Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Laura Baron - Heart Of The Great Unknown

Size: 109,0 MB
Time: 46:42
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Jazz/Folk/Pop Vocals
Label: Laura Baron
Art: Front

01. Your Hands (3:37)
02. Fragile (4:14)
03. Mary In A Sardine Can (4:08)
04. A Little Note (4:56)
05. Build Me A Fire (3:41)
06. Heart Of The Great Unknown (Song For Ruchi) (5:45)
07. Tell Me More (4:30)
08. Ripple (4:05)
09. Never Meant To Know (4:27)
10. Fever (3:47)
11. Sometimes You're Humble (3:27)

It’s the most complex form of easy listening, and that’s meant as a compliment. Tolling the line that blurs soft-core blues and jazz with acoustic guitars, sentimental flavors and an inherent beauty that only few can truly portray. You’re either born with it or you’re not. It can be exciting and bland, difficult and simple, intriguing and predictable.

Washington area musician Laura Baron has perfected this formula. Whatever it entails, whatever it embodies, the singer is a master of her craft, a craft, it must be noted, that is much harder to pull off than it first appears to be. Too often dismissed as a public radio trope reserved for only pretentious ears and middle-aged poets who wear multiple scarves during summer months, the easy listening, influences-heavy road is one often traveled, yet rarely conquered.

Yet with her latest 11-song set, “Heart of the Great Unknown,” Baron has no problem exploring the depths of that path. Imperative to her engine is that voice of hers, a chameleon-like tenor that has no fear of emotion or the bounds typically tied to genre labels. She transcends them with her deep, affecting croons, no matter the route, no matter the territory.

The best moments come when she decides to veer into the jazz world. Opener “Your Hands” is as moody as they come with its light guitar picking and elegant piano playing. By the time the brush-heavy drums appear, the dark atmosphere is already set for the arrival of some 1940s-era horns that only spice up the glamour these three minutes and 37 seconds exude.

“Tell Me More” and “Fever,” meanwhile, sound like the genesis of a “Mad Men” soundtrack. Her voice is seductive, slithering through the swing with so much confidence and imagination that even the scats never feel overdone. The former, a retrograde calypso-heavy original that beams sunshine, contrasts brilliantly with the latter, a 1956 Cooley/Blackwell treasure smothered in sultry smoke as Baron’s understated approach defines the performance’s murky mood.

From there, things morph into a more traditional setting. “A Little Note” is a fine version of adult-contemporary with its pop sensibilities and tight structure. The empowering narrative Baron’s voice tells over the sparsity of mandolin is perfect for a Lilith Fair stage near you. “Sometimes You’re Humble” and “Never Meant to Know” both take that simplicity and strip it down to tender folk with the addition of strings (“Know”) and the innocence of the singer’s purposely plaintive voice (“Humble”).

Even a nod toward world music succeeds. “Heart of the Great Unknown (Song for Ruchi)” might be lyrically suspect (occasional pushes for overt dramatics sometimes get in the way of Baron’s natural talent), but the Indian influences are as good as any you might be able to find this side of the beltway as they accentuate Baron’s versatility in tone. One tabla and a wooden flute later, and what you have is a great change of pace on a record not afraid to embark on roads littered with difference. Impressively, the track that precedes it, “Build Me a Fire,” works as a straight boogie that again makes good use of those horns. Like the seasoned veteran of the performance universe that she is, the songwriter blends into traditional blues competently and affectingly to get her point. It all adds up to a type of embarrassment of riches, her talents expanding the definition of the word “bounds.”

Why? Because Laura Baron’s latest record knows nothing of what they are. On an album devoid of all fear, the artist only rarely slips up, though when a set of songs appears this ambitious, it’s almost unfair to consider any possible discrepancies with a heavy hand. Folky. Jazzy. Worldly. Bluesy. Poppy. The record never overreaches, even when it seems like it should.

Indeed, the only thing easy about this kind of stuff is the listening. It’s the creating part that’s hard. And as “Heart of the Great Unknown” proves without any shadow of a doubt, Laura Baron has that part of the equation darn near perfected. ~by Colin McGuire

Heart Of The Great Unknown

Akiko - Commencement

Size: 131,1 MB
Time: 56:28
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz: Hammond Organ
Art: Front

01. Blues For Bandit (5:15)
02. Funky Girl (5:06)
03. When Johnny Comes Marching Home (5:10)
04. How Deep Is Your Love (5:53)
05. Give Me The Simple Life (5:07)
06. Spanish Flea (4:38)
07. It's Easy To Remember (6:12)
08. L-O-V-E (6:08)
09. Don't Misunderstand (6:08)
10. Commencement (6:47)

Akiko started playing the organ at the age of 3. After graduating from Osaka College of Music, her career as a jazz organist started immediately. She immigrated into NYC in 2001 and have been blessed with so many celebrated music artists such as Lou Donaldson, Grady Tate, Dr. Lonnie Smith, Jeff Hamilton, Frank Wess, Bernard 'Pretty' Prudie and Jimmy Cobb.

Akiko joined Lou Donaldson Quartet in 2007 and have been toured worldwide in Europe, Asia including jazz clubs and jazz festivals in the United States since then. Meanwhile, her own band has headlined many well-known jazz venues as Vail Jazz Festival, Blue Note, Dizzy's Club Coca Cola in Jazz at Lincoln Center.

As her mentor, the legendary Dr. Lonnie Smith describes, “Akiko's playing is like watching a flower blooming, a bird spreading her wings in the music world. Akiko is here to stay.” Her future is bright and promising.

Commencement

Debbie Orta - Child's Play

Size: 123,7 MB
Time: 52:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz Vocals, Bossa Nova
Art: Front

01. The Way You Look Tonight (Feat. Sammy Figueroa, Percussion) (3:50)
02. I've Grown Accustomed To His Face (4:27)
03. You're Mine, You (2:06)
04. You Are My Child (5:38)
05. Medley: I'm Through With Love/Down With Love (4:38)
06. Bossa Nova Song (4:38)
07. Child's Play (2:52)
08. A Song For You (5:37)
09. Taking A Chance On Love (Feat. Othello Molineaux, Steel Drum) (3:08)
10. Jericoacoara (6:04)
11. Make Someone Happy (4:29)
12. Both Sides Now (5:26)

"Outstanding" "You Are My Child is the most beautiful thing I've ever heard" "great voice" "amazing flute solo" "wow, incredible arrangements" "awesome band" are just some of the sentiments from listeners of this brand new indie release by Debbie Orta. This versatile jazz vocalist and songwriter performs her favorite songs from The Great American Songbook accompanied by a stellar band of musicians. Her original compositions have the type of flair and unforgettable melodic interest that you find among the greatest jazz and Brazilian compositions. A former backup singer on tour with Jose Luis Rodriguez, "El Puma" throughout the United States, Central and South America, and parts of Europe, Debbie brings her worldly influence to her music. This is jazz in a variety of rhythms: swing, bebop, salsa, and bossa nova, plus Debbie's original gospel tune. These twelve album tracks weave a spell, with rhythmic and sonic textures. How often do you get to hear jazz steel drum on a vocal album? Debbie's guest artist on "Taking a Chance on Love" is none other than the legendary Othello Molineaux who is the originator of this technique, playing virtuoso jazz on the island instrument that was previously only known for tropical colors. On "The Way You Look Tonight" she has invited the world renowned session man and concert percussionist, Puerto Rican born Sammy Figueroa. A variety of well-known background vocalists heighten the listener's overall experience on original songs, "Child's Play" and "You Are My Child," each arrangement builds with new touches throughout the song to its inevitable climax. The lyrics are poetry that stands on its own. Debbie's warm, emotional vocals caress the ear, never too much or too little, always in the pocket, from the most syncopated Latin feel to the soulful ballads. Debbie has the right sound on each of these styles; note her down-to-earth vocal characteristics on Leon Russell's "A Song for You," and how she takes her time, phrasing way behind the beat on the sublime ballad, "Make Someone Happy." Her musicians deliver inspired performances on every cut: Mike Orta on piano, Nicky Orta on electric bass, Carlomagno Araya on drums, Eddie Maina on saxes and flute; plus guests Jamie Ousley on upright bass, Claudio Spiewak on guitar - a jewel of an album that is not your usual singer-plus-trio recording, but a masterwork that delivers surprise after surprise. Just as much care and creativity were given to the imaginative packaging designed by pasitadesign.com. The entire artistic product is worth having in hard copy for your favorite CD collection.

Child's Play

Tommy Emmanuel - The Guitar Mastery Of Tommy Emmanuel

Size: 106,5+133,2 MB
Time: 45:34+57:14
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Contemporary Jazz, Finger-Picked Guitar, Smooth Jazz
Art: Front

CD 1:
01. Somewhere Over The Rainbow (4:20)
02. Tall Fiddler (2:25)
03. Angelina (3:41)
04. Endless Road (4:31)
05. La Visita (3:20)
06. Windy & Warm (2:47)
07. I Still Can't Say Goodbye (3:22)
08. Gameshow Rag/Cannonball Rag (2:23)
09. The Mystery (3:53)
10. Lewis & Clark (4:00)
11. Cantina Senese (1:51)
12. Antonella's Birthday (2:42)
13. Cowboy's Dream (3:21)
14. Sunset (Bonus Track) (2:51)

CD 2:
01. The Welsh Tornado (2:36)
02. Ruby's Eyes (3:27)
03. Half Way Home (3:12)
04. Moon River (Instrumental) (4:03)
05. The Fingerlakes (3:19)
06. Tapestry (4:54)
07. Smokey Mountain Lullaby (3:56)
08. Haba Na Haba (Instrumental) (4:04)
09. The Tennessee Waltz (2:34)
10. Guitar Boogie (4:08)
11. Only Elliot (Bonus Track) (1:55)
12. Mombasa (Live) (9:13)
13. Beatles Medley (Live) (6:10)
14. Questions (Live) (3:37)

Tommy Emmanuel, four-time winner of Australia's Best Guitarist award, has helped bring the art of rock guitar down under to a higher awareness over his two-decade-long career by bringing a sense of jazz improvisation into a mix that also includes blues, country, rock, classical, and Spanish music. After years as a popular sideman and ace songwriter, the two-time ARIA (Aussie Grammys equivalent) award winner launched his solo career in 1988 with Up from Down Under. Several releases have followed, most notably 1993's critically acclaimed The Journey, which hit high on Gavin and Radio & Records NAC airplay charts. He has shown a mastery and affinity for both electric and acoustic axes and has been singled out by the likes of notable musicians such as Chet Atkins -- with whom he recorded The Day Finger Pickers Took Over the World in 1997 -- and Todd Rundgren, who considers him an innovator on the instrument. Only appeared in 2001, followed by 2002's Endless Road (it was finally released in the U.S. three years later), 2005's Live One, and 2006's Happy Hour (with Jim Nichols) and Mystery.

Although Emmanuel took a brief hiatus from the music industry at the end of 2007 for health reasons, that October he recorded all three nights of a residency at the Sierra Nevada Brewery in Chico, California. These recordings would make up the acclaimed double-CD live set that was released as Center Stage in April 2008. Equally well-received was 2010’s Little by Little, a comeback of sorts in the form of a double-studio album which featured a tasteful rendition of Carole King's "Tapestry." 2011’s All I Want for Christmas nodded in places to John Fahey's classic festive recordings, while 2013’s The Colonel & The Governor saw him team up with the equally talented English guitarist Martin Taylor. ~ by Jonathan Widran

The Guitar Mastery Of Tommy Emmanuel CD 1
The Guitar Mastery Of Tommy Emmanuel CD 2

Bonnie Lee Galea - Since I Fell For You

Size: 84,7 MB
Time: 36:14
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz/Blues Vocals
Label: Bonnie Lee Galea
Art: Front

01. Miss Celie's Blues (2:20)
02. Mean To Me (4:04)
03. Erev Kachol Amok [Deep Blue Evening] (4:12)
04. How Come (2:43)
05. Since I Fell For You (3:34)
06. Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby (3:28)
07. Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone (2:34)
08. Black Coffee (3:29)
09. All Of Me (2:38)
10. Les Etoiles (3:10)
11. Sunday Morning (3:58)

Bonnie Lee Galea ….. Sultry, Sophisticated & Stylish! Bonnie has performed, managed & marketed her own band’s professionally since 2000 throughout Northern Territory, Queensland & South Australia. With her Mediterranean background, this songstress has a vast repertoire extending from early classics to current contemporary numbers & occasionally her original compositions, marketed under her own name.

With an eclectic selection of music from Masters such as Billie Holiday, Ruth Brown & Janis Joplin to Bob Marley, Melody Gardot, Alanis Morrissette & Amy Winehouse incorporating a collection of romantic songs sung in Mediterranean, European & South American languages adopted from her travels from artists such as Sergio Mendes, Astor Pezola, Gypsy Kings etc!

Since I Fell For You
Track 7

Herb Ellis - Three Guitars In Bossa Nova Time

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 35:16
Size: 80.7 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz, Bop
Year: 1963/2009
Art: Front

[4:16] 1. You Stepped Out Of A Dream
[4:20] 2. Bossa Nova #2
[2:50] 3. But Beautiful
[3:09] 4. Bossa Nova Samba
[3:10] 5. Leave It To Me
[4:30] 6. I Told Ya I Love Ya, Now Get Out!
[4:17] 7. Sweet Dreams
[3:06] 8. Low Society Blues
[2:11] 9. Gravy Waltz
[3:21] 10. Detour Ahead

The title Three Guitars in Bossa Nova Time is misleading in that only two guitars in any instance play the material, while tenor saxophonist Bob Enevoldsen is more important to the overall sound of the music than any other performer. In the main, Herb Ellis and Laurindo Almeida take charge on most of the songs, certainly all bossa novas and light sambas, accompanied by the pianist Donn Trenner (who worked on television with Steve Allen), bassist Bob Bertaux, lesser-known percussionists Bob Neel or Chico Guerrero, the more famous Milt Holland, and guitarist Johnny Gray on three tracks in place of Almeida. All of these selections are familiar, whether as Brazilian songs or Latinized mainstream jazz, while Ellis is upfront in the mix and definitely the leader. While one guitar is initially off the beat on "You Stepped Out of a Dream," Ellis and Almeida are merged together with Enevoldsen in fuller proportions during the fine take of "But Beautiful" with some good solo step-outs, and play in harmonically inventive tones for the very nice "Bossa Nova Samba." Enevoldsen, a multi-instrumentalist known more for playing the trombone, is as cool and smooth as Stan Getz on the melody of the Carnival beat-driven "Leave It to Me," and the spare, careful "Bossa Nova #2." Gray joins Ellis for the more jazz-oriented pieces, including the simple, laid-back "Sweet Dreams," the more commanding "Low Society Blues," where things with the entire combo really come together, and the famous Ray Brown evergreen "Gravy Waltz," made richly harmonic and memorable unto itself. "Detour Ahead" is turned into a bossa and is well done here, but the swinging version might be preferable to those who know this classic song well. On the other hand, the outstanding "I Told Ya' I Love Ya', Now Get Out" is a better adaptation with call and response squawking between Enevoldsen and Ellis perfectly depicting a couple's spat. This interesting 1963 prelude session from Ellis and Almeida together marked the beginnings of a tuneful and spicy partnership, and is a worthwhile addition and longstanding buried treasure in the discography of all participants. ~Michael G. Nastos

Three Guitars In Bossa Nova Time

Kalapana - Kalapana I

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 37:26
Size: 85.7 MB
Styles: Folk, Soft rock
Year: 1975/1995
Art: Front

[3:01] 1. Going Going Gone
[3:33] 2. The Hurt
[2:41] 3. Nightbird
[2:57] 4. What Do I Do
[2:47] 5. To Be True
[3:00] 6. When The Morning Comes
[4:24] 7. Naturally
[4:27] 8. All I Want
[3:01] 9. Kona Daze
[3:08] 10. You Make It Hard
[4:23] 11. Everything Is Love

Kalapana is a Hawaiian group that performs pop and soft rock music. They are known for their songs "Naturally" and "The Hurt".

In 1973, childhood friends David John (DJ) Pratt and Carl James Malani Bilyeu auditioned at the Rainbow Villa for Cecilio & Kapono. Malani was soloing at the Oar House in Hawaii Kai and DJ was downstairs at Chuck's in Sunlight with Kirk Thompson. They got together in DJ's grandfather's garage with Bryant Mackey Feary, another solo act, playing at the Oar House. They wrote songs, rehearsed, and at one point discussed the meaning of Kalapana. The literal translation of the word "Kalapana" is "sprouting money". Kirk said the meaning was "beat of the music", but he wanted "Dove" anyway. DJ thought it meant "Black Sand". Regardless, they named themselves Kalapana, playing their first gig at Chuck's in Hawaii Kai.

They became a regular band at a club called "The Toppe Ada Shoppe". They opened concerts for Earth, Wind & Fire, Batdorf & Rodney, The Moody Blues, Sly & The Family Stone, and Cecilio & Kapono. They released their first, self-titled album, Kalapana, which included Jackie Kelso on sax and flute, Bill Perry on bass and Larry Brown on drums.

Kalapana I

Emerald City Jazz Orchestra - Come Rain Or Come Shine

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 78:30
Size: 179.7 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[9:35] 1. Speak No Evil
[8:16] 2. Blues #3
[4:17] 3. Come Rain Or Come Shine
[6:08] 4. Infant Eyes
[5:51] 5. Call It Whatchawanna
[5:33] 6. Stella By Starlight
[4:15] 7. Manteca
[7:58] 8. Fee-Fi-Fo-Fum
[4:24] 9. In A Mellotone
[7:44] 10. Body And Soul
[7:36] 11. Amazing Grace
[6:48] 12. Jumpin' At The Woodside

A rule of thumb for any artistic endeavor is that a sequel is seldom as good as the original. The qualifier "seldom must be used because there are occasional exceptions to the rule. As luck would have it, here comes one now—the Emerald City Jazz Orchestra's remarkable followup to its debut album, Alive and Swingin'! (SMP 0004). In reviewing that earlier enterprise, I noted that "section work is immaculate, soloists are superb, and the rhythm section simply kicks ass. I happy to report that nothing has changed.

Well, that's not entirely true; there have been a couple of changes, but for the better. Baritone saxophonist Matso Limtiaco, who authored nine of the thirteen exemplary charts on Swingin'!, has written all of them this time, while the ECJO has picked up another stellar soloist, veteran trumpeter Vern Sielert. Besides being a superb arranger, Limtiaco is a capable improviser too, as he shows on Wayne Shorter's "Infant Eyes and Duke Ellington's "In a Mellow Tone.

Shorter is represented as well by "Speak No Evil and "Fee-Fi-Fo-Fum, Count Basie by "Jumpin' at the Woodside, Dizzy Gillespie by "Manteca, tenor saxophonist Johnny Griffin by "Call It Whatchawanna (showcasing one of the band's stylish tenors, Travis Ranney). Limtiaco also arranged the standards "Stella by Starlight, "Body and Soul (another feature for Ranney) and "Come Rain or Come Shine, plus the traditional hymn "Amazing Grace, which he dedicated to those who lost their lives in NYC on September 11, 2001.

The album's only recent composition, "Blues #3, was written by Limtiaco to spotlight the rhythm section (with crisp solos by bassist Steve Messick, drummer Ken French and pianist Reuel Lubag). While each of Limtiaco's charts is enticing, I was especially charmed by the quicker tempo on "Mellow Tone, which is here more assertive than mellow (as is Matso's solo), and the funky framework on "Body and Soul, which handsomely complements Ranney's evocative tenor. "Woodside doesn't sound a whole lot like Basie's classic theme but is nonetheless sharp and swinging on its own terms. Limtiaco says he tried to choose songs with great blowing opportunities for the soloists, and so he has. Besides those already mentioned, the resourceful ad-libbers include trombonists Nathan Vetter, Dan Marcus and Vic Anderson; altos Ben Roseth and Mark Taylor; and tenor Cliff Colon, who burns rubber on "Manteca, "Fee-Fi and "Woodside. The ensemble, as noted, is consistently trim and poised, vanquishing Limtiaco's strenuous charts with unflappable assurance.

The group's leader (and lead trumpeter), Kevin Seeley, writes in the liners that during the two recording sessions "no tune was played more than twice, and half of these tunes we caught on the first take! What a band! I'll second that. The studio sound is generally acceptable, the 78:55 playing time exemplary. Another slam dunk by the well-endowed ECJO, and one of the more impressive big band albums of the year. ~Jack Bowers

Kevin Seeley, leader, trumpet; Greg Lyons, Peter Green (6), Vern Sielert, Randy Burgeson, John Fricke, trumpet; Ben Roseth, Mark Taylor (1,4,5,8-10), Vanessa Sielert, Cliff Colon, Travis Ranney (1,4,5,8-10), Andrew Glynn, Steve Reincke (6), Matso Limtiaco, reeds; Vic Anderson, Greg Koehler (6), Nathan Vetter, Dan Marcus, Stuart Hambley (6), Bud Parker, trombone; Reuel Lubag, piano; Steve Messick, bass; Ken French, drums.

Come Rain Or Come Shine

Stacy Sullivan - Its A Good Day: A Tribute To Miss Peggy Lee

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:26
Size: 115,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:09)  1. I Love Being Here With You
(3:17)  2. I Got Rhythm / My Romance / One Kiss
(4:14)  3. The Folks Back Home
(2:20)  4. You Was Right Baby
(2:45)  5. He's A Tramp
(3:13)  6. Till There Was You
(2:45)  7. I Don't Know Enough About You
(3:03)  8. I Love The Way You're Breaking My Heart
(3:21)  9. Cheek To Cheek
(4:19) 10. Nobody's Heart Belongs To Me
(3:55) 11. That Old Black Magic / Lover
(4:32) 12. Where Did They Go
(4:05) 13. Johnny Guitar
(2:25) 14. It's A Good Day
(2:57) 15. Angeles On Your Pillow

An intimately swinging project, fresh with courageous takes on Peggy Lee’s famous canon. Joining forces with Jon Weber, Steve Doyle, and Bucky Pizzarelli, Miss Sullivan evokes Lee, but deftly applies her own stamp to each and every song. To complete the picture, the album introduces “The Folks Back Home,” (a previously unreleased song by Lee and Paul Horner,) and Stacy Sullivan possesses the musicianship and vocal chops to do both Peggy Lee and the material justice.

“Sly and subtle, Stacy Sullivan, like Peggy Lee, is a master of suggestion. There's a wink in her voice, and when you hear her on this gorgeous, intimately swinging album, you know that wink is meant only for you.”~ David Hajdu, Music Critic - The New Republic

“With her blond long hair caressing her shoulders, Stacy Sullivan, the seventh sibling in the multi- talented Sullivan family, has never been better than she is in her ‘A Tribute to Miss Peggy Lee.’ Sullivan is a revelation. Watch for a repeat engagement of this show! It will be a contender for every award this year.”~ Joe Regan, Jr. - Times Square Chronicles.   More....http://www.lmlmusic.com/album/itsagoodday/

Personnel: Bucky Pizzarelli (guitar); Jon Weber (piano).

Betty Carter - The Complete: 1948 - 1961

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:24 (Disc 1)
Size: 175,5 MB (Disc 1)
Time: 75:19 (Disc 2)
Size: 173,0 MB (Disc 2)
Art: Front + Back

Disc 1

(3:27)  1. Moonlight In Vermont
(1:43)  2. Thou Swell
(2:41)  3. I Could Write A Book
(4:14)  4. Gone With The Wind
(2:44)  5. The Way You Look Tonight
(2:29)  6. Can't We Be Friends
(2:36)  7. Tell Him I Said Hello
(2:41)  8. Social Call
(2:32)  9. Runaway
(2:34) 10. Frenesi
(2:01) 11. Let's Fall In Love
(1:48) 12. You're Driving Me Crazy
(2:49) 13. I Can't Help It
(2:11) 14. By The Bend Of The River
(2:52) 15. Bab's Blues
(2:25) 16. Foul Play
(2:34) 17. You're Getting To Be A Habit
(2:07) 18. On The Isle Of May
(4:03) 19. But Beautiful
(2:19) 20. All I've Got
(4:33) 21. Make It Last
(1:34) 22. Bluebird Of Happiness
(3:41) 23. Something Wonderful
(3:18) 24. Red Top
(3:20) 25. Benson's Boogie
(3:07) 26. The Hucklebuck
(3:48) 27. Jay Bird


Disc 2

(2:06)  1. What A little Moonlight Can Do
(3:13)  2. There's No You
(2:26)  3. I Don't Want To Set The World On Fire
(2:26)  4. Remember
(2:52)  5. My Reverie
(2:07)  6. Mean To Me
(3:04)  7. Don't Weep For The Lady
(2:00)  8. Jazz
(2:23)  9. For You
(3:27) 10. Stormy Weather
(2:47) 11. At Sundown
(1:59) 12. On The Alamo
(4:43) 13. Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye
(3:29) 14. You And I
(3:22) 15. Goodbye / We'll Be Together Again
(2:53) 16. People Will Say We're In Love
(3:17) 17. Cocktails For Two
(2:25) 18. Side By Side
(4:12) 19. Baby, It's Cold Outside
(1:37) 20. Together
(3:45) 21. For All We Know
(3:24) 22. Takes Two To Tango
(4:47) 23. Alone Together
(1:59) 24. Just You, Just Me
(1:58) 25. Frenesi
(2:21) 26. Rock-A-Bye Baby

The Precious And Rare series presents beautifully remastered recordings by some of the very finest jazz artists. Betty Carter brought a new vocal style to jazz, rich in improvisation, passionate scat singing and fighting spirit. She sang with jazz legends such as Dizzy Gillespie, Lionel Hampton, Charles Mingus, Wes Montgomery and Ray Charles and created her own jazz label, achieving prominence in the music business. Songs include 'The Way You Look Tonight', 'Let's Fall In Love', 'Something Wonderful', 'Stormy Weather', 'Baby It's Cold Outside', and many more. 'The finest jazz singer heard in Australia in the past 20 years remains Betty Carter on her two tours in the 1990s. Anyone who witnessed her performances then will never forget the spell she cast as she swept audiences into a theatrical as well as musical world of her own...This comprehensive collection of recordings - from the initial dates with Lionel Hampton through to 12 songs with [Ray] Charles reveals an artist with flawless musical instincts from the outset.' ~ Sydney Morning Herald  https://www.musicdirect.net.au/audio/the-complete-betty-carter-1948-1961.do

Tab Smith - Vintage Dance Orchestra No. 262 - Ep Sax For Dance

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1952
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 21:00
Size: 49,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:20)  1. Ace High
(2:32)  2. Sunny Side Of The Street
(3:08)  3. Under A Blanket Of Blues
(2:41)  4. You Belong To Me
(2:39)  5. Auf Wiederseh'n Sweetheart
(2:38)  6. Red, Hot And Blue
(2:21)  7. Hands Across The Table
(2:37)  8. Can't We Take A Chance


Tab Smith's career can easily be divided into two. One of the finest altoists to emerge during the swing era, Smith became a popular attraction in the R&B world of the 1950s due to his record "Because of You." After early experience playing in territory bands during the 1930s, Tab Smith played and recorded with Lucky Millinder's Orchestra (1936-1938) and then freelanced with various swing all-stars in New York. He had opportunities to solo with Count Basie's band (1940-1942) before returning to Millinder (1942-1944), and took honors on a recording of "On the Sunny Side of the Street" with a stunning cadenza that followed statements by Coleman Hawkins, Don Byas, and Harry Carney. After leaving Millinder, Smith led his own sessions which became increasingly R&B-oriented (he never became involved with bop). His string of recordings for United in the 1950s (which have been reissued by Delmark on CD) made him a fairly major name for a time even though he had a relatively mellow sound and avoided honking. In the early '60s Tab Smith retired to St. Louis and later became involved in selling real estate. Bio ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/artist/tab-smith-mn0000013954/biography

Paul Kuhn - I Wish You Love

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:41
Size: 138,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:52)  1. Sister Sadie
(7:48)  2. Take The A-Train
(4:55)  3. I Wish You Love
(6:40)  4. Stitt's Tune
(8:12)  5. Polka Dots & Moonbeams
(7:38)  6. Broadway
(5:27)  7. Soon
(5:42)  8. With A Song In My Heart
(8:23)  9. Flying Home

Paul Kuhn (12 March 1928 – 23 September 2013) was a German jazz musician, band leader, singer and pianist. He was the band leader of the SFB Big Band, the orchestra of the Sender Freies Berlin, the TV-Station of West Berlin, part of ARD. He was the conductor of the German entry in the 1972 Eurovision Song Contest. Kuhn was born a the son of a croupier in Wiesbaden. In 1936, at the age of 8, he had a public gig at the 'Funkausstellung' in Berlin, playing the accordion. Some years later, he discovered jazz music (which was frowned upon during the nazi time (1933-1945)). In 1944, he was in Paris and had some gigs to entertain soldiers of the Wehrmacht, who still occupied Paris. After V-Day (8 May 1945), the USA formed an occupation zone in parts of Germany, amongst them the region around Frankfurt. Kuhn was hired by AFN (American Forces Network), he was live on radio almost every day, alone or with his band. 

He adopted the style and sound of Glenn Miller (1904-1944). In the 1950s, he arranged and composed entertainment music. Around 1955, he increasingly launched pop songs, sung and played by himself. During the sixties, more and more west German households bought a TV; music shows, big bands and singers were very successful. In 1968, Kuhn was named head of the entertainment orchestra of Sender Freies Berlin. In 1980, this band was dissolved and Kuhn moved to Cologne and founded his own orchestra. Starting in 2000, he toured with Max Greger, Hugo Strasser and the Big Band of SWR (Südwestdeutscher Rundfunk). At the end of 2011, Kuhn travelled to San Francisco to record a CD (The L.A. Session, with John Clayton and Jeff Hamilton). The album was released in 2013. His most known hits were Der Mann am Klavier (1954), Es gibt kein Bier auf Hawaii (1963) and Die Farbe der Liebe (1958 in the charts).Bio ~ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Kuhn_%28band_leader%29

Personnel:  Bass – Paul G. Ulrich; Clarinet, Alto Saxophone – Georg Mayr; Drums – Willy Ketzer; Piano – Paul Kuhn;  Trombone – Ludwig Nuss; Trumpet – Till Brönner

New City Swing Quartet - Jazz Standards And Torch Songs

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 89:29
Size: 206,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:50)  1. All Of Me
(2:04)  2. A Tisket A Tasket
(2:25)  3. On A Slow Boat To China
(4:29)  4. Summertime (And The Living Is Easy)
(3:08)  5. Since I Met You Baby
(3:08)  6. Don't Get Around Much Anymore
(3:41)  7. Just A Gigolo
(3:35)  8. Crazy (For Loving You)
(4:22)  9. Georgia ( On My Mind)
(2:38) 10. Knobbby
(2:48) 11. Simply
(2:41) 12. Is Your Is Or Is You Ain't (My Baby)
(3:06) 13. Phanton Blues Bar
(3:24) 14. Walking With Christopher
(2:25) 15. Come On Home
(4:23) 16. Linus And Lucy (The Peanuts Theme Song)
(4:54) 17. What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life?
(4:37) 18. Steamroller Blues
(3:48) 19. Stars Fell On Alabama
(2:32) 20. She May Be Your Girl
(2:16) 21. Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me
(2:22) 22. Ain't Misbehavin'
(6:01) 23. My Funny Valentine
(3:19) 24. Annie Had A Baby
(5:34) 25. Tenderly
(2:49) 26. The Gypsy Song


Jazz Standards And Torch Songs