Misplaced Pages

Short Trip Home

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
1999 studio album by Joshua Bell, Edgar Meyer, Sam Bush, Mike Marshall
Short Trip Home
Studio album by Joshua Bell, Edgar Meyer, Sam Bush, Mike Marshall
ReleasedSeptember 7, 1999
RecordedAugust 1998
GenreClassical
Length64:46
LabelSony Classical
ProducerEdgar Meyer
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Billboardfavorable
Gramophonefavorable

Short Trip Home is an album of classical chamber music by a quartet unusual both for its membership and its instrumentation. Double bassist Edgar Meyer wrote the majority of the compositions recorded on the album for a quartet of violin, double bass, mandolin, and guitar. Classical violinist Joshua Bell joins bluegrass musicians Sam Bush and Mike Marshall and Meyer on the album. In addition to classical music in an American vernacular, the quartet occasionally breaks out on more traditional instrumental bluegrass tunes.

Track listing

  1. "Short Trip Home" (Edgar Meyer)
  2. "Hang Hang" (Meyer, Mike Marshall)
  3. "BT" (Meyer)
  4. "In the Nick of Time" (Meyer)
  5. Concert Duo. Prequel (Meyer)
  6. "BP" (Meyer)
  7. "If I Knew" (Meyer)
  8. "OK, All Right" (Meyer)
  9. "Death by Triple Fiddle" (Meyer, Sam Bush, Marshall, Joshua Bell)
  10. Concert Duo. 1 (all movements by Meyer)
  11. Concert Duo. 2
  12. Concert Duo. 3
  13. Concert Duo. 4

Personnel

  • Joshua Bell, violin
  • Edgar Meyer, bass
  • Sam Bush, mandolin; violin on "Death by Triple Fiddle"
  • Mike Marshall, guitar; mandola on "BT"; violin on "Death by Triple Fiddle"

In popular culture

The track "Short Trip Home" is heard in the Richard Proenneke documentary Alone in the Wilderness.

The tracks β€œIn the Nick of Time” and "Concert Duo. 1" are heard in the Ken Burns documentary The War (miniseries).

The track "BT" was used as the theme song for WUNC (FM)'s The State of Things (radio show) from 2004 until 2010.

References

  1. Billboard Aug. 21, 1999 (p. 5)
  2. Gramophone Jan. 2000
Edgar Meyer
Albums



Stub icon

This classical music album-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: