Book of
Rhapsodies is Ghost Train Orchestra's second album, following their highly
acclaimed debut Hothouse Stomp (2011). In this adventurous installment, Ghost
Train Orchestra plus a six-member choir perform bandleader Brian Carpenter's
modernistic reimaginings of four unusual ensembles from the late 1930s: The
Alec Wilder Octet, The John Kirby Sextet, The Raymond Scott Quintette, and
Reginald Foresythe and His New Music. Produced by Grammy award winner Danny
Blume and featuring Carpenter's surreal arrangements for 12-member orchestra
plus choir, Book of Rhapsodies delivers the rich experience of transporting the
listener to the past and using that past to transform the future.
Decades
before composer/conductor Gunther Schuller coined the term Third Stream to
describe a genre straddling the line between jazz and classical music, New York
became the epicenter of a new movement of composers whose work seemed to exist
outside the margins. In the late 1930s, a small cadre of forward-thinking
composers began creating small ensembles with unorthodox instrumentation to
realize some of the strangest and most evocative music of the period. With Book
of Rhapsodies, Ghost Train Orchestra travels ten years ahead from Hothouse
Stomp to tackle Brian Carpenter's new rearrangements of late 1930s chamber jazz
by four seminal bandleader/composers: Alec Wilder, John Kirby, Raymond Scott,
and Reginald Foresythe.
The
Ghost Train Orchestra's debut album Hothouse Stomp listed on several 2011 top ten lists: NPR,
New York Jazz Record, Boston Globe, JazzTimes, The Sound Room, and Stereophile
Magazine. Brian Carpenter was featured on NPR's Fresh Air with Terry Gross and
the album reached the top 10 of the Billboard Jazz charts. Downbeat Magazine
raved "Carpenter and his little big band don't just recreate musical
museum pieces; they breathe fire and life into this amazing musicŠthe only
thing better than hearing this recording would be seeing the band live."
The
Ghost Train Orchestra was formed in 2006 after Carpenter was selected as the
musical director for an event marking the 90th anniversary of the historic
Regent Theater in Arlington, MA. Since then the band has performed regularly in
New York City, home of all its members except the leader, a Boston resident.
Book of Rhapsodies was recorded at Brooklyn Recording Studio after a string of
monthly shows at Brooklyn's colorful Jalopy Theater. Carpenter rearranged the
music for orchestra, adding strings, low brass, guitar, and a six-member choir
featuring members of the Philip Glass/Robert Wilson opera Einstein on the
Beach. Acclaimed artist Noah Woods created the cover and booklet artwork
inspired by the strange and descriptive song titles of the original composers.
In 2001,
Carpenter moved to Boston to direct a film documentary on the life and legacy
of Albert Ayler. He subsequently founded the sprawling Boston-based band Beat
Circus and composed an acclaimed "Weird American Gothic" trilogy of
dark Americana albums. He also leads Brian Carpenter & the Confessions,
whose music is primarily song-oriented, with Carpenter as lead singer and
lyricist. He was recently commissioned by the Berkeley Repertory Theater in
California as composer and lyricist for "true crime" musical The
Barbary Coast, based on the book by Herbert Asbury. In addition, he produces
radio programs on WZBC-FM at Boston College, including recent documentaries on
Sam Rivers, Raymond Scott, and film sound design. His Ghost Train Orchestra
features an outstanding roster of talent: alto saxophonist Andy Laster (Satoko
Fujii), clarinetist Dennis Lichtman (Mona's Hot Four, Nation Beat), tenor
saxophonist Petr Cancura (Joe Morris), trombonist Curtis Hasselbring (Ballin'
the Jack), tubist Ron Caswell (Slavic Soul Party), violinist Mazz Swift (Burnt
Sugar), guitarist Avi Bortnick (John Scofield), bassist Michael Bates, and
drummer Rob Garcia (Joseph Jarman, Vince Giordano).
Book of Rhapsodies will be released on October 8, 2013.
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