Thursday, August 29, 2013

Bobby Troup - Bobby Troup Sings Johnny Mercer

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 35:17
Size: 80.8 MB
Label: Marathon
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 1957/2010
Art: Front

[2:51] 1. Jamboree Jones
[2:48] 2. Midnight Sun
[2:22] 3. Come Rain Or Come Shine
[2:34] 4. Laura
[4:26] 5. That Old Black Magic
[4:13] 6. One For My Baby
[2:25] 7. Cuckoo In The Clock
[2:50] 8. Day In, Day Out
[2:52] 9. Jeepers Creepers
[2:46] 10. (Love's Got Me In A) Lazy Mood
[2:57] 11. Skylark
[2:07] 12. I'm With You

Bobby Troup is better known as a composer ("Route 66") than performer, but the English CD reissue of Bobby Troup Sings Johnny Mercer, a mid-'50s studio session made for Bethlehem, showcases his vocals. Accompanying himself on piano on some of the tracks and accompanied by bassist Red Mitchell, guitarist Howard Roberts, drummer Don Heath, and valve trombonist Bob Enevoldsen, Troup explores a dozens pieces with lyrics by the masterful Mercer. Troup doesn't have a great vocal range, but his smooth singing style is very appealing. The selection of material includes rarities like the happy-go-lucky "Jamboree Jones" (a piece which also has music by Mercer), "I'm With You" (which he co-composed with Mercer), and the equally fun "Cuckoo in the Clock." Among the many standards present are the swinging but subtle take of "That Old Black Magic," cool instrumental arrangements of "Laura" and "Jeepers Creepers," and a mellow "Skylark." This mellow album is easily recommended. ~Ken Dryden

Sings Johnny Mercer

Sonny Rollins - Sonny Rollins Plays EP

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 37:57
Size: 88.0 MB
Label: Essential Media
Styles: Hard bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1981/2010
Art: Front

[8:58] 1. Sonnymoon For Two
[4:55] 2. Like Someone In Love
[5:55] 3. Theme From Tchaikovsky's Symphony Pathetique
[4:12] 4. Lust For Life
[6:33] 5. I Got It Thad
[7:21] 6. Ballad Medley: Flamingo / If You Were Mine / I'm Through With Love / Love Walked In

Sonny Rollins will go down in history as not only the single most enduring tenor saxophonist of the bebop and hard bop era, but also as one of the greatest contemporary jazz saxophonists of them all. His fluid and harmonically innovative ideas, effortless manner, and easily identifiable and accessible sound have influenced generations of performers, but have also fueled the notion that mainstream jazz music can be widely enjoyed, recognized, and proliferated. Born Theodore Walter Rollins in New York City on September 7, 1930, he had an older brother who played violin. At age nine he took up piano lessons but discontinued them, took up the alto saxophone in high school, and switched to tenor after high school, doing local engagements. In 1948 he recorded with vocalist Babs Gonzales, then Bud Powell and Fats Navarro, and his first composition, "Audubon," was recorded by J.J. Johnson. Soon thereafter, Rollins made the rounds quickly with groups led by Tadd Dameron, Chicago drummer Ike Day, and Miles Davis in 1951, followed by his own recordings with Kenny Drew, Kenny Dorham, and Thelonious Monk. ~excerpt from bio by Michael G. Nastos

Bass – Doug Watkins (tracks: B1, B2), Eddie Jones (tracks: B3), Wendell Marshall (tracks: A1 to A3); Drums – Elvin Jones (tracks: B3), Jo Jones (tracks: B1, B2), Kenny Dennis (tracks: A1 to A3); Piano – Gil Coggins (tracks: A1 to A3), Jimmy Jones (3) (tracks: B1, B2), Tommy Flanagan (tracks: B3); Tenor Saxophone – Frank Foster (tracks: B1, B2), Sonny Rollins (tracks: A1 to A3); Tenor Saxophone, Flute – Frank Wess (tracks: B3); Trombone – Henry Coker (tracks: B3), Jimmy Cleveland (tracks: A1 to A3); Trumpet – Thad Jones (tracks: B1 to B3).

Recorded in November 4, 1957 at the Belton Studios in New York City; Esoteric Sound Studios in New York City; January 6, 1957 at the Esoteric Sound Studios in New York City.

Sonny Rollins Plays EP

Rosana Eckert - At The End Of The Day

Styles: Jazz Vocals
Label: GEM Records
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:59
Size: 105,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:57)  1. I Know I've Seen This Thing Before
(3:46)  2. Something's Gotta Give
(4:13)  3. Ela é Carioca
(3:45)  4. Mr. Hooper's Find It In A Minute Book
(4:22)  5. At The End Of The Day
(4:40)  6. You're Makin' Me Crazy
(4:58)  7. For Elizabeth
(5:12)  8. Lament
(3:45)  9. Rock Me To Sleep
(5:11) 10. One Mint Julep
(3:05) 11. You Are There

There has been a trend for the past number of years of jazz vocalists opting for original compositions primarily and simply peppering their recordings and performances with stray standards. El Paso native Rosana Eckert conforms to this trend with a collection of original and standard compositions that are fresh and sophisticated. Backed by a crack team of Dallas musicians, including percussionist/husband Gary Eckert, Ms. Eckert effortlessly swings with her well-shaped alto and intelligent ear for lyrics.

The opener, "I Know I’ve Seen This Thing Before," penned by the singer and her hus-band, flows with that jazz perfection one always wishes for in a vocal recording. Ms. Eckert duets first with bassist John Adams, progressively adding the remaining band members, building a quiet tour-de-force. Johnny Mercer’s "Something’s Gotta Give" allows pianist Brian Piper to display his wares in a jaunty fashion. "Ela E Carioca" is a Bossa sway and "Mr. Hooper’s Find It In A Minute Book" a swing-era phonetic and poetic marvel, complete with a growling muted trumpet. Ms. Eckert’s ballads are uni-formly fine. "At the End of the Day" is almost necessarily a lullaby quietly accented with Rodney Booth’s exquisite brass. 

She accomplishes the same with "Lament," a plaintive and pure melody piece gently driven by the core rhythm section. Two wonder-ful inclusions are Benny Carter’s "Rock Me To Sleep," which struts the recording stage with a swagger and wink, and "One Mint Julep" which is a fast, rocking piece with no peers on this recording.  The piece highlights Aaron Kelley’s electric guitar. Ms. Eckert’s debut recording is an occasion for celebration. It is a well conceived and well performed pleaure.~ C. Michael Bailey http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=11836#.Uhpz0T9vA1I

At The End Of The Day

Corey Christiansen - Lone Prairie

Styles: Straight-ahead/Mainstream
Label: Origin Records   
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:09
Size: 122,0 MB
Scans: Front

(7:10)  1. Dying Californian
(6:52)  2. Streets Of Laredo
(6:55)  3. In The Pines
(4:39)  4. California Widow
(4:22)  5. Sittin' On Top Of The World
(6:32)  6. El Paso
(4:46)  7. Bury Me Not On The Lone Prairie
(4:02)  8. Chaparrel
(3:40)  9. Il Grande Massacro
(4:06) 10. Red River Valley / Bootyard

Guitarist Corey Christiansen has released two previous recordings on the Origin label in Roll With It (2008) and Outlaw Tractor (2010). Both were well received and featured Christiansen's ethereal playing, characterized by a deep reverb beneath a slightly overdriven tone. These recordings are uniformly fine, but generally lacked a thematic center (not that one was required).

Having said that, Christiansen provides here a disc with a central theme of music of the American West on Lone Prairie but, if one is expecting "Streets of Laredo" or "Bury Me Not" to feature a border guitar part, think again. Christiansen and his sextet lay a postmodern play over this collection of traditional American western music and compositions inspired by the same. The presence of two keyboardists, Steve Allee and Zach Lapidus, establishes a plushly digital foundation for the ten selections on this recording. Here is a successful musical case that is completely inorganic in the sense that this is music arranged for the postmodern (that word again) soundscape. This is not your father's acoustic jazz.

And Christiansen's cover of "El Paso" is neither Marty Robbins nor the Grateful Dead. It is a fearlessly re-imagined piece with the two keyboards swirling around a muscular and assertive Christiansen while he solos. The song is the Western tone poem that resulted, had Aaron Copland met Robbins for a beer in Austin, then found themselves in Tombstone, AZ. at the O.K. Corral. Likewise is the musical myth created around "Bury Me Not On The Lone Prairie." Opened with a simple bass figure by Jeremy Allen, the song slowly builds and ebbs dramatically. Both pieces brag on Christiansen's arrangement abilities and his pacing control.

Lone Prairie works well within its concept, providing music that could score a 21st Century Spaghetti Western as evidenced by the presence of Ennio Morricone's "Il Grand Massacro." Christiansen continues to grow both as a guitarist and as a creative force in his West Coast environment. ~C. Michael Bailey  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=44801#.Uh0CWlcucv4

Personnel: Corey Christiansen: Guitar; Steve Allee: Keyboards, Piano; Zach Lapidus: - Keyboards, Piano, Supercollider; Jeremy Allen: Acoustic And Electric Bass; Matt Jorgensen: Drums; Michael Spiro: Percussion.

Bucky Pizzarelli, Michael Moore, Johnny Frigo, Howard Alden - Hot Club of 52nd Street

Styles: Dixieland/New Orleans/Swing
Label: Chesky Records
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:00
Size: 114,5 MB
Scans: Front

(4:42)  1. Rosetta
(6:23)  2. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
(5:39)  3. Tangerine
(6:42)  4. Nuages
(5:15)  5. Strike Up The Band
(4:07)  6. Some Of These Days
(5:02)  7. Avalon
(6:10)  8. Melancholy Baby
(5:59)  9. I've Got Rhythm

There is no lack of talent or passion on Hot Club of 52nd Street ; for these two reasons alone it would be a noteworthy album. But this is a rare kind of swinging, foot-stomping, finger-tapping live session, as expressive and fiery as it is expertly controlled. Conceived and carried out in the spirit of guitar great Django Reinhardt (incidentally, Hot Club guitarists Bucky Pizzarelli and Howard Alden trained the actors and laid down the soundtrack for Woody Allen’s Django film homage Sweet and Lowdown ), Hot Club of 52nd Street certainly does credit to the wayward genius gypsy’s illustrious name.

The album comprises nine standards, all performed with an ear for pure melody. Things begin playfully enough with “Rosetta,” as the rhythm guitarist (Alden? Pizzarelli? Does it even matter with a quartet as cohesive as this?) twice shimmies his way down a partial scale, allowing Johnny Frigo to enter with his violin and spin, dance, pirouette, somersault. As he bows out, the other guitarist comes in. He seems to dismantle and reassemble his acoustic guitar, strumming all the while. Throughout the four-minute tune, Michael Moore plucks his bass notes, each as clear and distinct as though he were slyly mirroring the guitar picking.

The rendition of “On the Sunny Side of the Street” which follows is one of the best I have ever heard jaunty, confident, carefree, brimming with optimism and goodwill. “Tangerine” simply rockets forward. (Despite its speed, it isn’t the 3:39 the liner notes claim. It’s actually 5:39.) Here rhythm guitar and bass unite to propel the song via a locomotion that suggests an all-out sprint rather than a mere pitter-pat. They use this same technique to astounding, vibrant effect later on “Strike up the Band.”

Reinhardt’s own ballad “Nuages” floats and drifts as lazily, as it ought to. Frigo’s double solo, with all the weeping and laughing of his instrument, is the most salient among them. “I Got Rhythm,” the closing track, takes the Gershwins' tune to a country hoedown: impressive finger picking by at least one of the guitarists matched with Frigo’s fiddle-like exuberance.

For a Chesky release, the quality of the recording is open to debate. Pristine sound is not the issue here, it’s the applause that enthusiastically and invariably follows each solo, always far louder than the quartet itself. This is fine for those who listen to a live recording and enjoy feeling a part of the audience. If you prefer a more privileged vantage somewhere closer to the musicians than the crowd in New York City’s A.C. Pianocraft Recital Hall  Hot Club of 52nd Street will be something of a disappointment. Playing the disc at the volume it deserves means reaching for the volume knob three or four times per song to compensate for the whistles, shouts and clapping.~ Eric J.Iannelli http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=13820#.Uh0AQlcucv4

Personnel: Bucky Pizzarelli, acoustic guitar; Michael Moore, bass; Johnny Frigo, violin; Howard Alden, acoustic guitar

Down To The Bone - Cellar Funk

Styles: Jam Band
Label: Narada Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:06
Size: 176,5 MB
Scans: Front

(5:33)  1. Back In Business
(5:18)  2. Cellar Funk
(5:56)  3. I'll Always Hold You Close
(5:53)  4. Timeless
(6:59)  5. The Flow
(5:20)  6. Crossing Boundaries
(6:49)  7. You're The Only Reason
(7:00)  8. Dancing To A Samba
(5:43)  9. Global Village
(5:45) 10. L.A. Shakedown
(5:02) 11. Little Smile
(4:57) 12. Down In The Basement
(6:44) 13. Back In Business (The Business Mix)

In 1996, when Down to the Bone’s From Manhattan to Staten shook the doldrums off smooth jazz, this new sound was fresh, funky and just plain fun. It still is. DTTB, led by British producer Stuart Wade, is now a veteran of the groove-jazz genre, whose dance staples are hip enough to be packaged into many smooth jazz discs.

DTTB works like this: Wade hums a melody, hears what instruments might come into play, and, along with his mates in his regular band, recruits session musicians who help fine-tune melodies and rhythms. Guests include Hammond B-3 player Brian Auger and Brazilian jazz vocalists Flora Purim and Guida de Palma. The creative process works for Wade, who will admit to anyone that he can’t play a lick of music. Scoff, but the proof is in the jam.

As a true jam band, DTTB’s music often dulls the senses with its repetition, as on “I’ll Always Hold You Close.” But wait, that’s a good thing. Your mind wanders for a few minutes, then flits back to the groove when Auger’s Hammond work tears through the speakers. Same with “Timeless,” which offers a tasty acoustic guitar lick, something the band hasn’t tried before. Elsewhere, Purim’s Carioca vocalese is perfectly suited for “The Flow,” where a horn riff blows over a festival-like rhythm. “Crossing Boundaries” and “Dancing to a Samba” also have a Brazilian flavor, and are driven by percussion that shakes like dancers at Rio’s carnaval.

Although most of DTTB’s songs are fairly busy (“LA Shakedown” is inspired by Blaxplotation movies and has a great Chic-like guitar riff), once in a while the band shows it can make a tight single as well. Exhibit A is “You’re the Only Reason,” an in-the-pocket groove with some tasty Hammond work and simply stated bass-and-drum line. ~Brian Soergel  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=13119#.Uhz-t1cucv4

Personnel: Stuart Wade (programming); Neil Angilley (keyboards); Neil Cowley (keyboards); Richard Sadler (bass); Shilts (tenor saxophone, flute); Ian Crabtree (guitar); Andy Watson (trombone); Lee Vivian (trumpet); Martin Gray (saxophone); Brian Auger (Hammond B3); Flora Purim (vocals); Guida De Palma (backing vocals); Matt Coldrick (guitar); Martin Shaw (trumpet); Julian Crampton (bass)