Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Lena Seikaly - Looking Back

Size: 123,2 MB
Time: 52:47
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. I'm Nobody's Baby (4:02)
02. Fascinating Rhythm (4:28)
03. Foolin' Myself (4:45)
04. Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone (3:16)
05. Baby, What Else Can I Do? (5:07)
06. I'm Coming, Virginia (4:13)
07. I Cover The Waterfront (5:59)
08. Love You Madly (5:47)
09. Guilty (5:41)
10. Supper Time (5:02)
11. After You've Gone (4:19)

Renowned performer Harry Connick, Jr. recently admonished young singers to think about what the lyrics mean, and not to overdo. Lena Seikaly needs no such advice. She is blessed with a beautiful natural instrument; excellent vocal training at the University of Maryland; taste and sensitivity; superb control of pitch and vibrato; and a gift for inventing delightfully improvised lines that remind one of Ella Fitzgerald’s brilliant scat singing at its best.

As a valentine to a golden age of American songwriting and singing, Lena has chosen nearly a dozen of her favorite vintage songs, with an emphasis on material recorded by Ethel Waters, Billie Holiday, or Ella Fitzgerald, but not often performed today. Encompassing a range of tempos and emotions, the songs were composed between 1918 and 1939, plus one outlier from 1950. To accompany her, she assembled a quartet of top musicians, including pianist Chris Grasso, himself an improviser of singable melody lines.

To single out several gems: Irving Berlin wrote Suppertime for Ethel Waters to sing in the 1933 revue As Thousands Cheer. Stretching across gender and color lines, Berlin’s lyrics give voice to an African American wife and mother who has just lost her husband to a lynching. Accompanied only by Chris Grasso’s pensive piano, Lena sings the melody virtually straight, delivering the understated ¬lyric with controlled yet palpable emotion and poignancy, holding the last note a full ten aching seconds. Duke Ellington’s Love You Madly surprises as a delightful duet with bassist Zack Pride. Another highlight, After You’ve Gone, closes the album with infectious scat singing and a big exclamation point, a fitting finale for this bouquet to a bygone era.

-- John Edward Hasse
John Edward Hasse is Curator of American Music at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, and founder of Jazz Appreciation Month. His books include Beyond Category: The Life and Genius of Duke Ellington and Discover Jazz.

Looking Back

Wendy Zaro & The Laura Caviani Trio - Fly Home Little Heart

Size: 103,8 MB
Time: 44:36
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2010
Styles: Jazz Vocals, Crossover Jazz
Art: Front

01. A Very Precious Love (3:16)
02. Not While I'm Around (4:12)
03. This Love Of Mine (4:01)
04. Fly Home Little Heart (4:00)
05. No One Is Alone (3:41)
06. While My Guitar Gently Weeps (5:03)
07. Bring Him Home (3:49)
08. For You There Is No Song (3:52)
09. In My Life (3:37)
10. How Could I Ever Know (3:39)
11. My Buddy - Old Friends (5:20)

A native born Californian, Wendy Zaro-Mullins has performed to audiences in Europe, Taiwan, and South and North America where critics have hailed her performances as "gripping" with "amazingly powerful vocals" which include a "lustrous robust sound" displaying a "simple, almost effortless, approach."

Zaro-Mullins' concert work includes solo appearances with symphonies throughout the country and abroad. Most recently, Wyoming audiences heard her sing the Verdi Requiem with the Wyoming Symphony and Chorus. She was been featured in Mahler's Second Symphony with the Wichita Symphony and Chorus, and Brahms’ German Requiem with the University of Missouri-Columbia Symphony and Chorus. Numerous appearances with the St. Joseph Symphony and Chorus of Missouri have led to performances of Britten's War Requiem, Verdi's Requiem Mass, and Barber's Summer of Knoxville, 1915. Zaro-Mullins premiered an American debut of Gorecki's Symphony No. 3 with the University of Kansas Symphony Orchestra as well as a performance of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. While a guest of the Paraguayan National Symphony and Orchestra she performed Mendelssohn's Psalm 42 and numerous operatic arias. Minneapolis audiences have heard Zaro-Mullins sing Barber's Summer of Knoxville, 1915 with the Kenwood Orchestra as well as performances of operatic arias with the Symphony of the Lakes.

At home on the opera, music theatre, and concert stages, Zaro-Mullins' credits include San Francisco Opera, American Opera Center, and Eugene Opera. Roles performed by Zaro-Mullins include Fiordiligi in Cosi fan tutte, Susanna in Susanna, Mother in Amahl and the Night Visitors, Belinda in Dido and Aeneas, Mimi in La Boheme, Mrs. Nolan in The Medium, Pitti-sing in The Mikado, and Olga in The Merry Widow. Performing in the musical theatre genre, Zaro-Mullins has been featured in the roles of Lady Thiang in The King and I with the Eugene Musical Theatre, Maria and Antonia in The Man of La Mancha with the Coachlight Dinner Theatre in New York, and Iris in The Tempest at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angelas. She has performed for several seasons with the Sacramento Music Circus in California.

Her chamber music includes international recitals with chamber series, encompassing Italy, Taiwan, South America and the USA, presenting the traditional and contemporary vocal repertoire. Zaro-Mullins' versatility can also be heard in the early music genre. For several years, she has performed with the Oregon Baroque Ensemble and with the Spencer Baroque Consort of Kansas.

A scholar and performer, Zaro-Mullins received her doctorate from the University of Oregon in vocal performance and pedagogy, completing her dissertation on the Jugendlieder of Alban Berg. This extensive research led to a premier CD recording of the complete Jugendlieder as well as The Seven Early Songs of Berg. Zaro-Mullins has taught on the faculties of the University of Oregon, Oregon State and Lane Community College in Eugene, North Central University in Minneapolis. St. Olaf College. She was Associate Professor of Voice at the University of Kansas and is currently holding that title at the University of Minnesota.

Zaro-Mullins earned her bachelor and master degrees from the University of Southern California. She attended the Juilliard School and the Conservatorio di G. Verdi in Milan, Italy. She was a member of the Los Angeles Civic Light Opera Workshop where she received extensive training in musical theatre performance. Zaro-Mullins adjudicates nationally at vocal competitions and conducts master classes on interpretation and vocal technique throughout the country. Her major teachers and coaches included Daniel Ferro, Gwendolyn Koldofsky, Exine Bailey, James Miller, Margaret Schaper, Natalie Limonik and Esther Andreas.

Fly Home Little Heart

Paul Millns - Footsteps / Calling All Clowns

Album: Footsteps
Size: 137,8 MB
Time: 59:00
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2001/2010
Styles: Pop/Rock, Blues
Art: Front

01. Old Enough (3:55)
02. Home for the Weekend (4:00)
03. World On Your Shoulders (4:48)
04. Poodle Avenue (3:56)
05. Gasoline Heart (4:08)
06. Wind from the East (5:44)
07. Another Sunset Ride (4:31)
08. Following Footsteps (3:39)
09. Happy Go Lucky Joe (3:31)
10. Saying It Back (3:38)
11. Who Can Really Tell (3:47)
12. What's She Doing Now (4:01)
13. Demolition Kid (2:47)
14. Halfway Happy Home (3:35)
15. Play On (2:54)

With his "Footsteps", Paul Millns has released a very special album: Friends and fans suggested to record a complete acoustic performance. The result surpasses all expectations. Paul’s captivating voice and his powerful piano playing create pearls of songs, whose intimate acoustic atmosphere come fully to the fore thanks to excellent recording technology. Paul Millns combines his roots in black American music with the gentleness of songwriters such as Randy Newman, Joni Mitchell or Bob Dylan. He is a song poet, who knows how to link the perfect telling of tales, dry humor and profound musicality. For fans of songs with great expressiveness, "Footsteps" is a must.

Footsteps

Album: Calling All Clowns
Size: 102,5 MB
Time: 44:01
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2010
Styles: Pop Rock, Blues
Art: Front

01. That Perfume (4:12)
02. Calling All Clowns (3:31)
03. Wheather Of The Heart (4:09)
04. Falling For You (4:10)
05. Put On A Sunny Hat (3:22)
06. The Moon Might Know (3:30)
07. Blame It On You (3:19)
08. London In The Rain (3:53)
09. The Way Of The World (3:46)
10. Homing In On You (4:15)
11. Slippery Sam (3:15)
12. My Funny Valentine (2:34)

The pianist and singer, who makes London his home, has an impressive catalogue of successful albums on his scoreboard. For German listeners, however, Paul Millns is most probably best known for his appearance in the ARD Rockpalast television program. On “Calling The Clowns”, this piano virtuoso with a craggy voice, relaxed timbre and pictorial language, takes a look at life’s vicissitudes. And he invites the listener in his unobtrusive, congenial and sensitive way to join in the experience – because Paul Millns is one of the last storytellers, which is what allows him to open people's hearts. Thanks to the support of a poised band, Millns has produced a very personal album featuring emotional ballads, animated piano tunes and thrilling rhythm and blues. Above all, however, with his “Calling All Clowns”, Paul Millns is addressing all those who are secretly clowns at heart.

Calling All Clowns

Sarah DeLeo - I'm In Heaven Tonight

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:59
Size: 99,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:50)  1. Rockin' Robin
(3:59)  2. I Feel Pretty
(5:28)  3. I'm In Heaven Tonight
(5:28)  4. No Moon At All
(2:53)  5. On The Street Where You Live
(3:56)  6. Stolen Moments
(4:40)  7. Let It Rain
(2:39)  8. In The Cold, Cold Night
(4:40)  9. Sometimes I'm Happy
(5:22) 10. You're Getting To Be a Habit With Me

The Great American Songbook can be and often is overused when emerging vocalists put together a collection. What sets one apart from another is a little deviation picking standards that aren't covered ad nauseam, or creative arrangements. Sarah DeLeo tries both approaches with I'm in Heaven Tonight.  The New York-based DeLeo began singing at the age of nine and developed a love of jazz soon afterward. She has found inspiration from a variety of jazz and non-jazz artists, including Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, Linda Ronstadt and Stevie Wonder. Her primary accompanists are percussionist Mark Bordenet, with keyboard duties split between organist Brian Charette and pianist David Cook. Others who appear on selected tracks are Jay Collins on saxophone and flute, Chris Bergson on guitar, Fabio Morgera on trumpet and Gary Wang on bass. DeLeo delivers a bouncy take on the classic "Rockin' Robin," a delightful arrangement by Collins that puts a jazz spin to a vintage pop song. Collins' flute adds a touch of "bird in flight" to this groove.

Wang, Bordenet and Charette quietly bring up "No Moon at All"; DeLeo's voice is light, and her notes precise. Bergson contributes a mellow guitar solo, with the organ striking complementary chords throughout. Morgera joins the ensemble for "On the Street Where You Live." DeLeo feels happy as she sings of an amorous interest, with emotion that is infectious. Bordenet, Charette, Bergson and Wang play with vigor. Morgera performs a bouncy solo in the middle break. DeLeo's melody to Oliver Nelson's classic "Stolen Moments," to which she composed the lyrics, follows the original perfectly. Using her voice rather than another instrument sets this rendition apart from others, with Bergson and Collins soloing during the middle break.  DeLeo's approach makes I'm in Heaven Tonight unlike most tribute or cover albums, and with her crystal voice and strong supporting cast, it's got excellent repeat-play potential. ~ Woodrow Wilkins  
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=31906#.Uu6twbS1QwA

Personnel: Sarah DeLeo: vocals; Chris Bergson: guitar (1, 2, 4-7, 10); Mark Bordenet: percussion; Brian Charette: organ (1, 2, 4-6); Jay Collins: saxophone and flute (1, 6, 7, 10); David Cook: piano (3, 7, 9, 10); Fabio Morgera: trumpet (3, 5, 7); Gary Wang: bass (3, 7-10).

Ralph Sutton - Sweet Sue

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:03
Size: 140,3 MB
Art: Front + Back

( 8:03)  1. Moppin' And Boppin'
( 7:34)  2. Lounging At The Waldorf
( 3:13)  3. I'm Gonna Sit Right Down And Write Myself A Letter
( 5:48)  4. Yacht Club Swing
( 9:25)  5. Sweet Sue
( 4:32)  6. Black And Blue
( 5:44)  7. Tea For Two
( 5:58)  8. It's A Sin To Tell A Lie
(10:43)  9. Honeysuckle Rose

A number of notable pianists who mastered stride emerged during the second half of the 20th century, but Ralph Sutton surely ranks among the top echelon, as proven on this live date focusing exclusively on music written and/or recorded by the great Fats Waller. Sutton's swinging group includes trumpeter Jon-Erik Kellso, Brian Ogilvie (on tenor sax and clarinet), rhythm guitarist and humorous singer Marty Grosz, as well as bassist Dave Green and drummer Frank Capp. Sutton covers the obvious hits like the amusing "I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter," the moody "Black and Blue," which features Ogilvie's strong tenor and Kellso's powerful horn as bookends before and after the leader's solo, as well as a lengthy but never dull jam of "Honeysuckle Rose; " but the less frequently played numbers are treasures of equal value. The driving "Moppin' and Boppin'," co-composed by Waller with Benny Carter for the soundtrack of Stormy Weather, the rollicking "Lounging at the Waldorf," and the easygoing "Yacht Club Swing" are all examples of how a fine composer's work benefits when played by masterful musicians. Sutton not only delivers consistently powerful and swinging solos but serves as the consummate accompanist to back other's solos, too. Warmly recommended. ~ Ken Dryden  
http://www.allmusic.com/album/sweet-sue-mw0000063519

Barney Wilen Quintet - Passione

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:18
Size: 138,9 MB
Art: Front

( 6:36)  1. Jitterbag Waltz
(10:01)  2. My Ship
( 4:53)  3. Line For Lyons
( 5:06)  4. Estate
( 7:07)  5. Venetian Rumba
( 5:26)  6. Passione
( 2:37)  7. Begonia
( 7:23)  8. Besame Mucho
( 4:10)  9. Bella Chao
( 6:30) 10. I Cover The Waterfront
( 0:24) 11. Al Herraz

Barney Wilen's mother was French, his father a successful American dentist-turned-inventor. He grew up mostly on the French Riviera; the family left during World War II but returned upon its conclusion. According to Wilen himself, he was convinced to become a musician by his mother's friend, the poet Blaise Cendrars. As a teenager he started a youth jazz club in Nice, where he played often. He moved to Paris in the mid-'50s and worked with such American musicians as Bud Powell, Benny Golson, Miles Davis, and J.J. Johnson at the Club St. Germain. His emerging reputation received a boost in 1957 when he played with Davis on the soundtrack to the Louis Malle film Lift to the Scaffold. Two years later, he performed with Art Blakey and Thelonious Monk on the soundtrack to Roger Vadim's Les Liaisons Dangereuses (1960). Wilen began working in a rock-influenced style during the '60s, recording an album entitled Dear Prof. Leary in 1968. In the early '70s, Wilen led a failed expedition of filmmakers, musicians, and journalists to travel to Africa to document pygmy music. Later Wilen played in a punk rock band called Moko and founded a French Jazzmobile-type organization that took music to people living in outlying areas. He also worked in theater. By the mid-'90s, he was working once again in a bebop vein in a band with the pianist Laurent de Wilde. Much of Wilen's later work was documented on the Japanese Venus label. ~ Chris Kelsey  Bio - http://www.allmusic.com/artist/barney-wilen-mn0000117853/biography

Personnel:  Barney Wilen tenor & alto, soprano saxophones; Enrico Rava trumpet;  Alain Jean-Marie piano;  Gilles Natural bass;  Philippe Soirat drums

Passione

Tape Five - Tonight Josephine!

Styles: Swing
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:59
Size: 113,0 MB
Art: Front + Back

(0:22)  1. Introduction Back In Time
(3:54)  2. A Cool Cat In Town (feat. Brenda Boykin)
(4:17)  3. Bad Boy Good Man (feat. Henrik Wager)
(3:42)  4. Pantaloons (feat. Yuliet Topaz)
(3:48)  5. Dixie Biscuit (feat. Henrik Wager)
(3:42)  6. Madame Coquette (feat. Yuliet Topaz)
(4:04)  7. Far Far Away Charles Tone (Charles-Tone mix feat. Brenda Boykin)
(0:32)  8. Intermezzo Speakeasy
(3:43)  9. The Flappers Delight (feat. Yuliet Topaz)
(4:19) 10. Birds Like It (feat. Iain Mackenzie)
(4:01) 11. Pousse L'Amour (feat. Yuliet Topaz)
(3:40) 12. The Smurf (Tape Five Remix instr.)
(4:09) 13. The Sky Is Not The Limit (feat. Iain Mackenzie)
(4:38) 14. Alcazar (instr.)

Tape Five is a multinational music project from Germany, founded in 2003 by songwriter/producer Martin Strathausen producing music in various styles like Swing, Electro Swing, Nujazz, Latin, Lounge, Dub, Trip Hop, Chill-out and Electro. While their first two albums contained Lounge, Nujazz, Swing and Latin, Tape Five took the influences of the electro-swing movement with their 3rd album,Tonight Josephine“ (2010). Tape Five co-operates with several record companies worldwide.

And the film goes on! Driving Electro-Swing action with 'Oscar feeling' conversations of clarinet and trumpet inspired by Louis Armstrong, Gene Krupa, Josephine Baker and Benny Goodman. The 3rd album from TAPE FIVE 'Tonight Josephine!' is another Retro-Homage to various facets from the 20th Century bar-music. Stop Press! The first half of the album is deeply inspired by the Golden Twenties. High calibre and style, like a black-and-white classic film, but coloured and varied like today's block-busters. Four different vocalists - Brenda Boykin, Iain Mackenzie, Henrik Wagner and Yuliet Topaz interpret new songs in the old styles. ~ Editorial Reviews  http://www.amazon.com/Tonight-Josephine-Tape-Five/dp/B0032W7CQI