Thursday, October 30, 2014

Gato Barbieri - New York Meeting (Feat. Carlos Franzetti, David Finck & Nestor Astarita)

Size: 116,5 MB
Time: 49:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2010
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front & Back

01. Equinox (6:57)
02. It's Over (5:48)
03. Preparense (8:12)
04. Straight No Chaser (6:12)
05. Blue In Green (6:09)
06. Someday My Prince Will Come (7:24)
07. So What (9:15)

Gato Barbieri is the second Argentine musician to make a significant impact upon modern jazz -- the first being Lalo Schifrin, in whose band Barbieri played. His story has been that of an elongated zigzag odyssey between his homeland and North America. He started out playing to traditional Latin rhythms in his early years, turning his back on his heritage to explore the jazz avant-garde in the '60s, reverting to South American influences in the early '70s, playing pop and fusion in the late '70s, only to go back and forth again in the '80s. North American audiences first heard Barbieri when he was a wild bull, sporting a coarse, wailing John Coltrane/Pharoah Sanders-influenced tone. Yet by the mid-'70s, his approach and tone began to mellow somewhat in accordance with ballads like "What a Diff'rence a Day Makes" (which he always knew as the vintage bolero "Cuando Vuelva a Tu Lado") and Carlos Santana's "Europa." Still, regardless of the idiom in which he works, the warm-blooded Barbieri has always been one of the most overtly emotional tenor sax soloists on record, occasionally driving the voltage ever higher with impulsive vocal cheerleading.

Though Barbieri's family included several musicians, he did not take up an instrument until the age of 12 when a hearing of Charlie Parker's "Now's the Time" encouraged him to study the clarinet. Upon moving to Buenos Aires in 1947, he continued private music lessons, picked up the alto sax, and by 1953 had become a prominent national musician through exposure in the Schifrin orchestra. Later in the '50s, Barbieri started leading his own groups, switching to tenor sax. After moving to Rome in 1962 with his Italian-born wife, he met Don Cherry in Paris the following year and, upon joining his group, became heavily absorbed in the jazz avant-garde. Barbieri also played with Mike Mantler's Jazz Composers' Orchestra in the late '60s; you can hear his fierce tone unleashed in the "Hotel Overture" of Carla Bley's epic work "Escalator Over the Hill."

Yet after the turn of the next decade, Barbieri experienced a slow change of heart and began to reincorporate and introduce South American melodies, instruments, harmonies, textures, and rhythm patterns into his music. Albums such as the live El Pampero on Flying Dutchman and the four-part Chapter series on Impulse -- the latter of which explored Brazilian and Afro-Cuban rhythms and textures, as well as Argentine -- brought Barbieri plenty of acclaim in the jazz world and gained him a following on American college campuses.

However, it was a commercial accident, his sensuous theme and score for the controversial film Last Tango in Paris in 1972, that made Barbieri an international star and a draw at festivals in Montreux, Newport, Bologna, and other locales. A contract with A&M in the U.S. led to a series of softer pop/jazz albums in the late '70s, including the brisk-selling Caliente! He returned to a more intense, rock-influenced, South American-grounded sound in 1981 with the live Gato...Para los Amigos under the aegis of producer Teo Macero, before doubling back to pop/jazz on Apasionado. Yet his profile in the U.S. was diminished later in the decade in the wake of the buttoned-down neo-bop movement.

Beset by triple-bypass surgery and bereavement over the death of his wife, Michelle, who was his closest musical confidant, Barbieri was inactive through much of the 1990s. But he returned to action in 1997, playing with most of his impassioned intensity, if limited in ideas, at the Playboy Jazz Festival in Los Angeles and recording a somewhat bland album, Que Pasa, for Columbia. Che Corazon followed in 1999.

As the 21st Century opened, Barbieri saw a steady stream of collections and reissues of his work appear. A new album, Shadow of the Cat, appeared from Peak Records in 2002. ~Biography by Richard S. Ginell

New York Meeting

Mink Stole & Her Wonderful Band - Do Re Mink

Size: 84,3 MB
Time: 36:01
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Blues, Pop, Rock, Swing
Art: Front

01. Female Trouble (3:02)
02. Bang Bang (2:33)
03. Thank You, Baby (3:39)
04. Baltimore (Feat. Jamie Wilson) (3:49)
05. Waiting For The World (2:20)
06. Born Of A Restless Spirit (Feat. Dave Chappell) (2:19)
07. God, If Any (2:42)
08. If You Were To Wake Up (Feat. John Irvine) (4:45)
09. Yours And So Am I (Feat. Michael Raitzyk & Arty Hill) (3:31)
10. What Can I Say After I Say I'm Sorry (2:17)
11. No Nose Nanook (1:56)
12. Sometimes I Wish I Had A Gun (3:04)

Swingy, bluesy, rocky, poppy, a little bit sweet, a little bit sad, and plenty of attitude: no one category completely describes this album that has taken my Wonderful Band (Walker Teret, Skizz Cyzyk, Glenn Workman) and me nearly three years to produce. It really began more than 10 years ago when I first started singing in small clubs in Los Angeles. Many of the songs on the album are reworkings of songs I performed in my one-woman cabaret show "Do Re MiNK," which is why I kept the name for the CD. Not a songwriter myself, I've been lucky to work with terrific musician/songwriters, and several cuts on the CD were written by bandmembers Kristian Hoffman and George Baby Woods from the Los Angeles incarnation of my Wonderful Band, and Skizz Cyzyk from the Baltimore incarnation. "No Nose Nanook" is a song I performed way back in the early '70s with the amazing Cockettes in a show called Vice Palace. "Female Trouble" is a cool reworking of the title song (performed by the late, great Divine) of the 1975 John Waters film, in which I played the disturbed Taffy Davenport. "Born of a Restless Spirit" is a full on rock song. The others are tunes I have fallen in love with over the years. "Sometimes I Wish I Had A Gun," written by my friend and musical mentor Brian Grillo, was previously released in 2007 on the compilation disc "A Date With John Waters."

Do Re Mink

Malonie Carre Quartet - Forever (With Gianny Laredo)

Size: 66,9 MB
Time: 28:33
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Why (2:35)
02. Round And About (4:02)
03. Forever (3:40)
04. Do It Her Way (3:25)
05. Do I Love Him (3:17)
06. In The Sky (3:20)
07. My Heart (3:06)
08. Out Of The Blue (5:04)

Bringing a Latin sensibility to jazz vocal, Carre fuses this date with some Broadway/cabaret ideas the underscore the dramatic element in a lot of Latin music that gringos would automatically think of as cabaret. There's plenty of jazz vocal here to make the jazz vocal fan be satisfied with the proceedings, this is something a little out of the usual pale and might just be what jaded ears in the genre are looking for. Probably a good bet for urbane tastes that like to be first on their block.

“Malonie´s voice is exquisite, her interpretation of these jazz songs and the unique presence of the Gianny Laredo (piano), has created a very special energy, creative sensitivity, for this project. This Album (Forever) has tremendous quality and above all an overflow of tremendous energy.” — Joaquin Betancourt Jackman, Grammy Award Winning Producer

Forever

Jesper Thilo Quartet - Stardust (Feat. Olivier Antunes & Bo Stief)

Size: 148,4 MB
Time: 63:27
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz: Cool Jazz, Trumpet Jazz
Art: Front

01. Let's Fall In Love (5:29)
02. Let's Face The Music And Dance (4:51)
03. Bewitched (6:26)
04. Hoe Down (4:45)
05. I'm Confessin' That I Love You (7:22)
06. Jessica's Day (4:39)
07. Strike Up The Band (8:50)
08. Stardust (4:59)
09. If I Could Be With You (3:50)
10. The Man I Love (5:57)
11. Soul Sister (6:14)

One of the top European straight-ahead jazz musicians from 1970 onward, Danish reedman Jesper Thilo has appeared on many records with American artists in addition to recording with his fellow countrymen. His tenor sound is reminiscent of Zoot Sims. Thilo, who has also occasionally played alto and clarinet, first recorded as a leader for Storyville in 1973, and in the 1980s and 1990s on Storyville his sidemen at various times included Hank Jones, Kenny Drew, Clark Terry, Roland Hanna, and Harry "Sweets" Edison. Thilo also appeared on Miles Davis' Aura (with compositions and arrangements by fellow Dane Palle Mikkelborg), released by Columbia in 1989. After the turn of the millennium Thilo has continued recording for a variety of labels, including several releases on Stunt Records: Remembering Those That Were (2009), On Clarinet (2010), and Scott Hamilton Meets Jesper Thilo (2011). ~Biography by Scott Yanow

Stardust

Jerome Epps - Eclectic Fusion

Size: 104,6 MB
Time: 44:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2007
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Smooth Funk (6:16)
02. Midnight Groove (5:16)
03. Rumba Salsa Rump (3:51)
04. Too Hip 2 Hop (5:02)
05. Enigma (5:42)
06. Celebracion (4:13)
07. Bossa De Nova (4:31)
08. Awakening (9:58)

Born in Washington DC, Jerome Epps began to embrace music at a very young age. With his father being an accomplished jazz saxophonist, Jerome would listen to his dad practice for hours to the likes of Miles, Coltrane, Bird, Sergio Mendes, Antonio Carlos Jobim, and the virtual who’s who of jazz. Yet there would take a slight detour on the path to fully appreciating jazz. And that detour was called: “Jimi Hendrix”. The Jazz world was put on hold while performed in numerous rock bands, influenced by Eric Clapton (Cream), Terry Kath (Chicago), Jimmy Page (Zepplin), and the original Santana band. Later his interests would shift back towards r&b, soul and funk, only to make the ultimate migration to more progressive jazz-rock fusion artists like Chick Corea, Al Dimeola, John McLaughlin’s Mahavishnu Orchestra, and Weather Report.

Oddly enough, as a youngster Jerome’s first music teacher was Roberta Flack (of “Killing Me Softly” fame) who taught him within the D.C. public school system. Years later he studied Music Education at Howard University where he met Dizzy Gillespie at a Latin-Jazz seminar. A priceless experience indeed.

Later, after moving west, Jerome finished his education at San Jose State University where he studied classical and jazz guitar. Hence, this musical path has led to Jerome’s new CD release “Eclectic Fusion” which embraces his eclectic roots in jazz, r&b, funk, latin, rock and fusion, while blending this sound with contemporary dance beats. Hence we give you “Eclectic Fusion”. Enjoy!

Eclectic Fusion

Yuko Ito - O Cantador

Size: 103,0 MB
Time: 44:14
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Brazilian Rythms
Art: Front

01. Mas Que Nada (4:55)
02. Samba De Verao (4:56)
03. Travessia (4:50)
04. Sina (4:49)
05. Batucada Surgiu (3:09)
06. Guerrilla (Eu Nao Sou Ninguem) (4:35)
07. Eu So Quero Um Xodo (3:14)
08. O Cantador (5:02)
09. Takeda No Komori- Uta (4:07)
10. Serrado (4:32)

New York based vocalist Yuko Ito's second Album "O Cantador" co-produced by great pianist / Composer Cidinho Teixeira. The recording is a collection of Brazilian songs by Jorge Ben, MarcosValle, Miton Nascmento, Djavan Dominguinhos, Dori Caymmi. She also recorded Japanese traditional song"Takeda No Komoriuta". She put original melody with african chant.
Also she recorded Japanese Rock Band Red Warriors's song "Guerrilla" She made Brazilian Portugeses lyrics on it.

Bio:
A native of Tokyo, Japan, she has been performing publicly in wide range of styles: pop, rock, R&B, jazz funk, gospel, free jazz and various forms of Brazilian music since high school. Her early musical career began when she founded the girl’s rock band Sissy Boy, which produced two CDs: Marcy’s Factory, with Vaan Media, and Kick Off Boy’s, with Crown Records Japan. Even with her early success in Japan, Yuko's musical vision was broad and she chose to move to New York in 1994. A vocal coach soon encouraged her to explore jazz and eventually this led to her receiving B.F.A degree from City College of New York in music (Jazz Vocal Performance). After a jam session Yuko attended while still in school, she was invited by jazz artist Sabir Mateen to perform with him. This encouraged her to continue to draw deeply from the jazz tradition in her work. She has performed with the Harlem Gospel Choir and appeared at Blue Note (New York), She has also performed with the Harlem Gospel Choir in Times Square on Good Morning America (ABC) and “New Yorker”( NHK BS1).

Having been lured by positive lyrics, unique beats and passionate movement, Yuko grew with her rebellious rock attitude into a mature songstress and it shows on her new album Mania De Você . Yuko Ito, originally from Japan, has evolved into a born again Brazilian New Yorker.

O Cantador

Barrelhouse Chuck - Combo Classics

Size: 108,2 MB
Time: 43:51
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Blues, Rock
Art: Full

01. Hot & Heavy (2:53)
02. Time Is Tight (3:12)
03. Depression Blues (3:27)
04. Chuckabilly (Live) (3:00)
05. Pacific Blue (3:37)
06. My Dog Don't Bow Wow (Perry Weber Vocals) (4:47)
07. Bright Sounds Of Big Moose (3:23)
08. Walk Don't Run 69 (2:09)
09. Porchlight (Nick Moss Vocals) (4:12)
10. Wah Wah Blues (5:04)
11. Farfisa B3 Boogie For Winwood (1:05)
12. Don't Go To Dallas (Oscar Wilson Vocals) (4:22)
13. Slam Hammer (2:35)

When I was growing up a lower middle class Irish-Italian kid in New York City, few families could afford big Wurlitzer or other in home organs. Much to their chagrin, many an Italian kid who had aspirations to play something with a keyboard were awarded an accordion. But then came the combo organ. Vox, Farfisa and others took the concepts of the organ, accordion, transistors and bright colored plastic to create a portable organ that musical combos could use. Those were heady days; with the advent of the transistor replacing the old vacuum tubes, equipment and electronics got lighter and easier to move and transport. No longer would keyboard players have to rely on the old out of tune house piano at their gigs. A new age was upon us musically.

Blues musicians embraced and adopted this new fangled device as did the rockers like Steve Winwood from the Spencer Davis Group and Traffic, the Doors and others. In the liner notes Chuck comments on the fab song of his youth, ”96 Tears”, by ? and the Mysterions that he played in every juke box he saw. Later on, Otis Spann became his Farfisa role model with his recording of “Ain’t Nobody’s Business” with drummer S.P. Leary. Chuck includes a passionate and lilting version of this (with S.P. again on drums!) on this album.

Barrelhouse Chuck pays homage to that 1960’s classic instrument by packing up all his great songs featuring the combo organ and giving us this great new CD “Combo Classics”! A very 1960’s looking photo of a combo organ adorns the CD cover, and inside and on back we have a beautiful, bright red compact combo organ of Chuck’s. Behind the CD in the jewel box we have a classic advertisement for “the new Rheem stereo compact combo electronic organ.” What a cool package, but cooler yet is what’s on the silver disc inside the package. All designed by Harmonica Todd Levine!

Chuck offers up thirteen prime and classic cuts of his combo organ virtuosity. He’s got hot newer stuff along with some of his older works on the combo and they are all hot stuff. The Spann classic includes Billy Flynn on guitar along with exquisite vocals by Chuck and Bethany Thomas. He lends his unique Farfisa sound to the Ventures “Walk Don’t Run 69” where he, Flynn and Kenny Smith give us that beach classic Lake Michigan styled!

“Depression Blues” written by Sunnyland Slim gives us some relevant commentary on today’s economic woes, where Chuck laments about people being laid of by the thousands as he makes the Farfisa sing also to us. Backing him again are Flynn and Leary along with Hash Brown on guitar, Todd Levine on fat tone harp and Rick Holmes on bass. He offers up the Farfisa on two newer cuts with the Swedish Trickbag group to open the album. Earl Hooker’s “Hot and Heavy” and what I like to call an original Swedish-Chicago surf tune called “Pacific Blue” a Goering original.

Good stuff just oozes from all over this CD.

The Goering-Flynn original “Chuckabilly-Live” features two amazing instrumentals where the instruments actually seem to talk to us. Chuck’s organ and Flynn’s guitar seemingly sing out to and grab us in this cut. Chuck goes to the Lowry organ to do the “Bright Sound of Big Moose”, a super tribute to Johnny “Moose” Walker. Nick Moss joins Chuck on two tracks and sings on one of them, his own “Porchlight”. James Cotton’s “Slam Hammer" by Benny Rickun on harp” from Perry Weber & The DeVilles. Perry plays nice guitar on two cuts. Curtis Salgado’s wicked harp adds so much to these tracks, too. Lynwood Slim does the singing on the other song, the J. Haliday-Ray Charles classic “I Choose to Sing the Blues”. Chuck hits us with an R.M.I. and Rheem on the first two and a Vox on the third. Classic stuff done by a man who has exerted full mastery over the combination organ, perhaps even more so than he has the piano! Space does not permit comments on every track, but suffice it to say all thirteen are equally special. I do have to mention, though, the Barrelhouse Chuck tribute to the great Stevie Winwood that he closes with, where Chuck plays the Farfisa on his “Farfisa B3 Boogie for Winwood”; along with Jim Mckaba on B3 it's classic stuff!

Run, do not walk, to the CD store (or even faster, run to your computer) and get this CD today. You won’t regret it. This is blues and early rock organ at its’ finest and no one- NO ONE!- does it better than Barrelhouse Chuck! ~by Steve Jones from The Crossroads Blues Society of Northern Illinois.

Combo Classics

The Asian Jazz All Stars Power Quartet - Live At The Living Room

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 71:45
Size: 164.3 MB
Styles: Fusion
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[13:54] 1. Carrot Cake
[19:22] 2. African Skies
[ 8:48] 3. This Guy's In Love
[11:49] 4. Wrappin' It Up
[17:50] 5. Tiramisu (For Hino)

The name says it all; four of Asia's leading jazz musicians—Singaporean pianist/organist Jeremy Monteiro, Philippine saxophonist Tots Tolentino, Hong Kong guitarist Eugene Pao and Thai drummer, Hong Chanutr Techatana-nan—combine to produce a powerful, electro-acoustic jazz fusion which draws inspiration from the Larry Goldings/Peter Bernstein/Bill Stewart trio. Recorded at the Living Room, Bangkok during a month-long jazz festival in June 2011 to celebrate the venue's tenth anniversary, this recording captures the quartet in exuberant mood.

After thirty years at the piano, Monteiro returned to his early love, the Hammond organ, in recording Groovin' at Groove Junction (Jazznote Records, 2009)—nominated for an Independent Music Award—and his organ sound leaves a large imprint on the session. Peter Bernstein's grooving, Blue Note-flavored "Carrot Cake" opens proceedings with strong solos from tenor player Tolentino and Monteiro. Gigging with his organ trio Organamix these last couple of years has sharpened Monteiro's organ chops, and his playing is confident and imaginative. Pao in turn stretches his digits, showing the kind of tasteful attack that has seen him work with pianists Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock, guitarist Joe Pass , saxophonist Jackie McLean, and drummers Jack DeJohnette and Bill Bruford.

A nineteen-minute interpretation of "African Skies" pays homage to its creator, saxophonist Michael Brecker. Pao, Tolentino and Monteiro all performed and/or recorded with Brecker, and the quartet really cooks on this free-spirited workout. Tolentino wisely follows his own path on a rousing tenor exploration, rather than trying to emulate the foremost post-Coltrane tenorist that Brecker was. Monteiro ratchets up the intensity a notch with a searching, extended solo before the quartet shifts down a gear, setting Pao loose with the task of bringing things back to the boil, which he does with a fluid, bluesy solo with plenty of bite. Chanutr Techatana-nan's effervescent, driving rhythms are a key to the dynamism of this track, and the quartet's energy throughout the recording.

Burt Bacharach/Hal David's "This Guy's in Love" provides a beautiful oasis of slowly swinging calm, with Tolentino and Pao's lyricism to the fore. Another fine Monteiro solo opens Larry Goldings "Wrappin' it Up," before Tolentino picks up the reins with a snaking solo which gains gradually in potency. This mid-tempo number showcases more measured, though no less impressive playing from the quartet and Pao in turn shines with a mazy run.

Tolentino's swinging "Tiramisu"—dedicated to Japanese trumpeter Terumasa Hino—clocks in at almost eighteen minutes and is perhaps the most ambitious and satisfying tune of the CD. The quartet burns on this hard-grooving number for the first eight minutes. Monteiro then unfolds a vaguely spacey solo over a drone before launching into adventurous improvised waters. Pao's liveliest playing of the session sets the seal on a powerful performance.

Jazz-fusion—for want of a better term—is alive and kicking in Asia, as this excellent recording demonstrates. So far, only Asian audiences have been fortunate to see this incendiary quartet on tour. Hopefully, it will go into the studio with some original material soon and launch itself beyond Asia. ~Ian Patterson

Jeremy Monteiro: organ; Eugene Pao: guitar; Tots Tolentino: tenor saxophone; Hong Chanutr Techatana-nan: drums.

Live At The Living Room

Charlier/Sourisse - Eleven Blues

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 63:43
Size: 145.9 MB
Styles: Bebop, Blues-jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[5:50] 1. Congo Square
[5:12] 2. Way Back Home
[4:20] 3. Meeting At Douglaston
[4:30] 4. Mingus Street Blues
[3:11] 5. Singin'drum
[7:05] 6. Tribute To Mister H
[9:40] 7. Couleurs Nuit
[4:43] 8. Celebration Station
[5:32] 9. Two And Four Driving
[7:34] 10. Used To Be A Waltz
[6:00] 11. La Seconde Danse

THIS album demonstrates yet again the elasticity of the blues form.

Each of the French duo's compositions explores a different angle, from the pastoral Couleurs Nuit, via the stately Mingus Street Blues to the pulsating Meeting At Douglaston. Benoit Sourisse's keyboard work is nimble and imaginative throughout, while co-leader Andre Charlier's subtle and swinging playing reaches a peak on his feature, Singin' Drum. Guitarist Jean-Marie Ecay and guest saxophonist Kenny Garrett turn in superior solos.

Eleven Blues

Halie Loren - Stages

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 64:21
Size: 147.3 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[3:15] 1. Danger In Loving You
[3:24] 2. Sunny Afternoon
[5:40] 3. I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For
[4:03] 4. More
[4:47] 5. Cry Me A River
[4:29] 6. The Girl From Ipanema
[3:53] 7. Free To Be Loved By Me
[4:21] 8. Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby
[3:34] 9. Love Me Like A River Does
[3:35] 10. They Oughta Write A Song
[3:40] 11. High Heel Blues
[6:00] 12. Summertime
[3:30] 13. My Rainbow Race
[5:04] 14. I'd Rather Go Blind
[4:57] 15. Nearness Of You

The studio is a safe place for musicians looking to birth an album in a controlled environment, but the stage is the real proving ground for performers. These people make their mark when lights are low, nerves are tested and safety nets are removed. This is where the real deal musicians get separated from the great pretenders and vocalist Halie Loren is as real as they come.

Loren, who may be the best-kept vocal secret in the Pacific Northwest, put out this low-key live album in 2010, but her reach was limited and it went largely unnoticed. Now, with the release of her head-turning Heart First (Justin Time, 2012), Loren's new label is fanning the flames of interest by reissuing this album with a few bonus tracks tacked on for good measure.

Her three-pronged approach to programming, which includes standards, pop pieces co-opted for jazzier purposes and originals, serves her well here. She jumps from U2 ("I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For") to Antonio Carlos Jobim ("The Girl From Ipanema") to Hoagy Carmichael ("The Nearness Of You") with apparent ease. She delivers classic material like "Cry Me A River" with polish, unlocks the potential that exists within The Kinks' "Sunny Afternoon" and taps into her inner-Sarah McLachlan on "Free To Be Loved By Me," which proves to be the most memorable original on display. Risky material choices occasionally meet with mixed results, as "High Heel Blues" proves to be a triumph while a tropically-infused take on Pete Seeger's "My Rainbow Race" is a bit too sugary, but Loren's willingness to move beyond the overdone is ever admirable.

Loren occupies the space that exists between pop and jazz, but that dual allegiance hasn't done her any favors in the past. Neither camp seemed willing to stake claim on her, but she deserves to be embraced by both. Now, with this live reissue following on the heels of her strongest studio album to date, this matter will hopefully be rectified. ~Dan Bialwsky

Halie Loren: vocals; Matt Treder: keyboards; Mark Schneider: bass; Tim McLaughlin: trumpet; Brian West: drums.

Stages

Red Norvo - Pretty Is The Only Way To Fly

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 31:26
Size: 72.0 MB
Styles: Cool jazz
Year: 1962/2010
Art: Front

[4:38] 1. I'll Remember April
[4:06] 2. Spider's Nest
[3:39] 3. Tenderly
[3:51] 4. Lullaby Of Birdland
[3:14] 5. Stella By Starlight
[3:52] 6. Scorpion's Nest
[3:47] 7. Funny Valentine
[4:16] 8. Love For Sale

Red Norvo was an unusual star during the swing era, playing jazz xylophone. After he switched to vibes in 1943, Norvo had a quieter yet no-less fluent style than Lionel Hampton. Although no match for Hampton popularity-wise, Norvo and his wife, singer Mildred Bailey, did become known as "Mr. and Mrs. Swing."
Red Norvo had a long and interesting career. He started on marimba when he was 14 and soon switched to xylophone. Active in vaudeville in the late '20s as a tap dancer, Norvo joined Paul Whiteman's orchestra in the early '30s (meeting and marrying Mildred Bailey). He recorded some extraordinary sides in the early to mid-'30s that showed off his virtuosity and imagination; two numbers (the atmospheric "Dance of the Octopus" and "In a Mist") had Benny Goodman playing bass clarinet, remarkably. Norvo led his own band during 1936-1944 which, with its Eddie Sauter arrangements (particularly in the early days), had a unique ensemble sound that made it possible for one to hear the leader's xylophone. In 1944, Norvo (who by then had switched permanently to vibes) broke up his band and joined Benny Goodman's Sextet. Through recordings and appearances, he showed that his style was quite adaptable and open to bop. Norvo welcomed Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie to a 1945 record date, was part of Woody Herman's riotous first Herd in 1946, and recorded with Stan Hasselgard in 1948. At the beginning of the 1950s, Norvo put together an unusual trio with guitarist Tal Farlow (later Jimmy Raney) and bassist Charles Mingus (later Red Mitchell). The light yet often speedy unisons and telepathic interplay by the musicians was quite memorable. Norvo led larger groups later in the decade, had reunions with Benny Goodman, and made many fine recordings. The 1960s found Red Norvo adopting a lower profile after he had a serious ear operation in 1961. He worked with the Newport All-Stars later in the decade, and from the mid-'70s to the mid-'80s was once again quite active, making several excellent recordings. However, his hearing eventually worsened and a serious stroke put Red Norvo out of action altogether after 55 years of music. He died on April 6, 1999, at the age of 91.

Pretty Is The Only Way To Fly

Cris Barber - This Moment To Be Free

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:32
Size: 141,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:17)  1. My Foolish Heart
(5:47)  2. I Got It Bad
(4:13)  3. I Only Have Eyes For You
(3:12)  4. Be Sure
(4:42)  5. Family Line
(3:51)  6. Sunny
(4:59)  7. Love For Sale
(5:06)  8. Going In
(3:31)  9. Blackbird
(4:44) 10. What Is It
(4:24) 11. Nature Boy
(3:55) 12. Devil May Care
(4:03) 13. What A Little Moonlight Can Do
(4:41) 14. Calling You

Southern California award-winning jazz vocalist Cris Barber has released her fourth album with “This Moment To Be Free” and it’s another winner of a recording. Often compared to Diana Krall, Barber uses her warm smooth vocals to interpret a terrific selection of pop and jazz standards like Victor Young’s “My Foolish Heart,” Cole Porter’s “Love For Sale,” and Paul McCartney’s “Blackbird” to name a few. All together the CD boasts fourteen tunes where the lady swings and voices love ballads to the heart. What makes this album a success is not only Barber’s vocal talents but her phenomenal backup. Assisting the Singer here is a core quintet comprised of first-call Los Angeles studio and concert players among them, Karen Hammack (piano), Barry Cogert (bass), Aldo Bentivegna (drums), Kurt Rasmussen (percussions), Jamie Findlay (guitar) and Greg Vail (sax and flute). Also appearing as special guest is guitarist Laurie Morvan performing on her original, “Family Line,” and Mark Barnes playing the Hammond B3 on “Family Line” and “What Is It.” Eden Ahbez’s classic standard “Nature Boy” is given one heck of an overhaul here as Barber voices the lyrics to a splendid Latin jazz rendition for one of the finer tunes on the disc. 

The lady and the band swing on the jazz staple “Devil May Care” with superb piano chops from Hammack. This tune is followed up by another sizzler in “What A Little Moonlight Can Do” where saxophonist Vail scorches one behind the singer’s lead. Barber shows a bit of her tender side on Duke Ellington’s “I Got It Bad,” and the love tune “Be Sure,” then turns a bit funky on the pop finale of “Sunny” completing one fine session of wonderful light hearted contemporary jazz with a twist. “This Moment To Be Free” is one of the finer jazz vocals recordings you’ll find this year and Cris Barber’s splendid performance is one reason why. ~ Edward Blanco  Ejazznews.com   http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/crisbarber4

Gigi Gryce - Doin' The Gigi

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:20
Size: 157,2 MB
Art: Front

(11:24)  1. Blues In Bloom
( 4:40)  2. A Premoniton Of You
( 7:37)  3. A Night In Tunisia
( 5:34)  4. Down Home
( 3:01)  5. Blues In Bloom
( 2:30)  6. Dancing the Gigi (A.K.A Strange Feelin')
( 3:32)  7. Sonor (A.K.A Sonar)
( 4:15)  8. Down Home
( 3:59)  9. Take The A Train
( 2:37) 10. Stompin' at the Savoy
( 4:31) 11. I'll Walk Alone
( 4:57) 12. Caravan
( 1:46) 13. All The Things You Are
( 0:08) 14. Announcements By Al 'Jazzbo' Collins & Hugh Downs
( 0:19) 15. Movin'
( 2:34) 16. There Will Never Be Another You
( 2:45) 17. Man Of Moods
( 2:02) 18. The Blues Walk (A.K.A Somebody Done Stole My Blues, Loose Walk)

Gigi Gryce had a short but productive career, which lasted roughly a decade before he abruptly left jazz in the early 1960s to become a teacher. This compilation of unissued performances is an important addition to his legacy, particularly the 1961 Birdland broadcast, which features the working band he used for his Rat Race Blues album (pianist Richard Wyands, trumpeter Richard Williams, bassist Julian Euell, and drummer Mickey Roker), plus the addition of vibraphonist Eddie Costa (who died tragically in a car wreck the following year). Beginning with an extended workout of Norman Mapp's "Blues in Bloom" (though it is actually a modal work, not a blues), the sextet's loping treatment is full of inventive solos. Gryce tackles "A Night in Tunisia" at a brisk clip, taking a sparkling two chorus solo, while also featuring each member of the band in turn. The sextet is also heard in two studio tracks from 1961, a brief "Blues in Bloom" and Gryce's sassy blues "Doin' the Gigi" (also known as "Strange Feeling"). 

The credits have been lost to another studio date with Williams and Wyands, though the bassist and drummer are unknown. The introduction of Gryce's setting of "Take the 'A' Train" transforms the famous theme from a subway to a locomotive, showcasing Williams and Wyands before the leader opens his solo with a humorous, unexpected quote from "Dixie." Gryce's ballad playing is the highlight of "I'll Walk Alone" (a Sammy Cahn-Jule Styne piece from a '40s film), with a fine open horn solo by Williams and muted work behind the saxophonist at the conclusion. A 1957 TV broadcast is the source of several performances, featuring Gryce leading a band with baritone saxophonist Cecil Payne, pianist Duke Jordan, bassist Wendell Marshall, and drummer Art Taylor. 

They are all fairly concise due to the time constraints of the television program, but they hint at the strengths of the quintet. Stand-out tracks include the abbreviated version of Gryce's brisk "Movin'," and a midtempo rendition of the standard "There'll Never Be Another You." The detailed liner notes by Noel Cohen and Michael Fitzgerald, which were adapted from their biography of Gigi Gryce, plus the numerous photos, are added bonuses to this valuable collection of essential bop. ~ Ken Dryden  http://www.allmusic.com/album/doin-the-gigi-mw0002166656

Doin' The Gigi

George Barnes - Don't Get Around Much Anymore

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:13
Size: 127,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:08)  1. Fascinatin' Rhythm
(4:26)  2. Don't Get Around Much Anymore
(2:42)  3. Pick Yourself Up
(6:48)  4. Moonglow
(4:07)  5. Perdido
(4:08)  6. I Can't Get Started
(3:29)  7. Blues Goin' Up
(0:40)  8. Introductions
(2:54)  9. Why Was I Born?
(5:29) 10. When Sunny Gets Blue
(3:52) 11. Sweet Georgia Brown
(3:26) 12. Cheerful Little Earful
(3:07) 13. Theme From The Flinstones
(3:26) 14. I May Be Wrong
(4:24) 15. Three Little Words

George Barnes has been unjustly overlooked by fans of jazz guitar, since he spent a good portion of his career as a studio musician, but the initial appearance in 2003 of this previously unreleased 1977 concert (recorded just a few months prior to his death) adds an important final chapter to his recorded legacy. 

Barnes leads his brand new quartet (with fellow guitarist Duncan James, bassist Dean Reilly, and drummer Benny Barth) through a delightful program of standards ("Sweet Georgia Brown," "Moonglow," and "Why Was I Born?"), gems from the vast Duke Ellington band book ("Don't Get Around Much Anymore" and "Perdido"), as well as the popular "Theme From the Flintstones." Barnes' fluid playing and that of his group make them sound as if they had been together far longer. The excellent sound by engineer Larry Cummings is identical to the mix heard by the audience that very evening. The warm, detailed liner notes by Barnes' daughter, Alexandra Barnes Leh, add a nice touch to this highly recommended release. ~ Ken Dryden  
http://www.allmusic.com/album/dont-get-around-much-anymore-mw0000019616

Personnel: George Barnes, Duncan James (electric guitar); Dean Reilly (bass); Benny Barth (drums).

Don't Get Around Much Anymore

François Raulin - Echoes Of Spring

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:22
Size: 126,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:03)  1. Carolina Shout (James P. Johnson)
(4:37)  2. Morning Air (Willie Smith "The Lion")
(8:55)  3. Aunt Hagar's Blues (W.C. Handy) (tribute to Art Tatum)
(1:35)  4. The Second Portrait of the Lion (Duke Ellington) - Portrait of the Duke (Willie Smith "The Lion")
(2:02)  5. Echoes of Spring (Willie Smith "The Lion")
(5:24)  6. Kitten on the keys (Zez Confrey)
(4:44)  7. Ain't Misbehavin' (Thomas "Fat's" Waller, Andy Razaf)
(1:38)  8. Child of a Disordered Brain (Earl "Fatha" Hines) - Zig Zag (Willie Smith "The Lion")
(5:28)  9. In the Dark - Flashes (Bix Beiderbecke)
(4:04) 10. In a mist (Bix Beiderbecke)
(4:07) 11. Boogie Woogie on St Louis Blues (W.C. Handy)
(5:15) 12. Tonk (Duke Ellington, Billy Strayhorn)
(3:23) 13. Fast and Furious (Duke Ellington)

To say that they were waiting, the Echoes of Spring , released on the label of the young pianist Edouard Ferlet , Melissa, about the Harlem stride piano, after the happiness felt in concert: the program of the two great pianists, François Raulinand Stephan Oliva , turned into effect in a number of festivals since its inception in Grenoble in March 2006. Thanks to the network so AFIJMA have supported and carried such a creation in the various festivals of Bordeaux to Nevers, program which have evolved over time and gain fluency. No current pianist is probably able to play as James P. Johnson , true "tickler" evil ticklers key. Starting from ragtime, but also inspired by the great Romantic composers like Liszt, he hoisted above the style he invented, the stride , where the left hand is powerful and metronomic while the right goes up in refinement improvisation and ornamentation. Fats Waller, Oscar Peterson, Earl Hines, Count Basie, Art Tatum, Duke Ellington , Monk ... all modern pianists would pay tribute tostride , be inspired while diverting. 

This music full of polyrhythms and reefs is a real challenge, a recreation of every moment, very elaborate despite the apparent fluidity, simmering subtlety of certain passages, the other filament. It was seasoned musicians to make this tradition alive. The quintet of Raulin and Oliva, whose musicians have long known, is the ideal training: the energies released will always deploy generously. Nothing more beautiful than the work of arrangement and intelligent complementarity of the two pianists who play all registers; nothing more disturbing than sweet counterpoints blowers, unite their sensual. Monniot Christophe plays all saxophones, the sharp angle between the gap and the arabesque, cuddly baritone, fiery alto, sopranino to the flickering . As for the clarinetist Lawrence Outside , it is one of the few to be able to balance its cheeky turbulence, sometimes exceeded its rowdy stridency, including the well because they practice both the "lag ear" while Sébastien Boisseau provides only a rhythmic Burning bass. The program starts with a bang on with the truculent "Carolina Shout" by James P. Johnson, the workhorse reminiscent of banjo drilled on "piano rolls" from 1918. Then it's delicious "Morning Air" Willie The Lion Smith , musician steeped in Chopin and Rachmaninoff who loved embroidery precious melodies with a sense of color which is found in Duke Ellington [ 1 ]. In fact, it should list all the songs, the assembly is very convincing. 

Changes tones, breaks the alarming climate "A Child of Disordered Mind" (a solo 's Earl Hines (1940), beautifully rearranged by Oliva) or bright roughness of "Boogie Woogie on St. Louis Blues" dedicated to the same Earl Hines. We listen to a stroke this time music loudly seasons - breakaway "Is not Misbehaving" by Fats Waller reviewed by Raulin, ripping blues "Aunt Hagar's Blues" introduces bass and clarinet, or the final played four hands, "Fast and Furious" as in the time of Duke and Billy Stayhorn. But how not to be moved to listen to "Flashes / In the Dark" by Bix Beiderbecke , or "In A Mist", only written for the piano by the young white cornetist Davenport (Iowa) composition? "A guy who had the atmosphere in the fingers" said Boris Vian . A visionary melody in many ways, where pianists find unusual agreements, a penchant for the phrase in arabesque. As for the title composition, "Echoes of Spring", it illuminates its melancholy sweetness that jazz of the past, the quintet has managed to make incredibly current. This fragile melody of January 1939, including the arrangement of François Raulin has kept the harmonies and swinging the left hand, also reminds us that the poet TS Eliot that sometimes the spring is not synonymous with renewal and that "April is the month Cruellest" ...Translate by google  ~ Sophie Chambon   http://www.citizenjazz.com/Francois-Raulin-Stephan-Oliva.html