The Meridian Arts Ensemble is made of a traditional brass quintet plus piano and drums. Their love of the music of the late
Frank Zappa is apparent, as they have covered it on several of their CDs. On this occasion, trumpeter
Jon Nelson arranged several
Zappa compositions as a mini-suite, starting with the somewhat obscure
"Run Home Slow" (the theme for a movie soundtrack composed in 1959 for a low-budget film, long before
Zappa became famous), followed by a brief comical rendition of
"The Little March" and a variation on the solo piano introduction to
"Little House I Used to Live In" (appropriately played as a piano solo by
Jon Klibonoff, who stays close to the original recording), while the full band performs a section of the main piece as played on
Zappa's
Fillmore East: June 1971 album.
"The Black Page," a challenging work written for
Zappa drummer
Terry Bozzio, is reprised by drummer
John Ferrari, with the full band slowing down the piece's theme, mixing impressionism with a loopy klezmer air. The ensemble switches gears to deliver a richly textured interpretation of
Claude Debussy's
"Sarabande," while modern composer
Stephen Barber's
"Semahane (Whirling Well)" sounds influenced by
Edgard Varese. The ensemble's French horn player,
Daniel Grabois, composed the haunting
"Zen Monkey," while
Nelson's spirited arrangement of the traditional Afro-Cuban theme
"El Solitario" is a lively affair. The remaining tracks are equally adventurous and full of surprises. ~ Ken Dryden