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An in-depth exploration of the style and influence of Pat Metheny, a truly distinctive musical voice of our time. Guitarist and composer Pat Metheny, among the most acclaimed, visionary musicians of our time, has for five decades toured with his many creative musical projects, most prominently the Pat Metheny Group, while collaborating with celebrated artists, including Charlie Haden, Ron Carter, Herbie Hancock, Ornette Coleman, and Steve Reich. Bob Gluck, whose perspective as pianist, composer, and educator has illuminated the music of Herbie Hancock and Miles Davis in his two previous books, now focuses his lens on the music of Metheny. Neither a biography nor chronological record of Metheny’s musical output, Pat Metheny: Stories beyond Words instead captures Metheny’s self-conception as a musician and the threads that unite and distinguish his creative process. Drawing upon a wealth of new interviews and close readings of musical examples, Gluck offers a bird’s-eye view of Metheny’s musical ideas. Among these are the metaphor of storytelling, the complementarity of simplicity and complexity, and the integrated roles of composer, performer, and band leader. Much like Metheny’s signature style, this book is accessible to a wide range of readers, presenting new clarity, musical insight, and historical perspective about the legacy of Metheny’s groundbreaking music.
Like the prior review, I could not disagree more with the first, one-star review. I almost didn't buy this book based on that review, and I am so glad that I didn't use that as a reason. This was a wonderful book. The author makes it quite clear that the book is not intended as any type of biography about Pat but more of a deep dive into this music. It would be difficult for a non-musician to grasp and appreciate all the dense terminology, but I still find the book well-balanced in many areas about Pat's music (although I was mildly disappointed there wasn't any mention of his Orchestrion project). Overall though, I highly recommend this book to anyone who is a Pat Metheny fan and wants to learn more about the way he thinks about music, both through the musical examples and through the author's interview excerpts with Pat. There are also highly informative appendices and a bibliography with many online references for those who want to really go down the rabbit hole. Well done, Mr. Gluck!