Free Music Notes for Not All Who Wander Are Lost

Chris Thile - Not All Who Wander Are Lost

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Free Music Notes for Not All Who Wander Are Lost

Free Music Review: Outstanding!
Hit: 5 Stars

I echo the comments of previous reviewers. I am an avid Nickel Creek fan and am on the prowl for more "newgrass" music. Chris Thile's music on this album is clean and impressive - in the same style as his work with Nickel Creek, but with no vocals. Highly recommended - you won't be disappointed.

Free Music Review: Thile fan for life
Hit: 5 Stars

This album contains my favorite song of all time, which is saying a lot because I am a huge music fan. Big Sam Thompson is the song. I have heard Nickel Creek do this song everytime I have seen them live. I love the way it starts out slow and then almost stops then the tempo increases. I know this is going to sound strange, but I want this song played at my funeral. The slow part can be to allow mourners grieve, then forget that grieving crap and celebrate! Celebrate my life and theirs and celebrate that I have gone home!! Thanks Chris for giving me this song!

Free Music Review: Never left my CD player after I bought it
Hit: 5 Stars

Every once in a while I come across a CD that stays in my CD player for months at a time. This is one of those CDs. It is so intricate and complicated, I feel like I hear something new every time I listen to it. Thile's blend of jazz, classical and bluegrass eludes classification- that is, it's one of a kind. I have Thile's other two albums, Deceiver, and How to Grow a Woman from the Ground, which tend to be more rock inspired and bluegrass inspired, respectively, and they are excellent albums in their own right; however, I think Thile did it best on this album. Not All Who Wander Are Lost is a must have for music connoisseurs of any genre.

Free Music Review: Amazing Instrumental Album
Hit: 5 Stars

Being a big fan of Nickel Creek and Chris Thile, I had no doubt that I would like this album. The other instrumentalists are all top notch players and of course Chris is amazing as always.

There's a nice amount of variety in musical styles presented on Not All Who Wander Are Lost. Fans of Nickel Creek will find several of the tracks very similar to songs like Ode to a Butterfly, Scotch and Chocolate, or Stumptown. Other tracks branch out into jazz, blues and various other experimentations.

If you like listening to very talented and skilled bluegrass instrumentalists, you can't go wrong with this one.

Free Music Review: This may never come out of the CD player.
Hit: 5 Stars

I liked Nickle Creek, and had a little trepidation about Thile's solo project. Don't solo projects usually involve self-indulgence and self-conscious 'spreading out' into areas of music unlike the ones that drew you to the artist in the first place? Don't prodigies always sour?

No. And NO. Noting the presence of dobro god Jerry Douglas, banjo god Bela Fleck, and big cuddly bass god Edgar Myer, I decided it couldn't be bad. And much as I liked these guys, and Nickle Creek, I was unprepared for how wonderful this collection is. It's been in the car stereo for three months and hasn't come out.

Besides the virtuoso musicianship one would expect from the lineup, the wonderfulness comes from that rarity of rarities, a prodigy who is growing and becoming better all the time. Thile's tunes demonstrate a compositional skill almost equal to his unbelievable mandolin prowess. After an intial stunned listen-through driving across the desert at dawn, my son pointed out examples of counterpoint and inversion, rondes and scale and time changes worthy of classical composition. (things I would know nothing of)

This is about as wonderful as I can imagine. If there's better music, I'm probably not sophisticated enough to appreciate it. The first five songs are absolutely mind-blowing. About the only disclaimer I can think of is if you need noise, dissonance, or atonality to feel music is worthwhile, you will be disappointed. This is all pretty melodic, and Thile is unafraid to follow a composition all the way to beauty.

From surprise at the roaring power a string band is capable of as "Raining at Sunset" proceeds to the "How many guys are playing there?" intricacies of the Fleck/Thile duet "Riddles in the Dark", this is delicious stuff.
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