Friday, July 1, 2016

Booker T. & The M.G.s - Green Onions (Remastered)

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:58
Size: 98.4 MB
Styles: R&B, Soul
Year: 1962/2012
Art: Front

[2:51] 1. Green Onions
[2:38] 2. Rinky-Dink
[3:30] 3. I Got A Woman
[2:51] 4. Mo' Onions
[2:08] 5. Twist And Shout
[3:53] 6. Behave Yourself
[2:18] 7. Stranger On The Shore
[3:23] 8. Lonely Avenue
[2:20] 9. The One Who Really Loves You
[2:45] 10. You Can't Sit Down
[2:28] 11. A Woman, A Lover, A Friend
[3:09] 12. Comin' Home Baby
[3:41] 13. Green Onions
[4:57] 14. Can't Sit Down

It’d be difficult to chose just one Booker T. album to own, given the absurd splendor of the band’s output (even excluding their work as Stax Records' house band). But this boisterous instrumental gesture to early-’60s R&B, funk, blues, jazz, soul, surf, and gospel might be the one. The now-traditional title tune, led by Booker T.’s unmistakable organ runs, has seeped into public consciousness in myriad ways since its 1962 release. And the quartet’s freakishly skilled playing simply pops—witness the smoky groove on “Lonely Avenue,” the knee-knocking bounce behind “Twist and Shout,” and Steve Cropper’s guitar stingers in “Mo Onions.”

Green Onions

Ray Brown - Bassics: The Best Of Ray Brown Trio 1977-2000 (2-Disc Set)

Focusing on the latter part of his career, the double-disc anthology Bassics: Best of Ray Brown Trio 1977-2000 collects a nice cross-section of the recordings bassist Ray Brown made with his various trio configurations for the Concord and Telarc labels. Included is work the iconic musician made with such pianists as Cedar Walton, Gene Harris and Monty Alexander, as well Benny Green and Geoff Keezer. These are elegant, sophisticated mainstream jazz recordings that are the epitome of swinging modern jazz. While listeners looking for a more representative view of Brown's long career should probably check out his influential early recordings, Bassics offers a perfect overview of the still superb Brown in the autumn of his life. ~Matt Collar

Album: Bassics: The Best Of Ray Brown Trio 1977-2000 (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:41
Size: 157.3 MB
Styles: Post bop, Mainstream jazz
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[4:57] 1. Sister Sadie
[5:01] 2. Blue Bossa
[5:45] 3. Exactly Like You
[4:13] 4. Mistreated But Undefeated Blues
[4:18] 5. Have You Met Miss Jones
[6:02] 6. That's All
[7:01] 7. Rio
[7:08] 8. Summertime
[5:48] 9. Buhaina Buhaina
[7:40] 10. The Real Blues
[6:39] 11. Bye Bye Blackbird
[4:05] 12. Gumbo Hamp

Bassics: The Best Of Ray Brown Trio 1977-2000 (Disc 1)

Album: Bassics: The Best Of Ray Brown Trio 1977-2000 (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:15
Size: 156.2 MB
Styles: Post bop, Mainstream jazz
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[6:02] 1. Phineas Can Be
[5:42] 2. Don't Get Sassy
[4:04] 3. Thumb
[6:12] 4. Port Of Rico
[4:26] 5. You're My Everything
[7:04] 6. Freddie Freeloader
[7:45] 7. It's Only A Paper Moon
[6:14] 8. Cherokee
[5:36] 9. Caravan
[7:54] 10. Goodbye
[3:32] 11. I Want To Be Happy
[3:36] 12. Lined With A Groove

Bassics: The Best Of Ray Brown Trio 1977-2000 (Disc 2)

Don Byron - Ivey Divey

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:21
Size: 170.2 MB
Styles: Clarinet jazz
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[8:47] 1. I Want To Be Happy
[7:12] 2. Somebody Loves Me
[5:05] 3. I Cover The Waterfront
[6:00] 4. I've Found A New Baby
[5:27] 5. Himm (For Our Lord And Kirk Franklin)
[3:17] 6. The Goon Drag
[5:03] 7. Abie The Fishman
[6:31] 8. Lefty Teachers At Home
[3:57] 9. Leopold, Leopold...
[7:03] 10. Freddie Freeloader
[9:24] 11. In A Silent Way
[6:28] 12. Somebody Loves Me

Don Byron (clarinet, bass clarinet, tenor saxophone), Jason Moran (piano), Jack DeJohnette (drums except on "Himm"), Ralph Alessi (trumpet on "The Goon Drag," "Leopold, Leopold!"), Lonnie Plaxico (bass on "The Goon Drag," "Abie the Fisherman," "Lefty Teachers at Home," "Leopold, Leopold!" "In a Silent Way").

Clarinetist Don Byron has fashioned a career something akin to a great jazz history lesson. With albums like Plays the Music of Mickey Katz and Bug Music , he demonstrated some of its traditional roots, whereas Music for Six Musicians and You are #6 explored the Latin and Afro-Cuban legacies. Tuskegee Experiments and the frighteningly good live record No Vibe Zone demonstrated where jazz might be going, at least in one person's view. Now, with Ivey-Divey , Byron consolidates it all into a recording that tells of the music's past, present and possible future all in one seventy-five minute stretch.

With a core group featuring piano wunderkind Jason Moran and drummer Jack DeJohnette, inarguably one of the most stylistically broad players of the past forty years, Byron pays homage to the similarly bass-less trio of Lester Young, Nat "King" Cole, and Buddy Rich. But this is no mere tribute record; in fact, Byron is quick to point out that "this is less of a repertory record than some of my others, I didn't want this just to be 'Don Byron Plays Lester Young.'" Nor is it. Instead, Byron, Moran and DeJohnette take five pieces commonly associated with Young, and stretch them to their limits. Take "Somebody Loves Me," which is presented in two vastly different takes. Moran's modernistic stride takes both versions to places Cole might only have dreamed of, in particular on the alternate take, where the trio plays loose and free with time in ways that would have been unheard of in the '40s, while still maintaining a reverence that clearly draws a line from the past to the present.

Elsewhere Byron contributes four originals that deliver on everything from the absurd Bugs Bunny-influenced funk groove of "Leopold, Leopold!" with bassist Lonnie Plaxico providing some nice contrast to the trio pieces, to the lyrical "Himm (for Our Lord and Kirk Franklin)," a stately duo between Byron and Moran, which extends gospel into the 21st century. And to draw a link between the distant past and the present/future, Byron tackles two pieces associated with Miles Davis, from two different periods. The bluesy "Freddie Freeloader," another trio piece, begins with a cool yet slightly disjointed groove, but soon picks up steam, heading for reaches farther afield. "In a Silent Way," with Plaxico once again sitting in, is an interesting take on the original, with an approach that is more organic yet, when DeJohnette comes in with his take on Tony Williams' signature drum beat, completely on target.

Ivey-Divey manages to succeed on many fronts, but mostly it's a consolidation of sorts, one that looks to the future without neglecting the past. The clarinet may not be the most popular instrument in jazz these days, although it does seem to be making something of a comeback, but in the hands of Byron, it's as vital and significant as any other. ~John Kelman

Ivey Divey

Clark Terry & Bob Brookmeyer Quintet - S/T

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:21
Size: 101.6 MB
Styles: Bop, Mainstream jazz
Year: 1991
Art: Front

[4:45] 1. Tete A Tete
[3:23] 2. Pretty Girl
[4:37] 3. Blue China
[5:21] 4. Hum
[3:04] 5. Blindman, Blindman
[6:06] 6. Step Right Up
[5:11] 7. Weep
[3:24] 8. Straight No Chaser
[4:39] 9. Sometime Ago
[3:49] 10. Hymn

“Ever since critics and other verbalizers began to involve themselves with jazz, categorizations have grown through the music like weeds. And also like weeds, these stylistic labels are often difficult to cut down so that you can experience the music directly. One index of the singular pleasures to be had from the music of the Clark Terry & Bob Brookmeyer Quintet is that it not so much defies categories but rather ignores them. Their invitation to simply make contact with the music itself is so immediate and infectious that only the most rigidified academic would try to sort this combo and the music it plays into some constrictingly neat niche.

"That," observes Mr. Brookmeyer, himself chronically reluctant to verbalize about music, "is what our music is for - pleasure, not historical diagnosis. We all enjoy each other personally, and perhaps it's that mutual enjoyment that comes out in the music." As of August, 1965, Brookmeyer and Terry will have been together four years. They are not together all the time, of course, because their multiple skills often occupy them in other assignments. But their nights as co-leaders of this unit usually add up to about three months a year, with New York's Half Note their basing point. And in addition, they play other locations and cities from time to time.

Heightening the evident pleasure which Brookmeyer and Terry absorb from this association is their pride in the group. "This," Brookmeyer notes, "is ours. Clark and I have always worked for other people and whatever renown -or notoriety, if you will - we've accumulated has been with other people. After all that time, it's a continuing enjoyment for us to shape our own band."

Clark Terry & Bob Brookmeyer Quintet

Eden Atwood - My Ideal

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:31
Size: 113,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:57)  1. Skylark
(5:54)  2. This Is New
(5:11)  3. Hey There
(5:32)  4. Smile
(5:12)  5. My Ideal
(4:25)  6. Witchcraft
(5:25)  7. Say It Isn't So
(6:37)  8. A Song For You
(6:13)  9. Nothing Ever Changes My Love For You

A fine interpreter of lyrics, Eden Atwood started off her jazz career with a series of excellent recordings for Concord. Raised in Montana, Atwood studied drama and musical theater at college but became interested in jazz, and at 19 she began singing locally. Although she worked as a model and an actress, Atwood has focused her attentions on singing; she made her debut in New York in 1992 and sings in a style somewhere between jazz and cabaret. 

She produced a high volume of material through the first half of the 90's, but stopped delivering regular material until she signed with Groove Note in the early 2000s.~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/artist/eden-atwood-mn0000177681/biography

Personnel:  Vocals – Eden Atwood;  Piano – Jeremy Monteiro;  Bass – Clark Sommers;  Drums – Chris Varga

My Ideal

Bradley Leighton - Back To The Funk

Styles: Flute Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 52:45
Size: 84,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:32)  1. Runaway
(5:08)  2. Flow
(4:29)  3. Back To The Funk
(4:30)  4. Midnight Affairs
(5:56)  5. Clear Blue Skies
(4:42)  6. Special Lady
(3:43)  7. Sunday In San Diego
(3:59)  8. Make It With You
(4:53)  9. Ready For You
(4:53) 10. Soul Moon
(4:53) 11. Love Light In Flight

Back to the Funk is an intentional throwback to early-'70s funky jazz, the type of music performed by flutist Herbie Mann and a little later by saxophonist Grover Washington, Jr. The R&B-ish grooves are catchy if predictable and the backup band is solid, with flutist Bradley Leighton in the lead nearly all of the time. Nothing unusual happens, but Leighton plays well over the vamps, sounding enthusiastic and reasonably creative within the genre. While eight of the 11 selections are recent originals, this could very easily be an album from 1972. Fans of that era's funky music will want to pick this one up. https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/back-to-the-funk/id91059200

Personnel: Bradley Leighton (alto flute); Scott "Tempo" Kyle, Scott Kyle (trombone); Allan Phillips (piano, keyboards, percussion, drum programming); Cecil McBee Jr. Back to the Funk songs (bass instrument); Evan Marks (guitar); John Rekevics (alto saxophone, tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone); Brad Steinwehe (trumpet); Duncan Moore (drums).

Back To The Funk

Glenn Miller Orchestra - The Very Best Of Swing

Styles: Jazz, Big Band, Swing
Year: 2008
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 44:37
Size: 74,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:43)  1. Let's All Sing Together
(3:34)  2. Begin The Beguine
(2:35)  3. Leroy Brown
(2:11)  4. Let's Dance
(3:12)  5. Baby, It's Cold Outside
(2:29)  6. You Are The Sunshine Of My Life
(3:22)  7. Harlem Nocturn
(3:05)  8. New York, New York
(3:07)  9. Blueberry Hill
(2:37) 10. 'S Wonderful
(5:38) 11. Miller Meets Kaempfert-Medley
(2:44) 12. A Cabana In Havanna
(3:05) 13. Bouncing In Bavaria
(1:51) 14. When You're Smiling
(2:17) 15. Seventy-Six Trombones

Shortly after the beginning of the 20th century, in a small rural Southwestern Iowa town, a boy was born to Elmer and Mattie Lou Miller. The date was March 1, 1904 and the town was Clarinda. The boy that was born that night was named Alton Glen Miller (later changed to Glenn) and when he uttered his first cry, Clarinda heard Glenn Miller’s first “moonlight serenade.” Glenn’s first serenade was not particularly unique as it had been sung by children for centuries and was barely heard across South 16th Street. However, his second Moonlight Serenade was a composition he wrote while studying music under Dr. Schillinger in New York City. Glenn’s second Moonlight Serenade was unique, becoming the theme song of his number one Big Band and heard literally all around the world. Glenn’s paternal grandparents were a part of the westward movement of people during the 1800’s and moved permanently to the Clarinda area in 1870 (Glenn’s grandfather Robert had lived in Page County prior to the Civil War, returned to Ohio after the war, then moved his family to Page County in 1870). Their son Elmer, who was three years old when the family settled in Clarinda, grew up in Page County and married a local girl, Mattie Lou Cavender in 1898. Mattie Lou (she also went by Lulu and Lou) was born in Page County, and grew up to become a well respected teacher in Clarinda. In 1902,  Elmer and Lou Miller purchased the home at 601 S. 16th St. from C.H. Howard. Here, on March 1, 1904, the future big band leader was born. Their first son Elmer “Deane” had been born in a different home in Clarinda in 1901.

The Millers lived in the house from 1902 – 1906, when they sold their home on 16th St for $1,275 and moved to Tryon, Nebraska to homestead 640 acres under the Kincaid Act of 1904. While homesteading in Tryon, they lived in a sod house. In the evenings, Glenn’s mother, Mattie Lou, would play a simple pump organ which helped ease the lonesome existence on the flatlands of Nebraska. Mattie Lou started a school called Happy Hollow and her children would sing songs as they rode in a wagon on their way to school. The soothing music of his mother in their sod house and the uplifting songs on the way to school must have given Glenn a greater meaning and appreciation for music. Life in a sod house was replaced by life in town when Elmer moved the family to North Platte, Nebraska. Mattie Lou gave birth to a third son, John Herbert “Herb”, in 1913 and a daughter Emma “Irene” in 1916, while living in North Platte.Circa 1917, Glenn’s family moved to Grant City, Missouri where he went to grade school. A businessman in town, John Mosbarger, was also the community band director and wanted Glenn to join older bother Deane in the community band. Glenn, however, has an old trombone. Mr. Mosbarger bought Glenn a new trombone so that he could join the community band and in exchange Glenn worked for Mr. Mosbarger, to pay off the new trombone.

In 1918, moved to Fort Morgan, Colorado where Glenn went to high school. During his senior year, Glenn decided to try the game of football, and by the end of the season, he was chosen by the Colorado High School Sports Association as “the best left end in Colorado.” Football wasn’t Glenn’s only interest, however, as he had become very interested in a new sound called dance band music. Glenn enjoyed this music so much that he and some classmates decided to start their own band. In fact, Glenn was so excited about this new music that when it came time for his graduation in 1921, he decided to skip his graduation ceremonies and instead traveled to Laramie, Wyoming to play in a band. Meanwhile, back home, Glenn’s mother had to accept his diploma and the principal commented, “Maybe you’re the one who should get it anyway; you probably worked harder on it than he did!” By now, Glenn had made the decision that he was going to be a professional musician. His first professional contract was signed with a Dixieland group called Senter’s Sentapeeds. To most people it sounds like something you would step on rather than listen to. Then another opportunity opened up where Glenn could play in the Holly Moyer Orchestra in Boulder and earn enough money to attend the University of Colorado. This lasted for two years, but in 1924, Glenn’s musical ambition, and a new job with the Tommy Watkins Orchestra, caused him to discontinue his college education so that he could spend full time playing and arranging music. Glenn eventually headed for Los Angeles, where he had heard there were numerous band opportunities. He soon got the chance to join the Ben Pollack Orchestra, a band noted for finding talented musicians. While playing with Pollack’s band, Glenn roomed with another rising star, a clarinetist from Chicago named Benny Goodman.

In 1928, after working in Los Angeles and Chicago, Glenn moved on to New York City where he worked with bands of Ben Pollack, Red Nichols and Paul Ash as a trombonist and arranger. In 1932, Glenn organized the Smith Ballew Band, and worked two years as manager, arranger and trombonist. In 1934, he helped the Dorsey brothers to organize their first full-time Big Band and in 1935, he organized Ray Noble’s American band. Finally, in 1937, Glenn decided to fulfill his dream and organize his own band. This first band soon ran into financial difficulties and had to disband, but Glenn was not one to give up and he tried again in 1938. This time was different, and in March of 1939, his band was chosen to play the summer season at the prestigious Glen Island Casino, in New Rochelle, New York. This big break led to another important engagement at Meadowbrook, New Jersey in the spring of the same year. Both places offered frequent radio broadcasts, and by mid-summer, the Miller Orchestra had developed a nationwide following. In the fall of 1939, it began a series of radio broadcasts for Chesterfield cigarettes which increased its already great popularity. Thereafter, the band was in constant demand for recording sessions and appeared in two films; Sun Valley Serenade in 1941and Orchestra Wives in 1942.

In 1942, at the peak of his civilian career, Glenn decided he could better serve those in uniform by putting one on himself. By doing this, the band gave up a $20,000 weekly income. Too old to be drafted at age 38, Glenn first volunteered for the Navy but was told that they didn’t need his services. Not giving up, Glenn wrote to the Army’s Brigadier General Charles Young on August 12, 1942. Miller persuaded the Army to accept him so he could in his own words, “put a little more spring into the feet of our marching men and a little more joy into their hearts and to be placed in charge of a modernized army band.” After being accepted in the Army, Glenn’s civilian band played their last concert in Passaic, New Jersey on September 27th, 1942. It was such a sad event that the band couldn’t finish playing the closing theme song, Moonlight Serenade. Glenn soon became part of the Army Specialists Corps with the rank of captain. For the next year and a half, besides arranging music, Glenn created and directed his own 50-member band. Captain Miller’s mission was morale building, bringing a touch of home to the troops and modernizing military music. Glenn was also a talented fund raiser, and raised millions of dollars in war bond drives. He also attracted Air Corps recruits through his I Sustain the Wingsweekly radio broadcasts.

Still wanting to do more, Glenn arranged for overseas duty for the band. Arriving in London, the band was quartered at 25 Sloane Street, an area in constant barrage by German V-1 buzz bombs. Glenn was immediately concerned for the band and made arrangements for the unit to move to new quarters in Bedford, England. The band moved on July 2, 1944, and the very next day a buzz bomb landed in front of their old quarters, destroying the building and killing 100 people. The Glenn Miller Army Air Force Band was extremely busy and Glenn wrote home that in one month they played at 35 different bases, while performing 40 radio broadcasts in their spare time.  Finally, on December 15, 1944, Glenn boarded a single engine C-64 Norseman aircraft to travel to Paris, France where he was to make arrangements for a Christmas broadcast. Tragically, the plane never reached France and was never found. The band, without Miller, performed the scheduled Christmas concert under the direction of Jerry Gray and continued to perform, playing their last concert on November 13, 1945 at the National Press Club dinner for President Truman in Washington, D.C. At that time, General Dwight Eisenhower and General Hap Arnold thanked the band for a job well done.Glenn Miller will be remembered for many things; his musical style, showmanship, hard work, perseverance, and much more. But his patriotism in giving up his number one civilian band to enlist in the United States Army Air Corps, his pioneering efforts to modernize military bands and his supreme sacrifice for his country have caused him to be remembered as Clarinda’s and America’s favorite musical patriot.Glenn Miller’s life cannot easily be summed up in a few words. He put more in his short life of 40 years than most people do in a longer lifetime. http://glennmiller.org/glenn-miller-history

The Very Best Of Swing

Lee Ritenour & Larry Carlton - Larry & Lee

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:35
Size: 140,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:02)  1. Crosstown Kids
(6:25)  2. Low Steppin'
(5:48)  3. L.A. Underground
(5:01)  4. Closed Door Jam
(4:45)  5. After the Rain
(4:48)  6. Remembering J.P.
(5:24)  7. Fun in the Dark
(6:16)  8. Lots about Nothin'
(4:55)  9. Take That
(6:12) 10. Up and Adam
(5:54) 11. Reflection of a Guitar Player

Larry Carlton and Lee Ritenour have had parallel careers, but this CD is their first joint meeting on record. The two guitarists complement each other well and there are hints of Wes Montgomery along with a tribute to Joe Pass ("Remembering J.P."), but the songs (all of them their originals) are little more than rhythmic grooves most of the time with the usual fadeouts. The consistently lightweight music is reasonably pleasing but never too stimulating.~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/larry-lee-mw0000172045

Personnel:  Lee Ritenour (organ, synthesizer, guitar, bass, programming), Larry Carlton (keyboards, guitar), Larry Williams (tenor saxophone, synthesizer), Jerry Hey, Gary Grant (trumpet, flugelhorn), Bill Reichenbach (trombone), Greg Phillinganes, Dave Witham, Rick Jackson (keyboards), Melvin Davis (bass), Omar Hakim, Harvey Mason (drums), Cassio Duarte (percussion).

Larry & Lee