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Chanticleer: Sound in Spirit.


Chanticleer Chanticleer

cajoled by fox into singing; thus captured. [Br. Lit.: Canterbury Tales, “Nun’s Priest’s Tale”]

See : Flattery
: Sound in Spirit. Warner Classics R2 61941.

Chanticleer is the immaculate male choir that has been gaining so much attention, winning so many plaudits, and becoming so popular lately. Their newest disc, Sound in Spirit, is a slight departure from their usual early religious music, traditional American tunes and hymns, gospels, spirituals, Renaissance songs, and the like.

If I may quote from the album's producer, Steve Barnett Jerry Stephen Barnett (born June 4, 1941 in Sand Springs, Oklahoma) was an American football offensive lineman in the National Football League for the Chicago Bears and the Washington Redskins. He played college football for the University of Oregon. : "This is the first Chanticleer recording totally conceived for recording and remixing in a studio environment. It is the first Chanticleer recording to be conceived as a total experience--ideally it should be listened to from beginning to end without pause--thus there is no silence or space between tracks. It is the first to add outdoor ambient sounds." And I might add, it is also the first Chanticleer recording to sound like a throwback throwback

see atavism.
 to the 1980's and 90's "New Age" music so beloved of the record-buying public.

The music of the disc dates from the thirteenth century to the present, from chants and liturgical Latin texts to modern compositions written especially for this recording. The choir sings them magnificently, their voices as always sounding three times bigger than they are, with phrasing and intonation intonation

In phonetics, the melodic pattern of an utterance. Intonation is primarily a matter of variation in the pitch level of the voice (see tone), but in languages such as English, stress and rhythm are also involved.
 of unparalleled precision.

However, for many listeners the whole affair may sound like a single, extended, seventy-five-minute note. With the exception of two early works dating from the thirteenth and sixteenth centuries and one Native American-inspired piece, most of the music is so relaxed, so ephemerally vaporous, it borders on the transitory TRANSITORY. That which lasts but a short time, as transitory facts that which may be laid in different places, as a transitory action.  and commonplace. What's more, the recording, made at Skywalker Sound, is so resonant resonant

giving an intense, rich sound on percussion; exhibiting resonance.
 most of the time and the natural ambient noise of frogs, crickets, and a running creek is so cliched cli·chéd also cliched  
adj.
Having become stale or commonplace through overuse; hackneyed: "In the States, it might seem a little clichéd; in Paris, it seems fresh and original" 
, that the album runs the risk of appearing like one of those old "Mystic Moods" concoctions of the sixties.

I don't mean to be harsh. The music really is quite spiritual in nature, and the singers are glorious, as always. But I was not convinced while listening to the disc that I would want to play it again as anything but background material, and I'm not sure that is what Chanticleer had in mind. But I'm sure I'm just a grump; most people will love it.
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Article Details
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Author:Puccio, John
Publication:Sensible Sound
Article Type:Sound recording review
Date:Apr 1, 2006
Words:372
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