Home
Visits New Orleans
Loading Inventory...
Barnes and Noble
Visits New Orleans
Current price: $13.99
Barnes and Noble
Visits New Orleans
Current price: $13.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
*Product Information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, and additional information please contact Barnes and Noble
A fine collection of pieces from New Orleans-based (but British-born) clarinetist
Sammy Rimington
.
Rimington
follows the sound of
George Lewis
, the heir to
Bunk Johnson
's band long ago. The clarinet bobs and weaves a bit among the rest of the band, with a bumping, casual rhythm section and a swinging trombone. This isn't quite the
Preservation Hall
-style
brass band
sound, it's not quite the
Dixieland
sound, it's somewhere in between instead. And that's a fine place to be, showing off some highly capable musicians who never take too much from a solo when they could be playing together instead. The sound is sweet, tender, and relaxed. Maybe not what people think of when they pick up an album of N'Orleans music with a hot five or a hot six involved, but a fine pick nonetheless. As a bonus,
Michael
and
David Doucet
join in for a couple of tracks at the end, as does the
Treme Brass Band
with
Kermit Ruffins
in tow. ~ Adam Greenberg
Sammy Rimington
.
Rimington
follows the sound of
George Lewis
, the heir to
Bunk Johnson
's band long ago. The clarinet bobs and weaves a bit among the rest of the band, with a bumping, casual rhythm section and a swinging trombone. This isn't quite the
Preservation Hall
-style
brass band
sound, it's not quite the
Dixieland
sound, it's somewhere in between instead. And that's a fine place to be, showing off some highly capable musicians who never take too much from a solo when they could be playing together instead. The sound is sweet, tender, and relaxed. Maybe not what people think of when they pick up an album of N'Orleans music with a hot five or a hot six involved, but a fine pick nonetheless. As a bonus,
Michael
and
David Doucet
join in for a couple of tracks at the end, as does the
Treme Brass Band
with
Kermit Ruffins
in tow. ~ Adam Greenberg