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''Outre Mer'' is the second full-length studio album by Garage A Trois released in 2005. Uniquely combining drums, percussion, eight-string guitar and saxophone it is funk-influenced and emphasizes polyrhythmic grooves. 〔Stephen Latessa (Outre Mer ) ''All About Jazz'' July 28, 2005. Retrieved August 30, 2008〕 Allmusic reviewer Sean Westergaard stated that with the release of ''Outre Mer'' Garage A Trois "evolved from a cool side project to a great band."〔 Sean Westergaard (Outre Mer : Review ) ''Allmusic''. Retrieved August 27, 2008〕 The full title of the album is ''Bande Originale du Filme de Outre Mer''. Various album reviews state the album is a soundtrack for a French film also titled ''Outre Mer'' which was never released. The liner notes include a short story by Klaus Tontine and a special thanks to Tontine Films France. When Charlie Hunter was asked in an interview with Paul Olsen if inspiration came from the film he stated: Basically, Stanton and Mike and Skerik and I got together and Stanton and I worked out a lot of grooves in the studio. That was our idea, just to put these grooves together--get “A” sections and “B” sections and just kind of build the music that way. And as far as () went, I don’t really know--I’ve never met him, I don’t really have any contact with him. I was just down in New Orleans for the week that we recorded it.〔 Paul Olsen (Charlie Hunter: Living the Music ) ''All About Jazz'', September 26, 2005. Retrieved August 27, 2008〕 Regarding the question of the film a reviewer Michael McCaw states, "Either way, the music speaks for itself."〔Michael McCaw (Outre Mer ) ''allaboutjazz.com'', August 26, 2005〕 ==Track listing== # "Outre Mer" - 4:44 # "Bear No Hair" - 4:25 # "The Machine" - 4:56 # "Etienne" - 5:19 # "Merpati" - 5:53 # "The Dream" - 2:54 # "Antoine" - 4:10 # "Circus" - 2:07 # "Needles" - 3:51 # "The Dwarf" - 4:14 # "Amanjiwo" - 3:17 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Outre Mer」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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