Monday, September 9, 2013

Antonio Forcione & Sabina Sciubba - Meet Me In London

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 47:37
Size: 109.0 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz, Vocal jazz
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[5:51] 1. Visions
[3:28] 2. Take Five
[5:22] 3. Caruso
[5:43] 4. Why Can't We Live Together
[5:04] 5. Night Train
[4:42] 6. Could You Believe
[5:37] 7. When We Two Parted
[6:32] 8. Brasilico
[5:13] 9. Estate

Sabina Sciubba has a warm voice and guitarist Antonio Forcione is a sympathetic accompanist who often challenges her. The duo, which is often joined by bassist Davide Mantovani and occasionally a few other musicians, performs atmospheric music that includes "Take Five," Al Jarreau's "Could You Believe," "Estate," some folk music and a few originals. Sciubba's versatile, mature, strong and sometimes-haunting voice makes this a disc worth searching for; she is a name that should be remembered. ~ Scott Yanow

Recording information: September Sound, Twickenham, London, England (10/1997-12/1997).

Antonio Forcione (guitar, nylon-string guitar); Sabina Sciubba (vocals); Adam Glasser (harmonica); Malcolm Creese (double bass); Davide Mantovani (electric bass, fretless bass); Bosco DeOliveira (percussion).

Meet Me In London

Nat King Cole - Cole Espanol And More Vol 1

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 28:49
Size: 66.0 MB
Styles: Easy Listening, Vocal
Year: 1958
Art: Front

[2:48] 1. Cachito
[2:39] 2. Maria Elena
[2:43] 3. Quizas, Quizas, Quizas (Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps)
[2:55] 4. Las Mañanitas
[2:46] 5. Acércate Más (Come Closer To Me)
[2:21] 6. El Bodeguero
[2:43] 7. Arriverderci Roma
[2:30] 8. Noche De Ronda
[2:34] 9. Tu Mi Delirio (You Are My Obsession)
[2:38] 10. Te Quiero Dijiste
[2:07] 11. Adelita

Nat King Cole addressed his growing international following with Cole Español, on which he sang in Spanish. Although he did not speak the language, he learned the song lyrics phonetically. Nine of the 11 selections had backing tracks recorded by conductor Armando Romeu, Jr., in Havana, Cuba, in February 1958, with Cole adding his vocals in Hollywood in June. The other two, "Cachito" and "Noche de Ronda," were cut with Hispanic musicians in Hollywood under the direction of Capitol Records' Dave Cavanaugh. The tunes were a mixed bag of Latin standards including Mexican mariachi music ("Adelita") and even the Italian "Arrivederci Roma" (sung in Spanish), and Cole's vocals were augmented by the Rivero Quartet and other uncredited singers. While that no doubt was intended to shore up his tentative performances, it actually showed him up, as the native Spanish singers offered a painful contrast to his own pedestrian readings of words he did not understand and pronounced with no flair. (On one track, "Tú, Mi Delirio," he abandoned the microphone for the piano to delightful effect.) Cole's singing voice was as smooth and attractive as ever, which must have helped, though, and the album's sales -- it reached the Top 20 in the U.S. and was a big hit internationally -- indicated that Spanish-speaking audiences were flattered that an American singer would try so hard to communicate with them in their own language. ~William Ruhlmann

Cole Espanol And More Vol 1

Patricia Kaas - Mademoiselle N'A Pas Chanté Que Le Blues

Styles: Chanson
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:24
Size: 136,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:29)  1. Une fille de l'est
(3:58)  2. C'est la faute à la vie
(2:13)  3. Summertime
(4:18)  4. Mon mec à moi
(3:19)  5. Mne nravitsya
(4:43)  6. Il me dit que je suis belle
(3:49)  7. Peut-être que peut-être
(4:04)  8. Entrer dans la lumière
(4:10)  9. If You Go Away (Ne quitte pas)
(3:01) 10. Et s'il fallait le faire
(3:56) 11. D'allemagne
(3:49) 12. Où sont les hommes ?
(3:52) 13. Si tu rêves
(4:20) 14. Je voudrais la connaítre
(5:24) 15. Mademoiselle chante le blues
(0:53) 16. Lili Marleen (L'ange bleu)

MONTREAL - Patricia Kaas returns with the compilation “Mademoiselle n’a pas chanté que le blues” which measures the entire journey in 25 years by the singer with unique voice. Discovered in 1985 by Gerard Depardieu it was his wife, Elizabeth, who contributed to the release of “Jalouse”, Patricia Kaas first song hummed by the French. Since then, Patricia Kaas has traveled the world singing in several languages (French, English, German, Russian) and sold 17 million albums. This compilation also reflects the cultural broth. We not only find success like “Mademoiselle chante le blues” and “Mon mec à moi”, but also other ones in the three languages that allowed her to conquer territories outside the Francophonie. Jean-Jacques Goldman gave her a new composition of his own, “C’est la faute à la vie”, he has himself taken in a studio with the French diva. (Translated using  Google Translator)  http://fr.canoe.ca/divertissement/musique/nouvelles/2011/09/29/18756746-qmi.html.

Kate McGarry - Girl Talk

Styles: Jazz Vocals
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:46
Size: 103,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:43)  1. We Kiss In A Shadow
(5:36)  2. Girl Talk
(2:17)  3. I Just Found Out About Love
(4:50)  4. The Man I Love
(5:38)  5. O Cantador
(4:25)  6. This Heart Of Mine
(2:34)  7. I Know That You Know
(5:39)  8. Looking Back
(4:49)  9. Charade
(3:10) 10. It's A Wonderful World

There are many reasons to like vocalist Kate McGarry's Girl Talk. There's the lively set list, first of all a mix of all-too-well-known and too-little-known standards, with a fine Brazilian number thrown in. There's the uniform excellence of the band: witness Gary Versace's idiomatic organ accompaniment on "Girl Talk"; guitarist Keith Ganz sensitive throughout, but especially on the forlorn folk tune "Looking Back"; the stately Brazilian duet "O Cantador," with Kurt Elling; and bassist Reuben Rogers' nice feature on "I Just Found Out About Love." McGarry herself approaches every mood and tempo with ease and assurance. 

Her bluesy reading of the title tune, for example, with its hopelessly sexist lyric ("the weaker sex, the speaker sex"), coos and flirts, but winks at every turn in the direction of Betty Carter's feminist deconstruction from Finally (Roulette, 1969). There's all that, and there's McGarry's subtle and important contribution to the long co-evolution of jazz and rock 'n' roll. On the one hand, there are jazz players playing rock 'n' roll tunes, like pianist Herbie Hancock's The New Standard (Verve, 1996). On the other, there are players who incorporate rock 'n' roll textures, techniques, preferences and norms into jazz performance. In recent years, the best example may be bassist Todd Sickafoose, who marvelously described his musical approach in an AAJ interview as "[Duke Ellington's] 'Black and Tan Fantasy,' as played by John [Lennon] and Paul [McCartney]." The first of these tendencies is, in part, a way of dealing with the depletion of the repertoire: how many times can you squeeze meaning out of "All The Things You Are"? Why not do some Nirvana numbers instead? McGarry has played this side of the fence: she garnered notice years back with a plaintive version of The Cars' "Just What I Needed." The second tendency is more complex, and has to do with the necessary regeneration and renewal of musical materials in jazz. 

And it's here that McGarry's contribution is most vivid on this record. The repertoire and the instrumentation fit comfortably in the jazz canon. But McGarry's singing and, to a lesser degree, the acoustic guitar speak to an audience as familiar with Joni Mitchell and Rickie Lee Jones as with Betty Carter. Of course, one need only compare the singing and compositions of Mitchell and Jones to the work of a more traditional folk singer like Joan Baez to recognize that they long ago merged jazz sensibilities into their folk music. McGarry, accordingly, infuses the jazz repertoire with this same jazz-folk sensibility nowhere more evidently than on the masterful version of "The Man I Love." In some ways, McGarry follows the lead of Carter (again), whose glacially paced interpretation on Look What I Got! (Verve, 1988) is similarly bleak. At the same time, and particularly in her soaring vocal coda, McGarry plumbs the Mitchell-Jones vocal groove. In so doing, she manages to convey both whispery fragility and tremendous power; a remarkable performance.~Jeff Dayton-Johnson 
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=42024#.UiSupT-wVw8

Personnel: Kate McGarry: vocals; Keith Ganz: guitar; Gary Versace: organ; Reuben Rogers: bass; Clarence Penn: drums and percussion; Kurt Elling: vocals 

Pat Martino - Alone Together

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:31
Size: 127,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:29)  1. Four on Six
(7:55)  2. Alone Together
(3:15)  3. What are You Doing the Rest of Your Life
(6:48)  4. Sunny
(7:30)  5. Left...or Right
(6:14)  6. The Visit
(9:58)  7. One for My Baby
(8:19)  8.  Israfel

Pat Martino is a legend for more than his speed-demon virtuosity at high-velocity tempos or his angelic harmonies on ballads. He has also faced death several times and tells the tale of his survival and recovery with a perspective akin to a zen master. These recordings from Martino's personal collection document the easy interplay and chemistry that he had forged with rhythm guitarist Bobby Rose on their first duet tour during the summer of 1977. Both men were at the very peak of their powers during these years and we are fortunate to have these superb performances preserved for posterity. ~Editorial Review http://www.amazon.com/Alone-Together-Pat-Martino/dp/B008DL4EPK