"Although conceptual allusions to literature might suggest haughty  pretension, Beckett is actually Fields' most varied and swinging record  in years. Even at their most abstract, these are engaging compositions,  bolstered by zealous group interaction, rich harmonic ingenuity and  stunning dynamic range. Like the work of its dedicatee, one listen to  this album won't do it justice." -- All About Jazz "When you think Beckett you don't automatically think of elegant and  intricately crafted modern chamber jazz, but that's precisely what  guitarist Scott Fields offers us here on this magnificent quartet outing  [Beckett] with John Hollenbeck (percussion), Scott Roller (cello) and  Matthias Schubert (tenor saxophone). The playing of all four musicians  throughout is exemplary, the scores cunningly crafted and intriguing to  the point of being frustrating (and if that isn't Beckettian I don't  know what is) and the recording superb. What more could you ask for? A  sequel, perhaps." -- Paris Transatlantic Magazine Scott Fields' (b. 1955) Samuel, the second album of compositions based on Beckett's plays, follows 2007's highly acclaimed Beckett.  One could argue though that Fields's compositions are in fact closer to  the original texts than most other Beckett-inspired musical works, for  the simple reason that the Chicago-born guitarist and composer actually  derives his music directly from them, not only by assigning precise  pitches, chords, time values and rhythms to particular words and phrases  in the text and transforming Beckett's wordplay into clearly delineated  melodic lines and harmonic fields, but also by associating his  meticulous stage and lighting directions with particular sounds and  gestures. It's no coincidence that Scott Fields has so far chosen to  work with Beckett's plays, rather than his prose or poetry, since a  sense of character and identity--or loss thereof--is as central to his  music as it is to Beckett's dramaturgy.
From www.newworldrecords.org