Thursday, April 30, 2015

Betty Carter, Ray Bryant - Meet Betty Carter And Ray Bryant

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:34
Size: 131.8 MB
Styles: Bop, Vocal jazz
Year: 1955/1996
Art: Front

[1:57] 1. Let's Fall In Love
[2:36] 2. Social Call
[2:28] 3. Run Away
[2:31] 4. Frenesi
[3:23] 5. Moonlight In Vermont
[1:40] 6. Thou Swell
[2:37] 7. I Could Write A Book
[4:11] 8. Gone With The Wind
[2:42] 9. The Way You Look Tonight
[2:33] 10. Tell Him I Said Hello
[2:26] 11. Can't We Be Friends
[3:16] 12. Sneaking Around
[3:58] 13. Old Devil Moon
[3:34] 14. Willow Weep For Me
[2:51] 15. What Is This Thing Called Love
[2:44] 16. Threesome
[2:51] 17. No Moon At All
[4:49] 18. Bryant's Folly
[4:19] 19. Get Happy

This LP featured singer Betty Carter and pianist Ray Bryant at the beginning of their careers. Carter's 25-year-old voice was already quite recognizable, although the improvising style on her 11 titles here is much more conservative than it would be from the 1970s on. However, Carter's scatting on "Frenesi" (which sounds like a wigged-out Carmen McRae) shows individuality, and her renditions of "Social Call," "I Could Write a Book," and "Moonlight in Vermont" are memorable. A historic and enjoyable set. ~Scott Yanow

Meet Betty Carter And Ray Bryant

The Quincy Jones-Sammy Nestico Orchestra - Basie And Beyond

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:07
Size: 146.8 MB
Styles: Mainstream jazz
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[5:38] 1. Ya Gotta Try ... Harder!
[5:14] 2. Belly Roll
[5:19] 3. Grace
[6:23] 4. The Joy Of Cookin'
[4:46] 5. Quintesssence
[7:21] 6. How Sweet It Is
[4:21] 7. Hard Sock Dance
[5:16] 8. The Witching Hour
[4:18] 9. For Lena And Lennie
[5:29] 10. No Time Like The Present
[4:08] 11. Lisette
[5:49] 12. Out Of The Night

Saxophone [Soprano & Tenor] – Kirk Whalum; Saxophone, Woodwind – Dan Higgins, Ernie Watts, Gary Foster, Gerald Albright, Jack Nimitz, Pete Christlieb; Trombone – Bill Reichenbach, Bill Watrous, Charlie Loper, George Bohannon, Reggie Young; Trumpet – Gary Grant, Jerry Hey, Oscar Brashear, Rick Baptist, Warren Luening, Wayne Bergeron; Tuba – Tommy Johnson; Vibraphone [Vibes], Percussion – Emil Richards; Piano – Randy Kerber; Bass [Electric] – Jimmy Johnson;), Neil Stubenhaus; Percussion [Additional] – Paulinho Da Costa; Double Bass – Chuck Berghofer; Drums – Vinnie Colaiuta; Drums [Additional] – Harold Jones; Electric Guitar – Paul Jackson, Jr.; Electric Piano – Greg Phillinganes; Flute – Hubert Laws; French Horn – Brad Warnaar, Greg Williams, Jerry Folsom.

Jones arranged and conducted for Count Basie in the late 1950s and early 60s. Nestico was the prolific workhorse of the Basie arranging staff during the final decade and a half of Basie's life. Their set of old and new arrangements is generally in the style of Basie's New Testament band, with even more of the smoothness and bottom-to-top power that some of his devotees admired and others disdained. Jones expands three of his classic pieces, "Quintessence," "Hard Sock Dance" and "For Lena and Lennie." He adds new versions of "The Witching Hour" and "Belly Roll" and uses an orchestration of "Grace" from his previous album, Q's Juke Joint. "Hard Sock Dance" begins with a conversation between drums and talking guitar that seems to have little to do with what follows, a superior piece of big band writing in the spirit and close to the letter of Jones' original arrangement. Vibraharpist Emil Richards is the featured soloist.

Other soloists are trumpeter Warren Luening reprising Harry "Sweets" Edison, and Hubert Laws on flute in Nestico's "How Sweet It Is;" tenor saxophonist Pete Christlieb, brief and stunning in "The Witching Hour;" Ernie Watts on tenor in "Belly Roll;" saxophonists Dan Higgins and Kirk Whalum in several spots; and Bill Watrous, wild on trombone in "Ya Gotta Try...Harder" and "No Time Like The Present." Whether the electric bass, funk guitar and percussion augmentation in Nestico's "Out of the Night," "The Joy of Cookin'" and a few of his other pieces constitute improvements to the Basie tradition or trendy updates will depend on the listener's perception. In any case, they justify the Beyond of the album title.

The big news here is that Quincy Jones has made his first straightahead jazz album in decades. Maybe he's coming back. ~Doug Ramsey

Basie And Beyond

Bobbie Gentry - The Very Best Of Bobbie Gentry

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:45
Size: 132.2 MB
Styles: Country-pop
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[2:50] 1. I'll Never Fall In Love Again
[2:32] 2. Something In The Way He Moves
[3:03] 3. Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head
[2:31] 4. All I Have To Do Is Dream
[2:16] 5. Walk Right Back
[2:49] 6. Seasons Come, Seasons Go
[2:04] 7. Son Of A Preacher Man
[3:17] 8. You've Made Me So Very Happy
[3:03] 9. Mississippi Delta
[4:12] 10. Ode To Billie Joe
[2:47] 11. Tobacco Road
[3:44] 12. The Fool On The Hill
[2:27] 13. Eleanor Rigby
[2:29] 14. Here, There And Everywhere
[2:29] 15. Where's The Playground, Johnny
[3:07] 16. Gentle On My Mind
[2:45] 17. In The Ghetto
[3:12] 18. Little Green Apples
[3:09] 19. My Elusive Dreams
[2:50] 20. Mornin' Glory

Bobbie Gentry did not record many albums but several compilations have been released. Because Bobbie only had a few big hits that have to be included, the remainder of each compilation often differs significantly. This UK compilation includes plenty of cover versions, some of which were duets with Glen Campbell. Of course, this compilation includes 'Ode To Billie Joe' & 'I'll Never Fall In Love Again' (a British number one hit). The covers include 'Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head' (B J Thomas), four Beatles classics, 'Son Of A Preacher Man' (Dusty Springfield), 'You've Made Me So Very Happy' (Blood Sweat & Tears), 'In The Ghetto' (Elvis Presley) and two Everly Brothers covers, which account for half of the Glen Campbell duets

The Very Best Of Bobbie Gentry

Joe Cohn - Two Funky People

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:00
Size: 135.1 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 1997
Art: Front

[4:51] 1. Solar
[7:07] 2. But Not For Me
[4:23] 3. Quite Sip
[4:23] 4. Two Funky People
[5:19] 5. Mr. George
[4:51] 6. Serenata
[6:55] 7. Ask Me Now
[4:48] 8. High On You
[6:09] 9. Days Of Wine And Roses
[4:18] 10. Motion
[5:51] 11. You And Me

Guitarist Joe Cohn is the prodigiously talented son of famed tenor saxophonist Al Cohn. Some may find it odd that on his debut recording fellow guitarist Doug Raney appears alongside him on many of the tracks. The two-guitar format is somewhat reminiscent of Joe Pass's recordings with rhythm guitarist John Pisano, although here Raney is quite prominent throughout as a solo voice. Telling the two guitarists apart will in fact require a good deal of concentration on the part of most listeners. In general, Cohn is the faster and more rhythmically adventurous of the two; his tone is brighter and more dry than Raney's. One would have hoped for more of a Joe Cohn showcase rather than a date on which another guitarist, a second "funky person," practically shares top billing. That said, both Cohn and Raney are fantastic straight-ahead players and they make beautiful music together, aided by Dennis Irwin on bass and Barry Ries on drums. Four of the tracks are seldom-played gems by Al Cohn, including the title track. Another, "Motion," is by Doug Raney's famous father, Jimmy Raney. (Perhaps it is the famous dads connection that brought these two together.) Other tracks include the classics "But Not for Me," "Solar," "Days of Wine and Roses," "Ask Me Now," and "Serenata." Thad Jones's mid-tempo burner "Quite Sip" is Cohn's one trio feature, and a great one. ~David R. Adler

Two Funky People

Trudy Kerr - Day Dream

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:22
Size: 145,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:53)  1. Polkadots & Moonbeams
(3:49)  2. That Old Black Magic
(5:10)  3. I've Got the World On a String
(5:19)  4. Day Dream
(4:56)  5. Small Day Tomorrow
(5:33)  6. You Don't Know What Love Is
(3:59)  7. I've Got Just About Everything
(6:54)  8. The Masquerade Is Over
(7:25)  9. Mad About the Boy
(4:47) 10. Star Eyes
(4:56) 11. Glad to Be Unhappy
(4:36) 12. I Get Along Without You Very Well

Always in possession of impressive technique and a powerful voice, singer Trudy Kerr brings to her third album greater assurance, more sophisticated phrasing and interpretative qualities gained through experience. She has also moved away from that Chaka Khan approach to singing which characterized earlier recordings. Despite her strong voice, she doesn't overdo it as she moves from up tempo enthusiasm to husky torch singing. Listen to "That Old Black Magic" which starts out just above a whisper but throughout moves up and down the dynamics scale. 

The same is true for "I Get along without You Very Well" as Kerr works with the drummer who uses cymbals and rolls to underscore the musical message she is making with the lyrics. Nice job. It puts a burden on the listener to stay tuned in. Miss a measure or two and you'll miss an inflection, a slight change of tempo, an unusual accent. Kerr respects the words, turning to scatting infrequently. On those tunes when it seems she is about to launch into a scat, she teases and backs away. Another feature of the album are the unique arrangements. Unfortunately no credit for that good work is given. Nevertheless, because this is an album of practically all standards, it was important that the arrangements avoid well trod interpretative paths. 

This is accomplished through the interplay of Kerr with the musicians, for instance between her and Geoff Gascoyne's bass and Sebastiaan de Krom's drums on I've Got the World on a String". Kerr also engages with some clever vocal noodling to end the tune. But it's the presence of one of the top jazz pianist on today's scene, Mulgrew Miller, which is the icing that makes this CD especially appetizing. His dedication to the music and to Kerr's vocal phrasing is critical to the success of this album. This is a vocal set of constantly changing moods, expressions of fresh ideas and solid musicianship. Recommended. ~ Dave Nathan  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/day-dream-trudy-kerr-jazzizit-review-by-dave-nathan.php
Personnel: Trudy Kerr - Vocals; Mulgrew Miller - Piano; Geoff Gascoyne - Bass; Sebastian de Krom - Drums; Guy Barker - Trumpet

Roy Hargrove - Family

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:52
Size: 181,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:22)  1. Trilogy: Velera
(3:48)  2. Trilogy: Roy Allan
(4:56)  3. Trilogy: Brian's Bounce
(7:03)  4. The Nearness of You
(4:01)  5. Lament for Love
(6:23)  6. Another Level
(6:11)  7. A Dream of You
(8:39)  8. Pas de Trois
(5:36)  9. Polka Dots and Moonbeams
(3:46) 10. The Challenge
(3:36) 11. Ethiopia
(6:00) 12. Nostalgia
(5:57) 13. Thirteenth Floor
(6:51) 14. Firm Roots
(3:38) 15. The Trial

This well-rounded set not only features trumpeter Roy Hargrove with his mid-'90s quintet (tenor saxophonist Ron Blake, pianist Stephen Scott, bassist Rodney Whitaker, and drummer Gregory Hutchinson) but with two other rhythm sections and a few special guests. The first three selections (which includes the uptempo blues "Brian's Bounce") are called "Trilogy" and dedicated to various family members. Hargrove shows off his warm tone on "The Nearness of You" (a ballads with strings album was in the near future), and other highlights include the lyrical "Pas de Trois," a duet by Hargrove and bassist Walter Booker on Larry Willis' "Ethiopia," and a driving version of "Firm Roots." 

A meeting between Hargrove and Wynton Marsalis on the bop standard "Nostalgia" is disappointingly tame, but otherwise this is a high-quality modern hard bop release. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/family-mw0000173529

Personnel: Roy Hargrove (trumpet, flugelhorn); Ron Blake (soprano & tenor saxophones); Jesse Davis (alto saxophone); David "Fathead" Newman (tenor saxophone, flute); Wynton Marsalis (trumpet); Stephen Scott, John Hicks, Larry Willis, Ronnie Mathews (piano); Rodney Whitaker, Christian McBride, Walter Booker (bass); Gregory Hutchinson, Lewis Nash, Jimmy Cobb, Karriem Riggins (drums).

Grady Tate - All Love

Styles: Hard Bop, Vocal
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:38
Size: 109,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:59)  1. Follow the Path
(6:30)  2. My One and Only Love
(4:17)  3. A Weaver of Dreams
(3:24)  4. What are You Doing the Rest of Your Life
(5:34)  5. Dream Love
(7:01)  6. Don't Misunderstand
(5:09)  7. In A Sentimental Mood
(5:05)  8. Estate
(6:34)  9. Sophisticated Lady

Grady Tate is best known as a top drummer, much in studio demand, with a long and impressive resumé. His singing talents are less widely documented, although he's released about a dozen vocal albums since 1968 and was nominated for a 1986 Best Jazz Vocal Grammy for his performance of "She's out of My Life." Tate is a fine singer in the Nat Cole/Johnny Hartman tradition: smooth and soulful, with naturalistic phrasing and a direct emotional message. While he doesn't have a big voice, it's affable and very pleasant, and the classic love songs on All Love are the perfect material to set it off. Two of the tunes are less familiar  "Follow the Path," a pretty melody by the late Bobby Scott with inspirational lyrics by Mort Goode, and Tate's own heartfelt "Dream Love." 

Tate enlists some stellar colleagues to enhance the mood and meaning of each track, including veterans Frank Wess, whose masterful flute blows cool and fresh, and pianist Kenny Barron, whose elegant solos are a delight (see, for example, his understated beauty on "My One and Only Love"). Tate plays drums on five of the nine tracks, with the legendary Jimmy Cobb on four. All told, All Love is a relaxed and engaging CD, refreshingly free of hype and fluff. ~ Judith Schlesinger  http://www.allmusic.com/album/all-love-mw0000316568

Personnel: Grady Tate (vocals, drums); Frank Wess (tenor saxophone, flute); Kenny Barron, Richard Wyands (piano); John Di Martino (Fender Rhodes piano); Ira Coleman (bass); Jimmy Cobb (drums).

New York Standards Quartet - Unstandard

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:22
Size: 127,4 MB
Art: Front

(8:17)  1. How High The Moon
(0:57)  2. Polka Beamlet #1
(4:59)  3. All the Things You Are
(0:46)  4. Polka Beamlet #2
(7:07)  5. Stablemates
(4:19)  6. But Beautiful
(6:48)  7. Lunar
(5:48)  8. Interplay
(2:08)  9. Two Meetings
(6:22) 10. The Ballet Girl Stirs (by Starlight)
(0:34) 11. After Thought
(6:21) 12. Summer Night
(0:48) 13. Polka Beamlet #3

It's a pleasure when a group of great jazz players take American standards and reshape them with their own unique stamp. This happens on New York Standards Quartet's Unstandard, where the musical gambit the direction these musicians take the originals is often surprising. Pianist David Berkman leads the way, handling arrangements and contributing originals, all the while taking impeccable solos. This is a joint effort, and veteran drummer Gene Jackson is invaluable, impressively powering the pace, aided by bassist Yosuke Inoue. The spotlight shines brightest, though, on Tim Armacost, whose forceful soprano and tenor saxophones anchor most pieces. The clever adaptations begin with the opener, Morgan Lewis' "How High the Moon." 

On this, the soprano evokes an eerie, funereal feeling, before warming up; this is not the usual bright, bouncy treatment of this jazz staple.) Likewise, the quartet's version of Jerome Kern's "All the Things You Are" takes advantage of the exotic effects a soprano can provide; a bow, here, to John Coltrane's pioneering work on thie instrument. Berkman's "Lunar" is an intriguing deconstruction of Miles Davis' "Solar." After a brief exploration, it's possible to here the place in the late trumpet icon's jazz universe, with Berkman's probing piano the master guide. Armacost puts his brand on Benny Golson's classic "Stablemates," which owes much to Sonny Rollins' tenor imprint. The composition, largely unrecognizable at first, soon becomes familiar and goes its atonal way. Jimmy Van Heusen's ''But Beautiful," becomes pastoral here, with a rippling stream and waterfall effect created by flute, piano and cymbal.

The touchstone of the CD's creative excellence is in Berkman's rework of Victor Young's "Stella By Starlight," known here as "The Ballet Girl Stirs (By Starlight)." After a stunning tour de force opening on tenor, the piano comes to the fore. Near the end, Young's haunting melody asserts itself, which brings a satisfied recognition of what was previously felt subliminally. Three charming vignettes on "Polka Dots and Moonbeams," each less than an minute, divide the play list, further evidence that Unstandard is not a usual series of the familiar. ~ Larry Taylor  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/unstandard-challenge-records-review-by-larry-taylor.php
 
Personnel: David Berkman: piano; Tim Armacost; soprano and tenor saxophones, flute; Yosuke Inoue; bass; Gene Jackson; drums.