A Drop of Water

A Drop of Water
Studio album by Keiko Matsui
Released 1987
Label Passport Jazz
Keiko Matsui chronology
Keiko Project
(1985)
A Drop of Water
(1987)
Under Northern Lights
(1989)

A Drop of Water is the debut album by Keiko Matsui from 1987. The album was also released in 1993 and then 1997 adding a bonus track for the previous album.

The original cover showed some colored pictures of Keiko Matsui with some other thing. The other released cover showed Keiko Matsui reaching for the Sun in the blue sky.

Review

This auspicious introduction to the many aspects of the composer's skills finds her surrounded by a slew of L.A.'s top players, some of whom had yet to begin their own solo careers at this point: Grant Geissman, Brandon Fields, Robben Ford, Nathan East, and Jimmy Johnson. Matsui balances a mystic Eastern edge with a lighthearted New Agey pop appeal. "Ancient Wind" and the Geissman co-composition "Mediterranean Sea" are the best cuts, building from pastoral ideas into an explosive ensemble hook. Matsui also showed her penchant for soulful vocal pieces, using Abu Khalil and Marva King to varying effectiveness. The emotional vocal title cut was inspired by Challenger astronaut Ron McNair.

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Ancient Wind"Keiko Matsui6:22
2."Light Above the Trees"Keiko Matsui4:48
3."Harbor Wind" (Featuring Marva King)Jeff Day/Keiko Matsui5:40
4."Mediterranean Sea"Grant Geissman/Keiko Matsui4:20
5."A Drop of Water" (Featuring Carl Anderson)Jeff Day/Keiko Matsui5:24
6."From My Window"Keiko Matsui5:10
7."Only Way Home"Keiko Matsui3:07
8."Fairy" (Featuring Carl Anderson)Kim Dodgson/Keiko Matsui4:34
9."Paper Spirit" (Featuring Molly Pasutti)Jeff Day 

Personnel

  • Keiko Matsui: Piano, Keyboards
  • Kazu Matsui: Shakuhachi
  • Brandon Fields: Saxophone
  • Walt Flower: Flugelhorn
  • Susie Katayama: Cello
  • David Garfield: Piano, Synthesizers
  • Derek Nakamato: Synthesizers
  • Grant Geissman: Guitar
  • Robben Ford: Guitar
  • Nathan East: Bass
  • Gregg Bissonette: Drums
  • Micheal Fisher: Percussion


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.