Some Phil Records
1997
Variety Orchestra
About This Album
Pushing the play button after slipping Brian Woodbury's disc into the CD player is like stepping inside Pee-Wee's Playhouse. You never know what to expect or what the next bar will bring; everything is disguised in outrageous ways; even the most familiar objects adopt a warped shape. The first few seconds of "Take the J Train" might suggest an avant-garde jazz big band, like a postmodern version of Duke Ellington's band, but soon the accordion comes in, then the banjo and the pedal steel, and you suddenly realize that you're not in Jazzland anymore. Woodbury seems to draw inspiration from everything within his vicinity: The Duke, Spike Jones, Charles Ives, John Zorn, Frank Zappa, traditional Mexican bands and Rock in Opposition. Every time a particular name comes to mind, a hitherto unheard element comes in, simply to contradict your impression. The music is often fast-paced, even frantic and exuberant. In the slower passages ("Mom," "Venice, Italy," the finale of "Threnody for Kennedy and Connally,"), the jazz leanings shine through, while the more complex sections immediately bring to mind Zappa's Grand Wazoo and Waka/Jawaka albums.
Track List
(try tracks 1,2,3 and 4)
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Similar Albums

Sherlock Jr & Felix The Cat Woos Whoopee
by The Club Foot Orchestra

Music Of El Cerrito, Vol. 2B
by Dan Plonsey

Greggery Peccary And Other Persuasions: A Selection Of Work
by Ensemble Modern Plays Frank Zappa

Concert Miniatures
by Neal Hefti And His Orchestra

Shoe String Symphonettes
by Marc Ribot