Those who are familiar with my classical music reviews 
          know that now and then I outrage purists by suggesting that a particular 
          classical album would make good background music or party music or meditation 
          music. Many of our greatest masterpieces were originally intended as 
          background music—Telemann’s Tafelmusik and the Serenades 
          of Mozart come to mind. To the intellectual Prince Esterhazy, the symphonies 
          of Haydn were good background music for his gatherings. I remember once 
          when I was doing some brainstorming with a colleague, we played Bach’s 
          Kunst der Fuge in the background and found that it subliminally 
          facilitated working out some difficult problems. 
        
 
        
This CD is labelled "New Age" meditation 
          music, but was brought to my attention partly because the theme for 
          two of the meditations is the theme from Debussy’s Reverie. The 
          Gordon brothers don’t do much with it, but then neither did Debussy; 
          it makes a reference point for them to work away from. 
        
 
        
Improvisation in jazz style is the easiest there is; 
          what amazes me most about jazz is that people pay for it, when they 
          could so easily learn to do it for themselves. You only have to know 
          one chord and any mistake you make in rhythm or harmony can easily be 
          worked around and into the texture. That’s why classical musicians love 
          to play jazz to unwind after a rigorous rehearsal day over a Mahler 
          or Nielsen score. Even that post-romantic arpeggiated style that cocktail 
          pianists do is reasonably easy; again, almost any note or beat you play 
          can be worked into the pattern so nobody notices if you make a mistake. 
          But this pure tonally white improvisation that the Gordon Brothers do 
          is the most difficult thing there is, and the Gordon Brothers are masters 
          at it. You can’t repeat yourself or it quickly becomes boring, yet a 
          single miscalculation and the mood is shattered and you have to start 
          all over again. 
        
 
        
Background music is not wallpaper music. The Chinese 
          solved that problem millennia ago by inventing the wind chime. Here 
          the Gordons use a little wind chime wallpaper sound now and then just 
          to spice the mood. Mostly they use up-front the sound of flowing water 
          and birdsongs to establish the ambience depicted in the cover picture 
          of a Japanese garden in full bloom. The water sounds were recorded at 
          a Sierra lake a 15 mile walk from the nearest dirt road to make sure 
          there could be no intrusion of unwanted sounds. The birdsongs are recorded 
          at a nature preserve in the valley and, along with a little wind chime, 
          are mixed with the water sounds under the harp and flute improvisation 
          for a sonic picture of a pleasant sunny day in a garden. Flutist Gordon 
          displays a spectacular virtuoso shakuhachi flute technique that 
          further underscores the Zen personality of the music. 
        
 
        
This release is a follow up to an earlier release which 
          I have not heard but which was a best seller. 
        
 
        
Paul Shoemaker