Little Worlds

Little Worlds is the tenth album by Béla Fleck and the Flecktones, released in 2003. The album was released as a 3-disc set. Ten tracks from the set were also released on a single disc called Ten from Little Worlds.

Little Worlds
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 12, 2003
GenreJazz fusion, progressive bluegrass, psychedelic folk, world fusion
Length153:32
LabelColumbia
ProducerBéla Fleck
Béla Fleck and the Flecktones chronology
Live at the Quick
(2002)
Little Worlds
(2003)
The Hidden Land
(2006)

The album contains several tracks that are hidden at the beginning and end of Disc One and at the end of Disc Three. These hidden tracks present a short and humorous story of two men, voiced by Yankees outfielder Bernie Williams and Michael McKean (as David St. Hubbins of Spinal Tap), stuck in traffic and flipping through different radio stations. The songs they hear are songs from the album played in different styles and on different instruments. For example, the slow and soothing song "Poindexter" is featured but redone as a heavy metal song with each band member playing an instrument different from his ordinary one. The redone version is also complete with rhythmic screaming to which one of the men listening in the car makes the comment "I don't even know what they are saying."[1][2]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[3]
All About Jazz[2]
Allmusic[4]

In his Allmusic review, music critic Zac Johnson wrote the "three-CD concept album has ambitious intentions, but ultimately ends up feeling a bit scattered... Still, every note is impeccably played and pristinely recorded, and those Flecktones fans who like to pull apart their extremely technical pieces of music, analyze them, and put them back together will find hours of rabid discussion on Little Worlds."[3]

Doug Collette, writing for All About Jazz, praised the album's packaging, sound quality and conception: "Lest you think Little Worlds is an exercise in esoteric self-indulgence, pay attention to the way the album flows over the course of the three discs. While much of the early going insinuates itself gently through the recurring use of Celtic melodic themes, there’s a distinct if understated increase in the intensity of the music between the first disc and the second. The appearance of guitarist Derek Trucks... on 'Pineapple Heart' ratchets up the visceral momentum of the music another level altogether, while 'The Last Jam' brings this entire affair to an emphatic climax."[2]

Critic Thom Jurek called the album an "outrageous exercise in self-indulgence... so excessive that Sony issued a single-disc sampler from the set hoping it would sell."[5]

Track listing

Disc one

"Bil Mon" is preceded by a pregap hidden track.

  1. "Bil Mon"  (Bill Monroe/The Flecktones) – 8:42
  2. "The Ballad of Jed Clampett" (with Bobby McFerrin Divinity Roxx and Sam Bush)  (Paul Henning) – 4:06
  3. "Puffy"  (The Flecktones) – 6:45
  4. "New Math"  (Béla Fleck/Roy Wooten) – 6:59
  5. "Longitude"  (Victor Wooten/B. Fleck) – 3:04
  6. "Latitude"  (V. Wooten/B. Fleck) – 5:04
  7. "Centrifuge" (with Derek Trucks)  (The Flecktones) – 2:05
  8. "Off the Top (The Gravity Wheel)" (with Nickel Creek)  (B. Fleck) – 4:54
  9. "Off the Top (Line Dance)" (with Nickel Creek)  (B. Fleck) – 4:55
    "Hidden Track/Follow the Line"  – 0:48
Disc two
  1. "The Fjords of Oslo"  (The Flecktones) – 0:41
  2. "Sherpa" (with Bobby McFerrin)  (Jeff Coffin) – 5:20
  3. "What It Is" (with Bobby McFerrin) (B. Fleck/Bobby McFerrin) – 3:41
  4. "The Leaning Tower" (with The Chieftains)  (B. Fleck) – 6:06
  5. "Mudslingers of the Milky Way"  (B. Fleck) – 6:14
  6. "Captive Delusions" (with Branford Marsalis)  (B. Fleck) – 3:54
  7. "Costa Brava"  (B. Fleck) – 8:23
  8. "Poindexter" (with Jerry Douglas)  (B. Fleck) – 5:38
  9. "Prequel"  (B. Fleck) – 3:14
  10. "Return of the Mudslingers" (with Branford Marsalis)  (B. Fleck) – 2:50
Disc three
  1. "The Cave"  (R. Wooten) – 1:35
  2. "Next"  (B. Fleck/V. Wooten) – 5:56
  3. "Pineapple Heart" (with Derek Trucks/Sam Bush)  (B. Fleck) – 5:06
  4. "Snatchin'"  (J. Coffin) – 4:47
  5. "Reminiscence"  (V. Wooten) – 5:33
  6. "Sleeper" (with Bobby McFerrin)  (B. Fleck) – 12:16
  7. "Flunky"  (B. Fleck) – 0:39
  8. "The Last Jam" (with Derek Trucks/Jerry Douglas/Bernie Williams)  (The Flecktones) – 4:26
    Hidden Track/The End  – 1:11

Personnel

The Flecktones
Guest artists

Ten from Little Worlds

Ten from Little Worlds
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 12, 2003
GenreJazz
Length52:59
LabelColumbia
ProducerBéla Fleck
Béla Fleck and the Flecktones chronology
Live at the Quick
(2002)
Ten from Little Worlds
(2003)
The Hidden Land
(2006)

At the request of their record label, the Flecktones released a regular-length album simultaneously with the three-disc set. The shorter version, entitled Ten from Little Worlds, contains highlights from the full album, and is only one disc long. Tracks 1, 2, 5, 9 & 10 are edited versions of the originals. The music file of Bil Mon is titled Big Mon.

In his Allmusic review, music critic Zac Johnson wrote "While the full work seems a little disjointed and too expansive, the ten-song collection is a little more digestible... the unfortunate hip-hop version of Flatt & Scruggs' 'Ballad of Jed Clampett' never needed to be recorded."[4]

  1. "Bil Mon" (B. Monroe, The Flecktones) – 7:13
    • Bela Fleck: electric synth banjo
    • Jeff Coffin: soprano sax, finger cymbals
    • Victor Wooten: fretless bass, Roland Sound Canvas
    • Roy Wooten: Synth-Axe Drumitar, X-Drum acoustic kick, gong
    • Cyrus Niccore: didjeridoo
  2. "Ballad of Jed Clampett" (P. Henning) – 3:55
    • Bela Fleck: banjo
    • Jeff Coffin: alto sax, keyboard
    • Victor Wooten: bass
    • Roy Wooten: Synth-Axe Drumitar
    • Sam Bush: mandolin
    • Bobby McFerrin: vocals
    • Divinity Roxx: vocals
    • Sara Watkins: fiddle
  3. "Pineapple Heart" (B. Fleck)
    • Bela Fleck: banjo
    • Jeff Coffin: alto flute, keyboards
    • Victor Wooten: fretless bass
    • Roy Wooten: Synth-Axe Drumitar
    • Sam Bush: mandolin
    • Derek Trucks: electric guitar
    • Joe Wooten: theremin
  4. "Snatchin'" (J. Coffin)
    • Bela Fleck: electric synth banjo
    • Jeff Coffin: tenor sax with harmonizer, keyboards
    • Victor Wooten: bass, foot pedal synth
    • Roy Wooten: Synth-Axe Drumitar
  5. "Next" (B. Fleck, V. Wooten)
    • Bela Fleck: banjo
    • Jeff Coffin: tenor sax
    • Victor Wooten: six-string bass, cello, keyboard
    • Roy Wooten: Synth-Axe Drumitar
    • Subasch Chandram: gutam
    • Ganesh Kumar: kanjira
    • Congar Ol Ondar: Tuvan throat singing
  6. "The Leaning Tower" (B. Fleck)
    • Bela Fleck: banjo, electric banjo, synth banjo
    • Jeff Coffin: soprano sax
    • Victor Wooten: fretless bass
    • Roy Wooten: Synth-Axe Drumitar, acoustic shakers
    • Derek Bell: Irish harp
    • Kevin Conneff: bodhran
    • Sean Keane: fiddle
    • Matt Molloy: flute
    • Paddy Moloney: Uilleann pipes
  7. "Puffy" (The Flecktones) – 6:45
    • Bela Fleck: banjo
    • Jeff Coffin: soprano sax, keyboards
    • Victor Wooten: bass
    • Roy Wooten: Synth-Axe Drumitar, X-Drum acoustic kick, vocals
    • Pamelia Kurstin: theremins
  8. "Sherpa" (J. Coffin)
    • Bela Fleck: banjo, electric synth banjo
    • Jeff Coffin: tenor sax, keyboard
    • Victor Wooten: electric bass, electric standup bass
    • Roy Wooten: Synth-Axe Drumitar, X-Drum acoustic kick, acoustic drums and cymbals
    • Pamelia Kurstin: theremin
    • Branford Marsalis: soprano sax
  9. "Off the Top (The Gravity Wheel)" (B. Fleck)
    • Bela Fleck: banjo
    • Jeff Coffin: alto sax, tenor sax
    • Victor Wooten: bass
    • Roy Wooten: Synth-Axe Drumitar
    • Chris Thile: mandolin
    • Sarah Watkins: fiddle
    • Sean Watkins: guitar
  10. "Off the Top (Line Dance)" (B. Fleck)
    • Bela Fleck: banjo
    • Jeff Coffin: alto sax, tenor sax
    • Victor Wooten: bass
    • Roy Wooten: Synth-Axe Drumitar
    • Chris Thile: mandolin
    • Sarah Watkins: fiddle
    • Sean Watkins: guitar

References

  1. "Album info and review". Greenmanreview.com. Retrieved 2012-05-07.
  2. Collette, Doug. "Little Worlds > Review". All About Jazz. Retrieved August 3, 2011.
  3. Johnson, Zac. "Little Worlds > Review". Allmusic. Retrieved August 3, 2011.
  4. Johnson, Zac. "Ten from Little Worlds > Review". Allmusic. Retrieved August 3, 2011.
  5. Jurek, Thom. "The Hidden Land > Review". Allmusic. Retrieved August 3, 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.