Wynton Marsalis pared his band down to a mere quartet for these sessions, which express a "J" mood that is alternately filled with melancholy or fired up with dogged determination. Either way, the passion of jazz and the individuality of 
Marsalis are present on this, one of his finest efforts. Pianist 
Marcus Roberts plays with an originality that goes beyond his more recognized interpretive style, while bassist 
Bob Hurst and drummer 
Jeff Watts are locked in tight and never let loose, no matter the tempo. The recording starts with the slow, pensive, and bluesy swing of the title track and "Presence That Lament Brings." The pretty ballad "Melodique" is one of the more beautiful muted trumpet constructs of 
Wynton's early career, while the lugubriously slow "After" is more difficult to play than most would suspect. The opposite end of the spectrum brings burners like the wild "Insane Asylum," featuring a positively charged and inspired 
Watts; the spirited signature 
Marsalis modal neo-bopper "Skain's Domain," which has 
Roberts and 
Hurst joined at the hip; and 
Watts on brushes exclusively stoking the fire of the hard bopper "Much Later." As heard on this solid recording from top to bottom, with a stance that expresses no middle range (it's either all or nothing), this group, with no other front-line horn and no brother 
Branford Marsalis, may have offered the then-young trumpeter one of the more bold challenges developing his individual voice. ~ Michael G. Nastos