Saturday, August 29, 2015

Charlie Shavers - Gershwin, Shavers & Strings

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:55
Size: 70.8 MB
Styles: Trumpet jazz
Year: 1955/2014
Art: Front

[2:36] 1. I've Got A Crush On You
[3:05] 2. Someone To Watch Over Me
[2:45] 3. Somebody Loves Me
[3:08] 4. The Man I Love
[3:04] 5. It Ain't Necessarily So
[3:06] 6. Liza (All The Clouds'll Roll Away)
[3:10] 7. Embraceable You
[2:54] 8. I've Got Rhythm
[3:46] 9. Summertime
[3:17] 10. But Not For Me

The music of George Gershwin, but taken to some great late night territory by the trumpet of Charlie Shavers! The album's a sublime "with strings" date – one that has Charlie blowing beautifully over backdrops from Sy Oliver – charts that certainly use some string instruments, but often in a very spare, mellow way – so that once Shavers gets going, his trumpet is right out front – often with a beautifully moody tone!

Gershwin, Shavers & Strings

Tito Puente - Masters Of The Last Century: Best Of Tito Puente

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:57
Size: 107.5 MB
Styles: Latin rhythms, Afro-Cuban jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[2:19] 1. Tito Mambo
[2:59] 2. Caravan Mambo
[3:07] 3. Mambo Diablo
[2:56] 4. Mari Juana
[3:13] 5. Mambo En Blues
[2:40] 6. Coco My My
[3:27] 7. Guaguancó En Tropicana
[3:15] 8. Lo Dicen Todos
[2:43] 9. Ta Bueno Pa Baila
[2:50] 10. Preparen Candela
[2:33] 11. Drinking Mambo
[3:00] 12. No Lo Hago Mas
[3:04] 13. Baile Mi Mambo
[2:37] 14. Nuevo Mambo
[3:13] 15. Oye Lo Que Tiene El Mambo
[2:52] 16. Mamey Colorao

An indefatigable visitor to the recording studios, Puente recorded his 100th album, The Mambo King, in 1991 amid much ceremony and affection (an all-star Latin music concert at Los Angeles' Universal Amphitheatre in March 1992 commemorated the milestone), and he kept adding more titles to the tally throughout the '90s. He also appeared as a guest on innumerable albums over the years, and such jazz stars as Phil Woods, George Shearing, James Moody, Dave Valentin, and Terry Gibbs played on Puente's own later albums. Just months after accepting his fifth Grammy award, he died on June 1, 2000. Several months later, Puente was recognized at the first annual Latin Grammy Awards, winning for Best Traditional Tropical Perfomance for Mambo Birdland. ~Richard S. Ginnell

Masters Of The Last Century: Best Of Tito Puente

Chaka Khan - Classikhan

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:15
Size: 105.9 MB
Styles: R&B, Jazz vocals
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[3:15] 1. Hey Big Spender
[3:02] 2. Hazel's Hips
[3:34] 3. The Best Is Yet To Come
[3:08] 4. Crazy
[3:47] 5. I'm In The Mood For Love
[3:48] 6. Is That All There Is
[3:45] 7. Stormy Weather
[3:59] 8. 'round Midnight
[4:07] 9. Teach Me Tonight
[4:24] 10. To Sir With Love
[3:04] 11. Diamonds Are Forever
[2:34] 12. Goldfinger
[3:42] 13. I Believe

Although the misleading title doesn't indicate it, Classikhan can be seen as a follow-up to the Echoes of an Era album Chaka Khan made with her all-star cast of jazz musicians in 1982. The disc is neither a best-of nor a bunch of re-recordings. Instead, it's a set of jazz standards and traditional pop that she recorded with the London Symphony Orchestra, with a little additional help on a handful of cuts from pianist Joe Sample and percussionist Sheila E. Followers of Khan who know the singer's work well beyond the chart hits know that something like this is hardly out of character for her. While it's true that many of these songs -- such as "The Best Is Yet to Come," "To Sir With Love," "Crazy," "Round Midnight" -- have been worn out by so many other renditions of varying quality, Khan injects plenty of her tirelessly singular personality. Most thrilling of all is a pair of nods to Shirley Bassey, John Barry, and James Bond. Weighty versions of "Diamonds Are Forever" and "Goldfinger" come near the tail end and steal the show, indicating that Khan would be a natural Bond-theme successor to the likes of Bassey, Carly Simon, Gladys Knight, and Tina Turner. The only obvious problem with the disc is its title. Longtime Khan fans are likely to glance at the cover of the disc and see it as a another career retrospective -- or, at most, re-recordings of the singer's old material -- that they don't need to hear. That's clearly not the case here. ~Andy Kollman

Classikhan

Jazz At Lincoln Center Orchestra - Live In Cuba (2-Disc Set)

LIVE IN CUBA captures nine-time Grammy Award-winner Wynton Marsalis and the world-renowned Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra’s dazzling first—and only—performances in Cuba.

Recorded in front of a clamorous, sold-out crowd at Havana’s Mella Theatre in October 2010, this two-disc album captures the big band’s unforgettable tracing of the connections between American jazz and Afro-Cuban music. LIVE IN CUBA is the inaugural release from Blue Engine Records, a project showcasing the music of Jazz at Lincoln Center.

Album: Live In Cuba (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:21
Size: 158.8 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2015

[ 8:23] 1. 2/3's Adventure
[11:38] 2. Baa Baa Blacksheep
[11:50] 3. Inaki's Decision
[ 5:30] 4. Sunset & The Mockingbird
[ 6:57] 5. Como Fue
[ 7:07] 6. Dali
[10:51] 7. Light Blue
[ 7:02] 8. Braggin' In Brass

Live In Cuba (Disc 1)

Album: Live In Cuba (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:48
Size: 155.2 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[ 6:36] 1. Limbo Jazz
[14:33] 2. Doin'(Y) Our Thing
[ 7:50] 3. I Left My Baby
[ 6:14] 4. Bearden
[ 8:25] 5. Symphony In Riffs
[ 5:33] 6. Spring Yaounde
[ 9:02] 7. Things To Come
[ 9:33] 8. The Sanctified Blues

Live In Cuba (Disc 2)

David Binney - Lifted Land

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:05
Size: 133,2 MB
Art: Front

( 2:20)  1. Fanfare for Basu
( 6:58)  2. The Road to Your House
(18:29)  3. As Snow Before a Summer Sun
(11:51)  4. The Blue Whale
( 5:13)  5. Curious About Texas
( 6:20)  6. Lifted Land
( 3:23)  7. Losing the Central Valley
( 3:27)  8. Red Cloud

In a career that seems to go from strength to strength and milestone to milestone, it's hard to imagine how David Binney manages to not only release one terrific record after another, but to do so, in some cases, under some pretty constricting terms. Like the five other albums that the influential saxophonist/composer has recorded as a leader or co-leader for the Dutch Criss Cross label most recently 2010's Aliso and the following year's Barefooted Town producer and label owner Gerry Teekens gave Binney just one day to record Lifted Land at their usual digs, Michael Marciano's fine Systems Two Recording Studios in Brooklyn, NY. The result is an album that would likely take many far longer to get this well but for Binney and his quartet, it seems to be nothing more than business as usual. Normally, Binney saves his more ambitious recordings for his own Mythology label, albums like 2011's career-defining Graylen Epicenter, with a cast of 12; true, Binney works with a far more manageable quartet for Lifted Land, but musically this is no simple head-solo-head blowing session. From the brief, through-composed opener, "Fanfare for Basu," its initial, near-impossibly knotty lines morphing into a section of Steve Reichian looped/overdubbed saxophones that, with the rest of the band slowly reentering, resolves back to its near-unfathomable opening and all this in a mere two minutes and twenty-five seconds.

Binney's quartet is a mix of old and new: Craig Taborn whose upward trajectory seems to have no end in sight, as the keyboardist, in addition to work with everyone from saxophonist Tim Berne to bassist Dave Holland, has just released a trio recording, Chants (ECM, 2013), as significant as his solo debut for the German label, Avenging Angels (2011) first connected with Binney for the saxophonist's Welcome to Life (Mythology, 2004), but has been a fairly regular colleague ever since, also appearaing on Graylen and Third Occasion (Mythology, 2009), another particular highlight in Binney's growing discography; bassist Eivind Opsvik first appeared on Binney's Out of Airplanes (Mythology, 2006) an experimental recording that truly used the studio as a compositional tool and has been the saxophonist's recent bassist of choice, appearing on every recording since Aliso. Only Tyshawn Sorey is new to Binney, replacing the saxophonist's usual choices of Dan Weiss and, on occasion, Brian Blade, but this is a thirty-something drummer who is also a deep compositional thinker, as his discography as a leader has only recently begun, starting with the critically acclaimed That/Not (Firehouse 12, 2007). Clearly, based on his work here, Sorey is a player capable of working in everything from the rigidly composed to the flat-out free.

Which is a good thing; Lifted Land may have its fair share of Binney's challenging compositional work, but there's also some unexpected, completely free improvisation to be found. "The Blue Whale," the album's second-longest track, opens with an oblique bass solo that ultimately resolves into a supporting double-stop ostinato which, supported by Sorey's light but busy cymbal work, leads to a relatively simple melody (in Binney terms, that is), opening up to an alto solo that gradually unfolds, beginning with long-held whole notes but slowly gaining in speed and intensity pushed, pulled and prodded by Opsvik, Sorey and, especially, Taborn, who underscores the saxophonist's work with contrapuntal combinations of abstract lines and dense voicings. The whole quartet ultimately turns incendiary as Binney then leaves Taborn to turn the heat up even further, creating a kaleidoscopic panorama of angular lines and block chords, as he ever-so-slowly moves towards an anthemic theme doubled by Binney and another ostinato that, this time, provides the space for Sorey to deliver a solo of tumultuous power and maelstrom-like energy. But the centerpiece of Lifted Land is the tune that precedes "The Blue Whale." A significant reduction of an extended composition that Binney performed as an entire show at New York's Rubin Museum of Art in the fall of 2011, "As Snow Before a Summer Sun" is still over eighteen minutes in length, and in many ways is a consolidation of everything Binney has been about to date. Opening in a dark place, with a short melodic intro leading to Opsvik's brief a cappella, arco solo, space is a key partner here; after another brief melodic group passage, the only sound heard is a single gong that, for nearly a minute, is gradually processed and panned across the entire soundstage, leading to a similar thirty-second exploration of a single cymbal before fading nearly to black, but with Sorey working a combination of hand percussion, gongs, cymbals and a bass drum that, rubbed with a wetted finger, evokes a deep glissando. Revealing the entire section to be a percussion solo one more orchestral in nature and, with so much taking place at low volumes, the complete antithesis of a typical drum solo.

Another brief group passage leads to another a cappella solo, this time from Binney, whose command, not just of harmony and melody, but of tone and texture, underscores a feature that, like his previous partners' solos, makes space and decay fundamental partners. With Taborn contributing a similarly brooding solo, it's not hard to see how the piece could be expanded to full-set length. Binney claims, in occasional All About Jazz contributor David Adler's informative liners, that ..."other than [a few sections that are difficult], the stuff is really not that hard." Begging to differ, just because the chart itself isn't particularly tough doesn't mean just anyone can bring it to life, whether here for 18 minutes, or in concert for triple or quadruple that length.

Elsewhere, the title track begins as a Binney ballad, which means that it may be gentle, but it's far from predictable. As Sorey and Opsvik gradually pick up the pace, so, too, does Binney's melody turn more stratospheric, leading to a 5/8 solo section for Taborn that's a focused contrast to his earlier unfettered abstractions on "The Blue Whale." When Binney reenters for a thematic reiteration it once again turns to an ostinato over which Sorey thunders and roars before a sudden signal to stop leads to an unexpectedly idiosyncratic line which, yet again, belies Binney's suggestion that this music is "not that hard." "Curious About Texas" leads to some of Lifted Land's most flat-out aggressive free play, while "Losing the Central Valley" shifts from an appealing melody couched in a more complex context that, once again, leads to a freely improvised passage with cued segments that lend it an umbrella of form. In an unprecedented move for a Binney recording where he's the sole leader, the saxophonist leaves Taborn to close the record with "Red Cloud," an improvised a cappella solo that further explores Taborn's ability to think compositionally, even when he's in completely uncharted territory. Not unlike his own Avenging Angel, Taborn takes a single motivic idea and builds an entire and entirely compelling piece around it.

Lifted Land represents Binney at his absolute freest...and his most unequivocal, uncompromising best. Always a powerful and inventive soloist, it's not that he hasn't worked in this context before, having ventured into liberated territory on Out of Airplanes (which, also featuring Opsvik and Taborn, perhaps explaining why he chose to recruit them for Lifted Land) and South (ACT, 2002) In both cases, however, they were merely brief contrasts more like palette cleansers to the more structure-based compositions that ultimately defined them. With Lifted Land Binney doesn't just release himself more liberally from the shackles of structure when the spirit moves him, he throws them away entirely on a recording whose compositional excellence is as revelational as its even vaster terrain, where the unexpected lurks around every corner and rests in every nook and cranny discovered and further explored by a quartet unerringly worthy of the trust, required by Binney, to comfortably document it in the space of but a single day's session space. ~ John Kelman http://www.allaboutjazz.com/david-binney-lifted-land-by-john-kelman.php
 
Personnel: David Binney: alto saxophone; Craig Taborn: piano; Eivind Opsvik: bass; Tyshawn Sorey: drums.

Lifted Land

Hendrik Meurkens - Sambatropolis

Styles: Brazilian Jazz, World Fusion
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:29
Size: 127,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:47)  1. Sambatropolis
(4:58)  2. Nem lá Nem Cá
(5:26)  3. Ocean Lights
(4:23)  4. The Bee
(5:24)  5. Fotografia
(3:05)  6. Hot and Stuffy
(4:54)  7. Você Vai Ver
(6:21)  8. You Don't Know What Love Is
(4:22)  9. Choro Da Neve
(5:51) 10. A Summer in San Francisco
(4:52) 11. Bernie's Tune

Playing the vibes and the harmonica is a rather unusual combination. Hendrik Meurkens was drawn to these instruments after he heard Lionel Hampton play the vibraphone on Benny Goodman's Live at Carnegie Hall (Columbia, 1938) and, a few years later, the harmonica of Toots Thielemans. Even as he emerged as an adept player of these instruments, Meurkens was dipping into jazz, and particularly bebop. But he was also pursuing another tangent in Brazilian music. Meurkens has long been letting the two streams converge to give his compositions a particular scope and depth. Meurkens varies the line-up of his bands to give his music more pith and character. 

He gets off on the right note assimilating swing on the heated "Sambatropolis." Jed Levy and Rodrigo Ursaia fire up the swing on their tenor saxophones, while letting a bop impulse add dimension and tensility. Meurkens brings his own vision to bear, swerving in and out of the melody with broad, facile strokes. Besides, his conversation with the sax men is decidedly topnotch. The mood is quite different on the intimate "Ocean Lights." The ballad glows, given its soul by Meurkens on harmonica; however it wouldn't quite be the same without pianist Helio Alves, who is not only full of fluid ideas, but is also an empathic complement. Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Voce Vai Ver" is another hallmark. The gentle strains of the bossa are dewdrops from the vibes; pretty yes, but also creating a splash and leaving an impress. "Choro Da Neve" spirals on the chorinho. The heady pulse is fanned by Meurkens on the harmonica with Adriano Santos driving the rhythm on the drums. Adding to the excitement are exhilarating contributions from Alves and Ursaia. Meurkens has come up with a winning blend, once more. ~ Jerry D’Souza http://www.allaboutjazz.com/sambatropolis-hendrik-meurkens-zoho-music-review-by-jerry-dsouza.php

Personnel: Hendrik Meurkens: harmonica, vibes (2, 7, 8, 10, 11); Rodrigo Ursaia: tenor sax (1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 9), flute (3, 7); Jed Levy: tenor sax (1, 5, 8, 10, 11), flute (2); Helio Alves: piano; Ian Macdonald: piano (8, 11); Pedro Ramos: cavaquinho (9); Gustavo amarante: bass; Adriano Santos: drums (2, 4, 6-11), Mauricio Zottarelli: drums (1); Duduka Da Fonseca: drums (3, 5).

Sambatropolis

Carter Calvert - It's a Man's World

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:06
Size: 147,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:07)  1. It's a Man's, Man's, Man's, World
(4:37)  2. I'm in the Mood
(4:43)  3. Every Little Thing (He) Does Is Magic
(4:52)  4. I'm On Fire
(6:01)  5. Don't You Worry 'bout a Thing
(5:14)  6. Take Me to the Pilot
(5:07)  7. Hurt
(5:19)  8. Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight
(3:42)  9. Can I Stay
(3:58) 10. Hallelujah, I Love (Him) So
(4:36) 11. Can You Be True
(6:09) 12. Love, Reign O'er Me
(6:37) 13. Let It Be

Carter Calvert’s new CD,  It’s A Man’s World, is a collaboration with two household names in jazz: Grammy® award-winning Ulysses Owens, Jr. (Producer/Drums) and Grammy® award-winning Laurence Hobgood (Arranger/Piano), renowned for their imagination and artistry. The end result is a collection of hits originally made famous by iconic male artists, re-imagined and sung from a woman’s point of view. Featuring music by James Brown, The Police, Bruce Springsteen, Paul McCartney & much more! http://www.cartercalvert.com/

"Her voice truly is a siren and she has a range like no other.” ~ JazzTimes

“Calvert is the answer to a musical prayer.” ~ Critical Jazz

“The electric sizzle and animal heat of her performance threatens to set off the building's sprinkler system.” ~ New Jersey Weekly

“…a deliciously torchy voice. Real class.” ~The Plain Dealer

“Carter Calvert is simply incredible. Her voice is so well focused and full of power that she can raise goose bumps.” ~The Trenton Times

“…a voice of smoke and fire... “ ~ San Diego Weekly

It's a Man's World