Monday, May 19, 2014

Liza Lee - Scarlet Mark

Size: 107,9 MB
Time: 46:15
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2004
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. Strawberry Fields Forever (3:49)
02. Heartbreak Even (3:23)
03. Baltimore Oriole (4:47)
04. Lady Grinning Soul (3:21)
05. Loom (4:48)
06. Don't Think Twice, It's All Right (5:05)
07. Love For Sale (2:31)
08. Down In The Depths (3:54)
09. Cornflake Girl (4:57)
10. Scarlet Mark (6:00)
11. All The Answers (3:34)

The CD opens with Liza Lee slowly singing the opening line of "Strawberry Fields Forever."

Her wistful delivery creates a sense of mystery because it’s not evident where she will take you with the song. She is soon joined by the piano and a hint of drums. Lee is turning the familiar Beatles’ song into a jazz tune.

Other artists have reinvented Beatles’ songs into jazz pieces with mixed results. What makes Lee’s turn work is that she has stripped the song to its bare bones, allowing her to experiment with the pacing and a small combo to play with the melody. They create a song that’s right for a late-night club. It would fit right in next to songs by Cole Porter or Hoagy Carmichael. That’s just what Lee does on "Scarlet Mark."

The New York City-based jazz vocalist has pulled together an interesting collection of 11 numbers and made them fit into a solid, engaging package. In addition to the Beatles’ song, she tackles a tune from another iconic figure with her performance of Bob Dylan’s "Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right." Again, she slows the tempo and pushes it into jazz territory aided by MaxJazz recording artist Bruce Barth on piano. Barth is also a co-producer of the CD along with Lee and bassist Pat O’Leary.

Lee was born and raised in Reading, Pa. Her grandfather was a jazz drummer and her grandmother, Terry Norman, was a jazz vocalist. Lee’s exposure to many genres of music shows through on the CD, which is released on her independent label, Jazz Doll records.

The singer, who has a direct and intimate style, likes to take songs not typical of a standard jazz set and give them a new retelling in a jazz format. She demonstrates her interpretive skills on songs by alt-rock singer-songwriters Ani DiFranco, "Heartbreak Even" and "Loom," and Tori Amos’ "Cornflake Girl."

The CD also includes Lee’s original "Scarlet Mark," which she wrote with O’Leary.

She mixes it up even further by showing that she can tackle more traditional material on Carmichael’s "Baltimore Oriole" and a couple of Porter tunes, "Love For Sale" and "Down In The Depths."

In one interview, Lee described herself as a straight-ahead jazz singer with a "kind of pop tone sometimes." That’s a pretty good description because she melds the two genres.

Scarlet Mark

Scott Hamilton - Live At Smalls

Size: 157,7 MB
Time: 68:14
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz: Saxophone Jazz
Art: Full

01. Shake It, Don't Break It (8:56)
02. Runnin' Wild (8:00)
03. Ah Moore (7:31)
04. Estate (9:38)
05. The Nearness Of You (7:11)
06. Apple Honey (9:57)
07. Sweet Georgia Brown (4:46)
08. If I Ever Love Again (7:29)
09. Easy Does It (4:45)

Scott Hamilton was born in 1954, in Providence, Rhode Island. During his early childhood he heard a lot of jazz through his father’s extensive record collection, and became acquainted with the jazz greats. He tried out several instruments, including drums at about the age of five, piano at six and mouth-organ. He had some clarinet lessons when he was about eight years of age, but that was the only formal music tuition he has ever had. Even at that age he was attracted to the sound of Johnny Hodges, but it was not until he was about sixteen that he started playing the saxophone seriously. From his playing mainly blues on mouth organ, his little band gradually became more of a jazz band.
He moved to New York in 1976 at the age of twenty-two, and through Roy Eldridge, with whom he had played a year previously in Boston, got a six-week gig at Michael’s Pub. Roy also paved the way for him to work with Anita O’Day and Hank Jones. Although it was the tail-end of the of old New York scene, a lot of the greats were still playing and he got to work and learn from people like Eldridge, Illinois Jacquet, Vic Dickenson and Jo Jones. Eldridge was Scott’s champion, but pulled no punches, and could be extremely critical, something for which Scott has always been grateful. In December of the same year John Bunch got Scott his first recording date, for Famous Door, and was also responsible for him joining Benny Goodman. He continued to work with Goodman at different times until the early 1980s.
In 1977 he formed his own quartet, which later became a quintet, with Bunch added to the group. The same year Carl Jefferson heard him, and began recording him for his Concord record label. More than forty albums later he is still recording for them, having made many under his own leadership, several with his regular British quartet of John Pearce, Dave Green and Steve Brown, including his latest, Nocturnes & Serenades. The Quartet plus two guests, Dave Cliff and Mark Nightingale recorded Our Delight! for Alan Barnes’ Woodville label. A new release, Across the Tracks on Concorde is due this May. Along the way he has made albums with Dave McKenna, Jake Hanna, Woody Herman, Tony Bennett, Gerry Mulligan, Flip Phillips, Maxine Sullivan, Buddy Tate, Warren Vache, many with Rosemary Clooney and a number with another of his mentors, Ruby Braff, with whom he played residencies at the Pizza Express Jazz Club, London in the mid-1980s. Over the years Scott has also performed and recorded with such touring bands as the Concord Jazz All Stars, the Concord Super Band and George Wein’s Newport Jazz Festival All Stars.
For some years he was based in London, where he first played in 1978, but now travels the world from Italy. Each year, in addition to two or three residencies with the quartet at the Pizza Express Jazz Club, British jazz club dates and festival work including Brecon, where he is one of the patrons, he regularly tours Germany, the Netherlands, Scandinavia, Japan, Spain and Italy. He returns to America three or four times a year to play at festivals, including in 2007, the New York JVC festival in June and Irvine, California in September, and in February 2008 for three nights at the Lincoln Centre New York.
His playing has best been described by fellow tenor saxophonist and writer, Dave Gelly: “Following a Scott Hamilton solo is like listening to a great conversationalist in full flow. First comes the voice, the inimitable, assured sound of his tenor saxophone, then the informal style and finally the amazing fluency and eloquent command of the jazz language.” Scott was awarded the ‘Ronnie’ for International Jazz Saxophonist of the Year in the 2007 inaugural Ronnie Scott’s Jazz Awards. It is no wonder that Scott Hamilton is in demand the world over. ~Brian Peerless

Live At Smalls

Emilie-Claire Barlow - Live In Tokyo

Size: 120,5 MB
Time: 52:10
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head (4:36)
02. All I Do Is Dream Of You (4:15)
03. Águas De Março (Waters Of March) (5:26)
04. Surrey With The Fringe On Top (4:48)
05. (I've Got) Just About Everything I Need (4:16)
06. Sunshine Superman (4:00)
07. Like A Lover (4:42)
08. La Belle Dame Sans Regrets (4:23)
09. These Boots Are Made For Walkin' (5:30)
10. The Beat Goes On (5:37)
11. Blame It On My Youth (4:33)

Dubbed "Canada's incomparable vocal-jazz jewel," Emilie-Claire Barlow has thrilled fans from Tokyo to London (Ontario) with her exquisite recordings and effervescent live performances in the company of la crème de la crème of Toronto-area musicians.

Wherever she appears, Emilie-Claire endears herself to critics, peers and audiences alike with her polished yet relaxed demeanor, her charming humor, and a voice of unforgettable beauty.

Born in Toronto to parents who were both professional musicians, Emilie-Claire was encouraged to sing and study several instruments, including piano, cello, clarinet and violin. Emilie-Claire names Ella Fitzgerald, Tony Bennett and Stevie Wonder amongst her greatest musical influences.

Since 1998 Emilie-Claire has released nine discs. Known for her masterful interpretations of 1930s and ‘40s gems from the Great American Songbook, as well as a jazzy take on 1960s pop with the release of her 2010 CD The Beat Goes On, Emilie-Claire won a 2013 JUNO in the Vocal Jazz category for Seul ce soir (Alone Tonight). Her ninth album – the first one solely ‘en français’– contains new arrangements of songs she's recorded previously, and six completely new covers, including "Petit matin" by Sylvain Lelièvre, "Croissants de soleil" by Ginette Reno and "La belle dame sans regret" by Sting. Emilie-Claire says that an all-French album gave her “an opportunity to immerse myself a little deeper in the music and the [beauty of the] language…regardless of the language, the tone of many of these songs really reflected where I am in my life right now, so it seemed very natural” (CBC Music blog post).

ECB’s tenth album, “Live in Tokyo,” will be available this April. It was recorded at the elegant Cotton Club in the city’s Marunouchi business district.

Live In Tokyo

Clare Teal - Hey Ho

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 56:47
Size: 130.0 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[4:04] 1. If Love Were All
[3:36] 2. One More - Baby Be Good To Me
[5:17] 3. Why
[3:36] 4. It's Not Unusual
[3:40] 5. The Sally Gardens
[2:43] 6. Love Is The Sweetest Thing
[3:40] 7. Whole - It Isn't Like Me
[4:01] 8. Care Of Cell 44
[4:22] 9. Try A Little Tenderness
[4:50] 10. Chasing Cars
[4:26] 11. Sing It Back
[4:09] 12. He Was Beautiful
[5:16] 13. A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square
[3:01] 14. We'll Gather Lilacs

It's not really a jazz album, although there's jazz in it, and it's certainly not a "nostalgia" album, even though it opens with a song by Noël Coward and closes with one by Ivor Novello. In fact, this amounts to an imaginative and sometimes quite radical revisiting of 14 British songs, from the early 20th century ("Down by the Sally Gardens") to 2005 (Snow Patrol's "Chasing Cars"). Even the sacrosanct "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square" comes in for some daring reharmonisation. It's all very unexpected, and only a singer as bright and adventurous as Clare Teal could bring it off - which she does, flawlessly. ~Dave Gelly

Hey Ho

The Drifters - Up On The Roof: The Best Of The Drifters

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 35:11
Size: 80.5 MB
Styles: R&B, Soul
Year: 1963/2014
Art: Front

[2:35] 1. Up On The Roof
[2:08] 2. There Goes My Baby
[2:24] 3. Sweets For My Sweet
[2:27] 4. This Magic Moment
[2:30] 5. Mexican Divorce
[2:37] 6. Stranger On The Shore
[2:52] 7. What To Do
[2:24] 8. Save The Last Dance For Me
[2:30] 9. Loneliness Or Happiness
[2:48] 10. Another Night With The Boys
[2:15] 11. (If You Cry) True Love, True Love
[2:41] 12. Room Full Of Tears
[2:31] 13. When My Little Girl Is Smiling
[2:21] 14. Ruby Baby

This is a definitive anthology of the Drifters' most fertile and commercially successful period (1959-63), after their initial early '50s rock hits with lead vocalist Clyde McPhatter. During this period, the group was essentially the mouthpiece for the boundless imagination of the greatest of the Brill Building songwriters. As a result, what you'll find here are such classics as " Up on the Roof", Gerry Goffin and Carole King's gorgeously romantic ode to working class escape and freedom, along with a virtual embarrassment of riches.

Up On The Roof: The Best Of The Drifters

Dusko Goykovich - Samba Tzigane

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 56:27
Size: 129.2 MB
Styles: Bossa Nova, Gypsy jazz
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[6:54] 1. Samba Tzigane
[5:00] 2. Melodia Sentimental
[7:07] 3. Menina Moca
[6:18] 4. O Grande Amor
[3:43] 5. A Descoberta De Lentidao
[3:04] 6. Trio Loco
[4:16] 7. Samba Triste
[3:32] 8. Coracao Do Sul
[5:16] 9. Five O'clock In The Morning
[3:43] 10. Este Seu Olhar
[7:29] 11. Every Day And Every Night I Dream Of You

Born in 1931 in Jajce (Bosnia), Dusko Goykovich studied at the Music Academy in Belgrade from 1948 to 1953. As a youth he played with several jazz and dixie bands, mostly for dancing audiences and eventually on parties at the embassies of the capital. When the 18-year-old joined the Radio Big Band of Belgrade, he was considered a talented young jazz man who also can read music. When he left the band five years later, he had grown into a fine big band player and featured soloist. Dusko went to Germany where he quickly became an integral part of its uprising young jazz scene. In 1956 he made his first record as a member of the Frankfurt All-Stars.

After a short stint in the big band of Munich's Max Greger, Dusko stayed for four and a half years with Kurt Edelhagen's band, then Europe's leading jazz orchestra. Francy Boland, Claus Ogermann, Jerry van Rooyen and Rob Pronk were among the arrangers who worked for Edelhagen. In addition to being the band's premier trumpet soloist, Dusko performed with such as Stan Getz and Chet Baker. It came as no surprise when in 1958 he was invited to play with the Newport International Youth Band at the Newport Jazz Festival. Other members of the Newport band included Albert Mangelsdorff, Ronnie Ross, George Gruntz, and Gábor Szábo.

Following the performance at Newport, Dusko's trumpet became very popular in Europe. In 1961 the Berklee School of Music offered the 29-year-old a grant for studying composition and arrangement in Boston where Herb Pomeroy was to become one of his teachers. Looking forward to writing his own arrangements for his great love, the big band, Dusko concentrated on his studies at Berklee so exclusively that he regrettingly turned down offers by Count Basie, Stan Kenton and Benny Goodman to join their bands. While at Berklee Dusko (now also on flugelhorn) recorded with the Berklee School Quintet and Orchestra including fellow students such as Gary Burton, Mike Gibbs, Sadao Watanabe, Steve Marcus, Mike Nock, and Dave Young.

Bass – Martin Gjakonovski; Drums, Percussion – Jarrod Cagwin; Flute – Márcio Tubino; Guitar – Ferenc Snétberger; Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Dusko Goykovich; Vocals – Céline Rudolph (tracks: 2, 5, 7, 8).

Samba Tzigane

Various - Jazz In New York (The Monash Sessions)

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 74:43
Size: 171.1 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[6:29] 1. Andy Gravish Ensemble - Swingin' At The Haven
[8:32] 2. Michael Wolff Ensemble - Portraiture
[9:08] 3. Michael Wolff Ensemble - Hummin'
[5:43] 4. Sy Johnson Ensemble - Goodbye Porkpie Hat
[7:35] 5. Sy Johnson Ensemble - Blues Suite #4
[4:14] 6. Andy Gravish Ensemble - Night Dreamer
[5:08] 7. Jean-Michel Pilc Ensemble - Dirge
[6:31] 8. Dave Pietro Ensemble - Darn That Dream
[6:53] 9. Dave Pietro Ensemble - Sweet Time Suite
[6:58] 10. Ben Allison Ensemble - East Of The Sun
[7:27] 11. Dave Pietro Ensemble - Adams Apple

Jazz In New York signifies the international collaboration between Monash University’s Sir Zelman Cowen School of Music Jazz and Popular Studies program, and New York University's Steinhardt campus, which is located in the heart of Greenwich Village.

Three weeks at the NYU Summer Jazz Improv Workshop is where Melbourne’s leading jazz students were treated to cutting-edge jazz education. Involving mentoring, master classes, workshops, and numerous performances with some of the finest jazz musicians in New York City.

This CD captures the new sounds of the future of jazz as represented in these Monash University small group ensembles. Masterfully recorded in the newly built and state of the art NYU James L. Dolan Music Recording Studio.

Jazz In New York (The Monash Sessions)

Malene Mortensen - Still in Love With You

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:23
Size: 144,1 MB
Art: Front + Back

(4:49)  1. Take Me to Your Heart
(3:17)  2. Que Sera Sera
(4:51)  3. Still in Love With You
(4:03)  4. Eternal Flame
(3:19)  5. Reflection
(3:54)  6. When We Make a Home (feat. Koh Mr. Saxman)
(4:23)  7. Just the Way You Are
(4:05)  8. Best of My Love
(3:29)  9. A Lovers Concerto
(3:54) 10. Lovers Moon
(4:46) 11. Perhaps Love
(5:03) 12. You and I
(4:09) 13. My Love
(3:31) 14. Price Tag
(4:42) 15. Still In Love With You (Rhodes) [feat. Neung Jakawal]

Malene Winter Mortensen (born May 23, 1982) is a Danish singer. She made her entrance into the Danish music scene in 2001, during the first season of "Stjerne for en aften", the Danish edition of Star for a Night. She made it to the finals, with her rendition of Moloko's "Sing it back". The following year, she entered the Dansk Melodi Grand Prix, the Danish national pre-selection for the Eurovision Song Contest. Although her song "Vis mig hvem du er" performed strongly in the national final, receiving top marks from all televoting regions, it was a full-scale failure at the Eurovision Song Contest 2002, in its English version, "Tell Me Who You Are". Her song received a mere seven points, placing her last amongst the 24 participating countries.The unforeseen Eurovision outcome was a blow to her previous achievements, but it did not make her give up her musical career. In 2003 she released her debut album called "Paradise". This album, revolving around modern jazz, was supported by three of Denmark's best known jazz musicians: Niels Lan Doky (piano), Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen (bass) and Alex Riel (drums). ~ Bio  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malene_Mortensen

Harry Allen - Love Songs Only!

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:52
Size: 179,1 MB
Art: Front

( 6:44)  1. Do Nothin' Till You Hear from Me
( 4:41)  2. Where Are You
( 4:34)  3. I Can't Get Started
( 6:36)  4. Quiet Nights
( 6:59)  5. I Can't Believe That You're in Love With Me
(11:59)  6. Comes Love
( 4:30)  7. Here Are My Arms
( 5:24)  8. Cloudy
( 6:31)  9. Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans
( 6:25) 10. In Love in Vain
( 3:26) 11. Sophisticated Swing
( 6:27) 12. My Foolish Heart
( 3:30) 13. Straighten Up and Fly Right

Fathers serious about seeing their sons one day becoming famous athletes begin developing their offspring's skills at a very young age. In the case of Harry Allen's father, who was a big-band drummer, he played jazz records each day for Harry before he went off to kindergarten. Starting off with accordion lessons, there was a fortuitous switch to saxophone later. Attending Rutgers University, Allen studied saxophone with Sahib Shihab, Bob Mintzer, and John Purcell. In 1989, he graduated from Rutgers with a degree in jazz tenor saxophone. While at Rutgers, Allen got his first gig with the help of master bass player Major Holley, where he replaced Zoot Sims at a studio recording with John Bunch, George Masso, Bucky Pizzarelli, and Ruby Braff. During the session, Dizzy Gillespie dropped by. Quite heady company for a young tenor player doing his first recording. Wholley also led Allen to Oliver Jackson, who Allen subsequently accompanied on several tours to Europe. A 1986 session with Kenny Barron was Allen's first recording date. 

After that, Allen had 19 recordings to his name for such labels as Progressive, Audiophile, and Nagel-Heyer. Later, his recordings were with major label RCA-Victor. Three of his discs have been awarded a Gold Disc by Swing Journal Magazine and his CD Tenors Anyone won both the Gold Disc and New Star awards. He has recorded as a sideman with Bucky Pizzarelli (with whom he performs quite frequently), Warren Vache, and Jeff Hamilton. Allen's musical inspiration and interpretive approach come from the giants and innovators of mainstream saxophone, including Coleman Hawkins, Ben Webster, Stan Getz, Illinois Jacquet, and Lester Young. Unlike many of his contemporaries, Allen has pretty much eschewed the modern, avant-garde, and impressionist schools of jazz of John Coltrane, Archie Shepp, and Ornette Coleman. Allen continues to record extensively and makes frequent appearances at jazz festivals and concerts. ~ Bio   https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/harry-allen/id296978#fullText

Personnel: Harry Allen: tenor sax; Randy Sandke: trumpet; John Bunch: piano; Brian Dee: piano; Dave McKenna: piano; Dennis Irwin: bass; Len Skeat: bass; Frank Tate: bass; Duffy Jackson: drums;  Butch Miles: drums; Oliver Jackson: drums; Howard Alden: guitar

James Carter Organ Trio - At The Crossroads

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:44
Size: 171,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:49)  1. Oh Gee
(3:19)  2. JC Off The Set
(5:26)  3. Aged Pain
(5:21)  4. The Walking Blues
(7:04)  5. My Whole Life Through
(7:23)  6. Walking The Dog
(7:00)  7. Lettuce Toss Yo' Salad
(5:09)  8. Misterio
(4:19)  9. Ramblin' Blues
(7:34) 10. Come Sunday
(5:21) 11. Tis The Old Ship of Zion
(9:52) 12. The Hard Blues

Jazz has many faces. Some are searching and expansive, like those of alto saxophonists Ornette Coleman and John Coltrane, seeking the outer edges of the music. Some are reverent and deferential, like the Modern Jazz Quartet and trumpeter Wynton Marsalis, trying to lend respectability to the music borne in the whore houses of New Orleans' Storyville district. But like every family, there are the black sheep, the ones that want to stay out all night long, drinking and smoking pursuing all manner of pleasures of the flesh. That is what the soul jazz genre of the organ trio is. Conceived in an alley behind a delta juke joint on the Southern chitlin circuit, the jazz organ trio reminds jazz of its gravid, earthy origins, reminding alto saxophonist Charlie Parker and trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie know that Kansas City and New York City are not that far from Memphis, Tennessee, as the crow flies. But organ jazz cleans up pretty well and, midnight Faustian bargains made on delta roads notwithstanding, saxophonist James Carter and his organ trio (augmented by horns on some tracks) evidence this on At The Crossroads, illustrating what happens when the blues put on a new suit and move uptown to the ritzy place where everyone drinks champagne rather than beer. But the blues can never shed, nor should want to, its humble beginnings, always acknowledging its origins in the rural cotton field, clapboard church and roadhouse. It is here that Carter takes advantage of the music, exploring all of its facets in his exceptional organ trio format. 

No stone is left unturned, no influence unaknowledged. Taking nothing for granted, Carter opens with an modern up-tempo jump blues, trombonist Matthew Gee's "Oh Gee," complemented by Bruce Edwards on guitar. Carter's core trio, which has been in existence since 2005 and the release of Out of Nowhere (Halfnote Records), contains organist Gerard Gibbs and drummer Leonard King, Jr., who round out the performance. The opening piece is tightly displayed with effortless swing. Carter reveals amply that he is both a student and master of reeds, bar blowing and wailing in the same breath. Carter is most potent as a blues player on those pieces that he doubles on tenor and baritone saxophones. "The Walking Blues" features vocalist Miche Braden and is a Louis Jordan-juke blues with a dense bottom and broad baritone solo-vamp that promotes Carter as a leading baritone player. Braden's scatting is bright and assertive over Gibbs' choppy organ. Braden returns on Maybelle Smith's "Ramblin Blues" (loosely based on Big Bill Broonzy's "Key to the Highway"), and Carter and guitarist Brandon Ross bring the blues way low-down. Trumpeter Kenyon Harold solos gutbucket, hitting every flatted fifth, followed by trombonist Vincent Chandler channelling Al Grey. Ronald Shannon Jackson's "Aged Pain" is all rhythm and blues made real with Edward's soulful guitar filigree. But it is Carter, singularly on baritone, who proves best since Gerry Mulligan that the big saxophone can serve as a dandy solo instrument. His solo is probing and inquisitive, well-balanced dramatically. Carter pulls out the alto saxophone on a couple of selections. The Leonard King original "Lettuce Toss Yo Salad" is a contemporary chitlin circuit bar-walker. Carter's facility on the alto is equal to that on the other reeds: he is very much the full service reedist. 

Carter provides the same vibe on Jack McDuff's "Walkin' the Dog." Gibbs is churchy in his organ introduction, flavoring the cooker with gospel notes. The disc ends on two superb alto saxophone driven pieces: the traditional "Tis This Old Ship of Zion" and the progressive Julius Hemphill composition "The Hard Blues." On "Tis This Old Ship of Zion" Braden sings her best on the disc, the same way all involved play, all summoning the Holy Spirit. Gibbs is 100% beside the pulpit with Carter centrally positioned to show the gospel power in his playing. It is easy to forget that this is a jazz organ trio playing, amen. Hemphill's "The Hard Blues" is the most provocative piece on the disc. A summation composition that weaves various blues styles together, Carter uses his performance as an integrating survey of the music in all of its hues. It is a filthy grinding groove laid down by Gibbs and King for Carter and Ross to probe and poke. And probe they do. Alternating through a bluesman John Lee Hooker dirge through an outer- space Coltrane romp, Carter and Ross spar and dance, summoning all of the spirits at bay. It is a Shakespearean ending to a hugely satisfying recording. ~ C.Michael Bailey   http://www.allaboutjazz.com/james-carter-organ-trio-at-the-crossroads-by-c-michael-bailey.php#.U3lZiCi9a5w

Personnel: James Carter: saxophones; Leonard King Jr.: drums, vocals (10); Gerard Gibbs: organ; Miche Braden: vocals (4, 11); Brandon Ross: guitar (4, 12); Bruce Edwards: guitar (1, 3, 6) Keyon Harrold: trumpet (4, 10); Vincent Chandler: trombone (4, 10); Eli Fountain: tambourines (10).