Michael Bryson: Sunday in Central Park

Michael Bryson: Sunday in Central Park

Michael Bryson’s “Sunday in Central Park” carries a melody held for decades before it was recorded, and that gap shows in the structure: the lead guitar does not announce itself, it arrives as something already known.
The phrasing in the guitar solos moves between shred precision and a looser, more open breath, the kind of playing that does not treat speed as the point. Keys and bass hold the floor while the lead goes up, a rhythm section that functions like a crowd that keeps moving regardless of what happens at the center. The ambient park sound embedded in the mix places the music inside a specific Saturday body temperature, the kind that belongs to no particular decade.
The track carries economy of ambition: the goal was never to be difficult, only to be full. A melody written at fifteen has no theory to defend. It just wants the sun and the people and the feeling that both of those things are enough.

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