Sunday, February 7, 2016

Joey DeFrancesco - Live: The Authorized Bootleg (Feat. George Coleman)

Size: 148,5 MB
Time: 64:10
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2007
Styles: Jazz: Modern Jazz, Hammond Organ
Art: Front & Back

01. Introduction ( 0:45)
02. Cherokee ( 9:17)
03. Ceora (Feat. Colleen McNabb) (13:50)
04. I'm In The Mood For Love ( 6:36)
05. On Green Dolphin Street (10:47)
06. Little Girl Blue (11:48)
07. Autumn Leaves (11:04)

Organist Joey DeFrancesco deserves credit for showcasing some comparatively neglected voices on the music scene, like tenor saxophonist Houston Person and clarinetist Mort Weiss. George Coleman, the featured guest on this outing, came up playing alto (Lee Morgan, City Lights, Blue Note 1957), though he would soon shift exclusively to tenor while retaining much of the smaller horn's high-register emphasis. A recently-issued 1963 Miles Davis concert with Coleman (Live at Monterey, Concord 2007) is so spellbinding it might lead to questions about Davis' judgment in replacing him with Wayne Shorter. Shorter chose abstract musical paths and, later, fusion, while Coleman remained close to the beleaguered center, continuing to fan the flames of hard bop in NYC Village quintets with frontline partner Danny Moore (whatever happened to this gifted trumpeter?) and New York power pianist Harold Mabern.

Always an imposing physical specimen, Coleman appears to have kept himself in shape musically as well. His favoring of the treble register of the horn is in evidence throughout, though of late he's introduced a degree of overcompensating support to his tones, which once bore a striking resemblance to the effortless altissimo of John Coltrane. Still, one could argue that the extra rawness makes him a better complement to the explosive rhetoric of DeFrancesco's B3. Whereas formerly the beauty of Coleman's playing frequently lay, like Davis' minimalism, in what was implied, his playing on this date, as DeFrancesco acknowledges during the program, is that of a man who "means business." The tones are frequently impassioned cries, the altissimos played not merely to the back row at Yoshi's but entering a sonic field ringing of quantum mechanical physics as much as tough-tenor testifying.

The program opens with a fearlessly flying "Cherokee" and adheres throughout to a mainstream melodic/harmonic line. Rather than attempt to run the changes and keep up with the rapid-fire articulations that a bop-minded player, or younger Coleman, might find hard to resist, the mature player opportunistically chooses his spots, frequently finding his way to the outer spatial regions of his horn's reach, occasionally adding an extra wallop to his phrases with a "phase-shifting," alternate-fingered climactic top tone. The approach is arguably problematic on Lee Morgan's artfully-constructed "Ceora," which simply refuses to cooperate with excessive tampering let alone bullying. Attempts to overpower its intricate melody or disturb its delicate harmonies can easily come off as unnecessary roughness. Also, recalling the inspired musical marriages of vocalists and tenor giants (Billie Holiday and Lester Young, Etta Jones and either Houston Person or Gene Ammons), where is Coleman during Colleen McNabb's time on the bandstand?

These quibbles aside, the combative veteran stands up to both the heavy-duty machine invented by Mr. Hammond and the indomitable playing by its present-day master as though the outcome were a foregone conclusion: as anyone should know, the man who "means business" seems to be saying, if you plan on having a musical street fight, and one of the pair is brandishing a Hammond B3, never bet against the guy with a Selmer Mark VI. ~by Samuel Chell

Personnel: Joey DeFrancesco: organ; George Coleman: tenor saxophone; Jake Langley: guitar; Byron Landham: drums; Colleen McNabb: vocal (on "I'm in the Mood for Love").

Live: The Authorized Bootleg

Ernestine Anderson - Live In New Orleans

Size: 127,0 MB
Time: 54:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Soul Blues, Jazzy Blues, Vocals
Art: Front

01. Autumn Leaves (11:08)
02. All I Need Is You (Live) ( 3:51)
03. All Blues (Live) ( 7:44)
04. I'm Walking (Live) ( 4:04)
05. What's New (Live) ( 5:34)
06. Sunny (Live) ( 6:04)
07. Please Send Me Someone To Love (Live) ( 4:06)
08. Thought About You (Live) ( 6:09)
09. Never Make Your Move Too Soon (Live) ( 6:16)

Scatting, talking along, singing, Ernestine Anderson wraps herself around a tune. Emerging in the ‘50’s with a hit album in 1956, she was hailed among the best, just behind Ella Fitzgerald and Sarah Vaughan. Recorded here in the ‘80’s, she’s in stride, in tune, her rich voice pulled along by the beat. Playing with her on this program, taped at Dukes Place atop the Monteleone Hotel in New Orleans French Quarter, are Terry Gibbs (vibes), Buddy DeFranco (Clarinet), Lou Levy (Piano), Bob Maize (bass) and Ray Mosca (drums). Her bluesed-up rendition of Fats Domino’s “I’m Walkin” is a real treat.

Live In New Orleans

Scott Hamilton & Harry Allen - Live!

Size: 157,9 MB
Time: 68:29
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Apple Honey (Live) (14:35)
02. The Lonesome Road (Live) (10:04)
03. Tickle Toe (Live) ( 9:07)
04. A Sound Investment (Live) (11:06)
05. Body And Soul (Live) ( 8:48)
06. Blues Up And Down (14:46)

Scott Hamilton:
When Scott Hamilton appeared in the mid-'70s fully formed with an appealing swing style on tenor (mixing together Zoot Sims and Ben Webster), he caused a minor sensation, for few other young players during the fusion era were exploring pre-bop jazz at his high level. He began playing when he was 16 and developed quickly, moving to New York in 1976. Hamilton played with Benny Goodman in the late '70s, but he has mostly performed as a leader, sometimes sharing the spotlight with Warren Vache, Ruby Braff, Rosemary Clooney, the Concord Jazz All-Stars, or George Wein's Newport Jazz Festival All-Stars. Other than a few sessions for Famous Door and Progressive, Hamilton has recorded a long string of dates for Concord that are notable for their consistency and solid swing. ~by Scott Yanow

Harry Allen:
Fathers serious about seeing their sons one day becoming famous athletes begin developing their offspring's skills at a very young age. In the case of Harry Allen's father, who was a big-band drummer, he played jazz records each day for Harry before he went off to kindergarten. Starting off with accordion lessons, there was a fortuitous switch to saxophone later. Attending Rutgers University, Allen studied saxophone with Sahib Shihab, Bob Mintzer, and John Purcell. In 1989, he graduated from Rutgers with a degree in jazz tenor saxophone. While at Rutgers, Allen got his first gig with the help of master bass player Major Holley, where he replaced Zoot Sims at a studio recording with John Bunch, George Masso, Bucky Pizzarelli, and Ruby Braff. During the session, Dizzy Gillespie dropped by. Quite heady company for a young tenor player doing his first recording. Wholley also led Allen to Oliver Jackson, who Allen subsequently accompanied on several tours to Europe. A 1986 session with Kenny Barron was Allen's first recording date. After that, Allen had 19 recordings to his name for such labels as Progressive, Audiophile, and Nagel-Heyer. Later, his recordings were with major label RCA-Victor. Three of his discs have been awarded a Gold Disc by Swing Journal Magazine and his CD Tenors Anyone won both the Gold Disc and New Star awards. He has recorded as a sideman with Bucky Pizzarelli (with whom he performs quite frequently), Warren Vache, and Jeff Hamilton. Allen's musical inspiration and interpretive approach come from the giants and innovators of mainstream saxophone, including Coleman Hawkins, Ben Webster, Stan Getz, Illinois Jacquet, and Lester Young. Unlike many of his contemporaries, Allen has pretty much eschewed the modern, avant-garde, and impressionist schools of jazz of John Coltrane, Archie Shepp, and Ornette Coleman. Allen continues to record extensively and makes frequent appearances at jazz festivals and concerts. ~by Dave Nathan

Live!

Randy Weston - Two Steps From The Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:22
Size: 177.1 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[4:28] 1. Just One Of Those Things
[5:03] 2. Again
[4:08] 3. Where Are You
[3:07] 4. I've Got You Under My Skin
[4:39] 5. In The Still Of The Night
[4:19] 6. A Ballad
[2:51] 7. Fire Down There
[6:30] 8. Once In A While
[3:35] 9. If You Could See Me Now
[5:15] 10. Bass Knows
[4:08] 11. We'll Be Together Again
[3:56] 12. Summertime
[3:55] 13. Little Girl Blue
[6:53] 14. Solemn Meditation
[4:02] 15. Lover
[2:57] 16. I Love Her
[3:41] 17. Pam's Waltz
[3:47] 18. It's All Right With Me

After contributing seven decades of musical direction and genius, Randy Weston remains one of the world's foremost pianists and composers today, a true innovator and visionary.

Encompassing the vast rhythmic heritage of Africa, his global creations musically continue to inform and inspire. "Weston has the biggest sound of any jazz pianist since Ellington and Monk, as well as the richest most inventive beat," states jazz critic Stanley Crouch, "but his art is more than projection and time; it's the result of a studious and inspired intelligence...an intelligence that is creating a fresh synthesis of African elements with jazz technique".

Two Steps From The Blues

Dena DeRose - Love's Holiday

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:15
Size: 144.8 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[4:52] 1. Lover
[4:48] 2. I Thought About You
[4:56] 3. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
[4:14] 4. The Good Life
[7:15] 5. Close Your Eyes
[4:58] 6. The Iris
[5:21] 7. On Green Dolphin Street
[7:41] 8. Birk's Works
[4:47] 9. But Beautiful
[4:46] 10. marian's mood
[4:02] 11. Lamp Is Low
[5:30] 12. The Nearness of You

Dena DeRose Piano, Vocals; Peter Washington Bass; Matt Wilson Drums; Joe Locke Vibes (4,5,6,8); Jim Rotondi Trumpet (3,6,8,11); Steve Davis Trombone (3,4,6,8,11); Tony Kadleck Trumpet/Flugel (4,6,11); Sara Della Posta French Horn (4,6,11); Brian Lynch Trumpet (9); Bill Charlap Piano (12).

To those who have seen Dena DeRose perform, it is immediately apparent that she is a compelling singer and pianist. What is not so obvious is the fact that she also arranges and often composes the tunes she performs. here Dena discusses some of the thoughts and considerations that went into five of the peformances on this recording; four classic American songbook tunes and one of her original compositions.

"In general, I try to interpret a tune by examining the relationship between its melodic/harmonic structure and the meaning of the lyric --- filtered, of course through my life experiences."

Love's Holiday

The Tony Corbiscello Big Band - Real Time

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:58
Size: 107.5 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[3:18] 1. You'd Better Love Me
[2:46] 2. A Beautiful Friendship
[3:09] 3. Moonglow
[1:54] 4. The Lady's In Love With You
[3:22] 5. Bossa Margherita
[2:49] 6. I Got It Bad And That Ain't Good
[2:27] 7. Putter'n Around
[2:15] 8. I Cried For You
[3:21] 9. Easy Street
[2:49] 10. Let's Fall In Love
[2:17] 11. Don't Get Around Much
[3:43] 12. As If We Never Said Goodbye
[2:35] 13. Blue Moon
[2:53] 14. The Lady Is A Tramp
[3:23] 15. You're My Thrill
[3:48] 16. In A Mellotone

Tony Corbiscello (drums); James Chirillo, Bucky Pizzarelli (guitar); Alan Gauvin (clarinet, alto saxophone); David Bixler, Mark Gross (alto saxophone); Doug Lawrence, Mark Phaneuf, Jim "The Royster" Perry (tenor saxophone); Dave Stahl, John Eckert, Patrick Rickman, Danny Cahn (trumpet); Steven Bleifuss (trombone); Matt Ingman (bass trombone); Mike Capobianco, Benny Aronov, Isaac Ben Ayala (piano); Tom Swift (percussion).

Raised in Fort Lee, New Jersey, Corbiscello first played drums in a marching band, then played in pop groups but, inspired by star drummers Gene Krupa and Buddy Rich, he turned to jazz. He studied music with trumpeter Pee Wee Erwin who in turn directed him to Sonny Igoe, former drummer with Benny Goodman (1948-49) and Woody Herman (1950-52), who had become a highly regarded teacher in New Jersey. Following graduation from Fairleigh Dickinson University, Corbiscello played drums with several jazz groups, mostly in and around New Jersey and New York, in particular with guitarist John Pizzarelli with whom he played in the early 90s. Most of the engagements with Pizzarelli were in small groups, but he was also in a big band the guitarist assembled to back Frank Sinatra at concerts in 1992 and which also included bass player Martin Pizzarelli.

Corbiscello also played with Bucky Pizzarelli, appeared at the Montreal Jazz Festival, Jacksonville Jazz Festival, Mt. Hood Jazz Festival and played with the New York Pops and the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra. He also led his own big band for dates in his home state, including appearing in Atlantic City, playing concerts and also providing the music for visiting entertainers such as Bob Hope. Corbiscello also played club and hotel engagements in New York City. He died of cancer in 2006.

Real Time

Howard McGhee - Life Is Just A Bowl Of Cherries

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:54
Size: 82.2 MB
Styles: Bop, Trumpet jazz
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[3:49] 1. Sonny Boy
[2:26] 2. So Blue
[3:01] 3. Broken Hearted
[3:11] 4. The Thrill Is Gone
[3:13] 5. Good News Just Imagine
[2:59] 6. I'm A Dreamer Aren't We All
[3:05] 7. My Song
[2:49] 8. The Best Things In Life Are Free
[2:50] 9. Life Is Just A Bowl Of Cherries
[2:06] 10. Together
[3:10] 11. Come To Me
[3:09] 12. My Sin

Howard McGhee (tp) Danny Bank, Phil Bonder, Sid Brown, Leon Cohen, Herbie Mann (sax) Donn Trenner (p) Al Caiola (g) Arnold Fishkin (b) Osie Johnson, Don Lamond (d) Frank Hunter (arr, dir) recorded NYC, February 14 & 15, 1956.

An orchestral setting for McGhee’s distinctive trumpet, treading a narrow path between jazz and Fifties Hollywood music score. Consisting entirely of familiar standards and a little sacharin at times, it nevertheless has its moments, and you could be forgiven for thinking you had somehow been transported back in time to the Nineteen Fifties.

Life Is Just A Bowl Of Cherries

Cecil Taylor - Love For Sale

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:27
Size: 116,9 MB
Art: Front

( 9:14)  1. Get Out Of Town
( 5:14)  2. I Love Paris
( 8:17)  3. Love For Sale
( 9:07)  4. Little Lees (Louise)
(10:16)  5. Motystrophe
( 8:16)  6. Carol/Three Points

This may be the straightest record Cecil Taylor ever recorded, but it is far from uninspiring. Despite its hopelessly gauche cover one can only presume Taylor had no say-so in the choice of artwork used Taylor's approach to three Cole Porter tunes with a trio and three of his own with a quintet is a lively combination, and one which, in lieu of his later work, reveals the construction of his system of improvisation better than his later records do when he is playing from the middle of it. Accompanied by Dennis Charles on drums and Buell Neidlinger on bass, Taylor dives deep into Porter's "I Love Paris," a shifty little pop song. Taylor goes head to head with Neidlinger in a contrapuntal statement of the melody  illustrated by chord changes which are extrapolated from the melodic sequence against harmony before actually flowing into the main theme of the tune for a moment before kicking the rhythm section loose and treating the tune percussively, almost as if it were a series of rhythm changes instead of harmonic ones. 

On the title track it's much the same, except Taylor's tenderness shines through in his lilting right hand in the middle as he trades fours with Charles. There's a wonderful cut-time tempo here, and Taylor starts building scales harmonically in his solo only to answer them with the melody and original harmony. With his own three tunes, with trumpeter Ted Curson and saxophonist Bill Barron added to the fray, Taylor takes more chances. On "Little Lees (Louise)," he scores in an elaborate melody that is played without dissonance by the horn section as he and Neidlinger play entirely in counterpoint. But here, too, there is a sublime lyricism at work; there are no extra notes or chords, and everything falls in line with the chromatic architecture Taylor composes with. "Maities Trophie" is Taylor ringing in a blues jam à la Ellington or at least his version of Ellington. The solos by Curson and Barron are tight, narrative, and bordering on swing, but all that's taken care of by Taylor's solo. Love for Sale is a delightful anomaly in Cecil Taylor's long career. ~ Thom Jurek  http://www.allmusic.com/album/love-for-sale-mw0000038935

Personnel: Cecil Taylor (piano); Bill Barron (tenor saxophone); Ted Curson (trumpet); Buell Neidlinger (bass); Dennis Charles (drums).

Love For Sale

Lola Haag - Here I Go Again...

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:09
Size: 111,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:47)  1. The Way You Look Tonight
(3:58)  2. Is You Is, Or Is You Ain't My Baby?
(4:05)  3. I've Grown Accustomed to His Face
(4:21)  4. Let's Fall in Love
(3:41)  5. New York State of Mind
(3:46)  6. Blame It on My Youth
(2:32)  7. Sway
(3:36)  8. Let There Be Love
(2:16)  9. You're Getting to Be a Habit with Me
(3:10) 10. Why Don't You Do Right?
(3:26) 11. Taking a Chance on Love
(3:39) 12. Georgia on My Mind
(2:45) 13. Give Me the Simple Life
(3:02) 14. Somewhere over the Rainbow

“Here I Go Again…” is a collection of some of Lola’s favorite songs. Coincidentally, they are also among the most requested songs that Lola performs in her live jazz shows. Carefully selected tunes transport the listener to a relaxed and romantic resort where they can completely unwind, sway and enjoy the lilt of the music, performed in Lola’s inimitable style. Lola never sings a song the same way twice and this CD captures the spontaneity of that playfulness! She collects songs with wonderful lyrics like some women collect fine jewelry. Nothing thrills her more than to enter into a song’s emotional message and present that to the listener as a personal, beautifully wrapped gift to enjoy time and time again.  http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/lolahaag13

Here I Go Again