Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Al Nicholls Swing Quintet - I'm Old Fashioned

Size: 87,4 MB
Time: 37:30
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2001
Styles: Jazz: Swing
Art: Front

01. Lovers And Other Strangers (3:11)
02. They Can't Take That Away From Me (4:29)
03. Dog Day Blues (5:11)
04. 7 Come 11 (3:13)
05. Portobello (4:13)
06. Bewitched, Bothered And Bewildered (5:25)
07. Perdu (3:20)
08. On The Street Where You Live (3:59)
09. I'm Old Fashioned (4:25)

Al Nicholls is the product of a sound musical training, both academically through Leeds College of Music and practically via the bands of Ray Gelato, The Big Town Playboys, King Pleasure and many others bigger and smaller.
Al is also the leader and musical driving force of London's renowned jump jive and good time swing band Blue Harlem.

I'm Old Fashioned

Roseanna Vitro - Clarity: Music Of Clare Fischer

Size: 131,2 MB
Time: 56:20
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Morning (6:34)
02. Web Of Love (Inquietacao) (5:27)
03. Love's Path (Love's Walk) (5:32)
04. Seagull (Gaviota) (5:15)
05. Swingin' With The Duke (The Duke) (4:55)
06. Pensativa (6:23)
07. Life's Journey (Pavillon) (5:39)
08. Sleep My Child (Sleep Sweet Child) (4:42)
09. Take Your Breath And Sing (O Canto) (5:51)
10. I Remember Spring (5:58)

Roseanna Vitro is a "singer's singer." What does that mean? It means she is so excellent and still warranting much more attention. Her deep and precise alto is perfectly tuned and balanced. Her phrasing is textbook. This is what a jazz singer sounds like.

But Vitro's skill set does not stop at vocal prowess. She is also a crack arranger, programmer and music journalist. That is a wealth of grace and talent from Hot Springs, Arkansas. Vitro's projects are also well-considered and assembled. Throughout her career, she has been intelligently judicious in selecting artist and artistic themes for her recordings. This is evidenced in her more focused recordings that concentrate on a single musical source. In 1997, Vitro released the gutsy Catching Some Rays: The Music of Ray Charles (Telarc, 1997) with the support of frequent collaborator pianst Kenny Werner and tenor saxophonist Eddie "Cleanhead" Vincent.

Vitro followed that recording with Conviction: Thoughts of Bill Evans (A Records) in 2001, where she is joined by Evans sideman, bassist Eddie Gomez and progeny pianists Fred Hersch and Allen Farnham. Again, Vitro produced a well-focused and executed recording date where she re-cast several Evans instrumentals as vocal offerings. In 2011, Vitro almost scared into a Grammy Award with The Music of Randy Newman (Motema Records), where her musical daring and intelligence showed no bounds.

Vitro returns now with a collection of pieces by the late composer and arranger Clare Fischer, who is best known for his championing of all things Latin Jazz, much of which is well represented on the present Clarity: Music of Clare Fischer Vitro keeps her Randy Newman band intact for the recording.

Vitro attends to both the common and obscure of Fischer's work. The oft-covered "Morning," "Seagull" and "Pensativa" appear alongside the lesser known "Take Your Breath and Sing." Vitro's husband and producer, Paul Wickliffe pens the lyrics for the latter piece. Pianist Mark Soskin looms large on songs like "Pensativa" and "Swingin' with the Duke," while violinist Sara Caswell provides a distant, echoing continuo to all on which she contributes.

Vitro sings squarely from between Ella Fitzgerald and Betty Carter. Her scat chops are the most certain of any singer expelling air today. Even a bit of her home-state twang may be detected in the bluesy "Swingin' with the Duke," providing this writer a warm spot in this approaching Autumn. Honor Roseanna Vitro.

Personnel: Roseanna Vitro: vocals and arrangements; Mark Soskin: piano and arrangements; Sara Caswell: violin; Dean Johnson: bass; Tim Horner: drums; Mino Cinelu: percussion; Brett Fischer: vibraphone (9).

Clarity: Music Of Clare Fischer

Bob Barnard - Looking Back

Size: 175,9 MB
Time: 75:05
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2004
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Someday Sweetheart (4:21)
02. Please Don’t Talk About Me (5:19)
03. Strike Up The Band (3:29)
04. Drop Me Off At Harlem (5:11)
05. River Boat Shuffle (3:43)
06. Dancing In The Dark (3:43)
07. Legs (5:02)
08. That's My Home (3:13)
09. Moten Swing (3:43)
10. Brother Can You Spare A Dime (3:31)
11. Lady Be Good (3:56)
12. Count 'em (4:35)
13. Broadway (4:45)
14. Skylark (4:27)
15. Bluesology (3:52)
16. Days Of Wine And Roses (3:38)
17. Blue Moon (3:53)
18. Django's Castle (4:35)

Robert Graeme Barnard, 24 November 1933, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Born into a musical family, Barnard began playing trumpet partly because the family band, led by his father, needed a trumpeter, but also because he had heard and was deeply impressed by a record of Muggsy Spanier. Barnard gained experience playing dance music but listened eagerly to records, notably those by his major influence, Louis Armstrong, and also to popular Australian jazz bands of the 40s, including that led by Graeme Bell. During this period and on into the 50s, Barnard had a day job, in a bank, but played extensively, touring with bands including the one led by his brother, Len Barnard. In 1957, he played in Sydney with a small group led by guitarist Ray Price. Back in Melbourne, he continued to play as a semi-pro, making occasional records, such as The Naked Dance with a band led by his brother. Bell called him with a job offer in Sydney and, although the gig failed to materialize, Barnard later joined Bell’s band. This led to a tour of his home country, and a visit to New Zealand and New Guinea alongside pop singer Frank Ifield. In 1963, Armstrong came to Australia, and Bell’s band greeted the visitor at the airport where Barnard played briefly with his idol.

In 1971 Barnard formed a band for an EMI Records session that resulted in 16 Jazz Greats, and three years later he formed his first band. The band played in and around Sydney and in 1976 went to the USA for an appearance at the Bix Beiderbecke Festival at Davenport, Iowa, where they were a huge success. After 10 years, the band’s popularity waned slightly and this, allied to the death of a key member, trombonist John Costello, motivated Barnard into cutting down to a quartet. Barnard toured extensively during the 80s and on into the 90s, playing in the USA and UK as well as in south east Asia and various European countries. He has worked with numerous leading jazz musicians, including Ruby Braff, Peanuts Hucko, Bob Wilber, Kenny Davern, Dick Carey and Milt Hinton, recording albums with the latter pair. He and his brother, Len, also made two fine albums for Sackville Records issued under Ralph Sutton’s name, Partners In Crime and Easy Street. The groups that Barnard formed for recording sessions and other dates varied from quartets to 9- and 10-piece bands and he has also recorded with strings. In the mid-90s Barnard worked on an album, partially funded by the Australian Council for the Arts, on which he celebrates the music of Australian composers. With what Barnard sees as a decline in interest in traditional jazz in his homeland, the end of the 90s saw him planning to spend more time in Europe and the USA.

Barnard’s playing is notable for his big, rich sound and the consummate ease of his flowing solo lines. Although his name was made, and his fame spread, through his forceful playing in the traditional jazz style this is by no means the extent of his huge talent. This would seem to lie rather in his lyrical mainstream ballad playing that emulates, without any hint of copying, the players he most admires, including Bobby Hackett, Braff, and, of course, Armstrong. Barnard has also composed a number of songs, including ‘Black Stump Stomp’, ‘Smackarooney’ and ‘Rainbow Hill’, an attractive ballad he included on a 1995 album recorded during a visit to New York..

Looking Back

Erin Armstrong - Ms. Parker

Size: 80,0 MB
Time: 34:38
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Route 66 (3:10)
02. The Lady Is A Tramp (2:50)
03. Come Rain Or Come Shine (4:36)
04. Lover Man (Oh Where Can You Be ) (4:33)
05. All Of Me (2:17)
06. Skylark (5:17)
07. Just You, Just Me (2:23)
08. Miss Otis Regrets (5:02)
09. Summertime (Feat. Carolina Morris) (4:26)

Moving to L.A. alone from South Carolina in 2005, Erin Armstrong brought along her Southern upbringing. Her blues roots, jazz education and appreciation for indie rock followed. Erin's good friend, Ben Fordham, eventually did too and joined her on violin, mandolin, guitar, and vocals. Rounded out by slide guitar, harmonica, Hammond organ, and electric guitar, Erin might seem like an alt-country or piano-pop artist, but these descriptions may be defied with each listen or live show. From the full-throttle blues-based drive of "Sue Thrasher" to the upbeat and dreamy "Hello Miss McGinty", auditory and genre-bending surprises delight.

Ms. Parker

Walter Wolff - Tomorrow

Size: 119,2 MB
Time: 51:32
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Jazz: Piano Jazz
Art: Front

01. Backstabber Bebopper (6:50)
02. Tomorrow (7:09)
03. The White Guy (3:23)
04. Spark (5:58)
05. Jean (1:56)
06. Simple Line (2:32)
07. Look At My Face (5:24)
08. Second Song (4:58)
09. Morava (5:01)
10. Waiting For Angela (4:12)
11. Where Are We Going Heen (4:04)

Personnel:
Walter Wolff - piano
Francesco Angiuli - double bass
Andreas Fryland - drums

The music of Wolff/Angiuli/Fryland is founded in a solid knowledge of the tradition of jazz. But the trio also encapsulates a fresh approach to this old musical form – resulting in a lyrical and melancholic, yet at the same time energetic and intense sound. During the past 6 years this trio has performed throughout Europe and in 2008 the trio both toured and recorded with legendary vibraphonist Teddy Charles, receiving great international acclaim by both the press and the public. On their debut CD “Prelude” compositions by the trio members as well as more familiar jazz repertoire are taken into treatment. Now this trio is back with their second album and a debut on Challenge Jazz: again an extraordinary jazz album!.

Tomorrow

Caroll Vanwelden - Shakespeare Sonnets 2

Size: 137,2 MB
Time: 58:49
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Let Those Who Are In Favour - Sonnet 25 (4:04)
02. If My Dear Love - Sonnet 124 (3:15)
03. Since Brass Nor Stone - Sonnet 65 (6:01)
04. O, From What Power - Sonnet 150 (4:17)
05. When In The Chronicle Of Wasted Time - Sonnet 106 (2:48)
06. So Is It Not With Me As With That Muse - Sonnet 21 (4:06)
07. I Never Saw That You Did Painting Need - Sonnet 83 (3:35)
08. How Oft, When Thou, My Music Play'st - Sonnet 128 (4:36)
09. Betwixt Mine Eye And Heart - Sonnet 128 (2:14)
10. Those Lips - Sonnet 145 (3:26)
11. Those Lines That I Before Have Writ Do Lie - Sonnet 115 (3:31)
12. O, Call Not Me To Justify The Wrong - Sonnet 139 (4:14)
13. Thy Gift, Thy Tables, Are Within My Brain - Sonnet 122 (3:28)
14. Against That Time - Sonnet 49 (3:15)
15. The Little Love-God - Sonnet 154 (3:07)
16. My Love Is As A Fever - Sonnet 147 (2:44)

Two years ago, newly discovered in Germany, the outstanding Belgian singer Caroll Vanwelden catapulted herself into the limelight amid much celebration and acclaim. So it's obvious that the chapter between Shakespeare and Vanwelden's not closed yet.

With Caroll Vanwelden Sings Shakespeare Sonnets 2 the graduate of the London Guildhall School of Music and Drama presents an emotional, rich and lively collection from her seemingly endless supply of creativity. (NDR)

Together with her congenial musicians: Thomas Siffling, whose elegant melodies on the trumpet and flugelhorn intertwine with Caroll’s expressive and emotionally charged voice, fellow musician Mini Schulz, smoothly stroking or groovy plucking on the contrabass for added texture, and new band member Rodrigo Villalon accenting the flexible rhythms with the drums and various percussion instruments, Caroll Vanwelden has once again produced a rich tapestry for jazz lovers around the world..

Shakespeare Sonnets 2

Lyle Lovett - Release Me

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 51:40
Size: 118.3 MB
Styles: Country
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[3:05] 1. Garfield's Blackberry Blossom
[2:45] 2. Release Me
[3:31] 3. White Boy Lost In The Blues
[3:16] 4. Baby, It's Cold Outside
[4:48] 5. Isn't That So
[3:41] 6. Understand You
[3:35] 7. Brown Eyed Handsome Man
[2:35] 8. Keep It Clean
[2:58] 9. One Way Gal
[6:10] 10. Dress Of Laces
[3:56] 11. The Girl With The Holiday Smile
[3:25] 12. Night's Lullaby
[5:05] 13. White Freightliner Blues
[2:44] 14. Keep Us Steadfast

Lovett says he wanted "Release Me" to be "a punctuation mark for this whole part of my career." The album is comprised primarily of covers, "some songs that have been important to me and have been an important part of my career. Several of these songs I've played since 1976 and just had never recorded." Among them are tunes by Jesse Winchester, Townes Van Zandt, Michael Franks, Frank Loesser and Chuck Berry, as well as the traditional instrumental "Garfield's Blackberry Bottom."

Lovett contributed two originals to the set: "The Girl With the Holiday Smile" came from a real-life 1978 encounter at a Houston 7-11 "where I met this young lady hiding out from the cops" and also appeared on his 2011 holiday EP "Songs For the Season;" and he composed "Night's Lullaby," which features Nickel Creek's Sara and Sean Watkins, for a 2011 run in the Shakespeare Center Los Angeles' production of "Much Ado About Nothing" that the three appeared in. Lovett co-produced the album with Nathaniel Kunkel, and other guests include k.d. lang and Kat Edmonson.

Release Me

Jeff Berlin - High Standards

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 54:29
Size: 124.7 MB
Styles: Straight ahead jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[6:17] 1. Groovin' High
[5:02] 2. Nardis
[5:59] 3. I Want To Be Happy
[8:06] 4. Body & Soul
[7:02] 5. Solar
[8:04] 6. Invitation
[5:26] 7. If I Were A Bell
[1:18] 8. Valses Nobles Et Sentimentales No. IV
[7:11] 9. Someday My Prince Will Come

Jeff Berlin has justifiably gained acclaim as a fusion bass wizard, racking up credits with the likes of Allan Holdsworth, Bill Bruford and Kazumi Watanabe and even subbing with old-school prog rockers Yes. But given the evidence of the music he favors at his own concerts and the concepts he imparts as head of his Clearwater, Fla., music school, the celebrated four-stringer has always been a straightahead jazzer at heart.

A no-nonsense, sometimes controversial advocate of music education, Berlin demands high-level work from himself and his bandmates, and encourages the same from his students. Hence the title of his latest and maybe most accomplished album as a leader, High Standards, a set of jazz gems that has the bassist joined by his regular Florida-based trio-mates: pianist/upright bassist Richard Drexler and drummer (and Pat Metheny vet) Danny Gottlieb. The three gallop from the get-go, with a rollicking run through Dizzy Gillespie’s “Groovin’ High.” That’s one of several brightly engaging uptempo tunes, along with Frank Loesser’s “If I Were a Bell” and Miles’ “Solar,” which opens with a floaty free section. A bluesy shuffle feel provides a welcome twist on “Invitation,” injected with Berlin’s fresh chordal flourishes, and the two bassists come off as natural-born tonal partners on Miles’ “Nardis” and the closer, “Someday My Prince Will Come.”

Yes, it counts as something of a chopsfest: Berlin’s fingerboard work remains amazingly fluid and fast, his ideas ceaselessly bubbling up. But the creativity of his soloing and the undeniably grooving swing of his walking lines ought to once and for all put to rest any lingering biases about the viability of the electric bass as a lead instrument in straightahead jazz. Right? ~Phillip Booth

High Standards

Margie Rayburn - Margie

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 36:30
Size: 83.6 MB
Styles: Pop/jazz vocals
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[3:28] 1. Blues In The Night
[2:20] 2. Almost Like Being In Love
[2:25] 3. Body And Soul
[2:16] 4. Hurry, My Love
[2:28] 5. Wonderful One
[2:32] 6. Should I
[2:47] 7. Day In, Day Out
[2:12] 8. Come Rain Or Come Shine
[2:02] 9. This Could Be The Start Of Something
[3:12] 10. Ill Wind
[1:59] 11. Unexpectedly
[3:37] 12. It's A Lonesome Old Town
[2:03] 13. Laddie-O
[3:05] 14. The Man I Love

b. 1924, Madera, California, USA, d. 14 June 2000, Oceanside, California, USA. Rayburn’s first significant professional experience was as vocalist for the Ray Anthony Orchestra. She later sang with Gene Autry and as a member of the Sunnysiders, on their sole Top 20 hit, ‘Hey, Mr. Banjo’, in 1955. Going solo after the Sunnysiders’ fortunes dimmed, Rayburn released ‘I’m Available’, written by Dave Burgess later of the Champs. This Liberty Records single eventually peaked at number 9 in the Billboard pop charts in October 1957. She was unable to follow the single with another hit and gave up her recording career by the mid-60s. She died from a heart attack in 2000. ~bio from AMG

Margie

Andre Delano - My So Fine

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 58:25
Size: 133.7 MB
Styles: Jazz-funk, Smooth jazz
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[4:01] 1. Sista Caliente'
[4:16] 2. Once My Love
[3:55] 3. My So Fine
[4:19] 4. Saultie (Feat. Kevin Toney)
[4:49] 5. More Than Words Can Say
[4:01] 6. The Da Da Song
[4:09] 7. College Sweetheart
[3:54] 8. Jsu Jam
[3:54] 9. Get To You
[4:54] 10. I Do
[4:06] 11. First Dance (Feat. Greg Adams)
[3:58] 12. Home Sweet Home
[4:02] 13. That Much (I Love U)
[4:00] 14. The Da Da Song

After the release of his popular debut Full Circle in 2005, this extraordinarily soulful, emotional, old-school R&B vibing saxman -- who has toured with Maxwell, the Osmonds and Lionel Richie, and opened shows for Peabo Bryson and urban jazz greats George Duke, Boney James, Norman Brown, Kenny G, and Peter White, said the way to change the face of smooth jazz was to "bring in new faces and be bold enough to take a chance." Joined by genre hitmakers like Greg Adams (on the sensuous Latin-vibing slow dance gem "First Dance") and Kevin Toney (the midtempo, hypnotic retro-soul of "Saultie"), he more than lives up to that promise on this multi-faceted, hook-filled collection. Beyond asserting himself as a diverse urban saxman whose soaring melodies and spirited grooves are matched only by his keen sense of improvisational passion, he's unabashedly in the sex and love business on My So Fine. He goes joyfully Latin (from the get-go, with the punchy sizzle of "Sista Caliente"), then candlelit and romantic and, at times, even gets a little crazy, progressive and jamming ("JSU Jam," a boisterous shout out to his alma mater, Jackson State University). Not that he needs to impress us further, but Delano proves himself a formidable modern R&B singer on a batch of tracks that offer a beautiful balance to the instrumental fun. Living up to its title (though it was intended for a romantic interest), My So Fine is a true star making turn for one of urban jazz's brightest young lights. ~Jonathan Widran

My So Fine

Wendy Nieper - First Flight

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:05
Size: 107,4 MB
Art: Front + Back

(4:47)  1. Blower's Daughter
(5:12)  2. Retrospective Waltz
(4:52)  3. Solomente
(3:14)  4. What'll It Be?
(7:10)  5. Empty Beach
(3:12)  6. Persuasion
(5:18)  7. Poinciana
(4:03)  8. Good Bait
(4:02)  9. Tree
(4:10) 10. My One And Only Love

One of the leading jazz vocalists in the UK, Wendy Nieper is a very versatile, sophisticated jazz vocalist and a gifted scat singer. Her rich vocal colors are complemented by wonderful phrasing and great musicality. Her wide experience as a singer includes being a member of the Swingle Singers with whom she recorded five albums. She has appeared on numerous albums both as a classical and jazz singer and has toured extensively around the globe. On this album, Nieper is accompanied by a great band including the talented composer/pianist Roland Perrin and the jazz legend Digby Fairweather. First Flight is an explosive mix of styles from Cuban to jazz and pop to funk. If you like Diana Krall, Stacey Kent, Claire Martin then we are sure you will love First Flight. ~ Editorial Reviews  http://www.amazon.ca/Wendy-Nieper-First-Flight-vocals/dp/B004O9Q5X4

Personnel: Wendy Nieper (vocals); Roland Perrin (piano).

Kluvers Big Band (Feat Deborah Brown) - Live In Tivoli

Styles: Jazz, Big Band, Vocal
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:14
Size: 133,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:19)  1. Centerpice
(5:36)  2. Always And Forever
(5:30)  3. I Love Being Here With You
(5:33)  4. After Pertubation
(3:11)  5. Errand Girl
(3:21)  6. Got The Jitters
(5:56)  7. Don't Go to Strangers
(8:08)  8. My Favorite Things
(5:38)  9. Atonal
(5:35) 10. Never A Care
(5:21) 11. Make Up Your Mind

In November 1997 we released "Live In Tivoli", one of the orchestra's regular partners singer Deborah Brown is the featured soloist. The CD was recorded during the Copenhagen Jazz Festival in 1996 and contains a varied repertoire of eminent events. Translate by google  http://www.aarhusjazzorchestra.dk/aarhus-jazz-orchestra-cd.php

Kluvers Big Band: Jens Chr. Jensen, Marc Berstein (alto sax); Lars Møller (tenor sax); Michael Lund (baritone sax); Kurt Holm, Torben Sminge, Henrik Hou Jørgensen, Lars Schuster (trumpet); Knud Schwaner, Nikolai Pedersen, Niels Jacob Nørgaard, David Springfield (trombones); Lisbeth Iversen (piano); Søren Addemos (guitar); Jens Jefsen (bass); Morten Lund (drums); Steen Råhauge (percussion); Deborah Brown (vocal)

Sean Jones Quartet - Im.pro.vise - Never Before Seen

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:24
Size: 159,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:33)  1. 60th & Broadway
(4:49)  2. Don't Fall off the L.E.J
(5:07)  3. Not While I'm Around
(7:15)  4. Dark Times
(6:27)  5. Interior Motive
(7:10)  6. The Morning After
(7:12)  7. I Don't Give a Damn Blues
(3:33)  8. Dr. Jekyll
(6:48)  9. How High the Moon
(7:03) 10. We'll Meet Under the Stars
(7:22) 11. New Journey

Sean Jones' recently released im.pro.vise - never before seen, on Mack Avenue Records, is a crisp suit of an album, cufflinks in the sleeves. The quartet of Jones on trumpet, Orrin Evans on piano, Luques Curtis on bass, and Obed Calvaire on drums create a sound that is built on a foundation that includes quite a few bricks from Miles' late-1960's period (as Jones' "ESP"-quoting solo on "Dark Times" can attest), it also builds on the sound of the Wynton Marsalis' 1980's output and the other Young Lions of the time (appropriate, given Jones' tenure with Marsalis in the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra). For a music that lives and dies by the drum, the presence of Obed Calvaire is always a good sign (see also: the SFJAZZ Collective and The Clayton Brothers, among others). Likewise, the presence of Christian McBride as one of the album's producers is a good sign, and portends the no-nonsense, good-feeling, straight-ahead jazz on im.pro.vise. 

Jones has been playing in groups with Orrin Evans at the keyboard since 2004's Eternal Journey, and with this quartet since 2006's Roots, and their time together definitely shows. From the opening duet between Jones' trumpet and Calvaire's drums on "60th & Broadway", the group works together to build a sound that is greater than the sum of its considerable parts. Each of the members of the quartet gets plenty of room to shine, with Jones and Evans taking memorable solos throughout the album. While there are no proper drum or bass solos on here, both Curtis and Calvaire get a chance to shine as well - Curtis' bassline notably driving "Dr. Jekyll" forward and Calvaire's drums getting a serious workout at the end of "New Journey". They play on seven originals from Jones, plus one from Evans ("Don't Fall off the L.E.J.", Jackie McLean's "Dr. Jekyll", the standard "How High The Moon", and Stephen Sondheim's "Not While I'm Around" (here as a duet between Jones and Evans). 

And while the quartet is definitely playing straight-ahead jazz, that's not to say there aren't some very modern elements in here - check out the end of "Don't Fall off the L.E.J." or the clipped trumpet on the introduction to "How High The Moon". The music on im.pro.vise won't change the way jazz is played or define a new sub-genre, but it also won't be leaving my CD player for some time. This album makes a very strong argument that nothing else is needed when the feeling is right and the music is this strong - no overdubs or other studio production, no electronic instruments (not that there's any problem with any of that) - just great, straight-ahead jazz that continues to reveal new layers on each listen.  http://nextbop.com/blog/seanjonesimproviseneverbeforeseen

Personnel: Sean Jones (trumpet); Orrin Evans (piano); Obed Calvaire (drums); Luques Curtis (bass)

Im.pro.vise - Never Before Seen

Lizz Wright - The Orchard

Styles: Neo-Soul
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:05
Size: 122,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:46)  1. Coming Home
(4:00)  2. My Heart
(4:54)  3. I Idolize You
(5:21)  4. Hey Mann
(3:42)  5. Another Angel
(3:54)  6. When I Fall
(5:03)  7. Leave Me Standing Alone
(3:45)  8. Speak Your Heart
(4:10)  9. This Is
(4:52) 10. Song For Mia
(5:00) 11. Thank You
(3:32) 12. Strange

Vocalist Lizz Wright mixes jazz, gospel, and soul on THE ORCHARD, an intimate, intensely personal album that ranks among the most compelling of the artist’s career. With help from singer-songwriter Toshi Reagon, Marc Anthony Thompson (who records under the name Chocolate Genius), and members of Ollabelle, Calexico, and Bob Dylan’s band, Wright has created a beautiful, organic feel on THE ORCHARD one that is the perfect vehicle for her expressive voice and original songwriting vision. Yet it is Wright herself that shines through most powerfully here, whether on stunning originals such as “When I Fall” or her treatments of Ike and Tina’s “I Idolize You” or Led Zeppelin’s “Thank You.” ~ Anthony Tognazzini  http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-orchard-mw0000492953

Personnel: Lizz Wright (vocals); Chris Bruce, Oren Bloedow (acoustic guitar, electric guitar); Joey Burns (acoustic guitar, baritone guitar, cello); Toshi Reagon (acoustic guitar, background vocals); Martin Wenk, Jacob Valenzuela (trumpet); Glenn Patscha (keyboards); John Covertino (vibraphone, drums, percussion); Larry Eagle (drums, percussion); Ben Perowsky (drums); Catherine Russell (background vocals).

The Orchard

Monday, September 29, 2014

Frank Morgan - S/T

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 74:33
Size: 170.7 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1988/2006
Art: Front

[5:37] 1. Bernie's Tune
[4:47] 2. My Old Flame
[4:29] 3. I'll Remember April
[5:11] 4. Neil's Blues
[5:01] 5. Champ, The
[3:37] 6. Chooch
[5:21] 7. The Nearness Of You
[4:41] 8. Whippet
[4:44] 9. Milt's Tune
[4:08] 10. Get Happy
[6:08] 11. Crescendo Blues
[6:36] 12. Huh!
[3:43] 13. Autumn Leaves
[6:23] 14. Well, You Needn't
[4:00] 15. B.T

When altoist Frank Morgan recorded his debut as a leader in 1955, he was being hyped as "the new Bird." Unfortunately, he followed in Charlie Parker's footsteps mostly by becoming an irresponsible drug addict. After 30 years passed, he cut his second album and seriously began his successful comeback. This GNP album features Morgan back at the beginning, performing four numbers with Machito's rhythm section and six other songs with a septet that also includes tenor saxophonist Wardell Gray (heard on his final recordings). Trumpeter Conte Candoli is a major asset on both of these boppish dates, while Morgan shows why he was rated so highly at this point in his career. ~Scott Yanow

Frank Morgan                

Dakota Staton - Time To Swing

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 39:44
Size: 91.0 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1959/2009
Art: Front

[1:53] 1. When Lights Are Low
[2:27] 2. Willow Weep For Me
[1:52] 3. But Not For Me
[2:25] 4. You Don't Know What Love Is
[1:41] 5. The Best Thing For You
[2:10] 6. The Song Is You
[2:00] 7. Avalon
[2:32] 8. Baby, Don't You Cry
[2:32] 9. Let Me Know
[2:34] 10. (It Will Have To Do) Until The Real Thing Comes Along
[2:47] 11. If I Should Lose You
[1:40] 12. Gone With The Wind
[2:48] 13. You've Changed
[2:23] 14. All In My Mind
[3:01] 15. Detour Ahead
[2:25] 16. Once There Lived A Fool
[2:27] 17. You'd Better Go Now

Dakota Staton was a classy Sarah-influenced vocalist who easily straddled the worlds of jazz and supper club pop. Her biggest success, 1957's "The Late, Late Show," had a sort of novelty-value sing-song quality, almost a pre-requisite for a jazz side to hit the pop charts in the '50s. TIME TO SWING is a short and breezy Capitol LP from 1959, the mood uptempo though there are some ballad treatments here, like "You Don't Know What Love Is" and "Until The Real Thing Comes Along." The clean, lightly- scored arrangments are by Sid Feller, a Capitol house-arranger at the time. As stated, the album is a short one; all the tracks clock in under 2:50 and a few are under 2:00! The reissue label DRG (which has been licensing neglected Capitol LPs as of late) includes five bonus cuts to make up the shortfall, including a fine version of "You've Changed," which Billie Holiday memorably introduced on her 1958 LADY IN SATIN. ~Richard Mortifoglio

Bass – George Duvivier; Drums – Don Lamond; Guitar – Ken Burrell; Oboe, Flute – Romeo Penique; Piano – Hank Jones; Saxophone – Al Johnson, Bill Woods, Don Hammond, George Berg, Jerome Richardson, Ray Beckenstein; Trumpet – Joe Wilder, Taft Jordan.

Time To Swing

Jim Hall - Subsequently

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 53:43
Size: 123.0 MB
Styles: Post bop, Guitar jazz
Year: 1992
Art: Front

[5:40] 1. Subsequently
[5:29] 2. Mister Blues
[8:18] 3. Pancho
[6:45] 4. The Answer Is Yes
[5:22] 5. Waiting To Dance
[6:10] 6. I'm In The Mood For Love
[5:01] 7. What's It Like To Love
[3:43] 8. Waltz For Sonny
[7:11] 9. More Than You Know

Jim Hall's third CD for Musicmasters is the usual excellent mix of well-crafted originals and thoughtfully-arranged standards that one has come to expect from the veteran guitarist. It also marks the addition of young keyboardist Larry Goldings and the recording debut of a promising young Danish tenor saxophonist Rasmus Lee. The leader's "Subsequently" is an immediately infectious song that kicks off the release, while "Pancho" is a captivating bossa nova with a few twists thrown in, and "Waiting to Dance" is a brisk waltz that has a few detours into post-bop. Hall's also covers his wife's tasty composition "The Answer Is Yes" once again. Standard fare includes a gracefully swinging "I'm in the Mood for Love" and a foot-tapping "More Than You Know"; harmonica player Toots Thielemans is a special guest on his own upbeat "Waltz for Sonny." With the demise of Musicmasters, this highly recommended CD could soon turn into a hard to find collectable, so it merits immediate an immediate search. ~Ken Dryden

Subsequently

Charlie Palmieri - El Fantastico

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 28:11
Size: 64.5 MB
Styles: Latin jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[2:50] 1. A Veces Soy Feliz
[2:49] 2. El Continental
[2:48] 3. Lullaby of Broadway
[2:55] 4. Ravel's Bolero
[2:31] 5. Sweet Sue, Just You
[3:04] 6. Noche y Día
[2:49] 7. Cielito Lindo
[3:03] 8. I've Got You Under My Skin
[2:20] 9. Lover's Mambo
[2:59] 10. Softly As In The Morning Sunshine

The older brother of Eddie Palmieri, Charlie Palmieri was every bit as gifted a pianist as his sibling, very percussive and responsive to rhythm while also flashing florid passages that were clearly the product of a classical education. His piano studies began at seven and he attended the Juilliard School of Music, turning pro at 16. He started the group El Conjunto Pin Pin in 1948, and then played in a series of ensembles -- including those of Tito Puente, Tito Rodriguez, and Pupi Campo -- before forming his own Charanga Duboney group in 1958. As music director of the Alegre All Stars while recording for the Alegre label in the 1960s, Palmieri stimulated competition among Latin labels like Tico and Fania, which formed their own all-star bands in response. Like many Latin jazz artists of the time, Palmieri flirted with the popular Latin boogaloo style in the 1960s and made some records for major labels like RCA Victor and Atlantic. He endured a near mental breakdown in 1969, but rebounded to work again for Puente on his El Mambo de Tito Puente television program, and he also found a second career as a historian and teacher of Latin music and history at various New York colleges in the 1970s. Palmieri moved briefly to Puerto Rico from 1980 to 1983, and after suffering a severe heart attack and stroke upon his return to New York, he recovered to lead various Latin combos, including Combo Gigante. ~Richard S. Ginnell

El Fantastico

Maria Williams - Rhythmic Remedy

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:13
Size: 127,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:07)  1. The Island
(2:51)  2. More
(4:59)  3. Nature Boy
(4:04)  4. And All That Jazz
(4:05)  5. A Taste Of Me - Sabor A Mi
(4:28)  6. Sleepwalk
(3:11)  7. It Don't Mean A Thing If It Ain't Got That Swing
(3:45)  8. Sabor A Mi
(1:50)  9. Give Me The Simple Life
(5:23) 10. Garden Of Imagining
(4:20) 11. Besame Mucho
(5:48) 12. Rays Of Dawn
(5:15) 13. All Very Clear

Sultry Houston Singer/Songwriter Maria Williams is also known as Texas' only female to front and lead her OWN 15 Piece Swingin' Big Band. This CD (her 2nd) has garnered radio airplay from Alaska to Brazil, and from California to Boston. Rhythmic Remedy is a compilation and integration of her own original compositions infused with Jazz & Latin Rhythms, English translations of Latin classics, and, of course, Broadway Musicals and Big Band Jazz Standards. With a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Houston, she has been entertaining and performing as a professional singer for more than twenty years. Her dance band is in high demand along the Texas Gulf Coast. The fourth of five children, she was born in Mexico to a Spanish Mother, yet her Father, a retired U.S. Colonel in the Air Force, gave her dual citizenship, along with a love of both cultures' food, dance, and music...http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/mariawilliams

Rodney Whitaker - When We Find Ourselves Alone

Styles: Straight-ahead/Mainstream
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:50
Size: 146,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:28)  1. The World Falls Away
(5:14)  2. When We Find Ourselves Alone
(4:57)  3. Lost Alone in You Again
(6:00)  4. When You Played with Roy
(4:34)  5. Autumn Leaves
(6:48)  6. You Go To My Head
(7:01)  7. Jamerson's Lullaby
(6:38)  8. Invitation
(5:45)  9. Freedom Day
(4:54) 10. A Mother's Cry
(6:25) 11. Mr. Magic

Bassist Rodney Whitaker is often cited for his affiliations rather than his own work. That's a shame, as it takes attention away from some wonderful music that he's put out under his own name, but it's easy to understand why that's the case. He anchored trumpeter Roy Hargrove's band for a while, ballasted and buoyed Wynton Marsalis's Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra during his stint with that acclaimed organization, and connected with drummer Carl Allen for a pair of exciting dates on the Mack Avenue imprint. He also directs that label's "Superband" and contributes to the future of the music through his educational work as a Distinguished Professor of Jazz Bass at Michigan State University. Add to that a list of recording credits that finds him supporting everybody from vocal breakout star Cecile McLorin Salvant to under-recognized pianist Junko Onishi and you start to realize why Whitaker's name is often spoken in the same breath as those he works with and supports. Here, all of that known-by-association nonsense falls away.  

When We Find Ourselves Alone presents Rodney Whitaker in all his glory, playing exactly what he wants to play. He doesn't share billing or serve somebody else's vision. Instead, he pulls from various places and interests to create a straightforward yet diverse program with some help from some old friends. Whitaker's joined by pianist Bruce Barth, an associate from his days with trumpeter Terence Blanchard, and two of his comrades-in-arms from his time with Hargrove saxophonist Antonio Hart and drummer Gregory Hutchinson. All four men gel beautifully and seem to have a ball walking down different musical avenues together.  The album starts off with "The World Falls Away," a swinging number that gives everybody a chance to solo, but the band immediately switches gears on the follow-up song the Brazilian-tinged, Hargrove-referencing "When You Played With Roy." 

As things progress, lots of other approaches are utilized. Pure beauty comes to the fore as Hart's poignant soprano steers the proceedings during "Jamerson's Lullaby"; drive and intensity are at the heart of "Freedom Day"; soul jazz makes an appearance via "Mr. Magic"; and "You Go To My Head" is reconfigured as a funk-inflected, backbeat-driven number. Whitaker's daughter vocalist Rockelle Fortin also brings some different things to the table. Her first appearance finds her working with her father's arco support at the dawn of "Autumn Leaves"; the piece later moves into a swinging environment with Fortin scatting away. She also enlivens "Freedom Day" and "You Go To My Head," brings a dash of sly sophistication to "Mr. Magic," and merges with Hart's uplifting saxophone on the hopeful, album-ending "Lost In You Again."  When We Find Ourselves Alone projects solitude through its name, but the music contained herein does the exact opposite. A sense of togetherness and camaraderie shines through here. ~ Dan Bilawsky  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/when-we-find-ourselves-alone-rodney-whitaker-mack-avenue-records-review-by-dan-bilawsky.php#.VCXB3RawTP8
 
Personnel: Rodney Whitaker: bass; Bruce Barth: piano; Antonio Hart: alto saxophone, soprano saxophone; Greg Hutchinson: drums; Rockelle Fortin: vocals.

Mick Hucknall - American Soul

Styles: Vocal, Soul
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:35
Size: 86,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:20)  1. That's How Strong My Love Is
(2:37)  2. Turn Back The Hands Of Time
(4:25)  3. I'd Rather Go Blind
(2:49)  4. Lonely Avenue
(3:08)  5. I Only Have Eyes For You
(3:09)  6. Tell It Like It Is
(2:02)  7. Baby What You Want Me To Do
(3:00)  8. The Girl That Radiates That Charm
(2:57)  9. Let Me Down Easy
(3:21) 10. Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood
(3:04) 11. It's Impossible
(3:38) 12. Hope There's Someone


Continuing with his journey through the past, Mick Hucknall doesn't focus on a specific singer, the way he did on 2008's Tribute to Bobby, where he saluted his idol Bobby Bland. Here, on the 2012 American Soul, Hucknall pays tribute to, well, American soul, selecting 12 soul standards, most of them from the '60s. Hucknall bends the rules a bit, allowing the Animals' "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood" into the mix to flirt with Jimmy Reed's "Baby What You Want Me to Do," but he generally sticks to well-loved standards such as "I'd Rather Go Blind," "Lonely Avenue," "I Only Have Eyes for You," and "Tell It Like It Is." Compared to Tribute to Bobby, this adds a bit of grit to its production in its attempt to sound like old-fashioned soul, and that's why it's a better record: it gets closer to the spirit and sound of what Hucknall loves. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine  http://www.allmusic.com/album/american-soul-mw0002417228

Personnel: Mick Hucknall (vocals, background vocals).

Billy Eckstine - Momento Brasileiro

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1979
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 34:22
Size: 55,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:07)  1. Cidade Maravilhosa
(3:11)  2. I Apologize
(3:19)  3. Corcovado
(3:05)  4. Where Or When
(3:42)  5. Dindi
(4:25)  6. Dora
(4:41)  7. Vivo Sonhando
(4:50)  8. Você e  Eu
(2:58)  9. Insensatez

One of the most distinctive of all ballad singers, Eckstine was both a pivotal figure in the history of jazz (because of his commitment to bebop) and the first black singer to achieve lasting success in the pop mainstream. After winning a talent contest in 1930 by imitating Cab Calloway, Eckstine sang briefly with Tommy Myles’ band, before returning to college.  On the recommendation of composer and tenor saxophonist Buddy Johnson he joined Earl Hines’ band in 1939 as singer and  occasionally  playing  trumpet  and in turn  encouraged  Hines to sign up Charlie Parker and Sarah Vaughan. Eckstine’s recordings with the band include ‘Stormy Monday Blues’ and his own ‘Jelly Jelly’. In 1943, he quit to go solo but in 1944 formed his own big band, a modern swing band committed almost exclusively to bebop, to the point where Eckstine’s stylized vocals regularly took second place to the playing of Dizzy Gillespie, Dexter Gordon, Art Blakey, Charlie Parker, Fats Navarro, Gene Ammons and Kenny Dorham, among others. 

The band was badly recorded and badly managed and in 1947 Eckstine folded it to go solo. However, the support Eckstine gave bop musicians at that time was crucial. Even before folding his band, Eckstine had recorded solo to support it, scoring two million-sellers in 1945 with ‘Cottage for Sale’ and a revival of ‘Prisoner of Love’. Far more successful than his band recordings, though more mannered and pompously sung, these prefigured Eckstine’s future career. Where before black bands had played ballads, jazz and dance music, in the immediate post-war years they had to choose. Lacking an interest in the blues and frustrated by the failure of his big band, Eckstine, at first reluctantly, turned to ballads. Henceforth his successes would be in the pop charts. 

In 1947, he was one of the first signings to the newly established MGM Records and had immediate hits with revivals of ‘Everything I Have Is Yours’ (1947), Richard Rodgers’ and Lorenz Hart’s ‘Blue Moon’ (1948), and Duke Ellington’s, Irving Mills and Juan Tizol’s ‘Caravan’ (1949). He had further success in 1950 with Victor Young’s theme song to ‘My Foolish Heart’ and a revival of the 1931 Bing Crosby hit, ‘I Apologize’. However, unlike Nat ‘King’ Cole who followed him into the pop charts, Eckstine’s singing, especially his exaggerated vibrato, sounded increasingly mannered and he was unable to sustain his recording success throughout the decade. His best record of the fifties was the thrilling duet with Sarah Vaughan, ‘Passing Strangers’, a minor hit in 1957. Eckstine later concentrated on live appearances, regularly crossing the world, and recorded only intermittently. In 1967, he briefly joined Motown and in 1981 recorded the impressive ‘Something More’. ~ Bio  http://www.vervemusicgroup.com/billyeckstine

Sunday, September 28, 2014

Steve Hobbs - On The Lower East Side

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 64:06
Size: 146.7 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Vibraphone jazz
Year: 1995
Art: Front

[7:38] 1. Amazing Grace
[5:21] 2. Around And Around
[7:26] 3. Sweet And Lovely
[5:53] 4. The Song Is You
[4:08] 5. Pedra Bonita
[7:23] 6. Thinking Of Chet
[3:52] 7. Au Privave
[5:09] 8. 18-35 (Together Again)
[5:12] 9. Pentachronic
[5:42] 10. But Beautiful
[6:17] 11. What Is This Thing Called Love

On the Lower East Side is an appropriate title for this hard bop date, which Steve Hobbs really did record on Manhattan's Lower East Side. It was in that part of New York that the vibist/marimba player formed a cohesive quartet with pianist Kenny Barron, bassist Peter Washington, and drummer Victor Lewis. Barron's solos alone make this CD worth the price of admission, but Hobbs is no slouch either. Although not as well known as he deserves to be, Hobbs is an expressive, swinging improviser with a recognizable sound. Though influences like Milt Jackson and Bobby Hutcherson serve him well, Hobbs is definitely his own person. This is apparent on inspired versions of overdone warhorses (including "What Is This Thing Called Love?" and "The Song Is You") as well as Hobbs originals that range from the Brazilian-flavored "Pedra Bonita" to the intriguing "Song for Chet" (which the jazzman wrote after learning about trumpeter Chet Baker's mysterious death in May 1988). One of the CD's most imaginative tracks is "Amazing Grace," which works quite well in a bop setting. On the Lower East Side isn't Hobbs' most essential release, but it's still an album that he can be proud of. ~Alex Henderson

On The Lower East Side

Julie Kelly - Kelly Sings Christy (Thou Swell)

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 48:23
Size: 110.8 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[3:46] 1. There's No You
[5:19] 2. Something Cool
[4:43] 3. It Might As Well Be Spring
[3:19] 4. Thou Swell
[4:59] 5. Lazy Afternoon
[2:45] 6. Gone For The Day
[5:16] 7. It's So Peaceful In The Country
[3:27] 8. It's A Most Unusual Day
[5:53] 9. Midnight Sun
[2:58] 10. The Best Thing For You
[5:53] 11. Lonely House

No discussion of '40s and '50s cool jazz would be complete without some mention of June Christy. Like Chris Connor and Julie London, the Misty Miss Christy (b. 1925, d. 1990) was a vocal equivalent of tenor saxophonist Stan Getz, alto saxophonist Lee Konitz, or trumpeter Miles Davis -- her singing was characterized by subtlety, restraint, and economy instead of aggression or forcefulness. Although Christy was the essence of cool jazz, one doesn't have to be a full-time member of the Cool School to acknowledge her greatness. Julie Kelly is far from a carbon copy of Christy, and that's the thing that makes this Christy tribute as interesting as it is -- on Kelly Sings Christy: Thou Swell, Kelly salutes the cool-toned goddess on her own terms. Recorded in 2001 (11 years after Christy's death), this excellent CD is devoted to songs that people associate with Christy -- gems that include Billy Barnes' "Something Cool" and Lionel Hampton's "Midnight Sun." To her credit, Kelly doesn't go out of her way to emulate Christy's versions. Her own personality never becomes obscured, and Kelly does some things that Christy wouldn't have done. An Afro-Cuban-flavored version of "It Might as Well Be Spring," for example, is more aggressive and hard-swinging than Christy would have been -- and Kelly's interpretations of "Thou Swell" and "Lazy Afternoon" have a tougher, harder edge than one would expect from Christy. So even though Christy is among Kelly's many influences, no one will accuse this CD of being a carbon copy of Christy's work. Jazz tribute albums can be incredibly predictable, cliché-ridden affairs, but that isn't a problem here. Letting her individuality shine through, Kelly isn't afraid to offer some surprises on this inspired tribute to the Misty Miss Christy. ~Alex Henderson

Kelly Sings Christy (Thou Swell)

Cannonball Adderley - Bohemia After Dark

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 46:55
Size: 107.4 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Soul jazz
Year: 1960/2009
Art: Front

[6:03] 1. Bohemia After Dark
[4:19] 2. Chasm
[6:19] 3. Willow Weep For Me
[3:14] 4. Late Entry
[9:09] 5. Hear Me Talkin' To Ya
[5:40] 6. With Apologies To Oscar
[6:54] 7. We'll Be Together Again
[5:13] 8. Carribean Cutie (Alternate)

The June 26, 1955 session is most notable for being the recorded debut of the recently discovered altoist Cannonball Adderley and his brother, cornetist Nat (who is also featured on the lone number from July 26, a quartet version of "We'll Be Together Again"). Although drummer Kenny Clarke is the nominal leader and the other sidemen include trumpeter Donald Byrd, Jerome Richardson on tenor and flute, pianist Horace Silver and bassist Paul Chambers, the impressive performance by the young Adderleys makes this a historic session that has often been reissued under Cannonball's name. ~Scott Yanow

Alto Saxophone – Julian "Cannonball" Adderley; Bass – Paul Chambers; Cornet – Nat Adderley; Drums, Leader – Kenny Clarke; Piano – Hank Jones, Horace Silver; Tenor Saxophone, Flute – Jerome Richardson; Trumpet – Donald Byrd.

Bohemia After Dark

Loston Harris - Comes Love

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:59
Size: 98,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:49)  1. Swinging At The Haven
(4:48)  2. Moonlight In Vermont
(3:15)  3. Close Your Eyes
(4:22)  4. Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me
(4:00)  5. Stompin Down Broadway
(4:36)  6. Comes Love
(5:34)  7. There Goes My Heart
(6:50)  8. Easy Listening Blues
(4:42)  9. Shaw We Dance?

Loston Harris' debut makes it easy to compare him to early Harry Connick, Jr. Harris plays piano in a likable style that is swing-based but sometimes boppish; he takes four vocals that sound a bit like Connick, performs an Ellis Marsalis piece ("Swinging at the Haven") and even thanks Ellis and Wynton Marsalis and Marcus Roberts, among others, in the acknowledgements. Harris has stronger technique than Connick (his playing on "Easy Listening Blues" is a good example) and Oscar Peterson is one of his influences. His vocals are unassuming, straightforward and warm. Although no innovations are heard and Loston Harris is in the early stages of forming his own sound, overall this trio date (with bassist David Grossman, drummer Clarence Penn and, on three numbers, Mark Shim guesting on tenor) is an enjoyable set of swinging music. The highlights include "Moonlight in Vermont" (which has a groove reminiscent of the Ahmad Jamal Trio), "Do Nothin' Till You Hear from Me," "Comes Love" and "Easy Listening Blues." ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/comes-love-mw0000034193

Personnel: Loston Harris (vocals, piano); Mark Shim (tenor saxophone); Clarence Penn (drums).

Ralph Sutton, Jim Galloway, Don Vickery - Pocketful Of Dreams

Styles: Piano And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:54
Size: 151,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:34)  1. Sleep
(7:50)  2. Farewell Blues
(7:33)  3. Sweet And Slow
(6:05)  4. Blue Skies
(4:54)  5. I've Got a Pocket Full of Dreams
(7:01)  6. You've Changed
(5:59)  7. Baby Won't You Please Come Home
(7:12)  8. Poor Butterfly
(6:49)  9. If Dreams Come True
(6:51) 10. She's Funny That Way

Ralph Sutton was the greatest stride pianist to emerge since World War II, with his only close competitors being the late Dick Wellstood and the very versatile Dick Hyman. Nearly alone in his generation, Sutton kept alive the piano styles of Fats Waller and James P. Johnson, not as mere museum pieces but as devices for exciting improvisations. Although sticking within the boundaries of his predecessors, Sutton infused the music with his own personality; few could match his powerful left hand. Ralph Sutton played with Jack Teagarden's big band briefly in 1942 before serving in the Army. After World War II he appeared regularly on Rudi Blesh's This Is Jazz radio show and spent eight years as the intermission pianist at Eddie Condon's club, recording frequently. He spent time playing in San Francisco, worked for Bob Scobey, moved to Aspen in the mid-'60s, and became an original member of the World's Greatest Jazz Band with Yank Lawson, Bob Haggart, and Bud Freeman. 

In the 1970s, he recorded many exciting albums for the Chaz label and then cut albums for quite a few labels. Despite suffering a stroke in the early '90s, Sutton kept a busy schedule through the mid-'90s, playing at jazz parties and festivals. He died suddenly on December 29, 2001, in his car outside a restaurant in Evergreen, CO. Although he would have received much greater fame if he had been born 20 years earlier and come to maturity during the 1930s rather than the 1950s, at the time of his death it was obvious that Ralph Sutton had earned his place among the top classic jazz pianists of all time. ~ Bio  https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/ralph-sutton/id1579569#fullText

An excellent swing soprano player with a lighter tone than Sidney Bechet, Jim Galloway has made many recordings with like-minded veterans. He played locally in Scotland on clarinet and alto before emigrating to Canada in 1965. He soon began specializing on soprano, led the Metro Stompers (1968), put together the Wee Big Band (1978), and hosted the weekly jazz radio program Toronto Alive! (1981-1987). Galloway, who has appeared at many jazz festivals and jazz parties, has recorded for Sackville, Hep, and Music & Arts along with several smaller Canadian labels with such pianists as Dick Wellstood, Art Hodes, and most often with Jay McShann. ~ Bio  https://itunes.apple.com/ca/artist/jim-galloway/id110727063

Personnel: Ralph Sutton (piano); Jim Galloway (soprano saxophone); Don Vickery (drums).

Hank Jones - I'm All Smiles

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:15
Size: 108,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:19)  1. Relaxin' At Camarillo
(7:37)  2. In A Sentimental Mood
(6:53)  3. Some Day My Prince Will Come
(4:29)  4. Afternoon In Paris
(6:17)  5. Au Privave
(5:03)  6. I'm All Smiles
(4:48)  7. Rockin In Rhythm
(6:46)  8. Con Alma

Although Tommy Flanagan tended to refer to two-piano dates as a gimmick, that's hardly the case during this superb 1983 concert in Germany with Hank Jones. The two pianists have the kind of feel for one another's playing that avoids the crash of egos and instead inspires the give and take necessary for each performance to reach its full potential. Immediately, the two veterans captivate their audience with a stunning aggressive improvisation upon Charlie Parker's "Relaxin' at Camarillo," then immediately quiet them with a soft, lyrical interpretation of the gorgeous ballad "In a Sentimental Mood." They're clearly having a lot of fun during their upbeat waltz through the popular ballad "Someday My Prince Will Come." The rest of the concert is every bit as fulfilling, with an inspired treatment of "Rockin' in Rhythm" getting the nod as the highlight of a memorable evening. ~ Ken Dryden  
http://www.allmusic.com/album/im-all-smiles-mw0000188033

Personnel:  Hank Jones – Piano; Tommy Flanagan – Piano.

I'm All Smiles

Saturday, September 27, 2014

The Al Nicholls Quartet - That Swing Thing

Size: 124,0 MB
Time: 53:34
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Jazz: Swing Jazz
Art: Full

01. Zing! Went The Strings Of My Heart (5:12)
02. God Bless The Child (7:04)
03. Love For Sale (6:55)
04. I've Got A Crush On You (5:31)
05. Night And Day (6:12)
06. The Man I Love (6:21)
07. Last Train's Gone (4:45)
08. Time After Time (5:24)
09. Tea For Two (4:50)
10. Too Close For Comfort (1:15)

A Modern recording of (mostly) swing standards of the 1940's and 50's played with aplomb by four masters of their craft.

Stylish small group swing of the kind that became popular alongside the big band music of the late 1930's and 1940's. There are ten tracks here - some well known standards, plus a few less frequently heard. The playing is superb - 4 guys who have obviously learnt their craft well through years of playing "on the road" as well as in the studio. The arrangements are intelligent and well thought out, and throw up quite a few surprises. The sound quality is excellent - crisp and modern, considering this was recorded in the "live" environment of the excellent Goldtop Studios.

That Swing Thing

Geila Zilkha - Day Dreaming

Size: 162,1 MB
Time: 69:48
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz: Vocals
Art: Front

01. Phoebe (4:34)
02. Love For Sale (6:06)
03. Come Fly With Me (3:59)
04. Dray Dreaming (6:28)
05. My Funny Valentine (6:03)
06. The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face (7:17)
07. Summertime (5:45)
08. Sleeping With An Angel Who Broke My Heart (7:43)
09. Fate & Promises (4:09)
10. Moonlight Serenade (4:34)
11. What A Wonderful World (6:01)
12. When The Party's Over (7:04)

Geila Zilkha is a successful and highly recognized singer in Japan. With a solid background in jazz and additional essence of strong soul music, her vocal performances delight the audiences’ ears and hearts wherever she sings.

Born and raised in Kobe to an Israeli father and Japanese mother, Geila attended the international school Canadian Academy from kindergarten through high school and is fluent in both English and Japanese. She showed a strong interest in the arts and music from an early age, and studied ballet from the age of three. When Geila was nine years old, she was diagnosed with scoliosis and underwent surgery during which a metal rod was implanted in her back. This operation meant that she could no longer dance or play sports, and ever since then Geila knew that she would pursue a career in music.

Soon after the operation, Geila began learning how to play the alto saxophone. When she felt the need to deepen her understanding of music, she also began playing the keyboard. She played in bands in high school and led a jazz big band. Geila was then accepted to Berklee College of Music in Boston to study the alto saxophone. Shortly afterwards, she realized that her voice was the instrument she should pursue, and changed her major to singing from her second year.

During her time at Berklee, she participated in Vocal Jazz Ensemble taught by her vocal mentor April Arabian, Vocal Summit taught by Bob Stoloff, and Reverence Gospel Choir led by Orville Wright and Dennis Montgomery III. She graduated from Berklee in 1991.

Geila returned to her hometown of Kobe following graduation and worked as a TV and radio personality. At FM802, a leading Osaka radio station, she hosted her own program for almost three years. She also co-hosted a morning show for ABC Television.

In 1995, the great Hanshin-Awaji Earthquake occurred and interrupted the course of her career as a well-known personality and singer, forcing her to take a leave of absence.

However, Geila was not ready to give up her dreams of becoming a successful musician. She moved to Tokyo, the cultural center of Japan. There, she sang in TV commercials and worked as a radio personality for InterFM. She worked as a voice actor for Benesse, a major correspondence education and publishing company, which earned her more spots narrating and singing in TV commercials for companies such as Mazda, All Nippon Airways (ANA) and Haagen Dazs. In the case of ANA, the commercial was so popular that audiences requested the company disclose the singer's name.

In 2002, she began an all-female gospel choir named Voissalot Choir. The group released three albums, sang in TV commercials and performed at Tokyo Disney Sea, JZ Brat and Sweet Basil as well as other renowned clubs. In 2004, Geila gave birth to a son. Six months later, she started singing again. In 2006, she was invited to teach at a high-ranking jazz school. In 2007, she met the highly acclaimed male vocalist Ayumu Yahaba, and they started singing duo shows entitled SOLO-DUO.

In 2009, after successfully leading Voissalot Choir to the Apollo Theater in New York, Geila decided to concentrate her efforts on solo shows. In 2010, she earned the Grand-Prix title for the annual Kobe Jazz Vocal Queen Contest which entitled her to sing a highly acclaimed show at the renowned jazz club Jazz Alley in Seattle. In October of the same year, she released her first solo album, all Me, which surprisingly became a megahit among jazz audiences although many people had never heard of her before. Print media feedback has also been very positive: the top jazz magazines in Japan, Jazz Japan, Jazz Life and Jazz Hihyo [Jazz Review], gave high praise, and the national newspaper Asahi Shimbun dedicated two feature articles.

Day Dreaming

Smooth Jazz All Stars - Smooth Jazz Tribute To Richard Marx

Size: 105,4 MB
Time: 45:07
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz: Smooth Jazz
Art: Front

01. Right Here Waiting (4:27)
02. Now & Forever (4:56)
03. This I Promise You (4:09)
04. Endless Summer Nights (4:30)
05. Hold On To The Nights (5:10)
06. Keep Coming Back (4:53)
07. Until I Find You Again (4:13)
08. Heaven Only Knows (4:55)
09. Chains Around My Heart (3:40)
10. Hazard (4:09)

A nice collection of well known contemporary songs played with a rich sax, comfortable bass, keyboard, and drums. May be the perfect fusion of contemporary music and jazz.

Smooth Jazz All Stars

The Cookers - Time And Time Again

Size: 143,2 MB
Time: 61:27
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Sir Galahad (7:54)
02. Reneda (6:12)
03. Slippin' And Slidin' (7:00)
04. Double Or Nothing (6:43)
05. Farewell Mulgrew (6:44)
06. Three Fall (6:36)
07. Time And Time Again (6:35)
08. Dance Of The Invisable Nymph (9:17)
09. Dance Eternal Spirits Dance (4:22)

Celebrating seven years together, Time and Time Again is the fourth release by The Cookers since the group's recording debut, Warriors (Jazz Legacy Productions, 2010). The band's all-star lineup, who first rose to prominence in the late '60s and early '70s, was initially formed by trumpet player David Weiss, who also serves as musical director. In addition to Weiss, the septet features the muscular frontline of trumpeter Eddie Henderson, tenor saxophonist Billy Harper and alto saxophonist Donald Harrison (replacing Craig Handy), with pianist George Cables, bassist Cecil McBee and drummer Billy Hart manning the blue chip rhythm section.

Drawing upon their varied experiences, the ensemble members split writing duties, effectively summarizing the entire spectrum of the jazz continuum in the process. Although hard bop-influenced post-bop is the unit's forte, most of these musicians have also worked in cutting-edge avant-garde settings; their forward-looking tendencies imbue the project's straight-ahead sensibility with a bold, modernistic aesthetic.

With five of the seven members contributing tunes to the session, there is ample stylistic diversity on display, ranging from breakneck swingers ("Double or Nothing") and swaggering blues ("Slippin' and Slidin'") to majestic waltzes ("Three Fall") and opulent ballads ("Farewell Mulgrew"). As seasoned veterans, their spirited performances convey the informality of an old school blowing session, tempered by an awareness of formalized song-craft. The arrangements are rhythmically tight and harmonically sophisticated, but supple enough to demonstrate the band's freewheeling rapport, with ample room for each member to shine.

Working as a true collective, no one player dominates the session, although Harper's commanding tone and assured phrasing lifts the bandstand when he takes center stage, with quicksilver cadences underscored by the nimble rhythm section, whose fluid interplay is a marvel of triadic interaction. Lending credence to its title, Time And Time Again expertly conveys the palpable commitment of these elder statesmen to push beyond preconceived boundaries and move the music forward, while acknowledging the innovations of the past. ~by Troy Collins

Personnel: Billy Harper: tenor saxophone; Eddie Henderson: trumpet; David Weiss: trumpet; Donald Harrison: alto saxophone; George Cables: piano; Cecil McBee: bass; Billy Hart: drums.

Time And Time Again

The Dave Brubeck Quartet Feat. Paul Desmond - Stardust

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 67:16
Size: 154.0 MB
Styles: West Coast jazz, Piano jazz
Year: 1954/1983/2006
Art: Front

[ 2:49] 1. Mam'selle
[ 6:56] 2. Stardust
[ 2:33] 3. Frenesi
[ 2:26] 4. Me And My Shadow
[ 2:51] 5. At A Perfume Counter
[ 3:20] 6. Crazy Chris
[ 3:06] 7. A Foggy Day
[ 3:18] 8. Somebody Loves Me
[ 3:12] 9. Lyons Busy
[ 3:40] 10. Look For The Silver Lining
[ 3:01] 11. Stardust
[15:01] 12. At A Perfume Counter
[ 3:32] 13. Alice In Wonderland
[ 3:17] 14. All The Things You Are
[ 2:19] 15. Lulu's Back In Town
[ 2:35] 16. My Romance
[ 3:12] 17. Just One Of Those Things

This CD features the Dave Brubeck Quartet in its early days. Although the dates are unaccountably left off of this two-fer, most of the music is from 1951-52 and features such short-term sidemen as bassists Norm Bates, Fred Dutton (who doubled on bassoon) and Wyatt "Bull" Reuther and drummers Herb Barman and Lloyd Davis in addition to pianist Brubeck and altoist Paul Desmond. Highlights include "Crazy Chris," "Lyons Busy," "Look for the Silver Lining" and "Alice in Wonderland." Two later selections ("Stardust" and a 14-1/2-minute version of "At a Perfume Counter") are from 1954-55 when the personnel stabilized with bassist Bob Bates and drummer Joe Dodge. ~Scott Yanow

Stardust

Molly Johnson - Because Of Billie

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 59:17
Size: 135.7 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[4:36] 1. Body And Soul
[3:21] 2. What A Little Moonlight Can Do
[5:04] 3. Fine And Mellow
[3:44] 4. Them There Eyes
[4:27] 5. You've Changed
[5:31] 6. God Bless The Child
[4:25] 7. How Deep Is The Ocean
[3:17] 8. Strange Fruit
[4:00] 9. Lady Sings The Blues
[4:19] 10. Do Nothing 'til You Hear From Me
[4:00] 11. You Go To My Head
[3:41] 12. They Can't Take That Away From Me
[3:30] 13. Now Or Never
[5:14] 14. Don't Explain

Renowned Canadian multi-genre chanteuse Molly Johnson has just released her sixth studio album, Because Of Billie!

“For years, people have said to me, ‘You are so much like Billie Holliday,’” says Johnson by way of explanation for this ambitious and also deeply personal project, presenting 14 songs of Lady Day’s cherished standards. “My response has been ‘No, I am because of Billie.” During the recording, Molly looked to infuse this project with her idol’s spirit, preparing the songs emotionally and technically so many could be recorded in one take. “Billie and her generation were the civil rights movement, they moved forward. That generation sacrificed and died for my privilege. I am honour-bound to that idea. I love history. I love to look back while pulling forward.” In keeping with the album’s theme, Johnson will also be donating a portion of sales to the Boys & Girls Clubs.

Recorded in Toronto with producers John Bailey and Mike Downes, the album features a stellar cast of musicians that include Robi Botos (Piano), Terry Clarke (Drums), Mike Downes (Bass and Trombone), John Johnson (Tenor Saxophone), Bryden Baird (Flugelhorn and Trumpet) & Colleen Allen (Alto Saxophone and Clarinet).

As singer-songwriter, artist, broadcaster, and philanthropist, her roots are Canadian while her reach is worldwide. Johnson has performed with such diverse artists as Tom Jones, Anne Murray & Lenny Kravitz and has performed for the legendary Quincy Jones, the late Princess of Wales and Nelson Mandela. Molly was awarded the JUNO Award for Best Vocal Jazz Album, and is recipient of the Queen’s Jubilee Medal and The Officer of the Order of Canada in recognition of her charitable work and contributions to the arts.

Because Of Billie

George Braith - Bop Rock Blues

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 51:01
Size: 116.8 MB
Styles: Bop, Blues
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[4:01] 1. Car Tune
[3:49] 2. Double Clutch
[4:01] 3. Capital Dive
[4:27] 4. Bishkabash
[4:18] 5. Metwo
[5:05] 6. Sweet Salt
[6:27] 7. You Know I Love You
[4:23] 8. Green Beats
[2:53] 9. High Beam
[5:11] 10. Hoagies & Wings
[3:01] 11. Pick & Roll
[3:18] 12. Cane Walk

Jazz musicians play multiple styles of music through their careers. Most of the time, the kind of music presented depends on who is listening. A tremendous audience has accumulated to Rock and Blues Styles. Bop Rock Blues contains the musical ingredients of Bop, Rock and Jazz with an emphasis on dance rhythms.

BOPTRONICS, developed by George Braith, is a method of using modern recording techniques to produce any kind of instrumentation. Unlike Midi, BOPTRONICS is played in real time. The BRAITHOPHONE is an invention of George Braith. it is a woodwind instrument that is played by producing two sounds at once.

George Braith - Vocals, Braithophone, Tenor Sax; Space Island Singers - Vocals; Earl Davis - Vocals, Trumpet; Bernard Wright - Piano; Charles Smith - Guitar; Reggie Bordeaux - Drums & Percussion.

Bop Rock Blues