Every One of Us is an album by the American musician Ray Anderson, released in 1992.[1][2] He supported the album with a North American tour.[3] The album is dedicated to John Coltrane and includes a version of his composition "Dear Lord".[4][5]
The Chicago Tribune stated that "Anderson's trademark wit is again in evidence, but this time he displays also more of his serious and spiritual side"; the paper later listed Every One of Us as the best jazz album of 1992.[16][17]The Philadelphia Inquirer said that Anderson "splats and smears and spritzes his way through seven tunes in a freewheeling manner that compels you to accept him on his own colloquial terms."[7] The Toronto Star opined that "'Funkalific' and 'Kinda Garnerish' are wild feats of imagination".[18]
The Philadelphia Daily News noted that "Anderson is a trombonist who has never fooled himself about the comic propensities of the instrument".[19]The Globe and Mail said that Anderson's "solos, mostly muted, are one exaggerated sound after another, and his singing is similarly blowsy".[20] The Daily Herald concluded that "Anderson continually subverts the traditional quartet approach with his growling, rough-edged tone".[13]The Tampa Tribune deemed Every One of Us the eighth best jazz album of the year.[21]