Mannheim Steamroller - Fresh Aire 4

1




Album Details

Title: Fresh Aire 4
Artist: Mannheim Steamroller
Release Date: 1981
Re-Released On: 9/12/2000
Label: American Gramaphone Records, Fresh Aire
Duration: 33:36
Album Type(s): Instrumental
UPCs: 012805037020, 012805500425, 012805037044
Genre: New Age
Styles: Neo-Classical, Adult Alternative, Progressive Electronic
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: 6
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. G Major Toccata
  2. Crystal
  3. Interlude 7
  4. Four Rows of Jacks
  5. Red Wine
  6. Dancing Flames
  7. The Dream
  8. Embers

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2000CDFresh Aire5004
2000CDAmerican Gramaphone Records5004
1981CDAmerican Gramaphone Records370

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Winter had a polarizing effect on the band, drawing them toward a more severe, economical sound that favored clarity over sentimentality. Gone were the overly romantic piano pieces and giddy medieval romps. This is music tinged with a certain sadness (as on "Red Wine"), at times alien and foreboding ("Crystal"). It's not a complete departure from their formula, but it does succeed at matching that formula to a specific season, moreso than the first three Fresh Aire records anyway. The album was originally split between outside (the first four tracks) and inside (the last four tracks), a point lost on the subsequent CD reissue. There's not a huge difference between the two; the medieval "Four Rows of Jacks" isn't so much different in spirit from the modern "Dancing Flames," and neither evokes the outdoors or indoors in particular. If Fresh Aire 4 is a better record than its predecessors, much of it depends on the listener's appreciation of synthesizers. Jackson Berkey uses them more here than on previous albums, and the music seems to sparkle as a result. It is their most modern record, embracing the world of electronic music on "Crystal" and "The Dream" (based on Johannes Kepler's work, which would serve as the launching point for Fresh Aire 5). The opening "G Major Toccata," as much fun as it is, almost sets the listener up to expect the same fare as the first three Fresh Aires. But the band quickly turns introspective, and by the closing "Embers" the mood has changed 180 degrees. Fresh Aire 4 remains their most effective evocation of a season, even if they are indoors for half of it. More importantly, it proves that the band could compete with modern musicians on their own turf. ~ Dave Connolly, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Beth McCollumStrings
Bob JenkinsOboe
Carol DavisPhotography
Charles W. CronkhiteStrings
Chip DavisRecorder, Percussion, Producer, Synthesizer, Drums, Arranger
Chris FarberStrings
Don SearsProducer, Engineer, Mastering
Dorothy BrownStrings
Ed WilsonLiner Notes
Eric HansenLute, Bass
Hugh BrownStrings
Jackson BerkeyCeleste, Piano, Synthesizer, Organ, Pipe Organ, Piano (Electric), Harpsichord, Fender Rhodes
James HammondStrings
Jim WheelerEngineer
Joe LandesStrings
John BodenHorn
John SvobodaArt Direction
Lou NewmanStrings
Louis Davis, SR.Keyboard Technician, ?
Merton ShatzkinStrings
Miriam DuffelmeyerStrings
Steve ShippsStrings
Sue RobinsonStrings