Consummate pro Akira Tana demonstrates
his nimble touch and reliably swinging grooves on Moon
Over The World (Sons of Sound). Originally released
in 1993 on the Japanese King/Paddlewheel label
as the second recording by the Asian-American Jazz
Trio — featuring the Hong Kong-born pianist
Ted Lo and Atlanta-born bassist Rufus Reid — the
concept here was to draw from Chinese and Japanese
folk/pop melodies as a source of jazzy exploration.
The trio does that with aplomb on the timeless
Chinese folk tunes "Reflections of Love," "Moon
Over The World," and "Condor Man" (which became
the theme to the popular '70s TV show Kung Fu).
Tana's signature tasteful
brushwork underscores
a swinging rendition of "Koi-no Vacance (Vacation
of Love)" by the contemporary Japanese-pop composer
Hiroshi Miyagawa, who also contributes the piece
"Chinese Fingers," rendered here as a Horace Silver-style
groover. Tana plays the sensitive
colorist behind
Lo's gentle piano work on Silver's hauntingly beautiful
ballad "No Place Is The End Of The World" as well
as on the poignant Jaco Pastorius composition "Three
Views Of A Secret" and the briskly swinging Gene
Bertoncini number, "Soflee," in which the drummer
engages in some spirited exchanges with bassist
and longtime rhythm partner Reid.
An underrated master, Tana shines on Moon
Over The World.
— Bill Milkowski, May 2004
© 2004
JazzTimes
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