Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Clifford Jordan Quartet - Live At Ethell's

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:30
Size: 140.8 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz, Hard bop
Year: 1987/2009
Art: Front

[ 9:59] 1. Summer Serenade
[ 9:13] 2. Lush Life
[ 8:51] 3. 'round Midnight
[ 6:44] 4. Blues In Advance
[10:00] 5. Little Boy For So Long Little Boy, But Not For Long
[ 9:35] 6. Arapaho
[ 7:06] 7. Don't Get Around Much Anymore

Tenor saxophonist Clifford Jordan never seemed to record an uninspired album. This Mapleshade CD, cut live at a Baltimore club, matches Jordan with pianist Kevin O'Connell, bassist Ed Howard and drummer Vernel Fournier. In addition to four standards (including "Lush Life" and " "'Round Midnight"), Jordan performs Stanley Cowell's "Cal Massey" and three of his own straight-ahead but diverse originals. Excellent advanced straight-ahead jazz from an underrated great. ~Scott Yanow

Live At Ethell's

Various - French Gypsy Jazz

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:34
Size: 95.2 MB
Styles: Gypsy jazz
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[3:25] 1. Hot Quintet De France - Nuages
[2:53] 2. Hot Quintet De France - Daphne
[2:39] 3. Jacques Montagne - X-Men
[2:25] 4. Hot Quintet De France - Dinah
[2:49] 5. Hot Quintet De France - Manoir De Mes Rêves
[3:09] 6. Jacques Montagne - Canone
[2:32] 7. Hot Quintet De France - Sweet Georgia Brown
[2:59] 8. Hot Quintet De France - Japanese Sandman
[2:52] 9. Jacques Montagne - Goldy
[2:47] 10. Hot Quintet De France - Isabelle Blues
[2:29] 11. Hot Quintet De France - Swing Gipsy
[2:21] 12. Hot Quintet De France - Sweet Sue
[2:59] 13. Jacques Montagne - Iron Man
[2:15] 14. Hot Quintet De France - Swing Gipsy
[2:54] 15. Hot Quintet De France - Les Yeux Noirs

This style of jazz is most often attributed to gypsy guitarist Django Reinhardt and violinist Stephane Grapelli who founded the all strings jazz ensemble, The Quintet du Hot Club de France, in the 1930s in Paris, France. This style is at times also referred to as “jazz manouche”, from the French term meaning “gypsy”. The style’s creation being attributed to a gypsy, the musical characteristics of the blending of gypsy musical elements with jazz and the fact that it has largely been fellow gypsies (until recently) who have carried and preserved the musical legacy of Django Reinhardt since his death in 1953, makes the term “jazz manouche” one that is quite fitting in describing this genre. ~Doug Martin

French Gypsy Jazz

Barb Jungr - The Men I Love: The New American Songbook

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:34
Size: 118.0 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[4:04] 1. Once In A Lifetime
[5:43] 2. I'm A Believer
[3:13] 3. Breaking Down The Walls Of Heartache
[6:04] 4. Night Comes On
[3:21] 5. Can't Get Used To Losing You Red Red Wine
[4:51] 6. The River
[3:56] 7. I Saw The Light
[5:38] 8. This Old Heart Of Mine Love Hurts
[4:01] 9. Everything I Own
[3:17] 10. You Ain't Going Nowhere
[3:38] 11. My Little Town
[3:42] 12. Wichita Lineman

Barb Jungr is more than just a great singer. She's one of the world's premiere song stylists, drawing critical acclaim both sides of the Atlantic and famed for her inspired recasting of material associated with the likes of Bob Dylan, Jacques Brel, Nina Simone and Elvis Presley. Her latest album, The Men I Love, her first for Naim documents Jungr's love of American popular song and its songwriters. And as has come to be expected with Jungr, the material displays her impressive ability to re-imagine well-known popular songs, revealing deep meanings and latent emotional content that comes to light when she dislodges the songs from their original contexts. "There is a body of great work which sits for me right inside the classic Great American Songbook, where songs both stand the test of time and also are able to be re-imagined and sometimes re-harmonised, allowing them to grow and develop beyond original recordings."

The genesis of this project was a season at the fabulous uptown venue, the Café Carlyle in New York City. The Café had become famous for a particular type of American and European song, and Jungr decided she wanted to do something a little different. She worked with pianist, arranger, producer and friend Simon Wallace in creating a new and varied programme of ‘Great American Songs' by contemporary writers. The show blew the doors wide open. The season was a huge success, and the audiences queued up to after the shows to tell Jungr how much the songs meant to them inspiring Jungr to make the show the basis of her next album.

"At that time Simon and I began to look at how to record them in a way that represented the ‘live' performance. We achieved this by recording lots of takes with just piano and voice, till we found the performances we wanted. Then we added further layers from some of Britain's greatest musicians - including bassist Steve Watts, cellist Frank Schaeffer, flute genius Clive Bell and percussionist Paul Clarvis".

The result is arguably Jungr's most complete artistic statement to date, a profound but always enjoyable examination of the ‘heart' of some of popular music's greatest song and a spellbinding collection from one of our greatest and most original voices.

The Men I Love

Spyro Gyra - The Best Of (The First Ten Years)

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:23
Size: 165.7 MB
Styles: Fusion, Smooth jazz
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[4:46] 1. Shaker Song
[3:54] 2. Morning Dance
[4:38] 3. Catching The Sun
[5:08] 4. Autumn Of Our Love
[5:00] 5. Cafe Amore
[4:15] 6. Cashaça
[6:06] 7. Freetime
[5:03] 8. Summer Strut
[6:37] 9. Old San Juan
[5:54] 10. Incognito
[5:31] 11. Conversations
[4:19] 12. Shakedown
[4:35] 13. Bob Goes To The Store
[6:30] 14. Del Corazon

This compilation covers the years 1977 to 1987, when Spyro Gyra was blazing new ground, blending jazz and pop elements in an original way that would eventually help define the emerging genre of smooth jazz. It touches on the band's Buffalo, New York, origins with "Shaker Song," recalls its first great success with "Morning Song," and documents the emergence of saxophonist Jay Beckenstein as an outstanding studio producer. Along the way, it also features the various musicians who have contributed to the group through the years. The original keyboard player Jeremy Wall contributes several compositions, including the touching "Autumn of Our Love" and the joyous "Summer Strut." There's an infectious humor to former bassist Kim Stone's "Bob Goes to the Store," while current member Julio Fernandez creates a fine setting for his own passionate guitar with "Del Corazon." Beckenstein's ability to work guest musicians into striking arrangements is apparent in Randy Brecker's trumpet with wah-wah pedal on "Catching the Sun," while bassist Eddie Gomez contributes distinctive energy to "Conversations." It's a stellar collection of tunes that will appeal to longtime fans and introduce the band's early career to recent devotees. ~Adam Rains

The Best Of (The First Ten Years)

Monty Alexander - Uplift

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:01
Size: 144,7 MB
Art: Front

(6:18)  1. Come Fly With Me
(5:53)  2. One Mint Julep
(6:44)  3. Renewal
(5:34)  4. Sweet Georgia Brown
(8:58)  5. I Just Can't See for Lookin'
(7:37)  6. Django
(6:53)  7. Body and Soul
(7:07)  8. Hope
(1:45)  9. Home
(6:07) 10. Fungii Mama

Virtually everyone who plays with pianist Monty Alexander loves the challenge of keeping up with his mischievous music-making and sudden changes in direction. Then there are those quotes splashes of everything from bugle calls and nursery rhymes to Duke Ellington and "Meet the Flintstones" that challenge the listeners' repertoire, as well as adding delight and surprise to each track. Who else, for instance, would begin "Sweet Georgia Brown" with a tongue-in-cheek reference to the opera "Carmen" and make it work? Uplift is a collection of 10 tunes, three of them Alexander's own, that producer John Lee calls "a masterpiece." That's a tough call to make, given Alexander's 62 fine recordings as leader over his five-decade career; in fact, Montreux Alexander (MPS, 1976) is such a desert island disc for many jazz lovers that it was reissued in a 30th anniversary edition. Certainly there are few living pianists who can match his imaginative and joyous approach, and his harmonic risk-taking; unlike many players who shift things around just for the sake of making a change, Alexander's innovations are always respectful of the melody. Not many are able to bring such new life to well-worn standards; in his blues-infused, infectious swing, he recalls the late master Gene Harris.

Here, Alexander is backed by his superb long-term bassist, Hassan Shakur, and drummer Herlin Riley, who has recorded numerous CDs with Wynton Marsalis, among others. From the bright, finger-popping opening "Come Fly with Me" (Alexander's salute to Frank Sinatra, an early fan and sponsor), they provide supple support for every detour, helping the whole trio rock like mad. Riley's killer solo on "Sweet Georgia Brown" is one of the things that make it the standout track it's nothing less than a jazz juggernaut. Or, maybe, the highlight is "Body and Soul," which Alexander hitches to a bright waltz tempo and takes to a whole new territory. Others will pick the driving "One Mint Julep," the soulful "Django," or the lush Jamaican landscape of the last three tracks. In any case, this is an exceptional collection, which also crackles with that special, open energy only a live performance can deliver. Uplift is an apt title, since that's precisely what this music does. ~ Dr Judith Schlesinger  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/uplift-monty-alexander-jazz-legacy-productions-review-by-dr-judith-schlesinger.php
Personnel: Monty Alexander: piano; Hassan Shakur: bass; Herlin Riley: drums; Fritz Landesbergen: drums (1, 6).

Uplift

Michael Marc - Acoustic Guitar

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:02
Size: 166,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:32)  1. I Will Always Love You
(3:26)  2. Marry Me
(4:47)  3. The Girl from Ipanema
(4:31)  4. The Shadow of Your Smile
(3:54)  5. Old Man River
(4:31)  6. I've Got You Under My Skin
(4:09)  7. All the Things You Are
(4:35)  8. Imagine
(3:38)  9. Perfidia
(4:20) 10. Corcovado (Quiet Night of Quiet Stars)
(4:36) 11. What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?
(3:53) 12. Smile
(3:41) 13. Moonlight in Vermont
(3:41) 14. Days of Wine and Roses
(4:10) 15. You Don’t Know What Love Is
(3:26) 16. It Never Rains in California
(2:39) 17. San Francisco (If You're Going To)
(3:04) 18. I Can't Make You Love Me
(2:20) 19. Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring

Michael Marc Zanabili was born in Heidelberg, Germany, where he was given his first opportunity to show his musical talent at a school performance at the age of eight, in front of an audience of 200 people. This early success led to an eager decision to become a guitarist. He made his living by performing in clubs and at private parties. Michael began to travel to Spain to attend classes with John Williams. In France he worked with such masters as Manuel Barrueco and Eduardo Falu. In 1986 Michael graduated from the prestigious "Hochschule für Musik des Rheinlandes" in Cologne, Germany and started to give concerts throughout Europe.

Michael Marc's playing is built on emotions and feelings rather than structures and tradition, something that always troubled him during his classical studies in Germany. Working with Barrueco and Falu confirmed his belief to listen to your heart first. "You can know everything about music, but if you don't feel it, the result will not be music"

On one of his many trips, Michael fell in love with San Diego, CA and decided to move there. He gave up his life in Germany and came to America with little more than his guitar in his hands. Continuing to create his own style of guitar music, which is influenced by Classical, Jazz and Flamenco, he started to record his first album: Plaza de la Libertad, a tribute to his "place of freedom".  Michael treats every string with an individual respect, to draw from its unique sound, never descending into a cloud of undefined sound waves. Instead he translates subtle feelings into music, giving importance to every single note and thus developing an intimacy with his audience. The guitar is used as an instrument to reveal every emotional phase so that no listener could resist its passionate charm. The 20th Century Guitar Magazine called it: "A stunning fusion of Acoustic, New Age, Jazz and Spanish classical guitar wizardry... Michael Marc's classical and Flamenco guitar techniques are dazzling and totally engaging." http://arrowrec.com/michael/

Ray Charles - Genius & Friends

Styles: Vocal, R&B
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:41
Size: 132,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:00)  1. Ray Charles & Angie Stone - All I Want To Do
(3:48)  2. Ray Charles & Chris Issak - You Are My Sunshine
(5:08)  3. Ray Charles & Mary J. Blige - It All Goes By So Fast
(3:41)  4. Ray Charles & Gladys Knight - You Were There
(4:28)  5. Ray Charles With Ruben Studdard & The Harlem Gospel Singers - Imagine
(3:42)  6. Ray Charles & Leela James - Compared To What
(3:45)  7. Ray Charles & Diana Ross - Big Bad Love
(4:43)  8. Ray Charles & Idina Menzel - I Will Be There
(4:46)  9. Ray Charles & George Michael - Blame It On The Sun
(4:40) 10. Ray Charles & John Legend - Touch
(5:10) 11. Ray Charles & Patti LaBelle & The Andrae Crouch Singers - Shout
(4:13) 12. Ray Charles & Laura Pausini - Surrender To Love
(2:32) 13. Ray Charles & Willie Nelson - Busted [Live]
(2:59) 14. Ray Charles & Alicia Keys - America The Beautiful

Atlantic/Rhino's 2005 Genius & Friends is the end result of a project Ray Charles initiated a few months before his death in June 2004. According to James Austin's liner notes, Charles called Austin in December of 2003, asking if he could find the masters to an unreleased duets record Ray recorded in 1997 and 1998. Austin found the tapes, but Charles was too sick to work on them, so after his passing  and after his final studio album, the duets record Genius Loves Company, became a number one hit in August of 2004 Atlantic/Rhino decided to finish off the project, bringing in producer Phil Ramone to oversee the completion of the album. This included bringing in singers to record their parts, since apart from two tracks  a 1994 duet with Diana Ross on "Big Bad Love" and a live 1991 version of "Busted" with Willie Nelson (taken from the television special Ray Charles: 50 Years in Music) these are all studio constructions, with vocalists duetting with a previously recorded Ray. 

While not quite the monstrosity it could have been posthumous duets albums like this always bear an unsettling ghoulish undertow Genius & Friends is also not a particularly good album either. This isn't because the pairings are ill conceived  apart from the woefully outmatched American Idol winner Ruben Studdard on "Imagine" (which boasts perhaps Ray's best vocal performance on this record), there's nobody here who doesn't hold his or her own, and Ramone has skillfully edited the new recordings with the existing tapes so it sounds like they were recorded at the same time, even if it rarely sounds as if the vocalists were in the same room together. Rather, the problem is that the productions are caught halfway between '90s adult contemporary and modern neo-soul, sounding too slick and polished to really be memorable. It's pleasant enough and it's top-loaded, too, with the duets with Angie Stone, Chris Isaak, and Mary J. Blige being among the best cuts but it's not as relaxed or appealing as Genius Loves Company, which had the feeling of being a real duets album. This feels like what it is a professional studio creation. Not a terrible thing per se, but not something that makes for a good album, either. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine  http://www.allmusic.com/album/genius-friends-mw0000381429

Personnel: Ray Charles (vocals, piano); Chris Isaak, George Michael, Idina Menzel, John Legend, Laura Pausini, Alicia Keys, Mary J. Blige, The Andraé Crouch Singers, Patti LaBelle, Angie Stone, Ruben Studdard, Willie Nelson, Gladys Knight, Diana Ross, Leela James (vocals); Rodney "Cortada" Alejandro, Darin "Zone" McKinney, Jamshied Sharifi, Aaron Zigman (programming).

Genius & Friends

Anita Wardell - Why Do You Cry?

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2008
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 47:41
Size: 87,7 MB
Art: Front

(6:57)  1. Ive Never Been in Love Before
(4:22)  2. September in the Rain
(4:36)  3. Why Do You Cry?
(4:17)  4. Twisted
(3:05)  5. In Love in Vain
(7:09)  6. Do You Know What It Means
(4:26)  7. Bye Bye Blackbird
(3:50)  8. Oh What a Beautiful Morning
(4:22)  9. Duke Ellington s Sound of Love
(4:33) 10. Deep Purple

Jazz vocalist Anita Wardell has been acclaimed for the unique artistry she brings to scat and be-bop singing. Raves from peers and critics alike have cemented her reputation as one of Britain 's finest vocalists.

Born in Guildford, UK, Anita emigrated to Australia with her family as child. Enraptured by movie musicals on TV, she soaked up the classics by Rodgers and Hammerstein and Cole Porter. Equipped with a portable tape player, she would record the songs off the set and listen to them countless times. She often explored her father's collection of big band albums by Duke Ellington, Count Basie and many more. During her teens, works by the likes of Clifford Brown, Miles Davis and Charlie Parker exposed her to the complexities of modern jazz while she learned her vocal craft from greats like Ella Fitzgerald, Mark Murphy, Carmen McRae, Betty Carter and Jon Hendricks. Attending Adelaide University in South Australia, Anita worked toward a performance in jazz and improvised music and worked regularly on the Australian jazz circuit.

 Performing with a host of local and international artists, including American saxophonist Richie Cole at the Kiama Jazz Festival and supporting the legendary Sarah Vaughan at the Sydney Opera House, her classroom studies were supplemented by real-life experience. Her recording career began when she joined the Adelaide Connection, formed in 1979-80. Founded by Adelaide native John McKenzie, who directed the group until the early 90s, the Connection enjoyed visits from distinguished guest artists and arrangers like Dr. Kirby Shaw, Phil Mattson, Don Burrows and James Morrison. Anita joined the group at its inception and credits the experience for teaching her how to "blend in with other singers and really listen!" Adelaide Connection recorded two albums (Makin' Whoopee and Nice and Easy) and toured throughout Australia. Anita returned to London in 1989, continuing her studies at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, completing a yearlong course in jazz and studio music. Now touring extensively throughout the UK and Europe, Anita played festival and club dates with appearances at the venerable London jazz club Ronnie Scotts, the Royal Festival Hall, National Theatre and a yearly stint at the Paradise Festival in Cyprus each September.

In 1995, Anita went into the studio with pianist Liam Noble to record an album's worth of material with the hopes of finding a label to release it. After shopping the CD around, they signed a deal with FMR Records. Why Do You Cry? was released to great praise. Pioneer Mark Murphy proclaimed Anita, "a gift from Australia", adding "what hits me is how expressive her ballad singing is. Then she has the courage to scat a ballad or two, not unlike a young lady disciple of the Ben Webster school." Singer Norma Winstone praises her "!unexpected vulnerability, which makes her reading of the ballads both beautiful and touching. Her honesty shines in this well-chosen collection of songs!" Jazzwise Magazine called her "energetic and inventive" while The Guardian proclaimed her "a model of the Jazz singer's art." Nearly universal praise was lavished for her timing, clarity, improvisational skills and emotional resonance. A BBC documentary for Channel Four found Anita in the company of Kurt Elling and Dee Dee Bridgewater in a salute to Ella Fitzgerald entitled "Jazz Heroes". "I really enjoyed working on the Ella Tribute," Anita says. "Having grown up listening and transcribing Ella solos, I felt so excited to be asked to talk about one of my great inspirations. Scat is a big part of what I do and so to be able to comment on scat syllables, style and phrasing was a great experience for me."

Anita continued to work throughout the UK with her trio: pianist Robin Aspland, bassist Jeremy Brown and drummer Gene Calderazzo. Aspland has worked with George Coleman, Bobby Watson, Steve Grossman, Van Morrison, Georgie Fame and is the pianist for Curtis Stigers when he tours England . Calderazzo hails from New York where he worked with legends Joe Henderson, Lionel Hampton and Michael Brecker. Moving to London in 1995, he has become one of the most demanded jazz drummers in Europe . Brown studied at the Royal Academy of Music and has become a very sought-after sideman throughout the UK . Anita and her trio returned to the studio in 1999 and recorded Straight Ahead, released on 33 Jazz. Critics praised her "vibrant delivery," finding in her style the "sweetness of Ella, the creativity of Mark Murphy whilst using her laughter, sadness and technique to tell a story like no other (Amazon). Japan 's most popular jazz publication, Swing Journal, gave its endorsement, writing, "!she's the real thing who can fluently scat and vocalese!" Her latest CD, Until the Stars Fade, finds Anita returning to her first love, tackling Porter, Rodgers and Hammerstein and Rogers and Hart. She and her trio deftly interpret well-known standards in a fresh way, whether it's playful scatting on an energetic "Get out of Town" or a tender reading of "Make Someone Happy". Throughout the disc, her vocalese rivals the storied lyricists in its expressiveness. It's no wonder The Guardian calls her "one of Britain 's most exciting talents."http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/anitawardell2

Mark Turner, Tad Shull - Two Tenor Ballads

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:05
Size: 154,0 MB
Art: Front

( 9:52)  1. A Flower Is a Lovesome Thing
( 6:21)  2. Autumn In New York
( 6:28)  3. Blue in Green
( 7:11)  4. What's My Name
( 7:27)  5. I Forget to Remember
( 6:44)  6. Alone Together
( 6:19)  7. Very Early
(10:18)  8. Turn Out the Stars
( 6:20)  9. You've Changed

The two tenor battle is not a new idea, with predecessors ranging from Dexter Gordon and Wardell Gray to Eddie “Lockjaw” Davis and Johnny Griffin. However, what we have here is not so much a competition but a complimentary pairing that makes the most of the individualistic styles of Mark Turner (a distinguished disciple of Lester Young and Warne Marsh) and Tad Shull (straight out of the Webster/Hawkins school of deep-throated tenors). It’s the contrast that makes for provocative listening, Shull positively robust and burly, with Turner proving to be lighter-toned and more reasoned.

Throughout this generous set, Turner and Shull get sensitive backing from the trio of Kevin Hayes, Larry Grenadier, and Billy Drummond. Even with the preponderance of ballad material, things never bog down or become effete. The variety of material also helps in this matter, with “What’s My Name” sporting a gentle rumba beat and the waltz tempo of Bill Evans’ “Very Early” given a light bounce. Recorded in 1994 and just now seeing release, Two Tenor Ballads gives us a sumptuous early look at Turner, who has since become a leading man of great promise. Unfortunately, this “lost session” is the most recent work to feature Shull, a neglected maverick who is rarely heard from these days. ~ C.Andrew Hovan  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/two-tenor-ballads-mark-turner-criss-cross-review-by-c-andrew-hovan.php

Personnel: Mark Turner & Tad Shull- tenor saxophone, Kevin Hays- piano, Larry Grenadier- bass, Billy Drummond- drums