Glide

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (50 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 50:37

eMusic Review

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Amelia Raitt

eMusic Contributor

Amelia Raitt is a former writer for the television program Mr. Belvedere and has been writing about pop music of all colors and stripes for eMusic since 2005. S...more »

08.19.08
Jerry Douglas, Glide
2008 | Label: KOCH Records / Entertainment One Distribution

Jerry Douglas is an undisputed master of the Dobro. His agile pickin 'and strummin 'was an integral part of (re)introducing the world to the rollicking beauty of bluegrass and old timey music on the O Brother Where Art Thou? soundtrack. Glide, his twelfth solo album adds to his legacy as a towering figure in modern country and folk music. Primarily instrumentals, the album jumps from bluegrass to swingin 'New Orleans-style jazz to modern country and all the nooks and crannies in between.

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Thanks emusic

EMUSIC-008DB7D1

Until I saw a listing on this site I hadn't heard of Jerry Douglas. What a treat, great instrumentalist. Not as good as "The Best Kept Secret". I downloaded cuts 1,2,5,6,9,10,and 11.

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Great modern sound from a traditional instrument

nmaltar487

I can't imagine better dobro playing than displayed on this album. I first heard Jerry Douglas on A Prairie Home Companion and had to seek him out on Emusic. This album hasn't left heavy rotation on my playlist since. A must have!

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Can't Write a SONG to Save His Life

rubiconvict

I've been obsessed with several recordings that featured Jerry Douglas. Strength in Numbers, Skip Hop & Wobble, any of the Alison Krauss stuff he's on...and even some of his older solo recordings. So I went to see him play live in Prospect Park, Brooklyn. Oh man. Jerry. If you're reading this. STOP! Stop whatever you're writing now and just.......just STOP IT! Let other people write the tunes. Stop covering jazz fusion. Stop wanking. And just play solid songs by other people. Or dig deeper and learn the art of metaphor/simile. Cuz so far, man, ya just aint cuttin' it. And it makes the music shallow, dull and expendable. Sorry. Love the musicianship. Just can't have the bad songs and endless wank. Our time's worth more than that.

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jerry's got chops!

geoffpat

Had never heard of him, but caught his show at the Blue Note since I was visiting New York during his gig. Wow! Am a fan now! Played his version of Remark You Made by Wayne Shorter. He admits to loving Heavy Weather back in the day. Who'd a thunk. This is his latest. Reflects more Union Station than hidden jazz side, but nice stuff nonetheless. Impressive technique and a lyrical gift.

They Say All Media Guide

Jerry Douglas is probably the most famous dobro player in the world, which might sound like damning with faint praise, except that he’s also one of the most in-demand session musicians in the world, period, as well as a constantly sought-after producer, and the man John Fogerty describes as “my favorite musician, and I’m including Otis Redding and Elvis in that.” Although he remains attached to his bluegrass roots, his playing expanded far beyond the strictures of that genre decades ago, and his latest solo album demonstrates the degree to which he has both thoroughly digested and transcended the formulae that gave him his start. On “Bounce,” which opens the album, you’d almost swear that there was a Scruggs-style banjo being picked in the background, but in fact it’s Douglas himself playing arpeggiated counterpoint to mandolinist Sam Bush; on “Marriage Made in Hollywood” he takes a wonderful story-song by Paul Brady and Michael O’Keefe, beefs it up with a modern country arrangement and invites Travis Tritt to sing. “Sway Sur la Route Royale” is a gentle, New Orleans-style funeral march, and his rendition of the classic banjo showcase “Home Sweet Home” is a dream-team project featuring Earl Scruggs and guitarist Tony Rice in a trio arrangement with Douglas. The danger with this kind of stuff is always that when boundaries are disregarded, too often the musical conception starts to get fuzzy around the edges and then it dissipates into a pleasant cloud of sound. Douglas flirts with that tendency on one or two tracks, but for the most part he retains a sharp focus; not only is every track played with the virtuosity that now seems to flow from his hands almost without conscious intent, but almost every track is brilliant on its own terms and makes a coherent musical argument. Highly recommended. – Rick Anderson

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