Artist

Eric Watson

Genre: Jazz ,Jazz Instrument ,Piano Jazz ,Neo-Bop ,Modern Creative ,Chamber Music ,Keyboard ,Vocal Music
Origin: U.S.A
Active: 1990 - 1995
Listen on Coda
Born on 5 July 1955 in Wellesley, Massachusetts, Watson took up the piano during early childhood and first explored rock music across his native state. He later pursued classical studies at Oberlin College in Ohio and subsequently relocated to France. While based there he performed across classical and jazz settings and served as accompanist for a dance ensemble. Over the ensuing years he appeared in France, the United States, and Central America, forging a durable partnership with John Lindberg. Although he has maintained performances in America, his professional base steadily deepened in France. His development reflects a stronger kinship with the European classical lineage than with jazz traditions; drawing on formal training, he connects composed and spontaneous music through rigorous architecture that nevertheless preserves flashes of immediacy.

He most often leads ensembles no larger than a quartet, projecting an intense, introspective pianism that reveals substantial emotional range to attentive listeners. His collaborators have included Ray Anderson, Daniel Humair, Steve Lacy—appearing together on multiple occasions, among them the 1988 release The Amiens Concert—Lindberg in duo format, Albert Mangelsdorff, Paul Motian, and Linda Sharrock. Given the demands his music places on audiences, numerous reviewers singled out the more approachable 1998 trio recording Silent Hearts, made with Mark Dresser and Ed Thigpen, as the strongest entry in a comparatively modest catalogue. While some observers have proposed affinities with pianists ranging from Bill Evans and Thelonious Monk to Jimmy Rowles and Mal Waldron, closer examination reveals that none functions as a true antecedent; instead Watson’s singular method has opened an original vein of shadowed creativity.