Friday, June 3, 2016

Archie Shepp - Something To Live For

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:06
Size: 128.4 MB
Styles: Saxophone & vocal jazz
Year: 1997
Art: Front

[ 5:58] 1. A Flower Is A Lovesome Thing
[ 5:51] 2. My Foolish Heart
[ 4:32] 3. Strange Fruit
[ 8:39] 4. You're Blasé
[ 5:29] 5. Something To Live For
[ 6:59] 6. Georgia On My Mind
[10:32] 7. Hello, Young Lovers
[ 8:01] 8. California Blues

Archie Shepp: Vocals and Tenor Sax: Eddie Henderson: Trumpet, Flugelhorn: John Hicks; Piano: George Mraz; Bass: Idris Muhammad; Drums: Steve McCraven; drums (track 8).

While making every attempt at identifying any inherent musical attributes that result in positive feelings or thoughts, this writer struggled with Archie Shepp’s futile stabs at vocalizing through an array of tried and true jazz standards. Archie Shepp’s place in Modern Jazz history as an innovative stylist and improviser is etched in stone; however, on “Something To Live For” Shepp stumbles through classics such as “My Foolish Heart” and “Georgia On My Mind”. Shepp gets by to some degree when he stays within his low register baritone, rekindling memories of Johnny Hartman or Joe Williams but that’s where it ends. Whether or not Shepp had a vocal coach seems insignificant or a moot point. Not sure why Timeless Records released this but someone should have sent Archie an anonymous note stating that this was an ill-advised endeavor, especially for public consumption. On Billy Strayhorn’s “A Flower Is A Lovesome” Shepp commences with deep baritone phrasing. The problem here and throughout is when Mr. Shepp pushes his rather limited vocal chords to the upper registers which includes some scat singing et al. Shepp falls flat on his face and displays very little ability to attain pitch and melody. His swaggering tirades detract from the fine accompaniment provided by the stellar supporting cast of musicians. “Georgia On My Mind” is almost unbearable. Here, Shepp’s voice is garbled and off track. He engages this tune in reckless fashion and the results are dubious and embarrassing. This writer found it difficult to maintain interest and the listening experience was less than gratifying and that’s being kind.

Perhaps Archie Shepp realizes that this outing was a mistake. We can only hope that history won’t repeat itself and that this legendary jazz modernist will continue to enamor us with his brilliant saxophone play. ~Glenn Astarita

Something To Live For

Eydie Gormé - The Wonderful Eydie Gormé

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:56
Size: 123.5 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[2:54] 1. Besame Mucho
[2:20] 2. I'll Take Romance
[2:49] 3. Too Close For Comfort
[2:28] 4. Johnny One Note
[2:07] 5. Together (Wherever We Go)
[2:08] 6. Your Kisses Kill Me
[2:42] 7. To You From Me
[2:31] 8. After You've Gone
[2:12] 9. Don't Get Around Much Anymore
[3:26] 10. Stormy Weather
[2:02] 11. Kiss In Your Eyes
[3:22] 12. Who's Sorry Now
[2:28] 13. Singin' In The Rain
[2:24] 14. Chicago
[3:08] 15. Hello Young Lovers
[2:40] 16. Sentimental Me
[2:58] 17. When I Fall In Love
[2:50] 18. Why Shouldn't I
[2:04] 19. Button Up Your Overcoat
[2:05] 20. Tip Toe Through The Tulips With Me
[2:08] 21. I Wanna Be Loved By You

With her husband Steve Lawrence, Eydie Gorme, who has died aged 84, was one of the last survivors of an American show-business tradition that dated back to the big-band era and the golden age of lounge entertainment. Their stock-in-trade was their mastery of the classic American popular song, coupled with a comic act they had been developing since they first met in the early 1950s. Outside the duo Steve and Eydie, they both enjoyed successful solo careers. Gorme reached No 10 in Britain in 1962 with Yes, My Darling Daughter, and had a US top 10 hit the following year with Blame It on the Bossa Nova. The latter earned her a Grammy nomination for best female vocal performance and became something of a trademark song.

She was born Edith Gormezano in the Bronx, New York City. Her mother was Turkish, her father, a tailor, was Sicilian, and both were Sephardic Jews. The youngest of three children, brought up speaking English and Spanish, Gorme worked as a Spanish interpreter with the UN after graduating from William Howard Taft high school in 1946. But having sung in a band at school, she was determined to make a career in the entertainment business. By 1950 she was singing with Tommy Tucker's band, then moved on to Tex Beneke's ensemble before striking out on a solo career in 1952.

The Wonderful Eydie Gorme    

Barry White - The Best Of Barry White

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:46
Size: 107.1 MB
Styles: R&B
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[4:09] 1. I'm Gonna Love You Just A Little More, Baby
[3:59] 2. Never, Never Gonna Give You Up
[3:50] 3. Can't Get Enough Of Your Love, Babe
[3:38] 4. What Am I Gonna Do With You
[4:13] 5. Let The Music Play
[3:22] 6. It's Ecstasy When You Lay Down Next To Me
[3:35] 7. Playing Your Game, Baby
[3:13] 8. Oh What A Night For Dancing
[4:57] 9. Love Makin' Music
[3:57] 10. Under The Influence Of Love
[3:53] 11. Practice What You Preach
[3:55] 12. Staying Power

The late Barry White was the one voice that is easily recognizable in the early 1970s. Just when disco was spawned, he became well-known not just for the R & B audiences but for the pop mainstream. Thus, the songs that are included during his early days were big hits. Obviously, the one notable track missing is "You're My First, My Last, My Everything". I'm wondering why?

However, what makes this collection an "original" compared to previous hit collections is his last two songs: "Practice What You Preach" and "Staying Power". Getting those two songs would be worth it for the casual fan. ~Amazon

The Best Of Barry White

Lee Konitz - Inside Hi-Fi

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1957
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:10
Size: 94,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:08)  1. Kary's Trance
(4:30)  2. Everything Happens To Me
(4:02)  3. Sweet And Lovely
(5:29)  4. Cork 'N' Bib
(5:10)  5. All Of Me
(5:21)  6. Star Eyes
(5:08)  7. Nesuhi's Instant
(5:19)  8. Indiana

This excellent recording (part of their 1987 Jazzlore series) features altoist Lee Konitz with two separate quartets during 1956. Either guitarist Billy Bauer or pianist Sal Mosca are the main supporting voices in groups also including either Arnold Fishkind or Peter Ind on bass and Dick Scott on drums. The most unusual aspect to the set is that on the four selections with Mosca, Konitz switches to tenor, playing quite effectively in a recognizable cool style. The overall highlights of this enjoyable album are "Everything Happens to Me," "All of Me," and "Star Eyes," but all eight performances are well played and swinging.~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/inside-hi-fi-mw0000194310

Personnel: Lee Konitz (alto & tenor saxophones); Sal Mosca (piano); Billy Bauer (guitar); Arnold Fishkind, Peter Ind (bass); Dick Scott (drums).

Inside Hi-Fi

Karin Krog / Jacob Young - Where Flamingos Fly

Styles: Vocal And Guitar Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:15
Size: 147,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:44)  1. Where Flamingos Fly
(5:08)  2. Prelude To A Kiss
(3:32)  3. Once I Loved
(4:29)  4. Last Night When You Were Young
(3:32)  5. I'm Shadowing You
(4:49)  6. I'll Be Seeing You
(5:26)  7. Caravan
(4:52)  8. Everything Happens To Me
(5:09)  9. Northern Sun
(5:13) 10. Cry Me A River
(3:17) 11. K.C. Blues
(4:59) 12. Everytime We Say Goodbye

Norways leading Lady in jazzmusic Karin Krogh gets together with young aspiring guitarplayer Jacob Young in another great duo album. Karin Krog is perhaps Norway's leading jazz singer and certainly its most idiomatic. She is a unique song artist with a great international reputation possessing her own recognizable style and voice. Her constant creative approach towards contemporary jazz has never been bound by tradition, even though her music bears a deep respect for its forms. Karin is equally at home with jazz standards, blues or electronic experimental techniques. In addition, she has been active in improving the working conditions for musicians and contributing towards a vital jazz milieu. In 1994 she celebrated 30 years since her first released LP as a solo artist. http://www.gubemusic.com/album_9002

Where Flamingos Fly

Ed Cherry - Soul Tree

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:27
Size: 126,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:35)  1. Let the Music Take Your Mind
(6:55)  2. A New Blue
(5:01)  3. Rachel's Step
(4:59)  4. Soul Eyes
(5:20)  5. Little Sunflower
(6:11)  6. Central Park West
(4:59)  7. Little Girl Big Girl
(6:18)  8. Ode to Angela
(5:25)  9. In Your Own Sweet Way
(4:40) 10. Peace

Like any jazz recording worth its salt, Ed Cherry's Soul Tree, his second release for the Posi-Tone imprint, impresses on more than one level. Cherry's interpretations of often performed jazz standards Mal Waldron's "Soul Eyes," Dave Brubeck's "In Your Own Sweet Way," Horace Silver's "Peace," among others are exceptionally well drawn and stand up nicely in comparison to other versions. The disc's ten tracks include two of the leader's original compositions. For the most part Cherry keeps things relatively simple, illuminating the melody of each tune with aplomb and keeping embellishments to a minimum. Consisting of the leader's guitar, Kyle Koehler's organ, and the drums and cymbals of Anwar Marshall, the trio is fleet, cursive, almost casually articulate, short on blatant displays of ego and long on mutual support. Complete in itself, the trio possesses a fine, self-contained vibe that might suffer by the presence of another instrumental voice.

Straight-ahead swing, funk, bossa nova, and other stylistic grooves all feel natural and unforced. There's nothing artificial or unduly calculated about the funk to swing transitions in "Let The Music Take Your Mind," or the tasty funk coda that follows Marshall's lithe, swinging shout chorus drumming on "In Your Own Sweet Way." The guitarist's tone cuts through the band, yet it contains a slightly reserved quality, as if he's loath to stand out or take a dominant role. Cherry's brief, no nonsense intros on some of the tracks set the right tone, never overshadowing what's to come. Post out head activities are substantive and provide another perspective of the group's inner workings. During his solos, Cherry frequently lands on the beat, reinforcing the band's momentum and freeing Marshall to effusively make snapping, rumbling comments on various combinations of his drum kit at a relatively low volume. (In short, Marshall often plays a lot without standing out.) The guitarist also serves as a smart, incisive accompanist to Koehler, serving up terse, energetic chords that add an additional layer of rhythmic tension.

The difference between Cherry's and Koehler's solo styles is another one of the record's winning characteristics. The guitarist's improvisations are thoughtful and patient, filled with small, telling details, as well as subtle gradations of texture; he invariably leaves room for the music to breathe. His work on "Soul Eyes," "Central Park West," "Little Girl Big Girl," "In Your Own Sweet Way," and "Peace" seem to beg the question: Why play several notes when a single, shrewdly placed note will do? There's a laid-back quality to Cherry's solos that exists side by side with a bluesy sensibility. He gradually draws the listener into a refined, personal space rather than trying to make a dramatic impact. In contrast, Koehler is chatty, persistent, and often uses the instrument's resources to make overtly emotional points. He shrewdly mixes and matches ostensibly disparate ideas and displays a penchant for reaching mini-climaxes, yet never crosses the line into excess. Amidst all of this dense, somewhat agitated activity there's an orderly mind at work. Listen to "Little Sunflower" for Koehler's up-tempo effusions, and "A New Blue" for his pensive side. Top-notch material that is interpreted in a refreshingly straightforward manner, a band that wholeheartedly embraces unity, and soloists who speak concisely and with character: These are the things that make Soul Tree a recording that can be enjoyed by listeners new to jazz and aficionados as well.~David A.Orthmann https://www.allaboutjazz.com/soul-tree-ed-cherry-posi-tone-records-review-by-david-a-orthmann.php

Personnel: Ed Cherry: Guitar; Kyle Koehler: organ; Anwar Marshall: drums.

Soul Tree

Ben Sidran - Old Songs For The New Depression

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 1982
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:41
Size: 87,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:19)  1. Let's Get Away From It All
(4:22)  2. Easy Street
(5:26)  3. Old Folks
(5:00)  4. Turn To The Music
(4:48)  5. Steady Eddie
(3:08)  6. Making Whoopie
(2:16)  7. Piano Players
(4:28)  8. Dark Night
(3:50)  9. Nostalgia In Times Square

Competent fusion and light jazz outing from vocalist/composer and keyboardist (as well as journalist and broadcaster) Ben Sidran. 

He sings and plays in sometimes pleasing, other times inconsequential fashion, while the songs are expertly produced and casually performed.~Ron Wynn http://www.allmusic.com/album/old-songs-for-the-new-depression-mw0000200508

Personnel: Ben Sidran (vocals, piano); Richie Cole (alto saxophone); Bob Malach (tenor saxophone); Marcus Miller (bass); Buddy Williams (drums); Jerry Alexander (background vocals).

Old Songs For The New Depression