Mitchell Froom is best known as a sideman and a collaborator, having produced albums for dozens of artists (from industry heavyweights like
Paul McCartney to cult heroes such as
American Music Club) and sat in on many more. When
Froom has stepped forward as a performer, he's often done so while sharing the stage with others, such as his
Latin Playboys material, written and recorded in collaboration with David Hidalgo from
Los Lobos, and his 1998 album
Dopamine, in which each tune was created in tandem with another artist.
A Thousand Days is the first album in which
Froom has presented what is thoroughly and clearly his own musical vision, and it may or may not surprise folks to know that all by his lonesome he doesn't seem to have much to say. Instead of assembling the layers of tape-loop keyboards and vintage electronics that have given his productions their trademark personality,
A Thousand Days features just
Froom at an acoustic piano performing 14 simple original pieces, and stripped of the sound that is his hallmark,
A Thousand Days offers you a man noodling at a keyboard, performing pleasant but aimless melodies that seem stuck somewhere between smooth jazz stripped of its sense of musical challenge and new age without being quite so easy to ignore. These skeletal piano works are created with too much craft to be entirely dismissed, but they don't have enough force in them to truly compel a listener for very long --
A Thousand Days is lovely background music, but that's about all there is to be said for it. Too bad he didn't bring along some friends to give these sounds the body and soul they need. ~ Mark Deming