Saturday, September 6, 2014

Johnny Coles - Little Johnny C

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 40:10
Size: 92.0 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Trumpet jazz
Year: 1963/1996
Art: Front

[5:08] 1. Little Johnny C
[8:12] 2. Hobo Joe
[7:20] 3. Jano
[7:07] 4. My Secret Passion
[5:56] 5. Heavy Legs
[6:24] 6. So Sweet My Little Girl

Although this Blue Note session (reissued on CD in 1996) is led by trumpeter Johnny Coles, pianist Duke Pearson (who contributed the arrangements and five of the six compositions) really functioned as leader.

The typically impressive Blue Note lineup (which includes Leo Wright on alto and flute, tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson, bassist Bob Cranshaw, and either Walter Perkins or Pete LaRoca on drums, in addition to Coles and Pearson) handles the obscure material with creative invention. Most memorable are the catchy title cut and the somber ballad "So Sweet My Little Girl." Cole's brittle trumpet is the lead voice throughout, although the young Joe Henderson was already instantly recognizable. ~Scott Yanow

Little Johnny C

Braziliando - Tempo De Brasil

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 62:12
Size: 142.4 MB
Styles: Latin jazz
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[5:58] 1. Samba Do Aviao
[5:27] 2. Passaros
[4:05] 3. Brigas Nunca Mais
[3:36] 4. Viva O Rio
[5:47] 5. That's The Way Of The World
[6:30] 6. Bons Tempos
[6:58] 7. Dindi
[3:36] 8. Ame
[4:46] 9. Caminhos Cruzados
[3:42] 10. Olivia's Dance
[5:45] 11. Izaura
[5:57] 12. Our Time Is Here

"Braziliando" plays an enchanting mix of Samba, Bossa Nova & Brazilian Jazz. Featuring the beautiful guitar playing and soulful vocals of Kleber Jorge, a native of Rio De Janeiro, singing in both Portuguese and English. Kleber has been a touring member of the Sergio Mendez band for many years. Also from Brazil, percussionist Cassio Duarte, who's played with a long list of Brazilian and jazz stars from Gal Costa to Djavan to Toots Thielmans. Cassio provides the raw rhythmic energy and hypnotic pulse, playing a wide variety of Brazilian & African drums and percussion instruments. The lyrical and passionate saxophone and flute playing of Robert Kyle round out this trio. Robert too has a long list of jazz credits, and he has a deep love for Brazilian music that shows up in every note he plays. The members of "Braziliando" have been performing together for over 10 years. Their debut CD "Tempo de Brasil" features a mix of instrumental and vocal music, with several songs from the pen of the great Antonio Carlos Jobim, as well as songs by other contemporary Brazilian composers, and original material too.

Tempo De Brasil

Maria Muldaur - Live In Concert

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 79:14
Size: 181.4 MB
Styles: Light rock
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[4:49] 1. Buckets Of Love
[4:35] 2. Lay Lady Lay
[4:59] 3. To Be Alone With You
[4:05] 4. Heart Of Mine
[4:38] 5. Make You Feel My Love
[4:54] 6. Meet Me In The Moonlight
[5:52] 7. Your Gonna Make Me Lonesome
[7:23] 8. Cajun Moon
[5:57] 9. Golden Loom
[4:11] 10. On A Night Like This
[5:10] 11. I'll Be Your Baby Tonight
[5:10] 12. Bessie's Advice
[5:28] 13. Midnight At The Oasis
[7:42] 14. Wedding Song
[4:14] 15. Ride Me High

Within one's lifetime, there will only be only a few rare vocalists who hit the peak of success, remain there for decades, and produce works that last eternally. Maria Muldaur is best known for her no.1 selling hit, Midnight At The Oasis , and is back with her new live DVD, featuring love songs from Bob Dylan. Maria gives us a stellar performance as she bravely recasts several songs in unlikely grooves.


Live In Concert

Bobby Durham - Domani's Blues

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 57:34
Size: 131.8 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[5:52] 1. Blueberry Hill
[3:48] 2. Domani's Blues
[4:52] 3. Embraceable You
[5:42] 4. Solar
[4:58] 5. I Should Care
[6:25] 6. Moanin'
[7:17] 7. A Nasty Dirty Blues
[6:43] 8. That Lucky Old Sun
[3:58] 9. My Babe
[5:30] 10. I'm Glad There's You
[2:23] 11. Cry

(February 3, 1937, in Philadelphia – July 6, 2008, in Genoa), was an American jazz drummer.

Durham was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and learned to play drums while a child. He played with The Orioles at age 16, and was in a military band between 1956 and 1959. After his discharge he played with King James and Stan Hunter. In 1960 he moved to New York City, where he played with Lloyd Price, Wild Bill Davis, Lionel Hampton, Count Basie, Slide Hampton, Grant Green, Sweets Edison, Tommy Flanagan, Jimmy Rowles, and the Duke Ellington Orchestra, in which he played for five years. While working with Basie he met Al Grey, and was a member of several of Grey's small ensembles. He accompanied Ella Fitzgerald for more than a decade, and worked with Oscar Peterson in a trio setting.

Durham also played in trios with organists such as Charles Earland and Shirley Scott, and there was a resurgence in interest in Durham's work during the acid jazz upswing in the 1990s. Many of Durham's projects, both as sideman and as leader, have come due to his association with producer Norman Granz, who had him work with Ella Fitzgerald, Count Basie, Harry Edison, Flanagan, and Joe Pass. Durham has led his own combos as well; he is noted for scat singing along with his drum solos. Durham has also performed often with pop and soul musicians such as Frank Sinatra, James Brown, Ray Charles, and Marvin Gaye.

Domani's Blues

Allison Moorer - Mockingbird

Styles: Country
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:24
Size: 109,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:16)  1. Mockingbird
(5:43)  2. Orphan Train
(3:23)  3. Where Is My Love
(2:57)  4. I'm Looking For Blue Eyes
(2:59)  5. Ring Of fire
(4:19)  6. Dancing Barefoot
(2:37)  7. I Want A Little Sugar In My Bowl
(3:38)  8. Go, Leave
(5:41)  9. Revelator
(4:28) 10. Both Sides Now
(3:58) 11. Daddy, Goodbye Blues
(4:19) 12. She Knows Where She Goes

Allison Moorer's Mockingbird was released a mere two weeks after her sister Shelby Lynne's Just a Little Lovin', a Dusty Springfield covers tribute. Moorer's album is a natural sounding set of covers that runs the gamut from rock and barrelhouse blues, to jazz, country, and traditional and indie folk. Mockingbird was produced by Buddy Miller and includes a stellar cast of players including husband Steve Earle, Richard Bennett, Julie Miller, Darrell Scott, Tammy Rogers, Tim O'Brien, and Phil Madeira. It feels organic. The set opens with the title cut, the only original. It's a breezy acoustic ballad with warmly layered guitars, a brushed snare, a hi-hat, a B-3, and the Nashville String Machine ensemble. The cut shifts midway and becomes a graceful pop tune kissed by R&B, courtesy of Jim Hoke's tough tenor sax solo. June Carter's "Ring of Fire" is in a very slow 4/4 with violin, viola, and B-3 walking alongside the singer as she lets her voice just ring out over the top. The reading of Patti Smith's "Dancin' Barefoot" has to be heard to be believed. It's a contender for best track on the set. Moorer's enunciation captures what is at the heart of Smith's song, expressing a powerful desire as it surrenders to raw need. The lyrics walk a knife's edge as the singer observes herself in both first and third person. It's awash in blazing electric guitars, tambourines, cymbals, popping drums and organ; they wash through it all violently, yet reflect the lyrics perfectly.

Moorer's take on Nina Simone's "Sugar in My Bowl" is a bluesier one. She can sing anything; her voice sways, swings, and swoops through acoustic guitars, bluesed out keyboards, and whispering drums. It's wonderful to hear Kate McGarrigle's "Go Leave" again, especially given this spare, reverential treatment. It will hopefully create in listeners the desire to investigate the McGarrigle Sisters' own records. Moorer's voice simply allows the song to have its way; she follows its turns with rapt attention. A New Orleans style bass drum, mandolin, Earle's nasty guitar, and a vintage microphone displace time on Ma Rainey's "Daddy Goodbye Blues." Of the remaining tracks, Moorer's interpretation of Julie Miller's "Orphan Train" takes us down a moving path: her father killed Moorer's mother and himself, in front of her and Lynne. Lynne's stirring "She Knows Where She Goes," precedes it. Together they reflect the deliberately forgotten, topically tragic side of the American country tradition Nashville is just plain afraid of songs like this. 

The album nears its end with Chan Marshall's simple yet deeply moving "Where Is My Love," especially as a follow-up to the aforementioned cuts. It feels as if it's sung by a survivor; an empty handed, full-hearted hero who paid the price and has little but loneliness to show for it. When Moorer, Buddy Miller, and company bring it to close with Jessi Colter's lusty "I'm Looking for Blue Eyes," it's as if the circle that began with "Mockingbird" is complete. Moorer, who has followed a restless career path through the wiles of Nashville's machine and lived to tell about it, ups her own ante here both creatively and emotionally. It is her warmest, most ambitious, and gutsy record yet. 
~ Thom Jurek  http://www.allmusic.com/album/mockingbird-mw0000581824

Personnel: Allison Moorer (acoustic guitar, electric guitar, programming, background vocals); Allison Moorer (vocals); Richard Bennett , Richard Rodney Bennett (acoustic guitar, electric guitar); Steve Earle (electric guitar); Darrell Scott (bouzouki); Chris Donohue (bass guitar); Kenny Malone (drums, percussion); Buddy Miller (vocals, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, glockenspiel, percussion); Julie Miller, Ann McCrary, Regina McCrary (vocals); Russ Pahl (steel guitar); Tim O'Brien (banjo); Mike Compton (mandolin); Connie Ellisor, Pamela Sixfin (violin); Tammy Rogers (fiddle); Jim Grosjean (viola); Carole Rabinowitz-Neuen (cello); Chris Carmichael (strings); Phil Madeira (accordion, keyboards); Jim Hoke (saxophone); Neil Rosengarden (trumpet); John Deaderick (keyboards); Bryan Owings (drums); The Nashville String Machine, Tom Howard.

Nancy Fox Hall - Just Singin

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:16
Size: 83,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:32)  1. You Don't Know Me
(2:14)  2. Walking After Midnight
(2:42)  3. Someone To Watch Over Me
(2:03)  4. Rock-A Bye Your Baby
(2:30)  5. I Don't Know Why
(2:18)  6. How Long Has This Been Going On
(1:52)  7. Cry Me A River
(1:44)  8. Hard Hearted Hannah
(3:49)  9. God Bless This Child
(2:22) 10. I Fall To Pieces
(2:31) 11. Can't Help Lovin' That Man
(2:44) 12. Crazy
(2:52) 13. Funny Valentine
(2:57) 14. Our Love Is Here To Stay

Just Singin' album by Nancy Fox Hall was released May 01, 2014. This album was fulfilling to create ,and I hope it is an enjoyable ensemble for you. It is a collection of some of my favorite tunes from past live participation in shows, musical performances and memorable evenings in cabarets. Just Singin' CD music contains a single disc. http://www.cduniverse.com/productinfo.asp?pid=9224560

Quincy Jones - Free And Easy!

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:47
Size: 137,1 MB
Art: Front

( 2:57)  1. Introduction By Olle Helander
( 3:29)  2. Moanin'
( 3:01)  3. Tickle Toe
( 3:44)  4. I Remember Clifford
( 3:50)  5. Whisper Not
(11:08)  6. The Phanton Blues
( 4:20)  7. Birth Of A Band
( 4:37)  8. The Gypsy
( 4:53)  9. Ghana
(13:01) 10. Walkin'
( 4:42) 11. Big Red

Quincy Delight Jones was born in Chicago on March 14, 1933. When he was a still a youngster, his family moved to Seattle and he soon developed an interest in music. In his early teens, Jones began learning the trumpet and started singing with a local gospel group. By the time he graduated from high school in 1950, Jones had displayed enough promise to win a scholarship to Boston-based music school Schillenger House (which later became known as Berklee School of Music). After a year at Schillenger, Jones relocated to New York City where he found work as an arranger, writing charts for Count Basie, Cannonball Adderley, Tommy Dorsey and Dinah Washington, among others. In 1953, Jones scored his first big break as a performer; he was added to the brass section of Lionel Hampton’s Orchestra. With his ability to dig up promising newcomers, Hamp had, among others, enlisted noted altoist-arranger Gigi Gryce, Clifford Brown and Art Farmer on trumpet, trombonist Jimmy Cleveland, pianist George Wallington and singer Annie Ross. In September, Lionel Hampton took his band to Sweden for the first time and made a tremendous impression on the youngsters with his frenetic rhythmical show. 

Hampton’s band continued the tour through Europe and having reached Casablanca it was decided that a return visit to Sweden was imperative and thus Quincy wrote and arranged tunes for a recording with an All Star band from which the iconic Stockholm Sweetin’ track emerged. Three years later, Dizzy Gillespie hired Jones to play in his band and later in 1956 when Gillespie was invited to put together a big band of outstanding international musicians. Diz chose Quincy to lead the ensemble. Jones also released his first album under his own name that year, a set for ABC-Paramount appropriately entitled This is How I Feel About Jazz. In 1957, Jones moved to Paris in order to study with the renowned Nadia Boulanger, an expatriate American composer with a stellar track record in educating composers, bandleaders and musicians. During his sojourn in France, Jones became friends with the now legendary Eddie and Nicole Barclay and they soon engaged Quincy as musical director and he produced and arranged sessions for Jacques Brel and Charles Aznavour, as well as American artists Billy Eckstine and Sarah Vaughan. In late 1959, the now 26 year old Jones was engaged to create the orchestra for a new musical Free and Easy, the songs for which were written by Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer. The intention was to tour the show throughout Europe before moving to Broadway, however the show ran into difficulties right from the start. 

After engagements in Amsterdam and Brussels and at the Alhambra in Paris in January 1960, by mid-February amongst bitter recriminations it eventually folded and the 18 musicians and their families were stranded. Having put together and rehearsed such a wonderful band Quincy, to his great credit decided to try to tour the band in it’s own right and for almost a year they struggled on playing concerts in many European countries including Scandinavia, Switzerland, France and Italy but exhausted and desperately short of money Quincy inevitably had to call it a day and return to the States. Fortunately several recordings of the “Free and Easy” band and some film footage were made of concerts given by this outstanding orchestra  just some of the awesome achievements this remarkable man has given to the world in his lifetime. http://www.candidrecords.com/product_info.php?products_id=331

Personnel: Les Spann (guitar, flute); Jerome Richardson (flute, tenor saxophone); Porter Kilbert, Phil Woods (alto saxophone); Budd Johnson (tenor saxophone); Sahib Shihab (baritone saxophone); Clark Terry (trumpet, flugelhorn); Lennie Johnson, Floyd Standifer, Benny Bailey (trumpet); Julius Watkins (French horn); Åke Persson, Jimmy Cleveland, Melba Liston, Quentin Jackson (trombone); Patti Bown (piano); Joe Harris (drums).

The North Star Jazz Ensemble - The Way You Look Tonight

Styles: Jazz, Mainstream Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:12
Size: 141,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:10)  1. The Way You Look Tonight
(4:59)  2. Every Time We Say Goodbye
(3:08)  3. Taking A Chance On Love
(5:37)  4. It Never Entered My Mind
(4:27)  5. I'm Old Fashioned
(4:54)  6. What A Wonderful World
(5:15)  7. My One And Only Love
(3:33)  8. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
(3:39)  9. Tangerine
(3:34) 10. I've Got The World On A String
(5:23) 11. I Thought About You
(3:33) 12. Cheek To Cheek
(3:10) 13. Tenderly
(3:44) 14. Stompin' At The Savoy

North Star Jazz Ensemble, as much as any inhabitant of their stable, epitomize the jazz philosophy of New England's North Star label. Get a bevy of good musicians in a studio, give them a play list of familiar standards that are tastefully arranged, and then let them express themselves, with special emphasis on the melody and chord structure which elevated these songs into the standard category in the first place. This does not mean the session is limited to mere recitation of the melody. There is plenty of room for improvisation hear Artie Montanaro's enterprising wending trombone on "The Way You Look Tonight." But the extemporization is not so far out as to dissociate it from the basic melody, losing many of the listeners in the process. 

The members of the ensemble, put together for this recording session, are all well-respected New England musicians. Guitarist Gray Sargent works with Tony Bennett, mouth organ player Mike Turk has been with Donna Byrne and Paul Broadnax, and horn player Jeff Stout with Gary Burton. Each member of the octet gets a chance to display their considerable individual talent. Mike Turk's harmonica takes the spotlight on "I'm Old Fashioned." Bruce Abbott's tenor on "My One and Only Love" recalls John Coltrane's solo on that seminal album with Johnny Hartman. This album is filled with exquisite playing of great American romantic ballads by jazz musicians of the highest caliber. It reminds one just how well this music can sound if played in a forthright, elegant manner without the artifices found on too many CDs. Recommended. ~ Dave Nathan  http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-way-you-look-tonight-mw0000666423

Personnel: Gary Sargent (guitar); Bruce Abbott (soprano saxophone, alto saxophone, tenor saxophone); Jeff Stout, John Allmark (trumpet, flugelhorn); Artie Montanaro (trombone); Paul Mason (drums).