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Sample Track 1:
"Elephant Dance" from Miho: Journey to the Mountain
Sample Track 2:
"Love is Not in Your Mind" from Miho: Journey to the Mountain
Sample Track 3:
"Bansuri & Saxophone" from Miho: Journey to the Mountain
Sample Track 4:
"Morning Sun" from Miho: Journey to the Mountain
Layer 2
Album Review

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Miho - Journey to the Mountain
Paul Winter Consort | Living Era (2011)

by RAUL D'GAMA ROSE
Published:  May 6, 2011

Paul Winter's music pulsates with the earth's polyrhythmic heartbeat. Various incarnations of his Consort have been so in tune with the ground beneath their feet that this ensemble, in all its forms, has come to be the harbinger of the wellspring of all life. From time to time, Winter's soul has roamed the realms where mysticism rubbed cricket-legs with the limbs of Gaia, as in Missa Gaia/Earth Mass (Living Music, 1982). At other times, he has aligned his heart with the ethereal wind that roamed the wonders of the world, best known of all being the musical expedition, Canyon, (Living Music, 1985). But there were also two classic albums, Earthbeat (Living Music, 1987), recorded with the Dimitri Pokrovsky Singers, and Earth: Voices of a Planet (Living Music, 1990), a masterpiece of a myriad voices. Both these albums came to be among the most celebrated and enduring musical testaments of the day.

However, with the release of Miho: Journey to the Mountain, Winter may have exceeded himself in his unique musical expression. The music was inspired by the Consort's visit to the unsurpassed beauty of the Miho Museum that nestles in the Shigaraki Mountains near Kyoto, Japan. After being lured there by an ensemble of Japanese drummers, the Shumei Taiko Ensemble, Winter became seduced by the architectural and acoustic beauty of the Miho. Once he met its creator, the architect, I.M.Pei, Winter began to create the cycle of songs inspired by what he calls one of the most beautiful man-made spots on earth, that is cradled by the awesome natural structure of the Shigaraki Mountains.

Winter's suite is divided into two sections. The first, "Many Paths To Paradise," describes his approach and arrival to the Miho and the second, "Shangri-La," provides a moving account of what he sees before him, that is, the museum, its exhibits, acoustics and how they touched his heart and the hearts of the musicians who traveled with him to Japan. From this perspective, Winter has produced music of singular beauty that could only have come from his magical pen. Critical to the success of the music is the soaring glissandi of his soprano saxophone, the equally fluttering majesty of Paul McCandless' various reeds, the percussionists, and the vocals of Arto Tunçboyacıyan.

Charts such as "The Welcome (Song of Miho)" and "Koto Spring" are only surpassed by "Love Is On Your Mind," and only because of Tunçboyacıyan's absolutely stunning vocals/ A magical manipulator of the emotions, the multitalented musician's vocals seem to emerge from the deepest recesses of his soul. The notes undulate in his throat, spinning out into the air thick with sadness and joy. The duet between him and Winter's saxophone is magnificently arbitrated by Don Grusin's keyboards.

The sounds of the earth's creatures—from elephants to honey bees—dapple this extraordinary music as it seduces heart and mind in this ongoing masterpiece tribute to the earth that Winter so loves.

 05/06/11 >> go there
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