“Dance of Two Souls” released 2019
Number 5 on the Zone Music Reporter Chart for June 2019
Number 7 on the Zone Music Reporter Chart for July
“Dance of Two Souls” is an exotic, ebullient album, overflowing with the joy of life.
“Dance of Two Souls” is the first album from the duo Perpetual Motion in ten years. Their seventh album together, violinist Josie Quick and husband Tom Carleno, an award-winning guitarist, bring us an exuberant, exotic, vivacious blend of world music, progressive jazz, and blues; “acoustic world fusion.”
Inspired by places they’ve visited and lands still waiting to be explored, the thirteen intricately composed tracks are a joyful celebration of life, love, good health, and the gift of being able to make music together. Joining Josie and Tom on the album are Blake Eberhard on electric and acoustic basses, and Christian Teele on drums and percussion. The album is like the gypsy in your soul. It’s lively, carefree, colorful, and adventurous. So, get your traveling shoes on and let’s go. . .
The album opens with the very exciting “Sunsplash,” which was inspired by a trip to Belize and watching the sun setting into the ocean from aboard a boat. Fun, and truly sparkling, it’s the perfect beginning to this album. Following is “Diabla,” which translates to “she-devil.” This song takes us on a journey through the mountains of Central America. Dynamic and spirited, we can feel ourselves there. “The Happy Song” is wonderful, with a fabulous and flowing violin melody, guitar blending perfectly around, percussion and a great beat underneath. Very nice and very happy.
We are easily transported to a French café in the splendid “Déjà Vu.” Josie says, “It’s a memory of a place we’ve never been.” For never having been there, they have flawlessly captured the rich and flavorful essence of such a place.
The title track, “Dance of Two Souls,” is one to listen to again and again. This sensuous bossa nova magnetically draws you in from the start. Silky and sumptuous, it is a graceful, effortless dance. I just love it.
“Troublant Boléro,” a song written by Django Reinhardt and Jacques Larue, is very nicely covered. Guitar, violin, bass, drums are all excellent together. It’s a stellar mix.
Inspired by a trip to South America, “Dos Gringos” is intriguing and passionate. “Viaje del Corazón” perfectly captures the sights, sounds, and ambiance of a trip to Cuba.
“Swinging Cats” is “Stray Cats meet gypsy jazz.” This is totally fun and playful. In addition to Josie’s flawless violin performance, there is a great guitar solo in here as well. Like the long, languid days of summer, “Summertime,” written by George and Ira Gershwin and Dubose Heyward, leads us into a lovely daydream. Again, flawless performances by all.
My total favorite on the album is the marvelous “Where Does the Time Go.” We can feel every note and nuance of this song in the very depths of our soul. This has got a mysterious, Eastern flair and is simply spectacular in all regards.
“Esmeralda” is titled for the Hunchback of Notre Dame’s unrequited love of a gypsy girl. This is expressive and deeply moving. The album closes out nicely with “Por Causa de Você,” which means “because of you.” This is a wonderful composition where we can almost hear lyrics where there are none. This feels like an intimate conversation and it’s another favorite on this ebullient album, overflowing with life.
Full Credits:
Josie Quick: Acoustic and electric violins
Tom Carleno: Acoustic guitars
Blake Eberhard: Electric and acoustic basses
Christian Teele: Drums and percussion (Christian plays Pork Pie Drums and Bouillez Acoustics cajons)
Produced by Josie Quick and Tom Carleno
All songs arranged by Josie Quick and Tom Carleno
Engineered and mixed by Steve Avedis
Additional percussion recorded by Christian Teele
Mastered by Tom Capek
Recorded, mixed, and mastered at Colorado Sound Studios, Westminster, CO
All songs published by Swallowtail Music except “Summertime” published by WB Music Corp OBO Ira Gershwin Music, Kobalt Music Pub America Inc, Raleigh Music Publishing OBO Nokawi Music, and “Troublant Boléro” published by Jewel Music Publishing Co. Inc.
Front cover painting by Quana Madison
Photography by Mark Sink
Rating: Excellent 5stars
Dyan Garris, Zone Music Reporter
“The combination of Josie’s progressive melodic violin playing and the gentle, rhythmic and Latin influenced guitar provided by partner Tom Carleno makes for sweet music. The broad strokes of sound painted on their musical canvas is the perfect marriage of sound, color, and vibrations. This is all natural with no additives, it is acoustic world fusion with jazz added for spice and snap. So, sit down and enjoy a homemade recipe of music straight from the magical fingers of two very talented souls.”
Rating Excellent 5 stars Keith Hannaleck- MusikMan Reviews Read the full review
Inspired by places visited and some not yet seen, Perpetual Motion has created Dance of Two Souls, an album that overflows with sunshine, joy, happy memories, romance and just enough drama to keep it real. Violin and guitar dance together beautifully in the hands of Josie Quick and Tom Carleno (Perpetual Motion)
Kathy Parsons Kathy’s Picks MainlyPiano.com Read the full review
“Dance of Two Souls”, certainly puts you in the mood for dancing ’round the room until the sun rises… Josie’s violin meshes perfectly with Tom’s gently swaying acoustic guitar style… I have no doubt that this song will be getting some MAJOR airplay ’round the globe!
They’re joined by some excellent players, too… Blake Eberhard: electric and acoustic basses and Christian Teele: drums and percussion (Christian plays Pork Pie drums and Bouillez Acoustics cajons)… you’ll hear them in all their musical glory on Josie’s lively original “Dos Gringos”… though a very short piece, it’s gives you splendid visions of the regions south of our borders… I just LOVED this tune.
Tom’s acoustic guitar intro on his original piece “Where Does The Time Go” segues ever-so-nicely into a wonderful musical portrait of the movement of time… in-time and on-time for every note, this song ABSOLUTELY merits an award!
Of the thirteen tasty tunes offered up for your own celebration, it is (hands-down) Tom’s original, “Por Causa de Voce” (meaning “Because of You”) that got my pick for personal favorite… the recording is flawless, and the performance is (truly) among the best I’ve heard (yet) in 2019 on this most enjoyable piece of music!
I give Josie, Tom & their players a MOST HIGHLY RECOMMENDED rating, with an “EQ” (energy quotient) score of 4.99, for this rousing musical adventure. Rotcod Zzaj Dick Metcalf –Contemporary Fusion Reviews
Perpetual Motion (guitarist Tom Carleno and violinist Josie Quick, aided by bassist Blake Eberhard and drummer/percussionist Christian Teele), take their acoustic instrumental music in a decidedly “south of the border” direction with easily discerned musical influences from Central and South America and the Caribbean. Dance of Two Souls is sultry, passionate, and sensual music played with utmost virtuosity and supercharged with soulfulness, fun, and the sheer joy of making music designed to celebrate life. Besides the 11 fantastic songs penned by the duo (nine by Quick and two by Carleno), check out their takes on the classic “Summertime,” as well the Django Reinhardt/Jacques Larue-penned “Troublant Boléro.” – Bill Binkleman, Retailing Insight October 2019
Nominated Best Acoustic Instrumental Album by the Zone Music Reporter 2017
Articles and Reviews
Zone Music Reporter
“All thirteen songs on Rear View seem to have a life of their own. Each song is a chapter that celebrates a union of hearts, minds and talents of two people that have music running in their veins. And all with the common element of balance. Let me close with the words of the poet Bob Dylan who said, “Art is the perpetual motion of illusion. The highest purpose of art is to inspire. What else can you do? What else can you do for any one, but inspire them?”
We are inspired.” Read More
Zone Music Reporter
“There’s just so much great music on Rear View!”
“I could go and on, praising the simpatico of the musicians and the seamless fusion of various genres within selected songs, but you’re just going to have to trust me when I urge you to grab a copy of Rear View and hear its many delights for yourself.” Read more
Journeyscapes Radio
Featuring thirteen remastered compositions which have been culled from twenty-five years of previously released material, the album highlights some of the duo’s best moments in musical craftsmanship. Read More
Mainly Piano
Rear View is a 25-year retrospective of the music of Perpetual Motion. The founding and core members of the group are violinist Josie Quick and guitarist Tom Carleno, two extraordinary musicians…Read More
MuzikMan Reviews
The combination of Josie’s progressive melodic violin playing and the gentle, rhythmic and Latin influenced guitar provided by partner Tom Carleno makes for sweet music. The broad strokes of sound painted on their musical canvas is the perfect marriage of sound, color, and vibrations. Read More
Contemporary Fusion Reviews
Perpetual Motion – REAR VIEW: I’ve reviewed this group before (issue # 139, specifically), featuring two high-talent players (Josie Quick – electric and acoustic violins, mandolin, percussion and Tom Carleno – guitars), as well as many others, since this is a 25-year retrospective kind of album. What you will hear when the album is final/ready (towards the end of January 2017) is some of the most forward-looking string-based work you’ve ever heard!
One World Music
Rear View by Tom Carleno and Josie Quick is a timeless offering of great tunes, wonderfully encapsulating musical moments of reverie, a compilation of compositions that span a quarter of a century. If you know of the artist’s work, this is a must get purchase, but if you don’t, but like the combination of perfectly balanced and superbly produced instrumental music, I would recommend putting this one on your musical radar as quick as you can.
Westword Magazine’s 100 Colorado Creatives
Violinist Josie Quick is always busy, whether she’s teaching, serenading a romantic wedding proposal, jamming with herself via looping, laying down tracks in the studio with Perpetual Motion, a jazz duo she shares with guitarist husband Tom Carleno, or playing with Coyote Poets of the Universe, a highly collaborative band she dubs “Progressive Alternative Americana.” She’s also a skilled ceramic artist, creating signature zen pots inspired by totemic images. Quick’s answers to the 100CC questionnaire follow. Read more
Stapleton Front Porch
July, 2014
Perpetual Motion
String Theory
This great little CD came in as part of a package for guitarist Tom Carleno..on this earlier outing (2006.Songs like the high energy “Spring Fever” will have you listening to this tune over and over again. “Jungle Spirits” was the clear winner for my pick as favorite, the changes are intricate and beautiful. I give Tom & crew a MOST HIGHLY RECOMMENDED for this CD.
Colorado Talent Monthly, February 2014
(Go to page 30)
Zone Music Reporter Review, Dec 2014
Perpetual Motion
Christmas Time Is Here
Perpetual Motion is an acoustic world fusion ensemble headed by guitarist Tom Carleno and his wife, violinist/mandolin player Josie Quick, with fretless bassist Michael Olson and drummer Rob Chamberlin. They’ve been a staple of the Denver music scene for years and this wonderful collection of both holiday standards and solid originals shows why such is the case. Their simpatico sense of musicianship is the key to this album. Nearly every track has a different combination of the four players and two songs also feature the sultry jazz vocals of guest star Alyson Hayes-Myers: the Vince Guaraldi classic “Christmas Time is Here” and “Silent Night.” The four originals fit in perfectly with the other seven carols. Style-wise, the group’s music is a cross between folk, swing, jazz and the early instrumental works from Windham Hill. The group’s take on “The Little Drummer Boy” (here titled “The Little Drummer Boy (from Ipanema)” features Quick on electric violin and spices up the album with some bossa nova flavors. All in all, Christmas Time Is Here is a delight and a great addition to your holiday music collection.
Denver Public Library concert review, August 28, 2012.
Sometimes it is worth it to stop and enjoy something on your journey, rather than to always be in perpetual motion. This past Saturday we got to do both. Denver locals Josie Quick and Tom Carleno brought Perpetual Motion to Fresh City Life.
Right off, I’ll tell you that, if you missed this wonderful concert, we will be bringing Perpetual Motion back for an encore in the new year. They are fantastic!
This sought-after duo blends acoustic world music into a bright fusion of sounds. Mixing international styles, Perpetual Motion moves effortlessly between the traditions of Central and South American folk, progressive jazz, blues and rock. This eclectic approach to music informs their original compositions and cover tunes.
Perpetual Motion’s energy is what drives this dynamic group. Their eclectic jazz sound is a style of their own creation. Always on the move, their adept arrangements, great original pieces, and energetic stage presence are pitch perfect. You just have to hear them! If you missed them, stay tuned — they’ll be back to energize the great hall again.
Hope to see you at one of our upcoming fall concerts. Full Fresh City Life Calendar here.
Voice
March 10, 2005
Concert features genre-spanning sound
By Peter Jones
What do you get when you cross a guitarist who can’t write lyrics with a violinist who can’t sing?Instrumentals, hopefully.
“We focus on our strengths,” violinist Josie Quick laughed.
She and husband Tom Carleno are the nucleus of Perpetual Motion. The Denver band’s self-described style is “dynamic acoustic jazz, combining blues, rock, Latin and more.”
“More,” in this case, spans bluegrass to surf music.
“When people ask me what kind of music we play, I just say good,” Quick said. “It’s hard to put a label on it.”
Perpetual Motion brings its genre-spanning sound to the Lone Tree Public Library March 13 for a free concert.
It was not for lack of trying that Perpetual Motion gave up on putting words to its music. The couple has tried tapping into its love for Beatles lyrics,but the results were uniformly disappointing – more “moon in June” than “Here Comes the Sun.” Voices were not their best instruments either, they admit.
The couple has, however, incorporated lyrical melodies and a kind of vocal phrasing into their music. Carleno-Quick compositions are not so much instrumentals, they say, but songs without words.
“Surfing on Cloud Nine” is described in CD liner notes as “a song about the joy of being alive.” That may surprise listeners who assumed that instrumentals were not “about” anything.
“We make the effort to make the melodies hummable. When I’m playing, I try to think vocally. I think where the breath would be if we had a singer,” Quick explained.
Perpetual Motion’s material ranges from the American folk roots in “The Wyoming Blues” to the scat-jazz of Wheels are Turning. “Surf ‘n Turf” honors surf guitar king Dick Dale.
Despite appearances to the contrary, the eclectic husband and wife team was not always this comfortable in its musical skin.
Quick was originally a “classical music nerd” who was growing steadily tired of playing note-for-note Beethoven in school assemblies. Her epiphany came from an unlikely source, a fiddle-based, southern-rock hit by the Doobie Brothers.
“I was just enthralled by “Black Water,” she said. “I realized I could play any style I wanted to on the violin.”
By the late 1980s, she was teaching the same lesson in a Denver music store, where Carleno happened to teach guitar down the hall.
Before long, the frustrated rock musician was smitten by his female colleague, His opening line had more truth than most, however.
“I’ve written some music. I’d like to hear what it would sound like with a violin,” Quick can remember him saying to her one day. “He thought he was so smooth, as cheesy as it was.”
A love connection was not all that gelled. Quick’s violin actually did sound pretty good with Carleno’s jazzy material.
Perpetual Motion was ready to move.
Although the band has seen as revolving door of personnel over the years, including two veterans of Boulder County’s Wind Machine, the married couple has always been the stable calm in the group.
Three or four can be a crowd sometimes, anyway.
“It’ll be just the two of us at the library,” Quick said.
Perpetual Motion will perform March 13, 2 p.m. The Lone Tree Public Library is located at 8827 Lone Tree Parkway. The concert is free, but reservations are required. Call 303-799-4446 .
Recently featured in Rocky Mountain News Talent Show
Perpetual Motion “Christmas Time is Here”
Judy B.
GoGo Magazine, January 21, 2002
What a beautiful and inspired record this is. And, it’s holiday tunes no less. Making an album of traditional Christmas songs is tricky because the songs are sooooo overplayed during December, and because tasteful can turn to tacky in the blink of an eye.
Perpetual Motion’s holiday release brings high quality musicianship and creative instrumental arranging (very important on a record such as this) to standards such as “Joy to the World,” “Carol of the Bells,” and “Do You Hear What I Hear.” Also included is the title track by Vince Guaraldi and some well-placed original tunes like “Northern Lights” and “Nova.”
Perpetual Motion usually records instrumental records that fit in well with mellow jazz or New Age listeners. The founding duo of Perpetual Motion, guitarist Tom Carleno and violinist Josie Quick have such huge musical ears, however, that the music stays fresh and accessible to any “type” of fan with high musical standards. Even on a Christmas CD, the duo does not disappoint.
Surprise your family by putting on a CD filled with the holiday spirit during dinner this year. Tell them it’s a local band. How cool is that?
Profilin’ from the Rocky Mountain Bullhorn June 2001Perpetual Motionby Judy BradyThe phrase “perpetual motion” conjures up images of constant
change, innovation and movement–like an interactive Energizer
bunny, meeting every new challenge with a step forward, a new
idea and an unflagging energy.Colorado musicians Tom Carleno and Josie Quick named their band
Perpetual Motion, making the first of many bold statements
regarding their instrumental music. In the twelve years since the
two got together, Carleno and Quick have utilized a gamut of
influences, tastes and musical resources to form an unusual alliance
in the expanding Colorado music scene.Sometimes their music sounds like pop, or maybe classical. No, it,s
blues, maybe classic rock, or jazz. We should know by now that the
easier a band is to categorize, the crappier the music. But Quick and
Carleno bring out the beauty of acoustic music without lulling us to
sleep. Their selection of tunes, Carleno,s adept arrangements and
their energetic stage presence are always entertaining.Unusual, but certainly the backbone of the group,s sound, is
Quick,s violin. It,s not the symphony style we know from
Beethoven records and diamond commercials, but a much more raw
and emotional tone amplified to complement Carleno,s guitar.Their versatility makes the band great for intimate settings but can
transfer well to larger venues. And although their artistry and love
of the music are apparent as a duo, they have released three albums
featuring a number of stellar local musicians.Perpetual Motion,s appeal reaches a wide audience through the
tasteful use of great original pieces and an odd assortment of
cover-tune arrangements. Drawing from songs on their 1997 release,
Surfing on Cloud Nine, the band can easily shift to a fabulous
rendition of “Josie” from Steely Dan or The Beatles,s “Dear
Prudence.” And it all seems to work.At a time when many musicians think that louder, faster and more
aggressive is better, the music fan needs a moment to listen to
quality music that is not only artistic in its nature, but introspective
and inspiring. Carleno and Quick bring the sort of sensitivity to
their music that reveals professional skill and training along with a
warm chemistry extending past the microphonesalways different,
and always moving.
The musical style of Perpetual Motion is one that shows great depth in the ability to develop and perform several genres of music harmoniously. Josie feels that it was her Classical chamber experience that prepared her for the kind of music that she and Tom create. She describes their musical sound as “counter point” or a “musical conversation” that is going on between the instruments. Josie feels that what makes their music unique is this musical conversation that is similar to what she experienced in her string quartet work, rather than the stringency of individualized parts that are expressed through rock music. For Josie “counter point” between the instruments “is the epitome of joy. I just love the way [it sounds] when you have two voices, three voices, intertwining and talking to each other.” The melody is described as “melodic fragments” where Tom plays keynotes on his guitar that Josie echoes on her violin. The point of their style is to play in harmony with the other musicians, complementing each other’s sound.
The music just sucks you in…a movie in every song, Can you hear the children running and playing in “Jacob’s Pond”? You can’t help but think of the outdoors, water and the joy of youth, And “Zero Gravity ..stars…can’t think of anything but stars. (Am I the only one who hears a few bars from the theme of Close Encounters?) The musical images are so vivid they almost spring forth from the strings.
When Perpetual Motion winds up their set with “Wyoming Blues, there is an almost audible sigh of regret from the audience. We had a casual fling with excellence and it was hard to let go.
From Riff Magazine January 2001
Perpetual MotionBy Bobby BensleyJust the name Perpetual Motion implies that this band has a busy sound. With 3 CD releases Ready Willing and Able, Surfing on Cloud Nine and Christmas Time is Here under their belts this band has earned the name.Eclectic and melodic the music of this group is hard to nail down to just one genre. If forced to do so I would call it Progressive Jazz, but would be doing it a disservice, as it is much more. The music of Perpetual Motion is as varied as their influences.Guitarist Tom Carleno plays with a flavorful fingerstyle that incorporates many different open tunings. Drawing from a background of rock influences such as Queen, The Beetles and Al Stewart, Carleno sets the ambiance for their instrumental landscapes. Running the gambit from Jazz to Blue Grass to Celtic, Perpetual Motion is at once delicate and relaxing, as well as strong and masculine and they can shift between the two with ease.Violinist Josie Quick really brings an element of uniqueness to this group. Drawing heavily from such Classical influences as Jean Luc’ Ponte, Stephane Grappelli and Django Rienhardt she adds color and classical movement to the rich and interlaced melodies that set this group apart from the rest.On their release Surfing On Cloud Nine, Quick and Carleno trade rapid counterpoints of melody which build a strong dialog around the drum and base lines of Chad Johnson and Maft Deason. Richly textured and layered with sensuous melodies, Perpetual Motion simply delivers good music that will leave you whistling.While available at major outlets such as Borders, Tower Records and Twist and Shout, the full collection of Perpetual Motion releases is available online at www.perpetualmotion.net as well as www.hapiskratch.com.
>This is from Westword December 14, 2000
Holidaze
A better… bet is Christmas Time Is Here, by the veteran Denver quartet called Perpetual Motion. Following a tasteful version of “Joy to the World” that also appears on Rocky Mountain Christmas, the combo enlivens “Northern Lights,” “It Came Upon a Midnight Clear” and the wittily titled “The Little Drummer Boy (From Ipanema)” via stylish arrangements and the refined violin playing of Josie Quick. No, it doesn’t rock — but not everything has to, ya know?
This article ran in the The Daily on September 16, 2000Eclectic ensemble blends unlikely instruments, jazzBy Kate Lavin ,Daily Staff Writer
Click on this link for a review on our CD Surfing on Cloud Nine.
“Taking the folk idiom in a different direction, Perpetual Motion‘s Ready, Willing and Able mixes guitar and violin into a contemporary acoustic sonnet. The melancholy and moving instrumentals will earn this disc an easy spot on the late-nite listening list.”
Dave Thomas The Denver Post“Best Orchestral Maneuvering” Perpetual Motion
“The trio Perpetual Motion – violinist Josie Quick, guitarist Tom Carleno and percussionist Chad Johnson – calls its work “acoustic jazz with a classical flair”. That’s wonderful, but it’s not all this energetic crew does. Whether performing Carleno’s original compositions or covering jazz, pop, Celtic, classic and folk style, Perpetual Motion conveys a sense of melodic freshness. The group’s debut album Ready, Willing and Able shows what can be accomplished when players pursue styles outside their instruments’ “Best-Suited” field.”
Westword Magazine Best of Denver – Arts & Entertainment June 28 – July 5, 1994Perpetual Motion – Ready, Willing and Able – Swallowtail Mu probably would have winked at Quick before blurting out, “Hey baby, I think we could make beautiful music together.” Luckily for Quick, Carleno was a little more tactful, and instead opted for “I have some songs I’ve written. Would you like to get together sometime and play them?”