Alison Brown Quartet Alison Brown

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CD

  • Release Date: 02/13/1996
  • Sales Rank: 112,446
  • Label: VANGUARD RECORDS
  • UPC: 015707948623
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Alison Brown Quartet

1LISTENG Bop 3:10
2LISTENThe Red Balloon 3:00
3LISTENMy Favorite Marsha 3:56
4LISTENMambo Banjo (Revisited) 3:45
5LISTENWithout Anastasia 3:11
6LISTENSong Of Monterrey 4:53
7LISTENMinding Rupert 3:18
8LISTENThe Wonderful Sea Voyage (Of Holy St. Brendan) 4:07
9LISTENHello Mendocino! 3:59
10LISTENThe Day Sweeps Back 3:16

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Alison Brown, believe it or not, is a five-string banjo player. The rest of her quartet is a standard jazz ensemble consisting of piano, bass, and drums, and you can be confident that there's nary a bluegrass lick anywhere on this album. Like her compadre {|Béla Fleck|} (to whom she must be absolutely sick of being compared), Brown figured out some time ago that the banjo is a fully chromatic instrument with every bit as much melodic flexibility as a guitar, and that its clear, crisp tone is perfectly suited to jazz. It works especially well as a bebop instrument, which Brown demonstrates on this album's opening track, the rollicking, Charlie Parker-ish "G Bop." It also works pretty well as a cool jazz instrument, which Brown demonstrates on the album's second track, the loping, Bill Evans-ish "Red Balloon." This sort of stylistic variety is grist for Brown's mill, but it doesn't always work in her favor: "My Favorite Marsha" (one of several tracks on which she switches to guitar) is nice but borders on new acoustic sappiness -- her guitar playing is good but not exceptional. However, "Without Anastasia" draws nicely on classical influences without sounding pedantic, and "Banjo Mambo (Revisited)" is a very fun Latin romp. Rick Anderson, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

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Alison Brown Quartetby Anonymous

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November 13, 2000: Variety combined with the continuously unexpected, this album is contrapunctal and brilliant. It may be heard many times, each with a new hearing and new excitement.