Music Review: Lindsey Boullt ‘Composition’  
Posted by Groovespook | September 26th, 2007 at 4:04 pm  
suggests, full of compositions.  
So this album is huge and as it’s name  
Some musicians write tunes, others write songs, but the really  
dedicated virtuoso types… They write compositions. This album, or  
this “moment of genius” as I prefer to relate to it, is just that. Fans of musicians  
who utterly bury themselves in their art, or to put it more bluntly, musicians  
wanking, need to put their seat-belts on, or some such metaphor.  
The production… Huge.  
The musicianship… Huge.  
The compositions… Huge.  
When I was initially handed the CD I had a completely different idea of what I  
was about to feed my brain. The Henge-like imagery and the ethereal sky  
suggested a calming natural ambiance. I saw a serious Lindsey Boullt on the  
inside cover concentrating on one of his guitars and overall the feeling was that  
this would be a fairly smooth and chilled out collection of tunes. WRONG.  
As much as I hate labeling music by the success of other musicians, my gut  
reaction to this epic — for epic it truly is — was that someone had managed to  
blend Lost Tribe, Probot, and The John Mclaughlin Trio into one band. This  
description is vague enough not to pigeon hole this unique CD, yet give you a  
fair idea of what to expect. I hope.  
Overall, Compositions comes off as a very tasty and well-recorded fusion of  
some unexpected styles and some intense tune-smithery. Music like this, while  
fairly accessible to the average listener, is what I term a Musician Appreciation  
Moment. The album is beautifully engineered and although the sheer cleverness  
can get a bit overwhelming, the entire album is just awesome.  
On a Groovespook Musician’s Music Rating (GMMR), it’s an 8. And yes, I’ve  
never done any sort of rating system before and I am definitely not going to tell  
you what that 8 is out of.  
Trust me though, when a piece of music makes me physically smile and even  
laugh out loud, it’s because I am trying to visualize how the hell they just did that  
and still manage to make it sound so friggin’ good and THEN manage to move  
on like it was nothing.  
Composition Track Listing:  
01. Page Revisited (4:30)  
02. Chasing The Whirling Dervish (3:47)  
03. Moving Panvishnu (4:02)  
04. Call For Peace (4:05)  
05. Bravo Davo De La Torre (3:26)  
06. Aurora’s Aura (5:04)  
07. Groovin’ With Stu (2:16)  
08. Taste The Hate (2:38)  
09. Farewell (4:32)  
10. Cleopatra’s Third Eye (5:45)  
Lindsey Boullt - Guitar  
Jerry Goodman - Violin  
Derek Sherinian - Keyboards  
Stu Hamm - Bass  
Atma Anur - Drums  
Jeremy Colson - Drums  
Jon Herrera - Bass  
Sukhawat Ali Khan - Vocals  
Peter Van Gelder - Sitar  
Mingo Lewis - Percussion