Saturday, October 29, 2016

Chet Baker and Paul Bley - Diane

Styles: Trumpet And Piano Jazz 
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:41
Size: 120,0 MB
Art: Front

( 7:16)  1. If I Should Lose You
( 7:01)  2. You Go To My Head
( 5:19)  3. How Deep Is The Ocean
( 3:56)  4. Pent-Up House
( 7:54)  5. Every Time We Say Good Bye
( 5:32)  6. Diane
( 4:15)  7. Skidadidlin'
(10:24)  8. Little Girl Blue

Chet Baker recorded at every opportunity during the last decade or so of his tragic life, with widely varying results due to his drug addiction. But this surprising duo session with pianist Paul Bley is one of his better efforts from this period, focusing primarily on standard ballads by top composers. Bley's playing in the mid-'80s usually was freer in nature, but he willingly plays more mainstream backing for the trumpeter. Baker's tone adds to the poignant air in a rather deliberate interpretation of "If I Should Lose You," with Bley playing beautiful, sparse chords behind him. The duo gels nicely in a midtempo setting of Sonny Rollins' "Pent-Up House," while Baker's "Skidadidlin'" is a low key, bluesy number. Baker sings "You Go to My Head" in a thoughtful manner. First issued on LP, the CD edition added a warm extended performance of Richard Rodgers' "Little Girl Blue" that obviously was omitted at first only due to time restrictions. ~ Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/diane-chet-baker-and-paul-bley-mw0000193195

Personnel:  Piano – Paul Bley;  Trumpet – Chet Baker;  Vocals – Chet Baker (tracks: 2)

Diane

Linda Purl - Midnight Caravan

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:12
Size: 127,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:01)  1. I Feel a Song Coming On
(3:11)  2. Let Me Love You
(6:05)  3. Autumn in New York
(2:37)  4. Them There Eyes
(3:50)  5. L'etang
(4:00)  6. I Thought About You
(4:05)  7. Oh Me, Oh My / Cheerful Little Earful
(4:52)  8. Easy Living
(3:13)  9. Shall We Dance?
(3:21) 10. My Ship
(3:06) 11. Spring Again
(3:42) 12. Caravan
(3:51) 13. My Romance
(2:19) 14. It's a Pity to Say Goodnight
(2:51) 15. 'Tis Autumn

From Feinstein s at the Regency, Linda Purl salutes the great women of the 40s and 50s, from Ella Fitzgerald to Rosemary Clooney!  Straight from New York s Feinstein s at the Regency, Midnight Caravan salutes the great female singing stars of the 1940s and 1950s, from Ella Fitzgerald to Judy Garland to Rosemary Clooney! From sultry ballads to hot Latin jazz arrangements of Broadway tunes, the show features classic standards like My Romance, Shall We Dance, and Caravan, conjuring a nighttime Mad Men -esque world where the surroundings are posh, the drinks keep flowing, and nobody goes to bed before three! Linda Purl, best known from her long reign on television in such classics as Matlock and Happy Days and more recently of The Office, True Blood, and Homeland comes out of the box to glimmer as a true jazz chanteuse. Along with hip and masterful arranger/pianist Tedd Firth, she makes us rediscover what we loved about the great NY nightclub era, all over again! ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Midnight-Caravan-Linda-Purl/dp/B00BIUOLM4

An act that literally takes your breath away... she has an impressive range, perfect intonation, and awesome phrasing ... discovering this kind of beauty and talent ... is like seeing a unicorn in a subway. ~ Rex Reed, NEW YORK OBSERVER

Beautiful, sensuous Purl ... a sultry nightclub star with a show that combines intimate stories, humor, and delicious song styling. ~ LA Weekly

A true American sweetheart ... riveting. ~ LA Times

Midnight Caravan

Nicholas Payton - Sketches Of Spain

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:56
Size: 94,8 MB
Art: Front

(15:40) 1. Concierto De Aranjuez
( 3:25)  2. Will O' The Wisp
( 4:11)  3. The Pan Piper
( 4:50)  4. Saeta
(12:48) 5. Solea

Yes...You read it correctly, Sketches of Spain is perhaps the embodiment of everything that is artistically brilliant about a trumpet player that until now has never realized his complete potential. The 1960 release from Miles Davis is reworked as a live concert with a 19 piece orchestra and includes long time running mates Vincente Archer on bass, Marcus Gilmore on drums and Daniel Sadownick on percussion. What makes the Payton "riff" on Miles work? Payton does what Payton does best, he plays trumpet. While I have remained one of a handful of writers that has never chosen to worship at the self indulgent alter of either Miles or Nicholas Payton, Sketches of Spain has never sounded better and Payton's performance is superb. You have no idea how bad it hurts to admit that. What makes this Payton recording special is the amazing ability to take everything that is #BAM and place it on the back burner in favor of simply performing a musical exploratory on one of the greatest selling albums in modern music...and the key word being music not #BAM. While a visceral artist from the word go, Payton does an amazing cerebral take on perhaps where this music could have gone and perhaps where it can go in the future.  There is little need to break down the work into pseudo intellectual bits and pieces as only Payton knows his true artistic intent but to the passive listener this is truly old school made new cool once again. Nicholas Payton and I have had our ups and downs, mostly downs. After the smoldering wreckage over the misogynistic disaster that was "Bitches" we find Payton back in his own wheelhouse, doing it his way and at an incredibly proficient level. Love him or hate him you got to give it to him. 
~ Brent Black http://www.criticaljazz.com/2013/11/nicholas-payton-sketches-of-spain-bfm.html 

Personnel: Nicholas Payton (trumpet); Aurelie Noll (harp); Stéphane Réty, Nikita Cardinaux, Rahel Leuenberger , Marc Lachat, Benedikt Shobel, Andreas Ferraino (woodwinds); Marc Ullrich , Marc Hood, Manuela Fuchs, Immanuel Richter (trumpet); Jean-Francois Taillard, Pascal Deuber, Henryk Kalinsky (French horn); George Monch (tuba); Marcus Gilmore (drums); Daniel Sadownick, Szilard Buti (percussion).

Sketches Of Spain

Erroll Garner - Ready Take One

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:02
Size: 152,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:47)  1. High Wire
(3:00)  2. I Want to Be Happy
(5:03)  3. I'm Confessin' (That I Love You)
(3:19)  4. Sunny
(5:07)  5. Wild Music
(6:23)  6. Caravan
(5:25)  7. Back to You
(4:25)  8. Night and Day
(2:57)  9. Chase Me
(5:52) 10. Satin Doll
(5:27) 11. Latin Digs
(4:50) 12. Stella By Starlight
(5:29) 13. Down Wylie Avenue
(4:52) 14. Misty

During his lifetime, Erroll Garner was a somewhat controversial figure with jazz aficionados. The main knock was that he was a technical master of the piano with plenty of flair and piano-bar panache, but not enough soul and swing to be a jazz heavyweight. Despite the bickering among jazz critics, Garner (who died in 1977) did not have trouble filling performance spaces or selling albums, but his place in the public ear waned after his death. His live Concert by the Sea remains one of the best-selling jazz albums ever, and received a deluxe 3-CD reissue (and was nominated for a Grammy) last year. Now, Sony/Legacy has dipped into the archives of Garner’s late manager, Martha Glaser, and found 14 finished but never released recordings, the content of this new album. Ready Take One is composed of recordings made in 1967 at Universal Recording Studios in Chicago; in 1969 at Capitol Studios New York; and in 1971 at RCA Studios New York. The album closes with a live version of Garner’s hit, “Misty,” recorded in Paris in May 1969. For the 1967 sessions, Ike Isaacs on bass, Jimmie Smith on drums and Joe Mangual on congas backed Garner. For the 1969 and 1971 studio and live recordings, Earnest McCarty, Jr. replaced Isaacs on bass. The fact that the band and style of playing remains consistent throughout makes the album hold together as a coherent sequence of enjoyable tunes rather than an “archive dig” of disjointed musical examples.

According to Robin Kelly’s liner notes, Garner’s style in the studio was much like his style on stage with his band: he would call out a tune and then go, with the band responsible for keeping up with whatever improvisational twists he chose to explore. Fortunately, the backing musicians were up for the challenge, and the recordings sparkle with the excitement of a quartet doing what good jazz musicians do exploring and reacting to each other rather than playing heavily-rehearsed and written-down music. And, for the record, although all of the players are technically excellent, the album gushes with swing and soul. One admittedly minor criticism: although the liner notes emphasize the fact that the reissue producers chose to keep audio of Glaser calling out take numbers and a few seconds of studio banter here and there, this “bonus material” does not add anything to the music. In fact, it slightly interrupts the flow of the album. Six of the album’s 14 cuts are Garner originals; “High Wire” and “Wild Music” are particularly nice. The Paris recording of “Misty” also stands out because, despite playing the song thousands of times to ever-eager audiences, Garner could still bring excitement and a connection of “I’m playing this song just for you” to what was yet another performance. Also interesting is the band’s take on the Juan Tizol/Duke Ellington standard “Caravan.” Garner’s decision to take the melody apart and reassemble pieces of it on unusual beats doesn’t always work, but the approach shows how the band was not content to run through standards in any sort of traditional way. The 1971 sessions, especially, show the influence of funk and acid-jazz on more traditional performers. Garner sometimes sounds quite a bit like Ramsey Lewis (“The In Crowd”), and that more-soul/less-swing approach was probably preferred by live audiences of the time. But, Garner never shies away from virtuosity, so there is always crisp execution of complex right-hand runs and rock-solid left-hand rhythm. Sony/Legacy has an arrangement to mine the archives of Garner and Glaser, and more releases are promised. Hopefully, there is more of this kind of polished music in the vaults. And, hopefully, future reissues producers will assemble and sequence future releases into enjoyable, musically coherent albums like Ready Take One. ~ Tom Fine http://blackgrooves.org/erroll-garner-ready-take-one/

Personnel:  Erroll Garner (p) / Jimmie Smith (d) / Ernest McCarter Jr. (b) / Jose Magual (perc)

Ready Take One