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风格
#传统蓝草 #蓝草
地区
欧美

艺人介绍

by Craig HarrisFiddle Fever was one of the most eclectic groups in string band history. Paced by the three fiddles of Matt Glaser, Evan Stover and Jay Unger, the virtuosic acoustic guitar flatpicking of Russ Barenberg, and the upright bass playing of Molly Mason, the quintet incorporated everything from bluegrass and traditional folk music to Cajun two-steps and Western swing. Their third and final album, Waltz of the Wind, even included an heavily atmospheric instrumental, "Icelandic Hymn," based on a melodic theme by Icelandic composer Thorkell Sigurbjornsson.

The impetus for Fiddle Fever was sparked when the five musicians came together in New York's Greenwich Village. The band represented the meeting of five top-ranked modern bluegrass players. Unger (fiddle, mandolin) and Stover (fiddle, viola) had been members of David Bromberg's late-1970s band. Glaser (fiddle, piano), who was equally as skilled at Bill Monroe-style bluegrass as he was at Django Reinhardt-inspired swing, had played with the Central Park Sheiks. Barenberg (guitar, fiddle, percussion, mandolin), had played with Country Cooking, and had previously worked with Glaser in the New York All-Stars and Breakfast Special. Joined by banjo player Tony Trischka, Barenberg and Glaser formed a short-lived newgrass group, Heartlands, in 1977.

Despite its potential, Fiddle Fever was together for a brief four years, disbanding shortly after Barenberg moved to Nashville. Glaser went on to become the chairman of the string department of the Berklee College of Music in Boston. Unger and Mason, who later married, continued to perform together as a duo.

Fiddle Fever had its greatest exposure seven years after they split up, when their recording of Unger's instrumental "Ashokan Farewell," from their second album Waltz of the Wind, was featured as the theme song of the Ken Burns PBS ary The Civil War in 1991. The tune was inspired by the fiddle and dance workshops conducted by members of the group at the Ashokan camp in New York's Catskill Mountains.