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Al Di Meola - World Sinfonia: The Grande Passion (2000) CD Rip

Al Di Meola - World Sinfonia: The Grande Passion (2000) CD Rip

BAND/ARTIST: Al Di Meola

  • Title: World Sinfonia: The Grande Passion
  • Year Of Release: 2000
  • Label: Telarc [CD-83481]
  • Genre: Jazz, Latin Jazz, World Fusion
  • Quality: FLAC (image + .cue,log,scans)
  • Total Time: 59:39
  • Total Size: 420 MB(+3%)
  • WebSite:
Tracklist

1. Misterio (7:53)
2. Double Concerto (5:58)
3. Prelude: Adagio for Theresa (1:21)
4. Grande Passion (9:05)
5. Asia de Vuba (8:58)
6. Soledad (7:37)
7. Opus Green (10:20)
8. Libertango (5:07)
9. Azucar (3:13)
Al Di Meola - World Sinfonia: The Grande Passion (2000) CD Rip

personnel :

Al Di Meola – guitars, dumbek, percussion
Michael Philip Mossman – trumpet
Oscar Feldman – tenor saxophone
Mario Parmisano – piano, synthesizer
Hernan Romero – guitar, charango, vocals
John Patitucci – acoustic bass guitar
Gilad Dobrecky – drums
Gumbi Ortiz – congas
Arto Tunçboyacıyan – vocals, percussion
Toronto Orchestra – strings, woodwinds
Fabrizio Festa – conductor

A rich, moody tapestry with flashes of fire, this CD incorporates elements of jazz, fusion, classical, Latin, tango, and Middle Eastern music. Sounding like the romantic soundtrack to an excellent foreign film, it's full of splendid moments, like the wash of colors on "Double Concerto," a sinuous composition by Al di Meola's "musical father and friend," Astor Piazzolla. Di Meola interprets two more beauties from the late Argentine tango legend -- the tender "Soledad" and the churning, incendiary "Libertango," where he uses MIDI technology to approximate the classic bandoleon sound -- and offers six of his own. One of them, the title track, could be the most gorgeous, soulful melody of 2000, stated in ways alternately delicate and powerful; when it finally crescendos it's like the ocean lifting, with the sun sparkling on it. His "Opus in Green," written with fine Argentine pianist Mario Parmisano, is very Return to Forever-like. Di Meola has phenomenal technique and a gift for unhackneyed writing; his famous blistering runs are in here, but only when they further the music -- not gratuitously added for their own sake. The arrangements by di Meola and Parmisano make optimal use of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra and soloists, creating an organically textured whole rather than the stringy soup that too often drowns such collections.~Judith Schlesinger



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