Bill Frisell - Blues Dream

S



Album Details

Title: Blues Dream
Artist: Bill Frisell
Release Date: 1/16/2001
Re-Released On: 0/0/2001
Label: Nonesuch Records, Elektra Entertainment
UPCs: 075597961522, 075597990379
Genre: Jazz
Styles: Modern Creative, Post-Bop, Avant-Garde Jazz, Jazz Instrument, Guitar Jazz
Moods: Amiable/Good-Natured, Cerebral, Freewheeling, Laid-Back/Mellow, Playful, Refined/Mannered, Reflective, Searching, Ambitious, Complex, Dramatic, Earnest, Elaborate, Hypnotic, Literate, Meandering, Passionate, Plaintive, Precious, Provocative, Sentimental, Sophisticated, Spacey, Stately, Uncompromising, Witty, Wry
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 5
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Blues Dream
  2. Ron Carter
  3. Pretty Flowers Were Made for Blooming
  4. Pretty Stars Were Made to Shine
  5. Where Do We Go?
  6. Like Dreamers Do, Pt. 1
  7. Like Dreamers Do, Pt. 2
  8. Outlaws
  9. What Do We Do?
  10. Episode
  11. Soul Merchant
  12. Greg Leisz
  13. The Tractor
  14. Fifty Years
  15. Slow Dance
  16. Things Will Never Be the Same
  17. Dream On
  18. Blues Dream (Reprise)

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2008CDNonesuch Records
2001CDElektra Entertainment79615

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

Similar CDs


Members who requested this CD also requested:

Album Review

From the beginning of Blues Dream, the listener knows that something special is going on. The spare notes of Ron Miles' trumpet and the relaxed guitar work of Greg Leisz lay the groundwork for a spacious sound on the title cut. This openness remains throughout the album, even when alto and trombone are added into the mix. The instrumental "Ron Carter" begins with the loose, electrified feel of an early Miles Davis fusion piece, with Bill Frisell's distorted guitar exploring the space of the piece without resorting to excessive volume. The short and sweet "Pretty Stars Were Made to Shine" leans heavier on the country side, with steel guitar and Chet Atkins' fingerpicking dominating. The arrangements on Blues Dream are a big change from last year's solo effort, Ghost Town. An essential part of the overall sound is Leisz' steel guitar and lap steel work. He also played with Frisell on Good Dog, Happy Man, and helps to set the mood and pace throughout Blues Dream. Ron Miles plays a smaller role, but it is fascinating how well his relaxed trumpet, with its carefully chosen notes, fits into the mix on the title cut and the short "Episode." Blues Dream is a perfectly chosen title: the material, steeped in the blues, is approached in a lazy, dreamlike fashion. Frisell's fondness for putting unusual combinations of instruments together adds to the overall effect, leaving the listener to wonder why no one has ever tried this before. Blues Dream is a lovely release that should satisfy Frisell fans as well as jazz, country, and blues fans looking for a genre-bending experience. ~ Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr., All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Judy ClappEngineer
Lee TownsendProducer