Those few people who manage to find this CD (by what means I can't imagine) might be attracted by the presence of alto saxophonist and avant-garde hero Marion Brown. Brown has been in poor health recently and in a New York nursing home. His appearance on a recent recording (in this case from 1999) would qualify as a bit of an event ... a very little bit. From what I can gather, Brown can be heard on only one cut, a 2:19 duet with vocalist Day, the title of which pretty much says it all: "Our Bit of Piddling." So your interest in this CD may well hinge on your interest in the featured artist. She has a tiny little voice, approximate pitch and the gumption or foolishness to tackle one of the touchstones of the jazz vocalist's canon: "Lover Man." This she does without accompaniment, and it's frankly a mistake. Here and in her unaccompanied reading of "Dindi," she makes odd sounds and odder interpretive choices. The remaining three cuts are better despite (or perhaps because of) the secondary role Day' assumes as a third instrumental voice. Saxophonists Jorge Sylvester (easily the strongest player on the date) and Booker T and bassist David Colding do what they can, but perhaps the best thing I can say about this very curious release is that at 35:33, it's over almost before it's begun.