Top40-Charts.com
Support our efforts,
sign up for our $5 membership!
(Start for free)
Register or login with just your e-mail address
Rock 09 February, 2021

Lyle Workman Will Release New Instrumental Album 'Uncommon Measures'

Hot Songs Around The World

A Bar Song (Tipsy)
Shaboozey
339 entries in 22 charts
I Had Some Help
Post Malone & Morgan Wallen
228 entries in 20 charts
Espresso
Sabrina Carpenter
438 entries in 26 charts
Beautiful Things
Benson Boone
657 entries in 27 charts
I Like The Way You Kiss Me
Artemas
372 entries in 26 charts
Stumblin' In
Cyril
325 entries in 16 charts
Please Please Please
Sabrina Carpenter
176 entries in 21 charts
Birds Of A Feather
Billie Eilish
266 entries in 23 charts
Stargazing
Myles Smith
241 entries in 18 charts
Million Dollar Baby
Tommy Richman
232 entries in 21 charts
Too Sweet
Hozier
398 entries in 22 charts
Belong Together
Mark Ambor
232 entries in 16 charts
Gata Only
Floyymenor & Cris MJ
272 entries in 15 charts
Not Like Us
Kendrick Lamar
216 entries in 20 charts
Lyle Workman Will Release New Instrumental Album 'Uncommon Measures'
New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Known both as a first-call sideman/session musician and a top-shelf film composer with credits including "Superbad," "The 40-Year-Old Virgin," and "Forgetting Sarah Marshall," prolific guitarist Lyle Workman will release "Uncommon Measures," his first solo album in a more than a decade, on February 19, 2021, via Blue Canoe Records. Featuring a 63-piece orchestra recorded live at Abbey Road under the direction of orchestrator extraordinaire John Ashton Thomas ("Black Panther," "Captain Marvel"), the collection plays like the score to some epic film from an alternate dimension, mixing elements of progressive rock, jazz fusion, and romantic classical music with gleeful abandon.
"This record ties together all the different threads of who I am," explains Workman. "It was four years in the making due to my film and TV schedule, but it's really the culmination of a lifetime in music."

Bursting at the seams with soaring arrangements and virtuosic performances, "Uncommon Measures" showcases not only Workman's unparalleled musicianship, but also his profound empathy and expansive emotional vocabulary. The songs here are living, breathing entities, constantly growing and evolving in ways both subtle and drastic, and the production is similarly unpredictable, veering from larger-than-life bombast to whispered intimacy and back, sometimes within the very same track. The result is a record as extraordinary as it is unexpected, a captivating, transportive song cycle that manages to scale the dizzying heights of joy and sadness, love and friendship, self-discovery and celebration, all without a single word.
"Lyle Workman is a completely accomplished and inspired guitarist, musician and composer," says Steve Vai. "He has a wicked command of the instrument and is perhaps one of three players I know of that can wield exotic orchestral compositions with either a screaming or whispering guitar. 'Uncommon Measures' is the masterful evidence of this."

A California native, Workman's musical journey began in the mid-1980s, when he joined the Sacramento-based band Bourgeois Tagg. The group landed a deal with Island Records and gained international acclaim for their hit single "I Don't Mind At All," a Workman co-write that helped earn performances on the Tonight Show, Top Of The Pops, American Bandstand, and their European equivalents. The band proved to be a launching pad for Workman, who soon began picking up gigs in the studio and on the road with the likes of Sting, Beck, Frank Black, Jellyfish, Todd Rundgren, Norah Jones, Bryan Adams, and jazz icon Tony Williams, who included Workman's "Machu Picchu" on his final album, "Wilderness," with Stanley Clarke and Herbie Hancock. Workman's skills as a sideman turned out to make him ideally suited for the world of film and television, as well, and work writing commercial jingles soon gave way to jobs composing for indie films, which opened the door to major studio releases and a connection with Judd Apatow, who began hiring Workman to score many of his projects. To date, Workman has composed music for films that have generated over a billion dollars at the box office worldwide.






Most read news of the week


© 2001-2024
top40-charts.com (S6)
about | site map
contact | privacy
Page gen. in 0.5198359 secs // 5 () queries in 0.0047926902770996 secs


live