eMusic Review 0
Wander out to the fringes of bluegrass, and you're bound to run into Noam Pikelny, a talented young banjo player whose ferocious virtuosity and dazzling creativity are offset by musical wit and a wry sense of humor. For his 2004 debut, Pikelny turned to a crafty selection of players: edgy mandolinist Matt Flinner and his frequent musical partner, bassist Todd Phillips, wide-ranging fiddler Stuart Duncan and under-appreciated guitarist David Grier, whose quirky sensibility is perfectly suited to the album's collection of airy tunes. Using bluegrass instrumentation and a musical vocabulary drawn from, but not limited to, the bluegrass bag of licks, Pikelny and his crew mingle jazz, new age and "newgrass" influences to create absorbing excursions into unexpected — and delightful — musical worlds. In the Maze isn't the future of bluegrass, but it points the way toward one important aspect of things to come.