Product Details
Private Astronomy: A Vision of the Music of Bix Beiderbecke

Private Astronomy: A Vision of the Music of Bix Beiderbecke
Geoff Muldaur's Futuristic Ensemble

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Track Listing

  1. Take Your Tomorrow (And Give Me Today) - Vocal by Geoff Muldaur and the Harmony Boys
  2. In The Dark - The Futuristic Chamber Group
  3. There Ain't No Sweet Man That's Worth the Salt of My Tears - Vocal by Martha Wainwright
  4. In A Mist - The Futuristic Chamber Group
  5. Futuristic Rhythm - Vocal by Geoff Muldaur and the Harmony Boys
  6. Davenport Blues - The Futuristic Chamber Group
  7. Singin' the Blues - Vocal by Martha Wainwright
  8. Candlelights - The Futuristic Chamber Group
  9. Bless You Sister - Vocal by Loudon Wainwright III and the Harmony Girls
  10. Flashes - The Futuristic Chamber Group
  11. At the End of the Road - Vocal by Geoff Muldaur
  12. In A Mist (chorale) - The Futuristic Chamber Group
  13. Clouds - Vocal by Geoff Muldaur

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #60925 in Music
  • Released on: 2003-09-30
  • Number of discs: 1

Customer Reviews

Boola Boola5
I was afraid that I was going to hate this CD. After all, those of us who love (or even know about) Bix's "Modern Suite" have had precious little to listen to, apart from Ralph Sutton's evocative piano solos (which, so far as I know, haven't made their way yet to CD) and Bunny Berigan's 1938 ensemble arrangements for "In a Mist," "Flashes," and "Candlelights" (plus "Davenport Blues"). My worry was that a bunch of folkies (Geoff Muldaur, Loudon Wainwright III, Martha Wainwright, et. al.) would turn this project into something precious or surround the "Suite" with hokum nonsense. Well, I was dead wrong. Muldaur's chamber arrangements of the instrumental pieces are both respectful of the originals and beautifully evocative in their own right. And the other "period" material, with spirited playing by some top-flight jazz musicians, is neither gimmickry nor filler. The biggest surprise was how well Muldaur's extraordinary vocals complement this material: Who needs Bing when you've got Geoff to sing "Waiting at the End of the Road"? And the same can be said for Martha Wainwright's wonderfully saucy rendering of "There Ain't No Sweet Man That's Worth the Salt of My Tears." This is a terrific project, fully realized. It's already in heavy rotation on my CD player.

A wonderful reimagining of some great old music5
Don't pay any attention to the crabbypants, crusty jazz purists who are poo-poohing this disc. They're simply being humorless and unimaginative, which pretty much puts them in 180-degree opposition to this lovely little record. I liked this a lot. It was very sweet, very creative and very listenable, and if it (gasp!!!) doesn't sound exactly like Bix Beiderbecke did, well golly! Why not go buy a Beiderbecke album as well, and quit carping about how this "doesn't live up to" the man, the myth and the legend? There's really no reason we can't enjoy BOTH the original music and this warm, intelligent tribute to Beiderbeck's restless genius. They each have a lot to offer. I, for one, look forward to listening to this record for years to come.

Great music, but not a lot of it4
First the good news: the music is wonderful. Great playing, and a terrific mix of standard jazz styles (There Ain't No Sweet Man, in particular) with Beiderbecke's chamber explorations. It's definitely worth many listenings.

The not-so-good news. I didn't think it was technically possible to only put 43 minutes of music on a compact disk. Seriously, the album seems awfully short for the money.