Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Jessica Lee - Rhythms Of Anyway

Size: 142,0 MB
Time: 61:22
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. The More I See You (3:33)
02. Love No Hands (4:08)
03. Small Day Tomorrow (4:49)
04. Halelujah I Love Him So (3:40)
05. Nature Boy (5:34)
06. Whispering (4:31)
07. Baby Come To Me (5:21)
08. One With The Skies - Song For Claire (4:54)
09. Nocturne (4:11)
10. Song Bird (4:23)
11. You Don't Know I Love You (5:34)
12. World Medley What The World Needs Now Is Love - Wonderful World (6:45)
13. Raincoat (3:53)

Jessica Lee displays her considerable vocal palette on this collection of jazz and blues songs. In addition to songs from the Great American Songbook and some R&B and blues, the album contains three original songs by Jessica. Legendary drummer Roger Humphries is featured on ten of the tracks. Also featured are guitarist Mark Strickland, Max Leake on keys,Chris Hemingway and Jay Willis on sax and Mark Perna on bass. In addition to the 10 songs which comprise the "Rhythms of Anyway" collection three bonus tracks are included. These include "Raincoat" which we hoped to include on Jessica's first CD "Bluebird Fly", but the release was delayed and with a new guitar solo and a new vocal track it was worth the wait. We hope you enjoy the album.

Rhythms Of Anyway

Frank Potenza - Soft & Warm

Size: 76,7 MB
Time: 33:00
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1987/2013
Styles: Guitar Jazz
Art: Front

01. California Dreamin' (4:15)
02. Sleeping Beauty (4:16)
03. Quiet Storm (4:21)
04. Coast Line (4:10)
05. Soft & Warm (3:51)
06. The 'In' Crowd (3:54)
07. Somewhere Out There (3:55)
08. Be My Love (4:14)

Upon graduating from the Berklee College of Music in 1972, jazz guitarist Frank Potenza embarked upon a prolific career that found him teaching, performing, and recording over the next few decades. A protégé of Joe Pass, Potenza has appeared with a number of well-known musicians, including Dizzy Gillespie, George Van Eps, Mose Allison, and Joe Sample, among others. Beginning in 1986, Potenza began recording solo albums for TBA Records of Los Angeles, CA: Sand Dance (1986), Soft and Warm (1987), When We're Alone (1988), and Express Delivery (1990). It wasn't until 1999 that he returned with another solo album, In My Dreams, recorded for Azica Records. At the time of the album's release, Potenza was teaching at USC and performing in his spare time. ~ Biography by Jason Birchmeier

Soft & Warm

Gabrielle Ducomble - Notes From Paris

Size: 137,8 MB
Time: 59:22
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. La Vie En Rose (4:58)
02. Un Homme Et Une Femme (4:53)
03. Ces Petits Riens (5:24)
04. Padam Padam (5:13)
05. Que Feras-Tu De Ta Vie (6:09)
06. Je Ne Regrette Rien (5:58)
07. Sanfona (4:06)
08. Ne Me Quitte Pas (6:40)
09. Oblivion (5:43)
10. Que Reste-T-Il De Nos Amours (4:50)
11. Sous Le Ciel De Paris (5:24)

Personnel:
Gabrielle Ducomble - Vocals
Nicolas Meier - Nylon, Steel & Fretless Guitars
Dan Teper - Accordian & Piano on Tracks 2, 6
Nick Kacal - Double Bass
Saleem Raman - Drums & Bongos
Chris Garrick - Violin
Gilad Atzmon - Clarinet & Alto Saxophone
John Bailey - Piano on track 5

Belgian-born and London-trained singer Gabrielle Ducomble’s second album, Notes from Paris, offers a glowing and vigorous account of the French chanson, seasoned with touches of jazz and tango. As you would expect in a French singer featured in Jazz FM’s Valentine's Day playlist, she draws heavily on the traditionally romantic perception of an English-speaking audience to both French lyrics and French-accented English.

Ducomble has made her own arrangements of some of the most iconic chansons in the repertoire for this album. Her background combines popular acclaim (she first made her name as the winner of a TV talent show) and high-class training (at the Guildhall School of Music). Her voice is exquisitely groomed, sumptuously powerful and buttery, like a fine Meursault, though that very poise, control and strength is occasionally at odds with the character of the original song. The strength of the best chansons - certainly Piaf’s, and in many ways Brel’s too - lies in their combination of defiance and vulnerability, expressed in that unmistakably nasal, even whinnying resilience that’s on the edge of dissolving into sobs. Ducomble’s versions are, on the whole, too slick and confident for that: there’s a sense she’s cheerfully revealing all to a stadium of fans rather than disclosing intimate secrets.

It’s particularly apparent with the Piaf numbers. La Vie en Rose, the first track on the album, opens with a crackly, period sound, before Ducomble’s glossy tone bursts through, perhaps a little stridently, given the tenderness of the lyrics. Ducomble’s version of Je ne regrette rien, though a novel re-working, also obscures the desperation in the speaker’s defiance beneath a rather too-fluent self-confidence. However, her version of Brel’s Ne Me Quitte Pas is, for the most part, beautifully desolate, Chris Garrick’s spare violin opening setting the scene in evocative, vaguely Celtic colours.

There’s much to enjoy in the album’s band of expert jazzers. Ducomble’s arrangements use instrumental colours well, especially saxes (Gilad Atzmon), which varies from cute, piping alto to sensual, thrusting tenor, and accordion (Dan Teper), which displays everything from cafe-style coquette to rasping menace.

A note is usually a slight, personal document; Notes from Paris is too big and bold for that, but it’s a confident statement by a powerful and charismatic singer, who’s destined to establish herself as a performer of the jazz- and tango-tinged chanson. ~Review by Matthew Wright

Notes From Paris

Jack Brass Band - For Your Body

Size: 127,6 MB
Time: 55:05
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz: New Orleans
Art: Front

01. There Goes My Baby (5:49)
02. If I Had No Loot (5:57)
03. Bad Mama Jama (4:58)
04. All I Do (4:51)
05. Got My Whiskey (4:35)
06. Freaky In The Club (4:44)
07. Every Little Step (4:59)
08. Let's Stay Together (3:50)
09. We're In This Love Together (6:20)
10. Can't Stop (4:40)
11. They All Asked For You (4:16)

Feel-Good Music is an apt description. The Jack Brass Band's latest album features 11 songs made famous by other artists, familiar to listeners from different generations, and puts a fresh spin on them to make them "street" and "party" worthy anthems. It's about the groove, and the way the rhythm section with a tuba (sousaphone) plays the basslines, and two drummers take over where many opt for one drumset player. Add in some greasy horns, killer ensemble and improvisational work, and a sing-a-long mentality to the lyrics - and you have a mix that makes people MOVE SOMETHING.

For Your Body

Deborah Latz - Toward Love

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:28
Size: 95,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:10)  1. It Had To Be You
(5:07)  2. Bewitched, Bothered & Bewildered
(6:49)  3. How Insensitive
(2:21)  4. Gone With The Wind
(3:00)  5. Avril A Paris
(5:30)  6. Lover Man
(3:51)  7. I Only Have Eyes For You
(6:54)  8. Night And Day
(2:08)  9. The Thrill Is Gone
(2:32) 10. Bluesette

They say that love makes the world go around. I don't know about that, but it's made for some great songs, tunes that vocalist Deborah Latz goes after with gusto on her debut disc, Toward Love. On the classic "Loverman," where Billie Holiday sounded fragile and deeply hurt where Carmen McRae gave us a wounded, world weary mood Latz evokes a hopeful innocence, as though she believes it will happen, that loverman will show up. The vocalist demonstrates some downtempo sass on Rodgers and Hart's "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered," this listener's highlight. Her voice rings with a fetching richness here, with Bob Bowen's bass caressing her syllables. And do I detect a hint of tongue in cheek? I'm not sure. The lyric is by today's perspective on romance wonderfully sappy; and Deborah Latz pulls it off with grace and straight-ahead beauty. On "Avril a Paris" Latz shows us she can sing a lyric in French with aplomb; pianist Timo Elliston works a percussive mode, nailing down the rhythm behind the mellifluous flow of language. "Night and Day" has the vocalist entering the scene with a coy hush in her voice, a softly feminine Tony Bennett-like rasp in front of Ben Sher's piquant guitar lines. A marvelous vocal effort, beginning to end. I'm bewitched. ~ Dan McClenaghan   
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=13783#.Ux0THoVZhhk

Personnel: Deborah Latz - vocal; Timo Elliston - piano; Bob Bowen -bass; Jimmy Wormworth - drums; Bob Sher - guitar

Toward Love

Dee Daniels - Close Encounter of the Swingin' Kind

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:53
Size: 131,0 MB
Art: Front + Back

(5:43)  1. Blues in the Night
(4:17)  2. Lavern Walk
(5:45)  3. Georgia
(5:32)  4. On Green Dolphin Street
(3:28)  5. Never Make Your Move too Soon
(8:33)  6. Nigerian Market Place
(5:56)  7. Lover man
(4:23)  8. J.c. Blues
(4:08)  9. Centerpiece
(5:05) 10. April in Paris
(3:57) 11. Things Ain`t What They Used to be

Dee Daniels mixes together the influences of Sarah Vaughan, R&B, and gospel in her own appealing style. She started off singing in church as a child and also took piano lessons so she could play for the choirs of her stepfather's church. She earned an art degree from the University of Montana in 1970 and taught art in high school in Seattle. She also sang on the side, at first for the fun of it and then eventually six nights a week with a band that performed rock and R&B. In 1972 she quit her teaching job to concentrate exclusively on singing.

Over time, Daniels began to love improvising and gradually drifted toward jazz. While living in Europe during 1982-1987, she worked with such jazz greats as Toots Thielemans, Monty Alexander, Johnny Griffin, and John Clayton. Although she moved back to the U.S. in 1987, she has performed often in other countries including Canada, Australia, Hong Kong, 11 African countries, and throughout Europe, and is actually better known overseas than in the U.S.

Daniels has appeared in such shows as the musical comedy Wang Dang Doodle and the 2001 Calgary Stampede, and she has performed with both jazz groups and pops orchestras. Along the way she has recorded for Capri, Mons (with the Metropole Orchestra), Three XD Music, and Origin in addition to releasing a DVD on Challenge. 
Bio ~ https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/dee-daniels/id155971580#fullText

Personnel: Dee Daniels (vocals); Johan Clement (piano); Fred Krens (drums).

Regina Carter - Southern Comfort

Styles: Violin Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:19
Size: 130,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:01)  1. Miner's Child
(2:11)  2. Trampin'
(4:36)  3. Hickory Wind
(7:21)  4. Shoo-Rye
(4:39)  5. Blues de Basile
(7:11)  6. I'm Going Home
(3:52)  7. Honky Tonkin'
(4:14)  8. Cornbread Crumbled in Gravy
(5:14)  9. See See Rider
(3:33) 10. I Moaned and I Moaned
(8:21) 11. Death Have Mercy / Breakaway

Although certainly best known as a jazz violinist, Carter seems comfortable enough playing the classical repertoire when called upon. Witness her 2003 album Paganini: After a Dream. And now with her new album, Southern Comfort, set for release March 4, she is out to show one more of the many faces of Regina Carter as she tackles a program of southern folk music and Americana. Needless to say, she takes this music and makes it her own.  As on some of her past albums, Southern Comfort is a thematic celebration of an important influence on her life and music. There was I'll Be Seeing You: A Sentimental Journey (2006) which focused on jazz favorites of her late mother, and then in 2010 there was her nod to the African influence on her musical heritage, Reverse Thread. In Southern Comfort, she explores some of the music that would have been available to her grandfather, an Alabama coal miner. She adds a modern tune or two, but even the additions are couched in the spirit of the album's theme-a little Cajun-style fiddling, some work songs, a homey lullaby, and a bit of the gospel spirit.  As she points out in the album's liner notes, while this music has a personal significance for her, it is indeed "the common experience of American folk music." The personal is indeed universal.

The 11-song set begins appropriately with a traditional piece called "Miner's Child" in an arrangement by guitarist Marvin Sewell. With some exceptions, most of the songs were arranged by instrumentalists playing on the individual tracks. Carter points out that the only direction she gave to the various arrangers "was to preserve the music's raw beauty." There is a haunting version of Gram Parsons' lovely "Hickory Wind" and a take of "Cornbread Crumbled in Gravy" reeking with sensitive simplicity. There is also a little vocal passage of this at the end of the album's final track, "Death Have Mercy"/"Breakaway." "Blues de Basile" is a tangy Cajun blues, while the hugely popular "See See Rider" is played in a version I had never heard before. Elsewhere, "I'm Going Home" is a lovely melody, not to be confused with Dvorak. Joining Carter on most tracks are Will Holshouser on accordion, Jesse Murphy on bass, Alvester Garnett on drums, and Sewell on guitar. Together with Carter, they have put together a truly exciting piece of work with a unique sound.   http://www.seattlepi.com/lifestyle/blogcritics/article/Music-Review-Regina-Carter-Southern-Comfort-5248666.php