For the uninitiated, it's understandable to assume that the artists on 
Steve Vai's record label, Favored Nations, must be from the same hard-rocking, six-string shredding variety. But this is certainly not the case, as evidenced by the 2006 double-disc release by 
Mimi Fox, 
Perpetually Hip. A Bay Area-based guitarist, 
Fox is a jazz guitarist through and through -- and not fusion, either, as her main influences include such jazz greats as 
Joe Pass, 
Wes Montgomery, and 
Grant Green. On 
Perpetually Hip, 
Fox follows a guideline for each disc -- the first sees 
Fox playing alongside a trio of New York musicians (pianist 
Xavier Davis, bassist 
Harvie S., and drummer 
Billy Hart), as the quartet mixes a few 
Fox originals with covers. The second disc, on the other hand, is solo, and comprised solely of interpretations of jazz standards. No flashy tricks here, just fantastically clean jazz playing, as evidenced by such disc one standouts as the album-opening title track and "While Bangkok Sleeps," as well such disc two highlights as 
Duke Ellington's "Caravan" and 
George Gershwin's "Someone to Watch Over Me." The respected jazz publication Down Beat has been praising 
Fox's talents for years now (named "Rising Star" for three consecutive years), and it all comes together for the guitarist on 
Perpetually Hip. ~ Greg Prato