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A Winter's Solstice: Silver Anniversary Edition
A Winter's Solstice: Silver Anniversary Edition
A Winter's Solstice: Silver Anniversary Edition

A Winter's Solstice: Silver Anniversary Edition

Product ID : 29317337


Galleon Product ID 29317337
UPC / ISBN 019341160427
Shipping Weight 0.18 lbs
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Manufacturer WINTER'S SOLSTICE
Shipping Dimension 5.55 x 4.96 x 0.55 inches
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A Winter's Solstice: Silver Anniversary Edition Features

  • Vários Artistas - A Winter's Solstice (silver Anniversa

  • Vários Artistas - A Winter's Solstice (silver Anniversa

  • Vários Artistas - A Winter's Solstice (silver Anniversa

  • Vários Artistas - A Winter's Solstice (silver Anniversa

  • Vários Artistas - A Winter's Solstice (silver Anniversa


About A Winter's Solstice: Silver Anniversary Edition

Product description No Description Available No Track Information Available Media Type: CD Artist: WINTER'S SOLSTICE Title: SILVER ANNIVERSARY EDITION Street Release Date: 10/09/2001 Domestic Genre: XMAS VOCAL COLLECTIONS Amazon.com Since the Windham Hill imprint's Winter Solstice series was born in 1985, the concept has gone through some changes, bottoming out with 1999's abysmally kitschy Winter Solstice on Ice. With this Silver Anniversary Edition, Dawn Atkinson, who produced the first Winter Solstice disc, has gone back to her original concept of nontraditional seasonal music and novel arrangements of Christmas classics. She's also brought in some old standbys, soliciting works from Paul McCandless, Barbara Higbie, Will Ackerman, Philip Aaberg, and Liz Story. Much of this new Winter Solstice turns on classical themes. Ex-Kronos Quartet cellist Joan Jeanrenaud teams with guitarist Steve Erquiaga on an airy Handel piece, and McCandless adapts Orlando Gibbons's "The Silver Swan." Others explore traditional carols, including Erquiaga's double-guitar filigree on "Greensleeves." As with past titles in this series, the best compositions are usually the originals. Keyboardist Tim Story, a Winter Solstice stalwart, unfolds another gorgeously melodic ambient chamber piece called "What Comes December." Tracy Silverman and Thea Suits turn in a wistful duet for electric violin and flute, and TV composer W.G. Snuffy Walden goes soft focus on "Moon Lake." While "Beneath the Trees," by Ackerman and Aaberg, seems born in the snow-covered trees of Ackerman's Vermont home, Hawaiian Ozzie Kotani's "Queen's Prayer" seems to have nothing to do with the season. Yet, it somehow fits the mood. --John Diliberto