Friday, May 16, 2014

Nina Ferro - Into The Light

Size: 113,8 MB
Time: 48:57
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Blues/Country/Jazz/Soul
Art: Front

01. To Get To My Heart (3:42)
02. When I Find You (3:51)
03. Plutonic Delirium (3:02)
04. Step Into The Light (3:31)
05. Cry Cry Cry (3:59)
06. Look Speak Fall (4:01)
07. I Turn To Stone (3:43)
08. I Never Wanted (4:13)
09. Dangerous Move (4:12)
10. Finish What You Started (3:45)
11. I'm In (3:08)
12. Let You Go (3:36)
13. All In The Name Of God (4:08)

The trick with a singer songwriter is always to finds a suitable niche with which to build their profile. In the case of Anglo Australian Nina Ferro things are slightly different. She’s already a multi award-winning vocalist, songwriter, session singer and recording artist, but the question remains how best to market a voice that can make ice melt at 20 paces?

The answer of course is Nashville. Not the Grand Ole Opry model of old, but the contemporary music scene that houses the likes of Dan Baird and Gary Nicholson, who contributes to this album. Then there’s the essential vision of guitarist /producer and project collaborator Sam Hawksley who has placed Nina’s versatile vocals within a roots rock, song-driven environment.

The assembled muso’s apparently nailed 16 songs in as many days and the 13 that made the cut are carried by a sense of purpose that permeates the album as a whole. Thereafter the subtle production emphasizes the harmony heavy hooks, and Nina’s occasional spine tingling phrasing.

And yet there’s still the question of how to label her? After all, there’s blues, jazz, soul, alt- country, and funk. Nina navigates a delicate balance between polished and by turns emotive singing, on a batch of songs that derive their equilibrium from carefully chosen song styles, and the consistency of her performances.

The outstanding thing about this album is that Nina brings such presence and authority to the material through her phrasing and interpretive skills, that the closing ‘All In The Name Of God’ comes as less of a shock than it might do. She shifts her focus from relationship songs to the lack of woman’s rights in different parts of the world and imbues the heartfelt lyrics with a spiritual quality that lifts the whole album beyond its mere commercial possibilities.

‘Into the Light’ is simply a magisterial album, and both her singing and the accompanying musicianship would be difficult to better. Whether Sam Hawksley heard something special before extending his invitation for her to go to Nashville, is something only he will know, but other than the rather formulaic opening track ‘To Get To My Heart’ – a predictable pedal steel guitar line meets a telegraphed chorus – and the radio friendly funk of ‘When I Found You’, this is an album that sparkles with her eloquent phrasing, pristine diction and intuitive timing over nuanced backing vocals.

The album builds subtly by degrees and flows naturally into the one of the album highlights, the percussive funk and ironic message of ‘Plutonic Delirium’. The title track in contrast, is a more relaxed funky groove with an uplifting chorus flecked by guitar and keyboard splashes.

And almost to order, she wraps her warm vocals round the slow blues of ‘Cry Cry Cry’ and hovers, swoops and soars magnificently on the piano led ‘I Turn To Stone’. On the funky ‘Dangerous Move’ the tightly wrapped rhythm section underpins Sam’s brief ascending guitar break to cut through the tension, before Nina’s second vocal attack takes things up a notch with some startling phrasing, on a song that could easily find a home on blues radio play list.

And it is the crossover appeal that makes ‘Into The Light’ more than just another MOR vocal album. There’s a nice ‘live in the studio’ feel, counterweighted by a polished production and Nina’s impressive interpretive skills to push the songs to their potential. And I guess it wouldn’t be Nashville without a brace of country tinged outings, with ‘Finish What You Started’ being the kind of relationship song that fits the old Nashville mould perfectly. And then there’s the confessional ballad ‘Let You Go’, on which she fills the track with a Karen Carpenter style vocal, except for the spiky lyrics given emphasis by a sudden tempo change: I’ve moved all the furniture around, I took all your pictures down, but I still feel the ghost of you, Erased your number from my phone, got use to sleeping all alone, I’ve been putting off the hardest thing to do’.

Sandwiched between the two, there’s the undulating funk of the rockier ‘I’m In’, which gives the album a notable lift at the three quarter mark, as she soars over a sweeping baking vocals in a perfect match of voice, song, and production. It’s also the track on which the session really sparks and nicely frames what has gone before.

‘Into The Light’ is full of good songs, well crafted musicianship and is shaped by Nina Ferro expressive vocals, which much like Amy Winehouse before her, makes light of any stylistic considerations. **** ~Review by Pete Feenstra

Into The Light

Freyja - This Girl

Size: 111,0 MB
Time: 47:29
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2008
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Fold Your Hand (3:56)
02. Hearts (Les Coeurs Tendres) (4:17)
03. Seventh Son (2:40)
04. This Girl (4:25)
05. All In Grey (4:12)
06. Summer Fly (3:39)
07. Right To Cry (4:46)
08. Nature Boy (4:50)
09. Here's To Life (5:29)
10. Don't Let The Sun Catch You Crying (4:03)
11. Bye Bye Mon Bel Ange (5:06)

At last, the moment FREYjA's fans been all been waiting for. FREYjA went to Paris many years ago to work on a new album & here it is - with a mixture of her own stuff, & for the very first time, an album with her own sensitive renditions of some favourite french chansons & standards. This CD will take you on an emotional journey inspiring you to both celebrate & question life & love

This Girl

The Real Thing - Back On Track

Size: 131,9 MB
Time: 57:13
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2011
Styles: Jazz: Soul/Funk
Art: Front

01. Back On Track (2:20)
02. Silly Hat Walk (4:20)
03. Endless Stream (5:22)
04. Pickin' Chicken (4:49)
05. The Spring (5:13)
06. Olsson's Samba (4:35)
07. Pimblett's Pie (5:00)
08. Seemingly Unaffacted (4:35)
09. Minor Stretch (5:30)
10. New Swede Blues (5:42)
11. Do It Like That (3:36)
12. Wimbo (6:06)

The Real Thing (1992-1995) was a Soul Jazz Band from Oslo, Norway, founded in 1992 when Sigurd Køhn and Palle Wagnberg formed the forerunner, The B3 Blues Band with Vidar Busk and Hamlet Pedersen. They changed the name when Staffan William-Olsson and Fredrik Carl Stormer joined the band. Størmer was replaced by Torstein Ellingsen in 1995, and Ellingsen again by Børre Dalhaug in 1998. Due to the sudden death of the band's saxophonist Sigurd Køhn in December 2004 The Real Thing was hibernating until a reunion in 2010.

The quartet released eight albums, their debut in 1992 with the album The Real Thing and later both live and studio recordings. They for the most play original music, combining influences from American Blue Note jazz (represented by people such aslike Jimmy Smith, George Benson and Wes Montgomery) and elements from modern popular music. The result is a mixture of genres including swing, blues, soul, Latin, funk and rock.

Personnel:
Paul Wagnberg - Hammond organ
Staffan William-Olsson - guitar
Torstein Ellingsen - drums
Dave Edge - alto saxophone

Back On Track

Erane - Artigos Variados

Size: 62,0 MB
Time: 26:34
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: MPB, Blues
Art: Front

01. Dream A Little Dream Of Me (2:50)
02. Meditaçao (3:27)
03. Light My Fire (3:25)
04. A Queda D'agua (1:30)
05. Estrada Do Sol (3:19)
06. Roxanne (4:02)
07. Da Maior Importancia (4:35)
08. Misterios (3:24)

Artigos Variados apresenta canções da MPB e Blues com arranjos de qualidade e interpretação singular.

Este senhor austero bate à minha porta: o tempo, como diz Machado, esse tecido invisível em que se pode bordar tudo. Dentro de mim, desde sempre, a paixão pela música me acompanha e graças a ela aprendi também a cuidadosa e delicada condição para a escuta em psicanálise. Somos nós parceiras na solidão, na alegria e na dor, num interminável casamento onde o som e a poesia possibilitam expressar e compartilhar as emoções mais profundas e imponderáveis.
Numa singela homenagem a esta fonte de arte e vida, capaz de tocar na alma de todos, além das idades, credos e etnias decidi produzir “Artigos Variados”, porque algo pulsa há mais de 50 anos em mim e, quem sabe, democrática e amorosamente também possa alcançar outros que partilham das mesmas emoções. ~Erane Paladino

Personnel:
Erane Paladino: Vocais
Flavio Ianuzzi: Piano
Kiko Perrone: Violão e guitarras
Bruno Migotto: Baixo
Vitor Cabral: Bateria
Ricardo Takahachi: Cordas
Welligton “Pimpa” Moreira: Percussão
Julia Donley Gonzales: Flauta
Elton Lu e Clara Hennel: Backing vocais

Artigos Variados

Lionel Hampton - Ring Dem Bells

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 48:49
Size: 111.8 MB
Styles: Vibraphone jazz, Big Band
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[3:08] 1. Hampton Stomp
[3:15] 2. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
[3:00] 3. Stompology
[2:47] 4. China Stomp (Chinatown)
[3:27] 5. I'm Confessin' (That I Love You)
[2:56] 6. Piano Stomp (Shine)
[3:03] 7. After You've Gone
[3:22] 8. Ring Dem Bells
[2:33] 9. Don't Be That Way
[3:23] 10. Shoe Shiner's Drag
[3:14] 11. Memories Of You
[2:12] 12. When Lights Are Low
[2:52] 13. I've Found A New Baby
[3:24] 14. Shades Of Jade
[3:08] 15. Jack The Bellboy
[2:57] 16. Flying Home

The word jazz and the term "mass appeal" are seldom used in the same sentence. Occasionally, a well-marketed jazz artist will connect with popular culture -- singer Diana Krall, for example -- but label execs usually assume that jazz won't sell as well as rock, R&B, rap, country, adult contemporary, or Latin music. However, there was a time when jazz did, in fact, enjoy mass appeal. It was called the swing era, and Lionel Hampton was among the many swing stars who connected with popular culture even though he wasn't a pop artist. Assembled by Bluebird/RCA in 2002, this collection spans 1937-1940 and takes listeners back to a time when Hampton reached the pop market by playing warm, soulful, infectious, hard-swinging jazz. The disc is full of five-star gems from the vibist's early period, including "On the Sunny Side of the Street," "Memories of You," and Hampton's signature song "Flying Home." And the list of sidemen reads like a who's who of swing -- people like Ziggy Ellman, Johnny Hodges, Ben Webster, and Nat King Cole. So why doesn't Ring Dem Bells merit a higher rating? For one thing, it isn't terribly generous by CD standards. The disc clocks in at around 49 minutes, and RCA could have easily provided another 30 minutes' worth of material. But the main problem is the sound quality; these recordings sound a lot scratchier and noisier on Ring Dem Bells than they do on other Hampton CDs that RCA has put out. This time, Bluebird/RCA's digital remastering leaves much to be desired. The haunting "Shades of Jade," for example, sounds a lot cleaner on Tempo and Swing (a 1992 release) than it does here. This carelessly assembled reissue simply doesn't do justice to an artist of Hampton's magnitude. ~Alex Henderson

Ring Dem Bells

Come Shine - Do Do That Voodoo

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 50:08
Size: 114.8 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[4:00] 1. Saga Of Harrison Crabfeathers
[7:20] 2. My Favourite Things
[4:18] 3. Memories Of You
[2:55] 4. You'll Have To Swing It
[5:12] 5. You've Changed
[3:58] 6. Somewhere Over The Rainbow
[7:00] 7. Nature Boy
[6:13] 8. April In Paris
[4:58] 9. Love For Sale
[4:07] 10. You Do Something To Me

In an unprecedented fashion, Come Shine burst into the national sales charts with their second album “Do that voodoo”. Rave, nearly hysterical reviews followed in the wake of the album’s release, solidifying “Do that voodoo’s” and Come Shine’s positions as jazz release and band of the year. “Do that voodoo’s” focus is on standards – tunes such as My favourite things, Nature Boy and Somewhere over the rainbow that have seen countless interpretations and performances over the years. What sets Come Shine’s renditions apart from the vast majority of standard interpretations is the ensemble’s ability to make the listener feel that the tunes have never heard before. The quartet’s confident, skilled, visionary and aesthetic playing provides a platform from which the tunes grow into new entities – freed from the constraints of past performances and interpretations. ~ Tomas Lauvland Pettersen

Do Do That Voodoo

Ella Fitzgerald - Miss Ella's Playhouse

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 30:55
Size: 70.8 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[2:35] 1. A Tisket A Tasket
[2:47] 2. Organ Grinder's Swing - Single Version
[2:23] 3. The Muffin Man - Single Version
[3:04] 4. Chew-Chew-Chew (Chew Your Bubble Gum) - Single Version
[2:43] 5. Melinda The Mousie
[2:39] 6. Old Mother Hubbard
[2:41] 7. Molasses, Molasses (It's Icky Sticky Goo)
[3:06] 8. The Bean Bag Song
[3:24] 9. Two Little Men In A Flying Saucer - Single Version
[3:15] 10. The Hot Canary - Single Version
[2:13] 11. Old Mcdonald

It's hard to know if Ella Fitzgerald simply recorded so much material during her life that she just happened to record an album's worth of children's music, or if she truly had a predilection for sing-song novelties. Whatever the reason, the great lady of song churned out enough kid-worthy material to make up this 2008 compilation, which has been titled MISS ELLA'S PLAYHOUSE, and marketed to children ages 1-4. Interestingly, the integrity of Ella's music is in no way compromised by the set. Sure, the material is light and whimsical, but this only enhances her artistry, making it accessible on a number of levels. The set list spans her career too, beginning with 1938's "A Tisket a Tasket" and ending with 1966's "Old McDonald." It's musically flawless, and fun for all ages.

Miss Ella's Playhouse

David Crosby - Croz

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 46:58
Size: 107.5 MB
Styles: Rock
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[3:48] 1. What's Broken
[3:50] 2. Time I Have
[3:42] 3. Holding On To Nothing
[3:58] 4. The Clearing
[3:46] 5. Radio
[4:17] 6. Slice Of Time
[3:58] 7. Set That Baggage Down
[4:57] 8. If She Called
[5:56] 9. Dangerous Night
[3:41] 10. Morning Falling
[5:01] 11. Find A Heart

"The best solo record David Crosby has made, without a doubt. Beautifully produced and recorded, the musicianship is so tasteful. His voice sounds as good as it ever was." ~Glyn Johns

Croz is David Crosby's first studio album in over 20 years, a collection of 11 new tracks from one of America's most notable singer-songwriters and two-time Rock and Roll Hall of Famer. Croz also features guest appearances from Wynton Marsalis, Mark Knopfler, Leland Sklar and Steve Tavaglione.

Croz

Jeanette Lindstrom & Steve Dobrogosz - Feathers

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:35
Size: 150,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:33)  1. Butterfly
(7:25)  2. Never Let Me Go
(4:12)  3. The Look Of Love
(3:49)  4. Love Makes You Suffer
(5:17)  5. Both Sides, Now
(5:14)  6. My Hands
(6:24)  7. Almost Blue
(5:09)  8. Like Water
(5:51)  9. Breakfast at Tiffany's  Moon River
(3:47) 10. To Whom It May Concern
(3:59) 11. Future Window
(5:27) 12. You Are There
(4:20) 13. Deep Space

Feathers travels a different road than Jeanette Lindström's previous albums. Where earlier releases have her sounding like an Afro-American singer with overtones of Abbey Lincoln and Diane Reeves, her newest is introspective and soft. There is no hint of soul, R&B, or anything resembling an up-tempo pace. This change of rhythms may have something to do with the label. Her earlier recordings were with Caprice, which has featured African/Middle Eastern music. Sweden's Prophone, on the other hand, not only records jazz, but classical as well, and probably is a bit more conservative. It may also have something to do with her fellow performer; Steve Dobrogosz's compositions and recordings are calm and collected as the listener will find out since there are four of his tunes on the 13 tune play list. His songs are also characterized by disconsolate, and in one case, cruel lyrics "So I reached out to rub off its color, break its small body, and pull off its wings" on "Butterfly." Maybe there's an allegory here somewhere. 

Then there's the not so appealing conclusion that "Love Makes You Suffer." Even tunes that one normally hears played if not in quick, at least in medium tempos, are offered in unusually slow measures. But there are gems here as well. Joni Mitchell's "Both Sides Now" has an ethereal quality about it with Lindström's voice floating above the Mozart sonata-like piano of Dobrogosz. The Andy Williams' monster hit "Moon River" opens with a lengthy Dobrogosz introduction which changes the phrasing and accents of this tune, giving it a much different play than Williams'. The hopeful lyrics are sung with an appropriate feeling of longing. Every now and then, one needs to take down an album from the shelf if for nothing else than as a proper backdrop for quiet times. You could do a lot worse than purchasing this CD for that purpose. ~ Dave Nathan   http://www.allmusic.com/album/feathers-mw0001154452

Sharon Marie Cline - This Is Where I Wanna Be

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:32
Size: 137,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:58)  1. Love Dance
(3:40)  2. Happy Talk
(4:36)  3. Sugar On My Lips
(4:28)  4. Laughter in the Rain
(6:38)  5. I Wanna Be Loved
(6:09)  6. This Is Where I Wanna Be
(4:03)  7. If Dreams Come True
(6:51)  8. You Don't Know What Love Is
(4:21)  9. Why Can't You Behave
(6:05) 10. How Long Has This Been Going On
(2:55) 11. Deed I Do
(3:43) 12. Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars

"This album is a passion piece ... a coming of age project for me. It embodies my fantasies, my dreams, my history, my optimism, and my soul. There is more and more to express each day, yet this album is a launching point for me. So quite literally This Is Where I Wanna Be " This is the kind of album you can pop into the stereo in the car and play on a road trip, or stay at home and curl up by a fire with a loved one... It's romantic, it's dreamy, it's lush and it is swinging!   http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/sharonmariecline4

Bennie Wallace - The Nearness Of You

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:08
Size: 119,8 MB
Art: Front

(9:23)  1. Come Rain or Come Shine
(5:06)  2. Willow Weep For Me
(4:18)  3. Crazy He Calls Me
(3:52)  4. Cocktails for 2
(4:58)  5. Why Was I Born
(5:56)  6. The Nearness of You
(4:40)  7. You Were Never Lovelier  I'm Old Fashioned
(5:20)  8. My Fair Lady  I've Grown Accustomed to Your Face
(3:59)  9. Some Other Spring
(4:33) 10. 'Tis Autumn

In their quest to beef up a CD’s exposure, good-intentioned industry insiders can sometimes unintentionally steer an album down a dead-end path. On the cover of Bennie Wallace’s The Nearness of You, a voluptuous woman clings to his shoulder looking seductively at his sax. The liner notes feature another babe in a low-cut evening dress resting on a piano with a sax. Viagra-infused lounge lizards trying to impress their first dates with their impeccable taste in mood music and Park Avenue dinner party hostesses seeking lightly rendered jazz standards that won’t overpower the table talk are the established target audiences for this CD. The industry folks just don’t get it: Bennie Wallace (tenor sax), Kenny Barron (piano) and Eddie Gomez (bass) are just too talented to be pigeon-holed into a straight-ahead, mostly easy listening standards album. 

Basically, it’s a nice album but not something that excites the senses, starts the juices flowing or forces you to confront new interpretations and ideas. In sum, it’s a pleasant disc but not one you’ll want to pop into the player on a regular basis. Having offered that much criticism, I would be remiss not to say that there are moments here that are truly delightful. Take for example, Kenny Barron’s soulful blues playing on Ann Ronell’s "Willow Weep for Me." Or Wallace and Gomez’s outstanding duo on Sam Coslow’s and Arthur Johnson’s "Cocktails for Two." The last track, Henry Nemo’s "’Tis Autumn," includes fine solos by all three musicians. ~ Rich Friedman   http://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-nearness-of-you-bennie-wallace-enja-records-review-by-rich-friedman.php#.U3I46ihnAqY
Personnel: Bennie Wallace: Tenor Saxophone; Eddie Gomez: Bass; Kenny Barron: Piano.

The Nearness Of You