On Wednesday Ray Charles Trumpeter David Hoffman Releases New Album was a top story. Here is the recap: Ray Charles Trumpeter David Hoffman brings a 'Calmness of Sprit' with his new CD release. David Hoffman approaches music from several perspectives. Traveling the world as trumpet soloist/arranger with the legendary Ray Charles, and his extensive experience in the world of Jazz formed an artistic platform, that enhanced his performance on stage and in recording projects. His current environment plays an important role in the inspiration behind his passion for music and nature to gently flow together. Having played with Ray for the last 13 years of his illustrious career, Hoffman moved back to his Midwest home, located in a converted rural Congregational Church, living and making music in the recording studio located in the former sanctuary. Corn, Pumpkin, and Soybean fields, with their mixture of colors, the sounds of the wind rustling through the meadows, and the scents of the seasons, offer a "Calmness of Spirit".
It's this environment that inspired Hoffman's most recent CD, 'Calmness of Spirit'. "My desire was to merge the sounds of the neighborhood with calming music, but in a different way than is standard. I feel like with much music of this type, the nature sounds are added on without really being a part of the music". On the first cut on the CD, "The Singing Frogs of Guadeloupe", Hoffman started with a track recorded in his back yard on a late summer's night. "The tree frogs were singing, and I sat outside with a digital recorder, enjoying their songs. Some other neighborhood animals joined in. You can distinguish at least two types of frogs, crickets, and a lone coyote in the distance. When I took the recording inside and listened to it, I discovered a very musical 'whir' caused by a small bug flying dangerously close to the microphone." It wasn't until Hoffman had listened to this "neighborhood" music that he started on his part of the project. "What I wanted to do is to accompany the frogs, which took figuring out their general rhythm and key center". What results is an integration of nature and music. The last part of the equation was the addition of Paul Adam's Hulusi, which is a wind instrument native to China. Somehow it fit in, giving a lighthearted feel to the finished track. - more on this story
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