Monday, December 15, 2014

Jennifer Hanson - How The Night People Pray

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:44
Size: 84,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:50)  1. Little Dreamer
(2:54)  2. Only Waiting
(3:10)  3. In The Cathouse Again
(3:41)  4. How The Night People Pray
(3:56)  5. Crazy (This Is What I Am)
(2:09)  6. Drunk Again
(2:36)  7. Honey, Won't You Please Come Home
(4:19)  8. No One To Say Goodbye To
(3:14)  9. In Hollywood It Happens All The Time
(3:50) 10. When I'm With You

Canadian vocalist extraordinaire Jennifer Hanson, currently based in Atlanta Georgia, dispels any confusion with the country singer of the same name, by presenting ten beautiful songs from the pen of renowned Canadian songwriter Graham Shaw. This cd is all about terrific songs performed by a singer with outstanding chops, displaying a vulnerability and emotion not often found in today's punch-it-up market. The music runs on the edges of jazz, pop and even folk, and  is propelled by some of the finest musicians in Canada. There is much craft evident in all aspects of "How The Night People Pray", and it won't be surprising if the "other" Jennifer Hanson starts getting requests to perform some of these songs. http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/jenniferhanson

Ryan Kisor - The Dream

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:08
Size: 126,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:48)  1. Minor Ordeal
(8:52)  2. The Dream
(6:32)  3. Deception
(7:25)  4. Calypso Cove
(6:06)  5. Bert's Blues
(5:09)  6. Panic Attack
(7:01)  7. I Should Care
(8:11)  8. Fiesta Mojo

With The Dream, Ryan Kisor returns to the quartet lineup that graced 2000's Point of Arrival: pianist Peter Zak, bassist John Webber, and drummer Willie Jones III. The program is wholly original except for the final two tracks, a ballad reading of "I Should Care" and a fun romp on Dizzy Gillespie's infectious "Fiesta Mojo." (Tenor saxophonist Eric Alexander and percussionist Renato Thoms join in on the latter.) Kisor sends sparks flying with the opening "Minor Ordeal," a hot minor blues, and "Deception," a muted foray over "Cherokee" changes (with a faint echo of "Half Nelson" at the top of the melody). The band also cooks on the mid-tempo "Bert's Blues" and the galloping modal Hubbard-esque "Panic Attack." But the waltz-time title track and the bossa piece "Calypso Cove" fail to sustain much interest. In sum, there are compelling moments, but after the fairly adventurous sound of 2001's Power Source, The Dream seems like a retreat to safer shores. ~ David R. Adler  http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-dream-mw0000221312

Personnel: Ryan Kisor (trumpet); Eric Alexander (tenor saxophone); Peter Zak (piano); Willie Jones III (drums); Renato Thoms (percussion).

The Dream

Hanna Richardson & Phil Flanigan - Do Something

Styles: Jazz, Vocal, Swing
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:10
Size: 126,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:55)  1. Three Little Words
(3:48)  2. Foolin Myself
(3:17)  3. What Have You Got That Gets Me
(4:14)  4. The Very Thought of You
(4:22)  5. A Porters Love Song To Chambermaid
(6:54)  6. The Ladys In Love With You
(4:56)  7. Me Minus You
(3:24)  8. Romance Without Finance
(5:05)  9. Talk To Me Baby
(3:50) 10. Do Something
(3:37) 11. I Double Dare You
(3:43) 12. Show Your Linen Miss Richardson

Classic, swinging American music at its finest, with Hanna now keeping flawless time on rhythm tenor guitar, and featuring Randy Reinhart on cornet, Stefan Vasnier on piano, Jared Mulcahy on bass, and Phil on both bass and tenor guitar. http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/richardsonflanigan4

The Al Cohn - Zoot Sims Quintet - You 'N Me

Styles: Clarinet And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1960
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:28
Size: 83,8 MB
Art: Front + Back

(4:08)  1. The Note
(4:47)  2. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
(4:36)  3. You 'N Me
(4:30)  4. On The Alamo
(3:40)  5. The Opener
(3:13)  6. Angel Eyes
(4:15)  7. Awful Lonely
(4:53)  8. Love For Sale
(2:23)  9. Improvisation For Unaccompanied Saxophones

The most unusual selection on this Al Cohn-Zoot Sims set from 1960 is "Improvisation for Unaccompanied Saxophones," a short but effective two-tenor workout that, through a clever arrangement by Cohn, gives one the impression that both saxophonists are using circular breathing. Another departure is "Angel Eyes," which has both Cohn and Sims switching to clarinet and showcases Major Holley's singing and bowed bass. Otherwise, the co-leaders stick to their main instruments and enjoy swinging together with the assistance of Holley, pianist Mose Allison (who would soon be starting his own successful solo career), and drummer Osie Johnson. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/youn-me-mw0000211151
Personnel:  Zoot Sims - tenor saxophone, clarinet; Osie Johnson – drums; Al Cohn - clarinet, tenor saxophone; Major Holley – bass; Zoot Sims Quintet

You 'N Me

The Bad Plus - Inevitable Western

Styles: Post-Bop, Avant-Garde Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:32
Size: 116,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:29)  1. I Hear You
(6:26)  2. Gold Prisms Incorporated
(4:32)  3. Self Serve
(6:45)  4. You Will Lose All Fear
(3:54)  5. Do It Again
(4:16)  6. Epistolary Echoes
(9:43)  7. Adopted Highway
(4:00)  8. Mr. Now
(5:23)  9. Inevitable Western

It's in the opening moments of "I Hear You," the first track on Inevitable Western: the mercurial, mysterious, yet utterly musical sense of adventure that lies at the heart of the Bad Plus' sound. After recording the rigorous, mathematically challenging score for Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring -- released only six months prior to this -- one can almost hear relief in the trio's return to its own universe. These nine tracks are equally divided compositionally among bassist Reid Anderson, pianist Ethan Iverson, and drummer Dave King. The bassist's aforementioned opener is a seemingly simple lyric stated by the piano but given a slightly quirky yet nearly processional tilt in its meter as Anderson illustrates the time as the drummer's syncopated accents add drama and humor. King's "God Prisms Incorporated" is a marvelous cut-time jazz illustration of post-rock song form. Iverson's pulsing chord statement rides atop the minimal melody, offset by the rhythm section's inventive interplay. A piano solo commences halfway through, stretching the notion of time, though the tune never quite abandons its interlocking grooves. Iverson's "Self Serve" is a knotty, almost swinging post-bop tune, with gorgeous harmonic statements by Anderson. 

The mutant classicism in the bassist's "You Will Lose All Fear" feels like it was simultaneously influenced by both Charles Ives and Aaron Copland. Iverson's solo, full of bright arpeggios and forceful dynamic chords, is adorned by King's hyperactive rolls and fills. The set's longest piece is the drummer's "Adopted Highway." Introduced by a shimmering crash cymbal and a single piano chord, all three members engage in measured, dissonant stop-and-start counterpoint. Iverson rumbles along the lower and middle registers as Anderson's pizzicato lines exhort King to use his brushes aggressively in response. The tune unfolds very gradually, as free-flowing improvisation alternates with intricately written lines, building to a taut climax before gradually whispering to a close. Iverson's "Mr. Now" is almost funky in its intro. His sharp, labyrinthine head is offered in short statements with King playing double time and Anderson holding the center. 

It becomes a meaty, hard-driving exercise in modern post-bop, as all three members engage in spirited dialogue. King delivers a bracing solo in the final third. The closing title number, by the pianist, seamlessly melds jazz, classical, blues, modal, and great American saloon-style music in dexterous and lyrical phrases and rhythmic frames. Inevitable Western is a reminder that the Bad Plus are not a "piano trio" in any ordinary sense of the term, but a unit of strikingly different voices acting as one in expanding the boundaries of jazz. ~ Thom Jurek  http://www.allmusic.com/album/inevitable-western-mw0002702271

Personnel: Ethan Iverson (piano); Dave King (drums).