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Dawg Duos

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Download links and information about Dawg Duos by David Grisman. This album was released in 1999 and it belongs to Country, Songwriter/Lyricist, Acoustic genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 01:01:23 minutes.

Artist: David Grisman
Release date: 1999
Genre: Country, Songwriter/Lyricist, Acoustic
Tracks: 12
Duration: 01:01:23
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $9.49

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Mando Bass Boogie Sonata (featuring Edgar Meyer) 2:59
2. Clinch Mountain Windmills (featuring Béla Fleck / Bela Fleck) 5:45
3. Mandoharp Fantasy (featuring Bryan Bowers) 3:36
4. Buttons and Bows (featuring Hal Blaine) 5:25
5. Caprice for CM (featuring Mark O'Connor) 4:56
6. Trinidadian Rag (featuring Bob Brozman) 4:50
7. Anouman (featuring Denny Zeitlin) 7:06
8. John Johanna (featuring Mike Seeger) 2:53
9. Swingin' Sorrento (featuring Jim Boggio) 4:21
10. New Deli Duo (featuring Zakir Hussain) 9:36
11. Muleskinner Blues (featuring Vassar Clements) 1:42
12. Old Souls (featuring Julian Lage) 8:14

Details

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With Dawg Duos, David Grisman presents an album of duos with a variety of acclaimed musicians, including Indian classical percussionist Zakir Hussain, the New Lost City Ramblers' Mike Seeger, and Edgar Meyer and Béla Fleck, genre-crossers who are nonetheless well-known to modern bluegrass fans. These accomplished musicians bring complex techniques and impressive virtuosity, and turn it all into enjoyable bluegrass music with a simple, relaxed feel. The music is pretty, in much the same way that Bill Frisell's Good Dog, Happy Man is. There are tunes that pour world music into the bluegrass vocabulary, such as "New Deli Duo," a tune Grisman describes as the closest he'll probably come to playing a raga; the duo with Bob Brozman, "Trinidadian Rag"; and the somewhat gypsy feel and klezmer moments in "Clinch Mountain Windmills," a piece melding Ralph Stanley's "Clinch Mountain Backstep" and Michel Legrand's "Windmills of Your Mind" (from The Thomas Crown Affair). There are moments of liteness — such as with the mall-music-like quietude of Grisman's duo with Denny Zeitlin — but too few to detract from the fact that this is an album modern bluegrass fans will find well worth having. Overall, an airy, light-pickin' album with a peaceful center.