Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Kate Targan - From The Light

Size: 87,3 MB
Time: 37:25
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Jazz Pop
Art: Front

01. La Despedida (3:16)
02. Almeria's Wind (4:07)
03. From The Light (3:56)
04. The Plane Song (3:32)
05. Nos (Feat. Xoan Curiel) (3:44)
06. Lonely (4:34)
07. Bilbao (4:20)
08. My Time (2:55)
09. Roberta Blue (4:09)
10. Paving The Way (2:49)

Every song on Kate Targan’s debut album, From the Light, is eminently listenable. Effortlessly striding across diverse styles and produced in a way that feels simultaneously meticulous and authentic, there isn’t an awkward or unbalanced song here. Yet for all that, it challenges audiences in ways that most music this accessible won’t. It is gentle enough to put on in the background, but it asks to be listened to. Its songs stand on their own, but they want to be heard as a whole album, a whole journey.

The album starts with the track "La Despedida", a wistful bluegrass departure reminiscent of Alison Krauss. With a voice combining a vulnerable airiness and fray with a studied jazz suppleness, Targan sings a goodbye to someone she still loves. Gentle guitar fingerpicking, sweet and simple piano lines and tasteful touches of steel guitar accompany the singer through a bittersweet parting. By the second track, however, she will be on the other side of the world, in the Spanish bossa nova number "Almeria’s Wind".

The thing holding the two tracks together is Targan’s voice. Somehow, her style can find a home anywhere, whether in a country reverie like "La Despedida" or a nocturnal, jazz romance like "Almeria’s Wind". Otherwise, the tracks are different enough to sound like they could be from two different albums the first time you hear them. The steel guitar is traded for a horn, the rhythmic fingerpicking for expressive chords, and the night mystery, filled out with the subtle sizzle of cymbals and the moody echo of vibraphone. Even the perspective has shifted, with the singer now the one holding on to a lover who must part.

The first switch between styles is a bit surprising on first listen, but becomes eminently gratifying as the logic of the album unfolds. Throughout From the Light, Targan switches back and forth between styles, traveling with the listener through the sunny days and luminous nights of a journey. Songs like "Nós" and "Bilbao" develop a moody jazz seduction, alternating with the warm, nostalgic sunlight of country tunes like "La Despedida" and "My Time".

The title track anchors the themes of the album. It begins with the words: “Take a walk with me through the moss-grown trees, where the dew-kissed trees cover sight. There, you’ll start to see morning’s golden beams shine down your reflection from the light.” This trip is not just about adventure and romance, but about healing. Alternating between leaving and returning, between longing and passion, the singer seeks to lead you to a place of wholeness, a mystical moment where the things you seek in the world find their double within you.

The penultimate track, "Roberta Blue", brings things full circle. With the lines: “Oh Roberta Blue, I wanna sing with you, you had a voice and a dream, and no one knew, and now you’ve got lifetimes of dreams to pursue,” Targan seems to be sending an absent loved one on her own journey, as the singer’s own travels draw to a close. A slow, aching ballad with gospel-inflected vocals underscored by flourishes of organ, the song feels like a religious tune, celebrating her friend’s strength and goodness, and rejoining in the journeys we all make through life.

The last song, "Paving the Way" is a gentle lullaby of return. With a piano line sounding sometimes like a music box and, other times, rolling like the strings of an orchestral harp, Targan celebrates a tender return to a loved one. “Let’s blink our lashes like butterflies, and even though I’m shy, I won’t go away,” she sings, turning down the lights in a homecoming with the same necessity, the same tenderness as the departure.

There are many levels on which to enjoy this album. You can listen to individual songs and enjoy them as well-crafted tunes. You can play the album through and passively move through the shifting styles and perspectives in a pleasant idyll. But if you really listen to it, you might get something deeper out of it: a celebration of the partings and reunions, the romances and reconciliations we all make, and a joy in the way we can take all these things with us through life. ~Review by David Lessem

From The Light

Hot Club Sandwich - Enjoy Yourself Or Get Out

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 38:50
Size: 88.9 MB
Styles: Gypsy swing
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[3:33] 1. New Friends
[2:23] 2. Sittin' Rockin' On Sunday
[3:10] 3. Enjoy Yourselfor Get Out
[3:11] 4. That's What I Thought You Said
[2:37] 5. Morning Train
[4:22] 6. Can't Stand The Heat
[2:48] 7. Wake Up Baby
[3:23] 8. Feet Back On The Ground
[4:29] 9. Middle Class White Boy Blues
[2:16] 10. Laid Back Lizzie
[3:37] 11. Livin' It Up
[2:55] 12. Marcelo

While the name of the combo and the bio both suggest jazz standards of the 30s and 40s a la Django Reinhardt, this recording bears little resemblance to any of its Paris (almost) namesake. There is the Grappelli-like violin style of Nik Brown and some lovely jazz guitar from Andrew London, but Terry Crayford's piano and smooth vocals along with the wit and vocal edge of London's songs take this album into a very different terrain. In fact Andrew London's Middle Class White Boy Blues sort of sums it up. It's great! Polished performances all round, plenty of variety and a sense that they're not taking it all too seriously. Yes, it's jazz but not for the purists, it's way too accessible!

Enjoy Yourself Or Get Out

Willie 'The Lion' Smith & His Cubs - S/T

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 68:49
Size: 157.6 MB
Styles: Swing
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[3:00] 1. There's Gonna Be The Devil To Pay
[2:34] 2. Streamline Gal
[2:48] 3. What Can I Do With A Foolish Little Girl Like You
[2:47] 4. What Can I Do With A Foolish Little Girl Like You (Diff Take)
[2:40] 5. Harlem Joys
[2:41] 6. Echo Of Spring (Diff Take)
[2:39] 7. Echo Of Spring (Diff Unissued Take)
[2:53] 8. Breeze (Blow My Baby Back To Me)
[2:53] 9. Breeze (Blow My Baby Back To Me) (Diff Unissued Take)
[2:51] 10. Swing, Brother, Swing
[2:51] 11. Swing, Brother, Swing (Diff Unissued Take)
[2:31] 12. Sittin' At The Table (Opposie You) (Diff Unissued Take)
[2:58] 13. The Swampland (Is Calling Me)
[2:55] 14. More Than That
[3:08] 15. I'm All Out Of Breath
[3:08] 16. I Can See You All Over The Place
[2:50] 17. Get Acquainted With Yourself
[2:30] 18. Knock Wood
[2:52] 19. Peace Brother Peace
[3:22] 20. The Old Stamping Ground
[3:23] 21. Blues, Why Don't You Leave Me Alone
[2:37] 22. I've Got To Think It Over
[3:02] 23. Achin' Hearted Blues
[2:44] 24. Honeymoonin' On A Dime

Willie "The Lion" Smith, Luckey Roberts, and James P. Johnson were Fats Waller's mentors and musical role models. While Roberts made far too few recordings in general and Johnson didn't lead full-blown studio swing sessions until the late 1930s, Waller & His Rhythm practically defined the genre of small group swing beginning in 1934. Willie "The Lion" Smith made his first recordings as a leader during the years 1935-1937 with a little group identified on the Decca label as His Cubs. The approach was somewhat similar to Waller's, and the Cubs do handle a Waller cover in the form of "There's Gonna Be the Devil to Pay," as well as a Waller original, "I Can See You all Over the Place," better known as "Squeeze Me." The Lion's uplifting "Echoes of Spring" appears in two alternate versions. All of his master takes have been reissued in chronological sequence by the Classics label, and crop up haphazardly on various other samplers. Timeless provides an uncommonly close look at one of the great, underestimated small swing bands of the '30s, represented here in three distinct lineups. A unit drawn from the Clarence Williams orchestra includes cornetist Ed Allen, clarinetist Cecil Scott, and washboard handler Willie Williams, with vocals by Clarence Williams himself. The next edition of the Lion's Cubs included bassist John Kirby and several players who would later perform in his famous sextet. These were trumpeter Frankie Newton, clarinetist Buster Bailey, alto saxophonist Pete Brown, and drummer O'Neil Spencer, who frequently doubled as a vocalist. An additional trumpeter in this particular group was King Oliver's nephew Dave Nelson. The third "Cubs" lineup in this set featured musicians whose names are not quite so familiar even to most followers of swing from this time period. Tenor saxophonist Robert Carroll worked in the orchestras of Benny Carter, Don Redman, and Teddy Hill. Guitarist Jimmy McLin mainly recorded with Billie Holiday and Teddy Hill. Altogether, this is an excellent collection of vintage small group swing. Its catchiest selections include "Get Acquainted with Yourself," "Knock Wood," and "Honeymoonin' on a Dime." For enduring examples of the Lion's music interpreted by other swing bands, seek out Sidney Bechet's recording of "You're the Limit" and the Teddy Hill Orchestra's attractive adaptation of "Passionette," which features pianist Sam Allen. ~ arwulf arwulf

Recording information: New York, NY (04/23/1935-09/15/1937).

Willie "The Lion" Smith (vocals, piano); O'Neill Spencer (vocals, drums); Jimmy McLin (guitar); Cecil Scott (clarinet, tenor saxophone); Buster Bailey (clarinet); Pete Brown (alto saxophone); Robert Carroll (tenor saxophone); Frankie Newton, Dave Nelson (trumpet); Ed Allen (cornet); Eric Henry (drums); Willie Williams (washboard).

Willie 'The Lion' Smith & His Cubs

Chris Connor - Sings Lullabys For Lovers

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 20:46
Size: 47.6 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz, Torch songs
Year: 1954/2013
Art: Front

[2:53] 1. Lush Life
[2:52] 2. Out Of This World
[2:33] 3. A Cottage For Sale
[2:30] 4. How Long Has This Been Going On?
[2:31] 5. Goodbye
[2:25] 6. Stella By Starlight
[2:17] 7. Gone With The Wind
[2:41] 8. He's Coming Home

Along with the 10" LP SINGS LULLABYS OF BIRDLAND, the similar format SINGS LULLABYS FOR LOVERS marked Chris Connors debut on Bethlehem Records in 1954. Recorded just a week apart in August of that year, LOVERS features completely different personnel than the Ellis Larkins-accompanised BIRDLAND. Here Connor is joined by bassist Vinnie Burke's quintet, which includes accordion and clarinet, and the session has an altogether more swinging, jauntier feel. Needless to say, Connor is in excellent voice at the start of her solo career as she tackles jazz standards like "Out Of This World," "Lush Life," and "Stella by Starlight." The accordion-clarinet combination adds a novel, reedy texture to the proceedings as well.~Richard Mortifoglio

Band: Joe Cinderella (guitar); Ron Odrich (flute, clarinet); Don Burns (accordion); Art Mardigan (drums).

Sings Lullabys For Lovers

George St. Kitts - A Lot Of Livin' To Do

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 40:18
Size: 92.3 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[2:34] 1. A Lot Of Livin' To Do
[2:35] 2. Love Me Or Leave Me
[3:22] 3. Birth Of The Blues
[3:10] 4. That Old Black Magic
[2:54] 5. Too Close For Comfort
[4:57] 6. Mr. Bojangles
[3:13] 7. Out Of This World
[3:14] 8. If It's The Last Thing I Do
[2:51] 9. What Kind Of Fool Am I
[2:53] 10. Let There Be Love
[2:43] 11. Can't We Be Friends
[2:38] 12. Bye Bye Blackbird
[3:07] 13. The Lady Is A Tramp

Over the last 30 years, George St. Kitts dazzled audiences in Canada and around the world with his versatile mix of talents as an entertainer, singer, songwriter, actor, musical show producer and choreographer. Originally from the South American country of Guyana, St Kitts began singing and performing professionally soon after immigrating to Canada at age 15. His love of "the music he grew up with", Jazz Standards, Rhythm and Blues, Motown, Reggae, Calypso, Tower of Power and The Top 40 has led to an impressive background performing with the likes of GUIDO BASSO, RENA GAYLE and with a wide variety of bands such as ODYSSEY, The PROOF, REFLECTIONS, and NEW RHYTHM. Kitts started "The George St. Kitts Band" in the 80's. George headlined at well-known Toronto hotspots:The El Macambo, Bluenote, PWDs, & The Bamboo.

In 1989, St. Kitts recorded a single, "Ready 4 U". In 1992, under his own label GQ Records, In 1993 St. Kitts cut his first album called "SLAM" with its signature song 'All I Need."." All I Need" was nominated 'Best R & B Recording' at the Juno Awards. His second album "NEVER STOP" received a second Juno award nomination in 1996. In 2000, St. Kitts reputation as a diverse talent landed him an understudy role as Banzai the Hyena in the award winning hit musical THE LION KING and a three and half year run at Toronto's Princess of Wales Theatre. Kitts turned down the offer of their European tour to focus on his own dreams - to launch a full time business of his own creating show event productions.

During the past six years, George and his company St. Kitts Music Inc. has been entertaining & producing blockbuster entertainment shows such as The Sounds of Motown and The Motown Boyz, as well as customizing specialty productions for galas, corporate events, casinos, charity fundraisers, specialty parties, and weddings. ('Chicago Theme', Rat Pack Theme, Lion King Themes, South African Folk Songs, Hebrew Celebration Songs, Bocelli, Supper Club Crooning and whatever is a 'buzz' in the old and new sounds/songs) Diversity and huge repertoire are important factors to great entertainment. Kitts Music Inc. now has three more bands - MIDNITE STARR, THE SOUND MACHINE and THE SOUNDS OF MOTOWN with a repertoire of hundreds of the greatest in musical favorites. Meanwhile, George St Kitts's singular talents continues to be in demand for by theatrical and music productions, most recently playing Sammy Davis Jr. in the 2005 production THE RAT PACK at the Canon Theatre.

A Lot Of Livin' To Do

Anita Wardell - The Road

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:26
Size: 122,3 MB
Art: Front + Back

(5:01)  1. Travels / The Road
(6:43)  2. You're My Thrill
(6:15)  3. Without a Song
(6:37)  4. With Every Breath I Take
(5:09)  5. Frevo Em Maceio
(6:15)  6. Surrey with the Fringe on Top
(5:55)  7. Superwoman
(6:03)  8. Mirrors
(5:25)  9. Você e Eu

Anita Wardell, the Australia-raised vocalist who appeared on the UK scene in the 1990s, makes albums that deploy familiar vocal-jazz methods and plenty of well-travelled standard songs, but also demonstrate a real care for her art. This set finds her accompanied by a sophisticated quintet led by her regular pianist Robin Aspland, on a repertoire mixing standards such as You're My Thrill and Without a Song with material by Pat Metheny, Bobby Hutcherson, Hermeto Pascoal and Stevie Wonder. Wardell's own lyrics are confidingly delivered over the country-song sway of Metheny's and Lyle Mays' Travels/The Road, and You're My Thrill stretches and swoops between an eerily distracted hover and straight jazz time. Pascoal's Frevo Em Maceio is a vehicle for Wardell's boppish agility, skipping flutelike over the mercurial melody, and she quietly caresses the meanings out of Stevie Wonder's Superwoman with an expertise that never betrays a hint of artifice. An unobtrusively classy vocal album. ~ John Fordham  http://www.theguardian.com/music/2013/aug/22/anita-wardell-the-road-review

The Road

Vivian Male - Our Day Will Come

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:55
Size: 105,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:42)  1. For the Love of You
(3:51)  2. Our Day Will Come
(4:09)  3. When I'm Gone
(4:47)  4. Walk On By
(4:17)  5. I'm So Proud
(4:01)  6. We've Got It
(5:23)  7. The Look of Love
(4:37)  8. Could It Be I'm Falling In Love
(5:00)  9. Breaking Up Is Hard To Do
(4:03) 10. Lovin' You

Sometimes the most endearing quality of the music that we love is its sheer timelessness. In this respect one need look no further than the sumptuous new collection from vocalist Vivian Male that features some of the finest soul songs ever written. Replete with tunes that are as familiar as they are delightful ‘Our Day Will Come’ is an understated gem and a must for all lovers of romantic soul.

A native Bostonian, Vivian Male is a jazz and R & B vocalist, entrepreneur and president of Vivian Male Productions. She has produced and performed concerts for educational scholarships at Berklee College of Music where she is a member of the Board of Trustees. Vivian is also a founder member of the Museum of African American History’s Legacy Society and was recently inducted into Boston’s ‘Steppin Out’ Hall of Fame.‘Our Day Will Come’ is Vivian’s first solo CD and, with a selection of such memorable tracks sung by a vocalist at the very top of her game, highlights can only be a matter of personal preference. Nevertheless, from the opening ‘For The Love Of You’ to Male’s closing rendition of Minnie Riperton’s exquisite ‘Lovin’ You’, there is not a weak link to be found. Male steps only briefly outside of ‘soulsville’ for a smooth version of ‘Breaking Up Is Hard To Do’ where her sensuous R & B tones takes the song to places Neil Sedaka never could and similarly her rendition of the Bacharach  David composition ‘Walk On By’ entirely checks all the right boxes. 

A terrific mid tempo vibe and an injection of sax from Bobby Tynes fit Smokey Robinson’s ‘When I’m Gone’ to perfection whilst the album’s only original tune is the tender but melodic ‘We’ve Got It’. Composed for Male by Jacqueline Rossi and Skip Smith it evokes music from that magical era of Philadelphia yet when Male turns to two songs with which the great Isaac Hayes enjoyed success the results are totally stunning. She injects ‘Our Day Will Come’ with a jazzily soulful swagger and her atmospheric take on ‘The Look Of Love’ is truly something to savour.

Male’s easy grooving rendition of the wonderful ‘Could It Be I’m Falling In Love’ finds her in a silky duet with the excellent Ray Greene and when the two of them combine for Curtis Mayfield’s ‘I’m So Proud’ they deliver what arguably is the albums best track. This spectacular cut came originally from the Impressions 1964 recording ‘Never Ending Impressions’ yet here Male and Greene make it sound brand new. http://smoothjazztherapy.typepad.com/my_weblog/2010/05/vivian-male-our-day-will-come.html

Nicki Leighton-Thomas - Forbidden Games

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:29
Size: 111,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:42)  1. Forbidden Games
(3:50)  2. Scars
(4:26)  3. Living In Overdrive
(2:10)  4. Music Reaches Places
(4:24)  5. Waiter The Check
(3:29)  6. Only Why No More
(4:05)  7. Every Now And Then
(2:44)  8. I'm Not Taking Any Chances
(4:08)  9. Tomorrow Never Came
(3:52) 10. In A New York Minute
(2:08) 11. Love's Eyes
(4:15) 12. Down
(4:11) 13. Nicki's Dilemma

'Forbidden Games' is Nicki's debut album and features many of the musicians she has appeared with on the London jazz scene. The album is a collection of songs written by Fran Landesman and Simon Wallace, who began writing together in 1994 and have been working with Nikki since 1996.  
http://www.candidrecords.com/product_info.php?products_id=114

Eddie Henderson - A Tribute To Lee Morgan

Styles: Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:06
Size: 135,3 MB
Art: Front + Back

( 6:30)  1. The Lion & The Wolff
( 4:46)  2. Sidewinder
( 6:55)  3. Ceora
( 5:16)  4. Speedball
( 8:23)  5. You Don't Know What Love Is
( 4:20)  6. Koko's Waltz
( 5:46)  7. Yama
( 5:08)  8. Ca-Lee-So
(11:59)  9. Search For The New Land

Unlike many of the other recent tribute albums, this program of the music of the late trumpeter Lee Morgan casts his compositions in familiar surroundings not all that different from the original recordings. Trumpeter Eddie Henderson, who was influenced by Morgan but found his own voice, is a good choice for the lead role and his muted outing on the one non-Morgan piece, "You Don't Know What Love Is," is a strong feature. Tenorman Joe Lovano, who can sound like Joe Henderson at times and hints at the passion of Coltrane on the date's most advanced piece "Search for the New Land," has a strong personality of his own and matches well with Eddie Henderson. 

The solid rhythm section (pianist Cedar Walton, bassist Peter Washington and drummer Billy Higgins) is a major asset while Grover Washington, Jr., makes a pair of guest appearances on soprano and shows once again that he can play swinging soulful jazz; pity that he never seems to play tenor in this type of setting. The eight Lee Morgan songs heard on this recommended CD are interpreted in the same basic hard bop style that the trumpeter spent most of his career playing, an idiom that serves as the modern jazz mainstream of today. Highlights include "Sidewinder," "Ceora," "Speedball" (which has some heated tradeoffs by the horns) and the infectious "Ca-Lee-So." ~Scott Yanow  
http://www.allmusic.com/album/a-tribute-to-lee-morgan-mw0000173109