What's It All About

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (37 ratings)
What's It All About album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Pat Metheny (See All Albums by Pat Metheny)
  • Date Released: May 6, 2011

  • Genre: Jazz

  • Label: Nonesuch

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 55:53

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when you trust an artist.....

EMUSIC-02572F78

...to continually deliver creatively, ingeniously, soulfully and from both the head and the heart, and then deliver it consistently to you in a manner that makes you thankful you have ears to hear that kind of freedom, it's rare. especially when they are giving you covers of songs you've come to deeply love and appreciate by the original artists. metheny has done it with this collection of classics. nearly every tune is a bulls eye in not only keeping my interest, but once again making me soar in the hearing. take a listen....i think you'll agree. ~steveT

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when you trust an artist.....

EMUSIC-02572F78

...to continually deliver creatively, ingeniously, soulfully and from both the head and the heart, and then deliver it consistently to you in a manner that makes you thankful you have ears to hear that kind of freedom, it's rare. especially when they are giving you covers of songs you've come to deeply love and appreciate by the original artists. metheny has done it with this collection of classics. nearly every tune is a bulls eye in not only keeping my interest, but once again making me soar in the hearing. take a listen....i think you'll agree. ~steveT

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Solo guitar at it's best!

HSWT

I probably have a bit of a bias here as I am roughly the same age as Metheny and as such grew up with these songs. The true beauty here though is Metheny's wonderful re-imaginings of these mostly pop tunes. His interpretations range from sticking pretty close to the original tunes, as in "The Sound of Silence", "Cherish", and "Alfie" to complete de-constructions as in "Garota de Ipanena" and the flamenco inspired take on "Pipeline". What rings true and consistent throughout is Metheny's mastery of using his great technique and musical knowledge to serve the telling of the story of the song. A must for lovers of solo acoustic guitar work.

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A bit apprehensive getting the entire...

kupitero

...LP after seeing the songs included. Like, what??? Had he lost his ingenuity and had gone too commercial??? Been a fan of him & his group since '81 after hearing his "80/81" LP back in Saudi Arabia (isn't it fantastic???). However, after hearing all the tracks, the more I'm surprised at the immense genius of this guitarist. Not bad, for guy who started playing the trumpet in Kansas! His rendition of "Garota de Ipanema" is truly one-in-a-million! Again, thanks, eMusic!!!

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Great Metheny

alfa10

Wonderful to see this album already on emusic, small remark is that the 2 bonus tracks ('Round Midnight & This Nearly Was Mine) which are available on iTunes & Amazon are not included. The Sound Of Silence on his 42 string is out of this world.

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Vintage Pat Metheny!!!

Slobadu

This is such a smooth album,each and every tune. It just takes me back to "New Chautaqua" in 1979 or even "Off Ramp" in 1983, which both albums were done superbly by Pat. If you are fans of those then this is the album to have. Also "in joy"ing Pat Metheny in concert in Germany in 1983 was the best. So this album really took me back and made me re-evaluate how important Pat Metheny style is to jazz

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They Say All Music Guide

The jazz tradition has long taken pop songs, reimagined and reinvented them harmonically and rhythmically and re-presented them as vehicles for improvisation. Pat Metheny has done something different on What’s It All About, his second Nashville-tuned baritone acoustic guitar record (with a handful of other acoustic instruments and no overdubs, but there are edits). Here he performs ten pop songs that have long been part of his personal arcana and recorded them so that we might hear what’s inside these songs — as songs. Recorded on a single day in February of 2011, Metheny interprets well-known songs by Paul Simon, Antonio Carlos Jobim, Lennon & McCartney, Henry Mancini, the Ventures, Burt Bacharach, Paul Williams, Terry Kirkman, Carly Simon, Thom Bell, and others across the pop spectrum. His approach is deliberate; his interest here is in the subtlety of melody; its nuance, suggestion, and mystery; he finds the places he hears inside the music before these songs even begin, or just after they end, through a unique series of tunings he employs between A-flat and C. “The Sound of Silence” opens the set by suggesting the tones of a Japanese koto in its intro (courtesy of his 42-string Pikasso guitar). When the melody commences, its languorous richness and rhythmic balance are so perfect, we hear it not only as the pop song we remember by Simon & Garfunkel, but as a lyric invention that is almost magical in its possibility. The version of Kirkman’s “Cherish” (a big hit by the Association), is equally profound. He finds the space where the human voice inserts itself in the harmonic structure and opens it with his guitar. There is slightly more improvisation in “Alfie,” but it’s open, spacious, and full of hinted-at dimensions in the crafting of the song’s parameters. “Girl from Ipanema,” played as discovers suggestions of other — darker and moodier — melodies inside it. He pulls out both the implied elegance in “That’s the Way I’ve Always Heard It Should Be,” and the quietly majestic variety of it in “Rainy Days and Mondays.” “Betcha by Golly, Wow” stands as a revelation: its truly inventive harmonies and jazz syncopations are — and one suspects they always have been — inherent in the tune’s basic architecture. In closer “And I Love Her” are the direct implications of bossa that Lennon and McCartney had no doubt taken note of at the time. Ultimately, What’s It All About is an intimate work revealing Metheny’s investigation of composition itself. The notion of song is inherent in everything he does, and he reveals that inspiration in spades here. – Thom Jurek

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