Details

Track Listing 1. Map of the World, A 2. Family 3. North 4. Home 5. Sisters 6. Childhood 7. Fall From Grace 8. Memory 9. Gone 10. Flight 11. Alone 12. Outcasts 13. Sunday 14. Discovery 15. Acceptance 16. Realization 17. Soliloquy 18. Night 19. Sunrise 20. Resolution 21. Pictures 22. Patience 23. Transition 24. Reunion 25. Renewal 26. Homecoming 27. Forgiving 28. Holding Us
| Details | | Producer: | Pat Metheny, Steve Rodby | | Distributor: | WEA (Distributor) | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Original score composed by Pat Metheny. Personnel includes: Pat Metheny (piano, keyboards, acoustic guitar); Gil Goldstein (organ); Steve Rodby (acoustic bass); David Samuels (percussion). Recorded in February 1999. Guitarist Pat Metheny's exceptional compositional skills reached another plateau with the beautiful score for the film A MAP OF THE WORLD. Here, with a full orchestral accompaniment, Metheny explores the pastoral sound of the acoustic guitar and coaxes from it some of the most emotionally rich music he has ever composed. Those looking for the guitarist's signature modern Brazilian-flavored electric style will not find it here, nor are there any strains of Metheny's traditional jazz leanings as he fully develops a new side to his already plentiful musical gifts. Ranging from deeply moving solo lines with impressionistic shadings to sweeping pastoral jaunts that build to tremendous heights of grandeur, Metheny captures the spirit of the rural setting of the film, drawing on the sounds of his childhood. On its own, the music emphasizes the exceptional care with which Metheny undertakes his art, gently caressing the music from the instrument until it reaches its full potential.
Industry Reviews 4 stars out of 5 - ...The tonal palette is...so lovely....gently evocative and quietly imprints itself on the memory... Q (01/01/2000)
...Metheny at his most unabashedly romantic and most redeemably beautiful....it's an essay in musical sweetness and melancholy... JazzTimes (04/01/2000)
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