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  <title>Podcast 985: A Conversation with Dan Siegel</title>
  <description> Pianist and keyboardist&amp;amp;nbsp;Dan Siegel&amp;amp;nbsp;has covered a broad swath of the jazz spectrum over the course of his four-and-a-half decade career, from straight ahead swing to sleek contemporary sounds. While that’s a testament to Siegel’s multi-faceted talents and restless curiosity, it’s also the result of the diverse array of collaborators that have joined him along the journey – a roster that includes Bela Fleck, Steve Gadd, Larry Carlton, Ernie Watts, Ottmar Liebert, Lee Ritenour, Brian Bromberg, Eric Marienthal, Bob Sheppard, Boney James, Alex Acuña and others.  Siegel’s twenty-third release,&amp;amp;nbsp;Unity, is the latest and one of the finest examples of that alchemical process. It&amp;amp;nbsp;reunites the keyboardist with drummer&amp;amp;nbsp;Oscar Seaton&amp;amp;nbsp;for the first time in 20 years, since the recording of the 2004 album&amp;amp;nbsp;Inside Out. It also marks his first meeting with bassist&amp;amp;nbsp;David “DJ” Ginyard, Seaton’s rhythm section partner in Terence Blanchard’s electrically charged E-Collective band. From the time the trio entered the studio together, Siegel’s vision of the music he’d written for the session irrevocably changed, a display of the titular unity.  To the core trio, Siegel added a rotating cast of master guitarists, most of them longtime compatriots and friends who each added their own distinctive flavors to the tracks:&amp;amp;nbsp;Rob Bacon&amp;amp;nbsp;(Raphael Saadiq, Amp Fiddler),&amp;amp;nbsp;Allen Hinds&amp;amp;nbsp;(Roberta Flack, Natalie Cole),&amp;amp;nbsp;Michael Miller&amp;amp;nbsp;(Boz Scaggs, Chick Corea),&amp;amp;nbsp;Dean Parks&amp;amp;nbsp;(Steely Dan, Michael Jackson), and&amp;amp;nbsp;Michael Thompson&amp;amp;nbsp;(Babyface, Whitney Houston).&amp;amp;nbsp;Unity&amp;amp;nbsp;also features percussion great&amp;amp;nbsp;Lenny Castro, whose relationship with Siegel dates back to the keyboardist’s self-titled 1982 album, as does that of prolific saxophonist&amp;amp;nbsp;Tom Scott, who heads the album’s horn section.  During out conversation for Podcast 985, Siegel acknowledged that at 70, his long and rewarding career is entering a concluding chapter. It’s refreshing to hear an artist address the arc of his career, and Dan speaks eloquently for his fondness for his collaborators, his life as a musician and producer, and the possibility that he may still have more musical mountains to climb. Muscial selections from Unity include “free Spirit” and “Simple Things.” </description>
  <author_name>Straight No Chaser - A Jazz Show</author_name>
  <author_url>http://straightnochaserjazz.libsyn.com</author_url>
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