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Unity
Ernie Watts
Unity
Genre: Jazz
 
Personnel: Ernie Watts (tenor saxophone); Geri Allen (acoustic piano); Eddie Gomez (acoustic bass); Steve Swallow (electric bass); Jack DeJohnette (drums). Recorded live at Power Station Studios, New York on December 13-14...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Ernie Watts
Title: Unity
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Sampson
Original Release Date: 1/1/1995
Genre: Jazz
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 602582299348

Synopsis

Product Description
Personnel: Ernie Watts (tenor saxophone); Geri Allen (acoustic piano); Eddie Gomez (acoustic bass); Steve Swallow (electric bass); Jack DeJohnette (drums). Recorded live at Power Station Studios, New York on December 13-14, 1994. TRACKS: 1. You Say You Care; 2. In Your Own Sweet Way; 3. Tricotism; 4. Unity; 5. Silver Hollow; 6. Some Kind A Blue; 7. Don't Look Now; 8. Joyous Reunion; 9. Lonely Hearts; 10. Sticky Kisses; & 11. Soul Eyes.

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CD Reviews

Very satisfying music from a somewhat neglected master
Jan P. Dennis | Monument, CO USA | 10/26/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Let's clear something up at the start: This is not a live album--at least not in the usual sense of having been recorded in front of a live audience at a club or in an auditorium. Rather, it is a disc recorded live directly to two-track in a studio. This technique, thought to deliver a certain presence and vitality to the music, here works big time. There's a clarity and immediacy that often gets lost with multi-tracking and all the musicians relegated to separate booths, listening to each other via headphones.



This type of "live" recording works best if the musicians have the maturity and listening capabilities of the first rank of artists, which these remarkable musicians certainly possess. Leader Watts (tenor sax), Jack DeJohnette (drums), Geri Allen (piano), Eddie Gomez (acoustic bass), and Steve Swallow (electric bass) were among the finest jazz musicians on the scene when this disc was recorded in late 1994. Don't let its relative age put you off; it is every bit as dynamic and powerful as the latest jazz release. That's because not only are these players at the absolute top of their entirely formidable game, this is, simply, one of those serendipitous sessions that veritably exudes magic from the grooves.



Leader Watts, a player of both sensitivity and power, is certainly a neglected figure in the history of jazz tenor saxophone, and this may just be his finest recorded performance. He holds a place not unlike, perhaps, that of the late, great Eddie Harris: too "popular" to be regarded as a top-tier player, but nevertheless consistently displaying a distinct and formidable concept on his horn. That his music was set in more, let us say, accessible jazz contexts than a Coltrane or Parker shouldn't take away from the magnificence of his playing, nor should it relegate him to the status of someone like Kenny G or David Sanborn.



With a savvy mix of standards and Watts/David Witham originals (check out the latter's wonderful new disc), spectacular ensemble and solo playing, and a solid concept by the leader, this represents some of the finest jazz from the last decade. Definitely worth checking out."