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Composer Chip Davis chooses the theme of fall for the second installment in his Fresh Aire series; puzzlingly, there's a striking lack of autumnal motifs. Instead, the album features the dandy unifying theme of doorways. Davis solidifies the Mannheim Steamroller sound here, with a Renaissance-style ensemble of recorders, dulcimer, woodwinds, harpsichord, and strings thrown into the same vat as Jackson Berkey's piano and quaint synthesizer, electric bass, and Davis's rock drums. The main melodic theme is set within the first half-minute of the first track, "Chorale," and from this point he whimsically throws open a series of new doors, including a pounding, humorous takeoff on "Dies Irae (Day of Wrath)" complete with blaring trumpets and Latin choir. Haughty French horns and Davis's drums put the militant march in "The Third Door," which brings the "Army of Pride" to chase away the demons. The piano and recorder then offer a lovely break with a peaceful duet. Yet another fracas is just around the corner: "The Fifth Door: Frenetic Energy" is a knuckle-busting workout for the harpsichord, followed by some jazzy riffs for cellos and drums. A gently flowing piano piece with the grace of Beethoven's "Moonlight" Sonata gives another welcome respite before the final wall-of-sound blast, "Door Seven: Thermal Inversion," which caps the fantasia segment. Five other pieces round out the album: "Interlude V," (continued from Fresh Aire I) featuring a delicate, raindrop-like piano; the somber "Velvet Tear" for piano and strings; "A Shade Tree" and "Toota Lute," featuring Eric Hansen on guitar and lute; and the full ensemble on the upbeat and heartfelt "Going to Another Place." Not really "fall" at all, but still lots of fun! Carol Wright, Barnes & Noble