
Brazilian Days |
|||||
|
Paul Winter (Sax)
Release Date: 01/08/2013
Original Release:
1998
# of Discs:
1
Label: Valley Entertainment (USA)
Track data is currently not available.
Performer: Paul Winter (Sax)
Distributor: Relativity (Label) Notes: Personnel: Paul Winter (soprano saxophone); Oscar Castro-Neves (guitar); Paul Halley (pipe organ); Nilson Matta (bass); Paulo Braga (drums); Cassio Duarte (percussion). Engineers: Geoff Gillette, Les Kahn, Steve Van Zandt, Sam West, Dixon Van Winkle. Recorded at Sunset Sound Factory, Hollywood, California; The Cathedral Of St. John The Divine, New York, New York; the Grand Canyon, Arizona. Includes liner notes by Oscar Castro-Neves. In the early 1960s, long before he was a key figure in the environmental music genre, soprano saxophonist Paul Winter helped to bring Brazil's jazzy bossa nova sound to the U.S. Some forty years later, Winter takes a break from his work with the whales and wolves to revisit the rich songbook of classic bossa nova with the help of his old friend, guitarist Oscar Castro-Neves. The results harken back to that past era with a wistfulness as captivating as a cocktail hour breeze on a Rio de Janeiro balcony. Things kick off with a bouncy rendition of Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Aula de Matematica," and then mellow out with tunes penned by other Brazilian songwriting legends such as Noel Rosa, Oswald Gogliano, and Carlos Lyra. Backed by stand-up bass and Latin percussion, Winter's smooth-as-butter sax sails over and under the gently jangling melancholia of Castro-Neves' guitar with enough gentle grace to make this album work just as well for yoga or meditation as for dancing.
Also Appears On:
Similar Genres:
Saxophone |
|
||||

A.B.F.
See more Customer Testimonials
|
Send us your Feedback
|
Feedback Terms