Bassist 
Charlie Haden gained his initial fame with the 
Ornette Coleman Quartet of 1959-1961, developing an innovative style that allowed him to walk the bass and create a forward movement and momentum while not stating a chord structure. 
Haden worked on other rewarding groups through the years, including his Liberation Music Orchestra, the 1970s 
Keith Jarrett Quintet, and in 
Old and New Dreams. His longest running project has been Quartet West, which he formed in 1986. A somewhat nostalgic unit, Quartet West matches 
Haden with tenor saxophonist 
Ernie Watts, pianist 
Alan Broadbent and usually drummer 
Larance Marable on melodic jazz that often could have been played in 1950s (or at least 1960s) Los Angeles. The two-CD set The Private Collection consists of two rare concerts from early in the group's existence. The first CD, recorded at a club date on 
Charlie Haden's 50th birthday, has the group (with its original drummer 
Billy Higgins) playing songs by 
Pat Metheny, 
Tony Scott, 
Miles Davis, 
Bach (a beautiful rendition of "Etudes"), and 
Charlie Parker in 1987. The second CD, recorded in 1988 in St. Louis, was a homecoming of sorts for 
Haden, who had many friends in the audience. The quartet (with 
Paul Motian on drums) performs numbers by 
Metheny (a second version of "Farmer's Trust"), 
Charlie Parker, and 
Ornette Coleman (a nearly 23-minute rendition of "Lonely Woman") plus "Body and Soul" and two 
Haden originals. 
Ernie Watts' tenor flights are consistently full of fire, passion, and intensity. His tone is soulful and distinctive, and 
Watts' style has his own "sheets of sound." While 
Haden and the drummers are capable of pulling the music in any direction, pianist 
Alan Broadbent keeps the proceedings grounded, chordal, and boppish. Although one would not have necessarily predicted this direction for 
Charlie Haden's music in 1970, it has worked out quite well. This well-recorded two-fer features 
Haden's Quartet West at its best. ~ 
Scott Yanow