Extraordinary songwriter/producer Meeco's Beauty Of The Night comes with a hidden cautionary note which is not visible or audible until the first strains of the music is heard. It is an elementally sad album and a box of Kleenex may be de rigueur. However, this is not to say that the album is not beautiful. After all, in immense sadness there is beauty as well. Meeco should know this. He is smitten with things Brazilianthe incredible vocalist, Eloisia, for one. Surely it is hera mainstay of his other albums as wellwho first introduced Meeco to the idea of the Brazilian chorinho or "little cry," that musical diminutive of choro, the great urban tradition of Brazil. In this music the lyric is never sung, but is cried instead. Meeco seems to have applied this concept to the music on this albumessentially a transliteration of that classic Brazilian form.
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data-original-title="" title="">Jaques Morelenbaum, a great Brazilian cellist and master of the musical arts in the realm of classical and Brazilian folk, Musica Popular Brasiliera and, of course the jazz idiom. Morelenbaum was an acolyte of
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data-original-title="" title="">Egberto Gismonti and other luminaries as is a member of Brazil's musical pantheon himself. His mournful wailing is one of the most beautiful aspects of this recording. He, too , must have influenced Meeco deeply. The alto flutenot merely a flute, or even a concert fluteis played by the magnificent
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data-original-title="" title="">Romero Lubambo, among others. Maupin's deep throated growl adds gravitas to the melancholy of this album.
Perhaps the most unusual aspect of the music on the album from end to end is the daring manner in which Meeco paces the music. The elegiac music has been slowed downas has the balladryto such an extent that the ache and longing of the spirit is palpable, like a sword piercing through the heart. This is courageous on the part of the composer and producer. The dirge-like quality of some of the music recalls the aspect that aspect of a requiem that makes it unique to music. That most of it has been written after the composer's mother passed on gives it an element of reality that can almost be touched as much as it is felt. There is a "B" side to all of this music and it takes the form of so-called remixes on the second disc. This is acceptable to the extent that the bonus is free. There can be no alternative to the feeling of the blues except the elementally aching manner in which it is expressed.
Refrao de Amor (Chorus of Love); Gotas de Adeus (Tears of Farewell); Luzes de Flores (Lights of Flowers); Amor e Encantos (Love and Delights); Refrao de Amor (Sad Guy); No Fundo do Teu Silencio (In the Depth of Your Silence); Ombres et Lumieres (Shadows and Lights)/Nua Solidao (Bare Solitude); Beleza da Noite (Beauty of the Night).
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