Navigator

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 49:39

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Where do they get these reviewers???

cescad

Fusion stalwarts Oregon eh? About as coherent as saying 'those Hip Hop stalwarts Steely Dan'..;/ Did like a few of these songs - esp. the Great Lawn - nice bass clarinet, but for the most part I disagreed with the reviewer (imagine that)..sounds like new age to me...very bland. Paul needs to be stretched...check out "Out of the Woods' by Oregon or 'Later That Evening' by Eberhard Weber (none of these I would describe as 'Fusion Stalwarts') What the heck is a stalwart anyway???

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They Say All Media Guide

1981′s Navigator is the second solo album by woodwind player Paul McCandless, and like the first, it’s not much of a departure from his better-known work with the fusion stalwarts Oregon. In front of a four-piece band featuring percussionist/vibraphonist David Samuels and guitarist Ross Traut (both of whom share composition chores), McCandless plays oboe, bass clarinet, English horn, and soprano saxophone lines that are too melodic to truly count as new age music, but aren’t showboatingly complex enough to fit in with the chops-before-inspiration fusion crowd. The resulting music is unfailingly pleasant, but only occasionally, as on the haunting “Non-Navigator,” with its spooky wordless ululations by vocalist Jay Clayton, does it feel truly inspired. Too often, as on Traut’s “The Great Lawn,” the proceedings are fine if tasty playing and a mellow mood are all one requires, but listeners wanting a deeper connection might find the album wanting. – Stewart Mason

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