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Mandolin virtuosos Chris Thile and Mike Marshall build upon their first set of instrumental dialogues, 2003's studio set Into the Cauldron, with Live Duets, exploring ever more fertile musical landscapes. Save for two covers, the songs are once again original compositions, all evincing a heightened concern for melody and harmonics, all rich in scintillating textures and moods. Thile's lovely "I'd Go Back if I Could" is a delicate, impressionistic lament that the Nickel Creek philosopher-king infuses with melancholy, alternating trilling chords with terse single-string musings while Marshall plays brooding mandocello lines. The two have a lot of fun with their collaborative, fancifully titled "Carpathian Mt. Breakdown," which offers the slightest hint of Romanian folk melody, the players wending their way through a speed-picked sonata movement, a slow, deliberate second movement, a dancelike scherzo movement, and the briefest hint of a closing rondo. Inspired by a traditional Bulgarian folk song, "Sedi Donka" is a marvel of fleet-fingered energy that embraces twin discourses on the main theme and breathtaking solo flights notable for their majestic, cascading flourishes. J. S. Bach, a Thile favorite, is onboard via "J. S. Bach DM Gigue," a sparkling interpretation of a passage from Bach's Violin Partita No. 2, with Marshall again adding the mandocello's heavier tone as an underpinning to Thile's impeccable and flawlessly executed rapid-fire melody lines. And that's mere prelude to the brilliant improvisatory fireworks Thile sets off in his sections of "Joy Ride in a Toy Car/Hey Ho," which must be heard to be believed -- the same could be said for Live Duets as well. David McGee, Barnes & Noble