Thursday, January 15, 2015

Lester Young - Lester Swings

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:15
Size: 147.1 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[5:49] 1. Ad Lib Blues
[3:48] 2. I Cover The Waterfront (Take 2)
[2:30] 3. Lester Swings
[2:41] 4. Undercover Girl Blues
[5:42] 5. It's The Talk Of The Town
[6:40] 6. This Years Kisses
[3:47] 7. Up 'n' Adam
[5:56] 8. They Can't Take That Away From Me
[4:29] 9. It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
[5:49] 10. Love Is Here To Stay
[8:15] 11. Waldorf Blues
[5:04] 12. All Of Me
[3:38] 13. Polka Dots And Moonbeams

In selecting a little over an hour's worth of excerpts from the eight-CD box set The Complete Lester Young Studio Sessions on Verve for this highlights disc, the compilers have resisted the urge to stick with only a collection of Young's more accomplished early works and included a few examples of his deteriorated, but still moving, later work. They have hedged their bets somewhat, however, by not sequencing things chronologically, so that the album closes with a 1949 recording of the pop song "Polka Dots and Moonbeams" rather than, say, "Waldorf Blues" from 1958. Early or late, Young's playing is readily identifiable, if only for the chances it takes, whether on the up-tempo "It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)" or the strikingly excessive introductory blowing on the opening phrases of "Love Is Here to Stay." Young's associates on the tracks constitute a who's who of his contemporaries, including Ray Brown, Nat "King" Cole, Hary "Sweets" Edison, Roy Eldridge, Herb Ellis, Hank Jones, Jo Jones, Connie Kay, John Lewis, Oscar Peterson, Buddy Rich, and Teddy Wilson. While it takes more than an hour to get a full sense of Young's work on Verve (hence the box set), this is an intelligently constructed sampler. ~William Ruhlmann

Lester Swings

Jaimee Paul - P.S. I Love You

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:34
Size: 136.4 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[2:58] 1. I Could Write A Book
[7:30] 2. Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most
[6:44] 3. Black Coffee
[3:25] 4. My Romance
[4:43] 5. P. S. I Love You
[5:46] 6. Summertime
[5:40] 7. The Nearness of You
[3:50] 8. L.O.V.E
[4:06] 9. A Child Is Born
[4:45] 10. The Man I Love
[3:47] 11. That's Life
[6:15] 12. Angel Eyes

Raised in Southern Illinois, steeped in the church choir, Paul was influenced by Gospel and Blues, cultivating a special place in her heart for Jazz. She left her home town for Nashville Tennessee to study music business at highly acclaimed Belmont University. After graduation Jaimee quickly found work at various record labels handling marketing and radio promotion; simultaneously she began working part time as a studio session singer. Not long after, studio work began to take over her schedule and she became a full time musician. Performing her own shows expanding her solo career. Jaimee's talent was rapidly recognized, and soon after she began touring as background vocalist with country superstar Wynonna.

In 2008 Green Hill Music signed Jaimee as their first female vocalist, and their debut record, "At Last", reached #1 on the iTunes Jazz charts. Recognizing the success several more albums followed, and her relationship with Green Hill continues today. Since then she has recorded 5 more albums...one (Bonded) which will be released on March 12th. Bonded is a daring tribute to the legendary themes of the world renown James Bond Movie phenomenon. A collaborative effort with the production of Michael Omartian and Jack Jezzro. Without fail, Jaimee masterfully delivers a one of a kind album that stands up to the originals with respectful attention to the great artists that paved the way for her.

Jaimee Paul continues in her solo career with great momentum and great music. She has had the unique privilege of performing for audiences throughout the U.S., Canada, Europe, and Japan. Some attendees have included Prime ministers, Congressmen, Military leaders, and Ambassadors. Music enthusiasts have been touched and inspired by her incredible talent, and the music she is honored and blessed to create.

P.S.  I love you

Alessandro Usai Jazz Trio - Downtown Jazz

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:40
Size: 100.0 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[4:29] 1. In A Sentimental Mood
[2:59] 2. Take The A Train
[2:06] 3. Billie's Bounce
[3:52] 4. Blue Bossa
[3:34] 5. Anthropology
[3:56] 6. Autumn Leaves
[5:48] 7. All Blues
[4:24] 8. Summertime
[4:27] 9. Someday My Prince Will Come (Take 2)
[4:34] 10. Footprints
[3:25] 11. Stella By Starlight

Alessandro Usai nasce a Milano il 16 febbraio 1983 e all’ età di 6 anni si avvicina alla musica sotto la guida del padre. A 14 anni si diploma all’accademia H.Villa Lobos di Paderno Dugnano. Nello stesso anno si iscrive ai Civici Corsi Di Jazz di Milano dove si diploma nel 2003. In questo periodo ha la fortuna di suonare con varie formazioni come “Il Guitar Ensemble” diretto dal maestro Franco Cerri, Gianni Bedori Quintet, la Dixieland Band diretta dal Maestro Rossano Sportiello e la Civica Jazz Band. Nel 2003 partecipa insieme al guitar ensemble all’ incisione del disco “Ieri e Oggi” di Franco Cerri suonando in tre brani. Poco dopo anche nel disco “Live at Paderno D’adda” Con la Dixieland band di Rossano Sportiello e Franco Cerri.

Nel 2007 si unisce alla Sugar Blue Band, la band che accompagna l’armonicista blues Sugar Blue con il quale ha avuto la possibilità di suonare nei più importatnti club italiana e in numerosi blues festival internazionali europei. Partecipa con i DIk Dik per i tour dal 2005 al 2010 e registra il Cd “Sold Out”.

Nel 2010 si unisce al gruppo milanese Foundaction con il quale si esibisce a Umbria Jazz 2010 e 2011, al Porretta Soul Festival e Narni Black Festival 2010 2011.Durante questi festival apre i concerti di Maceo Parker, Tower Of Power, Chaka Khan e Dee Dee Bridgewater.

Downtown Jazz

Shirley Horn - The Swingin' Shirley Horn

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:00
Size: 128,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:49)  1. Don't Be On The Outside
(3:03)  2. Mack The Knife
(2:04)  3. The Great City
(3:38)  4. I Got Plenty O' Nuttin'
(2:40)  5. That's No Joke
(2:01)  6. Big City
(3:12)  7. Hit The Road Jack
(2:52)  8. This Can't Be Love
(3:37)  9. Hard Hearted Hannah
(2:57) 10. Peel Me A Grape
(4:44) 11. Fever
(4:20) 12. Come Fly With Me
(1:44) 13. Sunday In New York
(3:24) 14. How I Am To Know
(2:43) 15. There's A Boat That's Leavin' Soon For New York
(2:16) 16. Come Dance With Me
(3:05) 17. Let Me Love You
(2:39) 18. The Best Is Yet To Come

A superior ballad singer and a talented pianist, Shirley Horn put off potential success until finally becoming a major attraction while in her fifties. She studied piano from the age of four. After attending Howard University, Horn put together her first trio in 1954, and was encouraged in the early '60s by Miles Davis and Quincy Jones. She recorded three albums during 1963-1965 for Mercury and ABC/Paramount, but chose to stick around Washington, D.C., and raise a family instead of pursuing her career. In the early '80s, she began recording for SteepleChase, but Shirley Horn really had her breakthrough in 1987 when she started making records for Verve, an association that continued on records like 1998's I Remember Miles and 2001's You're My Thrill.

Along the way she picked up many prestigious honors including seven Grammy nominations (and one win for Best Jazz Vocal Album with I Remember Miles), a 1996 induction into the Lionel Hampton Jazz Hall of Fame and France's the Academie Du Jazz's Prix Billie Holiday for her 1990 album Close Enough for Love. In 2001 Horn's health began to fail (she had her left foot amputated due to diabetes) and while it affected her piano playing, she continued to perform sporadically and recorded one final album for Verve, 2003's May the Music Never End. Horn passed away on October 20, 2005, due to complications from diabetes. Bio ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/artist/shirley-horn-mn0000030925/biography

Brother Jack McDuff - Brotherly Love

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:10
Size: 154,8 MB
Art: Front

( 5:35)  1. Hot Barbecue
( 7:27)  2. Vas Dis
( 5:18)  3. Kettle Of Fish
( 7:57)  4. Georgia
( 5:38)  5. Santa Amalia
( 4:40)  6. April In Paris
( 9:33)  7. Time's Marchin' On
( 8:08)  8. Pork Chops G Pasta
(11:50)  9. Rock Candy

Brotherly Love would have been one of those feel-good Jack McDuff albums that reunites some of his early collaborators and some of the musicians he helped train (dozens of them!)...were it not his last album. Instead, Brotherly Love takes on a double meaning: a reference to the Philadelphians who join him on the album (Pat Martino and Joey DeFrancesco) and an acknowledgement of the fraternity (and, yes, sorority-or, well, camaraderie) of musicians who develop lifelong friendships and instinctive understandings of the music. Working once again with Red Holloway, McDuff leads with his unmistakable style that combines the blues with a melodic approach not only to his solos, but also to his music. 

McDuff wrote six of the tunes on Brotherly Love, and they typically includes his signature titles that imply his unpretentious attitude about life. Titles like "Time's Marchin' On," (a slow down-home blues building to the inevitable climax before fadeout and spoken exclamation), "Kettle Of Fish," (a faster blues that serves as the occasion for inspiring solos from McDuff, Martino and Holloway), "Vas Dis" (a twisting jazz waltz somewhat akin to "Take Five") and McDuff's famous "Rock Candy." "Rock Candy" has personal significance to Joey DeFrancesco, who joined McDuff on this tune in a live performance at the Concord Jazz Festival in 1996 after their duo It's About Time album was released. "Rock Candy" was the first tune that DeFrancesco performed with McDuff at the age of ten. 

Playing "Rock Candy" note-for-note as a child just the way that McDuff recorded it, DeFrancesco remained friends with him for what became a lifetime. Brotherly Love includes two tracks from that live performance, "Rock Candy" and "Pork Chops & Pasta," played by McDuff's touring band of Jerry Weldon, Andrew Beals, John Hart and Rudy Petschauer. The appearance at the jazz festival not only represents a full-circle performance of the tune, but also it's an thrilling performance unto itself when all of the musicians were at their peak. The enthusiastic applause at the end of the performance showed appreciation in person for the musicians' giving-it-their-all. That same applause which ends the recording shows appreciation for McDuff's lifelong success in entertaining thousands of listeners. The more surprising selection on the CD is Chucho Valdes' "Santa Amalia," played by the studio group consisting of Holloway, Martino, bassist Frank Gravis and drummer Grady Tate. 

Even with the Latin tinge laid down by Tate and the festival licks implied by Holloway, McDuff converts the tune into something that would fit right into the organ circuit repertoire. "April In Paris" and "Georgia" are the two other tunes on Brotherly Love that McDuff didn't write. With a nod to Count Basie's classic recording of "April In Paris," McDuff, in an orchestral fashion, fills in for the entire band before Holloway and Martino change the feel into that of an easy swing. That doesn't mean that McDuff leaves out the famous ending; he plays it as dramatically as would be expected. "Georgia" slows down into a languid retelling of the story, allowing for the musicians to fill in the rests with bluesiness and meaning. A hard-driving leader who demanded musical integrity from the people who worked for him, Jack McDuff remained true to the spirit of the music, even as he disdained fast licks for logical solo development. Brotherly Love is yet more proof that he understood the power of music, as he worked to channel that power to his audiences. ~ AAJ Staff  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/brotherly-love-jack-mcduff-concord-music-group-review-by-aaj-staff.php
 
Personnel: Jack McDuff, Joey DeFrancesco, Hammond B-3 organ; Andrew Beals, alto sax; Red Holloway, alto & tenor sax; Jerry Weldon, tenor sax; Pat Martino, John Hart, guitar; Frank Gravis, bass; Grady Tate, Rudy Petschauer, drums

Oliver Jones - One More Time

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:16
Size: 129,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:57)  1. One More Time
(5:53)  2. Dance Again Diana
(7:07)  3. Good Day Miss Lee
(5:09)  4. Ballad for a Lonely Man
(4:35)  5. Snowy Bossa
(7:55)  6. Waltz for Debbie
(6:46)  7. Days of Wine and Roses
(4:52)  8. Body and Soul
(7:57)  9. Something for Chuck

Oliver Jones has long been a national treasure in Canada. Despite threatening to retire on several occasions, he is fortunately still playing at this point in time on at least an occasional basis. Most of the pianist's recordings have been in trios, so it is a welcome event that on some of the selections on One More Time he is joined by at least one horn player, if not all three. Chet Doxas has a nice spot on tenor during the wistful "Ballad for a Lonely Man," Ingrid Jensen is both fiery and expressive during her solos, and trombonist Dave Grott keeps up with the other two. But the main star throughout is Jones who is not only heard playing at his prime but contributed six of the nine songs. His playing on Bill Evans' "Waltz for Debby" and "Days of Wine and Roses" are two of the many highlights of this easily recommended release.
~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/one-more-time-mw0000465170

Jimmy Rosenberg Feat. Bireli Lagrene & Angelo Debarre - The Alternative One And Only Album

Styles: Guitar And Gypsy Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:57
Size: 119,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:19)  1. Blue Bossa
(4:01)  2. Groovin' High
(3:09)  3. Blues For Ike
(3:18)  4. Coquette
(5:19)  5. Embraceable You
(5:27)  6. Troublant Bolero
(3:10)  7. Donna Lee
(2:54)  8. I Can't Give You Anything But Love
(2:41)  9. Wasso's Waltz
(2:23) 10. Limehouse Blues
(4:55) 11. September Song
(3:05) 12. It Don't Mean A Thing
(6:09) 13. All Of Me

Joseph (Jimmy) Rosenberg (born 10 April 1980 in Helmond) is a Dutch Sinto-Romani guitarist from, known for his virtuoso playing of Gypsy jazz and other related styles. He was initially active in the Romani (Gypsy) cultural center of Sinti, and was inspired by his relative Stochelo Rosenberg, after the release of his trio's album "Seresta" (Hot Club Records, 1989). Jimmy Rosenberg's international reputation started with the British Channel 4 show (Django's Legacy, 1990) with the trio "The Gypsy Kids", who consisted of Falko Reinhart and Sani van Mullum. In 1995 he was in the trio together with Johnny Rosenberg on guitar and Rinus Steinbach on bass. With this group he toured in Oslo, New York and the Django festival in Paris until he pursued a solo career in 1997. Rosenberg has often taken part in the Norwegian Django Festival in Oslo, his first attendance having been made at only twelve years of age. In 2000 he made his debut at Carnegie Hall, as part of the Django Reinhardt Festival at Birdland, New York. 

He has released many records, and has worked together with Norwegians such as Hot Club de Norvège, Ola Kvernberg, and Stian Carstensen. Internationally, he has worked and released records with Romane, Jon Larsen, Andreas Öberg, Bireli Lagrene, Angelo Debarre and Frank Vignola. 

He has also played with Willie Nelson. His life is documented in the Dutch film The Father, The Son, and the Talent (2007).The film is an account of Jimmy's relationship with his father and his struggles with drugs, in addition to live performances. It documents the high regard given Jimmy by artists such as James Brown, Stevie Wonder and Willie Nelson, including inviting him to play guitar with them. Jimmy says, about performing, "That feeling is beyond description. A lot of love goes into it. When I play at a concert after I've been very angry or very upset.. and I play it all out of my system, after the concert I feel as light as a feather. It was all gone and I felt happy and cheerful. And I would enjoy everything I did". The documentary film Jon & Jimmy, about his long lasting, but turbulent relationship with jazz guitarist Jon Larsen, was released (TV and DVD) in 2010 (produced by the Oscar winning Storm Studio). Jon & Jimmy won the prestigious Dutch Edison Award (jazz) 2010. Bio ~ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Rosenberg