Shifting Sands of Time (w/Jennifer Kimball and Cathie Ryan)
Man of Constant Sorrow (w/Ralph Stanley)
High on a Mountain (w/Lucy Kaplansky and Jennifer Kimball)
I'm Blue, I'm Lonesome Too (w/Tim O'Brien)
Motherless Child (w/Jennifer Kimball)
Cry, Cry, Darling (w/Laurie Lewis)
June Apple (w/Jennifer Kimball and Cathie Ryan)
Memories of You (w/Lucy Kaplansky and Jennifer Kimball)
Funeral in My Brain (w/Jennifer Kimball)
Working on a Building (w/Tracy Bonham)
Strange Bird (w/Ry Cavanaugh)
Rank Stranger (w/Rhonda Vincent)
Wayfaring Stranger (w/Lucy Kaplansky and Jennifer Kimball)
These days, everyone wants to be eclectic and the mastermind of some hyphenated style, but very few fusioneers are as fearless as this new all-star acoustic ensemble led by violinist Matt Glaser and featuring Andy Stat... more »man (clarinet, mandolin), John McGann (guitar, mandolin), Tony Trischka (banjo), Bruce Barth (piano), Jim Whitney (bass), and Jennifer Kimball (vocals). The recording also includes cameos from Lucy Kaplansky, Tim O'Brien, and others. Hang onto your Stetson as "Man of Constant Sorrow," kicked off by Trischka's banjo and the craggy voice of Ralph Stanley himself, wanders into interludes of rolling jazz piano. Elsewhere, klezmer clarinet melodies rise out of the Appalachian mist, Emily Dickinson poetry soars to late-night jazz, and bluegrass classics are boldly yet gently reharmonized--a series of transformations and explorations with strong spiritual overtones. The Strangers are definitely on a quest, and listeners who suspend their expectations will be rewarded with music that's beautifully played and uniquely transporting. --Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers« less
These days, everyone wants to be eclectic and the mastermind of some hyphenated style, but very few fusioneers are as fearless as this new all-star acoustic ensemble led by violinist Matt Glaser and featuring Andy Statman (clarinet, mandolin), John McGann (guitar, mandolin), Tony Trischka (banjo), Bruce Barth (piano), Jim Whitney (bass), and Jennifer Kimball (vocals). The recording also includes cameos from Lucy Kaplansky, Tim O'Brien, and others. Hang onto your Stetson as "Man of Constant Sorrow," kicked off by Trischka's banjo and the craggy voice of Ralph Stanley himself, wanders into interludes of rolling jazz piano. Elsewhere, klezmer clarinet melodies rise out of the Appalachian mist, Emily Dickinson poetry soars to late-night jazz, and bluegrass classics are boldly yet gently reharmonized--a series of transformations and explorations with strong spiritual overtones. The Strangers are definitely on a quest, and listeners who suspend their expectations will be rewarded with music that's beautifully played and uniquely transporting. --Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers
"Probably 2001's single most enchanting album -- forget the post-modern baloney of Radiohead's recent techno-drone crap and the new Lucinda Williams disk (which is merely aimless self-indulgence masquerading as spirituality). The Wayfaring Strangers draw from a vast well of American (jazz, bluegrass, old-tyme, folk) and international (klezmer and middle-eastern sounds, mostly) influences to turn standards of the bluegrass repertoire (and some newly-written tunes) BACK into the souful meditations that at heart they are. With such virtuosi as Andy Statman (transcendant! Why doesn't he play like this on HIS albums??), Tony Trischka (who shows the more meditative side of his playing), and leader Matt Glaser, the Wayfaring Strangers have the necessary tools to pull off this audacious experiment in American music. And while yes, many of the songs are slow, they are not dull -- the empathy and interaction are fascinating, more so than most so-called Jazz albums of the day. Stop reading this and buy it already. . ."
WOW!
Patricia Abdelnour | Valley Village, CA United States | 09/22/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This mind blowing fusion of various american music styles is emotionally deep, and just the perfect solace for these difficult times. At first the music might be a little disconcerting if you insist that musical styles remain separated but, give it time, it'll get to you."
Ralph Stanley and Laszlo Gardony. Great combination!
Carmel | US | 11/13/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)
"The "Man of Constant Sorrow" sung by the great Ralph Stanley and featuring an amazing piano solo by Laszlo Gardony is without question the best track on this beautiful CD.
The music is truly inspiring on "Shifting Sands of Time". Hats off to the leader and innovative mind of the band, Matt Glaser! Bravo Wayfaring Strangers!"
Shaking out the Roots
Ted Eschliman | Lincoln, NE United States | 08/06/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Four measures of jazz comping behind Mountain Music Giant, Ralph Stanley is enough to entice you to hear out the rest of the project. Like nothing you'll hear anywhere else, the merging of folk, bluegrass, fusion, Klez, and straight-ahead jazz by this acoustic ensemble retains the identity of each ingredient, without beating the cake batter into tasteless pulp.
Flavorful. Captivating.
Come on folks, we want more!"