Sunday, October 30, 2016

Jon Eardley - From Hollywood to New York

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1955
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:31
Size: 93,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:01)  1. Late Leader
(5:29)  2. Indian Spring
(4:08)  3. Black
(4:38)  4. Gloss
(5:52)  5. Hey There
(4:38)  6. Demanton
(4:19)  7. Sid's Delight
(6:23)  8. If You Could See Me Now

Trumpeter Jon Eardley's first two sessions as a leader (he would only lead two others during the next 20 years) are combined on this reissue CD. A fine boppish player who mostly stuck to the middle register of his horn, Eardley would soon be joining Gerry Mulligan's group. He is heard on four selections heading a quartet with pianist Pete Jolly (who was just starting his career), bassist Red Mitchell, and drummer Larry Bunker, and on four other numbers with tenor saxophonist J.R. Monterose, pianist George Syran, bassist Teddy Kotick, and drummer Nick Stabulas. The music (five originals and three standards) is essentially cool-toned bop and was quite modern for the period. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/from-hollywood-to-new-york-mw0000690506

Personnel: Jon Eardley (trumpet); J.R. Montrose (tenor saxophone); Pete Jolly, George Syran (piano); Red Mitchell, Teddy Kotick (bass); Nick Stabulas (drums)

From Hollywood to New York

Pastorius, Metheny, Bley, Ditmas - Jaco

Styles: Jazz, Post-Bop, Fusion
Year: 1974
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:39
Size: 84,2 MB
Art: Front

(9:55)  1. Vashkar
(1:00)  2. Poconos
(6:28)  3. Donkey
(7:14)  4. Vampira
(1:04)  5. Overtoned
(3:45)  6. Jaco
(5:12)  7. Batterie
(0:28)  8. King Korn
(1:29)  9. Blood

Although listeners often think of Jaco Pastorius' first solo album as 1976's Jaco on Epic, producer/keyboardist Paul Bley actually gave Pastorius his first official chance at professional recording two years earlier. Coincidentally titled Jaco (originally titled Pastorious/Metheny/Ditmas/Bley), this spontaneous set is also significant for being among guitarist Pat Metheny's first recordings; completing the quartet are Bley on electric piano and drummer Bruce Ditmas. The music consists of three songs by Bley, five from Carla Bley, and "Blood" by Annette Peacock. Pastorius sounds quite powerful, but Metheny's tone is kind of bizarre, very distorted, and not at all distinctive at this point. The recording quality is a bit shaky throughout the electronic set, and the group does not quite live up to its potential, but Pastorius shows that he was already an innovative player, making this an LP of historic interest. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/jaco-mw0000759043

Personnel:  Drums – Bruce Ditmas;  Electric Bass – Jaco Pastorius;  Electric Guitar – Pat Metheny;  Electric Piano, Producer – Paul Bley

Jaco

Paul Bley, Charlie Haden, Paul Motion - Memoirs

Styles: Avant-Garde Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:54
Size: 163,6 MB
Art: Front

(9:50)  1. Memoirs
(7:56)  2. Monk's Dream
(4:19)  3. Dark Victory
(7:49)  4. Latin Genetics
(6:10)  5. This Is The Hour
(4:14)  6. Insanity
(9:45)  7. New Flame
(7:07)  8. Sting A Ring
(5:27)  9. Blues For Josh
(8:14) 10. Enough Is Enough

Memoirs serves as a tidy summation of Paul Bley's gifts as an individual and musical conversationalist. It helps that he converses with old friends. Paul Motian is, roughly, to the drums what Bley is to the piano, capable of sculpting icy, paradoxical emotions; on moment's notice, they can venture "out" where tonal centers and rhythmic pulses are not invited. And there, always, is the fundamental Charlie Haden, who demonstrates how a few well-placed notes and well-observed silences can lock a group texture into place. ~ Josef Woodard http://www.allmusic.com/album/memoirs-mw0000094281

Personnel:  Bass – Charlie Haden;  Drums – Paul Motian;  Piano – Paul Bley

Memoirs

Marquis Hill - The Way We Play

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:02
Size: 106,0 MB
Art: Front

(1:47)  1. Welcome / Sirius (Bull’s Theme)
(6:14)  2. Medley: The Way We Play / Minority
(0:37)  3. Prelude
(5:33)  4. Moon Rays
(4:32)  5. My Foolish Heart
(2:05)  6. Polka Dots and Moonbeams
(5:53)  7. Fly Little Bird Fly
(3:32)  8. Maiden Voyage
(3:48)  9. Straight, No Chaser
(5:58) 10. Beep Durple
(0:36) 11. Juan's Interlude
(5:22) 12. Smile

Prior to winning the Thelonious Monk Institute's International Jazz Competition in 2014, trumpeter Marquis Hill was already a formidable presence on the Chicago jazz scene. An adroit improviser and educator, Hill had taken home several accolades, including his first place win in the 2013 Carmine Caruso International Jazz Trumpet Solo Competition. His Monk Institute performance merely cemented the notion that Hill was a jazz artist who'd arrived. As part of his prize for winning the Monk contest, he earned a record deal with the Concord label, and 2016's The Way We Play is the result. While the album is certainly a showcase for Hill's fluid talents as an improvisor, it also works to showcase his skills as a bandleader. As with his 2014 effort, Modern Flows EP, Vol. 1, The Way We Play finds Hill leading his Blacktet, a group of longtime collaborators including saxophonist Christopher McBride, vibraphonist Justin Thomas, drummer Makaya McCraven, and bassist Joshua Ramos. Thoughtfully organic and rife with a groove-oriented, hip-hop-informed style, the Blacktet is at once contemporary and steeped in modern jazz tradition. Essentially, Hill balances both of these strengths on The Way We Play, largely touching upon songs from the jazz canon re-arranged in his own fluid, soulfully articulated style. As if to playfully underline his Chicago spirit, Hill also re-creates the Chicago Bulls game-opening theme replete with vocalist Meagan McNeal introducing his band. He then moves through a set of well-curated covers including a sophisticated version of "My Foolish Heart," featuring vocalist Christie Dashiell and a kinetic take on Horace Silver's "Moon Rays," in which McCraven plays a frenzied drum style reminiscent of electronic drum and bass beats.

Hill is a dynamic performer whose trumpet can be hushed and breathy one minute, and boldly clarion the next. Aesthetically, while he fits into the Freddie Hubbard mold with flashes of Wynton Marsalis and Clifford Brown, he's also a deeply rooted trumpeter with an array of influences, demonstrated here by his Afro-Cuban take on Donald Byrd's "Fly Little Bird Fly" and his choice to tackle Carmell Jones' knotty "Beep Durple." His technique can dazzle, as evidenced by his lithe squealing-at-the-clouds solo on Thelonious Monk's "Straight, No Chaser." However, he's also a canny romantic whose supple, burnished tone can pull you deeper into a melody as he does on his largely rubato take on the ballad "Polkadots and Moonbeams." Elsewhere, he delivers a languid take on fellow Chicagoan Herbie Hancock's "Maiden Voyage," and even makes room for incisive social commentary via a spoken word poem from writer Harold Green III on "The Way We Play/Minority." Ultimately, The Way We Play illustrates Hill's award-winning sound, a sound that should appeal broadly to listeners hungry for a stylish, subtly forward-thinking approach to post-bop jazz, and to those who simply enjoy a warmly delivered standard. ~ Matt Collar http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-way-we-play-mw0002946301

Personnel: Marquis Hill (trumpet, flugelhorn); Meagan McNeal, Christie Dashiell (vocals); Christopher McBride (alto saxophone); Vincent Gardner (trombone); Justin "Justefan" Thomas (vibraphone); Makaya McCraven (drums); Juan Pastor (percussion).

The Way We Play

Jill Johnson - For You I’ll Wait

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:02
Size: 104,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:58)  1. I Will Never Let You Know
(4:52)  2. It Don't Change a Thing
(3:08)  3. Again
(3:50)  4. When It Pours It Rains
(3:39)  5. Gotta Love Me More
(3:26)  6. Love Is Good At Breaking Hearts
(4:39)  7. Could You Stay the Night
(4:52)  8. Till You're Gone
(4:50)  9. For You I'll Wait
(3:15) 10. Given Up
(4:28) 11. The Night I Cry

It’s been four years since Jill Johnson released a record with her own material, and finally her much anticipated album “For You I’ll Wait” is now being released! The music was written during a week in April in Nashville and Austin  a week when the songs came as a flood. The result is “For You I’ll Wait”, an album containing 11 tracks with a delicate sound and intimate lyrics revealing who Jill is today. “It should chafe, there should be brittleness and it should be felt! It is a feeling that became even more apparent after my collaboration with Gabriel Kelley. The meeting with him in the TV series “Jill’s Veranda” in Nashville affected me quite profoundly. I felt at once that I wanted to make music with him and I think that he brought me to a darker, deeper sound with more heart and soul,” explains Jill.  On ”For You I’ll Wait”, Jill has worked with some of USA:s most outstanding song-writers and as well as Garbriel Kelley, was of course, Liz Rose, a close friend of Jill who’s a several time Grammy-nominee and even award winning, Nathan Chapman, Kate York and Lori McKenna.

“It sounds almost silly when you say that you’ve written that much music over just a few days, but that’s exactly what happened. I really opened up and we wrote around the clock which produced results. I was completely at a standstill when I got home but simultaneously felt quite elated”, says Jill. The theme for the whole album is more or less about life, love and also about that which we all know, that a person should first and foremost love and respect herself  in order to love and respect others. This time, Jill has taken on the role of co-producer together with her good friend and producer of many years, Amir Aly. The whole album was recorded together with Jill’s musicians whom have played with her for a number of years, contributing to the overall self-assured sound.

“I’ve always known how I want to sound on record, but have never had the patience to produce my music to the full. My writing has developed over the years, lyrics have become more personal and with that the interest has grown to create frameworks. Since I started to play the guitar a few years ago, a new ear for how others play has developed and it’s great to try out new things and dress up the music in different costumes. Amir Aly is the most talented producer I’ve worked with. He’s a fantastic musician, has the technical knowledge and has the patience of an angel in order to immerse me in the process and guide me in my search for the perfect sound. Producing this record with Amir has meant lots of laughter, tears and learning. Music, when it’s most enjoyable”, says Jill. ”I really look forward to the tour which will be the first for a long time with completely new material”, says Jill. ”I love concert halls as a performing space, that give the audience the chance to really listen and me to get closer to them”, concludes Jill. http://jilljohnson.se/en/jill-johnson-for-you-ill-wait/

For You I’ll Wait