Thursday, July 3, 2014

Various - Blues Of Summer

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 67:48
Size: 155.2 MB
Styles: Post bop, Straight ahead jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[5:29] 1. Danny Moss - Summer Blues
[7:08] 2. Allan Vaché - No Regrets (Blues For Hans)
[7:05] 3. Warren Vaché - Too Phat Blues
[7:30] 4. Buck Clayton - Black Sheep Blues
[4:57] 5. Butch Miles - Barney's Blues
[7:08] 6. Bill Allred - Dear Hans Blues
[6:01] 7. Dave Glasser - Intimacy Of The Blues
[4:14] 8. Bob Wilber - I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues
[2:26] 9. Oscar Klein - Farewell Blues
[5:15] 10. Wycliffe Gordon - St. Louis Blues
[5:29] 11. Warren Vaché - Blues Times 2 (H & S)
[5:02] 12. Harry Allen Quartet - Every Day I Have The Blues

Germany-based record company, Nagel-Heyer, has pulled together some of the best from their stable of performers for a compilation built around the blues, Summer blues to be specific. These tracks were culled from albums made between February 1990 and June 1999. Nagel-Heyer has an impressive stable of stars, all of them well-steeped in the jazz and blues tradition. There's Warren Vache and Allan Vache, trumpeter/ vocalist Byron Stripling, preeminent guitarists Howard Alden and Oscar Klein among the many jazzmiesters represented here. There are also a variety of instrumental combinations that perform the music including the swing big band of the late Buck Clayton, a fortuitous combination of jazz veterans mixed with younger players. The album from which this track is taken was cut just before Clayton passed on and is one of his many legacies. His "Black Sheep Blues," which combines outstanding ensemble and solo work, is one of the album's highlights. There are also cuts featuring trios, quartets, septets and other small groups. There's excellent solo track by New Orleans swing guitarist Oscar Klein. Only two vocals are included, Pug Norton on "I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues" and Warren Vache on an appropriate lament for Summer, "Too Phat Blues." Since the album is tied to Summer, depressing type blues are avoided while happy, bouncy and occasionally sultry, blues are emphasized. The only downer is the cha-cha-cha version of "St. Louis Blues" by Wycliffe Gordon and company.

All in all, this very good compilation should achieve its objective, i.e., to encourage jazz fans to buy complete albums from which these samples have been harvested. ~Dave Nathan

Blues Of Summer

Blue Mitchell Sextet - Blue Soul

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 55:54
Size: 128.0 MB
Styles: Trumpet jazz
Year: 1959/2008
Art: Front

[3:39] 1. Minor Vamp
[4:26] 2. The Head
[3:19] 3. The Way You Look Tonight
[3:54] 4. Park Avenue Petite
[4:03] 5. Top Shelf
[4:56] 6. Waverley Street
[4:08] 7. Blue Soul
[5:46] 8. Polka Dots And Moonbeams
[6:31] 9. Nica's Dream
[3:34] 10. Minor Vamp (Take 1)
[5:07] 11. Park Avenue Petite (Take 1)
[6:27] 12. Blue Soul (Take 2)

Trumpeter Blue Mitchell left his home in Miami for a short stint in New York City, headed back to Florida, and then to Los Angeles before his brief but vital career as a jazz trumpeter ended. This sojourn identified his sound, initially branded by the warmth of the Southeast, burnished by the hustle and bustle of the Big Apple, and polished by the West Coast cool school demeanor. In 1959, as Mitchell returned to Miami, he connected with Detroit trombonist Curtis Fuller and Philadelphia tenor saxophonist Jimmy Heath to form one of the most potent three-horn front lines in jazz history. Few knew how good they were until after the fact, but this recording, the third album for Mitchell as a leader, has him and his mates in full flight. Drummer Philly Joe Jones has a lot to do with the solid booster rocket-like propulsion on this primarily hard bop date, and check out his calypso variations on the second chorus of the otherwise easy blues swing and ultra melodic "Waverley Street." Credit Mitchell's street smarts and highly developed melodic inventiveness as the focal point for this definitive session. In many ways, this is a parallel album to the Miles Davis classic Kind of Blue, with subtle undertones driven by fourth-gear swing. The CD kicks off with the famous "Minor Vamp," of which Fuller's original take for the Savoy label has been remixed and layered, and is heard in the acid jazz dancehalls. It's a familiar sparse line, a two-note vamp tacked onto a lithe, perky melody that needs no critique -- it's simply great! More concisely rendered hard bop follows on "The Head," not complex by any means, but filled with plenty o' soul. The hardest line crops up during "Top Shelf," featuring a memorable, cutting, precise solo by Heath. Fuller and Heath lay out so you can hear in full dimension the cozy and warm persona of Mitchell on the ballad "Park Avenue Petite," but especially on the bright, easy swinger "Blue Soul," which most accurately approaches Kind of Blue. In tribute to his then boss, Horace Silver, "Nica's Dream" features Mitchell's muted trumpet over an underlying fresh bed of trombone and tenor sax. Even more so, Mitchell's deep blue horn shines on the standard "Polka Dots and Moonbeams," an organ of sheer beauty and one to be studied for those who need to learn that playing fewer notes more musically is an admirable quality. This is one of the most precious jazz recordings of a year that would soon give sway to the Blue Note sound, and is in many real and important ways as much of a prelude as any other statement. It's a must-have for all serious mainstream jazz fans. ~Michael G. Nastos

Blue Soul

Joan Chamorro - Joan Chamorro Presenta Eva Fernandez

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 59:17
Size: 135.7 MB
Styles: Latin jazz, Saxophone jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[4:17] 1. These Foolish Things
[6:06] 2. Comes Love
[5:00] 3. Cry Me A River
[5:04] 4. B.A.Blues
[4:40] 5. Whisper Not
[3:24] 6. Cheek To Cheek
[3:43] 7. Souvenir
[4:49] 8. Just Friends
[4:56] 9. My Ideal
[6:04] 10. My Favorite Things
[3:19] 11. I'm Fool To Want You
[4:08] 12. Georgia On My Mind
[3:42] 13. Old Folks

This second CD of 'Joan Chamorro presenta' is one more thing that makes me proud of my work. Eva Fernández is a musician since I met her, at age 7. She has always showed outstanding ability and sensibility. Her Petite Fleur in the Sant Andreu Jazz Band's first CD, with her friend Andrea Motis, has moved me a lot of times and has made me feel proud of her. Her alto sax sound is clean and powerful, and her work as a lead of the saxophone section is brilliant.

Eva is a soprano, alto and baritone saxophonist as well as clarinetist. On this record we can enjoy her good work with the soprano and alto saxophones, but what really stands out is her voice, which has a characteristic and special timbre that she modulates depending on what she wants to communicate. Her performer and jazz musician condition also allows her to express all sort of melodies in a different way. ~Joan Chamorro

With Scott Robinson, Dick Oatts, Ignasi Terraza, Andrea Motis, Esteve Pi, Josep Traver, Curro Gálvez, Víctor Correa, Jaume Ferrer, Sant Andreu Jazz Band.

Joan Chamorro Presenta Eva Fernandez

JazzXChange - Walk Tall: Tribute To Joe Zawinul

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 39:44
Size: 91.0 MB
Styles: Hard bop
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[3:40] 1. One For Newk
[4:50] 2. Money In The Pocket
[6:25] 3. Walk Tall
[5:55] 4. Mercy, Mercy, Mercy
[4:56] 5. Mystified
[5:27] 6. Scotch & Water
[4:32] 7. Country Preacher
[3:55] 8. Sticks

During his fifty year career, Joe Zawinul pioneered the development of many jazz styles. Together with Cannonball Adderley he added Soul to Jazz, and with Miles Davis, on those classic recordings In A Silent Way and Bitches Brew, he invented Electric Jazz. Later , with Weather Report and his Zawinul Syndicate he included ethnical elements to create a borderless, panglobal jazz music.

After his death in 2007, JazzXChange took on the challenge of paying tribute to the keyboard wizard who is still the most important European in the history of jazz. Their new album, Walk Tall, recorded for BlueNote Germany, contains a selection of tunes composed by the Austrian ambassador of music back in the 1960’s during his time with the Cannonball Adderley Band.

These early compositions of Josef Erich Zawinul include the title track Walk Tall (written in honour of Martin Luther King), Mercy Mercy Mercy (best selling jazz recording at that time with over a million copies sold), Scotch and Water, Country Preacher and more. These are interpreted by JazzXChange respectfully and with great musical ingenuity. JazzXChange dismantles and then reassembles the components of these classics, but maintains their essence to deliver a compact and tasty sound.

In 2006, with their debut album Well, You Needn't, JazzXChange turned tunes by Sonny Rollins, Milt Jackson, Benny Golson, Thelonious Monk, Joe Henderson etc. into modern jazz stylings. The extensive reviews by print media, television and radio focused not only on a great debut by this German outfit, but also recognized the unusual personnel of the band. Next to the most experienced professionals of the European jazz scene were two prominent German businessmen: August-Wilhelm Scheer, founder of IDS Scheer and member of the supervisory board of SAP and Werner Seifert, CEO of Deutsche Boerse until 2005. After hearing August’s articulate baritone sax and Werner’s bluesy keyboard style on Well, You Needn't , the media took up the transition from manager to musician with a big halo with headlines such as From stock exchange to JazzXChange. Amongst the vast publicity for the two unconventional managers, the (actual) music lost out from time to time in the media reporting. Now the excitement has cooled a little, the new album, Walk Tall should earn more space in the music pages rather than the business section of the papers. The new album, with it’s first rate musicianship, has certainly earned that right.

Walk Tall: Tribute To Joe Zawinul

Terri Brinegar - As I Am

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:22
Size: 106,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:09)  1. Three Words
(3:36)  2. The Love Of My Life
(3:49)  3. Sweet Passion
(3:29)  4. I Got The Right
(3:17)  5. As I Am
(4:12)  6. Paradise
(3:35)  7. Give It Away
(4:48)  8. Home
(3:12)  9. Let Me Come Back Home
(5:27) 10. Why You Treat Me So Bad
(3:45) 11. Gone
(2:59) 12. Sunshine

Terri has been surrounded by music from a very young age - her parents were Bluegrass musicians. At the age of 9, Terri began violin lessons with the idea that she’d play fiddle in the family band. However, her classical music training lead her in a different direction. She chose upon classical voice as her major study at North Texas State University, with a full academic scholarship. She was the winner of many state-wide competitions and graduated with honors. New York City was her next venture when she was accepted into the famed Juilliard School of Music. Terri soon realized though that she did not want a professional career as an opera singer. So she moved to Los Angeles where she was exposed to many other thriving genres of music, namely Rock & Roll, Blues, R&B, and Soul. It was here she joined her first band and started writing music. She sang in many Blues and R&B bands and even performed at the Monterey Bay Blues Festival, the Catalina Blues Festival, House of Blues, BB King’s Blues Club, and countless concert venues. In January of 2006, she moved to Nashville to begin her next journey, focusing on songwriting and of course, singing.  http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/terribrinegar

Opus 5 - Progression

Styles: Trumpet And Flugelhorn Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:06
Size: 142,6 MB
Art: Front

( 8:51)  1. Snow Child
(10:06)  2. Fear of Rooming
( 9:17)  3. Climbing
(10:03)  4. Walk a Waltz
( 9:19)  5. Geraldine
( 7:41)  6. Inner Balance
( 6:46)  7. For Instance, Take This

In the world of jazz the quintet is an established tradition. The standard quintet format has been one of the most common throughout the history of the music. It's a hard format to mess up, but it's an even harder format in which to stand out. On their most recent recording, Progression, Opus 5 stands out as a group rooted in tradition but always exploring possibility. A esthetically the group follows in the spirit of some of the great quintets of the past like Art Blakey and Miles Davis's second quintet. But each band member's voice shines in their solos and the band as a unit creates organic and moving music. All familiar names on the Criss Cross label, these five players all have years of playing experience with each other. Their comfort and joy in playing with each other can be found on every track. Unlike their first two releases, Progression, features wholly original material from the band members. Drummer Donald Edwards contributes the opening and closing tunes on the album, both energetic swingers. The last tune, "For Instance, Take This," flies by at a burning tempo and pianist David Kikoski lets the sparks fly in his solo. Bassist Boris Kozlov and Edwards seem to effortlessly match his every twist and turn. 

Kozlov contributes two originals to the setlist. "Walk a Waltz" is a curiously titled piece considering it moves through several time signatures including 7/8 and 10/8. Kozlov also contributes "Inner Balance," a beautiful and haunting Shorter-esque ballad. Alex Sipiagin's masterful phrasing and dark, warm sound on the flugelhorn match the song's tone perfectly. "Climbing" is the sole Sipiagin composition on the album. Adding in overdubbed muted trumpet, to create a third voice, the three melodic lines weave in and out of each other perfectly. Saxophonist Seamus Blake contributes his original tune "Fear of Rooming" a fun, bouncy tune in three. Each member of the band takes their turn in the spotlight at various points in the music on Progression, but this band is a perfect example of the old jazz cliché that a band is "more than the sum of its parts." Though rooted in swing music, these musicians are constantly stretching the limits of harmony and time. They take risks in the music and the risks pay off because of the strength of the band as a whole. ~ Andrew Luhn   http://www.allaboutjazz.com/progression-opus-5-criss-cross-review-by-andrew-luhn.php#.U7R6n7F8eM0
 
Personnel: Alex Sipiagin: Trumpet and Flugelhorn; Seamus Blake: Tenor Saxophone; David Kikoski: Piano; Boris Kozlov: Bass; Donald Edwards: Drums

Lori Lieberman - Takes Courage

Styles: Vocal Pop
Year: 2010
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 57:34
Size: 92,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:49)  1. Early Wednesday Morning
(4:32)  2. Another Galaxy
(4:28)  3. New York Mining Disaster
(4:18)  4. Gun Metal Sky
(4:19)  5. The Opposite Of Love
(3:38)  6. Only With You
(4:13)  7. When You Were Mine
(5:18)  8. He Needs You
(4:23)  9. Bus Stop
(5:04) 10. More Than This
(4:54) 11. My Baby Needs A Shephard
(4:13) 12. Killing Me Softly
(4:18) 13. Takes Courage

Leonard Cohen came up on stage in one of her concerts and sang “Bird On A Wire”. Don McLean invited her to be a part of his documentary, “American Troubadour,”   Judy Collins called her a gifted songwriter.Highly regarded among her peers and younger artists alike, this legendary artist has gone on to record LP after CD, gleaning the respect of an ever-changing industry  a loyal and devoted base of fans. Best known for Killing Me Softly”, written during her Troubadour days in Los Angeles when her girlfriend, writer Michele Willens, took her to a  Don McLean in concert, she developed her producing and arranging skills into a career that has spanned over fifteen albums. Featured in author, Leo Blokhuis’ book, “Sounds Of The West Coast” which won the Golden Tulip Award, he devotes a chapter that details Lori Lieberman’s early music California in the seventies, the Sunset Strip and the West Coast club circuit that included singer-songwriters such as Joni Mitchell, Jackson Browne, and The Eagles. A true full circle moment occurred a few weeks ago, when she met Don McLean for the first time at his concert in Los Angeles, where he credited the song to Lori Lieberman, and sang its inspiration, “Empty Chairs”, to her. Born in Los Angeles but raised in Switzerland, among Lieberman’s early musical influences were Francoise Hardy, Tom Rush, Cat Stevens “and anything from the States I could get my hands on”.

After attending University in Boston, she signed her first record deal with Capitol Records. The next five LPs on that label included some of the leading studio musicians a young Larry Carlton, members of the “L.A. Express”, Sneaky Pete, and pianist Joe Sample. She toured the U.S. with Randy Newman, Billy Joel, Leonard Cohen, John Sebastian and Rick Nelson, to name a few. For several years,as the  music business went from acoustic to disco, Lori Lieberman spent time away in the hills of Malibu to raise three children. She returned to recording under the guidance of Joseph Cali, who first had the idea to record her with his then partner, Mark Levinson, as a two mic live experience. She was nominated for the Golden Note Award for excellence with “A Thousand Dreams”, on Pope Music, and two CDs followed “Home Of Whispers”, and “Gone Is The Girl”, became staples of the Audiophile community, who embraced her stunning songs, warm vocals and rich orchestrations. Rich Warren, of WFMT Chicago, named “Home Of Whispers” as his number one, most recommended CD of that year. With the release of “Monterey”, on Drive On Records, co-produced by Lori Lieberman and Joseph Cali, with songs composed and arranged by Lieberman, she toured the U.S., receiving airplay as the Indie market increased, highlighting her natural and acoustic sound. “Gun Metal Sky”, released in 2009, marked her debut as an orchestrator for strings and woodwinds. While most of the songs were self-penned, she included interesting and unique versions of songs by some of our most beloved songwriters Emmylou Harris, The Bee Gees, Paul Simon, and the Hollies. Three songs were added to Sirius Radio’s “The Loft”, and performances that included the City Winery in New York, and a premiere concert tour of the Netherlands led to distribution throughout Europe, and a deal with V2 Records...More  http://lorilieberman.com/wordpress/bio/

George Kahn - Jazz Deluxe

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:32
Size: 141,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:41)  1. Bourbon Street Strut
(4:56)  2. Smooth Jazz Seven
(5:00)  3. Silver Blues
(6:40)  4. Miles Journey
(5:31)  5. Ritmo Jazz
(4:09)  6. Your Life
(5:29)  7. Summer Carnival
(4:44)  8. Dream Lover
(3:35)  9. El Rico Montuno
(6:18) 10. Riding On Air
(4:04) 11. Time Flyer
(5:19) 12. Havana Nights

A major force in the Los Angeles jazz community since the late 1990s, pianist-composer George Kahn recently released his sixth CD, Cover Up! Made available through his Playing Records label, Cover Up! features Kahn's trio with bassist Brian Bromberg and drummer Alex Acuna, plus occasional guests. The brilliant lineup of players interprets four catchy originals as well as some surprising , recognizable rock tunes that are transformed into jazz. “People always respond to songs they know,” says George Kahn. “Thinking about it, I realized that I'd always wanted to create jazz versions of tunes that one does not normally hear in a jazz setting. Rather than perform ‘Stella By Starlight' or ‘Autumn Leaves' yet again, I thought it would be fun to play songs that I liked while I was growing up, usually from the late 1960s and early ‘70s and some newer tunes. I settled on songs by Cream, Pink Floyd, Bill Withers and John Mayer along with the Beatles.” Rather than performing watered-down versions of pop tunes, Kahn created arrangements that reinvented the songs as swinging and hip jazz. “‘Sunshine Of Your Love' was difficult initially, but when I played it in the studio with Brian Bromberg and Alex Acuna, it really jelled. 

‘Comfortably Numb' has a very open and interesting chord progression that allows it to work very well as a ballad. The first time I heard ‘Waiting On The World To Change,' I loved the song and realized that it was really a gospel tune although John Mayer does not play it like that. We slowed it down, added a couple of chord changes and there it was.” Also quite unusual is the meshing together of the Beatles' “Yesterday” and Jerome Kern's “Yesterdays.” Rather than play it as a conventional medley, the two songs are combined in a way that keeps listeners guessing as to which song is which. George Kahn has been playing with Brian Bromberg and Alex Acuna on an occasional basis since they met in 2004 and they formed the nucleus of his previous CD “…Compared To What?“ There is clearly a strong chemistry between the three of us. When I thought about doing a new album, they were the first musicians I thought of. I love playing with them, and the groove we get is so natural and infectious.” Tenor-saxophonist Justo Almario and trumpeter John Fumo, who are on four selections apiece, are old friends while the versatile guitarist Pat Kelley adds a great deal to the music on two cuts. Bill Withers' “Use Me” features the young singer Courtney Lemmon. “My wife is a vocal teacher and Courtney was one of her students when she was attending Santa Monica High School around eight years ago, She was also our babysitter at one time and had a great voice even then. She sang a song on my previous CD, studied at the New School in New York, moved back to the Los Angeles area a year ago, and was a natural to feature on the Bill Withers song.” 

George Kahn grew up in New Rochelle, New York, studying classical music from the age of nine. He began composing while in high school and was always interested in improvisational music, studying the music of Charles Ives, John Cage and Karlheinz Stockhausen as a Composition Major at Brandeis University. He did not start to explore jazz until his last years at Brandeis, being particularly affected by John Coltrane's Kulu Se Mama, which opened his mind towards what was possible in music. After graduating, he lived on Cape Cod for a couple of years, did some gigs in Boston, toured the East Coast with a disco band and eventually moved to California in 1976. “I decided that it was time to stop saying I was a musician and actually be one.” Kahn worked in an improvising New Age group for a few years, studied arranging with Spud Murphy, and performed in a variety of settings. In the latter half of the 1990s he made his move, forming the Playing Music label and Sudhana Music Publishing. Since then he has released six CDs. “Each of my albums features a wide range of styles which are tied together by my compositional and playing style. For my debut Out of Time, I decided to shoot high and get my dream drummer, Billy Higgins. After I talked him into working on the project, he recommended bassist Richard Reid. Everything fell into place after I got Billy. I was surprised to find out that he did not read music. But by the second run through, he had every song down. That guy had the biggest ears in the world, he was just phenomenal.” Next out was Conscious Dreams, an un-issued recording from 1985 that is more in the New Age vein, featuring George Kahn on all of the instruments. Freedom Vessel mostly has Kahn in a trio with the late bassist Dave Carpenter and drummer Joe LaBarbera, plus guest spots for altoist Eric Marienthal and Bobby Rodriguez. The emphasis is on the pianist's infectious originals. 

Midnight Brew uses Kahn's working trio of the time (with bassist Karl Vincent and drummer M.B. Gordy) as the nucleus behind such all-stars as Marienthal, Justo Almario, guitarist Larry Koonse, trumpeter Bobby Rodriguez and singer Tierney Sutton. The Kahn-Bromberg-Acuna trio appears for the first time on …Compared To What?, assisted by Almario, Marienthal, John Fumo and guitarist Ira Ingber. “Naturally I like to think that each CD is stronger than the previous one,” says the pianist. “It is like having building blocks, with each new project building on the ones of the past. One of Keith Jarrett's focuses is to be riff free, not constantly playing the riffs and phrases that you already know and instead concentrate on flowing improvisation. That is my aim in my playing.” George Kahn, who performs frequently in the Los Angeles area, including an annual Jazz For The Homeless fundraiser for the charity PATH (People Assisting The Homeless) and benefits for public school music programs, looks forward to touring again in the near future. “My main goal is to share my music with as many people as possible. I believe that there is a great deal of life in West Coast Jazz. It is not only viable but has the opportunity and ability to broaden its base. I purposely picked out songs that might get a John Mayer fan who has never heard a jazz album, to possibly explore this CD because they know some of the songs. I hope that Cover Up! will give more people a door into this wonderful music.” Both accessible and consistently creative, “Cover Up!” is George Kahn's finest recording to date, containing music that is difficult to resist. Bio ~ http://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/georgekahn