Sunday, August 25, 2013

Beth McKee - Next To Nowhere

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 41:00
Size: 93.9 MB
Label: Swampgin Music
Styles: Louisiana blues vocals, R&B
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[3:01] 1. Next to Nowhere
[4:13] 2. On the Verge
[2:53] 3. Shoulda Kept on Walkin'
[3:01] 4. Not Tonight, Josephine
[4:42] 5. New Orleans to Jackson
[3:22] 6. River Rush
[3:47] 7. Tug of War
[4:07] 8. Someone Came Around
[3:34] 9. Same Dog's Tail
[4:03] 10. Return to Me
[4:12] 11. Already Mine

Singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist Beth McKee came to the attention of those outside the deep south with her stellar 2009 album I'm That Way, a collection of Bobby Charles covers. Like him, she possesses one of the most unaffected singing voices out there; it takes pleasure in the act of singing itself. That's part of what makes Next to Nowhere, her first collection of original material, so special; the other is her songs. McKee is a smoking piano, organ, and accordion player, and all are amply displayed here. The set was self-produced and Tony Battaglia's mix is clean and true. The band is a close-knit group of friends and family including drummer/husband Juan Perez. Subdudes founder Tommy Malone lends his slide guitar playing. McKee's songs effortlessly criss-cross the entire panorama of Southern music. The title track, with its funky electric Cajun choogle, is a churning rocker that accepts responsibility for life's mistakes. It's the most danceable articulation of hard times in a dog's age. This is quickly countered by gratitude in the bluesy rocking R&B of "On the Verge," that celebrates survival and second chances. The Swamp Sistas gospel-flavored backing chorus sweetly sings its assent to the protagonist's testimony. "Not Tonight, Josephine" is a rollicking piano stomper in the grand NOLA 88s tradition. "New Orleans to Jackson," with its ghostly violin and B-3, could be covered by Lucia Micarrelli on the Treme series, but McKee singing it would be far better: David Simon, sign this woman up! Gospel and R&B fuel "River Rush," with its grooving Fender Rhodes and popping snare. McKee sings with conviction without having to strive -- it's there as soon as she opens her mouth -- this is modern Southern soul personified. She can lay out the blues too: "Tug of War" is worthy of Bonnie Raitt at her early best. Cajun-meets-R&B and barroom stroll in "Same Dog's Tail," and the shimmering rocker "Return to Me" would have been worthy of Delaney & Bonnie with Eric Clapton. The set closes with the swampy, sensual blues of "Already Mine," a swaggering testament to all forms of love: unconditional, mutual, and sensual. While the sounds on Next to Nowhere are rooted in the great musical hallmarks of the past, it's only because they speak eternally. So do McKee's songs: they poetically yet directly come right at the gristle and grain of life itself -- without reservation. They wear their scars as badges of honor; their victories with grace, sass, and swagger. Her protagonists detail our own struggles, failures, celebrations, loves, and losses with honesty, commitment, acceptance, and willingness. All this in an era when we need them most. Tough, tender, and resilient, McKee's excellent Next to Nowhere comes from a songwriter we need to hear more from. Period. ~ Thom Jurek.

Next To Nowhere

Blue Mitchell - S/T

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 31:25
Size: 71.9 MB
Label: Mainstream Records
Styles: Bop, Trumpet jazz
Year: 1963
Art: Front

[6:18] 1. Soul Village
[7:13] 2. Blues For Thelma
[4:55] 3. Queen Bee
[7:30] 4. Are You Real
[5:28] 5. Hi Hermano

Owner of a direct, lightly swinging, somewhat plain-wrapped tone that fit right in with the Blue Note label's hard bop ethos of the 1960s, Blue Mitchell tends to be overlooked today perhaps because he never really stood out vividly from the crowd, despite his undeniable talent. After learning the trumpet in high school -- where he got his nickname -- he started touring in the early '50s with the R&B bands of Paul Williams, Earl Bostic, and Chuck Willis before returning to Miami and jazz. There, he attracted the attention of Cannonball Adderley, with whom he recorded for Riverside in 1958. That year, he joined the Horace Silver Quintet, with whom he played and recorded until the band's breakup in March 1964, polishing his hard bop skills. During his Silver days, Mitchell worked with tenor Junior Cook, bassist Gene Taylor, drummer Roy Brooks, and various pianists as a separate unit and continued recording as a leader for Riverside. When Silver disbanded, Mitchell's spinoff quintet carried on with Al Foster replacing Brooks and a young future star named Chick Corea in the piano chair. This group, with several personnel changes, continued until 1969, recording a string of albums for Blue Note. Probably aware that opportunities for playing straight-ahead jazz were dwindling, Mitchell became a prolific pop and soul session man in the late '60s, and he toured with Ray Charles from 1969 to 1971 and blues/rock guitarist John Mayall in 1971-1973. Having settled in Los Angeles, he also played big-band dates with Louie Bellson, Bill Holman, and Bill Berry; made a number of funk and pop/jazz LPs in the late '70s; served as principal soloist for Tony Bennett and Lena Horne; and kept his hand in hard bop by playing with Harold Land in a quintet. He continued to freelance in this multifaceted fashion until his premature death from cancer at age 49. ~bio by Richard S. Ginnell

Bass – Larry Gales; Drums – Doug Sides; Piano – Walter Bishop, Jr.; Saxophone [Tenor] – Jimmy Forrest; Trumpet – Blue Mitchell.

Blue Mitchell

Lou Rawls - Rawls Sings Sinatra

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 33:37
Size: 77.0 MB
Label: Paradise Music Works
Styles: Vocal jazz, Easy Listening
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[3:04] 1. Come Fly With Me
[2:54] 2. Nice 'n' Easy
[3:52] 3. All The Way
[3:29] 4. Learnin' The Blues
[3:35] 5. That's Life
[4:11] 6. The Lady Is A Tramp
[2:43] 7. Summer Wind
[3:22] 8. The Second Time Around
[3:21] 9. My Kind Of Town Chicago
[3:01] 10. They Can't Take That Away From Me

Tackling the Sinatra songbook seems like a dicey proposition. Who wants to be compared to one of the greatest singers of all time? Most likely you are going to come up short in comparison. Lou Rawls decided to take on the challenge on his 2003 release Rawls Sings Sinatra, which features Rawls wrapping his distinctive baritone around 12 songs associated with Sinatra. It is produced very cleanly by Billy Vera, arranged swingingly by Benny Golson, and split between up-tempo songs like "Come Fly With Me," "That's Life," and "My Kind of Town/Chicago" and ballads like "All the Way," "One for My Baby (And One More for the Road"), and "In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning." Vera and Rawls make a few interesting choices song-wise, picking a few lesser-known songs like "Summer Wind," "The Second Time Around," and "Learnin' the Blues." All the pieces are in place to make this a pleasant exercise in Sinatra-worshipping nostalgia. The only problem is the less-than-perfect state of Rawls' vocals. He definitely shows his age as he occasionally scrapes his way through the trickier passages and growls his way through the swinging tunes. If you can handle him not sounding exactly as he did in his prime, Rawls actually sounds pretty good on most of the disc. In fact on some of the songs, and especially on the ballads like "All the Way" and "One for My Baby (And One More for the Road"), his newfound vocal unsteadiness adds a new shade of vulnerability that is quite interesting. Fans of Rawls who want to live in the past should avoid this disc for certain, but those who are willing to hear the real Rawls of 2003 will find themselves in possession of a pleasant and swinging disc. (Oh yeah, the Sinatra comparison. Does it stack up well against Sinatra in his prime? Not even close. How about against Sinatra when he was 68 as Rawls is in 2003? Well, Sinatra was still better, but not by much.)

Rawls Sings Sinatra               

Uptown Vocal Jazz Quartet - Hustlin' For A Gig

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 44:37
Size: 102.1 MB
Label: HouseKat
Styles: Jazz vocal harmonies
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[4:02] 1. He Was The Cat [a Tribute To Eddie Jefferson]
[5:28] 2. Hustlin' For A Gig
[5:02] 3. Gone Gone Gone
[4:33] 4. I'll Remember Why
[3:02] 5. Caught You Spreadin' Your Love All Over The Place
[2:42] 6. This Is The Life
[5:00] 7. A Million Miles
[3:45] 8. Java Junkie
[6:45] 9. Now I Have This
[4:14] 10. You Ain't Seen Nothin' Yet

Their sound reminds the listener of such iconic vocal groups as Lambert/Hendricks/Ross and The Manhattan Transfer, but Uptown Vocal Jazz Quartet has put their own distinctive signature on 4-part harmony jazz vocals with this diverse package of new music, clever lyrics, and arrangements they wrote themselves! spanning vocalese, bop, big band swing, sentimental ballads, Chicago blues, cool jazz, driving samba, lilting bossa nova, Basie-style swing, lyricized scat, and even a warm dose of harmonized R&B.

Recording information: Bias Studios, Springfield, VA.

Ginny Carr (vocals, keyboards); Andre V. Enceneat, Robert McBride, Holly Shockey (vocals); Steve Herberman (guitar); Chris Vadala (clarinet, alto saxophone); Leigh Pilzer (tenor saxophone, bass saxophone); Chris Walker (trumpet); Jen Krupa (trombone); Alan Blackman (piano, Fender Rhodes piano); Frank Russo (drums, percussion).

Hustlin' For A Gig 

Laura Ainsworth - Necessary Evil

Styles: Jazz, Cabaret
Label: Eclectus Records
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:56
Size: 111,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:08)  1. Necessary Evil
(3:22)  2. One More Time
(4:19)  3. The Gentleman Is a Dope
(3:20)  4. Just Give Me a Man
(3:25)  5. Love Is a Dangerous Thing
(4:37)  6. My Foolish Heart
(4:39)  7. The Lies of Handsome Men
(3:24)  8. Get Out and Get Under the Moon
(5:24)  9. Out of This World
(3:20) 10. Hooray for Love
(3:30) 11. I'd Give a Dollar for a Dime
(4:24) 12. Last Train to Mercerville

“Singing in a satiny, impossibly old-fashioned, nearly three-octave voice, Ainsworth is the very portrait of West Coast cool…"~Nick DeRiso, SomethingElseReviews.com

As the daughter of renowned saxophonist Billy Ainsworth, Laura Ainsworth grew up watching her dad accompany such legends as Tony Bennett and Ella Fitzgerald. Her first album, "Keep It To Yourself," announced to the world that the sophisticated vocal style of the 1940s and '50s was still alive and well. Now, her second album, "Necessary Evil," extends that legacy of great music even further, and in new and exciting directions. On the film noir-themed "Necessary Evil," Laura and her partner/producer/pianist Brian Piper (2011 Dallas Jazz Musician of the Year and leader of the Newport Jazz Beach Party spotlight group, the Brian Piper Trio) offer a collection of terrific songs from the 1920s to today, all about love. 

Not love as a happily-ever-after fairy tale, but love with a twist: songs of heartache, lust, infatuation, fantasy, self-delusion and all the other aspects that sometimes make it feel less like a beautiful dream than a "necessary evil." Love is presented in all its forms, from heartbreaking (Laura's gorgeous new rendition of "My Foolish Heart") to hilarious ("Just Give Me A Man"). Opening with a blast of cool, Vegas-style big band brass from a 13-piece horn section on the title cut, "Necessary Evil" runs the stylistic gamut. Snap your fingers to the irresistibly bopping "The Gentleman Is A Dope"...be enchanted by the lush, exotic world jazz reinvention of "Out Of This World"...be transported back in time with the lilting "Get Out And Get Under The Moon"...and raise a martini to the cynical AC-style anthem to female empowerment, "The Lies Of Handsome Men." In the end, we realize that the only place you can always turn to for true, pure, eternal love is in the great old songs on the jukebox ("I'd Give A Dollar For A Dime). 

And so the album concludes with the brilliant new tribute to the king of romantic standards, "Last Train To Mercerville." Accompanied by a swinging big band and Piper's genius arrangement, this track cleverly weaves together lyrical and musical references to dozens of timeless Johnny Mercer songs. It's a brand new Big Band classic for the 21st century, and a song that Laura believes her late dad would've loved. So hop on the train back to a time when men donned fedoras to take dames with dangerous curves and long, satin gloves to swank gin joints, to hear great music by a stunning flame-haired chanteuse who's earning worldwide airplay and gushing reviews. But don't take our word for it. Download a FREE SONG at lauraainsworth.com, join her on Facebook and Twitter, or just check out what the critics had to say...More (http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/lauraainsworth3).

Necessary Evil

Larry Coryell - Fallen Angel

Styles: Jazz, Fusion
Label: CTI Records
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:42
Size: 118,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:31)  1. Inner City Blues
(3:45)  2. Fallen
(3:34)  3. Never Never
(5:40)  4. (Angel on Sunset) Bumpin' on Sunset
(0:54)  5. Stardust
(4:31)  6. Misty
(3:07)  7. I Remember Bill
(5:52)  8. Pieta
(4:49)  9. Thus Spoke Z
(4:32) 10. Stella by Starlight
(6:25) 11. Monk's Corner
(2:03) 12. Westerly Wind
(2:53) 13. The Moors

On Fallen Angel, Larry Coryell teams up with arranger Don Sebesky to produce a wide-ranging album full of sampled sounds and programmed tracks in an attempt to mix the old CTI sound of the '70s with the production techniques and rhythms of the '90s. "Inner City Blues" kicks things off with great promise, as Coryell jams over a pre-programmed rhythm track with background vocalists. On "(Angel on Sunset) Bumpin' on Sunset," he improvises along with a sampled Wes Montgomery, then turns Erroll Garner's classic "Misty" into a mid-tempo reggae jaunt through which he and pianist Mulgrew Miller travel lightly. The CTI connection is brought to the forefront with a remake of Deodato's "2001" hit called "Thus Spoke Z," on which the famous theme is implied but never stated. Other highlights include a funky, angular tribute called "Monk's Corner," Sebesky's attractive "I Remember Bill" and the solo "Westerly Wind." 

There are also two pleasant smooth jazz vocal pieces at the front of the album, the beautiful ballad, "Fallen," a duet between vocalists Klyde Jones and Jeanie Bryson, and the funky made-for-radio "Never Never," featuring saxophonist Richard Elliot and a vocal from Ms. Jones. Fallen Angel was obviously an attempt to find Larry Coryell a place on the smooth jazz playlist, a task it didn't really accomplish. While it is not likely to appease those who bemoan the guitarist's failure to live up to his initial promise, it can be enjoyed if taken on its own terms.~Jim Newsom(http://www.allmusic.com/album/fallen-angel-mw0000622907).

Personnel: Larry Coryell (electric guitar); Klyde Jones (vocals); Chris Hunter (alto saxophone); Richard Elliot (tenor saxophone); Mulgrew Miller, Ted Rosenthal (piano),Mulgrew Miller (piano); Don Sebesky, Jamie Lawrence (synthesizer).

George Duke - Reach For It

Styles: Vocal
Label: Legacy
Year: 1977
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:18
Size: 97,4 MB
Art: Front

(1:50)  1. The Beginning
(4:13)  2. Lemme At It
(5:31)  3. Hot Fire
(4:53)  4. Reach For It
(4:28)  5. Just For You
(4:50)  6. Omi (Fresh Water)
(3:11)  7. Searchin' My Mind
(5:24)  8. Watch Out Baby
(6:45)  9. Diamonds
(1:07) 10. The End

By 1977, the jazz content of George Duke's albums had decreased considerably, and soul and funk had become his main priorities. Reach for It has more to offer from an R&B standpoint than a jazz standpoint, though the fusion it does contain is first rate  including the Latin-influenced "Hot Fire" and "Lemme at It" (an aggressive gem that's in a class with some of the keyboardist/pianist's best work with the Billy Cobham/Duke Band). Reach's heavy R&B content resulted in Duke facing the same accusation as George Benson, Patrice Rushen and other improvisers who moved away from jazz in the '70s  that he was a sellout. But none of this CD's R&B content comes across as contrived or formulaic. In fact, Duke is downright inspired on the haunting "Just for You" and the Parliament-influenced title song. Even so, it's always regrettable when a gifted improviser pretty much abandons jazz -- and Duke is a prime example. It should be stressed that the high rating awarded this CD is primarily from an R&B standpoint  and that those strictly interested in hearing Duke playing jazz would be better off investing in earlier efforts like Faces in Reflection.~Alex Henderson(http://www.allmusic.com/album/reach-for-it-mw0000319716).

Personnel: George Duke (vocals, keyboards); Charles Icarus Johnson (vocals, guitar); Leon "Ndugu" Chancler (vocals, drums, roto-toms, timbales); Deborah Thomas, Dee Henrichs, Sybil Thomas (vocals); Raul De Souza (trombone); Byron Miller (keyboards, bass); Mike Sembello (guitar); Stanley Clarke (bass); Manolo Badrena (bongos, congas, percussion).

Recording information: Paramount Recording Studios, Los Angeles, CA.
R.I.P.
Reach For It

Oscar Peterson Trio - West Side Story

Styles: Jazz
Label: Verve
Year: 1962
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:22
Size: 81,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:58)  1. Something's Coming
(5:36)  2. Somewhere
(7:48)  3. Jet Song
(4:37)  4. Tonight
(4:56)  5. Maria
(4:29)  6. I Feel Pretty
(3:56)  7. Reprise

West Side Story was a bit of an unusual session for several reasons. First, the popularity of both the Broadway musical and the film version that followed meant that there were many records being made of its music. Second, rather than woodshed on the selections prior to entering the studio, the Oscar Peterson Trio spontaneously created impressions of the musical's themes on the spot. "Something's Coming" seems like a series of vignettes, constantly shifting its mood, as if moving from one scene to the next. Ray Brown plays arco bass behind Peterson in the lovely "Somewhere," while the feeling to "Jet Song" is very hip in the trio's hands. The snappy interplay between the musicians in the brisk setting of "Tonight" turns it into a swinger. "Maria" initially has a light, dreamy quality, though it evolves into a solid groove. The romp through "I Feel Pretty" is full of humor, while the CD closes with a brief reprise of several themes from the musical to wrap the session with a flourish.~Ken Dryden(http://www.allmusic.com/album/west-side-story-mw0000123965).

Oscar Peterson Trio: Oscar Peterson (piano); Ray Brown (bass); Ed Thigpen (drums).