Mannheim Steamroller - Fresh Aire 7

2




Album Details

Title: Fresh Aire 7
Artist: Mannheim Steamroller
Release Date: 1991
Re-Released On: 9/12/2000
Label: American Gramaphone Records
Duration: 45:19
UPCs: 012805077729, 012805500722
Genre: New Age
Styles: Neo-Classical, Adult Alternative, Progressive Electronic, Ethnic Fusion, Contemporary Instrumental
Moods: Atmospheric, Calm/Peaceful, Reflective, Soothing, Spiritual, Wistful, Amiable/Good-Natured, Bittersweet, Innocent, Laid-Back/Mellow, Pastoral, Refined/Mannered, Sentimental, Springlike, Yearning, Elegant, Melancholy, Sophisticated, Wintry, Freewheeling, Detached
Total Copies: 14
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Conjuring the Number 7
  2. Sunday the 7th Day
  3. The 7 Colours of the Rainbow
  4. The 7 C's
  5. The 7 Metals of Alchemy
  6. Chakra 1
  7. Chakra 2
  8. Chakra 3
  9. Chakra 4
  10. Chakra 5
  11. Chakra 6
  12. Chakra 7
  13. The 7 Stars of the Big Dipper

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2000CDAmerican Gramaphone Records5007
1991CDAmerican Gramaphone RecordsAGCD-777

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Chip Davis didn't have to look far for inspiration on Fresh Aire 7, using the occasion to indulge a long-standing interest in the number seven. The result is rather strict program music: the seven chakras are aligned to seven unique works, the seven colors (or "colours" if you live in the U.K. or Nebraska) of the rainbow are transcribed into seven separate notes/instruments, a seven-part rondo is recorded between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. on a single day, etc. Of course, this sort of mystic numerology is a natural fit for new age, a point acknowledged when Fresh Aire 7 won the Grammy in 1991 for Best new age Album, but luck had little to do with it. Combining synthesizers with an orchestra and choir (old pal Jackson Berkey occasionally appears behind the harpsichord), Davis bridges acoustic and electronic sounds together into a new age/classical tapestry more rich in color and effect than most of his contemporaries. Having left medieval rock behind him, Davis has evolved into a savvy electronic composer on a par with Michael Oldfield, Jean-Michel Jarre, and Vangelis, but his electronics are always tempered with a human element. The disc begins with "Conjuring the Number 7," uncorking a bubbly bottle of musical champagne at the onset. "Sunday the 7th Day" re-creates the scene of fox hunts from Davis' hometown region, an engaging confection of light classical music. "The 7 Colours of the Rainbow" may be the most steeped in new age idioms, featuring soothing sounds with rolling notes; "The 7 Metals of Alchemy" is edgier, inviting comparison to contemporary Tangerine Dream or Oldfield. Both pieces rank among the best electronic compositions in the Mannheim catalog. But the album's highlight is the extended work, "The 7 Chakras of the Body." "Chakra 1" starts in the primitive forest, "Chakra 2" mixes mechanical sounds with an Eastern melody, and soon Davis has left the earth in a mix of angelic voices and keyboards that achieves the same effect as Harold Budd's best work. "The 7 Stars of the Big Dipper" closes the disc on a note of childlike wonder. Though "The 7 C's" is really just a puddle of a pun, Fresh Aire 7 is a septemfluous collection of sounds that channels Davis' creative energies, and in the end it's new age's cup that overfloweth. Mannheim Steamroller seems to just get better with age, due largely to Davis' boundless curiosity. ~ Dave Connolly, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Adrian GolaViolin
Alice RenderFrench Horn
Alison SmartVocals, Soprano (Vocal)
Andrew GantTenor (Vocal)
Andrew HammondBass (Vocal)
Angus SmithTenor (Vocal)
Arnie RothConcert Master, Violin, Orchestra Contractor
Bill BradleyEngineer
Blair MiltonViolin
Bobby JenkinsHorn (English), Oboe
Brad OplandBass
Brian AckleyAssistant Producer
Campbell HughesBalance Engineer
Campbell HughsEngineer
Caroline AshtonSoprano (Vocal), Soloist
Catherine BrubakerViola
Charles GibbsBass (Vocal)
Charles GreigBass (Vocal)
Charles PottBass (Vocal)
Chip DavisConductor, Bass (Upright), Producer, Liner Notes, Photography
Clare WallaceSoprano (Vocal), Vocals
Collins TrierBass
D.L. Cramer Ph.D.Illustrations
Dale ClevengerFrench Horn
Daniel StrbaViola
Dennis Di CiccoPhotography
Don GreigBass (Vocal)
Donna DeamSoprano (Vocal), Vocals
Everett MirskyViolin
Florentina RamniceanuViolin
Florentina RamniceauViolin
Fox FehlingViolin
Frances JellardAlto (Vocals)
Gail SalvatoriViolin
Gary StuckaCello
Gregory SadlekConsultant, ?
Gregory SarchetBass
Harvey BroughTenor (Vocal)
Jackson BerkeyHarpsichord
James OttawayBass (Vocal)
James SmelserFrench Horn
Jeremy TaylorTenor (Vocal)
Jo MaggsVocals, Soprano (Vocal)
Jocelyn MilesVocals, Soprano (Vocal)
John BoydMastering, Engineer, Mixing
John RutterChoir Master
John SharpCello
Joseph GolanViolin
Karen KerslakeSoprano (Vocal), Vocals
Kim ScholesCello
Kim SholesCello
Laura MillerViolin
Lawrence GolanViolin
Leonard ChausowCello
Li-Kuo ChangViola
Liba ShachtViolin
Louis Davis, SR.Keyboard Technician
Louis Stout?, Orchestral Assistant
Mark LeBrocqTenor (Vocal)
Marlou JohnstonViolin
Marlou JonstonViolin
Martin AbramsViola
Mary GingrichFrench Horn
Mary HitchAlto (Vocals)
Mike ChambersBass (Vocal)
Nicola BarberAlto (Vocals)
Otakar SroubekViolin
Patrick Lee-BrowneBass (Vocal)
Paul GordonTenor (Vocal)
Penelope StowSoprano (Vocal)
Peter GrittonAlto (Vocals)
Peter LaBellaViolin
Phyllida HancockAlto (Vocals)
Rachel PlattSoprano (Vocal), Vocals
Rick HarrigPhotography
Robert SwanViola
Roger MoultonViola
Samuel MagadViolin
Sharon DavisPhotography
Simone MaceSoprano (Vocal), Vocals
Steve HartmanHarp
Susanna SpicerAlto (Vocals)
The Cambridge SingersVocals
Thomas YangViolin
Victoria MayneCello
Walter PreucilCello
Wayne JeszMastering, Assistant Production Coordination, Assistant Producer