An interesting album, to be sure. The participations of Gil Goldstein & Peter Levin gives it a strong late-period Gil Evans flavor, which makes for an interesting intersection w/Wayne's contributions. Arrangements by Lennie White & Goldstein
Think about it - in one meeeting, you get a combination, in one form or another, of several of the major compositional strains of the electric jazz movement ("fusion" seems wholly inadequate and/or inappropriate) coming together. Some of it is ultimately a little lightweight, but there's some very intersting things going on as well. The arrangements were by Lennie White & Goldstein; think of how the particpation of Marcus Miller, then farily fresh from his work w/Miles, might have bumped the potential for "summitry" up another notch or two.
Glad to see that this is coming back out again. Don't think it was real "high profile" the first time around. If there was a buzz, I missed it. Not that it's necessarily "great", but I do think that has a lot of interest in terms of displaying some directions for composing/arranging for electric jazz, showing as it does that the pyrotechnics and hyperactivity that became the albatross around the neck of "fusion" was indeed only one side of the electrical coin.