Spanish, Neapolitan, French, and Italian) instead of the six or so on EUGENE!. However, Pink Martini opt for a more unified sound here, one that draws on the more straightforward lounge-pop of their debut, SYMPATHIQUE, and the mellowness of '60s and '70s pop. SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS' first half is especially smooth, opening with the beautifully soft Neapolitan ballad "Ninna Nanna" and the title track, on which Forbes sings "I think we should take it slow" over swooping strings, brass, and piano that resurrect the glory days of AM pop; that feeling is echoed by the cover of Joe Raposo's "Sing," the Sesame Street song that gained popularity when the Carpenters performed it (Emilio Delgado, aka Sesame Street's Luis, duets with Forbes here in Spanish and English). The album's first few tracks are among its most playful, including the slinky yet winking "Ohayoo Ohio" and the French confection "Ou Est Ma Tete?" While Pink Martini gets almost too cute for their own good with "And Then You're Gone" and "But Now I'm Back," a pair of songs about a quarreling couple inspired by Franz Schubert's "Fantasy Piano for Four Hands" and featuring NPR justice correspondent Ari Shapiro on the latter's vocals, SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS' second half is among their finest work. "Over the Valley" is a standout, a ballad so timelessly sweet that it seems like it must be a long-lost standard the group just blew the dust off of, but it's an original; conversely, the covers of Moondog's haunting "New Amsterdam" and Agust�n Lara's "Piensa en Mi," sung by Chavela Vargas, sound fresh and authentic, providing the drama HANG ON LITTLE TOMATO and HEY EUGENE! provided in spades. Though it's a lower-key set of songs than those two albums, SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS is charming in its own right.
The Portland, Oregon-based big band Pink Martini, founded by classically trained pianist Thomas Lauderdale, jump effortlessly between various technically challenging sounds and styles from across the pop spectrum and around the world. Featuring as many as 12 members at any given time, Pink Martini is as at home with French chanson or Portuguese fado as it is with swing and film soundtracks. The group has released three critically acclaimed albums since forming in 1994.
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