Bassist and composer Chris Trinidad successfully bridges musical and cultural gaps on this album that combines sounds from countries and continents like seasonings to a Mediterranean meal. Alex Hand Miller plays both guitar and tambura, while Neelamjit Dhillon blows alto sax and bansuri, bringing in percussion instruments including tabla and kanjira. Colin Hogan brings in bohemian accordion and melodic, and with Mario Saolmon adding Latin pulses with congas, bongos, campana and maracas, the moods can range from a Morocco meeting India “Sinit Parvulos” to a rockish “Qui Fecerit.” Almost Gaellic accordion teams with strings on the dreamy “Timeat” with folksy bansuri flute leading into the lonely “Venite Filii.” Rich guitars and tablas percolate on “Dispersit Dedit Pauperibus” and the percussion rumbles evocatively for the pretty “Beatus Quem Elegisti.” A successful melodic tale of ecumenism.