Saturday, June 13, 2015

Ella Fitzgerald, Joe Pass - Easy Living

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:04
Size: 146.7 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz, Guitar jazz
Year: 1986/2011
Art: Front

[4:24] 1. My Ship
[3:01] 2. Don't Be That Way
[3:27] 3. My Man
[2:46] 4. Don't Worry 'bout Me
[3:04] 5. Days Of Wine And Roses
[4:15] 6. Easy Living
[6:04] 7. I Don't Stand A Ghost Of A Chance With You
[4:39] 8. Love For Sale
[4:20] 9. Moonlight In Vermont
[3:28] 10. On Green Dolphin Street
[2:56] 11. Why Don't You Do Right
[3:27] 12. By Myself
[2:47] 13. I Want A Little Girl
[2:37] 14. I'm Making Believe
[5:06] 15. On A Slow Boat To China
[3:08] 16. Don't Be That Way [take 3, Alternate]
[4:27] 17. Love For Sale [take 1, Alternate]

For her third duo recording with guitarist Joe Pass, Ella Fitzgerald swings 15 mostly familiar standards that range from "My Ship" and "Don't Be That Way" to "Why Don't You Do Right?" and "On a Slow Boat to China." Although her voice was visibly fading, Fitzgerald's charm and sense of swing were still very much present. But this CD is not one of her more significant recordings, other than being one of the final chapters. ~Scott Yanow

Easy Living

Joe Cohn - Restless

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:01
Size: 144.3 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[5:48] 1. Never Look Back
[5:58] 2. Too Marvelous For Words
[4:57] 3. Little Juicy
[6:41] 4. Restless
[4:10] 5. Fast
[6:06] 6. Woody's Lament
[5:53] 7. Diffusion Of Beauty
[6:28] 8. I Wonder Where Our Love Has Gone
[5:45] 9. Shadow Waltz
[6:31] 10. Comes Love
[4:39] 11. I Hadn't Anyone Till You

There are jazz musicians who haplessly attempt to reinvent themselves with every passing fad and then there are those, like guitarist Joe Cohn, who diligently progress their art with integrity and conviction. A mainstay on the New York scene, Cohn consistently delivers with a nod to the past and an intensity full of forward motion. Restless is no exception. The guitarist is at the top of his game and the disc has the feel of a late-night jam session where everyone involved gets ample opportunity to stretch out.

Cohn dispenses every phrase of every solo with vibrancy and mastery of conception. His style is rooted in the classic sounds of Barney Kessel, Tal Farlow and Kenny Burrell, however his approach is void of imitation and maintained with warmth and personality. The guitarist's seemingly effortless, horn-like weaving of ideas on "Too Marvelous for Words and "Comes Love stands out as exceptional. Saxophonist's Dmitry Baevsky and Harry Allen share the solo spotlight equally with Cohn. Like Cohn, both horn men are adept in the language of swing and bebop. Baevsky's alto tears through Thad Jones' "Little Juicy and Allen dominates with his brawny tenor tone on the title track. The inclusion of two tunes from the pen of Cohn's father, the late Al Cohn, pays tribute to the legacy of the oft-forgotten tenor saxophone giant. The up tempo burner, simply titled "Fast, is contrasted nicely with the minor-key stroll of "Woody's Lament.

Pianist Hod O'Brien comps and solos with flawless execution, swinging along tirelessly. The veteran pianist contributes as composer with "Diffusion of Beauty, a spirited hard-bop romp. Bassist Dennis Irwin and drummer Chuck Riggs keep time with clock-like precision and elevate each groove with fervent buoyancy. With well-chosen repertoire and on-the-money performances, Cohn and company deliver a robust, high-spirited session. Restless stands out as a first-rate effort from one of jazz's most underrated guitarists. ~John Barron

Joe Cohn: guitar; Hod O'Brien: piano; Dmitry Baevsky: alto saxophone; Harry Allen: tenor saxophone (1, 4, 6, 7, 10); Dennis Irwin: bass; Chuck Riggs: drums.

Restless

Archie Shepp - Essential Best

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:16
Size: 163.1 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[ 9:51] 1. The Shadow Of Your Smile
[ 9:59] 2. Here's That Rainy Day
[10:25] 3. Blue Train
[ 9:39] 4. I Want To Talk About You
[ 4:50] 5. What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life
[ 7:46] 6. Sous Le Ciel De Paris
[ 7:53] 7. Blue In Green
[10:50] 8. Alone Together

Archie Shepp has been at various times a feared firebrand and radical, soulful throwback and contemplative veteran. He was viewed in the '60s as perhaps the most articulate and disturbing member of the free generation, a published playwright willing to speak on the record in unsparing, explicit fashion about social injustice and the anger and rage he felt. His tenor sax solos were searing, harsh, and unrelenting, played with a vivid intensity. But in the '70s, Shepp employed a fatback/swing-based R&B approach, and in the '80s he mixed straight bebop, ballads, and blues pieces displaying little of the fury and fire from his earlier days. Shepp studied dramatic literature at Goddard College, earning his degree in 1959. He played alto sax in dance bands and sought theatrical work in New York. But Shepp switched to tenor, playing in several free jazz bands. He worked with Cecil Taylor, co-led groups with Bill Dixon and played in the New York Contemporary Five with Don Cherry and John Tchicai. He led his own bands in the mid-'60s with Roswell Rudd, Bobby Hutcherson, Beaver Harris, and Grachan Moncur III. His Impulse albums included poetry readings and quotes from James Baldwin and Malcolm X. Shepp's releases sought to paint an aural picture of African-American life, and included compositions based on incidents like Attica or folk sayings. He also produced plays in New York, among them The Communist in 1965 and Lady Day: A Musical Tragedy in 1972 with trumpeter/composer Cal Massey. But starting in the late '60s, the rhetoric was toned down and the anger began to disappear from Shepp's albums. He substituted a more celebratory, and at times reflective attitude. Shepp turned to academia in the late '60s, teaching at SUNY in Buffalo, then the University of Massachusetts. He was named an associate professor there in 1978. Shepp toured and recorded extensively in Europe during the '80s, cutting some fine albums with Horace Parlan, Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen, and Jasper van't Hof. Shepp continued to tour and record throughout the '90s and '00s. Moving from provocative free-jazz icon in his youth to elder jazz journeyman in his latter years, Shepp has appeared on a variety of labels over the years including Impulse, Byg, Arista/Freedom, Phonogram, Steeplechase, Denon, Enja, EPM, and Soul Note. ~bio by Ron Wynn

Essential Best

Mary Coughlan - Red Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:56
Size: 107.4 MB
Styles: Jazz-blues vocals
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[4:16] 1. Ain´t No Love In The Heart Of The City
[4:47] 2. Blue Light Boogie
[3:00] 3. You Can Leave Your Hat On
[4:41] 4. Portland
[5:47] 5. I´d Rather Go Blind
[5:49] 6. Black Coffee
[4:28] 7. Pull Up To The Bumper
[4:31] 8. At Last
[3:00] 9. She´s Got A Way With Men
[4:10] 10. One For My Baby
[2:23] 11. Strange Fruit

Irish torch singer Mary Coughlan was born in Galway in 1956. After enduring a painful adolescence that included bouts with drugs and alcohol as well as a stay in a mental hospital, she relocated to London at the age of 19, living in a hippie squat. Coughlan returned to Ireland in 1974, where a chance encounter with Dutch musician Erik Visser helped point her towards a singing career. Specializing in jazz and blues, she began slowly earning a reputation on the pub circuit, which resulted in a handful of television appearances. On this CD, she's playing mostly blues recorded in Bremen, Germany in 2001, joined by bluesmen Kester Smith, Bill Rich, Peter O'Brien, Frank Mead, Madagascar Slim, Lester Quitzau and Bill Bourne.

Red Blues

Caterina Zapponi - Romantica

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:35
Size: 112,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:25)  1. J’ai ta main
(4:15)  2. Polvere di stelle (Stardust)
(6:13)  3. Estate
(4:39)  4. Count Basie (Lil' Darlin')
(2:45)  5. Torna a Surriento (Come Back to Sorrento)
(3:08)  6. Bora Bora
(3:36)  7. Non Dimenticar
(4:01)  8. Que reste-t-il de nos amours
(3:31)  9. Fenesta vascia
(2:56) 10. ‘Na voce, ‘na chitarra (e o’ poco e’ luna)
(2:47) 11. Maladie d’amour
(3:06) 12. Redis-moi (You Can See)
(4:06) 13. Vorrei (Got to Go)

Though Caterina Zapponi was born in Rome and raised among Italy’s artistic cognoscenti (her mother is a singer of French origin, her screenwriter father crafted both Roma and Satyricon with Federico Fellini), it was a viewing of the Cole Porter musical High Society that ignited her desire to study jazz in America. She earned a scholarship to Berklee and subsequently finished fourth in the 1994 Monk vocal competition. But her biggest break came later in the ’90s, when she met pianist Monty Alexander, who, as her husband, manager and frequent accompanist, has facilitated her musical maturation.

Alexander was the cornerstone of her multilingual debut album, 2001’s Universal Love Songs, and is again for this long-overdue sophomore release. While the first album provided a lovely introduction, Zapponi’s ease and assuredness have since grown exponentially. Favoring a smoldering style that is equal parts Julie London and Françoise Hardy, she again opts for a cross-cultural playlist, venturing from a shimmering “Stardust” sung in Italian and sweltering “Estate” to a breathy “Que reste-t’il de nos amours” and lazily inviting “Non Dimenticar.” The mood is mellow and seductive (even when she salutes Count Basie in a clever French reworking of “L’il Darlin’”), much enhanced by all-star support that includes dual Pizzarellis (guitarist Bucky and bassist Martin), guitarist Frank Vignola, violinist Kristian Jorgensen and Etienne Charles on the lute-like cuatro. ~ Christopher Loudon  http://jazztimes.com/articles/138245-romantica-caterina-zapponi

Personnel: Caterina Zapponi (vocals); Yotam Silberstein, Frank Vignola, Bucky Pizzarelli (guitar); Kristian Jorgensen (violin); Monty Alexander (melodica, piano).

Romantica

Conrad Herwig - A Voice Through The Door

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:25
Size: 141,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:42)  1. A Voice Through the Door
(8:06)  2. Traceless Moon
(8:54)  3. The Sun Within
(6:53)  4. Morning Shade
(7:14)  5. Water Rising Into Mist
(7:06)  6. All Or Nothing At All
(8:10)  7. Thorn Witness
(9:16)  8. Free Action Reaction

It would be fellow Criss Cross associate Walt Weiskopf who would bring Conrad Herwig into the label's fold back in 1992. The trombonist would then go on to record his own Criss Cross debut, Heart of Darkness in 1998. Now some 15 years into his tenure, Herwig has recorded eight remarkable and engagingly diverse albums with A Voice Through the Door being his latest breakthrough. Highlighting a distinguished composer, this inspired recital includes seven new Herwig originals along with a reworking of the standard All or Nothing At All. Then emphasis is on shared communication, an aspect that is clearly evident through Herwig's long track record with pianist Orrin Evans and drummer Donald Edwards. Adding something new to the mix, however, are new associations with tenor man Ralph Bowen and bassist Kenny Davis, themselves frequent collaborators going back to their days with the band Out of the Blue. ~ Editorial Reviews  http://www.amazon.com/A-Voice-Through-The-Door/dp/B008I66CIC

Personnel: Conrad Herwig – trombone;  Ralph Bowen - tenor sax;  Orrin Evans – piano;  Kenny Davis – bass;  Donald Edwards – drums.

A Voice Trough The Door

Claude Williams - King Of Kansas City

Styles: Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:12
Size: 124,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:24)  1. Lester Leaps In
(4:31)  2. For All We Know
(4:13)  3. St. Louis Blues
(4:42)  4. Solitude
(2:50)  5. Smooth Sailing
(3:24)  6. Nice Work If You Can Get It
(4:15)  7. Canadian Sunset
(4:01)  8. Gee Baby, Ain't I Good to You?
(3:26)  9. Exactly Like You
(5:12) 10. Fine and Mellow
(3:25) 11. Them There Eyes
(3:16) 12. Smoke Gets in Your Eyes
(5:28) 13. East of the Sun (And West of the Moon)

Eighty-eight at the time of this date, the apparently ageless violinist Claude Williams plays a variety of swing standards with plenty of energy, an appealing tone, and creative ideas. He features some excellent players (all from Kansas City) in the supporting cast, including tenor saxophonist Kim Park (who steals the show on the opening "Lester Leaps In"), guitarist Rod Fleeman, and singers Karrin Allyson and Lisa Henry (who are on two songs apiece). 

Williams, who sings "St. Louis Blues" and "Gee Baby, Ain't I Good to You," has rarely sounded better, and he is remarkably youthful throughout. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/king-of-kansas-city-mw0000405019