Sunday, June 29, 2014

Charlie Parker - South Of The Border

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 57:26
Size: 131.5 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1995/2001
Art: Front

[ 2:53] 1. Mango Mangue
[ 3:01] 2. Okiedoke
[ 5:51] 3. No Noise
[ 3:03] 4. My Little Suede Shoes
[ 2:40] 5. Un Poquito De Tu Amor
[ 3:05] 6. Why Do I Love You
[ 2:43] 7. Tico Tico
[ 2:49] 8. Fiesta
[ 2:42] 9. La Cucaracha
[ 2:49] 10. Mama Inez
[ 2:42] 11. Estrellita
[ 2:39] 12. La Paloma
[ 3:11] 13. Begin The Beguine
[17:13] 14. Medley The Afro-Cuban Jazz Suite

Verve gathers together all of the master takes of Charlie Parker's recordings with the swinging band of Afro-Cuban jazz pioneer Machito, along with ten other Latinized numbers that he cut in 1951-1952. Besides illustrating the willingness of producer Norman Granz to experiment and take Parker out of a small-group bebop straitjacket, this CD shows that Bird's improvisational style changed hardly at all in a Latin setting. He continued to run off his patented lightning bop licks over the congas and bongos and they just happened to interlock with the grooves quite snugly, although he did adapt his phrasing of the tunes themselves to suit their rhythmic lines. Included here is the spectacular "No Noise" that he cut as a guest with Machito and tenorman Flip Phillips in 1948, as well as Chico O'Farrill's epic Afro-Cuban Jazz Suite (also with Machito). For those who do not have the ten-CD The Complete Charlie Parker on Verve -- where all 14 selections can be found -- this is an inexpensive way to hear Parker in a refreshingly different context very nearly at the top of his form. ~Richard S. Ginnell

South Of The Border

Chicago Metropolitan Jazz Orchestra - Labor Of Love

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 55:29
Size: 127.0 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[5:34] 1. Reuben's Blues
[4:57] 2. Send In The Clowns
[4:40] 3. Just Friends
[4:42] 4. My Old Flame
[3:05] 5. All Of Me
[5:47] 6. My One And Only Love
[5:01] 7. Take The A Train
[4:38] 8. When Sunny Gets Blue
[4:34] 9. Samba Da Yo
[4:25] 10. A Little Minor Booze
[3:22] 11. Out Of Nowhere
[4:40] 12. Malaguena

The Chicago Metropolitan Jazz Orchestra’s first recording ( Live and Screamin’, a concert date from October–November ’97) was so impressive the thought here was that only a “labor of love” could possibly equal or surpass it. Well, the millennium has arrived, and with it the CMJO’s Labor of Love, and if the band’s second excursion can’t eclipse the flash and excitement of Screamin’, it comes close often enough to dissuade any reproval. As usual, the CMJO’s repertoire is conspicuously inspired by the Stan Kenton library with splendid charts written for Kenton’s orchestra by Gene Roland (“Reuben’s Blues”), Dave Barduhn (“Send in the Clowns”), Marty Paich (“My Old Flame”), Lennie Niehaus (“All of Me”), Willie Maiden (“A Little Minor Booze”) and Bill Holman (“Out of Nowhere,” “Malaguena”). The session’s midsection accommodates tasteful arrangements by John Kornegay (“Just Friends”), Tom Matta (“My One and Only Love”), Don Menza (“Take the ‘A’ Train”), Jerry Nowak (“When Sunny Gets Blue”) and the CMJO’s superb lead trumpeter, Kirk Garrison (Frank Catalano / Hary Kozlowski’s “Samba da Yo”). ~Jack Bowers

Lenny King, leader; Chris Sarlas, Gary Parker, alto sax; Ken Kistner, alto, baritone sax; Bryan Murray, Frank Catalano, tenor sax; Kent Lawson, baritone sax; Kirk Garrison, Jim Peterson, Nate Walcott, Ben Clark, Randy Kulik, trumpet; Hary Kozlowski, Mark Corey, Michael Joyce, Steve Larkin, trombone; John McAllister, bass trombone, tuba; Mike Flack, piano; Anthony Brock, bass; Michael Fiala, drums; Al Keeler, Jerry Steinhilber, Latin percussion.

Labor Of Love

Swing Amor - Gypsy Swing Jazz

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 36:23
Size: 83.3 MB
Styles: Gypsy jazz
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[2:34] 1. Lady Be Good
[2:49] 2. Minor Swing
[3:23] 3. Valse De Amor
[2:42] 4. Swing Easy
[2:32] 5. Made In France
[1:42] 6. Dark Eyes
[4:17] 7. Umbrella
[2:40] 8. Green Dance
[4:23] 9. In A Sentimental Mood
[2:10] 10. Blue Shapes On The Melody
[3:22] 11. Mire Pral
[3:44] 12. My One And Only Love

A gypsy swing band formed in 2004. Currently, the band performs in cafes and such based in Kumamoto Prefecture.

In April 2006, their first album GYPSY SWING JAZZ was released. It includes 12 gems, from originals to standard Jazz tunes. In July 2007, they participated in a compilation album "DJANGO FESTIVAL4" which

was released by a long-established Norwegian gypsy jazz label. The recording of their second album, three years after the first, is scheduled as well.

Gypsy Swing Jazz

Julie London - 2 albums: Yummy, Yummy, Yummy / You Don't Have To Be A Baby To Cry

Album: Yummy, Yummy, Yummy
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 33:25
Size: 76.5 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 1969/2012
Art: Front

[3:27] 1. Stoned Soul Picnic
[2:43] 2. Like To Get To Know You
[3:18] 3. Light My Fire
[2:52] 4. It's Nice To Be With You
[3:05] 5. Sunday Morning
[3:03] 6. Hushabye Mountain
[1:55] 7. Mighty Quinn (Quinn The Eskimo)
[2:30] 8. Come To Me Slowly
[2:03] 9. And I Love Him
[2:50] 10. Without Him
[2:54] 11. Yummy, Yummy, Yummy
[2:40] 12. Louie, Louie

Pop standards vocalist/actress Julie London was definitely at a transitional phase in her career when she cut Yummy, Yummy, Yummy (1969) -- the final entry in her decade-and-a-half long relationship with Liberty Records. Modern listeners will revel in the obvious kitsch factor of a middle-aged, old-school female who is crooning rock & roll. Rightly so, as the two musical universes rarely collided with a lucrative outcome. However, just below the genre-bending veneer lie interesting interpretations of concurrently well-known selections with the occasional sleeper gem thrown in. The lush and admittedly antiquated orchestration doesn't mask London's smoky and smouldering pipes, and some scores definitely work better than others. The opening cover of Laura Nyro's "Stoned Soul Picnic," the adaptation of the Beatles' "And I Love Her," and the remarkably evocative "Hushabye Mountain" from Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (1968) are each superior matches of artist with repertoire. Less successful is Harry Nilsson's "Without Him" [aka "Without Her"] as it lacks the urgency of Blood, Sweat & Tears' rendering or the pithy of Nilsson's original. The remake of Spanky & Our Gang's "Like to Get to Know You" is similarly short on soul, although it lends itself to the middle-of-the-road (MOR) feel, as does "It's Nice to Be With You." That said, the latter is infinitely more tolerable in this context than it was on the Davy Jones' warbled Monkees' single. The seeming incongruity of London's take on the Doors' "Light My Fire" isn't all that odd until she lets her hair down (so to speak) and slips into something right out of The Graduate's Mrs. Robinson. There are several instances of 'What were they thinking?,' such as the practically surreal "Mighty Quinn (Quinn, The Eskimo)" which sounds like it was the result of a Quaalude-related encounter. By the time we roll around to the title track, one can't tell if London is trying to be sexy or is simply hung over. "Sunday Morning" -- the second nod to Spanky & Our Gang -- also makes London come off as either bored or sleepy, either of which will be the effect that a majority of the album will inevitably have on 21st century ears. ~Lindsay Planer

Yummy, Yummy, Yummy

Album: You Don't Have To Be A Baby To Cry
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 29:46
Size: 68.2 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 1964/2012
Art: Front

[2:38] 1. Since I Fell For You
[2:23] 2. Night Life
[2:24] 3. Charade
[2:06] 4. You Don't Have To Be A Baby To Cry
[2:45] 5. Wheel Of Fortune
[2:36] 6. Wives And Lovers
[2:35] 7. Fools Rush In
[2:57] 8. That Sunday (That Summer)
[2:37] 9. I Wish You Love
[2:02] 10. There! I've Said It Again
[2:25] 11. All About Ronnie
[2:13] 12. I Want To Find Out For Myself

Wikipedia reports that this Julie London album is commonly mistaken to be entitled as You Don't Have To Be A Baby To Cry, due to mistitling on the album jacket's spine. This error had already happened previously with her 1963 album, The End Of The World, when it was mistitled as "The Good Life" on the album jacket's spine. I believe that Liberty Records intended it to be called Julie London.

You Don't Have To Be A Baby To Cry

Andrea Wood - Dhyana

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:33
Size: 152,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:37)  1. Comes Love
(6:49)  2. Pra Que Discutir Com Madame
(6:53)  3. The End Of A Love Affair
(3:46)  4. Hold On To The Center (House Of Jade)
(7:37)  5. Someday My Prince Will Come
(6:41)  6. Syracuse
(5:06)  7. My Favorite Things
(8:16)  8. For The Meantime
(4:36)  9. Chega De Saudade
(3:24) 10. A Time For Love
(7:42) 11. I Only Have Eyes For You

It is amazing the vast experience and maturty young jazz musicians and singers are able to accumulate these days. A case in point is jazz singer Andrea Wood. This Washington DC native studied classical voice and piano at the Duke Ellington School of Arts, has a Bachellor in Jazz performance at Michigan State University, studied reggae in Kingston, Jamaica, worked in France and sings in over four languages. Quite impressive! But even more impressive is how Wood applies all that knowledge and experience to her music. Wood moderate vibrato at the end of each line and astonishing vocal range inject her phrasing with a dramatic effect, quite effective in coveying the emotions of a song. Wood also did all the arrangements and each one reflects the diversity of influences on her music. 

The funk version of "Comes Love", the interesting fusion of calypso with samba rhythms on Haroldo Barbosa "Pra que Discutir com Madame" and the reggae arrangement of "I only have eyes for you" are some examples of this diversity."Someday my prince will come" starts with a classical feel before it changes into a swing groove. The arrangement at the beginning of "My Favorite Things" is similar to that of John Coltrane with some tempo changes at the end.Anothet talent of Andrea Wood is her abbility to sing in different languages as she does in perfect french and portuguese on the bossas "Syracuse" and Jobim's "Chega de Saudae". Wood also plays percussion and wrote the lyrics to Wayne Shorter's "Hold on to the Center".  http://jazzinsidemagazine.com/Members/wsostre/cd-review-andrea-wood-dhyana

Personnel: Andrea Wood - vocals, percussion, Noble Jolley - piano (1,3,5,8), Nathan Jolley - drums (1,3,5,8,11), Blake Meister - bass (1,2,3,5,8,9,11), Amy Bormet - piano (4,7,10), Terence Arnett - drums (4,7,9), Justin Parrott - bass (4,7), Elijah Jamal Balbed - tenor saxophone (4,7), John Lee - guitar (6.11), Herbert Beach - guitar (9), Victor Provost - steel pan (2), Tosin Aribisala - congas, percussion (2)

Melissa Walker - I Saw The Sky

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:23
Size: 141,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:13)  1. I'm Old Fashioned
(6:14)  2. Some Other Time
(4:51)  3. Nothing Ever Changes My Love For You
(5:41)  4. My Shining Hour
(4:51)  5. I Saw The Sky
(4:48)  6. Twilight Song
(6:23)  7. I Get Along Without You Very Well
(4:18)  8. Let's Take An Old Fashioned Walk
(5:09)  9. The Face I Love
(8:35) 10. Return To Me
(6:15) 11. I'm In Love

Canadian born Melissa Walker decided to break off law studies to become a barrister at the court of song, and wasn't that a bit of luck for us. On this her third Enja release, Walker proves conclusively that great standards need never when in the hands of an imaginative stylist able to restore their magic and glitter. Walker uses a variety of vocal modes and instrumental backup to deliver a set of special interpretations. A string quarter opens "Some Other Time" and then Walker startles with her pure soprano which starkly contrasts with the deep coloration of the strings. Continuing to find ways to use sidemen with ingenuity, they take a chorus on "The Face I Love" with Stefon Harris' vibes taking the lead. More contrast here as Walker wheels along in a much slower pace than that employed by Harris and cohorts as Walker intuitively works within and around the beat. Good stuff! "Let's Take an Old Fashioned Walk" reveals a debt to Sarah Vaughan, before Vaughan moved on to diva status with plummeting and plunging deliveries. 

But of all the tunes on the play list, it's a poignant and wishful thinking "I Get Along without You Very Well" where Walker gives a clinic on how to caress a lyric. Shunning dramatics, she employs gentleness, on the mark pitch and knowing phrasing to recite the story embedded in one of Hoagy Carmichael's finest compositions. Once more Harris' vibes provide the cushion that allows Walker to effortlessly glide through this lovely tune without excess emotional display. There is a smattering of lesser known and original material on the play list. One of the more expressive is "Return to Me", expressively arranged by Makoto Ozone, which gives Walker an opportunity to glide between soft and powerful regions of her vocal chords. While such guest artists as Kenny Barron are a nice extra attraction, it's the steady rhythm section led by pianist/arranger Shedrick Mitchell that deserves the award for best supporting musicians. ~ Dave Nathan   http://www.allaboutjazz.com/i-saw-the-sky-melissa-walker-enja-records-review-by-dave-nathan.php#.U62XnLG4OSo
 
Personnel: Melissa Walker - Vocal; Shedrick Mitchell, Kenny Barron, Makoto Ozone - Piano; Kiyoshi Kitagawa - Bass; Clarence Penn - drums; Stefon Harris - Vibes/Marimba; Vesselin Gellev, Deborah Bock - Violin; Olga Terlitsky - Viola; Ann Kim - Cello

Keith Jarrett & Charlie Haden - Last Dance

Styles: Straight-ahead/Mainstream, Piano Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:06
Size: 177,1 MB
Scans:

(10:18)  1. My Old Flame
( 9:36)  2. My Ship
( 9:34)  3. 'Round Midnight
( 4:23)  4. Dance of the Infidels
(11:54)  5. It Might as Well Be Spring
( 7:13)  6. Everything Happens to Me
( 9:32)  7. Where Can I Go Without You
( 4:25)  8. Every Time We Say Goodbye
( 9:07)  9. Goodbye

For the past 30 years barring a few diversions into classical repertoire, unexpected instrumentation like 1986's Book of Ways and a couple of home-cooked solo albums that, as with the 1986 recording No End (ECM, 2013), were out-of-character recordings where he overdubbed all the instruments himself pianist Keith Jarrett has been working two contexts and two contexts only: solo piano performances that, with the exception of the home-recorded The Melody at Night, With You (ECM, 1999), have all been recorded live; and his Standards Trio recordings in all but one instance featuring bassist Gary Peacock and drummer Jack DeJohnette that, with the exception of the first three recordings made in 1983 (ultimately collected together in the Setting Standards: New York Sessions (ECM, 2008) box) and 1993's Bye Bye Blackbird, have also been exclusively in-concert recordings.  Jarrett's prior years as a leader saw him engaged in a greater variety of settings, his earliest dating back to 1967's Life Between the Exit Signs (Vortex), a trio date featuring bassist Charlie Haden and drummer Paul Motian, two players with whom the pianist would continue working when he formed his so-called "American Quartet" in 1974 with saxophonist Dewey Redman for a series of recordings that began with Treasure Island (Impulse!) and ended with Bop Be (Impulse!, 1977) (even though Eyes of the Heart was released by ECM in 1979, it was recorded five months prior to that final Impulse! date).  

Both Jarrett's American Quartet and the European-based "Belonging Quartet" that featured saxophonist Jan Garbarek, bassist Palle Danielsson and drummer Jon Christensen were also distinguished from the pianist's subsequent recordings, both in his fully improvised solo recordings and the Great American Songbook explorations of his Standards Trio, in that they featured Jarrett's original compositions. Of course, in the right hands, improvisation is nothing less than in-the-moment composition, and so while Jarrett may appear to have deserted formal composition, both of his current projects are, it can be argued, still Jarrett in composition mode: one, in-the-moment with no preconceptions; the other, equally spontaneous but using the context of the jazz standard and Great American Songbook repertoires as its foundation. All of which made Jasmine (ECM, 2010) a release worth celebrating. Recorded at Jarrett's home (in his Cavelight Studio), it was an intimate conversation between two old friends Jarrett and Haden who'd not recorded together in over three decades, and who were brought together when the pianist participated in Reto Cardiff's film about the bassist, Rambling Boy (2009). Some things are never lost, and if Jasmine proved anything, it's that the chemistry shared by Jarrett and Haden may have been on hiatus for 30 years, but was no less potent, no less profound, when they found themselves recording a series of standards at Jarrett's home with no rehearsals barring a few quick run-throughs of the changes. 

The collaboration must have been a fruitful one, because Last Dance comes from those same sessions, another full 76 minutes of music comprised, once again, of songs culled from jazz standards and the Great American Songbook. The same strengths that made Jasmine such a wonderful and welcome diversion from Jarrett's solo and trio releases remain definitive on Last Dance. Haden demonstrates his usual unerring ability to find the absolutely perfect note played with equally impeccable tone whether it's in the spare yet ambling swing of his support for Jarrett's solo on the mid-tempo "Everything Happens to Me" or his own more intrinsically lyrical feature later in the same song; there's never a note wasted or a note out of place. As for Jarrett, while his career has been predicated on both virtuosity and an ability to spontaneously pull music from the ether, and as consistently superb as his solo and Standards Trio work has been over the past three decades, here in this context, he's never sounded so relaxed, so unfettered in a way that's different from his inimitable freedom in live performance. There is, of course, an energy that comes from an audience that feeds a musician and can make the difference between a good performance and a great one, but equally, there's something about the unconstrained freedom of playing at home with a longtime friend who shares your language. There's nothing to prove, only music to make, and while Jarrett has visited songs like Thelonious Monk's classic ballad "'Round Midnight" and Thomas Adair and Matt Denis' slightly brighter "Everything Happens to Me" before, they've never sounded this tender, this affectionate. Two tracks from Last Dance are alternate versions of songs heard on Jasmine: while Victor Young and Peggy Lee's "Where Can I Go Without You" is taken at almost the same tempo, Gordon Jenkin's "Goodbye" is taken at a slightly slower pace, demonstrating how even such subtle differences can impact the way a song unfolds. In both cases, however, while the basic arrangements are the same, they also show how masterful improvisers can play the same song night after night (in this case, possibly even twice on the same day) and keep it sounding fresh and original. 

Haden's health these days has made performance difficult, as he battles post-polio syndrome that can impair his hands and his voice, because his vocal chords are at times paralyzed. It's impossible to know whether he will be able to continue touring or recording, but he's always been a fighter, so who knows what the future will bring. But if Last Dance were to be a title with particular significance if it were to be the last recorded notes that Haden fans were to have the privilege of hearing, they'd be as confident, muscular and astutely intuitive as anything he's ever done. And while Jarrett, despite a run-in with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome that nearly scuttled his career in the mid-to-late '90s, seems to be in reasonable health (he's also, at 69, seven years younger than Haden) and, consequently, has plenty of performances left in him Last Dance will stand, alongside Jasmine, as two of his most beautiful and intimate recordings, played with a lifelong friend who, despite a thirty-year gap in their musical partnership, came back as if time had stood still and not a second had passed since they'd last collaborated. ~ John Kelman   http://www.allaboutjazz.com/keith-jarrett-charlie-haden-last-dance-by-john-kelman.php#.U6zCzLG4OSo
Personnel: Keith Jarrett: piano; Charlie Haden: double bass.

Last Dance

David Benoit - Standards

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:36
Size: 118,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:10)  1. Brothers Go To Mothers
(3:58)  2. Cute
(6:00)  3. Django
(4:09)  4. Blue Rondo Á La Turk
(4:38)  5. Some Other Time
(4:56)  6. Cakewalk
(6:01)  7. Stardust
(4:03)  8. Straight No Chaser
(5:13)  9. I Loves You Porgy
(7:24) 10. Waltz For Debby

Recorded in a simple trio format with bassist Brian Bromberg and drummer Gregg Bissonette, Standards is about as close as smooth jazz pianist David Benoit has come to the classic post-bop West Coast sound that's always been one of his primary inspirations. Benoit is simply not an adventurous soul as either a bandleader or a pianist, and so Standards consists mostly of familiar songs (John Lewis' "Django," Thelonious Monk's "Straight No Chaser," Bill Evans' "Waltz for Debby," Dave Brubeck's "Blue Rondo à la Turk") given safe, pretty performances that never come close to re-invention. It's simply not in Benoit's nature to take risks, but to a listener on the pianist's mellow wavelength, these performances are both technically excellent and completely heartfelt. The choice of a couple obscurities by Henry Mancini and Neal Hefti adds an idiosyncratic personal touch as well. Bold and audacious it may not be, but Standards is a low-key delight. ~ Stewart Mason   http://www.allmusic.com/album/standards-mw0000419968.

Personnel: David Benoit (piano); Brian Bromberg (bass instrument); Gregg Bissonette (drums).

Standards