Béla and the Flecktones recently put out a new album, Outbound. While it features their famous World Music-Jazz-Bluegrass amalgamation of joy, it is also a somewhat experimental album, even more so than their 1998 release, Left of Cool. Featuring vocals by Shawn Colvin and guest appearances by numerous other artists, Outbound moves further in the direction of Left of Cool.

Perhaps the most wonderful track on the album is one of the Flecktones' live standards, a wild Newgrass-jazz take on the Aaron Copland classic of Appalachian country/folk, Hoedown.

The album, as Béla's listeners have come to expect, experiments with sounds from all over the world-- from traditional Indian folk music to the interesting if somewhat unexplored field of Scandinavian music.

Track List

  • Intro
  • Hoe Down
  • Moment So Close
  • Zona Mona
  • Hall Of Mirrors
  • Earth Jam
  • Something She Said
  • Ovombo Summit
  • Aimum
  • Prelude
  • Lovers Leap
  • Outbound
  • Scratch & Sniff
  • Shuba Yatra
  • That Old Thing
  • Reprise

    The Japanese version contains one bonus track:
  • Two Timers

    Artists
    Béla Fleck : Banjo, Guitar, Steel Guitar, Electric Sitar
    Future Man : Cymbals, Drumitar, Drums (Bass), Sampling, Synthesizer, Tambourine, Tom-Tom, Zendrum, Zildjian
    Paul Hanson : Bassoon, Sax (Soprano), Sax (Tenor)
    Paul McCandless : Horn (English), Oboe, Penny Whistle, Sax (Soprano)
    John Medesk] : Organ
    Edgar Meyer : Bass (Acoustic)
    Andy Narell : Steel Pan
    Jon Anderson : Vocals
    David Angell : Violin
    Adrian Belew : Guitar (Electric)
    Sandip Burman : Tabla
    John Catchings : Cello
    Jeff Coffin : Clarinet, Flute (Alto), Sax (Alto), Sax (Soprano), Sax (Tenor)
    Shawn Colvin : Vocals
    David Davidson : Violin

    Production Credits
    Tracy Hackney : Engineer
    Ken Latchney : Engineer
    Zach Newton : Engineer
    Denny Purcell : Mastering
    Richard Battaglia : Engineer
    Adrian Belew : Overdub Engineer
    Jeff Coffin : Horn Arrangements, String Arrangements
    Béla Fleck : Engineer, Horn Arrangements, String Arrangements
    (This information is courtesy of Sony records) (Some of this information is provided by CDNOW.com)
  • The terms "inbound" and "outbound" are sometimes used to distinguish between directions of bus and train lines in public transit systems such as Boston's MBTA. They refer to directions of travel which go toward or away from some notional point of origin.

    This makes at least some basic sense in most systems, since the general layout usually resembles a hub and spokes, or star topology, with the downtown area hosting a collection of more or less convenient transfer points among the lines (Boston, of course, being a prime example of such a hub), and routes that don't go to or from this area generally go to or from a single terminus... except the ones that don't. So maybe it isn't such a great idea after all, especially when you factor in the problem of what "outbound" means in a station in the center, where there's no "inbound" and several "outbounds", and some lines pass through the center so that there will be more than one outbound direction even on the same line.

    Most transit systems seem to have solved this problem by giving up on inbound/outbound entirely, naming directions by their endpoints. Even Chicago's CTA refers to El trains as bound for either the Loop or a specific endpoint, not in or out. Boston, however, persists. In case you ever find yourself needing to know, here's how it's done:

    • Commuter rail lines originate from either North Station or South Station and never pass through (except the special Red Sox train), so they're outbound when going away from Boston.
    • Subway lines cross in a square whose corners are Park Street, Downtown Crossing, State Street, and Government Center, and away from this square is outbound. Within the square, inbound and outbound are not used. One quirk of this is that Bowdoin, the downtown terminus of the Blue Line, has an "inbound" direction.
    • Bus routes don't have inbound or outbound; in fact, most bus stops don't even have route-specific information at all. Welcome to the joy that is the T.

    Out"bound` (?), a.

    Outward bound.

    Dryden.

     

    © Webster 1913.

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