

Slide Show
Wow, a whole library devoted exclusively to art and music! Dan Atkinson and the people here at The Anthenaeum in



Eric’s set is loaded with mostly original music which has the audience paying close attention to the music and talent of the musicians rather than relaxing and taking in the same old standards. Eric opens his set with “Perfection” giving everyone a feel for all of the intriguing music that he has in store. “Beauty”, a more recent composition, is inspired by a friend who possess such. John Rangel paints his way through chord structures with such energetic romanticism and feeling. Donald Barnett, the newest addition to the quartet opens the music up with a natural ability to fill space with nuances that span the spectrum from jazz to funk and back to lullabies on precious ballads. Trevor Ware, always rhythm-a-ning, always so grounded in the earth of the music. Eric is so fluid; a seamless ride on the wave, against the grain, through the middle, out the back and up to the top before the foaming cascade of alto and soprano caresses.



Music is the best when the cats are smiling and the
centrifugal force collectively acts as a beacon whose signal is strong, loud,
intoxicating and well received. “The Multitudes” ends with a big drop and is
inspired by the




Say this “I think I hear a shot of the Blues”, and that you did. You would think that these cats have been playing together for years, but oh contraire. As tight as they are, this is the first of what will hopefully be many more encounters of this majestic fourplex. Four units in one building only appreciating in value as the years go by. A sliding scale of power from the peaks of arpeggios diving into the depths of the lower register with perfect entry; 10, a perfect score! The evening was organic magic and the music lifted off of the page like sunshine, water, cool breezes and enriching soil nourishing a field of its flowers.









