Honestly, it's tempting to imagine (shades of the urban legend about German avant-garde freaks
Amon Düül) that when
Houston Person signed to High Note Records in the mid-'90s, he recorded one marathon session and all of his albums since then have simply been culled from those master tapes. Certainly they've had the same sound, along with most of the same personnel. Practically the only way to tell the difference between the albums is by the song selection choices. This one splits the difference between jazz standards and pop hits, with
Duke Ellington's immortal "Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me" (given a wonderful, sprightly reading that owes a subtle debt to
Rahsaan Roland Kirk's sublime take on the underrated
A Meeting of the Times) leading one pack and
Bread's treacly "If" (surprisingly good, with some lovely, restrained guitar work by
Russell Malone the only backing for
Person's meditative solo) the other. As always with
Person, the standards win. This isn't a bad place to start for those wondering which album from this era to get. ~ Stewart Mason