Thursday, February 12, 2015

Artie Wayne - You're My Thrill

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:27
Size: 74.3 MB
Styles: Vocal, Easy Listening
Year: 1958/1999/2012
Art: Front

[2:40] 1. Take Me In Your Arms
[2:24] 2. You're Getting To Be A Habit With Me
[3:39] 3. Out Of This World
[2:36] 4. I Can't Love You Anymore
[2:31] 5. Look Out For Me Baby
[2:54] 6. You're My Thrill
[2:26] 7. I Love You, Baby
[2:36] 8. Anita
[2:27] 9. Time After Time
[3:13] 10. Golden Earrings
[2:17] 11. You Really Do Get Around
[2:38] 12. Temptation

This could possibly be the ultimate lounge album - it's the original 1958 RKO/Unique recording issued for the first time on CD, feat. film & music star Artie Wayne's tribute to 1950s sex goddess Anita Ekberg, w. orchestra directed by Jerry Fielding.

Personnel includes: Artie Wayne (vocals); Jerry Fielding, Pete King (arranger); George Russell (guitar); Maurie Harris (trumpet). All tracks have been digitally remastered.

You're My Thrill

Christian McBride - Gettin' To It

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:22
Size: 126.7 MB
Styles: Neo bop
Year: 1994
Art: Front

[4:33] 1. In A Hurry
[7:38] 2. The Shade Of The Cedar Tree
[5:49] 3. Too Close For Comfort
[5:44] 4. Sitting On A Cloud
[4:12] 5. Splanky
[5:28] 6. Gettin' To It
[5:22] 7. Stars Fell On Alabama
[5:17] 8. Black Moon
[7:38] 9. King Freddie Of Hubbard
[3:36] 10. Night Train

McBride had already made his name as an astounding bass sideman when he recorded his first album as a leader, which nailed him as another in the long line of mainstream-minded Young Lions. McBride would shed that tag within a few years when he brought forth his other interests, but for now he headed a series of three- to six-piece bands compromised mostly of somewhat older Young Lions similarly attached to tradition. They're in pretty good form, too -- the tasty Cyrus Chestnut on piano, the growing trumpeter Roy Hargrove, big-toned tenorman Joshua Redman -- and the more experienced trombonist Steve Turre and drummer Lewis Nash complete the personnel. McBride's big, rock-solid tone and melodic agility give his playing the properties of a horn -- at 22, he was a mature master -- yet his ideas as a leader were not yet as imaginative as his bass playing. One exception -- and easily the most entertaining and musical track on the CD -- is the birth on record of McBride's bass trio with mentor Ray Brown and veteran Milt Hinton in "Splanky"; you'd never guess that three unaccompanied bassists could make such sublimely enjoyable music. Another is the title track, whose funky tune and rhythm are audibly inspired by James Brown. Mostly, though, this is a promising but cautious debut. ~Richard S. Ginnell

Gettin' To It

Urban Knights - The Best Of Urban Knights

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:26
Size: 90.3 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz, Crossover jazz
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[3:50] 1. Sweet Home Chicago
[4:59] 2. The Message
[3:49] 3. Got To Give It Up
[4:20] 4. Hi-Heel Sneakers
[3:55] 5. The Gypsy
[4:06] 6. My Boo
[4:59] 7. Clubland
[4:27] 8. Church
[4:58] 9. Close Your Eyes And Remember

The smooth jazz all-star collective Urban Knights features pianist Ramsey Lewis as its constant member. Sometime Urban Knights include Grover Washington Jr., Maurice White, the Emotions, Najee, Dave Koz, Fareed Haque, and Earl Klugh. Lewis united the various Knights for outings like 1995's self-titled debut, 1997's Urban Knights II, and 2000's Urban Knights III, which was the supergroup's first album for the Narada label. ~bio by Heather Phares

The Best Of Urban Knights

Sarah Vaughan - The Rodgers & Hart Songbook

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 1985
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:40
Size: 86,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:01)  1. My Funny Valentine
(3:53)  2. Little Girl Blue
(2:42)  3. A Tree In The Park
(2:27)  4. It's Got To Be Love
(3:27)  5. A Ship Without A Sail
(3:33)  6. Bewitched
(2:49)  7. Thou Swell
(3:42)  8. It Never Entered My Mind
(2:47)  9. It's Easy To Remember
(2:58) 10. Why Can't I
(3:16) 11. My Romance
(3:00) 12. My Heart Stood Still

Possessor of one of the most wondrous voices of the 20th century, Sarah Vaughan ranked with Ella Fitzgerald and Billie Holiday in the very top echelon of female jazz singers. She often gave the impression that with her wide range, perfectly controlled vibrato, and wide expressive abilities, she could do anything she wanted with her voice. Although not all of her many recordings are essential (give Vaughan a weak song and she might strangle it to death), Sarah Vaughan's legacy as a performer and a recording artist will be very difficult to match in the future.

Vaughan sang in church as a child and had extensive piano lessons from 1931-39; she developed into a capable keyboardist. After she won an amateur contest at the Apollo Theater, she was hired for the Earl Hines big band as a singer and second vocalist. Unfortunately, the musicians' recording strike kept her off record during this period (1943-44). When lifelong friend Billy Eckstine broke away to form his own orchestra, Vaughan joined him, making her recording debut. She loved being with Eckstine's orchestra, where she became influenced by a couple of his sidemen, Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, both of whom had also been with Hines during her stint. Vaughan was one of the first singers to fully incorporate bop phrasing in her singing, and to have the vocal chops to pull it off on the level of a Parker and Gillespie.

Other than a few months with John Kirby from 1945-46, Sarah Vaughan spent the remainder of her career as a solo star. Although she looked a bit awkward in 1945 (her first husband George Treadwell would greatly assist her with her appearance), there was no denying her incredible voice. She made several early sessions for Continental: a December 31, 1944 date highlighted by her vocal version of "A Night in Tunisia," which was called "Interlude," and a May 25, 1945 session for that label that had Gillespie and Parker as sidemen. However, it was her 1946-48 selections for Musicraft (which included "If You Could See Me Now," "Tenderly" and "It's Magic") that found her rapidly gaining maturity and adding bop-oriented phrasing to popular songs. Signed to Columbia where she recorded during 1949-53, "Sassy" continued to build on her popularity. Although some of those sessions were quite commercial, eight classic selections cut with Jimmy Jones' band during May 18-19, 1950 (an octet including Miles Davis) showed that she could sing jazz with the best.

During the 1950s, Vaughan recorded middle-of-the-road pop material with orchestras for Mercury, and jazz dates (including Sarah Vaughan, a memorable collaboration with Clifford Brown) for the label's subsidiary, EmArcy. Later record label associations included Roulette (1960-64), back with Mercury (1963-67), and after a surprising four years off records, Mainstream (1971-74). Through the years, Vaughan's voice deepened a bit, but never lost its power, flexibility or range. She was a masterful scat singer and was able to out-swing nearly everyone (except for Ella). Vaughan was with Norman Granz's Pablo label from 1977-82, and only during her last few years did her recording career falter a bit, with only two forgettable efforts after 1982. However, up until near the end, Vaughan remained a world traveler, singing and partying into all hours of the night with her miraculous voice staying in prime form. The majority of her recordings are currently available, including complete sets of the Mercury/Emarcy years, and Sarah Vaughan is as famous today as she was during her most active years. Bio ~ https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/sarah-vaughan/id79995#fullText

1954-1958. This is the reissued version to get. ~ Ron Wynn  http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-rodgers-hart-songbook-mw0000314416

Personnel: Sarah Vaughan (vocals); Turk VanLake (guitar); Jerome Richardson (reeds); Sam Marowitz, Cannonball Adderley (alto saxophone); Ernie Royal, Bernie Glow (trumpet); J.J. Johnson , Kai Winding (trombone); Jimmy Jones , Ronnell Bright (piano); Roy Haynes (drums).

Monty Alexander - The Duke Ellington Songbook

Styles: Hard Bop, Piano Jazz
Year: 1984
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 85:15
Size: 201,2 MB
Art: Front

( 9:26)  1. I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart
( 5:52)  2. Sophisticated Lady
( 6:00)  3. Things Ain't What They Used To be
( 6:07)  4. Love You Madly
( 7:30)  5. Eastside, Westside
(13:19)  6. In A Mellow Tone
( 6:00)  7. Caravan
( 6:07)  8. Just Squeeze Me
( 7:30)  9. In A Sentimental Mood
(17:20) 10. C Jam Blues

Monty Alexander long ago combined together the influence of Oscar Peterson with the soul of Gene Harris and Nat "King" Cole to form his own appealing and personable style. Long a bit underrated (due to the shadow of Peterson), Alexander has recorded more than a score of excellent albums. Monty Alexander began piano lessons when he was six and he played professionally in Jamaican clubs while still a teenager; his band, Monty and the Cyclones, was quite popular locally during 1958-1960. He first played in the U.S. when he appeared in Las Vegas with Art Mooney's Orchestra. Soon he was accompanying a variety of top singers, formed a friendship with vibraphonist Milt Jackson, and began gigging with bassist Ray Brown. 

With the recording of a pair of Pacific Jazz albums in 1965, an RCA date in 1967, and a Verve session in 1969, Alexander began to gain a strong reputation. His series of exciting albums for MPS during 1971-1977 found him in prime form, and his recordings in the '80s, '90s, and 2000s found him building on his original style. Alexander, who often pays tribute to his Jamaican heritage, performs regularly with his own trio and swings hard in his own voice. Bio ~ https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/monty-alexander/id2987018#fullText

Personnel:  Monty Alexander (Piano), John Clayton (Bass)

Kenny Wheeler - Songs for Quintet

Styles: Jazz, Post-Bop
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:14
Size: 120,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:58)  1. Seventy-Six
(8:43)  2. Jigsaw
(5:10)  3. The Long Waiting
(6:40)  4. Canter No.1
(6:07)  5. Sly Eyes
(2:39)  6. 1076
(6:11)  7. Old Time
(6:49)  8. Pretty Liddle Waltz
(4:54)  9. Nonetheless

With the passing of Kenneth Vincent John Wheeler Kenny Wheeler to his legion of friends and fans the world lost yet another significant figure in the history of jazz from the mid-'60s through to the second decade of the new millennium, the artist that Norma Winstone (more often than not his singer of choice) called "the Duke Ellington of our times." While Wheeler had, since 2004, been releasing his music on the Italian Cam Jazz label, but it seems wholly appropriate that his final album- -recorded in December, 2013, just nine months prior to his passing at the age of 84 has been issued on Munich's award-winning ECM Records. 

Wheeler had released a number of fine albums prior to coming to the label in the mid-'70s (including his first, the recently reissued 1969 Fontana classic Windmill Tilter), but it was with ECM that he truly honed his skills as a composer and bandleader (his unparalleled acumen on both trumpet and flugelhorn already finely developed), first as a member of the groundbreaking Azimuth trio, with Winstone and keyboardist John Taylor, but subsequently as a leader in his own right with a stellar run of albums ranging from 1976's Gnu High, 1977's Deer Wan and 1980's Around Six to 1984's Double, Double You, 1990's Music for Large & Small Ensembles and 1997's Angel Song.

With Songs for Quintet, plenty has changed...but plenty has also remained the same. The quintet Wheeler has chosen for the December, 2013 date recorded at Abbey Road Studios in London the infirmed Wheeler likely unable to travel much further to record in any of the studios usually chosen by ECM founder/producer Manfred Eicher and Steve Lake (who, uncharacteristically, are credited as co-producers) is a set of friends, all of whom he's been recording with for decades with the exception of drummer Martin France. Still, France is no stranger to Wheeler and the trumpeter's circles, having been a member of John Taylor's trio since 2005 and appearing on the trumpeter's last two Cam Jazz recordings (2012's large ensemble The Long Waiting (2012) and 2013's appropriately titled sextet date Six For Six). France will also be no stranger to longtime label followers for his work in the unfairly overlooked group First House on 1985's Eréndira and 1989's Cantilena. Saxophonist Stan Sulzmann goes back much further, playing on Wheeler albums ranging from the lower-profile Kayak (Ah Um, 1992) to the more internationally acclaimed Music for Large & Small Ensemble. 

John Parricelli a busy session guitarist who shows up in the jazz world all- too-infrequently, and whose own Alba (Provocateur, 2000) is an album begging for a follow-up (and on which France appears as another example of theUK's close-knit jazz community) first appeared on record with Wheeler on 1999's A Long Time Ago (the trumpeter's final recording for the label until now) but proved even more impressive on the expat Canadian trumpeter's Dream Sequence (Psi, 2003). Bassist Chris Laurence has been one of Wheeler's primary go-to bassists since Kayak, and whose own New View (Basho, 2007) not only featured Parricelli and France, but included a Wheeler tune, "Sly Eyes," which is reprised to great effect on Songs for Quintet.

And so, with a collection of musicians who have engaged and interacted both with the trumpeter (who sticks to the warmer, mellower flugelhorn here) and in other contexts, Wheeler had about as simpatico a quintet as he was likely to find, across a 52- minute set that features a number of previously performed compositions. The ambling ballad "The Long Waiting" was both the title track to the 2012 big band recording and featured on the more intimate Six for Six. The more eminently propulsive "Canter No. 1," representing some of Songs for Quintet's fiercest moments while still remaining somehow gentle and restrained, was heard previously in multiple contexts: on Wheeler's Cam Jazz duo debut with John Taylor, Where Do We Go From Here? (2004); in a medley with "Old Ballad" on Kayak; on the atypical trio date with Taylor and electric bassist Steve Swallow, One of Many (Cam Jazz, 2011); and, finally, on The Long Waiting. The closing, particularly drum driven "Nonetheless" debuted on 1995's All the More (Soul Note, 1997) before being reprised on one of Wheeler's particular career milestones, the chamber-like Angel Song, before ultimately reappearing just a few years later on Dream Sequence.

But even well-known, well-covered music assumes a life of its own on Songs for Quintet. Sulzmann covered "Jigsaw," the title track to his own transatlantic 2004 Basho album, but here it simmers with a different kind of heat, as Parricelli's chordal accompaniment creates even more ethereal atmospherics than the delicate support of The Jigsaw's pianist, Marc Copland. "Sly Eyes," on the other hand, begins with a militaristic solo from France before assuming a tango-informed complexion, as Wheeler delivers a solo of careful consideration and inimitably focused construction. A characteristic, in fact, that has defined Wheeler's playing throughout his sixty-year career. He may no longer be capable of hitting the signature stratospheric highs he once did so effortlessly, but his tone remains pure, his melancholic lyricism wholly intact. Wheeler has played with many a fine drummer in his career, but France ranks amongst his best, capable of the delicate colors required on the opening "Seventy Six" while driving the more energetic "Jigsaw" with a frenetic pulse punctuated with plenty of explosive punctuations while providing a tumultuous underpinning to the "changes, no time" of the relatively brief "1076."

"Old Time" reworks the title track to Azimuth's How It Was Then....Never Again (ECM, 1994), but morphs its bluesy origin into a more potent opportunity for both Wheeler and Sulzmann, with Laurence and France effortlessly flowing from feather-light support to more intense accompaniment in particular during a solo that proves to be amongst the saxophonist's best of the set.

Parricelli is as capable of fiery energy as anyone in the group, but his best moment comes on the appropriately titled "Pretty Liddle Waltz," the album's penultimate track and a feature for both the guitarist's impeccable tone and harmonic sophistication in his accompaniment, but also for his attention to detail and dynamics during a thematically focused solo that may demonstrate the guitarist's early roots in label mate John Abercrombie but, having long since transcended such reductionist characterizations, is now pure Parricelli and yet another reason why it's such a shame he's heard from so infrequently.

Not unlike the swan song of another great loss (and, at one time, Wheeler collaborator), saxophonist Michael Brecker's Pilgrimage (Heads Up, 2007), it's quite remarkable that, as with Brecker just a scant six months before his passing, the already weakening Wheeler still had an album like Songs for Quintet in him just nine months before his death. Still, sometimes the old saying that someone plays as if his life depended on it is more than just an adage. It's impossible to know if Wheeler knew his days on earth were truly numbered, but with Songs for Quintet another legend may now have passed, but not before delivering an album that's not just as good a swan song as anyone could hope for, but a recording that stands amongst the rest of his discography as one of his absolute finest. ~ John Kelman  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/kenny-wheeler-songs-for-quintet-by-john-kelman.php
Personnel: Kenny Wheeler: flugelhorn; Stan Sulzman: tenor saxophone; John Parricelli: guitar; Chris Laurence: double bass; Martin France: drums.