Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Pat Martino - Stone Blue

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:52
Size: 137.0 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[ 4:25] 1. Uptown Down
[ 6:46] 2. Stone Blue
[ 9:15] 3. With All The People
[ 7:26] 4. 13 To Go
[ 8:08] 5. Boundaries
[ 3:39] 6. Never Say Goodbye
[ 6:13] 7. Mac Tough
[13:24] 8. Joyous Lake
[ 0:32] 9. Two Weighs Out

One could viably look at the recordings of renascent guitar hero Pat Martino's recordings of the last few years and pose the musical question: will the real Martino stand up? His Muse releases showed an artist in recovery from his life- and music-threatening brain aneurysm operation of 1980, and his 1996 album The Miracle may be his boldest complete effort yet in the post-op years. Last year's Blue Note debut, All Sides Now, was an odd hit-and-miss affair, a set of dialogues with guitarists with whom he didn't always have much to talk about with. He gets along well with the musicians on his newest album, a quasi-reunion with drummer Kenwood Dennard and keyboardist Delmar Brown, who played with him on his legendary 1976 album Joyous Lake.

Joined here by the admirable tenor saxist Eric Alexander and reliable bassist James Genus, the group navigates through a set of Martino originals that revisit his own corner of the fusion landscape. Mostly, the playing is intense-Martino's own, instantly identifiable style, the eloquent, clean-toned scramble-and the material builds off its built-in tensions, as in the opening "Uptown Down," the fast little postlude "Two Weighs Out," and the title track. The breezy tonalities of "With All the People" may veer a bit too close to smooth jazz for comfort, but the lyricism of his ballad "Never Say Goodbye" is darkly sweet.

Ironically, Brown's overly digital sounds now sound dated, in this age when the raw beauties of older keyboard sonorities are the rage. What sounds timeless here is the leader, wailing with a kind of concurrent wisdom and go-for-broke commitment to improvisational abandon. The truth is that Martino stands up every time he plays. Hints of Martino's unique power is contained in each episode of his work, this latest chapter included. ~Josef Woodland

Stone Blue

Madeline Eastman - Art Attack

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:32
Size: 122.6 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 1994
Art: Front

[4:08] 1. The Thrill Is Gone
[4:39] 2. Gypsy In My Soul
[3:32] 3. Sonhos
[4:38] 4. I Like You, You're Nice I Like You
[4:38] 5. The Boy Next Door
[3:33] 6. Evidence
[5:00] 7. Say It Isn't So
[3:05] 8. My Heart Stood Still
[5:23] 9. Nefertiti
[3:09] 10. Telephone Song
[3:35] 11. MC
[2:44] 12. It Never Entered My Mind
[2:38] 13. You Can't Go Home Again
[2:44] 14. Love Came On Stealthy Fingers

Singer Madeline Eastman's third release for the Mad-Kat label shoots out in a lot of different directions, some more successful than others. Eastman is at her best on explorative workouts (such as a wordless version of "Nefertiti" in which she is joined by The Turtle Island String Quartet), uptempo pieces where she can scat and swing and on sensuous ballads such as "The Thrill Is Gone." In contrast, her treatment of "Gypsy in My Soul" comes across as overly pushy, the lyrics of Blossom Dearie's "I Like You, You're Nice/I Like You" are not too inspired and Eastman's decision to sing in Portuguese (as heard on Ivan Lins's "Sonhos") is a mistake. An energetic version of Thelonious Monk's "Evidence" and a hard swinging "My Heart Stood Still" are much better. The supporting cast includes a trio with pianist Kenny Barron and drummer Tony Williams on half of the program; Bay Area musicians were enlisted for most of the other tracks. To Madeline Eastman's credit, she consistently stretches herself and is not afraid to take chances. The hits far outnumber the misses on this very interesting release. ~Scott Yanow

Art Attack

The Dave Bailey Sextet - One Foot In The Gutter

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:36
Size: 173.1 MB
Styles: Bebop, Contemporary jazz
Year: 2007/2012
Art: Front

[11:02] 1. One Foot In The Gutter
[12:58] 2. Well you needn't
[19:41] 3. Sandu
[17:13] 4. Blues For J.P
[ 7:55] 5. Two Feet In The Gutter
[ 6:44] 6. Our Miss Brooks

Bass – Peck Morrison; Drums – Dave Bailey; Piano – Horace Parlan; Tenor Saxophone – Junior Cook; Trombone – Curtis Fuller; Trumpet – Clark Terry. Recorded at Columbia 30th Street Studio, New York City, on July 19 and 20, 1960. Digitally remastered at La Source Mastering Paris, France.

All sides here were recorded during a series of blowing sessions that put great emphasis on the soloists. The moving spirit behind them was drummer Dave Bailey. All musicians involved play without strain, generating the kind of explosion only jazz can create. The three opening tunes were issued on the album One Foot in the Gutter, the first Bailey did as a leader, and as he himself explained in the original liner notes, “we had unusual freedom throughout, not only in what we played, but in what we did, and at one point you can hear Clark Terry and Junior Cook enthusiastically applauding one of Curtis Fuller’s solos. That was the spirit of the session, and the audience joined right in.”

One Foot In The Gutter

Chet Atkins - Read My Licks

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:17
Size: 96.8 MB
Styles: Country-pop guitar
Year: 1994
Art: Front

[3:14] 1. Young Thing
[4:09] 2. Mountains Of Illinois
[3:29] 3. After You've Gone
[3:01] 4. Every Now And Then
[4:06] 5. Somebody Loves Me Now
[3:41] 6. Norway (Norwegian Mountain Song)
[4:33] 7. Read My Licks
[3:55] 8. Take A Look At Her Now
[3:42] 9. Around The Bend
[4:34] 10. Dream
[3:48] 11. Vincent

Chet Atkins is one of the most influential personalities to ever come out Nashville. Credited with creating the commercial middle-of-the-road "Nashville Sound," Atkins--a guitar virtuoso as well as a keen-eared record executive--remains at the forefront of the country music scene. READ MY LICKS won him a Grammy in 1995.

Tackling such diverse fare as pop standards and folk rock, Atkins is equally adept at capturing the breezy jazz feel of Johnny Mercer's string-accented "Dream" as he is with a spare, solo interpretation of Don McLean's "Vincent." Incorporating vocal assistance from sweet-voiced Suzy Bogguss and meaty instrumental backing from guitarist Mark Knopfler, fiddler Stuart Duncan and country piano legend Floyd Cramer, Atkins constructs a full spectrum of sound. But it is Atkins' own nimble and intricate fingerpicking that is the true centerpiece here. Country-based, with jazz, blues, pop and classical inflections, Atkins gracefully glides through styles as if he were skating on smooth ice. There is a constant motion when he plays, utilizing the three-finger-style Travis technique, with the melody floating above the booming lower notes. This method makes the solo "Vincent" as full-sounding as any of the more orchestrated tracks. ~AMG

Read My Licks

Pee Wee Russell - Pee Wee Russell In England

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:29
Size: 165.9 MB
Styles: Clarinet jazz
Year: 1965/2006
Art: Front

[ 6:48] 1. There'll Be Some Changes Made
[ 5:23] 2. Sugar
[ 8:41] 3. Rose Room
[ 8:20] 4. Rosetta
[ 8:11] 5. If I Had You
[ 7:58] 6. 'deed I Do
[ 5:47] 7. Pee Wee's Blues
[14:28] 8. Untitled Blues
[ 6:49] 9. Indiana (Back Home...)

Pee Wee Russell with John Armatage (drums), Ray Crane (trumpet), Pete Strange (trombone), Cyril Keepher (tenor sax), Archie Sample (clarinet), Collin Bates (piano), Dave Green (bass), and Sandy Brown (clarinet). Recorded at Manchester Sports Guild, England, October 17th, 1964.

The idiosyncratic jazz clarinetist Pee Wee Russell is heard in a live 1964 performance backed by a band led by the British drummer Johnny Armatage. Recorded in Manchester, U.K., the set includes a variety of traditional jazz favorites, such as "There'll Be Some Changes Made," "Back Home Again in Indiana," and "If I Had You."

Pee Wee Russell In England

Clémentine - Les Voyages

Styles: Vocal, Brazilian Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:57
Size: 106,0 MB
Art: Front

(1:58)  1. Catavento
(2:58)  2. Liebestraum
(3:01)  3. Les Voyages
(4:18)  4. Tristeza (Goodbye Sadness)
(2:16)  5. Pourquoi Pas
(3:37)  6. Aquarela Do Brasil
(3:15)  7. Nos Vimos Ya (Haven't We Met)
(1:04)  8. Rendez-Vous A Montmartre
(2:46)  9. Syracuse
(3:04) 10. Tudo Bem, Tudo Bom
(2:10) 11. Saint-Tropez Blues
(2:19) 12. Crepuscule Au Pont De Tolbiac
(4:53) 13. Águas De Março
(4:27) 14. Nina
(3:44) 15. Al Anochecer

Clémentine is a French singer and songwriter based in Japan. She debuted in France in 1988 with the single, "Absolument Jazz". In addition to many releases as a singer, she has appeared regularly on the entertainment segment for NHK Educational TV "French TV". Collaborates frequently with other artists, mostly in Japan. Recently she has often collaborated with her daughter, Solita, who is also a singer.

Born in Paris but traveled widely as a child. With her father transferring first to Mexico and later around the world, she grew in touch with Bossa Nova and other local flavors of music. Returned to France and started Piano lessons at age 10 and Jazz school at age 12. Started her professional career in 1987 by sending a demo tape to Jazz greats Johnny Griffin and Ben Sidran, and was subsequently given an opportunity to record several songs with them. In 1988 released her first single, "Absolument Jazz" with CBS France. Signed a contract with Sony Music Entertainment Japan in 1990, and released many singles and albums. From 2003 to 2005 switched to the Epic Records Japan label, and from 2005 to 2008 to Toshiba EMI. Returned to Sony Music Entertainment in 2008.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cl%C3%A9mentine_%28musician%29

Les Voyages

Charles Lloyd - The Water is Wide

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:27
Size: 156,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:38)  1. Georgia
(5:02)  2. The Water Is Wide
(4:36)  3. Black Butterfly
(3:45)  4. Ballade And Allegro
(5:13)  5. Figure In Blue
(5:39)  6. Lotus Blossom
(8:35)  7. The Monk And The Mermaid
(7:37)  8. Song Of Her
(7:29)  9. Lady day
(4:15) 10. Heaven
(5:13) 11. There Is A BalmIn Gilead
(4:19) 12. Prayer

Tenor saxophonist Charles Lloyd pursues a slightly different angle on his new and seventh “ECM” release titled, The Water Is Wide. Lloyd continues to utilize the exemplary talents of drummer Billy Higgins and guitarist John Abercrombie, who both performed on the artist’s previous effort, Voice In The Night. While the saxophonist also enlists young wunderkind pianist Brad Mehldau and bassist Larry Grenadier who comprise two thirds of the pianist’s working trio. 

Perhaps Lloyd is plotting a new course in contrast to his earlier ethereal dreamscape style recordings as the saxophonist directs his strategies towards bluesy and moody renditions of Hoagy Carmichael’s “Georgia” and the traditional “The Water Is Wide”, among other standards and Lloyd originals. Throughout, the saxophonist’s infamous Coltrane inspired angular attack and tantalizing inflections meld wonderfully with Mehldau’s warm, thoughtful phrasing and Abercrombie’s poignant undercurrents. Yet the combined rhythmic artistry of Billy Higgins and Larry Grenadier proves to be indispensable throughout this rather ubiquitous mix, which also includes Billy Strayhorn’s endearing “Lotus Blossom”, and Duke Ellington’s lesser known, “Heaven”.

The saxophonist’s rich melodious phrasing and soulful expressionism on Cecil McBee’s “Song Of Her” offers the optimum in softly executed sentiment and lush balladry whereas you can almost hear Billie Holiday’s voice seeping through Lloyd’s sultry and altogether deeply moving lines on his original composition, “Lady Day”. Simply put, Charles Lloyd has rarely sounded better as the musicians seemingly interrogate each other’s souls during these sixty-eight enlightening minutes. Without a doubt, The Water Is Wide should find it’s way into quite a few top ten lists for the year 2000. Highly recommended. ~ Glenn Astarita  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-water-is-wide-charles-lloyd-ecm-records-review-by-glenn-astarita__23485.php

Personnel:  Charles Lloyd; Tenor Saxophone: Brad Mehldau; Piano: John Abercrombie; Guitar: Larry Grenadier; Double-Bass: Billy Higgins; Drums

The Water is Wide

Georgie Fame - Lost in a Lover's Dream

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:35
Size: 116,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:11)  1. Wide-Eyed and Legless
(5:10)  2. My Foolish Heart
(4:35)  3. Skiing Blues
(2:04)  4. Blossom
(3:24)  5. Say When
(4:57)  6. Don't Blame Me
(3:37)  7. Medley: There's No More Blue Time / Breezin' All the Way
(3:42)  8. Singing Horn
(4:56)  9. Cry Me a River
(4:44) 10. I Can't Get Started (With You)
(4:12) 11. How Blue
(4:58) 12. Lost in a Lover's Dream

Thanks to the million-selling success he achieved with “The Ballad of Bonnie and Clyde” in 1967, British vocalist and keyboardist Georgie Fame is often misbranded as yet another pop star who turned to jazz when the hits stopped coming. In fact, Fame’s jazz leanings date to the beginning of his career (“Night Train” was the lead track on his 1964 debut album). He’s toured with the Basie band, recorded with Annie Ross and paid tribute to Mose Allison alongside Ben Sidran and Van Morrison. Allison’s influence on Fame has been tremendous. His loping, drawling style is eerily similar. Indeed, anyone unfamiliar with Fame’s history might, upon hearing Lost in a Lover’s Dream, be easily fooled into thinking he grew up with Allison in Mississippi.

Recorded in Slovenia with just guitar (Primoz Grasic) and bass (Mario Mavrin), the album is split fairly evenly between standards and Fame’s own compositions. Most of the original tunes have appeared on previous discs but sound fresh against such beautifully minimalist backing. Fame opens with “Wide-Eyed and Legless,” a paean to unconquerable bad habits worthy of Tom Waits; revisits his witty “Skiing Blues,” the mountainside littered with double entendres; and reprises “Blossom,” the sweet bouquet to Blossom Dearie he first recorded in 1969 (two years earlier, Dearie ignited their musical flirtation with “Sweet Georgie Fame”). As for covers, Fame proves a sublime balladeer across “Don’t Blame Me,” “My Foolish Heart” and “Cry Me a River,” and sprinkles a marvelous “I Can’t Get Started” with references to his multifarious jazz history. ~ Christopher Loudon  http://jazztimes.com/articles/66412-lost-in-a-lover-s-dream-georgie-fame

Personnel: Georgie Fame (vocals), Primoz Grasis (guitar), Mario Mavrin (bass guitar).

Lost in a Lover's Dream

Tom Tallitsch - Heads Or Tales

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:51
Size: 121,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:19)  1. Coming Around
(6:20)  2. Tenderfoot
(6:02)  3. Double Shot
(5:31)  4. Perry's Place
(5:15)  5. Flat Stanley
(5:58)  6. Travel Companion
(5:17)  7. The Lummox
(6:45)  8. Dunes
(3:20)  9. Don't Let It Bring You Down

Lots of sharp changes here deft tenor work from Tom Tallitsch, really cooking strongly alongside the Hammond of Jared Gold! Gold's fast becoming one of our favorite contemporary players on his instrument  and for this sweet little set, he brings out a lot of Larry Young-like lines arcing and curving with an angular feel that's really great and setting fire to Tom's tenor nicely, as it runs alongside the organ with a Joe Henderson sort of vibe. Guitar is from Dave Allen, drums from Mark Ferber, and titles include "Tenderfoot", "Coming Around", "Double Shot", "Flat Stanley", "Travel Companion", and "Dunes".  https://www.dustygroove.com/item/619310

Personnel:  Tom Tallitsch - tenor saxophone;  Dave Allen – guitar;  Jared Gold – organ;  Mark Ferber - drums

Heads Or Tales

Bilgeri - A Man And A Woman

Styles: Pop/Rock
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:01
Size: 183,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:58)  1. I'm GonnaTake You home
(4:20)  2. A Man And A Woman
(3:56)  3. Don't Stop
(4:10)  4. Breaking Free
(3:35)  5. I've Gotta Get A Message To You
(4:11)  6. Deep In My Heart
(3:39)  7. Step Back In Time
(3:48)  8. It's You
(4:08)  9. Just A Heartbeat Away
(4:15) 10. Captain Midnight

Reinhold Bilgeri forms to become a teacher in secondary German, geography, philosophy and psychology and teaches at the gymnasium of Feldkirch until 1981. During the 1970s, he formed with writer Michael Köhlmeier duo Bilgeri & Köhlmeier  (de). He enjoyed success in 1973 with the song Oho Vorarlberg. Bilgeri also has a regional reputation with his rock band "Clockwork" until the beginning of his solo career in 1981. With Videolife, it ranks among the best sellers in Austria that year. With other titles like Love Is Free or Some Girls Ladies are there between twenty times in the pop charts.In the early 1990s, he married model and actress Beatrix Kopf  (de). They have a daughter, Laura, born in 1995. 

In December 2002, the title Silver Bell is widely distributed on the German radio and television. After a compilation of his success in 2005, he published a jazz album Jazzz it - Songs von Gershwin bis Deep Purple including collaborations with Joe Meixner  (de), Harry Sokal  (de), Willi Langer  (de), Christian Lettner  (de) or The RounderGirls. Furthermore, Bilgeri written. In 2005 he published Der Atem des Himmels ("Heaven's Breath"), a novel inspired by the catastrophic avalanche in the Großes Walsertal  (de) in 1954. In late 2006, his show mixes his jazz pieces and passages readings his novel. In 2009, he signed the film adaptation and realization of the movie  (in) comes out in 2010. Translate by Google  https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reinhold_Bilgeri

A Man And A Woman