Friday, August 15, 2014

Bennie Green - Bennie Green Swings The Blues

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 74:09
Size: 169.7 MB
Styles: Bop, Trombone jazz
Year: 1960/2012
Art: Front

[3:57] 1. Been Walkin'
[3:07] 2. Blue Mambo
[3:51] 3. Love At Last
[4:43] 4. Penthouse Blues
[5:40] 5. Hop, Skip And Jump
[4:18] 6. A Bun Dance
[3:22] 7. Pennies From Heaven
[4:24] 8. Change Up Blues
[5:20] 9. The Shouter
[6:15] 10. Green Leaves
[7:23] 11. This Love Of Mine
[9:46] 12. Walkin' And Talkin'
[6:03] 13. All I Do Is Dream Of You
[5:54] 14. Hoppin' Johns

This budget LP from the long-defunct Mount Vernon label does not give the personnel or dates, kind of an odd omission considering that tenor saxophonist Jimmy Forrest was a much more commercial name in 1959 than leader/trombonist Bennie Green. The quintet set (which also features pianist Sonny Clark, bassist George Tucker and drummer Paul Gusman) does not quite stick to the blues, since there is a ballad and a couple of numbers based on other chord changes (including the familiar "I Got Rhythm" pattern). However, the playing is on a high level. Green and Forrest play off each other well, and the basic originals (highlighted by "Penthouse Blues" and "Hop, Skip and Jump") are all swinging. This obscure album has been reissued on CD in more recent times by Fresh Sound. ~Scott Yanow

Bennie Green (trombone); Jimmy Forrest (tenor saxophone); Sonny Clark (piano); Paul Gusman (drums). Recording information: Nola Penthouse Studios, New York, NY (1959).

Bennie Green Swings The Blues

Maggie Herron - In The Wings

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 42:21
Size: 97.0 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz, Piano jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[3:24] 1. I Could Sooner
[4:05] 2. J'attends
[3:58] 3. I'm The Answer To Your Problems
[3:52] 4. Stepping Out
[3:57] 5. Dans Le Vide De La Nuit
[6:40] 6. Up Early
[4:01] 7. Don't Ask Me To Stop
[4:05] 8. Powerful Dreams
[3:39] 9. It Could Happen To You
[4:36] 10. In The Wings

Forget what you may hear otherwise, Maggie Herron's In the Wings is Tin Pan Alley melded with nightclub jazz and Broadway—the serious side of the Alley, the Parisian jazz life, and Broadway with a musically literate bite, not the glitz and tinsel glamor too damn prevalent nowadays. Pianist and singer Herron has been hooked up with saxist Paul Lindbergh for four years, and the gent has woven himself tightly into his partner's musk and leashed free-spiritedness, and is probably not unused to feasting with a panther or two, a little Gato here, a little Dewey there, and plenty of trad foundations. The two do much to energize one another.

Take Herron's cover of Mitchell's Woodstock and you'll see a centrifugal blend of all the foregoing as well as a great close-out duet between Lindbergh and trumpeter Eldred Ahlo. If I call Herron's compositions 'muscular', it's only because she manages to anchor them so solidly in tradition while dancing atop everything, especially when letting go in melismatic larksong soaring above the melodies. Rain-muffled echoes of Piaf step in any number of times, not least because Herron likes to encant in le langue francaise every so often but also because there's a strong essence of Parisian cobblestone in her method, not to mention that side hint of grit lurking just at the perimeter—not always, not frequently, but there when needed in Herron's timbre. More than once, I was struck by the fact that this was what I wanted out of Chi Coltrane but never got. I was likewise struck by images of Deitrich and others in that middle-range of hers.

Singing, however, is far from Maggie's only card in the deck. A keyboardist since before fourth grade, she knows her way around the ebonies and ivories, showing this well over and over, playing above, amidst, and just below the rest of the ensemble as occasion and arrangement dictate. Numerous jam sections crop up—in the jazz tongue: improvs—and what at first may seem to be a collection of chart hopefuls is actually a melding of two worlds, just enough mellow rock in the lighter jazz mode to make both comfortable while meaty. ~Mark S. Tucker

In The Wings

El Chicano - The Best Of El Chicano

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 49:39
Size: 113.7 MB
Styles: Latin rock
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[4:40] 1. Viva Tirado
[3:56] 2. Brown Eyed Girl
[3:05] 3. El Cayuco
[3:51] 4. Tell Her She's Lovely
[4:37] 5. The Latin One
[3:17] 6. Sabor A Mi
[3:49] 7. Juntos
[3:44] 8. (Se Fua Mi) Cha Chita
[5:31] 9. Cubano Chant
[6:08] 10. Cantaloupe Island
[3:57] 11. Ahora Si
[3:01] 12. Gringo En Mexico

As part of Universal's 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection, the 12-track Best of El Chicano disc highlights the group's best-known material released in the early to mid-'70s. While the group has often been compared to Santana, they were a much tighter outfit, bypassing extended jams and sticking closely to their combined roots of soul, salsa, and Latin jazz. Beyond their two genre-defining hit singles, "Brown-Eyed Girl" (1972) and "Tell Her She's Lovely" (1973), the collection includes such album tracks as "Viva Tirado," "The Latin One," and "Juntos," mixed with boogaloo-tinged Latin jazz written by Tito Puente, Herbie Hancock, and Ray Barretto. Along with Cannibal & the Headhunters and the Premiers, el Chicano were among the first generation of Hispanic rockers to gain national attention and break out of the local East Los Angeles scene of the '60s and '70s. It's encouraging that their music is finally being given the proper attention it deserves. ~Al Campbell

The Best Of El Chicano

Roy Meriwether - The Art Of The Groove

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 45:28
Size: 104.1 MB
Styles: R&B, Piano jazz
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[7:16] 1. I'll Take Romance
[6:25] 2. I'm Just A Lucky So And So
[6:21] 3. Woodine
[4:08] 4. Me & Mrs. Jones
[7:14] 5. Blues For Big Maceo
[4:02] 6. A Tribute To You My Lady
[4:28] 7. Sexual Healing
[5:31] 8. Jonah

A multi-dimensional and self-taught virtuoso, Roy Meriwether blends jazz, blues, and gospel with classical elements in a unique and innovative style that has drawn enthusiastic crowds to night clubs, colleges, and concert halls across the country. Born in Dayton, Ohio, Mr. Meriwether started playing piano at the age of three and had composed two pieces before he was four. Shortly thereafter, he began playing in his father’s church, accompanying the family choir, and performing with gospel singers throughout the Midwest.

Mr. Meriwether turned professional with his own group at age 18 and has devoted himself to both composing and performing ever since. Reviewers are frequently impressed by his power. Critic Arnold Shaw once described him as a “two-fisted pianist who in this day of right-handed wizards has the sound of a champion, with thunder in his left hand and lightning in his right.”

As recently reported in the Scottsdale, Arizona Daily Progress: “Mr. Meriwether performs both standards and original compositions with a creativity that is nothing short of genius. Meriwether himself is the epitome of a ‘giving’ musician, at his best with a responsive, listening audience. He does not require it, but appreciates it and rewards it with dynamite delivered with the power his hands produce.” Mr. Meriwether's sound is unmistakable and his music is timeless! His latest releases “The Art Of The Groove”, "Inspiration", "Live at John Word's", and "Live at Gordy's", and he continues to tour regularly throughout the US and Europe.

The Art Of The Groove

Sherri Roberts - The Sky Could Send You

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:51
Size: 119,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:11)  1. You're Looking At Me
(4:34)  2. Jamaica Farewell
(3:51)  3. Before
(4:12)  4. Let Me
(3:25)  5. Tell Me My Name
(3:57)  6. The Moon's a Harsh Mistress
(4:42)  7. Return to Paradise
(5:21)  8. You're Nearer
(4:02)  9. Do It the Hard Way
(4:30) 10. Slow Hot Wind
(4:54) 11. Far from New York
(3:06) 12. Por Toda Minha Vida [For All My Life]

An appealing jazz singer from the San Francisco Bay area, Sherri Roberts has a nice voice, always swings, and is not afraid to stretch herself. On The Sky Could Send You she utilizes a variety of guest artists, including altoist Phil Woods on three numbers, but she is the main focus throughout. Her repertoire, which includes a rhythmically complex rendition of the Nat King Cole-associated "You're Looking at Me," two obscure Rodgers & Hart songs, Henry Mancini's "Slow Hot Wind," and Jimmy Webb's "The Moon's a Harsh Mistress," plus an original co-written with bassist Harvie S, is challenging yet she always sounds relaxed and sincere. This is a subtle release that grows in interest with repeated listenings, and is a welcome return to recording after seven years for Sherri Roberts. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-sky-could-send-you-mw0000347788

Personnel: Sherri Roberts (vocals, background vocals); Benjamin Lapidus (tres); Harvie S (bass instrument); Daria (background vocals); John Hart (guitar); Phil Woods (saxophone); Lew Soloff (trumpet); Pablo Vergara, David Udolf (piano); Tim Collins (vibraphone); Vince Cherico (drums); Daniel Sadownick, Renato Thoms (percussion); Skyler Jett (background vocals).

Howard Alden & Dan Barrett - Live In '95

Styles: Vocal, Jazz, Swing
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:30
Size: 164,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:22)  1. 9:20 Special
(8:28)  2. When Lights Are Love
(7:23)  3. Ask Me Now
(6:13)  4. Oriental Strut
(7:27)  5. Savoy Blues
(3:31)  6. Jeepers Creepers
(5:39)  7. That Old Feeling
(4:20)  8. It's Now Or Never
(4:52)  9. With Someone New
(4:24) 10. Perdido
(4:18) 11. Skylark
(9:28) 12. Fascinating Rhythm

Here’s a combo that typifies everything right about jazz: good writing, clever voicings and an exuberant group sound with excellent solos by everyone in the quintet. So the end result is happy, straightahead, multistyle swing. The band’s genre-hopping is heard immediately with a John Kirby-flavored intimacy on “9:20 Special.” That’s followed by the Benny Carter tune “When Lights Are Low,” with contrapuntal lines running through the first chorus and Alden chordally interpolating Woody Herman’s famous “Four Brothers” interlude in the release. From there the band switches to Monk for his seldom-heard “Ask Me Now,” a gorgeous ballad with the two-five changes musicians love to improvise on. 

The band has put together a collection of songs that draws all possible colors from Alden’s guitar, Barrett’s trombone, Chuck Wilson’s alto and clarinet, Frank Tate’s bass and Jackie Williams’ drums. The highlight is “Perdido,” which features a well-executed unison bop line. Halfway through the album, the quintet brings on singer Terrie Richards, who boasts fine intonation. Her best effort is the neglected oldie “That Old Feeling,” and she even resuscitates its intro. ~ Harvey Siders  http://jazztimes.com/articles/16931-live-in-95-the-howard-alden-dan-barrett-quintet

Personnel: Howard Alden (guitar); Howard Alden; Terrie Richards Alden, Terrie Richards (vocals); Chuck Wilson (clarinet, saxophone, alto saxophone); Dan Barrett (trombone); Frank Tate (bass instrument); Jackie Williams (drums).

Wayne Shorter - Wayning Moments

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1962
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:51
Size: 146,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:35)  1. Black Orpheus
(3:57)  2. Devil's Island
(3:43)  3. Moon Of Manakoora
(4:34)  4. Dead-End
(4:21)  5. Wayning Moments
(3:13)  6. Powder Keg
(2:58)  7. All Or Nothing At All
(4:51)  8. Callaway Went That-a-Way
(4:40)  9. Black Orpheus
(3:59) 10. Devil's Island
(4:47) 11. Moon Of Manakoora
(5:10) 12. Dead End
(4:21) 13. Wayning Moments
(3:38) 14. Powder Keg
(3:57) 15. Callaway Went That-a-Way

The liner notes, the originals of which are included with this reissue, reflect that "this is not experimental jazz." It isn't. It is finely performed mainstream jazz of the era in which it was made. While this recording does not equal the quality of the sessions to be recorded by Shorter later in the decade for Blue Note, it is pleasantly played bop. Shorter's tenor saxophone shows a conservative side, to be sure, and a young Freddie Hubbard hardly takes any chances. Still, the rhythm section anchored by pianist Eddie Higgins and including bassist Jymie Merritt and drummer Marshall Thompson, keeps a solid beat and the results are pleasant enough. 

Double takes of all but one of the eight charts is included, though there are really not any important substantive differences from the originals. The short recording times of each track limits the solos, but there is nonetheless an attractive simplicity infusing the set. Overall, this does not represent the best work of either Shorter or Hubbard, but it is still an interesting, if non-essential part of the discography of each of them. ~ Steve Loewy  http://www.allmusic.com/album/wayning-moments-mw0000036852

Personnel: Wayne Shorter (tenor saxophone); Freddie Hubbard (trumpet); Eddie Higgins (piano); Jymie Merritt (bass); Marshall Thompson (drums).

Sidsel Endresen & Stian Westerhus - Didymoi Dreams

Styles: Vocal, Alternative
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:17
Size: 136,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:34)  1. The Rustle Of A Long Black Skirt
(6:47)  2. Barkis Is Willing
(4:59)  3. Drawing An Arc
(2:26)  4. Limbs Leaves And Snowmobiles
(7:48)  5. Wayward Ho
(4:24)  6. Hedgehumming
(8:22)  7. Immaculate Heart
(5:23)  8. Wooing The Oracle
(2:55)  9. Hector
(4:32) 10. Dreamwork
(6:02) 11. The Law Of Oh

There was a time when a live performance was a one-time event; something experienced once by an audience, never to be experienced exactly that way ever again. Live recordings were costly affairs, and if the particular performance lined up for recording didn't turn out to be a great one or if there were other factors involved, like a bad piano well, the artist was, as they say, SoL. Nowadays, it's so easy/inexpensive to record live shows that many artists, like pianist Keith Jarrett, eschew the studio completely. Of course, this facility renders its own set of problems, not least among them an ability to discern between good shows and the less-often truly great one worthy of permanent documentation. So, it's still a serendipitous event when there's an exceptional performance, properly recorded, in a venue where all the other minutiae which add up to being just what the artist needs to deliver that exceptional show actually line up. 

Folks in attendance at vocalist Sidsel Endresen and guitarist Stian Westerhus' 2011 performance, at Bergen, Norway's Natt Jazz Festival even those who'd caught this intrepid improvising duo more than once since its official debut at Molde Jazz 2010 knew that this performance was one of those special ones, and the good news is that it wasrecorded. A little more than a year after the fact, Didymoi Dreams is now available for those who've been wondering what all the hubbub is about. While Endresen and Westerus do perform in venues around Europe, their primary turf is their native Norway, and North Americans who've been enviously reading about their performances at Natt Jazz, Molde, Punkt and elsewhere can finally hear this groundbreaking duo that relentlessly breaks every rule, while being absolutely aware of what it is they're breaking. It's great to see Endresen with two exceptional back-to-back recordings, after something of a drought since 2008's Live Remixes, Vol. 1 (Jazzland). Ha! (Rune Grammofon), released late in 2011, documents a 2010 live performance with Humcrush and is undeniably fine; but Didymoi Dreams even more successfully captures a vocalist capable of tremendous lyricism, with a warm, rich and unfailingly perfect voice, but one who has, in the past decade, developed a distinctive language all her own, a combination of seemingly impossible-to-articulate phonetics, unparalleled extended vocal techniques and unheard-of conceptual cells, all honed to the point where they are as easy to draw upon as breathing. 

Endresen no longer sings songs; instead, her voice has truly become an instrument as capable of texture and atmosphere as it is melody and, on occasion, lyric. Despite an intrinsic paradox in their approaches to sound Endresen absolutely acoustic, Westerhus unrepentantly electric they're a perfect match for each other. Since returning to Norway after five years living in London, Westerhus has earned a well-deserved reputation as the country's hardest working guitarist. Amidst a rapidly increasing body of work that includes performing on and producing trumpeter Nils Petter Molvaer's superb Baboon Moon (Sula, 2011) Westerhus has released a masterpiece of 21st century guitar in Pitch Black Star Spangled (Rune Grammofon, 2010), joining a rarefied group of guitarists who, along with fellow Norwegian (and Molvær alum) Eivind Aarset, seamlessly employ technology to create infinite potential for the landscape of contemporary guitar, as capable of flat-out aggression and ear-splitting sonics as he is painstaking depth and unrelenting beauty. Endresen and Westerhus clearly share a work ethic, dedicated to finding new ways to use their respective instruments in new aural landscapes, yet paradoxically one is all about the untarnished purity of an acoustic instrument (Endresen's voice), while the other is devoted to the use of a massive arsenal of electronic effects and amplification (in his choice setup, employing four amplifiers and enough effects to fill space that would accommodate a big band). Together, they create sounds that, were it not possible to actually see them live, would be simply unbelievable to most. Westerhus bows, picks, scrapes and slaps his strings, uses the kind of volume that allows him control over feedback and, at times, will spend as much time with his guitar cable unplugged using just his thumb to create harsh buzzes that he then processes, loops and expands as he does actually playing his guitar. 

Endresen, at times, sounds like she is speaking in tongues or, at least, in a language foreign to everyone but herself, occasionally injecting English or Norwegian but more often than not using phonetics that she twists and turns, front to back and back to front, with guttural sounds that can be used to create pulse and groove. Oddly, it all still somehow sounds like a language, with cadence and inflection sometimes deceiving the ear into actually thinking it understands what's being said. But, for a singer who, in her earlier days, released albums filled with profound melodism like Undertow (Jazzland, 2000), and Exile (ECM, 1994), Endresen has finally achieved some signposts along a journey that, in the past few years, has finally begun reaching at least some of its intended destinations. Together, Didymoi Dreams moves from avant-edged ethereal spaces and softer landscapes to rough, hard surfaces; from electronic warbles and feedback screeches often remarkably used, however, to create staggered pulses to unexpected moments of tension-releasing consonance. As experimental as this is, and as extreme as it can sometimes become, Endresen and Westerhus still prove that beauty can be found in what might appear to be the least-likely of places, with both "Hedgehumming" and "Hector" evoking a painful lyricism with an uncanny sense of structure. 

And that's what makes Didymoi Dreams such a stellar record. Free improvisation is often mistaken for aimless musings, self-indulgence and music that is outré just for the sake of it. Endresen and Westerhus are outré, no doubt about that; but with Didymoi Dreams, they've proven that it is possible to draw form from the ether, and play with absolute freedom while still focusing on building in-the-moment structural constructs. A vital document for those at the show; an essential one for those who'd like to hear free improvisation at its absolute finest. ~John Kelman  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/sidsel-endresen-and-stian-westerhus-didymoi-dreams-by-john-kelman.php#.U-zBGmNryKI

Personnel: Sidsel Endresen: voice; Stian Westerhus: guitar.