Friday, January 30, 2015

Meschiya Lake & The Little Big Horns - Foolers' Gold

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:02
Size: 123.7 MB
Styles: New Orleans jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[3:11] 1. Catch Em Young
[4:28] 2. Don't Start With Me
[4:15] 3. My Man
[3:30] 4. It's The Rhythm In Me
[2:48] 5. I'll Wait For You
[5:30] 6. Midnight On The Bayou
[3:38] 7. Foolers' Gold
[4:28] 8. Young Woman's Blues
[4:58] 9. Satan, Your Kingdom Must Come Down
[3:42] 10. Organ Grinder
[3:29] 11. Miss Otis Regrets
[3:30] 12. The Fragrance Of Your Charms
[2:58] 13. Do Right
[3:31] 14. I Believe In Music

U.K. reviewer Allan Wilkinson wrote of the album, “a couple of self-penned numbers from Lake...just go to prove, along with the rest of this gem of a record, that no flood nor new century can subdue the spirit of New Orleans.” Her sophomore effort with the Little Big Horns, Foolers Gold was released in September of 2013. It mixes the extraordinary traditional jazz mastery she demonstrated on Lucky Devil with a bold, contemporary sensibility all her own. Foolers Gold promises to once again evoke the words of Dan Baum when he wrote in the New Yorker: “Meschiya Lake rocks back on her heels, lifts her chest, and opens her throat like an air raid siren to croon in a thrilling pre-microphone style that...can make you feel by turns as though you were shivering around a campfire in a railroad yard or drinking in a Budapest nightclub in 1938."

Foolers' Gold

The Ray Bryant Trio - S/T

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:01
Size: 80.2 MB
Styles: Piano jazz, Soul jazz
Year: 1957/1993
Art: Front

[4:50] 1. Golden Earrings
[3:19] 2. Angel Eyes
[4:59] 3. Blues Changes
[4:34] 4. Splittin'
[5:02] 5. Django
[4:51] 6. The Thrill Is Gone
[4:00] 7. Daahoud
[3:22] 8. Sonar

Pianist Ray Bryant solidified his reputation with this outstanding 1957 trio release. It displayed his facility with the blues, speed, gospel influence, and interpretive abilities on such songs as John Lewis' "Django" and Clifford Brown's "Daahoud." It also contained Bryant's funky originals "Splittin" and "Blues Changes," and was punctuated by Ike Isaacs' careful bass work and Specs Wright's loose, in the groove drumming. This set has recently been reissued by Fantasy, and the remastering provides a fine sonic framework for Bryant's heady, unpredictable, and often exciting playing. ~Ron Wynn

The Ray Bryant Trio

Jeanie Bryson - Tonight I Need You So

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:07
Size: 142,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:22)  1. Simple Song
(5:19)  2. Honeysuckle Rose
(4:22)  3. Tonight I need You So
(5:20)  4. Willow Weep For Me
(5:43)  5. I Don't Want To Fall
(5:08)  6. Moonlight in Vermont
(6:58)  7. Two-Hump Ride
(6:02)  8. The Face I Love
(5:08)  9. Solamente Tu
(4:29) 10. What Can A Miracle Do?
(3:02) 11. Too Thy To Say
(6:09) 12. Skydive

Bryson's soft warm voice at times recalls Maxine Sullivan and on "Solamente Tu" she comes very close to the fragility of Astrud Gilberto. There are a few memorable selections on her second Telarc disc, most notably the exuberant "Simple Song" (which has some jubilant playing from altoist Paquito D'Rivera), a sensuous "Honeysuckle Rose" and a fine version of "Skydive." Unfortunately the set also has an excess of forgettable poppish material that weighs down the content somewhat. However Bryson mostly overcomes the material and her likable and easygoing style compensates. This release is not essential but is enjoyable. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/tonight-i-need-you-so-mw0000114090

Personnel: Jeanie Bryson (vocals); Don Braden (tenor saxophone); Paquito D'Rivera (alto saxophone); Claudio Roditi (trumpet); Jay Ashby (trombone); Ted Brancato, Danilo Perez (piano); Vic Juris (guitar); Christian McBride (acoustic bass); Ron Davis, Ignacio Berroa (drums); Rudy Byrd (percussion).

Jan Lundgren - Cooking! At The Jazz Bakery CD 1 And CD 2

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:56 (CD 1)
Size: 117,4 MB (CD 1)
Time: 49:09 (CD 2)
Size: 113,2 MB (CD 2)
Art: Front

CD 1
(0:33)  1. Introduction
(4:02)  2. Our Delight
(4:46)  3. Bruz
(4:13)  4. Social Call
(4:39)  5. Little Niles
(5:46)  6. Nica's Tempo
(5:15)  7. Early Autumn
(5:48)  8. Bohemia Ater Dark
(4:32)  9. Milestones
(5:41) 10. Webb City
(5:36) 11. Four


CD 2
(5:52)  1. Hot House
(4:27)  2. On a Misty Night
(4:51)  3. Lady Bird
(5:06)  4. If You Could See Me Now
(5:02)  5. Sister Sadie
(5:03)  6. Relaxin' at Camarillo
(5:02)  7. Confirmation
(5:06)  8. Groovin' High
(6:54)  9. Moanin'
(1:41) 10. Varmlandsvisan

A talented Swedish pianist, Jan Lundgren has on various occasions showed that he is quite versatile. On this two CD set, Lundgren sticks to bebop, playing in a style influenced by Bud Powell but filled with his own individual approach. Recorded live at Los Angeles' famed Jazz Bakery in a trio with bassist Chuck Berghofer and drummer Joe La Barbera, the 20 selections were all performed on the same night. Despite being first takes, there are no obvious missteps and the music is quite impeccable. Lundgren revives a variety of bop-oriented songs (mostly from the 1940s and '50s and ranging from Tadd Dameron to Randy Weston and Horace Silver), swings hard, and never runs out of melodic ideas. It is a particularly impressive outing and one of Jan Lundgren's finest recordings to date. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/cooking-at-the-jazz-bakery-mw0000046454

Personnel: Jan Lundgren (piano); Joe La Barbera (drums).

Zoot Sims With Scott Hamilton - It Had To Be You

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1984
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:45
Size: 155,2 MB
Art: Front

(10:44)  1. It Had To Be You
(10:25)  2. Gone With the Wind
(10:48)  3. Indiana
( 7:06)  4. Easy Living
( 9:56)  5. Sunday
(10:38)  6. Broadway
( 8:04)  7. Just You, Just Me

Recorded four months before his death and three days after what was thought to have been his final recording, this jam-session CD is notable not only as the last Zoot Sims record but the only one to team him with fellow tenor Scott Hamilton. Since Zoot was one of Hamilton's idols, the Swedish concert was a happy affair. Joined by pianist Claes Crona, bassist Arne Wilhelmsson, and drummer Per Hulten, the two tenors battle it out (with mutual respect) on lengthy versions of such standards as "Gone With the Wind," "Indiana," "Sunday," and "Just You, Just Me." A historic encounter that lives up to expectations and shows that Zoot Sims never did decline. 
~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/it-had-to-be-you-mw0000446416

Personnel: Zoot Sims, tenor sax; Scott Hamilton, tenor sax; Claes Crona, piano; Arne Wilhelmsson, bass; Per Hultén, drums

Junko Onishi - Baroque

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:48
Size: 171,7 MB
Art: Front

( 9:04)  1. Tutti
( 5:51)  2. The Mother's (Where Johnny Is)
(19:41)  3. The Threepenny Opera
( 4:47)  4. Stardust
(10:45)  5. Meditations for a Pair of Wire Cutters
( 9:48)  6. Flamingo
(10:24)  7. The Street Beat/52nd Street Theme
( 4:26)  8. Memories of You

The world has been a slightly less happy place since Junko Onishi's last record. After establishing herself as one of the finest young jazz pianists around with her debut, Wow (EMI, 1993), Onishi released a string of fine Blue Note recordings: Live At The Village Vanguard Volume 1 and Volume 2 (both 1994); the superb Cruisin' (1994), featuring her majestic "Eulogia"; and Piano Quintet Suite (1995).

With Fragile (Blue Note, 1999) a virtual rock covers album that took on Jimi Hendrix, Cream and The Righteous Brothers Onishi's recorded output all but vanished in the U.S., while the pianist reportedly released a number of CDs in Japan. Now on Verve, Onishi is back with another unpredictable but typically excellent effort. A more lavish-sounding record than the rock n' raw Fragile, Baroque gives Onishi the opportunity to showcase her formidable compositional and arranging skills. Working with durable and longtime band members Rodney Whitaker and Reginald Veal, (bass), Wycliffe Gordon (trombone), and fellow former Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra band mate Herlin Riley (drums) along with stellar guests Nicholas Payton (trumpet) and woodwind/reed phenom James Carter Baroque is Onishi's show, yet every musician shines brightly. Riley and Gordon solo engagingly in avant-garde fashion on the album's obvious highlight, "The Three Penny Opera," which, according to the liners, features a piano solo based a musical score by Onishi's mentor and friend, the great Jaki Byard. This Onishi original is both a surprise and a revelation, with all the musicians allowed to stretch more than on her previous recordings. 

As evidenced by the album's opener, "Tutti," Onishi's style has now allowed for a more improvisational approach. In some of her earlier records, her classical training sometimes kept things rather tight. But on numbers like bassist Charles Mingus' notoriously difficult "Meditations for a Pair of Wire Cutters," the pianist seems to have taken a page from the composer's book, allowing her seasoned fellow musicians room to interpret more freely. Onishi gives herself two beautiful unaccompanied piano showcases on Baroque: Hoagy Carmichael's "Stardust" and Eubie Blake's "Memories of You." Both are fresh takes, technically impressive, and inventive without fussiness. Baroque's expansiveness and variety make for what could be Onishi's most purely entertaining CD to date. ~ Keith Henry Brown  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/baroque-junko-onishi-verve-music-group-review-by-keith-henry-brown.php

Personnel: Junko Onishi : piano; Rodney Whitaker: bass; Reginald Veal: bass; Wycliffe Gordon: trombone; Herlin Riley: drums; Nicholas Payton: trumpet; James Carter: tenor and soprano saxophones, bass clarinet, flute; Roland Guerrero: congas.

Baroque