The Classical test Source For All The Performing, Visual And Literary Arts & Entertainment News

Snarky Puppy, Metropole Orkest Debut Album 'Sylva' [REVIEW]

An instrumental collective out of the University of North Texas for the last 11 years led by composer, producer and bassist Michael League, Snarky Puppy's major label debut, Sylva, is an ambitious departure from its usual fusion. Released through Impulse!/Universal Music Classics, the Snarky 12 play with Holland's Metropol Orkest, a 63-piece symphony orchestra, whose intros and outros to the six elongated tracks brings a sophisticated and cinematic feel to the proceedings.

It's an impressive package, with cover art by Miraphora Mina and Minalima Design (graphic artists known for their work on the Harry Potter films) plus a DVD with live performances of all six pieces and a 20-minute behind-the-scenes featurette.

Even if you don't connect with the idea that League wrote each movement as an ode to a different forest, the music still stands on its own merit. Dig a little deeper and you'll find that the mountain woods of Portugal and the California Redwoods provide inspiration; as do the fairytale forests from childhood daydreams. To pound this point home, the band spent two Netherlands nights with 300 people seated amongst the 75 musicians in a room made to look like a forest (sculpted out of metal and wood by Dutch artists). The audience wore headphones to ensure high sound quality.

Over 40 musicians have floated in and out and in again of this wide-ranging and free form (yet deliciously accessible) open-ended collective. They won a "Best R&B Performance" Grammy last year for "Something" with Lalah Hathaway. Sylva proves there's no ceiling on their creativity.

Real Time Analytics