Search - Eric Tingstad, Nancy Rumbel :: Paradise

Paradise
Eric Tingstad, Nancy Rumbel
Paradise
Genres: Jazz, New Age, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (14) - Disc #1

Like the two albums (American Acoustic and Pastorale) that preceded it, Paradise by Eric Tingstad and Nancy Rumbel offers listeners the audio equivalent of a comfortable sweater and a favorite pair of jeans. The two vetera...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Eric Tingstad, Nancy Rumbel
Title: Paradise
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Narada
Original Release Date: 10/24/2000
Release Date: 10/24/2000
Genres: Jazz, New Age, Pop
Style: Meditation
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 724385029325, 0724385029356, 724385029356

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Like the two albums (American Acoustic and Pastorale) that preceded it, Paradise by Eric Tingstad and Nancy Rumbel offers listeners the audio equivalent of a comfortable sweater and a favorite pair of jeans. The two veteran musicians continue to blend folk's expressive spirit with the meticulous nature of chamber music in ways that yield serene, instantly appealing backdrops for reading, watching the sun rise, or warming a gathering of friends in front of a fireplace. Gone is the duo's midcareer experimentation with energized, ensemble-based settings; what remains is the pair's core sound--Tingstad's sonorous acoustic guitars gracefully intertwined with Rumbel's lyrical passages for oboe, English horn, and ocarinas, embellished here with light percussion. Gentle almost to a fault at times, Paradise is nevertheless amply supplied with pleasant melodies: the sweet breezes flowing through "Sailing," the Spanish-tinged romance of "As You Wish," and pair of engaging pop-classical hybrids, "The Lowcountry" and "Rokeby." Highlights: the inviting Middle Eastern flair that adorns a tribute to Ofra Haza ("Ofra") and Tingstad's animated "The Lawnmower Song." --Terry Wood

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CD Reviews

The Dynamic Duo do it again
Guardian of the Zen Sea | Looking after the sun and surf | 10/31/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)

"There is just something about the music that Tingstad and Rumbel create... I can't quite express why I like it so much. I really don't normally like acoustic guitar with woodwind/horn/ocarina music. Really, I don't. But these two musicains combine to create music that does not fall into all the schmaltzy, sugary musical traps which litter the road to New Age acoustic music. I truly believe that a part of their success lies in the fact that they live and work in the Pacific Northwest. Also, they make a conscious effort to create what they call "[the] capacitiy to allow people to reconnect with hearing silence. There is an art to listeneing to ends of notes, to the phrasing of passages..." (liner notes) Tingstad and Rumbel have an ability to create simple, yet complex music. Unlike many other acoustic artists in the dreaded "New Age" category, they understand that less is often better, and that subtlety allows the listener to bring his or her own imagination to the music. If you have pruchased music by Tingstad and Rumbel before, then you will not be disappointed by this CD. If you have never tried their music, I'm sure that you will find this CD wonderful to listen to and to relax your soul. Also try their previous CD "American Acoustic". And I highly recommend the solo effort by Nancy Rumbel called "Notes from the Tree of Life". I often play cuts from this CD on a Public Radio Program in Alaska, and always get calls asking about the artist."
Well Worth The Wait
Guardian of the Zen Sea | 12/05/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)

"My wife and I have been Tingstad and Rumbel fans for years, and their musical compositions just keep getting better and better. One of the things we love the most about Eric and Nancy's music is their ability to perfectly reproduce their recordings onstage--we've heard them perform live and their sound is unmistakable and indistinguishable from their recordings. Paradise matches the caliber of their previous CDs, but the new compositions are fresh and unique-- we've been waiting for some of these tunes we've heard at their performances to make this CD for years."
For Those Who'd Rather Be Alive
Greg | 12/01/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This album is a delight from start to finish. After the largely Renaissance chamber sound of Pastorale, T&R have returned to a more wide-ranging palette (recalling their 1990 classic Homeland) while keeping it intimate (a low-key rhythm section guests on some tunes). Eric's guitars ring crisp and bright as ever, and Nancy's oboe, English horn and ocarina are sweet and chipper by turns.From the rolling, evocative opener (Sailing) we're taken on another delightful tour of nature and cultures the world over. This album is more upbeat than Pastorale, which (perhaps out of circumstance?) had some deeply melancholic themes (Savannah, Guinevere's Lament and Reverence).The title track, The Lowcountry and The Wanderer are vintage, lyrical tunes. As You Wish, Eleganza and Ofra (a tribute to late singer Ofra Haza) expand the view, with the latter a first touch of Egyptian. The classic pastoral sound is still there in The Man From Stratford and Mansfield Park (both literary nods), as well as Village Square.A pleasant surprise treat is the closer, Eric's lively solo The Lawnmower Song. Recalling his solo tunes Leo's Lament and Flight to Buck Mountain, hearing this toe-tapper makes me want to fly out west and hustle him back into the studio with just one guitar, for old times' sake.Another pleasant surprise was how well the cover of Sting's tune Fields of Gold works. Apart from Christmas carols, this is the only T&R cover aside from the Bach Bourrée featured on Pastorale.This album is another T&R triumph, another reminder of the joyous places music can take us. Eric and Nancy are the best (and most underrated) that contemporary music has to offer us. Don't miss out."