This interesting and one-time matchup features Larry Coryell and Emily Remler on a set of guitar duets. It is easy to tell the two players apart, yet their styles were quite complementary. Highlights of the date (which has four standards, Pat Martino's "Gerri's Blues," and two Coryell originals) include "Joy Spring," "How My Heart Sings" and "How Insensitive." - Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
There was a genuine bond between these two quite dissimilar guitarists. They demonstrate an instinctive understanding of the material and deliver an album full of graceful improvising, seamless stylistic technique and unique musical idealization.
“Together is more than a matter of being in the same room. It’s being in the same mind, and it’s a condition that these two distinctly individual players are able to achieve, seemingly at will.” - Neil Tresser
”Remler’s rhythmic precision feels willed, a result not of abandoning herself to the music but of riding it with superlative control; every conclusion she reaches is airtight, every challenge definitively met, every flight of fancy solidly rooted.” Charles O. Hartman from JAZZ TEXT: Voice and Improvisation In Poetry, Jazz, and song. - Source: allthingsemily.com
Tracklist:“Together is more than a matter of being in the same room. It’s being in the same mind, and it’s a condition that these two distinctly individual players are able to achieve, seemingly at will.” - Neil Tresser
”Remler’s rhythmic precision feels willed, a result not of abandoning herself to the music but of riding it with superlative control; every conclusion she reaches is airtight, every challenge definitively met, every flight of fancy solidly rooted.” Charles O. Hartman from JAZZ TEXT: Voice and Improvisation In Poetry, Jazz, and song. - Source: allthingsemily.com
1. Arubian Nights
2. Joy Spring
3. Ill Wind
4. How My Heart Sings
5. Six Beats, Six Strings
6. Gerri's Blues
7. How Insensitive
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