The Wayfaring Strangers are a number of things: a band, an album, a project, and a new way to play American music. In their incarnation as a band, they have been called "the most potent supergroup in folk music" by the Boston Herald. The Herald goes on to praise Shifting Sands of Time as "an audacious, genre-bending experiment, full of joy, sorrow, and beauty." Most importantly, the Wayfaring Strangers seek to find spiritual common ground between different styles of music: among which include jazz, bluegrass, folk, Klezmer, Celtic, and chamber music.
A collective fronted by visionary violinist Matt Glaser, the Wayfaring Strangers present a bold, successful experiment in Americana. This all-star assemblage of players and singers, whose pedigrees extend across innumerable genres, first set out years ago to seek the heart of American music in a deft blend of modern and traditional styles. Their first album, Shifting Sands of Time, is the culmination of that search. On this stunning debut, Glaser's elusive dream of combining the high lonesome sound of bluegrass and mountain music with the soul and sophistication of late-night jazz is given a voice by some of the world's finest acoustic musicians. The end result is unprecedented not only in its intricacy, beauty, and striking interplay of styles but also in its organic purity. Never before has something so expansive on paper came out sounding so smooth and natural on disk.
History shows that change has been instigated only by those bold enough to reach into the unknown - to cross the lines and discover the hidden fruits of music's gray areas. But the will to initiate such an astonishing fusion is not enough: ability and ingenuity is essential. It is the caliber of Glaser's co-conspirators that lends such necessary continuity and clarity to Shifting Sands of Time. His long-time associate Andy Statman, on mandolin and clarinet, is the sparkplug of the Wayfaring Strangers - a musician so virtuosic in both sound and scope that he pushes the ensemble as a whole to new heights with his fiery inventions. His sweeping clarinet playing comes straight from the Klezmer tradition, with modal incantations and pained cries, while his mandolin work is fierce in its rhythmic attack. With Statman fanning the flames, banjo master Tony Trischka delivers some of his finest playing ever - a fascinating intersection of old-tyme drones, Earl Scruggs derived finger-picking, and Trischka's own melodic and chromatic approach. New York pianist Bruce Barth brings a rich harmonic palette and sensitive, tasteful phrasing to the group. Guitarist John McGann and bassist Jim Whitney are the rock of the Wayfaring Strangers, holding the rhythm firm yet supple under the vocalists' and soloists' ecstatic, evocative flights.
With the level of musical invention so high, only the best vocalists are capable of matching wits with Glaser and the Strangers. Shifting Sands of Time is blessed by a who's who of contemporary folk, bluegrass, and pop singers, giving grace and charisma to the project. Acclaimed folk singer and songwriter Lucy Kaplansky delivers knock-out performances on "Wayfaring Stranger" and "High on a Mountain." Dean Olsher, host of WNYC's "The Next Big Thing," called the latter track "one of the most transcendently beautiful pieces of music I've heard in a long time." Tim O'Brien revisits his swing-band roots with a bouncy "Blue and Lonesome." "Rank Stranger" is blessed with a resilient, moving performance by bluegrass star Rhonda Vincent. Jennifer Kimball, the Strangers' official full-time vocalist, invests each of her performances with the perfect blend of earthiness and wonder. Best known in pop and rock circles, Tracy Bonham delivers an impressively versatile interpretation of the classic spiritual "Working on a Building." Most memorable of all, though, is a stunning version of "Man of Constant Sorrow" featuring Ralph Stanley. A legend in bluegrass and mountain music, Stanley's impassioned performance is framed in shimmering piano, and subtle, eastern-influenced percussion. This cut illuminates the common ground between the modality of Ralph Stanley's mountain singing and the modality of modern jazz, to stunning effect.
New vistas, new directions. The Wayfaring Strangers deliver all they promise on their jaw-dropping debut Shifting Sands of Time. As noted bluegrass critic, songwriter, and musician Jon Weisberger writes, "Every once in a while, an album comes along that challenges our expectations, our assumptions about the way music is made. Not for those who demand that their music be comfortably predictable, Shifting Sands of Time is hauntingly new, like a dream mingling the past and the present, the known and the unknown into something that can touch our deepest emotions." Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
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