Bobby Watson & Tailor Made with Tokyo Leaders Big Band - Live at "Someday" in Tokyo (2000)

  • 29 Nov, 19:24
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Artist:
Title: Live at "Someday" in Tokyo
Year Of Release: 2000
Label: Red Records[AUD009]
Genre: Jazz, Post Bop, Contemporary Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 72:22
Total Size: 453 MB(+3%)
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. Dual Conversation (B.Watson) - 6:26
02. Ms. B.C. (P.Watson) - 14:06
03. Karita (B.Watson) - 17:12
04. Long Way Home (B.Watson) - 6:11
05. Unfold (B.Watson) - 15:40
06. In Case You Missed It (B.Watson) - 12:47
Bobby Watson & Tailor Made with Tokyo Leaders Big Band - Live at "Someday" in Tokyo (2000)

personnel :

Bobby Watson - alto saxophone, leader
Shiro Sasaki, Mitsukuni Kohata, Keiji Matsushima, Yoshiro Okazaki - trumpet
Hideaki Nakaji, Haruki Sato, Masahiko Kitahara - trombone
Masaki Domoto - bass trombone, tuba
Seiji Tada, Atsushi Ikeda - alto saxophone
Tatsuya Sato - tenor saxophone
Kose Kikuchi - tenor saxophone, flute
Atsushi Tsuzurano - baritone saxophone
Masaaki Imaizumi - piano
Koichi Osamu - bass
Tappy Iwase (#2,4,5), Yoshinobu Inagaki (#1,3,6) - drums

The concept was to "recreate" Bobby Watson's American jazz conglomeration, the Tailor Made Big Band of the early 1990s, with a Japanese version. Recorded live at the Japanese club Someday with the Tokyo Leader's Big Band, the six compositions and arrangements by Watson are alive with vibrant explosion. The alto saxophonist is at the top of his form, and the band sounds totally inspired. Although it is impossible to know who is soloing (other than Watson), there are particularly strong efforts from an unidentified trumpeter and trombonist. The band swings hard, and the compositions are tightly arranged, permitting the soloists of the band to strut their stuff. There is unmitigated electricity where Watson interjects sections of collective improvisation. This is the sort of mainstream jazz date that encourages spontaneity and challenge, while never reverting to worn cliché. It is a model for big jazz bands at the turn of the century, and a fine introduction to the work of Watson, who has often been documented on the Red Records label from Italy.~Steve Loewy