Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Bob Wilber & The Scott Hamilton Quartet - Bob Wilber & The Scott Hamilton Quartet

Size: 136,7 MB
Time: 58:30
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1993
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Riff (3:49)
02. Rocks In My Bed (4:12)
03. Between The Devil And The Deep Blue Sea (6:05)
04. Time After Time (3:18)
05. I Never Knew (4:04)
06. Jonathan's Way (4:15)
07. All Too Soon (4:54)
08. Freeman's Way (3:16)
09. Treasure (3:42)
10. Puggles (3:29)
11. Taking A Chance On Love (3:30)
12. 144 West 54Th (6:30)
13. Jazzspeak (7:20)

On this CD reissue, Bob Wilber (who triples on clarinet, soprano and alto) meets up quite successfully with the relatively young swing stylist Scott Hamilton (heard near the beginning of his career) and the tenor's rhythm section of the period (guitarist Chris Flory, bassist Phil Flanagan and drummer Chuck Riggs). Together they perform melodic and swinging renditions of six of Wilber's originals along with six veteran standards; the logical arrangements help to set up the solos. Also included on the reissue is a seven-minute "Jazzspeak" in which Wilber remembers how the date came about. Easily recommended to mainstream and small-group swing fans. ~by Scott Yanow

Bob Wilber & The Scott Hamilton Quartet 

Linda Purl - Up Jumped Spring

Size: 104,4 MB
Time: 40:47
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. There'll Be Some Changes Made - Got A Lot Of Livin' To Do (Feat. Tedd Firth, Andy Burchschi & Mike Marlier) (3:08)
02. Anyplace I Hang My Hat Is Home (Feat. Tedd Firth, Todd Williams, Andy Burchschi & Nelson Rangell) (4:15)
03. Pick Yourself Up (Feat. Tedd Firth, Andy Burchschi & Mike Marlier) (2:04)
04. My Foolish Heart (Feat. Tedd Firth, Todd Williams, Andy Burchschi & Nelson Rangell) (4:47)
05. Nobody Else But Me (Feat. Andy Burchschi, Tedd Firth, Todd Williams & Nelson Rangell) (2:40)
06. I Wish You Love (Feat. Andy Burchschi, Nelson Rangell, Tedd Firth & Todd Williams) (3:51)
07. Starting Over (Feat. Andy Burchschi, Tedd Firth & Mike Marlier) (4:36)
08. Up Jumped Spring (Feat. Tedd Firth, Andy Burchschi, Nelson Rangell & Todd Williams) (3:26)
09. It Amazes Me (Feat. Tedd Firth, Andy Burchschi & Mike Marlier) (4:57)
10. Something's Coming (Feat. Tedd Firth, Andy Burchschi & Mike Marlier) (2:47)
11. If You Want The Rainbow (Feat. Tedd Firth, Andy Burschchi & Mike Marlier) (4:11)

This is a CD of fabulous musicians coming together and having a great time. Nelson Rangell one of the best saxophonists ever plays his heart out. Tedd Firth takes flight on the piano folding into Purl's soulful vocals like a best friend. These are classics from the American Songbook reinvented, rediscovered.

Linda Purl (born September 2, 1955) is an American actress and singer, perhaps best known for portraying Ben Matlock's daughter Charlene Matlock in season one of Matlock.


New Up Jumped Spring

Marquis Hill - New Gospel

Size: 99,9 MB
Time: 36:33
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2011
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Law And Order (5:43)
02. The Believer (7:35)
03. New Gospel (5:24)
04. Autumn (5:12)
05. A Portrait Of Fola (4:08)
06. The Thump (4:32)
07. Bass Solo (0:53)
08. Goodbye Fred (3:02)

There's a new generation of jazz musicians brewing on the Chicago jazz scene, and with New Gospel, Marquis Hill has solidified himself as one of its leading trumpet players. Joined by several other young Chicago jazz musicians, Hill makes a bold move by filling his entire first release with his own compositions.

Hill's notable orchestrating skills are reminiscent of Booker Little with a modern edge, like that of Roy Hargrove. Even if it's something just as simple as a displacement of the beat on "Autumn," or voicing the saxophone above the trumpet on "The Believer," he finds that balance between demonstrating his ability to write interesting material while still allowing his musicians enough room to be creative. He also manages to reference the past without sounding dated or restricted in any way. A great example of this is "The Thump" which begins with a saxophone-trumpet duet, similar to something that Igor Stravinsky would write for winds, that moments later breaks into an R&B groove. Though much like Miles Davis has done in the past, Hill's choice to snap a tempo for a new section on "The Believer" breaks up the album's flow a bit and disturbs the atmosphere created.

The performances on this release should not be overlooked. At several points, Hill and altoist Christopher McBride share some great dialogue when handing off solos, especially going from saxophone to trumpet on "The Believer" and vice versa on "The Thump." Bassist John Tate is an absolute rock on this album, often times being the only rhythm section member playing during an intro or transition, and on a track that doesn't seem to fit with the rest of the album, he is the only performer on a selection called "Bass Solo." Hill highlights Tate's playing again in a trumpet and bass duet on the closing "Goodbye Fred," a tribute to the late Chicago saxophonist Fred Anderson.

With a very raw, organic sound, New Gospel has helped distinguish Hill in a Chicago jazz market that is becoming increasingly populated with new talent. This release is not only a product Chicago can be proud of but also a standard which those other young jazz musicians on the scene can look up to. ~by Alex Marianyi

Personnel: Marquis Hill: trumpet; Christopher McBride: alto saxophone (2, 3, 5, 6); Chris Madsen: tenor saxophone (1, 4); Kenneth Oshodi: guitar (1, 3, 4); Joshua Moshier: piano; John Tate: bass; Jeremy Cunningham: drums.

New Gospel   

Alyssa Allgood - Lady Bird EP

Size: 159 MB
Time: 26:03
File: FLAC
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Yardbird Suite (4:47)
02. If You Never Come To Me (4:51)
03. Jaded (3:51)
04. If I Should Lose You (5:50)
05. Lady Bird (6:42)

Today scat is, literally, a dirty word. In a more polite age it was what Louis Armstrong did when he forgot the words to "Heebie-Jeebies."

Such was Pops' influence that, even though it was a mistake, soon everyone was doing it. After bebop kicked in, King Pleasure took things further when he first improvised wordlessly, then wrote down his own words to James Moody's solo on "I'm In The Mood For Love."

Others followed in the King's footsteps, most famously Lambert, Hendricks & Ross and—in a knockabout kind of way—Ella Fitzgerald.

With this, her first-ever record, Chicago vocalist Alyssa Allgood —just 23 years old—bravely attempts to revive the scat tradition. It will, hopefully, go some way to restoring the reputation of a word now most commonly used to denote a particularly disgusting form of pornography.

Backed by a cooking quartet led by organist Don Chase, Allgood displays her vocal chops to best advantage on the opener, Charlie Parker's "Yardbird Suite" from 1946, which Bird wrote in C and straight —or reasonably straight—4/4 time.

It has a wonderfully catchy melody and must be something of a showstopper when Allgood performs it in the Windy City clubs where she earns her keep.

She continues with one of Tom Jobim's lesser known but most poetic love songs, "If You Never Come To Me." There's a nice, laidback but assured guitar solo from Tim Fitzgerald on this one.

"Jaded," Allgood's own composition, is anything but; full of interesting melodic twists and turns. Alex Beltran turns in a fine, restrained solo on tenor saxophone.

Allgood has daringly added her own introductory verse to the old standard "If I Should Lose You and—more daringly still—penned a complete set of lyrics to Tadd Dameron's "Lady Bird." Written in 1939, this was the first song to feature what became known as the Tad Dameron Turnaround (Cm7, E flat m7, A flat m7, D flat m7).

And, with that—just five songs—it's all over. A quality-starved world hungers for more. ~Chris Mosey

Personnel: Alyssa Allgood: vocals; Don Chase: organ; Tim Fitzgerald: guitar; Alex Beltran: saxophone; Matt Plaskota: drums.

Lady Bird

Yusef Lateef - The Doctor Is In And Out

Size: 104,9 MB
Time: 43:06
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1976/2002
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. The Improvisors (7:53)
02. Hellbound (6:36)
03. Mystique (7:39)
04. Mississippi Mud (2:51)
05. Mush Mouth (6:26)
06. Technological Homosapien (5:16)
07. Street Musicians (2:57)
08. In A Little Spanish Town (T'was On A Night Like This) (3:25)

In 1976, Yusef Lateef's as restless a spiritual seeker as there ever was in the field of music, revisited some of his earliest themes in the context of modern sonic frameworks: The Eastern modal and melodic frameworks of his Prestige sides, such as Eastern Sounds, Cry!/Tender, and Other Sounds, brought to bear in much more sophisticated, complex, and grooved-out ways -- after all, it had been 20 years or more. The groove referred to is funk and soul. Funk itself was mutating at the time, so Lateef's interpolation at the crossroads of all ports in the musical journey was not only valid in 1976, but also necessary. For this recording, he utilized an absolutely huge group of musicians, bringing them in for this or that part, or a sound, or a particular vamp. Some of those present were Kenny Barron, Ron Carter, Dom Um Romao, Al Foster, Billy Butler, Anthony Jackson, a five-piece brass section, and a synth player. Lateef, as always, was offering evocative glimpses of geographical, psychological, spiritual, and emotional terrain in his compositions, but not in predictable ways. There's the deep minor-key meditation on blues and evolving thematic variations on "Hellbound" that becomes a Latin funk tune; the airy, contemplative, and skeletal "Mystique," which may use a repeating rhythmic phrase but explores every inch of its margins via a string section and Lateef's flute solo; the smooth, urban, bluesy funk of "Mississippi Mud"; the completely out electronic musique concrète<\it> of "Technological Homosapien" that becomes a series of synth squeals and an erratically tumbling bassline; and the wonderfully warped mariachi variation (sung in white-boy English) that featured the band playing bluesy hard bop over an age-old recorded track on "In a Little Spanish Town." It's a weird way to end a record, but then, it's a weird and wonderful record. ~by Thom Jurek

The Doctor Is In And Out

Greta Panettieri - Shattered

Size: 106,1 MB
Time: 45:25
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Shattered (4:42)
02. Oppure No (4:24)
03. Don't Know (5:38)
04. I'm In Love (4:15)
05. Non Ci Giurerei (5:55)
06. Life On Mars (3:16)
07. Look Back (5:51)
08. Pensamento Feliz (5:38)
09. Less Is More (5:43)

Da New York all’Italia, dai maggiori Festival e Club Italiani alla televisione. E’ una delle voci più incantevoli del panorama italiano e internazionale: Greta Panettieri, cresciuta artisticamente a New York, è una musicista dalla personalità vulcanica che sta facendo sempre più parlare di sé in Italia e all’estero. Non solo cantante e compositrice ma anche multistrumentista - suona il violino, la chitarra, il pianoforte - ed autrice di testi anche per le canzoni dei suoi colleghi (Gege’ Telesforo, Ainè). Il JAZZIT AWARD 2015 la consacra come una delle migliori cantanti jazz italiane e LA7 la chiama per più di venti puntate come ospite fissa del programma L’ARIA CHE TIRA. Attualmente è in tour con il nuovo e multiforme disco “SHATTERED-SGRETOLATA”.

Nel 2014 e nel 2015 ha conquistato stampa e pubblico calcando i maggiori club e teatri italiani con il suo “Viaggio in Jazz” attraverso i brani del suo ultimo album soul jazz “Under Control” e del suo acclamatissimo “Non Gioco Più” (Italian ’60 in Jazz), disco che rilegge i successi interpretati dalla grande Mina con uno stile del tutto inedito ed originale, riproponendo anche il virtuosissimo brano “Brava” grazie alle eccellenti doti vocali di Greta che duetta con il trombettista Fabrizio Bosso.
Album amatissimo dalle radio italiane, “Non Gioco Più” ha subito conquistato il pubblico italiano registrando il tutto esaurito in diversi teatri e club italiani, ma anche negli States su importanti stage tra cui il Rockwood Music Hall di New York. Dallo scorso “Non Gioco Più” è distribuito anche in Giappone dalle etichette Albore Jazz e Tower Records.

"Under Control" è un disco autobiografico racconta il passaggio dal management di una grande major a una dimensione più creativa e indipendente, dove trovare finalmente la dose libertà per realizzare la propria musica in modo autentico. Tra le illustri collaborazioni del disco, quella preziosissima di Larry Williams, celebre producer e arrangiatore per Al Jarreau, Michael Jackson (“Thriller”, “Off the Wall” e “Bad”) e Quincy Jones. “Viaggio in jazz” è anche il titolo della Graphic Novel pubblicata a dicembre 2014 da Edizioni Corsare, ispirata proprio all’avventurosa ascesa artistica di Greta durante gli anni vissuti a New York: un libro a fumetti che ripercorre l’inizio della sua carriera con la scoperta delle sue innate doti vocali, fino al suo ritorno in Italia che ha segnato l’inizio di una nuova fase professionale. Presentata già a Roma (alla Fiera Più libri più libri al Palazzo dei Congressi) e alla Feltrinelli di Via Appia) e in altre città italiane, la Graphic Novel sarà protagonista di una mostra giovedì 29 ottobre al Medimex 2015 di Bari, inaugurata proprio da un live di Greta Panettieri in duo con il pianista Andrea Sammartino.

A luglio 2015 è uscito il singolo “C’est Irreparable”, versione originale di "Un anno d'amore" scritta dall’autore italo-francese Nino Ferrer e resa celebre in Francia da Dalida, figura forte e, per molti versi, analoga a quella di Mina. Greta Panettieri la interpreta nella lingua originale, il francese, che svela nuovi significati rispetto alla versione italiana presente nel suo album "Non gioco più". Il singolo è stato presentato in prima assoluta live sul palco del Blue Note Milano il 5 luglio. Insieme al singolo è uscito anche il videoclip, scritto e interpretato insieme all'autore e attore Massimo Salari, che ne ha curato la regia continuando con lei una collaborazione iniziata diversi anni fa a Perugia, prima del suo trasferimento negli States Greta Panettieri: "Cantare "Un anno d'amore" in un'altra lingua ha trasformato completamente la canzone, il sentimento contenuto in essa e quindi anche la mia interpretazione: così come per le altre lingue in cui spesso canto in studio o in tour (inglese, brasiliano, spagnolo) ne sento la forte influenza sul timbro della mia voce, sul modo di emettere i suoni e su tutta la mia gestualità. La ricerca che ho compiuto su questa canzone mi ha fatto mettere a fuoco una realtà parallela a quella italiana, la Francia degli anni '60 e la voce di Dalida che con la sua eleganza e il suo carisma è stata per la Francia ciò che Mina è stata per l'Italia, ispirando una intera generazione di autori e interpreti."

Shattered

Brian Simpson - South Beach

Styles: Piano Jazz 
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:34
Size: 105,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:25)  1. South Beach
(4:14)  2. Can't Tell You Why
(3:36)  3. Lay It On Me
(4:52)  4. Never Without You
(4:17)  5. Paradise Island
(4:50)  6. Old Friends 
(4:41)  7. All I Want Is You
(4:42)  8. Our Love
(4:54)  9. Summer's End
(4:58) 10. Moonlit Ocean

Sometimes you have to accept something for what it is. Keyboardist Brian Simpson's debut for Shanachie , South Beach, sounds like a thesis submitted to the College of Smooth Jazz. It hits all the tropes of the genre: plenty of tinkling keyboard melodies, funky bass n' drums riffs, sweet saxophone seasonings, and vanilla background vocals. That may seem like a criticism, but it's not; it is a recognition of what may have been on Simpson's checklist, and how successfully he scratches each off as the album proceeds. Simpson plays pleasant, if innocuous, keyboards throughout South Beach, which is a perfect title for this warm and breezy album. Simpson's years as a session player, and as musical director for smooth jazz staple Dave Koz, provides him with both a familiarity with the genre and a lot of friends on his speed dial. Though Koz is missing, sax stylings are present throughout, provided by tenor saxophonist Euge Groove on "Lay It On Me," and Steve Alaniz on "All I Want Is You" and "Our Love." Simpson really shines on "Old Friends," a pretty, piano-driven tune enlivened by George Duke's synthesizer solos. 

Duke, one of the icons of smooth jazz, makes a perfect mentor, and evidence of how closely Simpson has been paying attention abounds here. This is essentially comfort food for the ears. It's simple, tasty and goes down easy, even if it never thrills the palate. Simpson isn't trying to chart a new course for smooth jazz as much as he's riding its wave; understanding that going makes South Beach as an enjoyable, if not especially memorable, way to spend 44 minutes. Simpson's goal here is to deliver the grooves, and on that score he succeeds completely. South Beach sounds pretty good, caressing the ears, even if it doesn't leave a lasting impression on the mind. ~ Jeff Winbush https://www.allaboutjazz.com/south-beach-brian-simpson-shanachie-records-review-by-jeff-winbush.php
 
Personnel: Brian Simpson: piano & keyboards; Tony Moore: drums, drum programming; Michael White: drums (2, 3, 6-9); Oscar Sexton: drums (5); Alex Al: bass (1, 3-5, 7, 8); Smitty Smith: bass (2); Larry Kimpel: bass: (5); Ian Martin: acoustic bass (6, 9, 10); Agape Jerry: guitar (1, 3, 7); Darrell Crooks: guitar (2, 4-6, 10); Peter White: acoustic guitar (4); Yarone Levy: acoustic guitar (4, 8); Brian Kilgore: percussion (1, 4-6, 8-10); Lenny Castro: percussion (2, 3, 7); Ron King: flugelhorn (2), trumpet (9, 10); Euge Grove: tenor sax (3); Steve Alaniz: tenor sax (4, 7, 8); George Duke: synthesizer (6); Brenda Kay Pierce: vocals (5).

South Beach

Karen Oberlin - My Standards

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:25
Size: 138,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:54)  1. And The Angels Sing
(5:44)  2. Something To Love For
(3:42)  3. A Nightengale Sang In Berkely Square
(5:52)  4. Love Dance
(3:10)  5. Doodlin'
(3:43)  6. Barangrill
(4:02)  7. Shipbuilding
(3:15)  8. Where Do You Start?
(3:32)  9. When (S)he Loved Me
(4:04) 10. Theme From "Valley Of The Dolls"
(4:32) 11. Happiness Is Hard To Sell
(7:53) 12. You Are Too Beautiful/ Too Beautiful
(5:31) 13. How Deep Is The Ocean
(1:24) 14. Count Your Blessings Instead Of Sheep

The title My Standards does not mean that this CD is a play list of classic entries in the Great American Songbook. Rather these are tunes that Karen Oberlin has listened to and adopted over the years, from Irving Berlin's to Elvis Costello's. Not only does the variety of music make this album bracing, but so does the way it is presented. Oberlin's primary genre is cabaret with a smattering of musical comedy. Yet she takes fascinating turns with the music within that framework. Her pure and crystalline like a mountain lake voice comes in loud and clear on an A Capella rendering of "Count Your Blessings Instead of Sheep". Fortunately, her tone is warm, not cold like a mountain lake. Although her voice has a classical bent (both her parents were classical musicians), she plants a feeling of jazz into such tunes as "Barangrill". "Theme from the Valley of the Dolls" is a successful mixture of lamentations by Oberlin with the funky jazz guitar of Dan Carillo. She takes on one of the saddest songs ever, "Where Do You Start?". Unlike versions by Shirley Horn and Susannah McCorkle which focus on the emotional wrenching caused by the impending separation to force a divvying up of the possessions, the direction that Oberlin takes stays with the process to make sure that each gets what belongs to them and nothing more. Things change again with an injection of a folk song element in "Shipbuilding". The demeanor changes again on such classics as Billy Strayhorn's "Something to Live For" where a decidedly passionate, yearning comes to the fore. And finally, she can be cute and coy on "Happiness Is Hard to Sell". Her chameleon like ability to change her delivery to meet the needs of the song prevents her from ever getting into a rut. A 16 year veteran of the singing scene, one can say with the release of this album, "it's about time". Recommended. ~ Dave Nathan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/my-standards-karen-oberlin-miranda-music-review-by-dave-nathan.php
 
Personnel: Karen Oberlin - Vocals; Arturo O'Farrill, Fred Hersch - Piano; Jay Leonhart - Bass; Victor Jones - Drums; Dan Carillo - Guitar; Peter Brainin - Sax; Roland Guerrero - Percussion

My Standards

John Hollenbeck - Songs I Like a Lot

Styles: Avant-Garde Jazz  
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:08
Size: 158,8 MB
Art: Front

( 8:12)  1. Wichita Lineman
( 5:25)  2. Canvas
(14:34)  3. The Moon's a Harsh Mistress
(11:23)  4. Man of Constant Sorrow
( 9:35)  5. All My Life
( 5:39)  6. Bicycle Race
( 7:35)  7. Fallslake
( 6:41)  8. Chapel Flies

It's hard to resist, at the very least, looking at an album with as honest and unassuming a title as Songs I Like a Lot; but it's even harder to resist when it turns out that the instigator is John Hollenbeck, founder of and primary composer for Claudia Quintet the chamber jazz ensemble which has, over the course of six albums in nine years, completely defied definition and categorization, beyond combining improvisational prowess and the ability to subtly interpret through-composed music. When Hollenbeck releases a recording under his own name, it's generally in a larger-scale environment, and Songs I Like a Lot is no different, a collaboration with the 16-piece Frankfurt Radio Big Band. But what makes the album different than any that have come before is that, with the exception of one track, this is a collection of cover songs that cover a broad range of sources, from Jimmy Webb to Imogen Heap; from Freddie Mercury and Queen to traditional folk music; and from maverick Japanese composer Nobukazu Takemura to renegade free jazz progenitor Ornette Coleman. It should come as no surprise to anyone familiar with Hollenbeck's unshackled proclivities. It should also come as no surprise that Hollenbeck's intent was to interpret these songs with singers. Given the breadth of material, it's no surprise that Theo Bleckmann is one of two singers recruited for Songs I Like a Lot. Something of a renegade himself, Bleckmann is no stranger to Hollenbeck's recordings, having collaborated regularly, from 2005's A Blessing (OmniTone) through to Claudia Quintet's recent What is Beautiful? (Cuneiform, 2012). Hollenbeck also enlists another familiar face in Gary Versace, a keyboardist who, from guitarist John Scofield and composer/arranger Maria Schneider, to Claudia Quintet with whom he guested on Royal Toast (Cuneiform, 2010) has demonstrated the kind of versatility Hollenbeck's music doesn't just ask, it demands.

What is, perhaps, a bigger surprise is the appearance of singer Kate McGarry though, with Versace a regular collaborator since her third record as a leader, The Target (Palmetto, 2007), there's already a clear connection to the musical circles these players inhabit. McGarry is, in fact, the first voice heard on Hollenbeck's expansive version of Jimmy Webb's "Wichita Lineman," and his instincts are justified from the first note she sings, combining pure and reverent delivery with understated interpretation. It's a song that's been covered many times but never so cinematically. McGarry shares the tune with Bleckmann, and if the two are ideal on their own, it's how their timbres complement each other even though they rarely sing together that further makes them such astute choices. As for his arrangement, Hollenbeck's skill at taking small but defining motifs from an original song and use them as starting points for broader orchestrations is what makes this set of eight tunes so successful. If "Wichita Lineman" is cinematic, then Hollenbeck's arrangement of Webb's "The Moon is a Harsh Mistress" is positively IMAX. Opening intimately, with McGarry's voice and Versace's piano alone together, a layer of flutes slowly insinuates itself into the arrangement, followed by a minimalist Steve Reichian pulse from Hollenbeck, on marimba, and guitarist Martin Scales that soon becomes an undercurrent over which the episodic piece builds, over fourteen minutes, to a breathtaking climax of swirling melodies that, despite the seven-second gap between them, seems to run conceptually into an equally unfettered arrangement of "Man of Constant Sorrow," made popular in the new millennium by the Coen Brothers' popular film Oh Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000). 

The traditional folk tune's tempestuous intro all low horns and tumultuous drums seems to make perfect sequential sense, even as it leads to a second section of strummed acoustic guitar and Bleckmann's delivery of the familiar tune: the call to McGarry's response. It is, however, more Midwestern, perhaps, than Deep South, especially when saxophonist Julian Arguelles' tenor solo soars over Scale's rapid strumming to recall the spirit of guitarist Pat Metheny's classic 80/81 (ECM, 1980). There's plenty more, from Hollenbeck's rubato arrangement of Ornette Coleman's "All My Life" laying bare the alto saxophonist's inherent lyricism, despite coming from the more extreme Science Fiction (Columbia, 1971) to a version of Queen's "Bicycle," which is clever without being coy, and Hollenbeck's sole compositional contribution, "Chapel Files," closing the album on a gentler note. These may be songs Hollenbeck likes, but it's how he hears them and, subsequently, arrange them for this large ensemble that's indicative of an unerring ability to find good music in any corner, nook or cranny, turning it into something personal without ever losing what made it so good in the first place. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/john-hollenbeck-songs-i-like-a-lot-by-john-kelman.php
 
Personnel: John Hollenbeck: arranger, conductor, mallet percussion, bicycle; Theo Bleckmann: voice; Kate McGarry: voice; Gary Versace: piano. Organ; Heinz-Dieter Sauerborn: alto and soprano saxophones, flute; Oliver Leicht: alto saxophone, clarinet, alto clarinet, flute; Steffan Weber: tenor and soprano saxophone, flute; Julian Argüelles: tenor and soprano saxophone, flute; Rainer Heute: bass saxophone, bass clarinet; Frabk Wellert: trumpet, flugelhorn; Thomas Vogel: trumpet, flugelhorn; Martin Auer: trumpet, flugelhorn; Axel Schlosser: trumpet, flugelhorn; Günter Bollman: trombone; Peter Feil: trombone; Christian Jaksjø: trombone, tenor horn; Manfred Honetschläger: bass trombone; Maretin Scales: guitar; Thomas Heidepriem: bass; Jean Paul Höchstädter: drums.

Songs I Like a Lot

Pepper Adams - California Cookin'

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1983
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 50:18
Size: 81,3 MB
Art: Front

(12:39)  1. Valse Celtique
( 9:58)  2. Summertime
( 7:10)  3. Last Resort
(10:30)  4. Now In Our Lives
( 9:59)  5. Oleo

Pepper Adams handled the baritone saxophone with the driven facility of hard bop and fueled the big horn with a propulsive intensity that caused him to be nicknamed "the Knife" for his "slashing and chopping technique," which had a humbling effect upon musicians fortunate enough to gig with him. From 1954 until shortly before his passing in 1986, Pepper Adams existed as an indispensable ingredient in the North American jazz ensemble, releasing more than 20 albums as a leader, emanating a special warmth as a featured soloist, and serving as a strongly supportive sideman and an often overlooked accompanist, for he anchored many an ensemble behind vocalists such as Brook Benton, Aretha Franklin, Jon Lucien, Carmen McRae, Helen Merrill, Esther Phillips, Dakota Staton, Joe Williams, and Jimmy Witherspoon. Often mentioned in the same breath with Serge Chaloff, Gerry Mulligan, and Cecil Payne, his powerhouse approach was closer to that of Harry Carney and Leo Parker. Born Park Adams III on October 8, 1930, in Highland Park, MI, he was five years old when his family moved to Rochester, NY, where he soon developed a passionate interest in jazz by listening to Fats Waller, Jimmie Lunceford, Duke Ellington, and Cab Calloway on the radio. At 12 he was blowing clarinet and tenor sax and was soon sitting in with local bands, including one led by veteran reedman Ben Smith. Pepper's primary inspiration was tenor archetype Coleman Hawkins, and Harry Carney inspired him to take up the baritone. Moving back to Detroit in 1946, he played in a group led by Lucky Thompson and worked in the house band at the African-American-owned Bluebird Inn with Barry Harris, Billy Mitchell, and Thad and Elvin Jones while holding down a job manufacturing automobiles. He blew tenor with Lionel Hampton for a while and served in the U.S. Army from 1951 to 1953, including a spell in Korea. Resuming his routine at the Bluebird, he developed his stamina while working with Miles Davis, Sonny Stitt, and Wardell Gray, whose influence he always acknowledged.

Adams worked in a group led by guitarist Kenny Burrell, then recorded with alto saxophonist Lennie Niehaus. His most memorable session of 1955 was with bassist Paul Chambers and emerging tenor John Coltrane. Moving to New York in January 1956, he recorded with Kenny Clarke, Curtis Fuller, and Quincy Jones. Pepper toured with Stan Kenton and Maynard Ferguson and while on the West Coast he jammed with Howard Rumsey's Lighthouse All-Stars. During 1957 Adams made records with harmonica ace Toots Thielemans; pianists Hank Jones and Ahmad Kharab Salim; trumpeters Shorty Rogers and Lee Morgan; and saxophonists Dave Pell, John Coltrane, Frank Wess, Coleman Hawkins, Hank Mobley, and Shafi Hadi (later reissued with the complete Debut recordings of Charles Mingus). In 1958 Adams worked with Benny Goodman, Johnny Griffin, Chet Baker, Manny Albam, Gene Ammons, and Donald Byrd, with whom he would co-lead a band and cut quite a number of albums over the years. In 1959 Pepper put out an LP with trombonist Jimmy Knepper and led a group that was recorded live at the Five Spot. He supported Art Pepper and Sonny Red on their album Two Altos and sat in on Philly Joe Jones' Showcase. Adams helped solidify the orchestra that appeared with Thelonious Monk at Town Hall and served as a sort of living furnace among trombonist Jimmy Knepper and saxophonists Jackie McLean, John Handy, and Booker Ervin during the session that resulted in Blues and Roots, the album that virtually defines the artistic legacy of Charles Mingus. He began the 1960s by recording with multi-instrumentalist Herbie Mann, pianist Herbie Hancock, vibraphonist Lionel Hampton, saxophonist Jimmy Forrest, and trumpeters Howard McGhee and Freddie Hubbard. He also recorded with pianists Duke Pearson and Red Garland, helped saxophonist Pony Poindexter cut his first album, and appeared live with Mingus at New York's Town Hall and Birdland.

In 1963 Pepper Adams Plays Charlie Mingus was co-produced by Mingus and vibraphonist Teddy Charles. Other collaborations from this period include Ben Webster's See You at the Fair, Oliver Nelson's More Blues and the Abstract Truth, and dates led by pianist Joe Zawinul and saxophonist Stanley Turrentine. In 1966 Thad Jones and Pepper Adams co-led the album Mean What You Say. This coincided with the first of the Monday night performances at the Village Vanguard by the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Big Band, an 18-piece unit that would stay together for ten years. Throughout the late '60s Pepper Adams performed with trumpeter Blue Mitchell, with Dizzy Gillespie at the Vanguard, behind organist Jimmy Smith on Stay Loose...Jimmy Smith Sings Again, and on various albums by saxophonists Lou Donaldson, Hank Crawford, Zoot Sims, Houston Person, and Roland Kirk. He closed out the decade by sitting in with bassist Richard Davis, with guitarist George Benson on the album Giblet Gravy, and in a large band behind Mose Allison on the LP Hello There, Universe. Pepper Adams showed up on several Blue Note sessions presided over by Elvin Jones from 1969 to 1973, on two albums with soul-jazz organist Johnny "Hammond" Smith, and with composer and multi-instrumentalist David Amram on various projects that materialized throughout the 1970s. Adams demonstrated terrific adaptability as he assisted Felix Cavaliere and the Rascals with their jazz-rock crossover Peaceful World and even signed on with comedian Martin Mull, appearing on his 1974 album, Normal, where he lent ballast to a tidy big-band arrangement of "Flexible" with Phil Bodner, Thad Jones, Jimmy Knepper, and Joe Farrell. Further engagements during the 1970s (including tours of the U.K. and Europe) involved pianists Arif Mardin, Ben Sidran, and Mickey Tucker; guitarist Eric Gale; saxophonist Grover Washington, Jr.; and Lalo Schifrin's disco album Black Widow. A return to jazzier turf came about on Nick Brignola's Baritone Madness, on sessions with pianist Walter Bishop, Jr., and on Charles Mingus' last albums Me, Myself an Eye and Something Like a Bird in 1978. 

Pepper's Urban Dreams came out in 1981, ushering in what would be his last five years of artistic productivity. He assisted with Teo Macero's Impressions of Charles Mingus and recorded with pianist Bess Bonnier, guitarist Peter Leitch, pianists Hank Jones and Hod O'Brien, and trumpeter Kenny Wheeler. Pepper's last recording, The Adams Effect, brought him together with saxophonist Frank Foster and a rhythm section of Tommy Flanagan, Ron Carter, and Billy Hart. A lifelong tobacco addict, Pepper Adams died of lung cancer in Brooklyn, NY, on September 10, 1986. ~ arwulf arwulf http://www.allmusic.com/artist/pepper-adams-mn0000255377/biography

Personnel: Pepper Adams (baritone saxophone); Ted Curson (trumpet); Victor Feldman (piano); Carl Burnette (drums).

California Cookin'

Ethan Iverson - The Purity Of The Turf

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:45
Size: 136,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:32)  1. The Purity Of The Turf
(5:20)  2. Song For My Father
(4:44)  3. Darn That Dream
(5:46)  4. Along Came Betty
(3:34)  5. Graduation Day
(6:16)  6. Confirmation
(5:36)  7. Kush
(4:56)  8. Sent For You Yesterday
(4:24)  9. Strange Serenade
(5:02) 10. Little Waltz
(5:12) 11. Einbahnstrasse
(3:18) 12. So Hard It Hurts

The Purity of the Turf is kind of a 'bucket list' moment for Ethan Iverson, who has always wanted to make a record with famous bassist Ron Carter. Iverson, pianist of the famous trio 'The Bad Plus', chose drummer Nasheet Waits to fill out the trio, because Waits represents the avant-garde as well as swing. Criss Cross records are level playing field, with everyone recording in the same studio in a single day: Thus the sporting title, 'The Purity of the Turf. ' The repertoire is mostly originals and jazz classics. A surprise highlight is the solo piano tribute to the late Paul Bley, 'So Hard it Hurts' by Annett Peacock. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Purity-Turf-Ethan-Iverson/dp/B01IAQC0I0

Personnel: Ethan Iverson – piano;  Ron Carter – bass;  Nasheet Waits – drums

The Purity Of The Turf