Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Rodney Whitaker - Ballads And Blues

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 69:45
Size: 159.7 MB
Styles: Post bop
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[ 7:26] 1. Whims Of Chambers
[ 7:29] 2. Alone With Just My Dreams
[ 9:02] 3. Ease It
[ 4:57] 4. The Way They Always Said It Should Be
[ 7:14] 5. The Hand Of Love
[ 5:37] 6. Wise Young Man
[10:32] 7. Centerpiece
[10:00] 8. For Rockelle
[ 7:25] 9. Big Foot

In this, his third release as a leader, Detroit-born bassist and member of the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra Rodney Whitaker sides with his Big Apple buds on a program of mainstream jazz standards and one pop tune. Tenor saxophonist Ron Blake plays lines everywhere between Coleman Hawkins and King Curtis, vibist Stephon Harris continues on the rise, pianist Eric Reed approaches monstrous levels, and drummer Carl Allen is solid as a rock. Trombonist Wycliffe Gordon joins on two of the nine selections. Whitaker takes charge on these cuts up front. A bass lead with Reed on "Whims of Chambers," a short unison line with Blake on "Ease It" before multiple solos (especially from the fantastic Reed), and the hot bossa-to-bop "The Hand of Love" all display his esteemed reverence for Paul Chambers. Whitaker's thick, syrupy, swing-laden sound, like Mr. P.C., is ever-present on his numerous solos and in his stance-aside-melody approach. "Whims" is particularly invigorating during the bridge, as playing from Whitaker and Reed seems to scamper, and Harris' vibes chase this; together with Blake, the four then incorporate a stair-step stop/start figure that sets the vibes on fire and puts the tenor sax in a soulful groove. Blake really sounds good on this date; Coleman Hawkins can be heard in his measured phrases during George Duvivier's excavated loping ballad "Alone With Just My Dreams," and on soprano sax, eschewing waves of love and happiness in "For Rockelle"'s steady, 120 beats-per-second fashion. Gordon's cameo roosts on the red hot "Big Foot" (informed by Harris on a patiently devoloped solo), and on the famous, easy, blues treatment of Harry Edison's classic "Centerpiece." Gordon plays trombone with the dexterity of J.J. Johnson on "Big Foot" and quotes "Chicago" on "Centerpiece." He seems in his element. With the musicians at their tenderest for Reed's "Wise Young Man," Harris is, again, the surrogate leader and delivers a cropped but substantial solo. Here is a jazz musician who doesn't need to play a flurry of notes to tell a story. On Carly Simon's "The Way They Always Said It Should Be," Whitaker's arco bass plays informant on a nicely rendered version of a soft rock tune. After the previous, more progressive jazz efforts, Whitaker has felt a need to play music "that doesn't have to be threatening or complex, some things that can help people relax." While not a collection of cool ballads and blues á la Chet Baker or George Shearing et al., as the title might suggest, the album is substantial, well-prepped, and nicely turned out. Recommended. ~Michael G. Nastos

Ballads And Blues

Donna Hightower - Take One!

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 59:12
Size: 135.6 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[2:26] 1. Perfidia
[2:47] 2. Maybe You'll Be There
[1:56] 3. Lover Come Back To Me
[2:14] 4. There, I've Said It Again
[2:29] 5. Because Of You
[2:52] 6. Please Don't Take Your Love Away From Me
[2:33] 7. C'est La Vie
[2:31] 8. Too Young
[2:38] 9. Baby, Get Lost
[2:26] 10. I Get A Kick Out Of You
[2:31] 11. Anytime, Anyday, Anywhere
[2:33] 12. Trouble In Mind
[2:46] 13. Every Day I Have The Blues
[3:06] 14. Gee, Baby, Ain't I Good To You
[1:45] 15. All Or Nothing At All
[2:20] 16. I Laughed To Keep From Crying
[1:37] 17. Lonesome And Sorry
[2:31] 18. The First To Know
[2:54] 19. The Blues Don't Care
[2:04] 20. Can't Help It
[2:25] 21. Born To Be Blue
[2:03] 22. I'll Be Around
[3:04] 23. A Cottage For Sale
[2:30] 24. I'm Alone Because I Love You

2 LPs in 1 CD: Tracks #1-12 from "Take One!" (Capitol T 1133). Tracks #13-24 from "Gee, Baby, Ain't I Good To You?" (Capitol ST 1273).

One of the highest tributes to any musician in a recording session is that he or she is a “Take One” artist. Donna Hightower is just that, a singer who delivers perfectly the first time she steps to the mike. In these late Fifties sides she demonstrated the phrasing, taste and skill which marked her as one the brightest new vocalist stars of the time. Backing her are two all-star groups conducted by Sid Feller and featuring some of the greatest soloists of the New York jazz scene, including Joe Wilder, Ben Webster, Hank Jones, Georgie Auld, Mundell Lowe, George Duvivier and Don Lamond.

Donna Hightower (vcl), Joe Wilder (tp), Ben Webster (ts), Mundell Lowe (g), Hank Jones (p), George Duvivier (b), Don Lamond (d), Sid Feller (cond).

Take One!

Antônio Carlos Jobim - Collection

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 48:41
Size: 111.5 MB
Styles: Bossa Nova, Brazilian jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[2:40] 1. The Girl From Ipanema
[2:48] 2. Agua De Beber
[2:52] 3. Corcovado (Quiet Nights Of Quiet Stars)
[3:31] 4. Águas De Março
[4:09] 5. Desafinado
[5:03] 6. Para Machuchar Meu Coracao
[2:45] 7. How Insensitive
[3:15] 8. Meditation
[2:14] 9. Samba De Uma Nota Só (One Note Samba)
[2:45] 10. Felicidade
[4:17] 11. Chega De Saudade
[3:49] 12. Quiet Nights Of Quit Stars
[2:19] 13. So Danco Samba (Jazz Samba)
[3:19] 14. O Morro Nao Tem Vez
[2:49] 15. Wave

It has been said that Antonio Carlos Brasileiro de Almeida Jobim was the George Gershwin of Brazil, and there is a solid ring of truth in that, for both contributed large bodies of songs to the jazz repertoire, both expanded their reach into the concert hall, and both tend to symbolize their countries in the eyes of the rest of the world. With their gracefully urbane, sensuously aching melodies and harmonies, Jobim's songs gave jazz musicians in the 1960s a quiet, strikingly original alternative to their traditional Tin Pan Alley source.

Jobim's roots were always planted firmly in jazz; the records of Gerry Mulligan, Chet Baker, Barney Kessel, and other West Coast jazz musicians made an enormous impact upon him in the 1950s. But he also claimed that the French impressionist composer Claude Debussy had a decisive influence upon his harmonies, and the Brazilian samba gave his music a uniquely exotic rhythmic underpinning. As a pianist, he usually kept things simple and melodically to the point with a touch that reminds some of Claude Thornhill, but some of his records show that he could also stretch out when given room. His guitar was limited mostly to gentle strumming of the syncopated rhythms, and he sang in a modest, slightly hoarse yet often hauntingly emotional manner. ~partial bio by Richard S. Ginnell

Collection

Sheila Cooper - While The World Is In Slumber

Styles: Vocal And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:55
Size: 131,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:51)  1. It's All Right With Me
(3:46)  2. Tulip Or Turnip
(6:52)  3. Warm Valley
(6:19)  4. Cry Me A River
(4:55)  5. An Occasional Man
(5:28)  6. Brookliner Boogaloo
(3:28)  7. Too Close For Comfort
(5:59)  8. In The Still Of The Night
(4:20)  9. 100 Easy Ways To Lose A Man
(5:08) 10. Love's Echo (For Calli)
(4:44) 11. Stardust

Alto saxophonist and singer Sheila Cooper combines a sense of jazz cool with humor and passion to bring new life to old treasures from the American songbook.

Canadian-born, New York-based singer, alto saxophonist, composer and arranger, Sheila Cooper is as saxophone legend Lee Konitz has noted "a singer on her horn and with her voice, and that's the best playing for me." Ever since she moved to New York, she has been wowing audiences at the city's top venues, including the Blue Note, Birdland, The Knitting Factory and Five-Spot.

And her European tours in support of her acclaimed first CD "Since You Were Mine" which featured world-class rhythm section Renee Rosnes, Scott Colley and Billy Drummond were triumphantly successful, playing to enthusiastic audiences in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, France, Czech Republic, Slovenia, Slovakia. "It was so thrilling to have people lining up in the break to have me autograph CDs," says Cooper. "I was quite overwhelmed by how excited they were."

Her follow-up CD, "While the World is in Slumber" featuring her trademark quirky, yet elegant renderings of popular standards, also includes two original compositions (one vocal, one instrumental). Her clever additional lyrics to Leonard Bernstein's little-known "100 Easy Ways to Lose a Man" wittily personalize and update a 50's gem. And her fresh, sexy voice is beautifully showcased by her imaginative and seductive arrangements of the songs, "In the Still of the Night" a line from which inspired the CD's title "Cry Me a River" and "It's All Right With Me." Also heard on the CD are the wonderful musicians John Hart on guitar, Chris Berger on acoustic bass and Marcello Pellitteri. More.. http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/sheilacooper2

Personnel:  Sheila Cooper: vocals, alto saxophone; John Hart: guitar; Chris Berger: acoustic bass; Marcello Pellitteri: drums

Phil Woods - American Songbook II

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:24
Size: 150,2 MB
Art: Front

(7:52)  1. Suddenly It's Spring
(6:54)  2. Careless
(5:40)  3. Last Night When We Were Young
(5:39)  4. I Remember You
(6:50)  5. I'll Take Romance
(5:21)  6. Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered
(6:43)  7. Yesterdays
(6:07)  8. Come Rain or Come Shine
(6:53)  9. Watch What Happens
(8:27) 10. Night and Day

The Phil Woods Quintet has long been famous for being the perfect outlet for the veteran altoist. In addition to bebop standards, the group usually includes inventive originals and lots of interplay between the five notable musicians, which in recent times has included trumpeter Brian Lynch and pianist Bill Charlap in addition to original members bassist Steve Gilmore and drummer Bill Goodwin. The American's Songbook II, like its predecessor, is a bit different in that all ten songs are standards from American popular music and usually shows rather than originating in the jazz world. Only "Careless" is a little obscure. 

The arrangements, often by Lynch, modernize the songs a bit while retaining their melodies and feel. There is some particularly beautiful playing along the way from Woods and, although this is not the most heated or intense recording by his group, it is quite pleasing, respectful and full of subtle adventures. ~ Scott Yanow  
http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-american-songbook-vol-2-mw0000481747

Personnel: Phil Woods: alto saxophone & clarinet; Bill Charlap: piano; Steve Gilmore: bass; Bill Goodwin: drums; Brian Lynch: trumpet.

American Songbook II

John Swana - John Swana & Friends

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:40
Size: 141,6 MB
Art: Front

( 9:40)  1. Oleo
( 7:49)  2. Before You
( 7:15)  3. Darn That Dream
( 6:18)  4. Out Of My Dreams
( 6:18)  5. You Don't Know What Love Is
( 8:42)  6. Straight, No Chaser
( 5:27)  7. I Didn't Know What Time It  Was
(10:07)  8. Pendulum At Falcon's Lair

John Swana is one of the most exciting trumpeters to arrive for a decade,” declares Mark Gardner, co-author of Blackwell's Guide to Recorded Jazz. Born in Norristown, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Philadelphia, Swana took up Trumpet at the age of 11. He was drawn to jazz at the age of 17 after hearing Dizzy Gillespie, and the interest developed into a passion while he was in college. There he began transcribing the solos of Freddie Hubbard, Clifford Brown, Miles Davis, and Tom Harrell. Swana has performed and toured with the Mingus Big Band. He has also played with well known jazz names such as Don Patterson, Shirley Scott, Mickey Roker, Stanley Turrentine, Harold Mabern, Cecil Payne, Johnny Coles, Ralph Peterson, Charles Fambrough, Bobby Watson, Trudy Pitts, Bootsie Barnes, Craig Handy, Chris Potter, Stephen Scott, Tim Warfield, Eric Alexander, Sam Newsome, Brad Mehldau,Vincent Herring, Uri Caine, Tim Armacost, Peter Leitch, Peter Bernstein, Ravi Coltrane, Ralph Bowen, Terrel Stafford, Seamus Blake, and Robin Eubanks. 

He has also been heard with Freddie Hubbard, Phil Woods, Ronnie Cuber, Eddie “Lockjaw” Davis, Clark Terry, Frank Foster, John Faddis, Slide Hampton, J.J. Johnson, Bob Minzer, and Charlie Persip. John Swana can be heard on recordings with: Benny Golson, Grover Washington Jr., Charles Fambrough, Craig Handy, Tito Puente, Bill O'Connell, Lenny White, Ricky Sabastian, Marlon Simon, Ed Simon, Dave Valentin, Cafe', Art Webb, Adam Holtzman, Ralph Bowen, Ron Blake, Peter Bernstein, Carl Allen, Mulgrew Miller, Benny Green, Kenny Barron, Tim Warfield, Lewis Nash, Clarence Penn, Kevin Hays, Chris McBride, Uri Caine, Peter Leitch, Marvin “Smitty” Smith, Ralph Peterson, Bobby Zankel, and Tom Harrell. http://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/johnswana

Personnel: John Swana (trumpet, flugelhorn); Bill Pierce (tenor saxophone); Tom Harrell (trumpet, flugelhorn); Mulgrew Miller (piano); Billy Drummond (drums).

John Swana & Friends

Lionel Hampton - Hamp: The Legendary Decca Recordings Disc 1 And Disc 2

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:41 (Disc 1)
Size: 153,7 MB (Disc 1)
Time: 66:04 (Disc 2)
Size: 152,7 MB (Disc 2)
Art: Front

Disc 1

( 3:11)  1. Flying Home
( 3:23)  2. Hamp's Boogie Woogie
( 3:07)  3. Million Dollar Smile
( 3:45)  4. Red Cross
( 3:31)  5. Hamp's Blues
( 3:17)  6. Evil Gal Blues
( 7:24)  7. Flying Home
(15:15)  8. Stardust
( 2:29)  9. Ribs And Hot Sauce
( 3:20) 10. Blow Top Blues
( 3:21) 11. Hey! Ba-Ba-Re-Bop
( 5:55) 12. Rockin' In Rhythm, Parts 1 And 2
( 2:54) 13. Limehouse Blues
( 2:49) 14. Tempo's Birthday
( 2:55) 15. Jack The Fox Boogie


Disc 2

(3:34)  1. How High The Moon
(3:13)  2. Three Minutes On 52nd Street
(3:06)  3. Red Top
(3:08)  4. Mingus Fingers
(3:20)  5. Midnight Sun
(3:16)  6. Chicken Shack Boogie
(3:09)  7. Central Avenue Breakdown
(3:23)  8. Drinkin' Wine, Spo-Dee-O-Dee
(3:18)  9. Moonglow
(3:07) 10. The Hucklebuck (Vocal Version)
(2:47) 11. Lavender Coffin
(2:51) 12. Rag Mop
(3:05) 13. I Wish I Knew
(2:31) 14. There Will Never Be Another You
(3:16) 15. Pink Champagne
(2:48) 16. Memories Of You
(3:13) 17. Time On My Hands
(2:34) 18. Easy To Love
(2:50) 19. Twentieth Century Boogie
(4:12) 20. Dancing On The Ceiling
(3:16) 21. How High The Moon

A very nice two-disc set indeed, with a wonderful cross section of Hampton's career, with the focus rightfully on the pre-1950 stage, with the final few cuts taking Hampton as far as a 1963 club date with trumpeter Charlie Teagarden. The music here is often delicate, spun from silver, and it's doubtful you'll find a better compilation of jazz vibraphone work. One fascinating highlight: Hampton's 15-minute version of "Stardust." 
~ Steven McDonald 
http://www.allmusic.com/album/hamp-the-legendary-decca-recordings-mw0000184511

Personnel: Lionel Hampton (vocals, piano, vibraphone); Dinah Washington, Joe James, Little Jimmy Scott, Sonny Parker (vocals); Eric Miller , Irving Ashby, Barney Kessel, Wes Montgomery, Billy Mackel (guitar); Ray Perry (violin, alto saxophone); Jerome Richardson (flute, alto saxophone); Herbie Fields (clarinet, soprano saxophone, alto saxophone); Marshall Royal (clarinet, alto saxophone); Jack Kelson, Jr. (clarinet); Earl Bostic, Gus Evans, Johnny Board, Willie Smith, Ben Kynard, George Dorsey, Bobby Plater (alto saxophone); John Sparrow, Corky Corcoran, Gene Morris, Eddie Barefield, Curtis Lowe, Jay Peters, Gil Bernal, Illinois Jacquet, Fred Simon , Johnny Griffin, Al Sears, Arnett Cobb, Bill Williams , Morris Lane (tenor saxophone); Lonnie Shaw, Jack McVea, Charlie Fowlkes (baritone saxophone); Manny Klein, Dizzy Gillespie, Ernie Royal, Roy McCoy, Jack Trainor, Ed Mullens, Leo Shepherd, Duke Garrette, Walter Williams , Lammar Wright, Jr., David Page , Joe Morris , Joe Wilder, Kenny Dorham, Al Killian, Snooky Young, Teddy Buckner, Benny Bailey, Wendell Culley, Jimmy Nottingham, Cat Anderson, Charlie Shavers, Charlie Teagarden (trumpet); John Morris, Paul Lee , Al Hayes , Harry Sloan, Fred Beckett, Andrew Penn, Jimmy Wormick, James Robinson , Sonny Craven, Chips Outcalt, Abdul Hamid, Jake "Vernon" Porter, Allen Durham, Lester Bass, Jimmy Cleveland, Al Grey, Benny Powell, Booty Wood (trombone); Dan Burley, Doug Duke, John Mehegan, Leonard Feather, Albert Ammons, Milt Buckner, Tommy Todd (piano); Buddy Cole (organ); Curley Hamner, Fats Heard, Fred Radcliffe, Ellis Bartee, George Jones, Earl Fox Walker, George Jenkins, Tom Montgomery, Lee Young (drums).