Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Hetty Kate & The Twenty 20s - Uh!Oh!

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:50
Size: 105,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:01)  1. Uh!Oh!
(3:55)  2. Raining In My Heart
(4:41)  3. Hymn For Him
(7:00)  4. Clouds
(4:17)  5. I've Got Your Number
(3:48)  6. Workin' In A Coalmine
(5:03)  7. Black Coffee
(4:24)  8. Ever Fallen In Love
(4:37)  9. Close Your Eyes
(5:01) 10. Cellophane

Late summer 2011 has produced two off-piste jazz vocal gems. The first was CTI Masterworks' reissue of Jackie Cain and Roy Kral's A Wilder Alias (CTI, 1974). The second is Hetty Kate and The Twenty 20s' Uh! Oh!. The disc focuses, lovingly, on standards from the 1950s and laces them, bizarrely but immaculately, with vestigial psychedelia, electro-acoustica and surf twangadelica. The result sounds like a David Lynch movie looks, but with a warm embrace replacing Lynch's icy grip on the spine. For Uh! Oh!, Kate British born, Australia based, and until now better known for more straight-ahead performances of the standards songbook is accompanied by a quintet of Melbourne's finest, between them adept in swing, hard bop, lounge/exotica and rhythm-and-roots. Saxophonist Deal Hilson and trumpeter Vinnie Bourke deal out classic era Blue Note sounds with dashes of ska and Stax; bassist Steve Purcell (who also composed three of the album's four originals) and drummer Sharky Ramos keep things lithe and swinging. 

So far, so solid for a group accompanying a charismatic and technically gifted vocalist whose gorgeous timbre carries echoes of Peggy Lee, June Christy and Julie London. The genius instrumental ingredient, however the ace in the hand is tenor guitarist Dale Lindrea. The tenor guitar is a four-string instrument tuned in fifths, a structure which more or less necessitates unusual chord voicings and big interval jumps. To these Lindrea adds psychedelia, blues riffs, surf tropes, loops and a magic bag of electro-acoustic effects. When they first reach the ear, his counterpoints to Kate's vocals may sound startlingly, crazily strange, but, a nanosecond later, they reveal themselves as absolutely on song. It is reality, Jim, but not as we know it. Lindrea's lost in space contributions are empathetically framed by the band's arrangements and post-production. The album was recorded over about a year, all in one room, by Purcell, with tracks collectively reviewed and recalibrated as the project progressed. Instrumental textures were gently twisted, dub effects alluded to, layers added, instruments moved back and forth in the mix. In front of all this, Kate's vocals remained relatively untouched, and the tunes' original melodies and underlying chord progressions left pretty much alone. The effect is hyper-real, sophisticated and quietly, totally, out of its tree. 

The disc opens with the title track, a Top 40 hit in 1959 for scat-singing virtual band/animated cartoon The Nutty Squirrels, whose jazz-informed, speeded-up vocals narrowly predated The Chipmunks' poppier and, ultimately, more successful take on the gimmick. Surreal to start with, by the time The Twenty 20s are through with it rubbing surf guitar up against a Lee Morgan-like trumpet solo "Uh! Oh!" is doubly out there. Three other covers are of songs made totemic by Peggy Lee, Tony Bennett and Sarah Vaughan: Cy Coleman and Carolyn Leigh's "I've Got Your Number," Sonny Burke and Paul Francis Webster's "Black Coffee"" and Bernice Petkere's "Close Your Eyes." There is a rock 'n' roll icon, Felice and Boudleaux Bryant's "Raining In My Heart;" a rhythm and blues classic, Allen Toussaint's "Workin' In A Coalmine;" and a British punk rock ballad, Pete Shelley's "Ever Fallen In Love," recorded by his band, The Buzzcocks, in 1978, but sitting comfortably alongside the older material. Purcell's originals are fine fare, particularly the spacey, minor keyed "Clouds," at 7:04 the longest track on the disc. 

But it is the covers and the way they are covered that ultimately lodge deepest in the head. Warning! There is a YouTube clip of "I've Got Your Number," by Kate and the band, which is presented as a taster for Uh! Oh!. It is no such thing. It is a straight-ahead performance of the song, which, though perfectly decent, is several light years away from the version on this album. The clip of "Cellophane" below is a better representation, though you have to penetrate poor audio quality to get the flavor.        ~ Chris May   http://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-twenty-20s-uh-oh-by-chris-may.php#.U5zrriioqdk

Personnel: Hetty Kate: vocals; Dean Hilson: saxophones; Vinnie Bourke: trumpet, flugelhorn; Dave Lindrea: tenor guitar; Steve Purcell: double bass; Skarky Ramos: drums. Guests: Hugh Harvey: drums (5, 7, 9); Steve Grant: trumpet (4).

Uh!Oh!

Al Cohn - Al Cohn & His Charlie's Tavern Ensemble

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1954
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:51
Size: 153,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:48)  1. Inside Out
(6:09)  2. Autumn Leaves
(6:58)  3. Serenade For Kathy
(7:16)  4. Move
(5:29)  5. Never Never Land
(6:26)  6. Something For Lisa
(3:08)  7. Count Every Star
(2:47)  8. La Ronde
(4:07)  9. Breakfast With Joe
(3:15) 10. This Reminds Me Of You
(3:05) 11. Cabin In The Sky
(2:22) 12. Lullaby Of Birdland
(2:54) 13. Cohn My Way

Al Cohn was something special, a gem among musicians. Writer, arranger, performer, leader he was one of those rare creative artists gifted with unlimited imagination and technical resources, with magnificent taste and an unerring insight into the expressiveness of East Coast jazz. In the 50s, the personnel he assembled for the four sessions that make up this CD often relaxed in Charlie’s Tavern, a congenial watering hole on Broadway across from Birdland, “the jazz corner of the world”. Despite slight personnel changes, each group was power-packed and, unlike many such outfits, married outstanding individuality to collective cohesiveness. With them, Cohn emphatically demonstrated the allembracing brilliance of the many-faceted talents that earned him the title “Mr. Music”.  
http://www.freshsoundrecords.com/and_his_charlies_tavern_ensemble-cd-4924.html

Featuring: Al Cohn (ts), Joe Newman (tp), Billy Byers, Eddie Bert (tb), Hal McKusick, Gene Quill (as), Sol Schlinger (bars), Sanford Gold (p), Billy Bauer, Jimmy Raney (g), Milt Hinton (b), Osie Johnson (d). Al Cohn, Johnny Carisi, Ralph Burns (arrangers)

Al Cohn & His Charlie's Tavern Ensemble

Jack Jezzro - The Beatles On Guitar

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:14
Size: 98,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:01)  1. Hey Jude
(3:15)  2. Yesterday
(4:48)  3. Let It Be
(4:35)  4. Eleanor Rigby
(3:56)  5. Here There And Everywhere
(4:22)  6. In My Life
(4:36)  7. Michelle
(4:05)  8. If I Fell
(3:54)  9. And I Love Her
(3:38) 10. I Will

Jack Jezzro has been one of Nashville’s most versatile musicians and record producers for over 30 years. He has appeared on many Grammy winning recordings and has numerous albums as an artist to his credit. His vast guitar discography as a recording artist includes the critically acclaimed Jazz Elegance and Brazilian Nights recordings, along with the Grammy nominated A Days Journey album. As a bassist, he was a member of the Nashville Symphony Orchestra from 1981-1991. He continues to be a member of the Nashville String Machine, playing on countless hit songs including those by Garth Brooks, Faith Hill, Bruce Springsteen, Carrie Underwood, Amy Grant, George Strait, Jennifer Lopez, Matchbox 20, Vince Gill, Wynonna, Olivia-Newton John, Rascal Flatts, Neil Diamond, Dolly Parton, and The Beach Boys. 

His productions, which number over 300 albums, include legendary jazz pianist Beegie Adair, acclaimed Dove award winning vocalist Kathy Troccoli, Grammy winning producer/composer/pianist Michael Omartian, jazz vocal great Jaimee Paul, tenor sax ace Denis Solee, bassist/vocalist Jim Ferguson featuring jazz great Chris Potter, renowned violinist David Davidson, composer/arranger/pianist Jeff Steinberg, multi-instrumentalist and Fiddler's Hall of Fame member Craig Duncan, virtuoso accordionist/pianist Jeff Taylor, singer/songwriter Christina Lake, pianist Christopher Phillips, trumpeter Leif Shires, jazz violinist Antoine Silverman featuring pianist Stefan Karlsson, and saxophonist Sam Levine. His music and productions could also be heard in several motion pictures, including the recent Woody Allen movie, "To Rome With Love." ~ http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/jezzro11

Personnel: Jack Jezzro (acoustic guitar, nylon-string guitar); Mary Alice Hoepfinger (harp); The Nashville String Machine (strings); Mark Douthit (alto saxophone, tenor saxophone); Jeff Bailey (piccolo trumpet); George Tidwell (flugelhorn); Pat Coil (piano); Craig Nelson (acoustic bass, electric bass); Bob Mater (drums); Eric Darken (percussion).