“I think it’ll be like riding a bicycle with Burton. We’ll just have in mind world peace when we play.”

Patty Waters must be acknowledged as a vocalist who has tested the limits of the human voice’s capabilities. Since her brief recording career in the mid-6O’s – after Albert Ayler brought her to the attention of ESP Disk – and despite performing very rarely, her influence has spread far beyond the realms of avant-garde and jazz. She has received much critical acclaim for her two ESP Disk recordings – Patty Waters Sings and Patty Waters College Tour. Waters’ interpretation of Black is the Color of my True Love’s Hair still remains a bold testament to the power of human expression. With a repertoire ranging from hushed piano solo ballads – in which her voice can fade to a whisper, barely audible – to performances using her voice as an instrument, conveying an incredible range of emotions.

“One of the best fucking singers alive.” – Rolling Stone

“Praised by people like Miles Davis. her range moves easily from intimacy to introspection to rage. and her evocation of “Black is the Color of My True Love’s Hair” has no parallel In musical history.” – San Francisco Sentinel

“Hear her voice with the ears of wolves. A sound contour never before heard in American music and poetry. It transcends virtuosi vocalizing. It is presented as Shamanic ritual. The most perfect realization of Jazz song as siren song. Compels a revisioned understanding of the lure of the sweet woman’s voice as a passage to paradise.” – Village Voice

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