Sunday, April 3, 2016

Engelbert Wrobel, Chris Hopkins, Dan Barrett - Harlem 2000 (Complete Session)

Size: 180,7 MB
Time: 77:43
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2002
Styles: Jazz: Mainstream Jazz
Art: Front

01. Beyond The Blue Horizon (3:43)
02. Four Or Five Times (7:38)
03. Dreamy Mood (3:58)
04. It's Been So Long (4:13)
05. Solid Old Man (4:41)
06. Angel's Idea (4:16)
07. Echoes Of Harlem (4:22)
08. Haven't Named It Yet (4:16)
09. Drop Me Off In Harlem (6:19)
10. Body And Soul (3:20)
11. Harlem Sundown (5:28)
12. I May Be Wrong (4:17)
13. B-Flat Swing (5:03)
14. Synthetic Love (6:15)
15. A Lull At Dawn (3:35)
16. Till Tom Special (Bonus Track) (6:10)

Leader Dan Barrett’s name was the only one familiar to me on this new Nagel-Heyer release (although I seem to have heard the name John Smith before). Not to worry; Barrett’s companions are as bright-eyed and wholly in tune with the nuances of his mainstream point of view as anyone could want. Apart from three songs with “Harlem” in the title there doesn’t seem to be much connection to that particular area of New York City, but the album needed a name and I suppose Harlem 2000 is as good as any. The music is certainly akin to what one might have experienced during a visit to Harlem (or many other populous area of the country) during the glory years of the Swing Era — and can still enjoy in a more contemporary setting thanks to labels such as Nagel-Heyer, Arbors and a handful of others. Barrett, who’s among the best at what he does (which in this case includes playing fabulous trombone and cornet and adding a first-rate vocal on Benny Carter’s “Synthetic Love”), can’t afford to look over his shoulder when soloing, as everyone else is no more than half a step behind and rapidly closing ground. Pianist Chris Hopkins, who wrote the liner notes, downplays his own role, which is nonetheless essential, from supervising the group’s splendid rhythm section to soloing with awareness and intelligence and contributing a handsome original composition, “Dreamy Mood.” John Smith (there’s that name again) is showcased on soprano sax on “It’s Been So Long” (in a trio setting with Hopkins and drummer Oliver Mewes), clarinetist Engelbert Wrobel on Barney Bigard’s “A Lull at Dawn,” Hopkins (with Wrobel and Mewes) on “Body and Soul,” Mewes on Lionel Hampton / Charlie Christian’s “Haven’t Named It Yet.” Wrobel also plays tenor sax (think Harry Allen) on “Solid Old Man,” “Drop Me Off in Harlem” and Barrett’s “Harlem Sundown,” Smith alto sax on “Four or Five Times,” “Angel’s Idea,” “I May Be Wrong” and Teddy Wilson’s “B-Flat Swing.” As for Barrett, he stays busy with enterprising cornet solos on seven numbers, trombone on five others including a muted / open master class on Ellington’s “Echoes of Harlem.” Bassist Christian Ramond adds nimble statements on “Haven’t Named It” and “Drop Me Off,” while Mewes takes a Krupa-like chorus on the jaunty opener, “Beyond the Blue Horizon” (a great but seldom-heard tune written in the ’30s by singer Margaret Whiting’s father, Richard Whiting) and Hopkins comps and solos superbly on every number. This realm of Jazz isn’t called “swing” without cause, and Barrett’s sextet swings freely and often throughout this sparkling and invariably persuasive session. ~by Jack Bowers

Personnel: Dan Barrett, cornet, trombone, vocals; Engelbert Wrobel, clarinet, tenor sax; John Smith, alto, soprano sax, vocals; Chris Hopkins, piano; Christian Ramond, bass; Oliver Mewes, drums.

Harlem 2000

Dena DeRose - United

Size: 117,5 MB
Time: 50:42
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. United (6:28)
02. Only The Lonely (5:42)
03. Clockwise (7:27)
04. So Far Away (6:11)
05. I'm Glad There Is You (4:56)
06. Simple Song Of Love (6:16)
07. Peace (5:59)
08. Sunny (5:04)
09. Not You Again (2:35)

Two years after her beautiful Shirley Horn tribute album, singer/pianist/teacher Dena DeRose releases “United”, a 9-song selection that teams her up again with longtime partners Martin Wind on bass and Matt Wilson on drums plus a couple of special guests. One of those is trumpeter Ingrid Jensen who blossoms on the opening title track, a Wayne Shorter composition that was recorded by Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers back in 1961. Dena wrote new lyrics to the song, universal and uplifting: “Stand up for all that you believe/Trust in the dreams that you conceive”.

Her swinging, delightful piano work is brimming with expertise and panache throughout the album. And she doesn’t choose the obvious standards for her newest endeavor: the Sammy Cahn/Jimmy van Heusen classic “Only The Lonely”, probably best noted for Frank Sinatra’s version, is done in an elegant, subdued and intimate fashion where Dena flawlessly and compellingly tells the story, accompanied by guitarist Peter Bernstein in a slight samba groove.

She also wrote the lyrics to a Cedar Walton composition. “Clockwise”, recorded by Bobby Hutcherson for his 1979 LP “Conception: The Gift Of Love” and two years later recorded by Walton himself on his “Piano Solos” album, also includes a Dena mantra: “Finding your own way in life is how to be!”. The trio comes up with a lot of impressive and energetic ideas which only a group can deliver that has stayed together for such a long time. You can find Martin and Matt as far back as on Dena’s 2005 MaxJazz album “A Walk In The Park” and they have played together ever since.

Carole King‘s “So Far Away”, one of my favorites from her classic “Tapestry” album from 1971 (which also included “I Feel The Earth Move”, “It’s Too Late”, “Will You Love Me Tomorrow?”, “(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman”, and “You’ve Got A Friend”), is treated with a haunting vocal production and simply is a blissful entry. It’s back to swinging ground for “I’m Glad There Is You” and here again, one of Dena’s specialties is shown: it’s as if she’s talking to you, unconstrained and buoyant.

Bassist Martin Wind‘s composition “Simple Song Of Love” is just that. A beautiful, almost naive, but never trite melody that has Dena’s lyrics underscoring the simplicity. I also enjoyed his sensuous bass solo, warm and at peace with the world. And we get some more treats: Horace Silver‘s “Peace” features Ingrid Jensen again on trumpet. The track meanders lovingly and meditatively along for about four minutes before it turns into a carnevalesque conclusion with intrinsic, repetitive lines with Dena pleading “Peace For Everyone”. A great arrangement.

The album finishes up with the Bobby Hebb standard “Sunny” which has Peter Bernstein again on soulful guitar, and an obscure little peace by UK composer Duncan Lamont. “Not You Again” would have been perfect for Shirley Horn’s repertoire and easily, gracefully fits into Dena’s as well (the song has been recorded by Cleo Laine and George Shearing in 1994). ~Gina Jazz

United

Freddy Cole - He Was The King

Size: 121,5 MB
Time: 52:13
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Easy To Remember (6:01)
02. Exactly Like You (4:30)
03. Funny (Not Much) (6:05)
04. That's My Girl (3:06)
05. Maybe It's Because I Love You Too Much (5:24)
06. The Best Man (3:13)
07. Sweet Lorraine (4:33)
08. Love Is The Thing (5:20)
09. Jet (4:08)
10. Mona Lisa (2:29)
11. It's Only A Paper Moon (4:03)
12. He Was The King (3:16)

Freddy Cole has finally recorded his own tribute to his famous older brother Nat "King"Cole and it's a lovely, heartfelt one at that. Freddy's warm voice and masterful presentation of the material here is a pure delight throughout.

The program features a wide ranging set of tunes from Nat King Cole's career ranging from "It's Only A Paper Moon", a number in Cole's repertoire in his early days, to "Mona Lisa" which was a huge hit for him when he had made the transition to popular balladeer. Other highlights include "Easy To Remember", "Sweet Lorraine" , the Latin tinged "Jet" and the title track "He Was The King" which Freddy composed especially for this project.

Freddy Cole has many of the same musicians on this recording that he has worked with in recent years. John Di Martino on piano, Randy Napoleon on guitar, bassist Elias Bailey and drummer Quentin Baxter. And some special guests show up on several tracks to add their instrumental artistry to the mix as well. Houston Person and Harry Allen on tenor saxophones, Joe Magnarelli on trumpet and Josh Brown on trombone.

Freddy Cole spent a number of years early in his career in the shadow of his more famous brother, but through the decades he carved out his own place in the jazz world and is a highly respected vocalist and performer in the jazz community. Since the 1990's he has issued a new album nearly every year which is quite an accomplishment. "He Was The King" honoring the legacy of Nat Cole is another fine addition to Freddy Cole's catalogue.

He Was The King

John Arman Organ Trio - John Arman Organ Trio

Size: 169,1 MB
Time: 73:19
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Contemporary Jazz, Hammond Organ
Art: Front

01. Something Like That ( 5:25)
02. Yaya & Kiwi ( 5:05)
03. Infant Tales ( 6:56)
04. This Time The Dream's On Me ( 6:30)
05. The Race ( 5:18)
06. Gateway ( 8:52)
07. Easyfetz ( 6:36)
08. Makeshift ( 8:57)
09. Tarantella ( 6:48)
10. Hot Coffee (12:47)

Personnel:
Drums - Wolfi Rainer
Guitar - John Arman
Hammond Organ - Christian Wegscheider

After about five years of band history has finally come: The first CD is there and with a little "best of" program perpetuates the band their favorite titles in recent years. Heard there mainly Arman and Wegscheider originals, but the composer remains zweitrangig- the blind understanding of the three Tyrolean men makes the music and gives it that unique, unmistakable sound. ~Google translation

John Arman Organ Trio

Anoushka Shankar - Land Of Gold

Size: 134,9 MB
Time: 57:55
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: World/Jazz
Art: Front

01. Boat To Nowhere ( 5:46)
02. Secret Heart ( 5:17)
03. Jump In (Cross The Line) (Feat. M.I.A.) ( 2:55)
04. Dissolving Boundaries ( 5:16)
05. Land Of Gold (Feat. Alev Lenz) ( 4:39)
06. Last Chance ( 4:42)
07. Remain The Sea (Feat. Vanessa Redgrave) ( 4:11)
08. Crossing The Rubicon (10:58)
09. Say Your Prayers ( 4:48)
10. Reunion ( 4:59)
11. Land Of Gold (Instrumental/Bonus Track) ( 4:19)

Land of Gold is Anoushka Shankars fervent response to the humanitarian trauma of displaced people fleeing conflict and poverty.

The virtuoso sitar player explores an expressive range, conveying an evocative journey infused with a message of enduring hope. With exquisite arrangements blending genres and musical collaborations, Land of Gold is a narrative communicated with conviction and poetic beauty.

Land of Gold originated in the context of the humanitarian plight of refugees. It coincided with the time when I had recently given birth to my second child. I was deeply troubled by the intense contrast between my ability to provide for my baby, and others who desperately wanted to provide the same security for their children but were unable to do so. Anoushka Shankar.

The narrative thread carried throughout the album evokes themes of disconnection, vulnerability and the underlying hope that persists in our darkest experiences. My instrument is the terrain in which I explore the gamut of emotional expression evoking shades of aggression, anger and tenderness, while incorporating elements of classical minimalism, jazz, electronica and Indian classical styles. Anoushka Shankar

Produced by Anoushka and her husband Joe Wright, whose film-making sensibilities helped to shape and add depth to the mood and energy of the album.

Notable electronic producer Matt Robertson (who is a long-term collaborator of Bjork) added cinematic soundscapes and textures, enhancing the initial compositions. Anoushka worked with a core-team of gifted musicians: At its base the album is designed as a trio of Anoushka, the famous Hang Drum player Manu Delago who performs on and co-wrote many of the pieces, and Sanjeev Shankar who was a student of her father Ravi Shankar, playing the Shehnai, a beautiful reed instrument from India.

Top notch female guest artists lend their voices to the album: M.I.A. with the Song, Jump In (Cross the Line), the wonderful singer Alev Lenz on Land of Gold and the actress and activist Vanessa Redgrave on Remain the Sea (reading a poem by Pavana Reddy). Not only do they add different musical styles and voices of different generations but all of them represent strong women known for using their voices for equality and against injustice. The last song Reunion features a girls children choir Girls for Equality.

The music is mainly based on western harmonics, features great electronic programming, string arrangements, hip hop elements, beautiful songwriting and virtuoso sitar performances embedded in exciting contemporary arrangements.

Land Of Gold

Barb Jungr - Shelter From The Storm: Songs Of Hope For Troubled Times (Feat. Laurence Hobgood)

Size: 128,9 MB
Time: 55:15
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Label: Linn Records
Art: Front

01. Bali Hai (Feat. Laurence Hobgood) (5:35)
02. Stars Lazy But Shining (Feat. Laurence Hobgood) (6:11)
03. Shelter From The Storm (Feat. Laurence Hobgood) (5:23)
04. Sisters Of Mercy (Feat. Laurence Hobgood) (5:18)
05. Venus Rising (Feat. Laurence Hobgood) (5:30)
06. Something's Coming (Feat. Laurence Hobgood) (4:29)
07. Woodstock (Feat. Laurence Hobgood) (6:10)
08. Hymn To Nina (Feat. Laurence Hobgood) (5:25)
09. All Along The Watchtower/In Your Eyes (Feat. Laurence Hobgood) (6:07)
10. Life On Mars/Space Oddity (Feat. Laurence Hobgood) (5:01)

Barb Jungr proves she's a genuine jazz marvel

Ivan Hewett finds the brilliant jazz singer on world-beating form

Barb Jungr is the alchemist among jazz singers. She takes dubious songs, and turns them into gold. And she takes songs we already knew were gold, and makes them interestingly different.

That gift was on electrifying display on Wednesday night, at the launch of her new album Shelter from the Storm. Jungr’s previous nine albums, which include reinventions of Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen, have lofted her slowly but surely to the top rank of jazz singers. Her latest roams across the great American songbook, with songs by Bacharach and Bernstein and Rodger alongside Joni Mitchell and Bowie and Bob Dylan. With her was Grammy award-winning piano virtuoso and ingenious arranger Laurence Hobgood, bassist Davide Mantovani and percussionist Olli Savill.

Jungr swept on and launched off into a song about an imaginary foggy island, conjuring up its presence in the distance. Being a great walker and inveterate traveller, she likes songs that conjure great vistas, which she makes us see in our minds eye with big sweeping gestures. Then we were off into a song in beguine rhythm which seemed weirdly familiar. It took some time to realise it was Richard Rodgers’s kitschy fantasy Bali Hai, from South Pacific. Jungr delivered it with a saucy, tongue-in-cheek relish, which almost rescued it.

But maybe it wasn’t the best place to start, and Hobgood’s new song Stars Lazy but Shining, one of three on words by Jungr, was not the most inspired (the one we heard later, inspired by the death of Nina Simone, was much stronger). The evening really caught fire with Bob Dylan’s Shelter from the Storm. It’s a difficult song to bring off with its endless procession of verses, each more grandiloquent than the last. Jungr and Hobgood did it partly by an unexpected gear-change to a driving rock rhythm. By the end, it had grown to something tremendous.

No doubt about it, Jungr can summon a fabulous bluesy energy, and that rooted, deep quality can be felt in her luscious pianissimo too. You wouldn’t think those qualities could be applied to the weirdness of David Bowie’s Space Oddity, but Jungr cleverly managed to meet the song half-way, thanks partly to Hobgood and Savill’s ingenious recolourings. To bring the same magic to Burt Bacharach’s What the World Needs Now shows just how intelligent a singer she is. She is truly a marvel, who should not be missed.

Shelter From The Storm

Dinah Washington - Dinah '62

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:46
Size: 93.3 MB
Styles: Jazz-blues vocals
Year: 1962/2003
Art: Front

[3:29] 1. Drinking Again
[2:32] 2. Destination Moon
[3:36] 3. Miss You
[3:22] 4. A Handful Of Stars
[3:21] 5. Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby
[2:43] 6. You're Nobody 'til Somebody Loves You
[2:31] 7. Red Sails In The Sunset
[2:12] 8. Where Are You
[2:55] 9. Coquette
[2:41] 10. Take Your Shoes Off, Baby
[3:03] 11. Make Believe Dreams
[2:31] 12. Something's Gotta Give
[2:13] 13. I'll Never Stop Loving You
[3:31] 14. Me And My Gin

The first of five LPs Dinah Washington recorded for Roulette during her last year and a half of life, Dinah '62 finds one of the foremost interpreters in vocal jazz treading merrily through a set of standards informed by Fred Norman's modern and commercially slanted big-band arrangements. Despite a few trad vocal backgrounds, most of these charts never overwhelm the songs or Washington's performances, and sometimes add to them; this version of the decades-old "Red Sails in the Sunset" benefits from its earthy electric guitar and organ. The singer brings a lifetime of experience to these songs, carrying the soporific world-weariness of Johnny Mercer's "Drinking Again" but then skating rompishly over the light novelty "Destination Moon." Washington is far more willing to indulge in histrionics than earlier in her career, but still exhibits remarkable control over her vocalizing, whether light or forceful. ~John Bush

Dinah '62

Eddie Thompson Trio - Ain't She Sweet

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:49
Size: 153.0 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[6:02] 1. The Surrey With The Fringe On Top
[5:18] 2. Cool Blues
[5:53] 3. Ain't She Sweet
[5:43] 4. You Are My Sunshine
[4:26] 5. Easy Does It
[5:31] 6. One Morning In May
[5:40] 7. Nancy (With The Laughing Face)
[4:21] 8. There Is No Greater Love
[3:51] 9. Just Friends
[4:59] 10. I've Got The World On A String
[4:40] 11. Wave
[4:49] 12. Why Don't You Do Right
[5:31] 13. When Lights Are Low

Eddie Thompson on piano with Len Skeat on bass and Martin Drew on drums from 1978. Recorded BBC Kensington House, London. September 23, 1978.

Pianist Eddie Thompson was born in London in1929. He attended the same school for the blind (Linden Lodge, Wandsworth), as George Shearing and was introduced to jazz through listening to the family radio and listening to Fats Waller, Earl Hines, and especially Art Tatum. By 1947 he was part of the London jazz scene and was able to supplement his jazz income, always precarious, with a career as a piano tuner.In the late 1940's he recorded with Johnny Dankworth and a very young Victor Feldman. In 1949 he played at the Paris Jazz Fair with Carlo Krahmer band and worked for a time with Victor Feldman's Sextet. He had his own quintet and trio during the early 1950s and also worked with Tony Crombie, Vic Ash, Ronnie Scott and Tommy Whittle (1957/8). At the end of the 1950s he again had his own trio and quintet. He was pianist at Ronnie Scott's 1959-60 and also did solo work at the Downbeat Club, London during 1960 before emigrating to the USA in 1962. He secured a residency at the Hickory House between 1963-67 and made many musical friendships including Duke Ellington, Erroll Garner, and Thelonious Monk. Thompson returned to the London area in 1972 for regular BBC Jazz Club gigs, and he recorded for the German BASF label and Doug Dobell's 77 label. He led his own group during the mid 1970s for a residency at the Jazz Cellar in Stockport and led his own trio as well as playing regularly at the Pizza Express in London. He was a frequent first choice for accompanying visiting US musicians until the mid 1980s.

He was at home playing mainstream or bop and possessed a prodigious technique and the ability, when he felt it necessary, to drop into the style of his heroes Garner, Peterson, and Nat Cole. Although blind he travelled to evening work in London clubs by the Underground, and also to clubs throughout the UK. Due to a lifelong smoking habit, he developed emphysema which contributed to his early death in November, 1986.

Ain't She Sweet

Bob Dylan - Slow Train Coming

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:27
Size: 106.3 MB
Styles: Album rock, Contemporary rock
Year: 1976/2005
Art: Front

[5:22] 1. Gotta Serve Somebody
[6:28] 2. Precious Angel
[5:06] 3. I Believe In You
[5:55] 4. Slow Train
[5:25] 5. Gonna Change My Way Of Thinking
[3:51] 6. Do Right To Me Baby (Do Unto Others)
[5:26] 7. When You Gonna Wake Up
[4:23] 8. Man Gave Names To All The Animals
[4:27] 9. When He Returns

Keyboards -- Barry Beckett; Drums -- Pick Withers; Bass -- Tim Drummond; Guitars -- Mark Knopfler, Bob Dylan.

Perhaps it was inevitable that Bob Dylan would change direction at the end of the '70s, since he had dabbled in everything from full-on repudiation of his legacy to a quiet embrace of it, to dipping his toe into pure showmanship. Nobody really could have expected that he would turn to Christianity on Slow Train Coming, embracing a born-again philosophy with enthusiasm. He has no problem in believing in a vengeful god -- you gotta serve somebody, after all -- and this is pure brimstone and fire throughout the record, even on such lovely testimonials as "I Believe in You." The unexpected side effect of his conversion is that it gave Dylan a focus he hadn't had since Blood on the Tracks, and his concentration carries over to the music, which is lean and direct in a way that he hadn't been since, well, Blood on the Tracks. Focus isn't necessarily the same thing as consistency, and this does suffer from being a bit too dogmatic, not just in its religion, but in its musical approach. Still, it's hard to deny Dylan's revitalized sound here, and the result is a modest success that at least works on its own terms. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Slow Train Coming

Jimmy Rowles - Shade And Light

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:42
Size: 125.2 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 1978/2008
Art: Front

[6:02] 1. The Lady's In Love With You
[4:47] 2. Portrait Of The Lion
[5:46] 3. Drinkin' And Driving'
[5:45] 4. Prelude To Kiss
[5:01] 5. Yes Sir, That's My Baby
[3:29] 6. You Started Something
[5:18] 7. When The Morning Glories Wake Up In The Morning
[6:39] 8. A Sleepin' Bee
[5:25] 9. The Lady's In Love With You (Take One)
[6:25] 10. A Sleepin' Bee

JIMMY ROWLES, piano; GEORGE DUVIVIER, bass; OLIVER JACKSON, drums. Recorded on July 21, 1978 at Barclay Studio.

Rowles, that great wit of a pianist, never fails to cheer me. With his sly selection of material, unfailing ability to avoid cliché, and assiduous choice of bandmates — in this instance bassist George Duvivier and drummer Oliver Jackson — he guaranteed each album was a modest gem. One of jazz's best-ever vocal accompanists, Rowles brought to his instrumental albums the same understanding of lyrics that he served him so well with Billie Holiday and Sarah Vaughn; you can almost hear the words to the tunes he plays. "The Lady's In Love With You" sets the tone for the program. Propelled lightly but persuasively by Duvivier and Jackson, the pianist plays the melody with great charm and then adds two feathery choruses before handing it off to the bass. The piano solo is at once reassuringly familiar and yet still unique. This same funny wildcard quality elevates the tune.

Another off-kilter choice: Rowles handles the little-known Duke Ellington composition "Portrait of the Lion" — a tribute by one great pianist to another, Willie "The Lion" Smith, here played by a third — by letting Duvivier state the theme. "Drinkin 'and Driving," a Rowles original that has been covered by Wayne Shorter and Shelley Manne, is given a deeply dolorous reading. It's a brilliant performance, one that evokes the kind of helplessness its title suggests. Rowles plays a skittering, tentative solo that touches the heart. But he wasn't a pianist who lingered on the morose. He moves on to a gentle bossa-nova take on "Prelude to a Kiss" and follows that with an Erroll Garner-inspired "Yes Sir, That's My Baby." We're also treated to one example of Rowles's affable whiskey baritone: "When the Morning Glories Wake Up In the Morning" is an absolute blast — wise, slightly insidious and completely and unmistakably Jimmy Rowles. A sly, persuasive and charming set from the great wit of the piano. ~Charles Farrell

Shade And Light

Stanley Turrentine - A Bluish Bag

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1967
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:54
Size: 158,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:14)  1. Blues For Del
(6:31)  2. She's A Carioca
(5:54)  3. Manhã De Carnaval
(5:32)  4. Here's That Rainy Day
(4:38)  5. What Now My Love
(5:12)  6. Samba De Aviao
(6:33)  7. Night Song
(6:06)  8. Days Of Wine And Roses
(5:55)  9. Come Back To Me
(5:07) 10. Silver Tears
(7:17) 11. A Bluish Bag
(5:49) 12. With This Ring

Stanley Turrentine's great blues-inflected tenor sax work for Blue Note Records in the 1960s helped build the template for what became known as soul-jazz, but Turrentine was always restless, and he recorded in a wide variety of formats, from trios to sextets, during his nine years at the label. This set, drawn from a pair of 1967 sessions, one in February that included Donald Byrd on trumpet, and the other in June with McCoy Tyner on piano, wasn't released by Blue Note at the time, although it is a smooth-running and varied album from start to finish, featuring several fine Turrentine sax solos over artfully arranged massed horn charts (eventually some of the tracks were released as Stanley Turrentine in 1975 and others as New Time Shuffle in 1979). Obvious highlights include the lead track, the lightly bouncing "Blues for Del," the title piece, "A Bluish Bag," composed by Henry Mancini and drawn from his Gunn movie soundtrack that had just come out that year, and the beautiful Johnny Burke/Jimmy Van Heusen ballad "Here's That Rainy Day," which allows Turrentine's concise, vibrato-free tenor sax playing to go tender and movingly soft. The large band arrangements mean that Turrentine often sits back in the mix here, but his solos, when they come, are always both appropriate and striking, a balance that is tougher to achieve than one might think. A Bluish Bag doesn't rewrite the book on Turrentine, but it shows that, whether large ensemble or small, he always brought his game.~Steve Leggett http://www.allmusic.com/album/a-bluish-bag-mw0000584454
 
Personnel:  Tracks 1-7: Stanley Turrentine – tenor saxophon;  Donald Byrd – trumpet;  Julian Priester – trombone;  Jerry Dodgion – alto saxophone, flute, alto flute;  Joe Farrell – tenor saxophone, flute;  Pepper Adams – baritone saxophone, clarinet;  Kenny Barron – piano;  Bucky Pizzarelli – guitar;  Ron Carter – bass;  Mickey Roker – drums;  Duke Pearson – arranger.

Tracks 8-12:  Stanley Turrentine – tenor saxophone;  Blue Mitchell, Tommy Turrentine – trumpet;  Julian Priester – trombone;  Jerry Dodgion – alto saxophone, flute;  Al Gibbons – bass clarinet, tenor saxophone;  Pepper Adams – baritone saxophone, clarinet;  McCoy Tyner – piano;  Walter Booker – bass;  Mickey Roker – drums;  Duke Pearson – arranger.

A Bluish Bag

Caecilie Norby - My Corner of the Sky

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:44
Size: 116,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:01)  1. The Look Of Love
(3:00)  2. The Right To Love
(4:28)  3. Set Them Free
(3:48)  4. Suppertime
(5:45)  5. African Fairytale
(3:40)  6. Life On Mars
(5:07)  7. Spinning Wheel
(3:10)  8. What Do You See In Her
(3:56)  9. Just One Of Those Things
(5:24) 10. Snow
(3:54) 11. A Song For You
(5:25) 12. Calling You

Danish singer Caecilie Norby's first recording to be released in the United States is quite a mixed bag. At times, Norby comes across as Nancy Wilson, going over the top in places and not showing much subtlety; on Irving Berlin's classic "Suppertime," she does not seem to know what she is singing about, sounding quite upbeat about a lynching. Some other selections are poppish (including odd revivals of "The Look of Love" and "Spinning Wheel"), but there are places (such as on "Just One of Those Things" and Wayne Shorter's "African Fairytale") where Norby shows potential as a jazz singer. 

She is assisted by a strong cast of Americans and Scandinavians (including pianists Dave Kikoski and Joey Calderazzo, keyboardist Lars Jansson, drummer Terri Lyne Carrington, trumpeter Randy Brecker, and, on "Spinning Wheel," tenor saxophonist Michael Brecker).
~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/my-corner-of-the-sky-mw0000020007

Personnel:  Caecilie Norby - vocals, background vocals;  Scott Robinson – flute;  Michael Brecker - tenor saxophone;  Randy Brecker – flugelhorn;  Dave Kikoski, Joey Calderazzo, Lars Jansson – piano;  Lars Danielsson, Lennart Ginman – bass;  Terri Lyne Carrington - drums, percussion;  Alex Riel, Jeff Boudreaux – drums;  Jacob Andersen – percussion;  Louise Norby - background vocals.

My Corner of the Sky

The Thelonious Monk Quartet With John Coltrane - Live At Carnegie Hall

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1957
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:35
Size: 118,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:52)  1. Monk's Mood
(4:41)  2. Evidence
(4:26)  3. Crepuscule with Nellie
(5:04)  4. Nutty
(4:29)  5. Epistrophy
(6:31)  6. Bye-ya
(9:34)  7. Sweet & Lovely
(6:31)  8. Blue Monk
(2:24)  9. Epistrophy (inc.)

Let's be clear from the start: this discovery of a new Monk/Coltrane live concert completely puts to shame the over-hyped Five Spot CD from years ago. Not only is the sound as sterling and clear as the sound on the Five Spot date was excretory, but the performances of the stars are light years beyond that muddy recording. There is a sense that both Monk and Coltrane knew they were going to make history in 1957 at Carnegie Hall, and it's palpable from the opening notes of "Monk's Mood. Monk sounds grandly baroque in summoning grandly cascading arpeggios from his piano (which sounds infinitely better than the junk pianos he was often saddled with), while Coltrane sounds immensely assured. To really savor Coltrane's performances, begin by listening to the studio session with Monk currently listed in the Fantasy catalog (Thelonious Monk With John Coltrane). Then listen to the Five Spot recording, and then this new discovery.

During the studio date, Coltrane sounds remarkably reserved, perhaps too star-struck still, as he was on his session with Duke Ellington, to do very much but hang on for the ride. The Five Spot recording has Coltrane sounding looser, particularly on "In Walked Bud, but the recording sounds like it was recorded at the wrong end of a mine shaft, and much of what Coltrane played has to be imagined. Coltrane at Carnegie Hall with Monk is a man certain of his own voice while not afraid of showing his roots, clear-thinking, wonderfully focused, in tune with Monk's logic, simpatico with the rhythm section. A case could be built that this is the finest Coltrane recording before the historic Atlantic and Impulse sessions. High points among Coltrane's solos abound, but my favorites are on "Nutty, with some wild cross-conversations between Coltrane and Monk going on, and "Sweet and Lovely, which Coltrane gooses into a galloping romp, clearly revealing his roots in early Dexter Gordon. The only dull patch for me is his lackluster accompaniment to "Crepuscule With Nellie, which was never about Coltrane anymore than Nellie was. It was Monk's showcase, regardless of who accompanied him.

On to Monk. After the grand opening gestures, he continues with buoyant, hyper-kinetic interpretations of "Evidence, "Epistrophy" (two versions, the complete one perhaps the better of the two for Monk, the incomplete one more of a Coltrane showpiece), and "Blue Monk. Very familiar fare, but toyed with harmonically and rhythmically as only Monk could do on a good night, and this was. Drummer Shadow Wilson was no Art Blakey, whom I always thought of as Monk's most apt drummer, but he respectably kept the band churning, along with rock-steady bassist Ahmed Abdul-Malik. The only flaw, and a minor one at that, is the heavy set of liner notes by five different hands. Only Lewis Porter really says something that deepens appreciation of this lovely recording. Amiri Baraka and Stanley Crouch pass beyond self-parody. I suggest that their future liner notes be published as e-books, though even that format might not accommodate their stadium-sized egos. This is, though Woody Allen hated the phrase, "jazz heaven.~Norman Weinstein http://www.allaboutjazz.com/at-carnegie-hall-thelonious-monk-blue-note-records-review-by-norman-weinstein.php
 
Personnel: Thelonious Monk: piano; John Coltrane: tenor saxophone; Ahmed Abdul-Malik: bass; Shadow Wilson: drums.

The Thelonious Monk Quartet With John Coltrane: Live At Carnegie Hall

Roger Cicero - Maennersachen

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:54
Size: 118,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:18)  1. Zieh die Schuh aus
(2:45)  2. Kein Mann fuer eine Frau
(3:14)  3. Kompromisse
(3:31)  4. Ich atme ein
(2:18)  5. Schiess mich doch zum Mond (Fly Me To the Moon (In Other Words))
(4:44)  6. Wenn sie dich fragt
(3:19)  7. Fachmann in Sachen Anna
(2:53)  8. Ich Idiot liess dich gehen
(3:51)  9. Mein guter Stern auf allen Wegen
(4:05) 10. Murphys Gesetz
(2:38) 11. Schoen dass du da bist
(3:05) 12. Das ganze Leben ist ein Zoo
(3:25) 13. Du willst es doch auch
(2:44) 14. So geil Berlin (Bonustrack)
(2:57) 15. Frauen regier'n die Welt (Bonustrack)

He is the son of Eugen Cicero, who is one of the greatest jazz pianists in Germany. As an infant he was pushed from the legendary Josephine Baker to the musical chest. He had his first stage appearance at the age of 12 years with Helen Vita, which was also a clever intone the swing. What wonder that the 1970-born Roger Cicero after excursions in classical singing and Soul, finally landed back in swing and blues. A trained pianist and guitarist who studied music in Amsterdam, came practically with everything on what the jazz scene of distinction: with the Eugen Cicero Trio of his father, Horst Jankowski Trio, the National Youth Jazz Orchestra under the baton Peter Herbolzheimer, and also with international stars like George Benson. He founded and played in various bands such as the Roger Cicero Quartet, the legendary Soulounge, with Nils Gesinger and Cornell Dupree, and with After Hours. Männersachen is an absolute must for everyone. More than just worth listening to!~Julia Edenhofer

The man from the hit "Put the shoes of" you have to imagine something like this: A little too far unbuttoned white shirt, a little too large pilot watch on the wrist, a little too fat Benz in the garage, something blonde girlfriend home. A real bloke, a real man, a great pike. And then God's gift to manhood home, wants to be admired - and is out the trash. Good God, have felt 4000 years "Brigitte" - psychology dossier because nothing brought to an understanding between men and women, guys and snails? No, the hoot Cicero fans, the man has so right. I farmland me here butt off, delivery behaved the coal from and am otherwise quite ok, and the moment I'm at home, I have to deal with Weiberkram. Marktlücke found! Roger Cicero is a mixture of Annett Louisan and Ildikó of Kürthy for men - at least he and Louisan employ the same lyricist. Ideally, as in Cicero from the romantic evergreen "Fly Me To The Moon" a simple "shoot me but to the Moon" is. If something bothers you about this swinging plate, it's the penetrance, is celebrated with the ultra loose here manliness close to cliché. A little tip: Daily Garbage Out Bring brings a jiffy back to earth.~Tobias Schmitz - star. http://www.amazon.de/Männersachen-Roger-Cicero/dp/B000FIGY52(Translate by Google)

Maennersachen