Monday, June 23, 2014

Tom Scott & Special Guests - Cannon Re-Loaded: All-Star Celebration Of Cannonball Adderley

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 52:19
Size: 119.8 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz. Saxophone jazz
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[6:32] 1. Jive Samba
[5:48] 2. Work Song
[5:47] 3. Mercy, Mercy, Mercy
[4:50] 4. Save Your Love For Me
[5:28] 5. Sack O' Woe
[3:18] 6. Country Preacher
[5:05] 7. Inside Straight
[5:46] 8. I Should Care
[5:27] 9. The Masquerade Is Over
[4:15] 10. Stars Fell On Alabama

Cannon Re-Loaded is simply that: a collection of tunes closely associated with Cannonball Adderley interpreted by an all-star collection of players on the current scene, with bandleader Tom Scott (who co-produced with Gregg Field) on alto saxophone (an instrument he doesn't play that often anymore), trumpeter Terence Blanchard, pianist George Duke (who was actually a member of the Adderley quintet and who also plays Rhodes and Wurlitzer), drummer Steve Gadd, bassists Marcus Miller and Dave Carpenter, and Larry Goldings on the Hammond B-3. Vocalist Nancy Wilson also guests on a pair of cuts that reprise her performances with Adderley from the Nancy Wilson/Cannonball Adderley set released in 1962. In his liner notes, Scott claims Adderley as a major influence on his own playing, and that what he and his dream band wanted to convey was not only Adderley's brilliance as a musician, but also his sense of humor, one that welcomed the audience in to the music he made.

There is no doubt that this quintet gets the tunes right. They open with "Jive Samba," move toward a fast-paced "Work Song," and then of course to "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy" before Wilson joins the band for "Save Your Love for Me." The music has plenty of swing and groove, and it's tight. And maybe that's the problem. Adderley's best records (we could all argue forever about which records those were) had a sense of looseness and a vibe inherent in them that is lost on this group -- with the exception of Duke, who uses his own sense of humor, percussive flair on the keys, and angular bits here and there to dress these jams up for the bandstand instead of the studio. The sound is so utterly pristine and shiny it contains none of that laid-back approach that made the Adderley groups so enjoyable.

For audiophiles, there is plenty to like: the stereo separation is perfect. There isn't a sound out of place here, with the occasional exception of Duke's touches that at least give the thing some air. "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy" and "Work Song," feel like they're being read off the page -- and we know that isn't so. Wilson's tunes "Save Your Love for Me" and "The Masquerade Is Over" come off beautifully, but they don't really echo the originals, they feel like standard contemporary jazz radio fare. Thanks to the Rhodes and B-3, "Country Preacher" comes off best because of the interplay between Goldings and Duke. They let so much soul drip from their respective keyboards that Scott can't make it shine so much., He has to stay closer to the warmth of the tune, and Blanchard, who actually might have been a bandleader in this setting, has got everything he needs in the melody to just let it fall out of his horn. "Inside Straight," while it has the melody, changes, and timing right, is so slick because of Miller's slaphappy bass; it contains a kind of mellowed-down funk that belongs on the studio-perfected jazz records released in the '80s. Thankfully, Blanchard lets some real grit come from his horn. The ballads "I Should Care" and "The Stars Fell on Alabama" come off better than just about anything here because of their reliance on more restrained charts (particularly on the former, with Blanchard's wonderful solo). Scott's solo is less his than Adderley's on the latter. He restrains himself from over-blowing for the most part, and allows some real emotion into the tune.

Overall though, this date may introduce contemporary jazz fans to the music of Adderley, but it doesn't begin to capture his spirit, his irreverent, dry and elegant sense of humor, or the sheer power he could wrench form a funky blues tune, or the soul he could dig out of that horn -- especially in front of an audience. Perhaps if this band would have cut this in front of a club crowd, they might have been able to get more inside the vibe of Adderley. As it stands, it sounds so controlled and rigid that it's simply a pleasant recording to listen to rather than a real tribute to one of the giants of jazz who was also one of its greatest communicators. And while we're at it, one has to wonder why some of Adderley's great soul classics like Black Messiah, Accent on Africa, Pyramid, Happy People, and Music You All have never been issued on CD? ~Thom Jurek

Cannon Re-Loaded: All-Star Celebration Of Cannonball

Adderley


Sarah Vaughan & Her Trio - Live At Mister Kelly's, Chicago 1957

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 35:38
Size: 81.6 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[3:34] 1. September in the rain
[5:19] 2. Willow weep for me
[3:14] 3. Just one of those things
[4:46] 4. Be anything but darling be mine
[2:45] 5. Thou swell
[5:06] 6. Stairway to the stars
[3:37] 7. Honeysuckle rose
[4:16] 8. Just a gigolo
[2:58] 9. How high the moon

After a rather shaky start (she can't find her key on "September in the Rain," knocks over a microphone stand, and stumbles on some lyrics during "Willow Weep for Me"), it doesn't take Sarah Vaughan long to overcome these glitches and deliver a nuanced, intimate performance on this live gig. Recorded in August 1957, this date features pianist Jimmy Jones, bassist Richard Davis, and drummer Roy Haynes. As should be expected, their solid performance is strictly accompaniment and, for the most part, unspectacular. The show, of course, belongs to Sassy. She swoops, soars, whispers, and belts it out. Her range is jaw dropping; her control and vibrato are simply beyond compare. And although Vaughan asks for her mic to be turned up throughout the performance, she is mixed up front and quite high in the recording--right where she deserves to be. ~S. Duda

Live At Mister Kelly's, Chicago 1957

Hugo Montenegro - Magnificent

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 23:28
Size: 53.7 MB
Styles: Jazz-funk, Easy Listening
Year: 1968/2011
Art: Front

[2:23] 1. String Of Pearls
[2:29] 2. Heartaches
[2:35] 3. Chanson D'amour
[1:55] 4. Peg O'my Heart
[2:17] 5. Peg O'my Heart
[2:51] 6. And The Angels Sing
[2:44] 7. I'll Know My Love
[2:54] 8. Dardanella
[3:15] 9. Song Of India

Originally a staff manager for Andre Kostelanetz at Columbia Records, Hugo Montenegro began making albums of easy listening music under his own name in the mid-1950s. He recorded for a number of labels over the years, including this album recorded especially for Pickwick. Including such songs as Chanson D'Amour, And The Angels Sing and Song Of India, each receives the full orchestral treatment.

Magnificent

Karin Plato - Out Of Town Disc 1 And Disc 2

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:58 (CD 1)
Size: 89,5 MB (CD 1)
Time: 34:52 (CD 2)
Size: 80,1 MB (CD 2)
Art: Front

CD 1

(3:16)  1. I'd Rather Be Somewhere Hot
(5:50)  2. Blue Skies
(7:04)  3. If I Only Had A Brain
(3:03)  4. Day In, Day Out
(4:38)  5. Golden Earrings
(3:22)  6. I'm Putting All My Eggs In One Basket
(3:51)  7. Summer Night
(3:14)  8. Try To Remember (#1)
(4:36)  9. Get Out Of Town


CD 2

(3:54)  1. The Breeze & I
(3:27)  2. I Remember
(5:18)  3. Butterfly
(4:52)  4. That's All
(4:06)  5. Reality
(5:52)  6. Red Sails In The Sunset
(2:32)  7. Blackberry Winter
(4:46)  8. Try To Remember (#2)

If your familiarity with British Columbian vocalists is limited to Diana Krall and Michael Bublé, then it’s time you got to know Karin Plato. Though she has been based out of Vancouver for a quarter-century, Plato wasn’t actually born in B.C. She hails from a tiny farming community called Alsask, the name derived from its location on the Saskatchewan-Alberta border. Plato’s passion for jazz singing prompted the move west to Vancouver in 1985, where she earned degrees in jazz and arranging at Capilano College. A decade later, first in 1996 and again in ’98, she continued her schooling at the esteemed Banff Centre for the Fine Arts, studying vocal jazz under two of the world’s foremost experts, Jay Clayton and Sheila Jordan. Just prior to her first Banff session, Plato made her recording debut with the aptly-title Pastiche, an eclectic mix of covers and originals that fully showcased the rich fullness of her voice. 

Over the next seven years, four more albums followed. Apart from the 2000 Christmas release Snowflake Season, each followed a similar pattern: a well-chosen balance of ballads and up-tempo standards mixed with a few laudable originals. Her fifth CD, 2003’s The State of Bliss also featured several duets with another underappreciated Canadian vocalist, Nat “King” Cole sound-alike Denzel Sinclaire. After The State of Bliss there was, in terms of recordings, a prolonged silence. Finally, in 2008, Plato delivered Downward Dancing. It remains the most obscure of her albums and, oddly, is not included in the discography on her website. Nor will you currently find it on iTunes or, apart from an occasional second-hand copy, on Amazon. (It is, however, listed as available on CD Baby.) Its obscurity is a shame. Though all of Plato’s output has been exceptionally fine, Downward Dancing represented a new plateau, perhaps precipitated by her long absence from the studio. 

During that break, Plato’s voice grew deeper and slightly throatier. The stylistic result suggests a close kinship with both Krall and Rosemary Clooney. Fortunately, the same superb sound that emerged on Downward Dancing is equally evident throughout Plato’s latest release, a double-disc set entitled Out of Town. As she explains in the liner notes, the title can be taken literally. Plato departed Vancouver and relocated in London (London, Ontario that is) for the sessions. In recent years, pianist John Roney has often accompanied Plato on her club dates across Canada. On Out of Town the superbly simpatico relationship they’ve established on the road is at last captured. Though Roney is front-and-center on most of the 17 tracks, additional support is provided by cellist Christine Newland and bassist Brendan Davis. The first disc is intentionally the more upbeat of the two. 

Plato opens with a bouncy original, the peppery “I’d Rather Be Somewhere Hot,” a paean to warmer climates dedicated to snowbound Canadians. The tempo remains bright and sunny for her arrestingly offbeat arrangement of “Blues Skies.” Then the proceedings slow for a leisurely, seven-minute ramble through “If I Only Had a Brain.” Plato again revs up for a feverish “Day In, Day Out” and a mid-tempo “I’m Putting All My Eggs In One Basket” that is cunningly sensuous. “Golden Earrings” is given a balladic reading that is fittingly mysterious. Plato’s unfettered handling of Harry Warren’s too-rarely covered “Summer Night” packs plenty of lusty August heat and there’s s parallel abundance of barely-contained hunger in her “Get Out of Town.” 

Rounding out the first CD is an appropriately wistful “Try to Remember.” The second platter gets underway with a gorgeously reflective “The Breeze and I.” The meditative mood continues through Stephen Sondheim’s pensive “I Remember” and “Butterfly,” a sweet ode to youthful curiosity from celebrated children’s entertainer Jennifer Gasoi. Plato’s “That’s All” is suitably tender, and the raw power of her “Red Sails In the Sunset” superbly captures the lyric’s profound sense of contentment. As a counterpointed bookend to the sizzling “I’d Rather Be Somewhere Hot,” Plato closes with a masterfully barren exploration of Alec Wilder’s regret-fueled “Blackberry Winter.” A second, more contemplative version of “Try to Remember” is added as a bonus track. ~ Christopher Loudon http://jazztimes.com/articles/26933-karin-plato-jazz-vocals-north-by-northwest

David Kikoski - Lighter Way

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:07
Size: 126,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:50)  1. Blanket of Byrd
(6:43)  2. Grey Area
(6:52)  3. Wanting and Waiting
(5:40)  4. Joyous
(6:40)  5. Lighter Way
(6:34)  6. Florence's Reverie
(6:44)  7. Stigmata
(8:01)  8. Variation

There was a time when most artists pursued linear careers. While the Miles Davis of Kind of Blue (Columbia, 1959) was very different than that of Bitches Brew (Columbia, 1969), a straight line could be drawn through his career, with each successive album usually representing an incremental step. These days artists often run multiple and vastly different projects concurrently, to some extent because of broadening interests resulting from the ever-expanding and cross-pollinating nature of improvised music. Pianist David Kikoski's Limits (Criss Cross, 2006) was an accessible, all-acoustic and modernistic mainstream affair. The equally contemporary Lighter Way is even more approachable. It finds its way into a broader sonic space through Kikoski's addition of synthesizers, and it explores greater stylistic territory that blends hints of Americana, romantic classicism, mid-'70s ECM and more.  Lighter Way features bassist Ed Howard and drummer Victor Lewis, who work regularly with Kikoski in support of artists like Eddie Henderson and Dave Stryker. This is the first time they've recorded as a standalone trio, and the reason they're in demand as a unit is in even greater evidence here. 

While often considered for its ability to swing hard in a variety of settings, here the trio is no less groove-centric, but in some ways distanced from the straight-ahead tradition. The fusion energy of "Stigmata" may come as a surprise, but anyone who's heard Howard with vibraphonist Joe Locke's Four Walls of Freedom band and Lewis' work with the late Jaco Pastorius in the mid-1980s knows both are no strangers to kicking it hard. Kikoski's synth tone is reminiscent of Genesis' Tony Banks, but that's as far as the comparison goes. Kikoski is obviously a far greater improviser, and both Howard and Lewis are with him every step of the way. The darker "Wanting and Waiting" sounds like an outtake from a 1970s ECM session by John Abercrombie's quartet with pianist Richie Beirach. 

It's one of four tracks that feature Kikoski solely on piano, and here Lewis' touch is light while Howard's warm pizzicato provides the lyrical theme. The Midwestern vibe of the equally acoustic but more optimistic "Joyous" belies Kikoski's Jersey roots, while the title track's gentle synth washes and soulful groove border on but never extend into smooth jazz territory. The romanticism of "Florence's Reverie" suggests a less Jarrett-esque Lyle Mays. But Kikoski's closer, the solo "Variation 1," is most portentous. Kikoski, most often thought of as a group player, may well have a solo record in him. In the meantime, Lighter Way demonstrates a broader side to Kikoski that bodes equally well for the future. ~ John Kelman  
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/lighter-way-david-kikoski-sunnyside-records-review-by-john-kelman.php#.U6OJ17EguSo

Personnel: David Kikoski: piano, synth; Ed Howard: bass; Victor Lewis: drums.

Grant Green - Street Funk & Jazz Grooves

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:17
Size: 172,7 MB
Art: Front

( 9:08)  1. Grantstand
( 7:44)  2. Lazy Afternoon
(11:04)  3. Sookie Sookie
(11:44)  4. Talking About JC
( 5:39)  5. Windjammer
( 6:45)  6. A Walk In The Night
( 5:54)  7. I Don't Want Nobody
( 8:53)  8. Cease The Bombing
( 3:28)  9. The Final Comedown
( 4:54) 10. In The Middle


Following the 1993 hit "Tukka Yoot's Riddim" by US3, which featured a sample from his 1971 track "Sookie Sookie", Grant Green has been enjoying a revival of popularity. Blue Note records released this compilation of the guitarist to catch the interest. So of course "Sookie Sookie" is here in it's original 11-minute three-second glory. As are other funk faves "Talkin' About JC" and "Windjammer", which amply show why Green is such an influence on acid jazz. Certainly on this Best of Blue Note have picked the more groove-based numbers from his 1965-72 work with the label.

Street Funk is a fun package, ideal for summer evenings. It's perfect for those not familiar with his playing apart maybe from the odd sampled riff, or those who have heard the respect paid to him by contemporary jazz musicians. True, Green's output went further than soul-jazz and it would be wrong just to tag him the father, god-father, or what-ever familial reference you wish to make, of the current jazz trend. But then even if this compilation doesn't tell the whole story it's still a great introduction. ~ Phil Brett   http://www.amazon.co.uk/Street-Funk-Jazz-Groove-Grant/dp/B000025KO5

Street Funk & Jazz Grooves

Jimmy Cobb (feat. Peter Bernstein, Brad Mehldau & John Webber) - The Original Mob

Styles: Jazz, Bop
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:43
Size: 146,6 MB
Art: Front

(8:09)  1. Old Devil Moon
(6:31)  2. Amsterdam After Dark
(6:37)  3. Sunday in New York
(5:54)  4. Stranger in Paradise
(8:25)  5. Unrequited
(5:05)  6. Composition 101
(4:32)  7. Remembering U
(5:32)  8. Nobody Else but Me
(7:14)  9. Minor Blues
(5:41) 10. Lickety Split

Far more than the last surviving member of the Miles Davis Kind of Blue sessions, Jimmy Cobb is one of the last and foremost pioneers of modern jazz drumming. The Original Mob is a live studio recording at the legendary Smoke Night Club with three former students that are all accomplished artists in their own right. Pianist Brad Mehldau, guitarist Peter Bernstein and bassist John Webber join forces with Cobb for quartet that does far more than smoke but exhibits a controlled burn of swing that pushes the limits of all the participants in an intimate atmosphere made for such an event.  An old school based collective with offerings from each member that are inventive yet seemingly tailored for the smoldering groove Cobb works finesse and precision. 

There are some surprises including an amped up "Sunday In New York" and the deceptively subtle swing of "Nobody Else But Me." The exquisite Jimmy Cobb original "Remembering U" could easily be mistaken as a tune from the Great American Songbook. Peter Bernstein's odd metered "Minor Blues" moves with an effortless flow that permeates this release. Brad Mehldau's "Unrequited" while the most adventurous tune still embraces the land of rhythm and groove without sacrificing melody for meter. We close out with John Webber's "Lickety Split." Webber's original is indeed a rousing smoker and a perfect end to what might easily be called the sound track to a city at last call. You don't have to go home but you have to get the hell out of here!  Jimmy Cobb has been doing his thing for seven decades. Cobb is not getting older, he is getting even better! ~ Brent Black   http://www.criticaljazz.com/2014/05/jimmy-cobb-original-mob-smoke-session.html

Personnel: Peter Bernstein: Guitar; Brad Mehldau: Piano; John Webber: Bass; Jimmy Cobb: Drums.

The Original Mob