Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Uou: Home
Uou: Home
ByIt would be easy to dismiss UoU as just another American-influenced expat jazz band, but as the music unfolds it becomes clear that there is much more at work. The group's synergy is unveiled through immersible compositionssoulfulness along with technical viability; varied musical elements; memorable individual solos; and a panoptic band aesthetic that is cohesive and engaging.
Equally telling as composers, each member contributes material that accentuates the group as well as their own abilities. A fine guitarist, Daisuke Abe's "Hanauta" has a modern Americana aura, mixed with heady swing and colorful splashes of bass clarinet by Takuji Yamada. Modal shades of blue are imparted in "No Mind," written by Yoshifumi Nihonmatsu, a drummer with exquisite traps; but here, the spotlight is given to Yoko Komori's superb piano solo. Komori in turn, offers the charismatic "Queen's Dance," a tune whose melody could easily find a home on Broadway.
More West than East, the inclusion of Japanese-inspired melodies is intricately woven into the music, in contrast to the Asian American sound of contemporary jazz group

Hiroshima
band / ensemble / orchestraTrack Listing
Hanauta; No Mind; Queens Dance; Cat's Play; Home; Moldiana; As I Recall; Ofro Song; Shoka; Rock-a-Bye.
Personnel
UoU
band / ensemble / orchestraTakuji Yamada: saxophones, bass clarinet; Daisuke Abe: guitar; Yoko Komori: piano; Kuriko Tsugawa: bass; Yoshifumi Nihonmatsu: drums.
Album information
Title: Home | Year Released: 2010 | Record Label: Tippin' Records
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
