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Mandarin Skyline

CD

Mandarin Skyline / Leigh Carriage.

  • Published by Vitamin Records — 2012 — 1 CD (52 min.)
  • Sales Availability: This item may be available to purchase from the Australian Music Centre.
    Please contact our Sales Department to confirm pricing and availability.
  • Library Availability: This item is not available from the Australian Music Centre Library

$POA

This item may be available to purchase from the Australian Music Centre.
Please contact our Sales Department to confirm pricing and availability.

Featured Australian works

  Work Composer PerformersDuration
Mandarin Skyline (2012) — small jazz ensemble with vocalist
Recorded/performed at: Studio 301, Sydney NSW
Leigh Carriage Leigh Carriage, Steve Russell, Sam Keevers, Phil Slater, Matt McMahon, Hamish Stuart, Jonathan Zwartz, Matt Smith 52 mins

Product details

This first album of Leigh Carriage originals recorded in Sydney with a number of various top-flight Sydney musicians, including bassist Jonathan Zwartz, drummer Hamish Stuart and guitarist Matt Smith as the foundation trio on all tracks. Carriage has a pure, clear voice in a style vaguely reminiscent of Jodi Mitchell. The title song with its lyrics of romantic nostalgia climbs into the upper register with long notes and features a sympathetic trumpet solo from Phil Slater who also ends the track with an appropriate feeling of softness. The intro to Breaking Point has an ominous feel as Matt McMahon's piano builds tension and the high register vocal opening adds to the ethereal atmosphere. Slaters's mysterioso trumpet intermingles with Carriage's wordless vocals in Refuge, a haunting theme that ends at a somewhat unexpected point on a high, breathy note. The mournful spirit is a suitable style for the subject matter of Lost Sons and Steve Russell contributes some thoughtfully substantial piano work, particularly in his solo. These are songs of melodic interest, delivered in slower tempos, sung very well and excellently arranged, and they're probably best heard in a reflective, pensive mood. -- John McBeath The Australian, June 2013, 4.5 stars.

Duration: 52 min.


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