Sunday, December 11, 2016

Mary Mayo - Time Remembered

Size: 110,9 MB
Time: 46:58
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2000
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Ages Ago (2:31)
02. I Like The Likes Of You (2:49)
03. By The Way (2:00)
04. Good Little Girls (2:49)
05. The Love I Long For (2:37)
06. The Bad And The Beautiful (3:03)
07. If Someday Comes Ever Again (2:32)
08. Just A-Wearying For You (2:51)
09. Mah Lindy Lou (2:17)
10. Jeanie With The Light Brown Hair (3:12)
11. Taking A Chance On Love (2:07)
12. What Is There To Say (3:56)
13. The April Age (3:11)
14. Autumn In New York (3:18)
15. London In July (2:30)
16. April In Paris (3:29)
17. Time Remembered (1:38)

Mary Mayo was the co-creator of one of the most unique and compelling records to emerge from the space age pop era, 1963's Moon Gas -- a collaboration with keyboardist/arranger Dick Hyman and guitarist Vinnie Bell, the album is highlighted by Mayo's ethereal and enchanting wordless vocals, a performance suggesting that of a human Theremin in both its alien approach and its otherworldly beauty. According to the spaceagepop.com website, Mayo was born July 20, 1924, in Statesville, NC, making her professional debut on Charlotte station WWBT soon after World War II. She was soon hired by saxophonist Tex Beneke, then leading the postwar version of the Glenn Miller Orchestra -- while on tour with the group, Mayo met bassist and arranger Al Ham, who later became her husband. The couple settled in New York City, and while Ham worked as a producer for Columbia Records, Mayo raised their daughter Lorri while also contributing uncredited vocals to her husband's studio sessions. At various points during the 1950s she also fronted a vocal jazz group called the Manhattanaires alongside a pre-Nutty Squirrels Don Elliott and recorded a handful of solo singles for Columbia.

Dubbed "a glimpse at the possible sounds of the 22nd century" in the liner notes, Moon Gas was by far Mayo's most notable effort and remains much-prized by collectors of exotica and early electronic recordings, although she enjoyed her greatest commercial success thanks to Coca-Cola: when the advertising agency McCann Erickson hired Ham to assemble a wholesome folk group to record their jingle "I'd Like to Give the World a Coke," he tapped Mayo and their daughter Lorri to lead the studio chorus, and when the commercial proved a cultural phenomenon, the song was re-recorded under the title "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing," credited to the Hillside Singers. The Metromedia label subsequently released two full-length Hillside Singers LPs, including a Christmas recording, both featuring Mayo. In 1986 the label also issued Time Remembered, a collection of songs she cut for the NPR radio series American Popular Song nine years earlier. Unfortunately, Mayo did not live to see the album's release -- she died of cancer in December of 1985. ~by Jason Ankeny

Time Remembered

Chet Baker - Live In London

Size: 147,1+133,7 MB
Time: 63:43+57:51
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

CD 1:
01. Have You Met Miss Jones (Live) (13:11)
02. Beatrice (Live) (15:01)
03. For Minors Only (Live) (13:25)
04. The Touch Of Your Lips (Live) (13:58)
05. Margarine (Live) ( 8:06)

CD 2:
01. With A Song In My Heart (Live) ( 9:54)
02. Leaving (Live) (12:16)
03. I Remember You (Live) (10:42)
04. My Funny Valentine (Live) (12:25)
05. I'll Remember April (Live) (12:32)

A lifelong heroin habit might have wrecked the doomed-youth charisma of Chet Baker’s poster-boy looks, but his Miles Davis-inspired trumpet playing and eerily sepulchral crooning survived remarkably well until his death in 1988 at 58. These moving live takes are impressively cleaned up from a cassette recording made at Covent Garden’s Canteen five years earlier, with Baker accompanied by a supple and sensitive local trio led by elegant John Dankworth pianist John Horler. Baker’s flicked-off trumpet trills and whoops constantly stretch and squeeze the beat between his graceful long lines, his softly strangulated vocal pleas are haunting on The Touch of Your Lips, and his mix of dawdles and sprints over Tony Mann’s cymbal beatlight up With a Song in My Heart. My Funny Valentine, always a Baker showstopper, is full of unexpected melodic choices while the tune always feels implied within the spaces. The odd cassette pitch-quivers surface here and there, but Live in London remains a compelling tribute to a flawed but inimitable jazz one-off. ~by John Fordham

Live In London CD 1
Live In London CD 2

Inga Soder - Stream Carries

Size: 100,6 MB
Time: 41:27
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Stream Carries (4:38)
02. Trust Yourself (4:47)
03. Heal Me (4:13)
04. I Just Feel That You Love Me (5:28)
05. Home Is Near You (5:00)
06. Silence Of Soul (3:54)
07. Too Much Of My Heart (4:03)
08. Don't Want You To Go (4:06)
09. Falling In Love It Isn't Hard (5:14)

Personnel:
Bass, Guitar [Additional], Keyboards, Percussion – Ape Anttila
Cello – Juhana Ritakorpi
Drums – Ville Pynssi
Guitar – Matti Oja
Piano, Piano [Wurlitzer], Keyboards – Joonas Haavisto
Trumpet – Jukka Eskola
Viola – Susanna Nietula
Violin – Anne Somero, Lasse Joamets
Vocals – Inga Söder

Singer, songwriter and voice teacher, Inga Söder is from Rovaniemi, Finland. She is remembered, among other things, Tartu Mikkiin and 2013. The Voice of Finland programs. Inga has performed with a number of prominent artists and renowned orchestras.

Stream Carries

Florence K - Buena Vida En Concert

Size: 156,5 MB
Time: 66:54
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. All Apologies (3:20)
02. Mon Amour (4:07)
03. L'appuntamento (4:38)
04. De Profil (5:03)
05. Je Donnerais Tout (4:46)
06. Rideau De Fer (4:25)
07. La Mentira (4:38)
08. Carnaval (4:04)
09. Au Bal Des Excuses (4:12)
10. L'amour Au Noir (4:35)
11. Mon Dieu (4:42)
12. La Gueule Du Loup (4:46)
13. Love Me Or Leave Me (4:08)
14. Mi Buena Vida (4:42)
15. Que Nadie Sepa Mi Sufrir (4:42)

French jazz-pop chanteuse Florence K was born in Montreal in 1983 to guitarist/composer Hany Khoriaty and opera singer Natalie Choquette. After making her television debut at six, at 16 she toured behind her mother as a pianist, a year later playing her first solo gig. Florence K spent the next several years as the house pianist at Montreal's Stash Café, amassing an extensive repertoire of songs sung in French, English, Portuguese, and Spanish via infrequent leaves of absence to play limited residencies everywhere from Atlantic City to Casablanca to Hanoi. In 2005, Florence K issued her debut LP, Live au Lion d'Or, on her own Red Blues label. Bossa Blue followed in mid-2006. ~by Jason Ankeny

Buena Vida En Concert

Chris Hazelton's Boogaloo Seven - Soul Jazz Fridays

Size: 100,5 MB
Time: 40:24
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Soul, Hammond Organ
Art: Front

01. Hip Shaker (Live) (5:30)
02. Onsaya Joy (Live) (7:16)
03. Theme For Theo (Live) (6:35)
04. The Grand Avenue Get-Down (Live) (6:17)
05. Retlemecaf (Live) (7:00)
06. Suit & Tie (Live) (7:42)

Personnel:
Chris Hazelton - Hammond B-3 Organ
Nick Howell - Trumpet & Tambourine
Nick Rowland - Alto & Tenor Sax
Brett Jackson - Baritone Sax
Matt Hopper - Guitar
Danny Rojas - Drums
Pat Conway - Congas & Percussion

Hammond organist Chris Hazelton and his large-group Boogaloo 7 pay homage to greats such as Lonnie Smith, Jimmy McGriff, Grant Green, and Lou Donaldson with their groove-centered brand of jazz, all the while pushing the genre forward with exciting new and original music.

Soul Jazz Fridays

Lee Konitz - Jazz A Juan

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:07
Size: 117.0 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1974/1996
Art: Front

[ 9:13] 1. Antibes
[10:58] 2. What Is This Thing Called Love
[10:21] 3. 'Round About Midnight
[ 8:51] 4. A Weaver Of Dreams
[ 8:08] 5. The Song Is You
[ 3:33] 6. Autumn Leaves

The always open-minded altoist Lee Konitz teams up with the advanced pianist Martial Solal, bassist Niels Pedersen, and drummer Daniel Humair for this adventurous set, recorded live at the 1974 Antibes Jazz Festival. The quartet performs unpredictable and sometimes eccentric versions of five standards and a previously unissued rendition of Konitz's "Antibes." Solal, whose chord voicings and use of space are quite original, acts as an equal partner with Konitz and the music is often magical and never overly safe. Worth investigating. ~Scott Yanow

Jazz A Juan

Various - Capitol Sings Around The World: Far Away Places

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:01
Size: 132.8 MB
Styles: Vocal pop
Year: 1994
Art: Front

[2:31] 1. Nat King Cole - Around The World
[3:18] 2. Lena Horne - I Love Paris
[3:08] 3. The Andrews Sisters - Tulip Time
[2:18] 4. Vic Damone - The Moon Of Manakoora
[2:16] 5. Dakota Staton - A Foggy Day
[3:16] 6. Dean Martin - Canadian Sunset
[3:24] 7. Bing Crosby - New Vienna Woods
[2:39] 8. The Dinning Sisters - Brazil
[2:30] 9. Bobby Darin - Sunday In New York
[1:54] 10. Kay Starr - On A Slow Boat To China
[2:11] 11. Nancy Wilson - The Boy From Ipanema
[3:07] 12. Peggy Lee - Bali Ha'i
[2:47] 13. The Four Freshmen - Frenesi
[2:54] 14. Dinah Shore - April In Paris
[3:12] 15. The Andrews Sisters - The Japanese Sandman
[4:45] 16. Nat King Cole - A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square
[2:49] 17. June Christy - A Night In Tunisia
[2:39] 18. Dean Martin - Arrivederci Roma
[3:13] 19. Margaret Whiting - Far Away Places
[3:01] 20. The King Sisters - Aloha Oe (Hawaiian Farewell Song)

Capitol Sings Around The World: Far Away Places

Esther Phillips - And I Love Him

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:33
Size: 76.8 MB
Styles: R&B, Soul, Jazz vocals
Year: 1965/2005
Art: Front

[2:35] 1. And I Love Him
[2:23] 2. 'tis Autumn
[2:40] 3. Shangri-La
[2:48] 4. Moonglow Theme From Picnic
[2:46] 5. Out Of The Blue
[2:22] 6. People
[2:43] 7. Makin' Whoopee
[2:42] 8. The Girl From Ipanema
[2:55] 9. I Wish You Love
[3:27] 10. If You Love Me (Really Love Me)
[2:57] 11. It's Too Soon To Know
[3:09] 12. Make Believe Dreams

A collection of "great love songs," And I Love Him! leads with the title track, a Beatles cover and an R&B hit, featuring a soft yet tremendously effective performance from the great Esther Phillips. Elsewhere Phillips wears her Dinah Washington influences well, stretching out her voice and exercising it with a sly, nuanced delivery while tackling a few excellent choices for material: "Shangri-La," "Out of the Blue," and "I Wish You Love." Surprisingly, she also exhibits a sure hand with some odd crossovers like "Moonglow & Theme From Picnic," "People," and "Girl From Ipanema." The arrangements, by Ralph Ellis, are definitely geared toward adult pop, but fortunately they're never so ostentatious that they get in the way of Phillips' idiosyncratic voice and gorgeous performances. ~John Bush

And I Love Him

Pee Wee Hunt, Joe 'Fingers' Carr - Pee Wee Hunt Vs. Joe 'fingers' Carr

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:38
Size: 122.8 MB
Styles: Ragtime, Dixieland
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[2:07] 1. Somebody Stole My Gal
[2:02] 2. Five Foot Two Eyes Of Blue Has Anybody Seen My Girl
[1:59] 3. Meet Me Tonight At Milton's
[2:16] 4. Too Much Mustard
[1:49] 5. Peg O' My Heart
[3:17] 6. St. Louis Blues
[2:05] 7. Chicago
[2:20] 8. Entertainer's Rag
[1:58] 9. Easy Melody
[2:14] 10. Goofus Rag
[1:55] 11. Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone
[1:53] 12. Nobody's Sweetheart
[2:18] 13. Lassus Trombone
[2:57] 14. I Ain't Got Nobody
[2:04] 15. Red Hot Mama
[2:18] 16. How Come You Do Me Like You Do
[2:17] 17. Ida! Sweet As Apple Cider
[2:43] 18. Under The Double Eagle
[1:56] 19. The Varsity Drag
[2:11] 20. Parade Of The Wooden Soldiers
[2:17] 21. Spain
[2:39] 22. Tuck Me To Sleep In My Old 'tucky Home
[2:03] 23. Swingin' Around
[1:49] 24. When You're Smiling

In 1948, trombonist Pee Wee Hunt and his band were fooling around at a Capitol recording session. They performed a satirical version of "Twelfth Street Rag" that found them playing like amateur Dixielanders and renegades of 1921-style jazz. The Capitol executives were delighted, the performance was released, and to everyone's surprise, it became a major hit! Prior to that spontaneous performance, Hunt had been best-known for his long period with the Casa Loma Orchestra. His father had been a violinist and his mother a guitarist, so music was a natural part of his life. Hunt was actually a banjoist originally; he started playing when he was 17. Soon he was doubling on trombone and playing in local bands on both instruments before eventually dropping the banjo. He was with Jean Goldkette's Orchestra for a period in Kansas City (1927-1928 after the Bix Beiderbecke period), worked with the Hollywood Theatre Orchestra in Detroit, and then in 1929 became one of the founders of the Casa Loma Orchestra, which would eventually be taken over by Glen Gray. Hunt had occasional trombone solos and was probably most notable for his good-humored (and sometimes comedic) vocals. He remained with the Casa Loma Orchestra for 14 years until departing in May 1943 to settle in Los Angeles. Hunt was a disc jockey for a time in Hollywood, served with the U.S. Merchant Marine, and in 1946, formed his own Dixieland group. The success of "Twelfth Street Rag" resulted in the trombonist recording many more dates for Capitol (up until 1962) although no further hits resulted. Pee Wee Hunt remained active into the '70s.

While heavily influenced by Art Tatum, this performer was hardly considered a heavyweight pianist during his career. Born Louis F. Bush, or Busch depending on the source, the keyboard maestro who would also make heavy use of the stage name of Joe "Fingers" Carr managed to make it into Leonard Feather's Encyclopedia of Jazz, but with the following disclaimer: "A novelty performer rather than a jazz artist." The novelty itself was a kind of heavily sexed-up ragtime piano style that caught on in the very dawn of the hi-fi era. The invention was in sharp contrast to lounge music and would most likely have the opposite effect than a seduction if played in a bachelor pad. Carr began driving his piano this way while working as an A&R man for Capitol. In a brainstorm based on a sharp analysis of current trends, he decided to sign himself up as the mysterious "Fingers."

Dipping his fingers into a recording session from time to time, Carr was particularly effective providing an authentic instrumental ambience on the 1949 single entitled "Ragtime Cowboy Joe" by the duo of Jo Stafford and Paul Weston. The fact that this side became a big hit didn't help Carr's chances to convince his bosses of the commercial potential for an all-piano album in the same style. "Ivory Rag," the first single released from Carr's new series of recordings, turned into an international hit.

Pee Wee Hunt Vs. Joe 'fingers' Carr

Ted Brown - Shades of Brown

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:04
Size: 151,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:54)  1. After You've Gone
(5:48)  2. I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
(6:19)  3. Almost Like Being in Love
(6:31)  4. She's Funny That Way
(5:29)  5. Limehouse Blues
(5:00)  6. How Deep is the ocean
(4:36)  7. This can't be Love
(6:28)  8. Cherokee
(4:39)  9. Embraceable You
(5:31) 10. The Song is You
(4:46) 11. You go to my Head
(5:58) 12. I Found a new baby

Although nearing his 80th birthday by the time this early-2007 session was issued near the end of the same year, tenor saxophonist Ted Brown hasn't recorded extensively as a leader. A onetime student of Lennie Tristano, he mastered the pianist's intricate reworkings of standards, though he eventually returned to a more straight-ahead approach to his instrument, becoming a descendant of Lester Young's playing style. With support from guitarist Steve Lamattina (making one of his first appearances on a widely distributed jazz CD) and veteran bassist Dennis Irwin, Brown possesses a light tone and consistently swings in these cool performances, with the rhythm section also playing at a low volume level, making for a relaxing date. Yet, Brown is very much his own man and not a "repeating pencil" trying to re-create Young's work, much like Zoot Sims, Al Cohn, and other cool-toned saxophonists who paid their dues during the 1950s. There isn't a piece on the session that's less than a half-century old, but Brown and his mates make each of them sound fresh. "Cherokee," "This Can't Be Love," and "You Go to My Head" are just a few of the highlights of this rewarding CD. ~ Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/shades-of-brown-mw0000585361

Personnel:  Ted Brown (tenor sax);  Dennis Irwin (bass);  Steve Lamattina (guitar)

Shades of Brown

Malene Kjaergard- Happy Feet

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:57
Size: 90,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:36)  1. Temporary Love Affair
(3:38)  2. Give Me the Simple Life
(5:13)  3. Happy Feet
(3:57)  4. I'm Hip
(4:07)  5. After You've Gone
(2:52)  6. Skylark
(3:18)  7. Rhode Island Is Famous for You
(5:30)  8. There Should Be
(3:43)  9. Undecided

Jazz vocalist Malene Kjærgård was born in Copenhagen, but raised in the suburb of Kolding. Malene's childhood was filled with music, theater and arts of all kinds. In 2007 Malene moved back to Copenhagnen where she performs as a singer in many different collaborations. In november 2012 Malene got the 2. place in DPA's competition "Young Jazz Composer of the Year" with her composition "Temporary Love Affair". 

In april 2013 Malene's debut album "Happy Feet" was released at Calibrated Music. Songs from her CD are being played at the Danish National Radio Jazz Channel P8, and she was the 3rd most played artist in october 2013 with the song "Undecided" from her debut album. Malene is educated as Singer and Vocal Coach from Complete Vocal Institute in Copenhagen, she has studied acapella vocal improvisation in NY, Hawaii, Italy, Holland and Denmark and she teaches singing students on a daily basis. http://www.malenekjaergaard.com/biografi

Happy Feet

Martin Jacobsen - Current State

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 67:37
Size: 125,2 MB
Art: Front

(7:54)  1. Witchcraft
(4:10)  2. Backwater
(9:53)  3. Stairway
(8:46)  4. Forest Flower
(5:21)  5. This I Dig Of You
(7:15)  6. Everything I Love
(5:02)  7. Arrival
(7:58)  8. Polkadots And Moonbeams
(6:29)  9. Funk In Deep Freeze
(4:45) 10. Current State

Tenor saxophonist Martin Jacobsen certainly falls into the latter category, a young Danish man seeking his fortune in the niche market foothills that are today’s jazz scene. Like many saxophonists of his generation, Jacobsen admits to a strong Coltrane influence. Though his preferred vintage of Trane isn’t as common, drawing on the saxophonist’s lesser touted Prestige years for inspiration and guidance. The chosen songbook also reflects a deep interest in Fifties hard bop and incorporates a pair of Hank Mobley tunes along with a handful of standards that were favorites for blowing sessions back in the day. Jacobsen opts for only a pair of originals, preferring instead to pack the program with an assortment familiar and lesser-known vehicles by others. His own tunes, the hard swinging “Backwater” and the title track, show him to be a composer of promise. While it’s instructive to hear his interpretations of familiar standards, the presence of only a few of his own pieces leaves the program feeling somehow incomplete. Jacobsen’s colleagues evidence an equal affinity for this balance of blues and bop and guitarist Raney in particular fits beautifully as chief chordal foil. Frenchman Naturel and American Hollander achieve a relaxed, but propulsive rapport and effectively fuel the action. Raney’s lustrous comping frames Jacobsen’s dry cerulean lines on the opening entry “Witchcraft.” The guitarist’s own solo, steeped in bright fleshy single notes, is in turn accented by the steady rhythmic push of Naturel and Hollander. 

Naturel’s elastic arco approach recalls Paul Chambers in the swinging saw-tooth pitch of his tree-felling lines. Charles Lloyd’s “Forest Flower” receives a lengthy reading and the syncopated Latin melody matches Jacobsen’s plush warm tone exquisitely. Raney’s effusive comping weaves with Hollander’s syncopations to create a lush tropical backdrop. The surprise comes with Naturel’s early pizzicato solo, thick and ripe with a succulent fulsome groove. It’s a pleasing trick he repeats on Cole Porter’s “Everything I Love.” The two Mobley tunes, “The I Dig of You” and “Funk in Deep Freeze,” accentuate the quartet’s sterling bop credentials. The four men sound like their having a ball blowing through the blues-plentiful changes and Jacobsen echoes the spirit of the composer, but with a greater urgency and resiliency to his tone. Raney’s cleverly constructed solo on the latter piece is easily his finest of the date. By his astute choice of album titles Jacobsen seems well aware of what makes jazz a vital music. It’s the constant sense of growth and discovery, taking the old and making it new. While this is a fine debut, there’s little doubt that future endeavors will prove even more impressive as the both Jacobsen and the band continue to mature. ~ Derek Taylor https://www.allaboutjazz.com/current-state-martin-jacobsen-steeplechase-records-review-by-derek-taylor.php

Personnel: Martin Jacobsen- tenor saxophone; Doug Raney- guitar; Gilles Naturel- bass; Rick Hollander.

Current State