It figured that Toshiko Akiyoshi would come up with one of the more individual solo albums in the Maybeck series (of which this is Vol. 36). Like most of her colleagues, she comes from out of the bop school, yet her playing here doesn't sound much like anyone else's. She has her own distinct ideas and she is especially compelling when her hands fly off in multiple directions. In Akiyoshi's "The Village," her left hand plays a difficult revolving pattern independent of the right; "Con Alma" is a fascinating contrapuntal tour de force; "Come Sunday" has wide chord voicings that may be unique to this series, and "Old Devil Moon" has a touch of Latin jazz in her powerful bass-clef accompaniment. She defies jazz fashion a bit by taking on "It Was a Very Good Year" -- a folk song before Sinatra got a hold of it -- though its modal harmonies nearly defeat her attempt to turn it into a showpiece. The microphones at Maybeck also catch her Jarrett-like scatting all too clearly, but that's only a minor distraction. - Richard S. Ginell
Tracks
01. The Village (Toshiko Akiyoshi)
02. Come Sunday (Duke Ellington)
03. Con Alma (Dizzy Gillespie)
04. Polka Dots and Moonbeams (Johnny Burke/James Van Heusen)
05. It Was a Very Good Year (Ervin Drake)
06. The Things We Did Last Summer (Sammy Cahn/Jule Styne)
07. Old Devil Moon (E.Y. "Yip" Harburg/Burton Lane)
08. Sophisticated Lady (Duke Ellington/Irvin Mills/Mitchell Parish)
09. Quadrille Anyone? (Toshiko Akiyoshi)
10. Tempus Fugit (Bud Powell)
TOSHIKO AKIYOSHI piano
Recorded live at Maybeck Recital Hall, Berkeley, CA July 10, 1994
Concord Jazz - CCD-4635