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Nat Janoff: Come Together Move Apart
ByJanoff's early influences include Eddie Van Halen, whose playing was the catalyst for Janoff's move from piano and bass to guitar, and

John McLaughlin
guitarb.1942

Mahavishnu Orchestra
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1971
The McLaughlin influence is still apparent, and led to Janoff's appearance on Mahavishnu Redefined II (ESC Records, 2010). It's here, too, on "Transit," but it's by no means the dominant sound. On most of the tunes Janoff displays a pure, effects-free and warm tone more reminiscent of

Kenny Burrell
guitar, electricb.1931

Wes Montgomery
guitar1923 - 1968
On the opening section of the gentle "For Now" Janoff's fluid, finger-picked guitar has a folksy feel to it, but then he slides gracefully into some soft-touch single note runs. He takes a similar approach to "Hope Fills My Heart," with chordal washes interspersed with warm and positive phrases. On "Sketch 1" and "Sketch 2," two lightly beautiful companion pieces, he's at his most delicate.
Bassist

Francois Moutin
bassChris Carroll
drumsPianist

John Escreet
pianob.1984

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980
The title of Come Together Move Apart is only half right. The quartet comes together from beat one, but never moves apart at any point. This is a richly rewarding album that showcases Janoff's exceptional guitar playing and at the same time heralds the arrival of a stunning new quartet. Let's hope that the quartet that comes together can stay together. ">
Track Listing
Mood; Shorter Times; For Now; Hope Fills My Heart; Sketch 1; Sunday Morning; Sketch 2; Partly Cloudy; Transit.
Personnel
Nat Janoff
guitarNat Janoff: guitar; John Escreet: piano; Fran?ois Moutin: bass; Chris Carroll: drums.
Album information
Title: Come Together Move Apart | Year Released: 2011 | Record Label: Self Produced
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