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Journey to the New World
Barnes and Noble
Journey to the New World
Current price: $13.99


Barnes and Noble
Journey to the New World
Current price: $13.99
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When the word "crossover" is used to refer to a classical artist like guitarist
Sharon Isbin
, it usually indicates an intention by the artist to appeal to a broader audience than the usual one for classical music.
Isbin
's album
Journey to the New World
can be described as a crossover effort in this regard, but she seems to have had another sort of crossover in mind in terms of the collection's theme. Musically, the selections depict a crossing of the Atlantic Ocean from Great Britain to North America.
begins with traditional British music and British folk, performing the works of lute player
John Dowland
and others upfront. She then makes a transition to American folk music by playing tunes that came across the ocean in centuries past. In this effort, she enlists folksinger
Joan Baez
, who is heard before and after the seven-part
"Joan Baez Suite,"
first singing a couple of verses of
"Wayfaring Stranger,"
and then, after
has presented her versions of songs like
"The House of the Rising Sun"
and
"The Lily of the West,"
returning for
"Go 'Way from My Window."
The third part of the album finds
moving on to the next step in the journey of traditional folk music, i.e., to becoming American country music. The 13-part
"Strings & Threads Suite"
is a full-scale duet collaboration with country fiddler
Mark O'Connor
on a variety of brief jigs, reels, and waltzes. The two performers, though coming from different traditions, work together well, effecting a conclusion to the journey to the new world that the album makes musically. ~ William Ruhlmann
Sharon Isbin
, it usually indicates an intention by the artist to appeal to a broader audience than the usual one for classical music.
Isbin
's album
Journey to the New World
can be described as a crossover effort in this regard, but she seems to have had another sort of crossover in mind in terms of the collection's theme. Musically, the selections depict a crossing of the Atlantic Ocean from Great Britain to North America.
begins with traditional British music and British folk, performing the works of lute player
John Dowland
and others upfront. She then makes a transition to American folk music by playing tunes that came across the ocean in centuries past. In this effort, she enlists folksinger
Joan Baez
, who is heard before and after the seven-part
"Joan Baez Suite,"
first singing a couple of verses of
"Wayfaring Stranger,"
and then, after
has presented her versions of songs like
"The House of the Rising Sun"
and
"The Lily of the West,"
returning for
"Go 'Way from My Window."
The third part of the album finds
moving on to the next step in the journey of traditional folk music, i.e., to becoming American country music. The 13-part
"Strings & Threads Suite"
is a full-scale duet collaboration with country fiddler
Mark O'Connor
on a variety of brief jigs, reels, and waltzes. The two performers, though coming from different traditions, work together well, effecting a conclusion to the journey to the new world that the album makes musically. ~ William Ruhlmann