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Caedmon's Call percussionist Garett Buell and his
troop of studio musicians have produced a five-star work of instrumental
art, mixing styles such as Jazz, Samba, Electronica and even Celtic.
Buell draws inspiration from Psalm 150, inviting listeners to praise
God through an unfathomable array of masterfully arranged instruments.
Each song is a different experience all together.
"Bitter/sweet" starts with a "bitter" in your
face jazz jam, and fades into a "sweet" ambient-jazz odessey.
"Amorphous" takes you to the streets of Brazil with its
latin Samba backbone, while "Groove Mantra" draws from
a tabla-n-drums backbeat and lazy piano meanderings while maintaining
an Acid Jazz vibeevidenced by electronic sampling and funk-esque
bass guitar riffs. "Lizinco" lands somewhere on the outskirts
of the trip-hop genre with its huge reverberating doumbeks, big
and bassey udu drum loops and celtic wanderings. This is not just
background musicthis is rich and meticulous music that draws
you in, makes you think about the gravity of life and the many wonders
of the concept of music in general.
Kirby Trapolino
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Buell is best known as
the percussionist for the modern folk-rock band Caedmon's Call,
where his world-beat performances add a crucial and distinctive
element to the band's sound. Over the last five years, Caedmon's
Call has sold nearly half a million albums, and their latest release,
40 Acres, cracked Billboard's Top 100, debuting at #77. And though
they perform over one hundred concerts a year before thousands of
people, it still doesn't satiate the energetic Buell.
"I love the people, I love the music,
I love touring, I love everything about the band," says Buell. "But
it still doesn't satisfy my appetite musically for what I want to
do and the challenges I want to pursue."
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1998, the ideas that would become Foreign Mission began forming in
Buell's mind. "This just kind of came out of nowhere," says Buell.
"I never thought I could do this, and then over the last year I've
been inspired to start putting something together."
At first, he feared that he didn't
have the financial or musical resources to pull it off. But Buell
soon found support from independent label Grassroots
Music, which has made Foreign Mission its inaugural project.
He also gained confidence from fellow musicians, who were anxious
to participate. "And as soon as I decided that I really wanted to
do it," says Buell. "God just opened the door."
In the Summer of 1999, Buell began
to make plans and gather musician friends to perform on the album.
Rather than turning to fellow members of Caedmon's Call, with whom
he plays all the time, Buell recruited musicians with more experience
in jazz and experimental music. "I knew for the type of project
I wanted to do, I wanted it to be an odd instrumentation, not your
normal rock band," says Buell. "I have so many friends that I have
gone through life with and played with and that have inspired me,"
he says. Three of these musicians played on Foreign Mission, bringing
their own unique talent and perspective.
Trip Wamsley (bass), Buell's former
roommate, added his funky, bending, driving bass lines to the songs,
most notably, "Bitter/Sweet." A full time musician, Wamsley has
toured extensively with his unique solo bass performances, and has
recorded several experimental records of his own. Robert Boston
(piano), whom Buell met while in college, expertly contrasts the
hard bass with minimalistic, yet stirring, jazz melodies. Boston,
who plays in jazz and orchestral acts, also teaches music theory
and composition at the University of Houston. Jett Butler (guitar),
another friend from college, shines on "Amorphous," with soaring
and beautiful solo runs up the fretboard. Butler, an architect by
profession, is a serious student of guitar, and, Buell says, "his
love for guitar is so intense that he can do other things but still
maintain his love for the instrument. And it shows."
With these prolific instrumentalists,
Foreign Mission is far more a group recording more than a mere drum
album. The bass, piano, guitar, and Buell's intense percussion,
each have distinct voices, all the while working as a part of the
greater whole. Although each instrument was recorded individually
in the studio, the songs have a distinctly live feel to them, as
each performer plays off of the others. Buell says, "I had ideas
in the direction of the album, the big picture of where I wanted
it to go, and so I directed them a little bit as they would play.
But I told everybody to do what they wanted, because I wanted the
whole thing to be very spontaneous. When an idea is fresh, then
it's the best."
The result is an album that will,
of course, be appreciated by musicians. But more important to Buell
is that non-musicians enjoy it too. "I don't want to write an album
for drummers and musicians," says Buell. "I would like musicians
to enjoy it, but I want everyone to enjoy itpeople who just
like music, they can listen to it and find something valuable about
it."
The experience that Buell offers the
average listener is illustrated by the sound-effects introduction
to the record. We hear a person walking up a city sidewalk, past
clubs full of music, then opening a door, a crowd cheering and the
music kicking in. The exact city sidewalk, the club, even the name
of the band does not matter. For in this age of the global urban
culture, music transcends geography and projects like Foreign Mission
give the listener the musical world in one recording.
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