Friday, September 25, 2015

Art Pepper - The Capitol Vaults Jazz Series (Disc 3 of 3)

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:53
Size: 180.6 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[5:07] 1. Holiday Flight
[6:07] 2. Too Close For Comfort
[4:08] 3. Long Ago (And Far Away)
[7:19] 4. Begin The Beguine
[5:36] 5. I Can't Believe That You're In Love With Me
[6:29] 6. Summertime
[4:21] 7. Fascinating Rhythm
[4:19] 8. Body And Soul
[7:36] 9. Without A Song
[3:29] 10. The Breeze And I
[4:39] 11. Surf Ride
[4:53] 12. Webb City
[6:13] 13. Begin The Beguine
[3:58] 14. Fascinating Rhythm
[4:32] 15. Webb City

The Capitol Vaults Jazz Series (Disc 3)                 

Abigail Riccards - Every Little Star

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:20
Size: 126.7 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[4:37] 1. I've Told Every Little Star
[5:26] 2. If I Had You
[4:07] 3. Singin' In The Rain
[4:00] 4. How Deep Is The Ocean
[5:30] 5. Circle Game
[3:41] 6. Sleepin' Bee
[6:01] 7. I Didn't Know About You
[4:57] 8. I Can't Give You Anything But Love
[3:14] 9. Smile
[4:45] 10. Waltz For Debby
[3:48] 11. Endless Joy
[5:08] 12. Bye Bye Blackbird

Abigail Riccards may not be known yet but Jane Monheit is, and on Riccard's Every Little Star, the famous jazz chanteur is both a mentor and co-producer. The Chicago-based Riccards began appearing in New York City in the early 2000s, garnering a good deal of critical attention from her live performances and her debut recording, When The Night Was New (Jazz Excursion, 2008).

Always supported by the best musicians, Riccards is backed up here by a piano-guitar quartet, led by pianist Michael Kanan, who handles the arrangements of all twelve songs included in this collection. His steady hand steers a neo-mainstream path, paying a counterpoint homage to John Lewis and George Shearing. Guitarist Peter Bernstein provides the string mood to the set, his introduction and accompaniment on "If I Had You" an album highlight. Bassist Neal Miner and drummer Eliot Zigmund round out the rhythm section, the quartet proving tasteful and brief support.

Riccard's instrument is one that is at once fresh and practiced. Interestingly, her voice is best framed in her duet with Monheit on Joni Mitchell's "Circle Game." Riccards' alto possesses an exegesis of the singer's art, able to fit anywhere—as evidenced by her cover of Bill Evans' "Waltz For Debbie" and Irving Berlin's "How Deep Is The Ocean." The culmination of her vision is on "Sleepin' Bee," where Riccards duets with only Miner's walking bass. Riccards' footing is secure and her future bright.~Michael BaileyAbigail Riccards: vocals; Michael Kanan: piano; Neal Miner: bass; Peter Bernstein: guitar; Eliot Zigmund: drums.

Every Little Star

Claudio Roditi - Jazz Turns Samba

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:27
Size: 143.0 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Trumpet jazz
Year: 1996/2015
Art: Front

[5:46] 1. Moody's Samba
[4:46] 2. Birk's Works
[7:21] 3. Speak Low
[7:46] 4. Without A Song
[7:08] 5. Come Rain Or Come Shine
[5:25] 6. Giant Steps
[9:19] 7. Moanin'
[5:37] 8. Moment's Notice
[5:11] 9. Donna Lee
[4:05] 10. Inside Out

Claudio Roditi takes a Brazilian-flavored look at a number of standards and familiar jazz compositions on these delightful sessions from 1992, with pianist Mark Soskin, bassist David Finck, and drummer Ignacio Berroa in his core group and various guests interspersed throughout the CD. The trumpeter's tone and phrasing are at a peak throughout the disc, and he switches to flügelhorn for a peppy rendition of "Without a Song." The upbeat samba treatment of "Speak Low" and bossa nova chart of "Come Rain or Come Shine" feature tenor saxophonist Andres Boiarsky, while the promising young tenor player David Sanchez is on hand for the midtempo arrangement of "Giant Steps" and gospel-infused "Moanin'." Guitarist Ed Cherry is added for the engaging uptempo samba interpretation of "Donna Lee," while harmonica player Hendrik Meurkens shines in Roditi's "Moody's Samba." Unfortunately, this rewarding CD has been allowed to lapse from print, so it is getting difficult to acquire. ~Ken Dryden

Jazz Turns Samba

Django Reinhardt - Djangology

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:50
Size: 166.7 MB
Styles: Gypsy jazz, Swing
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[3:27] 1. I Saw Stars
[2:57] 2. After You've Gone
[3:37] 3. Heavy Artillery (Artillerie Lourde)
[4:13] 4. Beyond the Sea (La Mer)
[2:34] 5. Minor Swing
[3:00] 6. Menilmontant
[3:41] 7. Brick Top
[2:51] 8. Swing Guitars
[2:51] 9. All the Things You Are
[2:23] 10. Daphné
[2:48] 11. It's Only a Paper Moon
[3:41] 12. Improvisation on Tchaikovsky's Pathetique Andante
[2:49] 13. The World Is Waiting for the Sunrise
[2:42] 14. Djangology
[3:18] 15. Ou Es-Tu, Mon Amour (Where Are You, My Love )
[2:51] 16. Marie
[3:42] 17. I Surrender, Dear
[3:06] 18. Hallelujah
[2:23] 19. Swing '42
[3:58] 20. I'll Never Be the Same
[3:57] 21. Honeysuckle Rose
[3:08] 22. Lover Man (Oh, Where Can You Be)
[2:43] 23. I Got Rhythm

In 1949, Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli reunited for a brief tour of Italy. While they were there they recorded about 50 tunes with an Italian rhythm section, and although they didn't know it at the time, these sessions marked the last time the Gypsy guitarist and the French violinist recorded together. This CD collects 23 of the best tracks from those final sessions, including versions of Hot Club standards like "Minor Swing," "Bricktop," and "Swing 42." Reinhardt and Grappelli don't try to recreate the raucous swing of their earlier collaborations, opting instead for an intriguing blend of romantic, almost classical melodic soloing and bebop-tinged harmonies and rhythms. The attempt doesn't always succeed, primarily because the three musicians on drums, bass, and piano are clearly out of their depth. But when the two masters click, as they do on "I Got Rhythm," they demonstrate an eagerness to explore the new musical possibilities offered by postwar jazz. Sadly Reinhardt died not long after he returned from Italy, so he and Grappelli were never able to continue their musical exploration, leaving the music on Djangology as a final farewell to one of the great partnerships in jazz. ~Michael Simmons

Djangology

Lucky Thompson - Love Ya

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:36
Size: 173.1 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[6:25] 1. Let's Try Again
[3:22] 2. I Cover The Waterfront
[4:51] 3. You Got To My Head
[4:04] 4. Easy Going
[6:40] 5. Soul In 3 4
[4:13] 6. My Funny Valentine
[3:14] 7. Angel Eyes
[7:06] 8. One For The Boys And Us
[4:13] 9. I Should Care
[3:30] 10. A Sunkissed Rose
[3:47] 11. Home Free
[4:14] 12. Paris The Beautiful
[8:16] 13. Now's The Time
[3:41] 14. Portrait Of Django
[3:58] 15. But Not For Tonight
[3:56] 16. Lullaby Of The Leaves

Born in Columbia, SC, on June 16, 1924, tenor saxophonist Lucky Thompson bridged the gap between the physical dynamism of swing and the cerebral intricacies of bebop, emerging as one of his instrument's foremost practitioners and a stylist par excellence. Eli Thompson's lifelong nickname -- the byproduct of a jersey, given him by his father, with the word "lucky" stitched across the chest -- would prove bitterly inappropriate: when he was five, his mother died, and the remainder of his childhood, spent largely in Detroit, was devoted to helping raise his younger siblings. Thompson loved music, but without hope of acquiring an instrument of his own, he ran errands to earn enough money to purchase an instructional book on the saxophone, complete with fingering chart. He then carved imitation lines and keys into a broom handle, teaching himself to read music years before he ever played an actual sax. According to legend, Thompson finally received his own saxophone by accident -- a delivery company mistakenly dropped one off at his home along with some furniture, and after graduating high school and working briefly as a barber, he signed on with Erskine Hawkins' 'Bama State Collegians, touring with the group until 1943, when he joined Lionel Hampton and settled in New York City.

Soon after his arrival in the Big Apple, Thompson was tapped to replace Ben Webster during his regular gig at the 52nd Street club the Three Deuces -- Webster, Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, and Art Tatum were all in attendance at Thompson's debut gig, and while he deemed the performance a disaster (a notorious perfectionist, he was rarely if ever pleased with his work), he nevertheless quickly earned the respect of his peers and became a club fixture. After a stint with bassist Slam Stewart, Thompson again toured with Hampton before joining singer Billy Eckstine's short-lived big band that included Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and Art Blakey -- in other words, the crucible of bebop. But although he played on some of the earliest and most influential bop dates, Thompson never fit squarely within the movement's paradigm -- his playing boasted an elegance and formal power all his own, with an emotional depth rare among the tenor greats of his generation. He joined the Count Basie Orchestra in late 1944, exiting the following year while in Los Angeles and remaining there until 1946, in the interim playing on and arranging a series of dates for the Exclusive label. Thompson returned to the road when Gillespie hired him to replace Parker in their epochal combo -- he also played on Parker's landmark March 28, 1946, session for Dial, and that same year was a member of the Charles Mingus and Buddy Collette-led Stars of Swing which, sadly, never recorded.

Thompson returned to New York in 1947, leading his own band at the famed Savoy Ballroom. The following year, he made his European debut at the Nice Jazz Festival, and went on to feature on sessions headlined by Thelonious Monk and Miles Davis (the seminal Walkin'). Backed by a group dubbed the Lucky Seven that included trumpeter Harold Johnson and altoist Jimmy Powell, Thompson cut his first studio session as a leader on August 14, 1953, returning the following March 2. For the most part he remained a sideman for the duration of his career, however, enjoying a particularly fruitful collaboration with Milt Jackson that yielded several LPs during the mid-'50s. But many musicians, not to mention industry executives, found Thompson difficult to deal with -- he was notoriously outspoken about what he considered the unfair power wielded over the jazz business by record labels, music publishers, and booking agents, and in February 1956 he sought to escape these "vultures" by relocating his family to Paris. Two months later he joined Stan Kenton's French tour, even returning to the U.S. with Kenton's group, but he soon found himself blacklisted by Louis Armstrong's manager, Joe Glaser, after a bizarre conflict with the beloved jazz pioneer over which musician should be the first to leave their plane after landing. Without steady work, he returned to Paris, cutting several sessions with producer Eddie Barclay.

Thompson remained in France until 1962, returning to New York and a year later headlining the Prestige LP Plays Jerome Kern and No More, which featured pianist Hank Jones. Around this same time his wife died, and in addition to struggling to raise their children on his own, Thompson's old battles with the jazz power structure also remained, and in 1966 he formally announced his retirement in the pages of Down Beat magazine. Within a few months he returned to active duty, but remained frustrated with the industry and his own ability -- during the March 20, 1968, date captured on the Candid CD Lord, Lord Am I Ever Gonna Know?, he says "I feel I have only scratched the surface of what I know I am capable of doing." From late 1968 to 1970, Thompson lived in Lausanne, Switzerland, touring widely across Europe before returning the U.S., where he taught music at Dartmouth University and in 1973 led his final recording, I Offer You. The remaining decades of Thompson's life are in large part a mystery -- he spent several years living on Ontario's Manitoulin Island before relocating to Savannah, GA, trading his saxophones in exchange for dental work. He eventually migrated to the Pacific Northwest, and after a long period of homelessness checked into Seattle's Columbia City Assisted Living Center in 1994. Thompson remained in assisted care until his death on July 30, 2005. ~bio by Jason Ankeny

Love Ya

Bud Shank & Bill Mays - Beyond The Red Door

Styles: Saxophone And Piano Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:50
Size: 165,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:34)  1. Red Door
(9:12)  2. The Wind/The Peacocks
(8:31)  3. Why Not Now?
(6:14)  4. Quietly
(9:20)  5. The Touch Of Your Lips
(8:51)  6. I Loves You Porgy
(7:56)  7. Carousels
(7:59)  8. Everything I Love
(7:09)  9. Where Or When

At its best, jazz is about spontaneity and surprise. It is also, as Bud Shank writes in his cogent liner notes to Beyond the Red Door, wherein his persuasive alto saxophone is seamlessly blended with Bill Mays's decorous piano, about "the expression of emotions... about feeling good, about self-respect, about self-assurance, about happiness and humor." Shank and Mays bring all those qualities, plus a lifetime of experience, to bear in an engaging and varied program of old favorites and newer treasures that encompasses a broad musical and emotional spectrum. Shank, who at eighty-one wears comfortably the mantle of elder statesman, has always had a distinctive sound, readily identifiable, while Mays is arguably more generic but nonetheless proficient and tasteful. In any event, they comprise a single-minded team, partly because, in Shank's words, they were "especially happy to be playing together as a duo." 

The happiness is palpable throughout, as Shank and Mays wend their way through a delightful melange of standards and original compositions that includes a pair of captivating melodies written by Shank and his wife, Linda ("Carousels," "Why Not Now?") and Mays' seductive waltz, "Quietly." The session opens on a suitably improvisational note with Zoot Sims / Gerry Mulligan's "Red Door," whose melody doesn't surface until the 1:30 mark. For a ballad medley, Mays suggested combining Russ Freeman's "The Wind," on which Shank had played alto flute on the original 1954 recording, with Jimmy Rowles' "The Peacocks."  

The duo's choice of standards is impeccable, starting with Ray Noble's sensuous "The Touch of Your Lips" and including the Gershwin brothers / DuBose Heyward's plaintive "I Loves You Porgy," Cole Porter's cheerful "Everything I Love" and Rodgers and Hart's haunting "Where or When." As for the readings, they are invariably warm and perceptive. Playing time is a generous 71:45, while sound is remarkably clear and well-balanced. If there's a downside, it lies in the fact that tempos are slow to medium, and that one's degree of pleasure may rest largely on his or her fondness for alto sax / piano duos in general and Shank / Mays in particular. Here's one emphatic vote in the "thumbs up" column. ~ Jack Bowers  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/beyond-the-red-door-bud-shank-jazzed-media-review-by-jack-bowers.php

Personnel:  Bud Shank: alto saxophone;  Bill Mays: piano.

Beyond The Red Door

Bobby Scott & His Trio - For Sentimental Reasons

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:43
Size: 162,5 MB
Art: Front

(6:04)  1. Night Lights
(6:14)  2. What'll I Do
(4:49)  3. Lovewise
(6:34)  4. For Sentimental Reasons
(6:22)  5. The More I See You
(6:40)  6. Gee Baby, Ain't I Good To You
(9:20)  7. I Keep Going Back To Joe'S
(5:09)  8. Mamselle
(9:04)  9. That's All
(5:43) 10. That Sunday, That Summer
(4:40) 11. Nature Boy

It's a bit ironic that Nat "King" Cole was the singer Bobby Scott paid tribute to on For Sentimemal Reasons, for the singers sounded nothing alike. Cole's voice was about as smooth and urbane as it gets, whereas Scott's expressive singing had a rough, weathered quality during the last years of his life. This intimate CD, which features Bucky Pizzarrelli on guitar, Steve La Spina on bass and Ronnie Zito or Jimmy Young on drums, isn't a tribute in the sense that the singer/acoustic pianist tries to emulate Cole; rather, Scott brings his own recognizable style to "Nature Boy," "Gee Baby, Ain't I Good to You," "For Sentimental Reasons" and other songs associated with Cole. Another high point of the CD is "Mamselle," a lovely gem that Frank Sinatra and Art Lund recorded in the 1940s. Even though Scott's singing wasn't very Cole-like, they did have one thing in common: both recognized the value of economy and simplicity. Sadly, Scott had only about a year and a half left to live when this excellent album was recorded. ~ Alex Henderson  http://www.allmusic.com/album/for-sentimental-reasons-mw0000204459

For Sentimental Reasons

Alice Testa - Alice's Room

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:28
Size: 106,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:20)  1. If I Were a Bell
(4:43)  2. Alice's Room
(3:47)  3. Black Hole Sun
(6:59)  4. Exit Signs 0.2
(4:31)  5. Kites
(3:58)  6. The Core
(5:18)  7. Pure Imagination
(7:27)  8. Nature Boy
(2:23)  9. Skylark
(2:57) 10. Morrow's Song

As referenced in the liner notes by Andrea Pozza, it is always with a sense of trepidation as well as excitement that the first excursion into listening takes place, as therein lies the beauty of the adventure of discovering new music, artists and singers. Being taken on an unexpected journey with several potential destinations ranging from bliss to disappointment, not knowing where you’ll find yourself at journey’s end. I was therefore eager to hear Alice Testa’s debut album.The album without doubt has a European Jazz feel to it, not unexpectedly. The band, comprising several leading players on the Italian jazz scene, supports her voice beautifully, creating shifting landscapes resonant to the tone and mood of the song without dominating. Atmospheric and immediately accessible, this isn’t challenging jazz by any means and yet there is an elegance in the apparent simplicity of the compositions and arrangements. 

A mix of standards, covers and originals, Alice is obviously wanting to demonstrate her breadth as an artist, rather than limiting herself to what might be expected of a new songstress. The mix works relatively well with material ranging from the immediately recognisable in songs such as ‘Pure Imagination’, ‘Skylark’ and ‘Nature Boy’ to an unexpected smoothed out version of Soundgarden’s ‘Black Hole Sun’ and on to the edgier original number ‘The Core’ which feels much more in keeping with current jazz trends with playful meter changes and a less customary standard feel in its approach.

For the most part the album stays true to a somewhat traditional sound, rather middle of the road with no radical departures to disquiet the listener from a Sunday afternoon sojourn say; an enjoyable, comforting encounter or background soundtrack, both appealing and palatable but perhaps lacking the indefinable magic of say relative newcomer Cécile McLorin Salvant singing similar standards. Although pleasant with its laidback feel and accomplished instrumental solos, vocally ‘Pure Imagination’ doesn’t inspire in the way that Jacob Collier’s a cappella version does, where the emotional connection to the song is clearly apparent in his engaging performance and dramatic harmonic re-working. Much more convincing is Alice’s more inventive take on ‘Black Hole Sun’, a brave choice but one that shows her own diverse taste in music which has no doubt influenced the singer she has become.

Her tone is clear and pure, occasionally airy and light, whilst her vocal approach genuine and true to the melodic lines, staying almost rigidly ‘straight’ with little to no deviation. She demonstrates a natural sensibility to phrase well musically and has good control of her instrument showing precision in pitching and timing, however I personally missed hearing a truly undeniable emotional connection to the lyrical content of the material for the most part. Her supporting cast on the other hand  Matteo Alfonso, Lorenzo Conte, Kyle Poole, Giancarlo Bianchetti and Francesco Geminiani  delivered much more on the expressive level alongside moments of improvisational beauty, creative but always in keeping with the cohesive group sound and direction of the song. Although there are a couple of moments where Alice herself is freed from singing text using the voice more instrumentally, replicating horn lines and delivering wordless melodies, I was left wanting greater glimpses of her own improvisational ability or even just more of a sense of her own vocal personality which for me perhaps isn’t quite developed yet. Finding your own voice as a singer in jazz is no mean feat and one which remains imperative if you’re to stand apart and be instantly recognisable in your own right from the very first note uttered. 

This may well come on subsequent albums which I look forward to hearing as no doubt creating this debut has been an inspirational learning curve which will further inform her evolution as an artist. ~ Donald Palmer  http://ukvibe.org/sans_frontier/alice-testa/

Alice's Room

Bob Wilber - What Swing Is All About

Styles: Clarinet And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:54
Size: 178,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:36)  1. Smiles
(4:13)  2. Tickle Toe
(6:08)  3. Someday You'll Be Sorry
(4:18)  4. I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues
(5:16)  5. I Want To Be Happy
(3:42)  6. You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To
(5:40)  7. Basic Jump
(5:42)  8. Back Home Again In Indiana
(3:56)  9. Love Comes Along Once in a Lifetime
(6:06) 10. The Song Is You
(3:09) 11. Feeling I'm Falling
(4:22) 12. I've Got A Crush On You / You Do Something To Me
(3:44) 13. Bernfest '96
(3:28) 14. This Is New
(4:06) 15. Goody, Goody
(3:52) 16. Billie's Bounce
(5:27) 17. Doggin' Around

This is simple stuff, plain and unassuming. Two high horns, with a broad arsenal, trade nimbly over a bright trio. The group was formed for a hotel job in 1984 and plays to this day. The repertoire is expected: old standards and basic originals. The album has no surprises, save one: this old music sounds fresher than a lot of modern bands. This is what swing is all about. The horns step together on “Smiles”, a parallel theme with plenty of warmth. Wilber shouts high, a clarinet purity on soprano; his former student Antti Sarpila is pure Lester. Pleasant but light; a gentle stroll in the park. It picks up with “Tickle Toe”: Antti is more urgent but still Presidential; Wilber, on clarinet, bends tone and shows grit while staying sweet. The exchanges are tough, Joe Ascione fending off both horns at once. It all works, right down to Basie’s Morse code at the end. The fans agree. 

“I Got a Right” brings in Pug Horton, for the first of any vocals. Befitting the tune, she is low and weary, with a charming vibrato. Mark Shane is understated, light rolls and Ellington trills. Wilber takes the straight soprano (less sweet than his curved model); it’s the match to Antti’s clarinet. Pug is brighter on “Nice to Come Home To”; less vibrato and more heat. Her notes stay creamy even down low – not many can say that. Wilber’s solo is busy and happy; Antti’s is almost its equal. “Basiec Jump” is a fun turn on “Undecided”; Antti stretches a bit with nice sandpaper tone. Shane strides right (he played a Basie tribute at this club a few months later); Wilber has little space, but does he use it! “Indiana” starts at a crawl: Pug muses as the piano flows, as slow as the Wabash River. She stops; the band starts. Antti dances high, while Wilber rolls a bit lower. Ascione gets a soft solo; hear the horns jab behind him. It’s quite a display, and the crowd agrees.

“Feeling I’m Falling” is a gem, a Gershwin tune I wish I knew before this. The clarinets walk together. Wilber keeps to theme, going high with bent notes; Antti likes trills. A lazy day of a song: it may be simple, but always welcome when it comes. Pug comes back for “I’ve Got a Crush on You” (hear Wilber on the lovely verse.) On the final word “you” it becomes “You Do Something to Me” – like that romance becomes passion. Next is “Bernfest ‘96” (named for a festival Wilber played), but don’t be fooled  it’s a classic swinger that could have been written in ’36. The tune is a winner, like the clarinet-tenor blend. There’s little here but the theme, but you don’t need anything else. “Goody Goody” is a group vocal: besides Pug, you hear Wilber, and maybe some of the crowd. Bob’s high swirling is his best solo; Antti groans a bit with a nice rumpled tone. “Billie’s Bounce” isn’t just Charlie Parker here it’s a bossa! And it swings. 

The soprano is slow, some bop moves but without the tension. Antti calls on Lester again, with great results. Shane hammers hard with tremolos: he’s old and modern at once. And “Doggin’ Around” is another “Undecided”, this one from the Count. Wilber is bluesier than normal, with high tumbles. Antti gets tough, quoting “Broadway” and beginning to strut. I like it; the crowd does not disagree. Shane strides again; his best effort. The long ending should be savored but I could say that for the whole album. ~AAJ  Staff  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/what-swing-is-all-about-bob-wilber-review-by-aaj-staff.php

Personnel: Bob Wilber (clarinet, soprano saxophone); Pug Horton (vocals); Antti Sarpila (clarinet, tenor saxophone); Mark Shane (piano); Phil Flanigan (bass instrument); Joe Ascione (drums).

What Swing Is All About