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 : Dead Symphony No. 6

List Price: $16.98
Amazon.com's Price: $13.99
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Binding: Audio CD
EAN: 0094922675385
Label: OMI Records
Manufacturer: OMI Records
Number Of Discs: 1
Publisher: OMI Records
Release Date: July 24, 2007
Studio: OMI Records
Sales Rank: 7801




Disc 1:
  1. Dead Overture
  2. Saint Stephen
  3. Here Comes Sunshine
  4. Mountains of the Moon
  5. Blues for Allah
  6. Sugar Magnolia
  7. To Lay Me Down
  8. If I Had the World to Give
  9. Stella Blue
  10. Bird Song
  11. China Doll
  12. Dead Finale
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Editorial Review:

Product Description:
From Reuters Life: THE GRATEFUL DEAD made their name playing improvisational music born anew with every performance, and now an American composer has sought to capture their psychedelic spirit in a classical symphony. 'DEAD SYMPHONY NO. 6' by LEE JOHNSON encompasses some of the band's most familiar melodies and its most otherworldly jams in a work in 12 movements. The symphony is 'a musical embrace of American culture' and a natural outgrowth of the band's spirit. Highlights include movements based on the Dead's psychedelic classic 'St. Stephen' and the rarely played 'Mountains of the Moon.' There is even an improvised portion, in the lament 'Stella Blue.' Johnson chose songs based on their melodic potential and overall fit. A movement based on the song 'Here Comes Sunshine,' for example, stretches the original melody in time so it is almost unrecognizable amid the harmonies. One ambitious movement was based on 'Blues for Allah,' which was played live only three times by the Grateful Dead. In Johnson's version, a clarinet's jaunty refrain evokes American composer George Gershwin, while deep cellos envelop the movement in its powerful Middle Eastern theme. The symphony's overture and finale include strains of 'Funiculi Funicula,' the much-parodied Italian song the Dead used often as a playful tune-up riff.



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Excellent!
This is a fine work by a composer that is developing with every composition. Johnson has not simply produced a GD tribute (god forbid), he has used the artistry of Garcia's songs to create a real and worthy contribution to contemporary classical music. If you are GD fan, you will not regret purchasing this work. If you know nothing of the GD but love great and beautiful music, you will be rewarded.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Fantastic Re-Imagining
Lee Johnson has taken the work of the Dead and re-imagined it as orchestral music. It is remarkably provocative and demands close listening. My wife is a classical musician, and upon hearing Johnson's work, she is now quite interested in listening more closely to the Grateful Dead. I think this CD can work as a bridge for fan's of both The Dead and classical/symphonic work. Entirely compelling.



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - well executed but uncompelling
Starting with the release of "Deadicated" (1991), I've picked up just about every Grateful Dead tribute. I have the tributes in bluegrass, rock, reggae, a capella and jazz ("Blues for Allah Project" "Dark Star" "Swingin'). Being an enthusiast for orchestral music, I was surprised to discover that this is the only philharmonic Dead tribute. In a day when most bands seem to have a string quartet or symphony orchestra tribute, it's odd that it took so long for the Grateful Dead. In any case, here it ... Read More



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Classics get classical treatment
Lee Johnson wrote Dead Symphony No 6 after being approached by Mike Adams in the wake of Jerry Garcia's death. Being new to the music may have been a bonus for Johnson: his fresh ears have gone to the most beguiling melodies and adventurous harmonies from the vast and innovative Grateful Dead repertoire and welded them into a coherent symphony, using a dash of improvisation and playful references to Funiculi Funicula (a favourite Dead throwaway to confirm they were finally in tune at the start of ... Read More



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