Friday, June 30, 2017

Johnny Hodges Septet - Blues-A-Plenty

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:11
Size: 96.6 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1958/2014
Art: Front

[3:32] 1. I Didn't Know About You
[3:36] 2. Cool Your Motor
[3:18] 3. Gone With The Wind
[4:02] 4. Honey Hill
[3:23] 5. Blues-A-Plenty
[3:40] 6. Don't Take Your Love From Me
[5:59] 7. Saturday Afternoon
[5:01] 8. Satin Doll
[9:36] 9. Reeling And Rocking

This record, which I played tonight, is masterful. If you're putting on a Johnny Hodges record, you likely know what you're hoping to hear; that Johnny Hodges sound; the cry and the wail and the strut. And here, he is in full command, effortlessly swinging in a laid-back, whiskey-soaked haze, surrounded by giants like Ben Webster, Roy Eldridge, Billy Strayhorn and Jimmy Woode. It's precisely what you hoped for. A giant sound from a small combo - big blues for broken hearts.

No, they don't break new ground but that's not the point. In the notes on the back of the record, critic Benny Green writes: "...although jazz certainly evolves, its individuals do not, in the sense that once a musician has acquired the nuances of his own generation, they are his for the rest of his life, whether he wants them or not." I don't know that that's true; but for this album the expectations are met and exceeded in the execution and for that, it's more than comforting, it's exhilarating. ~Bink Figgins

Blues-A-Plenty

Jurandir Santana - Um Segundo

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:37
Size: 97.5 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz, Brazilian rhythms
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[6:01] 1. Pra Rosa
[3:31] 2. So What
[4:00] 3. Por Um Dia
[5:00] 4. A Minha Cara
[4:22] 5. Chorando De Brincadeira
[5:52] 6. Pro Donato
[4:28] 7. Esperança De Um Menino
[4:42] 8. Noturna
[4:36] 9. É Assim Que Eu Gosto

Jurandir Santana is considered one of the greatest guitarists from Brazil with a unique style, has been dedicated to the research of the complexity of brazilian music. His identification with music began at the age of 10. Today, Jurandir Santana has a respected curriculum, worked with big names of brazilian artists and worldwide music like as Gilberto Gil, Gal costa, Rosa Passos, Daniela Mercury, Jaques Morelenbaum, Seamus Blake Xangai, Toninho Horta, Fabiana Cozza, Mariene de Castro, Fredrik Nooren, Armandinho Macedo, Arthur Maia, Nico Assunção, Gabriel Grossi, Nelson Veras, Marcio Montarroyos, Nelson Ayres, Chico Pinheiro e Filó Machado. As like a teacher was invited to made workshops in Berklee College of Music(USA) , Western Illinois University (USA).

in 2006 Jurandir Santana released his debut album ” Só Brasil “ Maritaca label ( São Paulo ) – A work that is the result of years of research that comes with a new sound with discovering new nuances of brazilian music. One of tracks on the CD is Cravo e Canela his version to the success of Milton Nascimento and Ronaldo Bastos. like most tracks CD Only Brazil, filled with references to Bahia musicality, invites us to know the richness of brazilian rhythms such as frevo, maracatu, chula, samba de roda and Ijexá°. Giving special emphasis to the rich variety of the northeastern sound, where the artist incorporates his jazz design acquired throughout his brilliant career. This work has special guests such as Nelson Ayres, Teco Cardoso, Joana Bocanera, Simone Mota and Damares Martins. Won the Braskem prize as like as better jazz cd of Bahia.

Now Jurandir release his recent album ‚ Um Segundo‚ by Temps Record label (Barcelona). Elegance and precision still present in this new disc. Jurandir Santana has been slowly creating a highly personal style, as seen in the nine musics in CD. Seven musics are unedited, not just in the arrangements and sonic textures, but in striking contrast in acoustic guitar with traditional instruments to which it has bring a new life, as the viola caipira, from Brazil, or the Canary timple. More than ever, Jurandir Santana is presented as an explorer of new sounds that closer itself, with populated and alive, full songs signs here and there, which are an echo of several sound that manages to catch the worlds, as one who is able to reach a wind.This work has special guests such as Seamus Blake, Childo Tomas, Carola Ortiz, Joana Bocanera e Denise de Macêdo.

Musician recognized in the brazilian market and a solid musical career, Jurandir Santana has achieved a well-deserved place in the international market. His work as a accredits the prestigious musician in Europe and USA.

Um Segundo

Shirley Horn - Violets For Your Furs

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:54
Size: 105.1 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 1991/2014
Art: Front

[ 3:24] 1. Our Love Is Here To Stay
[ 7:24] 2. Georgia On My My Mind
[ 3:40] 3. Gee Baby Ain't I Good To You
[ 5:16] 4. Lover Man
[ 4:55] 5. Violets For Your Furs
[ 4:13] 6. Baby Won't You Please Come Home
[10:16] 7. My Man
[ 4:17] 8. More Than You Know
[ 2:24] 9. I Didn't Know What Time It Was

Six years before she signed with Verve and finally became a big name, Shirley Horn already sounded quite mature and fully developed on this live trio date. Recorded at the 1981 Northsea Jazz Festival with bassist Charles Ables and drummer Billy Hart, the pianist/vocalist performs nine familiar standards, including versions of "More Than You Know" and "I Didn't Know What Time It Was" that did not come out until the 1991 CD reissue. The emphasis, as usual, is on ballads, including "Gee Baby Ain't I Good to You," "Baby Won't You Please Come Home" and the title cut. This lesser-known set is up to the same level as Shirley Horn's best-selling Verve sets. Recommended. ~Scott Yanow

Violets For Your Furs

Joe Pass - The Best Of Joe Pass

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:19
Size: 99.2 MB
Styles: Bop, Guitar jazz
Year: 1983/1991
Art: Front

[5:29] 1. A Foxy Chick And A Coolcat
[4:56] 2. How High The Moon
[2:57] 3. What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life
[6:55] 4. Que Que Ha
[4:09] 5. Summertime
[5:24] 6. Blues For Alican
[5:48] 7. Satin Doll
[7:38] 8. On Green Dolphin Street

This CD is a collection of selections from other albums that guitar virtuoso Joe Pass recorded over the years. What one person considers "best of" may be very different from what another person considers "best of". The sound quality varies from one cut to the next, including a little acoustic feedback, but they are all acceptable. Joe plays a number of different types of guitar on this album, including electric guitar, gut string guitar (acoustic), and what the liner notes refer to as an acoustic guitar, but it sounds like an amplified acoustic guitar. I was hoping for better than what is presented on this CD. I certainly remember better performances from Joe Pass on the old LP's that I used to listen to. This is not the best of Joe Pass. This album contains some covers of jazz standards and other tunes, and leaves a lot to be desired. ~Daniel M. Hart

The Best Of Joe Pass

Nancy Reed - Young At Heart

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:10
Size: 147,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:00)  1. Young At Heart
(3:31)  2. Cappucino Kisses
(4:13)  3. The Midnight Of Our Love
(2:38)  4. I Like Everything
(4:55)  5. Stars Fell On Alabama
(2:18)  6. Thats The Call Of The South
(4:45)  7. Bittersweet Waltz (Featuring Rick Krive)
(4:35)  8. After All Of These Years
(3:38)  9. Dancin'
(4:00) 10. Mother
(3:35) 11. As Good As It Gets
(3:20) 12. Please Be Kind
(3:28) 13. The Devil Is Afraid Of Music
(2:57) 14. Casablanca
(6:51) 15. Please Don't Play A Bossa Nova
(4:16) 16. At Any Given Moment

Singer Nancy Reed has good musical genes. Her father was a jazz pianist and her mother an opera singer. Her first professional gig was at the age of 19 recording at the A& R studios in N.Y.C.. Over the years, she has performed at jazz festivals and concerts with such luminaries as Phil Woods, Slide Hampton, and David "Fathead" Newman. 1993 saw Reed working with singer Stephanie Nakasian on Nakasian's album Bitter Sweet. In 1996, Reed was on Bob Dorough's CD, This Is a Recording. In the same year, she recorded with her husband-guitarist, Spencer Reed, leading to the aptly named CD, Together. She joined the David Leonhardt Jazz Group in 1997 and she tours regularly with them throughout the United States. Their maiden album, A Time for Love, was released in 1998 and a second album, released in May of 1999, is devoted to music for tap dancing, called Swingin' Tappin' and Jammin'. Like the singers she cites as major influences, Sarah Vaughan and Shirley Horn, Reed's voice is defined by its lovely tone and excellent pitch. She can swing and sing ballads with equal aplomb. Reed is a regular performer at venues throughout the Poconos in Pennsylvania, as well in Mexico and Japan. ~ Dave Nathan http://www.allmusic.com/artist/nancy-reed-mn0000366406/biograph

Young At Heart

Gigi Gryce Orch-tette - Reminiscin'

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1960
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:09
Size: 77,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:25)  1. Blue Light
(4:26)  2. Caravan
(4:00)  3. Reminiscing
(4:46)  4. Yesterdays
(3:21)  5. Gee Blues Gee
(5:13)  6. A Night In Tunisia
(4:20)  7. Dearly Beloved
(3:35)  8. Take The ''A'' Train

Gigi Gryce was a fine altoist in the 1950s, but it was his writing skills (including composing the standard "Minority") that were considered most notable. After growing up in Hartford, CT, and studying at the Boston Conservatory and in Paris, Gryce worked in New York with Max Roach, Tadd Dameron, and Clifford Brown. He toured Europe in 1953 with Lionel Hampton and led several sessions in France. After freelancing in 1954 (including recording with Thelonious Monk), Gryce worked with Oscar Pettiford's groups (1955-1957) and led the Jazz Lab Quintet (1955-1958), a band featuring Donald Byrd. He had a quintet with Richard Williams during 1959-1961, but then stopped playing altogether to become a teacher. During his short career, Gigi Gryce recorded as a leader for Vogue (many of the releases have been issued domestically on Prestige), Savoy, Metrojazz, New Jazz, and Mercury. ~ Scott Yanow https://itunes.apple.com/ca/album/reminiscin-orch-tette/id590705894

Personnel:  Alto Saxophone – Gigi Gryce;  Bass – George Duvivier , Julian Euell , Reginald Workman;  Drums – Bob Thomas,Walter Perkins;  Piano – Richard Wyands;  Trumpet – Richard Williams;  Vibraphone – Eddie Costa

Reminiscin'

Bert Kaempfert - Blue Midnight

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:29
Size: 89,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:16)  1. Blue Midnight
(2:07)  2. Love
(2:22)  3. Red Roses For A Blue Lady
(1:55)  4. Java
(3:01)  5. Almost There
(2:59)  6. Lonely Nightingale
(2:08)  7. Cotton Candy
(2:36)  8. Three O'Clock In The Morning
(2:23)  9. Free As A Bird
(2:57) 10. Love Comes But Once
(2:15) 11. Treat For Trumpet
(2:23) 12. Goodnight Sweet Dreams

Bert Kaempfert had almost too much talent, ability, and good luck rolled into one career to be fully appreciated, even by his own chosen audience, the lovers of fine orchestral pop music. He was one of the most successful conductors, arrangers, and recording artists in the latter field, but was also a major producer and played a key (if indirect) role in the roots of the British beat boom of the early '60s, which evolved into the British Invasion of America in 1964. Berthold Kaempfert was born in Barmbek, a working-class section of Hamburg, Germany, in 1923. He was musically inclined as a boy, and found that interest indulged by an act of fate when he was six years old Kaempfert was injured in a car accident and his mother used the money from the settlement to buy him a piano. He became proficient at the keyboard, and also on the clarinet and saxophone, among other instruments. He studied at the Hamburg Conservatory and although he was interested in all facets of music, Kaempfert was particularly taken with American-style big-band music of the late '30s and early '40s his multi-instrumental skills made him a potentially valuable commodity, and he was recruited into a pop orchestra run by Hans Bussch while in his teens, but was later drafted and served as a bandsman in the German navy, before being captured and interned as an Allied prisoner.He founded a band of his own and later toured American military installations in Germany, at last able to play his favorite kind of music. Returning to his native Hamburg, he began performing on British Forces Network radio and writing compositions, initially using the alias of Mark Bones. Kaempfert's reputation in Hamburg attracted the attention of Polydor Records, which hired him as an arranger, producer, and music director during the second half of the 1950s. Among the talent that he brought to the company's roster was the Yugoslav pop artist Ivo Robic, who chalked up an international hit (Top 20 in America), and Viennese singer/guitarist/actor Freddy Quinn, who had a German hit with "Die Gittarre und das Meer." His own orchestra generated such hits as "Catalania," "Ducky," "Las Vegas," and "Explorer," but he had bolder, more ambitious music in mind. He arranged, produced, and recorded an instrumental entitled "Wonderland by Night," which was pretty enough but couldn't seem to get a hearing in Germany, even from his own company. Instead, Kaempfert and his wife brought the track to Milt Gabler, the legendary producer at Decca Records in New York, who arranged for its release in America in 1959; with its haunting solo trumpet, muted brass, and lush strings, the single topped the American pop charts and turned Bert Kaempfert & His Orchestra into international stars. Over the next few years, he revived such pop tunes as "Tenderly," "Red Roses for a Blue Lady," "Three O'Clock in the Morning," and "Bye Bye Blues," bringing them all high onto the pop charts internationally, as well as composing pieces of his own, including "Spanish Eyes (Moon Over Naples)," "Danke Schoen," and "Wooden Heart," which were recorded by, respectively, Al Martino, Wayne Newton, and Elvis Presley (with Joe Dowell charting the hit single of "Wooden Heart"); for an old American jazz fan like Kaempfert, however, little may have brought him more personal satisfaction than Nat King Cole recording his "L-O-V-E."

At the turn of the decade into the 1960s, Kaempfert was still busily at work in his duties as a producer. He was well aware that a new generation of listeners had come along, whose interests lay far from the beautifully crafted instrumental music that he favored, which was an outgrowth of the pop sides of such '40s artists as Tommy Dorsey, Harry James, and Glenn Miller they preferred music drawn from country and R&B sources. He had signed a Liverpool-based singer named Tony Sheridan, who was performing in Hamburg, and needed to recruit a band to play behind him on the proposed sides he auditioned and signed a quartet from Liverpool called the Beatles, and even cut a couple of interesting sides of theirs, "Ain't She Sweet" (sung by rhythm guitarist John Lennon) and the instrumental "Cry for a Shadow" (co-authored by Lennon and lead guitarist George Harrison) during his sessions for Sheridan; with its pounding beat and raw singing, the former wasn't Kaempfert's kind of music, but "Cry for a Shadow," with its rich melodic line and sonorous guitar, was perhaps as close as this new music ever came to his own. The Beatles' own sides didn't emerge until a couple of years later, when events made it economically feasible to do so, but Kaempfert's recording of the Beatles, even as a backing band for Sheridan, proved a vital catalyst to their entire subsequent success. Stylistically, none of the Kaempfert-recorded sides closely resembled the music for which they became famous, and had their path to being signed by George Martin at Parlophone Records resulted from, say, their being heard in a performance, those Hamburg-recorded sides would rate nothing more than a footnote in their history but those Polydor sides cut by Kaempfert played an essential role in their story. As Beatles biographer Philip Norman recalled in his book Shout!, on October 28, 1961, an 18-year-old printer's apprentice named Raymond Jones walked into the music store owned by Brian Epstein to ask for a copy of "My Bonnie," recorded by the Beatles (though it was actually credited to Tony Sheridan); the store didn't have it, but Epstein noted the request and was so intrigued by the idea of a Liverpool band getting a record of its own out that he followed up on it personally. Thus began a chain of events that led to his discovery of the Beatles and, through his effort, their signing by George Martin to Parlophone Records (they first had to get clear of any contractual claim by Polydor).

Kaempfert had become so successful as a recording artist that he was forced to give up his duties as a producer his records were selling by the hundreds of thousands, the album of Wonderland by Night even topping the American charts for five weeks in 1961. By 1965, he'd joined the ranks of film music composers with the soundtrack to a movie entitled A Man Could Get Killed the title song from the movie became "Strangers in the Night," which Frank Sinatra propelled to the top of the American and British charts. He followed this up a year later with another hit for Sinatra, "The World We Knew (Over and Over)." For Kaempfert, whose admiration of American music began with the big-band pop sound whence Sinatra had begun his career, those hits must have represented a deep personal triumph, transcending whatever money they earned indeed, he was selling records during the early '60s in the kind of quantities that rivaled Tommy Dorsey or Harry James' successes 20 years before, and he'd proved himself a prodigiously talented composer as well, an attribute that few of the big-band leaders possessed.

Although Kaempfert's chart placements faded by the end of the decade, there could be no disputing his impact on the popular culture of the 1960s, which was so widespread into so many different areas that few individuals appreciated its scope; teenagers, had they known of his role, could be grateful to him for giving the Beatles that all-important first break, while their parents may well have danced to "Wonderland by Night" and its follow-ups, their older siblings might well have orchestrated their romantic endeavors to "Strangers in the Night," and television viewers and casual radio listeners might well have heard and hummed the Kaempfert tunes "That Happy Feeling" (an early piece of world music pop, adapted from a piece by Ghana-born drummer Guy Warren), "Afrikaan Beat," or "A Swingin' Safari" (which, in a recording by Billy Vaughn, became the theme for the long-running game show The Match Game). His success as a composer was reflected in the five awards that he received from BMI in 1968 for "Lady," "Spanish Eyes," "Strangers in the Night," "The World We Knew," and "Sweet Maria." Kaempfert's chart placements vanished in the 1970s as the music marketplace (especially on radio) finally squeezed out the adult and older dance music listenership he'd cultivated. His records continued to sell, however, and his bookings remained healthy for another decade, and Kaempfert piled up awards in Germany. As he had with rock & roll, he also changed somewhat with the times when disco became popular in the mid-'70s, Kaempfert recorded a disco version of Isaac Hayes' "Theme from Shaft" that even impressed the composer. His sales were always healthy, if not substantial, in America, but in Europe he was still a top concert draw as well. Kaempfert died suddenly, at the age of 56, of a heart seizure while at his home in Mallorca, resting up after a triumphant British tour. In the years since, he has finally been recognized for the breadth of his achievements virtually his entire album catalog (and all of his hits) from the late '50s through the end of the 1960s remains in print on CD. Additionally, Kaempfert's recordings of the Beatles have at last been given the recognition that they deserved, in the form of a Bear Family Records box. Additionally, his own music has acquired a new fan base in tandem with the late-'90s boom of interest in 1950s pop instrumental (i.e., "bachelor's den" audio) music, and "Afrikaan Beat" is arguably as popular as incidental music in 2003 as it was in 1965, as well as closely associated with that past in American popular culture, itself a great achievement for the bandleader from Hamburg. ~ Bruce Eder https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/blue-midnight/id640361476

Blue Midnight

Grant Stewart Trio - Roll On

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:24
Size: 113,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:15)  1. Thinking Of You
(6:40)  2. Here I'll Stay
(4:02)  3. After You've Gone
(6:28)  4. Just As Though You Were Here
(6:59)  5. Un Poco Loco
(5:43)  6. End Of A Love Affair
(3:48)  7. Fats Flats
(5:51)  8. Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans
(5:33)  9. Roll On

Born in Toronto, Canada on June 4, 1971, Grant Stewart was exposed to the music of Charlie Parker, Wardell Gray and Coleman Hawkins by his father, a high-school English teacher and semiprofessional guitarist. Father and son often played together for hours on end. It was through these early experiences and his father's encouragement that Stewart first developed a strong ear for melody, style, and improvisation. He began with the alto saxophone at age 10, and when he was 14 his first teacher, noted Toronto bandleader Pete Schofield, invited him to play professionally in Schofield's Big Band. At 17 he switched to the tenor saxophone and was soon playing with such master saxophonists as Pat Labarbara and Bob Mover. Stewart considers Mover to be one of his greatest teachers and among his strongest influences along with Sonny Rollins, John Coltrane, Don Byas, and Lester Young. Since moving to New York City at the age of 19, Stewart has studied with such masters as Donald Byrd, Barry Harris, and Joe Lovano, and performed with Curtis Fuller, John Hendricks, Clark Terry, Etta Jones, Bill Charlap, Frank Gant, Dan Barrett, Bob Mover, Brad Mehldau, Russell Malone, Larry Goldings, Peter Bernstein, Jimmy Cobb, Harry Connick , Harold Mabern, Mickey Roker, Arthur Harper, Jimmy Lovelace, Cecil Payne, Dick Hyman, Herb Geller and was a member of the last Al Grey Sextet.

Stewart can be found playing at such clubs in NY as, Birdland, Smoke, The Ketano, The Jazz Standard, Fat Cat and can be heard every Tuesday night at Smalls Jazz Club. Stewart has performed all over North America and Europe as well as Japan, Brazil, Taiwan and was one of the first jazz artists to be invited to play at the historical Hermitage Museum in St.Petersberg Russia. Grant was also a featured artist at the Guggenheim Museums' Jazz series with his trio-featuring Jimmy Cobb. Stewart has two releases as a leader out on Criss Cross, Downtown Sounds and More Urban Tones, as well as a third on the Fresh Sounds label entitled Buen Rollo. Downtown Sounds, heralded by critics in the U.S., Canada and Europe, was recorded in 1992 and includes Brad Mehldau, piano, Kenny Washington, drums, Peter Washington, bass and Joe Magnarelli, trumpet. Geoff Chapman, of the Toronto Star selected Downtown Sounds as one of the Top Five Jazz Albums of 1994. More Urban Tones features Peter Bernstein, guitar, Peter Washington, bass, and Billy Drummond, drums. You can also hear Grant on Ryan Kisors' recent Quintet release The Awakening on Criss Cross Jazz. One of his latest projects is a two-tenor group co-led with Eric Alexander. The C.D.is called Wailin' and is available on Criss Cross. Grant's latest quintet release Estate featuring Bill Charlap and Joe Cohn is available on Criss Cross as well. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/grantstewart

Personnel:   Grant Stewart - tenor saxophone;  Paul Sikivie – bass; Phil Stewart – drums.

Roll On

Thursday, June 29, 2017

Herbie Mann & Joao Gilberto - Recorded In Rio De Janeiro

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:23
Size: 71.9 MB
Styles: Latin jazz, Bossa Nova
Year: 1965/2005
Art: Front

[2:35] 1. Amor Em Paz (Love In Peace)
[1:56] 2. Desafinado
[1:17] 3. Bolinha De Papel
[3:03] 4. Insensatez
[2:22] 5. Maria Ninguém
[2:29] 6. O Barquinho
[2:19] 7. Samba De Minha Terra
[2:01] 8. Rosa Morena
[4:27] 9. Consolation
[3:20] 10. One Note Samba
[1:11] 11. Bim Bom
[4:18] 12. Deve Ser Amor

Nice, more light than emphatic Afro-Latin and jazz mixture by flutist Herbie Mann and composer/vocalist Joao Gilberto from 1977. The two make an effective team, with Gilberto's sometimes sentimental, sometimes impressionistic works effectively supported by Mann's lithe flute solos. ~Ron Wynn

Recorded In Rio De Janeiro

John Cain - Then There's You

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:44
Size: 97.8 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[3:06] 1. Then There's You
[4:30] 2. Into The Mystic
[5:02] 3. It Might As Well Be Spring
[4:29] 4. The Nearness Of You
[4:34] 5. Some Other Time
[4:07] 6. Everybody's Talkin
[3:23] 7. Corcovado (Quiet Nights Of Quiet Stars)
[3:29] 8. Time Well Spent
[3:04] 9. Bye Bye Blackbird
[3:00] 10. And I Love Her
[3:56] 11. The Night Has A Thousand Eyes

This is an acoustic guitar recording featuring Chris Coulter on Sax/Flute, Don Hurta on Bass/Production and myself, John Cain on nylon string guitar and vocals. We play an eclectic mix of Originals, Pop, Brazilian and Jazz standards. The artwork is a painting by the renowned artist, Charlotte Phillips. Enjoy!

Then There's You

Bobby Caldwell - Perfect Island Nights

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:37
Size: 106.7 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals, Smooth jazz
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[4:31] 1. In The Afterlife
[3:30] 2. Crazy For Your Love
[4:15] 3. Donna
[2:56] 4. Where Is Love
[4:54] 5. Perfect Island Night
[3:19] 6. Our Day Will Come
[4:29] 7. I Need Your Love
[3:05] 8. Can't Get Over You
[3:26] 9. Call Me Up
[4:30] 10. Extra Mile
[4:00] 11. Rain
[3:36] 12. Sukiyaki

The veteran blue-eyed soul singer has been busy since 1995 (the year he released his last literal pop album, Soul Survivor), recording albums of standards along with his Frank Sinatra and Bobby Darin-styled soundtrack work and counting the royalties from the 100 or so covers or samples of his best-known hit, "What You Won't Do for Love" -- so preoccupied, in fact, that's it's been easy to forget just how skilled he is at delivering easygoing romantic pop, whether it's funky and percussive (as on the brassy, bouncy "Call Me Up"), perfect for Latin salsa dancing (the balmy "Donna"), or simply laid-back and moonlit (the title track). Caldwell is at the top of his charming game on this modern adult contemporary classic, not mining any truly original territory lyrically but wringing every last emotion out of his originals (the power ballads "Extra Mile" and "Crazy for Your Love" are standouts) and a handful of well-chosen covers. None of his classic pop choices come close to his renditions of "Beyond the Sea" or "Luck Be a Lady," but he finds all the passion necessary on a loping take of "Sukiyaki (Forever)" (he provides sweet new English lyrics), the bright samba arrangement of "Our Day Will Come," and the masterfully soulful "Where Is the Love," which finds him perfectly paired with Deniece Williams. The colorful back cover shows a contented Caldwell, arms crossed, in his trademark blue slouch hat, sound asleep. Maybe his long-awaited pop comeback exhausted him, but it will energize fans longing for his return to form. ~Jonathan Widran

Perfect Island Nights

Benny Green - These Are Soulful Days

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:47
Size: 102.5 MB
Styles: Straight ahead jazz
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[4:18] 1. Virgo
[5:40] 2. Bellarosa
[5:00] 3. Summer Nights
[5:40] 4. Punjab
[6:47] 5. These Are Soulful Days
[3:05] 6. Ernie's Tune
[6:06] 7. Hocus-Pocus
[8:07] 8. Come On Home

As part of Blue Note's 60th anniversary gala, Benny Green was invited to record a selection of his favorite tunes from the label's venerable catalog. Green picked eight songs previously recorded by the likes of Horace Silver, Lee Morgan, Joe Henderson, and Dexter Gordon, then he recruited bassist Christian McBride and guitarist Russell Malone. Together, they recorded These Are Soulful Days, a splendid tribute to the glory days of Blue Note, when excellent hard bop musicians ruled the roster. Like the classic albums from the late '50s and early '60s, These Are Soulful Days clocks in at an economical 45 minutes and feels intimate. All eight songs were recorded directly to two-track, giving the music an immediate, vibrant feel. Since Green decided not to choose well-known standards, the songs are fresh, which is only appropriate, since the trio gives performances that are steeped in tradition, yet remain lively and unpredictable. At its best, These Are Soulful Days feels like a lost classic from the Blue Note vaults, and that's the highest praise that can be said about a project like this. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

These Are Soulful Days

John Lewis And Hank Jones - An Evening With Two Grand Pianos

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1979
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:24
Size: 102,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:07)  1. Stompin' At The Savoy
(6:17)  2. Saint Louis Blues
(5:05)  3. Confirmation
(5:31)  4. Tears From The Children
(5:13)  5. Willow Weep For Me
(5:31)  6. Billie's Bounce
(6:04)  7. Odds Against Tomorrow
(5:31)  8. I'll Remember April

This album is an unlikely success. On a set of piano duets by Hank Jones and John Lewis, there is plenty of swing, a liberal dose of good humor and surprisingly uncrowded ensembles. Highpoints of the eight spirited performances include "Stompin' at the Savoy," "Confirmation," "Billie's Bounce" and "I'll Remember April." ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/evening-with-two-grand-pianos-mw0000773733

Personnel: John Lewis (piano); Hank Jones (piano, grand piano); John Richard Lewis (grand piano).

An Evening With Two Grand Pianos

Bette Midler - Broken Blossom

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1977
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:54
Size: 89,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:56)  1. Make Yourself Comfortable
(3:38)  2. You Don't Know Me
(3:00)  3. Say Goodbye To Hollywood
(3:36)  4. I Never Talk To Strangers
(3:21)  5. Storybook Children
(3:17)  6. Red
(3:16)  7. Empty Bed Blues
(3:06)  8. A Dream Is A Wish Your Heart Makes
(4:14)  9. Paradise
(4:23) 10. Yellow Beach Umbrella
(3:00) 11. La Vie En Rose

After a string of over the top '70s albums with high-energy tunes that made Bette Midler a sensation worldwide, she settled down on Broken Blossom. The first song, "Make Yourself Comfortable," sets the pace with a relaxed doo wop style that's hard to resist. There are some remakes on Broken Blossom including a version of Billy Joel's "Say Goodbye to Hollywood" with about twice as much pizzazz as the original; the surprising choice of "A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes," from Disney's Cinderella; and "You Don't Know Me," which was previously sung by Elvis Presley, Rick Nelson, Van Morrison, and Ray Charles, and still sounds great. Broken Blossom seems to be a mixed message from Midler, whom listeners love for being so uncontrolled but she has toned down on antics. Broken Blossom served as a bridge between Midler's solely musical days and her career as actress. Shortly after its release, she performed in her classic live film Divine Madness and then was nominated for an Academy Award for The Rose. Broken Blossom is quirky, though not as spontaneous as we have come to expect. We are used to an outrageous choice in songs sung by an outrageous personality. If one can accept simply melodic songs sung by that same personality, then Broken Blossom is a fine listen. 
~ Peter Fawthrop http://www.allmusic.com/album/broken-blossom-mw0000104878

Personnel: Bette Midler (vocals, background vocals); Lee Ritenour , Fred Tackett (guitar, electric guitar); Howard Roberts (guitar, ukulele); Ira Newborn, Thom Rotella (guitar); David T. Walker (electric guitar); Jimmie Haskell (strings, horns); Don Menza, Steve Douglas , Marshall Royal, Plas Johnson (saxophone); Frank Vicari (tenor saxophone); Jim Horn (baritone saxophone); Don Rader, Bobby Shaw, Gene Goe (trumpet); Craig Doerge, Artie Butler (piano, keyboards); John Barnes, Tom Waits (piano); Don Randi (organ, keyboards); Mike Melvoin (keyboards); Steve Porcaro (synthesizer); Chuck Rainey, David Hungate, Jerry Scheff, Jim Hughart, Leland Sklar, Max Bennett (bass guitar); Jim Keltner, Russ Kunkel, Shelly Manne (drums); Alan Estes (congas, percussion); Jack Jennings, Bill Watrous, Lew McCreary (percussion); Chuck Higgins, Clydie King, Donny Gerrard, Ellie Greenwich, D. David Latman, Dianne Brooks, Brian Russell, Mike Harris , Brenda Russell (background vocals).

Broken Blossom

Kenny Barron - Invitation

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:54
Size: 132,8 MB
Art: Front

(9:17)  1. Namely You
(5:25)  2. And Then Again
(4:41)  3. Dew drop
(7:51)  4. Invitation
(7:10)  5. Joanne Julia
(7:20)  6. An Afternoon In Paris
(8:41)  7. You Dont Know What Love Is
(7:28)  8. Blue Monk

Kenny Barron has been a respected jazz pianist since the early '60s, but it wasn't until the mid-'70s that he began coming into his own as a composer; deftly working complex time signatures and mercurial melodies into seamlessly swinging numbers, agile sambas, and lovely ballads. Fifteen years on, Invitation finds Barron in full maturity as a writer and in the sympathetic company of tenor saxophonist Ralph Moore, bassist David Williams, and drummer Lewis Nash. Barron's democratic pen runs the gamut here as he distills Monk's angular jubilance on "And Then Again," produces one of his most beautiful ballads in "Dewdrop," and works a fine bossa nova groove on "Joanne Julia." The covers are no less impressive. Barron and the group swing solid and fleet on Bronislaw Kaper's caustically subdued "Invitation" and place John Lewis' "Parisian Afternoon" in a gently swinging light. "You Don't Know What Love Is" is read solo by Barron with mysterious aplomb, and "Blue Monk" gets a strong blues reading. Throughout, Ralph Moore's choice tenor lines glide over the notes, Lewis Nash's tasteful drumming impressively anchors the group, and Barron's inventive solos ride atop the band in full stride. With great material, solid playing, and the full Criss Cross sound, Invitation ends up as one of Kenny Barron's finest outings of the 1990s. ~ Stephen Cook http://www.allmusic.com/album/invitation-mw0000273098

Personnel: Kenny Barron (piano); Ralph Moore (tenor saxophone); Lewis Nash (drums); David Williams (bass).

Invitation

Mark Isham - Mark Isham

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:43
Size: 105,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:23)  1. Honeymoon Nights
(6:03)  2. I Never Will Know
(5:56)  3. Marionette
(3:56)  4. An Eye on the World
(4:26)  5. Blue Moon
(3:12)  6. Ashes and Diamonds
(5:20)  7. Toward the Infinite White
(4:38)  8. Songs of the Flying Fish
(6:45)  9. Turkish Delight

Isham continues his ensemble-style collaborations with guests Tanita Tikaram, Chick Corea, John Patitucci and John Novello, and the contributions of sidemen David Torn, Peter Maunu, and Peter Van Hooke. The pleasing group work provides a nice complement to the two vocal tracks. If you like these, try Isham's soundtrack recording for Trouble in Mind with Marianne Faithfull. ~ Scott Buttman http://www.allmusic.com/album/mark-isham-mw0000316022

Personnel:  Mark Isham – electronic sounds, keyboards, percussion, producing, synthesizer, trumpet;  Alex Acuña – drums, percussion;  Terry Bozzio – drums;  Chick Corea – piano;  Douglas Lunn – bass

Mark Isham

Naoko Terai - Anthem

Styles: Violin Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:06
Size: 124,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:19)  1. Those Foolish Days
(5:17)  2. Love Is a Many Splendored Thing
(5:31)  3. Once Upon a Dream
(5:06)  4. Hymn a l'Amour
(5:44)  5. Ten-Gallon Shoes
(3:22)  6. Straight Flash
(6:50)  7. I Am Here for You
(4:45)  8. Milonga in Sorrow
(4:21)  9. Love on the Breeze
(3:08) 10. Where Does Our Love Go?
(4:39) 11. Somewhere Sometime

From the age of 4 began to learn the violin, 1988 to professional jazz violinist debut. In 1997, with the Japanese jazz pianist Kenny Barron co-starred in the opportunity to participate in the recording of New York, in one fell swoop attention. After that, we carry out extensive music activity with concerto-centered, television, radio, advertisement, etc., with full expression of expressiveness and rich style of play. With fine expression and passionate playing, active in the world stage jazz violinist. Translate by google http://www.zh-tw.barks.jp/artist/?id=52008425&m=bio

Personnel:  Violin – Naoko Terai;  Double Bass – Jumbo Ono;  Drums, Percussion – Go Nakazawa;  Guitar – Yoshihiko Hosono;  Piano, Electric Piano, Synthesizer, Organ – Naoki Kitajima

Anthem

Wednesday, June 28, 2017

Boogaloo Joe Jones - No Way!

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:04
Size: 82.6 MB
Styles: Soul-Jazz, Funk
Year: 1970/1998
Art: Front

[7:16] 1. No Way
[4:49] 2. If You Were Mine
[5:59] 3. Georgia On My Mind
[7:09] 4. Sunshine Alley
[4:01] 5. I'll Be There
[6:48] 6. Holdin' Back

Grover Washington, Jr. (tenor sax) and Bernard Purdie (drums) are the key accompanists on a set of pretty funky early-'70s soul-jazz. The covers of fairly straight pop numbers ("Georgia on My Mind," the Jackson 5's "I'll Be There") are kind of undistinguished. Better are the originals "No Way" and "Holdin' Back" (by Jones) and "Sunshine Alley" (by organist Butch Cornell), which have a more convincing groove. "No Way" is the toughest, with funk guitar lines betraying some influence from James Brown; "Holdin' Back" sounds a bit like a jazzy instrumental treatment of the kind of songs Marvin Gaye used to record in his early Motown days. This has been combined with his subsequent album, 1971's What It Is, on the single-disc CD reissue Legends of Acid Jazz: Boogaloo Joe Jones, Vol. 2. ~Richie Unterberger

No Way!

Eddie Cano - Danke Schoen

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:27
Size: 72.0 MB
Styles: Latin jazz, Boogaloo
Year: 1963/2008
Art: Front

[2:31] 1. Danke Schoen
[2:47] 2. Days Of Wine And Roses
[2:49] 3. Baby Elephant Walk
[3:03] 4. Teach Me Tonight
[2:20] 5. Dime With A Halo-Theme
[3:14] 6. Hello, Young Lovers
[2:27] 7. Our Day Will Come
[2:01] 8. Moon River
[3:39] 9. A Taste Of Honey
[2:21] 10. Mr. Lucky
[1:47] 11. Panchita
[2:22] 12. What Kind Of Fool Am I

Pianist Eddie Cano spent most of his career connecting the dots between jazz and Latin styles. He found an appreciative audience for a series of albums under his own name released in the '50s and '60s by labels such as Atco, Reprise, and RCA, his following similar to that of vibraphonist Cal Tjader and bandleader Les Baxter. Cano also drew on dance crazes such as the cha cha and the Watusi to promote his efforts. His family was rich musically, Cano's father a bass guitarist, his grandfather a member of the Mexico City Symphony. Cano studied bass with his grandfather and private teachers, also studied piano and trombone, spent two years in the Army beginning in 1945, and then began hitting stages in a group led by Miguelito Valdés.

He soon made a connection with Herb Jeffries, a singer whose forte was balladry and with whom Cano would collaborate off and on over the next decade. The pianist had his own bands going as early as 1948, but continued working with Jeffries, Bobby Ramos, and Tony Martinez. As a composer, Cano came up with a large repertoire, including the tasty "Algo Sabroso," the friendly "Cal's Pals," the wiggly "Watusi Walk," and the thrilling "Ecstasy" -- not to mention "Honey Do," which could be a cross-genre answer song to Carl Perkins' popular "Honey Don't." While many of his peers concentrated on the peerless thrust of Latin rhythms, Cano hardly ignored this component but seemed equally intent on emphasizing the kind of complex, provocative harmonic and melodic structures associated with modern jazz. ~ bio by Eugene Chadbourne

Danke Schoen

Joe Brown - The Ukulele Album

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:46
Size: 107.1 MB
Styles: Pop/Rock
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[3:40] 1. When I'm Dead And Gone
[2:53] 2. Mr Blue Sky
[2:35] 3. Tickle My Heart
[4:07] 4. I'm Not In Love
[3:07] 5. I'll See You In My Dreams
[3:03] 6. Hula Girl
[3:30] 7. You've Got Your Troubles
[3:18] 8. Pinball Wizard
[2:11] 9. When I'm Cleaning Windows
[2:07] 10. I Like Ukuleles
[3:18] 11. The Ace Of Spades
[3:39] 12. There's No Pleasing You
[3:04] 13. Where Were You Last Night
[3:19] 14. I Like You
[2:48] 15. I Like Bananas

Joe Brown can justifiably lay claim to being the current King of the Ukulele. He has been cited by some of the world's biggest rock performers as a world class player. The top two ukulele performed favorites world-wide are 'Over the Rainbow', recorded by thousands of people, and 'I'll See You in My Dreams' recorded and popularized on uke by only Joe. The ukulele has been an instrument Joe has always loved and played. In 1963 it even got him into big trouble. Joe was one of the very first artists to have a record banned by the BBC - his recording of the old George Formby song 'With My Little Ukulele in My Hand' performed on the ukulele was deemed way too risqué! in 2006 Joe was approached by major USA ukulele manufacturer KALA, the direct result of ukulele sales having increased world-wide more than tenfold since the Concert for George. Kala credited Joe with much of that success and they asked him to design and endorse his own Signature Series.

The Ukulele Album

Margaret Whiting - Too Marvelous For Words

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:44
Size: 148.2 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1980
Art: Front

[3:05] 1. My Ideal
[2:41] 2. Any Place I Hang My Hat Is Home
[2:51] 3. Love Among The Young
[2:07] 4. I Guess I'll Have To Change My Plan
[2:31] 5. My Future Just Passed
[2:24] 6. Sleepy Time Gal
[1:58] 7. You Go Your Way
[2:55] 8. Something's Gotta Give
[1:56] 9. An Old Flame Never Dies
[3:02] 10. They're Either Too Young Or Too Old
[3:49] 11. Can't Teach My Heart New Tricks
[2:15] 12. On The Good Ship Lollipop
[2:10] 13. You Grow Sweeter As The Years Go By
[2:29] 14. Have You Got Any Castles, Baby
[3:06] 15. Something You Never Had Before
[3:12] 16. She's Funny That Way
[2:20] 17. Day In Day Out
[2:24] 18. Guilty
[4:18] 19. One For My Baby
[3:17] 20. Make The Man Love Me
[2:42] 21. Namely You
[2:14] 22. Trouble Is A Man
[2:13] 23. Too Marvelous For Words
[2:33] 24. I Remember You

Audiophile, one of the George H. Buck, Jr. Jazz Foundation family of record labels, is home to many singers of the great popular songs. When they record for this label, they are usually approaching the tail end of their careers, although their skills have not diminished. While voices may be a little huskier and the higher notes more difficult to reach, these fine singers nonetheless still possess their feel for the music, which has been honed with years of experience. The label provides a valuable service to lovers of this kind of music by not letting some of the finest practitioners of the vocal art fade from public view. Among the many who have found a home here is one of the most beloved singers of popular songs, Margaret Whiting. Too Marvelous for Words is a tribute to her father, Richard Whiting, and to Johnny Mercer. A reissue of material released in 1980, the CD has eight more tracks than the LP and a more resonant sound. Time has been good to Whiting. There's a more mature feel to her voice, replacing that girlish sound that characterized her singing in earlier years. Accompanied by Loonis McGlohon, who has accompanied many of those recording for Audiophile, Whiting does songs written by those whom she met as visitors to her father's home when she was a child, bringing a special intimacy to her performance. The rich vibrancy of her voice, coupled with her masterful delivery techniques, comes through on such familiar tunes as "Sleepy Time Gal" and "I Remember You." These qualities make lesser-known works like "Have You Got Any Castles, Baby?" and "Can't Teach My Old Heart New Tricks" sound better than they should. This reissue is a happy addition to the library of vocal recordings of American classic popular music. ~Dave Nathan

Too Marvelous For Words  

Stephen J. Menold - Live At Cafe Resonance

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:00
Size: 107.6 MB
Styles: R&B/Jazz/Swing
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[ 9:35] 1. Off Kilter
[10:02] 2. New Gospel
[ 6:42] 3. In Waiting
[ 8:34] 4. The Writer
[12:05] 5. Purson McFurson

Bass - Stephen James Menold; Piano - Joe Ferracuti; Drums - Peter Colantonio; Sax - Alex Francoeur; Trumpet - Martine Labbé. Recorded, and performed live on the brisk, late night of April 3rd 2017 at Cafe Resonance in the heart of Montreal's Mile End. Stephen James Menold is a young bassist, composer and arranger in Montreal who's consistently working with numerous artists from near and far.

Take a step into this album and be prepared to wallow in the effortlessly cool ambiance found on these original jazz compositions. Shimmering lead melodies, mellifluous piano, and steady pulsing drums are all perfectly held together by fresh bass lines that are traipsing about this album. Whether you're looking to sit back and relax on a cold rainy night, or head out on a refreshing spring morning- this album's got something for everyone.

Live At Cafe Resonance

Charles Earland - Living Black

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:56
Size: 128.0 MB
Styles: Jazz/Funk/Soul
Year: 1970/2009
Art: Front

[ 9:43] 1. Key Club Cookout
[ 8:25] 2. Westbound #9
[14:31] 3. Killer Joe
[ 4:36] 4. Milestones
[ 8:26] 5. More Today Than Yesterday
[10:13] 6. Message From A Black Man

Recorded in 1970 at the Key Club, Living Black! is notable for many reasons, not the least of which is that it showcased Earland in an inspired live setting. From choosing his sidemen to the material to reading the audience to pure instrumental execution, there isn't a weak moment on this date, nor a sedentary one. Earland makes the band roll on all burners from the git and never lets up. Consisting of four extended tunes, there's the burning rhythm and stomp of "Key Club Cookout," which blazes with wisdom and funky fire. Earland's own soloing is revelatory, but it is the way he drags absolutely unexpected performances from his sidemen that makes him so special as a bandleader. Grover Washington never played like this again-- at least on a record--deep in the soul groove on his tenor, he turned it inside out, looking for new embouchures in which to get the sounds out of the horn. He dug deep inside his trick bag and left no one wanting. Likewise, guitarist Maynard Parker, who came from the Chicago blues school, gets to exercise that side of his West Side soul personality -- check out his break on "Westbound No. 9." "Killer Joe," the longest track on the record is swaggering blues strut. It features a slow, strolling horn line from Washington and trumpeter Gary Chandler that opens out onto a gorgeous pastoral frame before popping out with the blues feel once again. Parker's guitar playing fills all the places Earland chooses not to, so the band's density is total. There is a moving short version of "Milestones" that closes the set, but it wasn't even necessary. Everybody who was there had their minds blown long before. ~Thom Jurek

Living Black

Jack Montrose - Blues And Vanilla & The Horn's Full

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:46
Size: 186,0 MB
Art: Front

(18:29)  1. Concertino Da Camera (Blues And Vanilla)
( 3:43)  2. Bockhanal
( 5:47)  3. Don't Get Around Much Anymore
( 2:52)  4. A Dandy Line
( 3:35)  5. For The Fairest
( 5:47)  6. Crazy She Calls Me
( 5:09)  7. Dark Angel
( 3:18)  8. Bernie's Tune
( 3:17)  9. Headline
( 3:16) 10. Rosanne
( 5:04) 11. Polka Dot And Moonbeams
( 3:03) 12. The Little House
( 3:25) 13. Solid Citizen
( 2:56) 14. Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me
( 3:29) 15. True Blues
( 2:44) 16. The Horn's Full
( 2:47) 17. Goody Goody

The two LPs compiled here are among the best works by the late Jack Montrose (1926-2006), a fine tenor sax player, remarkable jazz composer and arranger, and a key figure in the 1950s West Coast jazz movement. The first includes Montroses extended work Concertino da Camera (subtitled Blues and Vanilla), his most ambitious project, devised within an essentially contrapuntal structure. The quintet sides prove the cleverly conceived aspects of his compositional concepts, with their sense of symmetry in the use thematic material. Montrose is accompanied here by some strong voiceswith a high level of individual performancesuch as Joe Maini, Shelly Manne, Jim Hall, Barney Kessel, and Red Norvo. The interplay, sympathy and good feeling between them are something to hearand one thatdoesnt pall with repeated hearings.

Personnel:  Jack Montrose (ts), Joe Maini (as), Red Norvo (vib), Jim Hall, Barney Kessel (g), Buddy Clark, Max Bennett, Lawrence 'Red' Wooten (b), Shelly Manne, Bill Dolney, Mel Lewis (d)

Blues And Vanilla & The Horn's Full

Nancy Reed - Jazz Is Here To Stay

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:34
Size: 95,6 MB
Art: Front

(2:49)  1. Jazz Is Here To Stay
(4:35)  2. I Got The World On A String
(2:25)  3. Havin' A Party
(4:33)  4. Love Thy Neighbor
(5:43)  5. Bluesette
(3:14)  6. You Are There
(2:42)  7. Toodle-Ee-Yoo-Doo
(5:07)  8. Once
(3:02)  9. Savin' All My Sugar
(3:12) 10. All Boy
(4:08) 11. Unbelievable

Singer Nancy Reed has good musical genes. Her father was a jazz pianist and her mother an opera singer. Her first professional gig was at the age of 19 recording at the A& R studios in N.Y.C.. Over the years, she has performed at jazz festivals and concerts with such luminaries as Phil Woods, Slide Hampton, and David "Fathead" Newman. 1993 saw Reed working with singer Stephanie Nakasian on Nakasian's album Bitter Sweet. In 1996, Reed was on Bob Dorough's CD, This Is a Recording. In the same year, she recorded with her husband-guitarist, Spencer Reed, leading to the aptly named CD, Together. She joined the David Leonhardt Jazz Group in 1997 and she tours regularly with them throughout the United States. Their maiden album, A Time for Love, was released in 1998 and a second album, released in May of 1999, is devoted to music for tap dancing, called Swingin' Tappin' and Jammin'. Like the singers she cites as major influences, Sarah Vaughan and Shirley Horn, Reed's voice is defined by its lovely tone and excellent pitch. She can swing and sing ballads with equal aplomb. Reed is a regular performer at venues throughout the Poconos in Pennsylvania, as well in Mexico and Japan. ~ Dave Nathan http://www.allmusic.com/artist/nancy-reed-mn0000366406

Jazz Is Here To Stay

Gigi Gryce - Gigi Gryce

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:03
Size: 80,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:36)  1. In A Sentimental Mode
(3:04)  2. Blues March
(2:32)  3. Sea Breeze
(2:48)  4. Bangoon
(3:16)  5. It Don't Mean A Thing
(2:39)  6. Cold Breeze
(3:32)  7. Rich And Creamy
(2:50)  8. My Ideal
(3:01)  9. Baba's Blues
(2:28) 10. Little Susan
(2:32) 11. Lullaby For Milkman
(2:39) 12. Somewhere

Prior to this album, saxophonist Gigi Gryce had never recorded on anything but his celebrated alto. We wanted to get on tape sounds and styles that have never been associated with him, said producer Jack Lazare. So, for the first time, Gryce recorded on flute, clarinet, tenor and baritone sax- in addition to alto, playing several of these instruments in the same tune through multiple tracking.  Gryce also provided his group with provocative arrangements of some well known jazz standards and some originals. The rhythm section offers strong support, with pianist Hank Jones contributing not only as pianist and composer, but also in doing much to make this challenging musical venture a successful one. http://www.freshsoundrecords.com/gigi-gryce-albums/5017-gigi-gryce-quartet.html

Personnel:  Gigi Gryce - alto saxophone, tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone, clarinet, piccolo, flute;  Hank Jones - piano, celeste;  Milt Hinton – bass;  Osie Johnson - drums

Gigi Gryce

Nicole Mitchell - Awakening

Styles: Flute Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:39
Size: 148,3 MB
Art: Front

( 7:01)  1. Curly Top
( 9:08)  2. Journey On A Thread
( 7:07)  3. Center Of The Earth
( 2:47)  4. Snowflakes
(11:40)  5. Momentum
( 8:58)  6. More Than I Can Say
( 6:24)  7. There
( 6:07)  8. F.O.C.
( 5:23)  9. Awakening

Flautist Nicole Mitchell's generous improvisational abilities are at the musical heart of Awakening. Not only does she move effortlessly from single-note lines and sliding honks to wispy, soft timbres, but she is equally comfortable moving from pure melodic phrasing to more experimental, free content. Coupled with an exceptional trio backing, Mitchell's album crackles with infectious spontaneity. Her music manages to be at once reflective and energetic, accessible as well as clever. "Curly Top" kicks of the set in a laidback groove, with splendid give and take between lead flute and guitarist Jeff Parker's fluid comping. In fact, Mitchell and Parker's musical synergy is key to the album's success. Again and again they fortify each other's musical flights with perfect harmonic support, giving the music a wide sonic texture and cleverly making the most of its melodic landscape. Behind them, Harrison Bankhead's bass and Avreeayl Ra's percussion team up to lay down a funky groove, pushing each other along in creative, rhythmic accents. On "F.O.C." and the title track, the quartet also plays with a straight-ahead feel and rides out the melody for all it's worth, weaving loping, angular solos into an established song structure.  On other tracks, though, the band breaks more dramatically from straight forms and moves into avant-garde territory. Both "Journey On A Thread" and "Center of The Earth" incorporate progressive musical experimentation while retaining a semblance of melodic structure. And the band is as tight and unified in the experimental modes as they are in the more traditional aspects of the songs. This balancing act results in music both exciting and approachable, and makes Awakening a vibrant musical statement. ~ Jack Huntley https://www.allaboutjazz.com/awakening-nicole-mitchell-delmark-records-review-by-jack-huntley.php
 
Personnel: Nicole Mitchell: flute;  Jeff Parker: guitar;  Harrison Bankhead: bass;  Avreeayl Ra; drums, percussion.

Awakening

Naoko Terai - Hot Jazz...And Libertango

Styles: Violin Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:50
Size: 153,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:45)  1. Tango Pour Claude
(6:29)  2. Slow Dance Of Love
(6:53)  3. Fragile
(6:09)  4. Blue Bossa
(5:26)  5. A Story Of Wind
(4:21)  6. In The Velvet
(6:51)  7. Spain
(3:28)  8. Happy Bird
(6:19)  9. November
(4:44) 10. Ariake Dawn
(4:57) 11. Libertango
(4:21) 12. Shenandoah

From the age of 4 began to learn the violin, 1988 to professional jazz violinist debut. In 1997, with the Japanese jazz pianist Kenny Barron co-starred in the opportunity to participate in the recording of New York, in one fell swoop attention. After that, we carry out extensive music activity with concerto-centered, television, radio, advertisement, etc., with full expression of expressiveness and rich style of play.  With fine expression and passionate playing, active in the world stage jazz violinist. Translate by google http://www.zh-tw.barks.jp/artist/?id=52008425&m=bio

Hot Jazz...And Libertango

Tuesday, June 27, 2017

Amos Garrett Jazz Trio - Jazzblues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:53
Size: 116.5 MB
Styles: Jazz-blues
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[ 3:44] 1. Freddy Freeloader
[ 6:27] 2. Misterioso
[ 3:57] 3. Blue Monk
[ 6:24] 4. Cocktails For Two
[10:16] 5. Little Sunflower
[ 8:42] 6. Bob Erlendson Medley
[ 7:10] 7. All Blues
[ 4:08] 8. Skylark

In addition to recording blues and roots music solo albums for Stony Plain, Amos has been leading his Jazz Trio for several years. The band's motto is "bringing blues back to jazz." The Trio's debut album reminds us all that blues was once a major part of the jazz world. Best known as a legendary first call session guitar player (Bonnie Raitt, Elvin Bishop, Emmylou Harris, etc.), Amos was also a member of Paul Butterfield's Better Days and Maria Muldaur's bandleader. Amos has appeared on more then 150 artists' recordings in all genres of music.

Jazzblues

Dave Ratajczak - Almost Grown

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:04
Size: 181.0 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[4:50] 1. I'm Always Chasing Rainbows
[5:59] 2. Broadway
[5:05] 3. Fancifree
[3:34] 4. 'round Midnight
[3:05] 5. Almost Grown
[5:42] 6. Moten Swing
[6:03] 7. Sultry Serenade
[4:46] 8. I Love You, Samatha
[3:55] 9. When It's Sleepy Down South
[5:24] 10. If I Only Had A Brain
[6:03] 11. In A Mellow Tone
[3:53] 12. It's All Right With Me
[5:31] 13. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
[6:49] 14. Move
[3:34] 15. Rosetta
[4:45] 16. Bye, Bye Blackbird

Dave Ratajczak is a full time percussionist in the New York metropolitan area. A highly versatile performer, some of the artists Mr. Ratajczak has performed and recorded with include The Woody Herman Orchestra, Gerry Mulligan, Audra McDonald, Rosemary Clooney, Eddie Daniels, Gerry Niewood, Grady Tate, Milt Hinton and Kenny Rankin. One of Mr. Ratajczak's career highlights involved recreating the role of jazz drumming great Gene Krupa with Bob Wilbur's orchestra in a Carnegie Hall performance celebrating the 50th anniversary of Benny Goodman's historic 1938 jazz concert.

As a studio musician, his wide range of recording experience includes movie soundtracks (Dead Man Walking, Cradle Will Rock, Wolf, The Pelican Brief, Object of My Affection, It Could Be You, Miller's Crossing, Brighton Beach Memoirs and Biloxi Blues), television commercials and radio jingles.

On Broadway he has performed in the orchestras of such Tony award winning shows as Titanic, City Of Angels and Crazy For You. In the Spring of 2000, Mr. Ratajczak will be performing in a new production of the Broadway classic Music Man

A graduate of the Eastman School of Music, Dave is also in the music education field. In addition to Hofstra University, he is currently a member of the NYU and New Jersey University Music Department faculties, and has performed master classes and clinics at Michigan State, the Eastman School of Music, Hartt College, Rowen College, the University of Connecticut at Storrs, as well as numerous clinics while with Woody Herman's Orchestra.

Almost Grown

Marvin Gaye - Vulnerable

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 28:23
Size: 65.0 MB
Styles: Soul, R&B
Year: 1997
Art: Front

[2:38] 1. Why Did I Choose You
[3:26] 2. She Needs Me
[2:43] 3. Funny, Not Much
[2:53] 4. This Will Make You Laugh
[3:07] 5. The Shadow Of Your Smile
[2:34] 6. I Wish I Didn't Love You So
[2:53] 7. I Won't Cry Anymore
[2:37] 8. Why Did I Choose You (Alt. Take)
[2:35] 9. I Wish I Didn't Love You So (Alt. Take)
[2:53] 10. I Won't Cry Anymore (Alt. Take)

Vulnerable is the end result of a project entitled The Ballads that Marvin Gaye began in 1966. Gaye intended the project as a showcase for his crooning, as well as a way to pay tribute to the pop and jazz standards he loved. It was a labor of love that took him 12 years to complete, and even after it was finished, the record wasn't released until 1997. Was it worth the wait? For dedicated fans, it certainly was, since Gaye's voice is as beautiful and soulful as ever. However, anyone who is not a dedicated fan will find Vulnerable intriguing but significantly flawed, especially since several of the songs seem ill-suited for Gaye's seductive vocals. Which means that even though Vulnerable is a nice addendum to his catalog, it's little more than a curiosity. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Vulnerable

Bill Heid - Asian Persuasion

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:05
Size: 135.2 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[6:18] 1. Kirai
[7:09] 2. Minor Glide
[7:30] 3. MacDuff Type Thang
[6:29] 4. Kimchi Bop
[5:18] 5. Hustle Bustle (Fan Hua)
[7:51] 6. Asian Persuasion
[6:33] 7. Crumb Cake
[7:31] 8. The Dinh Dynasty
[4:21] 9. It's A Living

Keyboardist/vocalist Bill Heid was born August 11, 1948, in Pittsburgh, PA. A natural and virtuosic musician who was inspired to play jazz and blues by listening to the radio, he played in both piano and organ groups. His brother is the well-respected drummer and producer George Heid. Originally influenced by Jimmy Smith and Don Patterson, Heid heard the chitlin' circuit greats at the Hurricane Bar, including Smith and Patterson, Jack McDuff, Jimmy McGriff, and Dr. Lonnie Smith. Down the street at the Crawford Grill were the jazz bands led by Freddie Hubbard, Max Roach, Gene Harris, Bobby Timmons, and Wynton Kelly.

On occasion he would sit in with some of these groups and pester them for information. Spending time in Chicago and later in New York, he met and hung out with his mentor, Larry Young, often visiting the family-owned Newark Club in Young's hometown of Newark, NJ. He was also privy to playing with the best organ drummers like Joe Dukes and Billy James. And he heard the local contingent of jazz greats like Ahmad Jamal, Art Blakey, Erroll Garner, George Benson, Eddie Jefferson, Mary Lou Williams, and Stanley Turrentine.

His quest for musical knowledge found him on the road when in 1963, in search of rare 78-rpm rhythm & blues records, he began a journey/career of hitchhiking. He did this in the contiguous 48 states of the U.S.; through Canada, Mexico, the Philippines, Japan, Korea, and China; and to the Thailand/Cambodia border. His over 400,000 documented miles of thumbing a ride gained Heid a spot in The Guinness Book of World Records. Some of his journeys led him to the so-called chicken houses and organ rooms of major cities, where he interned with Jimmy Witherspoon, Jimmy Ponder, Sonny Stitt, Grant Green, David "Fathead" Newman, Ira Sullivan, and Mickey Roker, and was a pianist with Don Patterson.

A move to Chicago brought him closer to the urban blues as he worked or recorded with Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, and especially Son Seals, Koko Taylor, Fenton Robinson, and Roy Buchanan. He also did two LPs and played in the bands of contemporary jazz guitarist Henry Johnson. Moving to Detroit, he spent two decades there playing in his own groups; helping to revive the career of a local legend of blues guitar and vocals, Johnnie Bassett, as the music director of his Blues Insurgents; and backing the veteran singer Alberta Adams. During and since his time in Detroit, Heid could be found making music soundtracks for adult films in Los Angeles, then touring worldwide for the U.S. State Department as a jazz ambassador, particularly on tours of Japan and Vietnam. In August 2003, Heid played more of the Pacific Rim in Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore.

Upon moving back to the Eastern United States, he could be heard on organ and piano engagements at various venues in the Washington, D.C., area. Of his mindset, Heid was quoted as saying "I can't live a day without playing 1-4-5s," incorporating those standard blues changes with cool McCoy Tyner minor riffs, vicious funk songs in Japanese, and what he calls Talifunk. "I approach this thing like total war and have been lucky to have avoided a day job." His hip vernacular, unique vocal language, and risqué sense of humor, melded with his passion for baseball, have made him an entertainer nonpareil. ~ Michael G. Nastos

Asian Persuasion

Denis Solee, The Beegie Adair Trio - Sinatra On Sax

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:22
Size: 124.5 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[3:37] 1. Come Fly With Me
[4:29] 2. You Make Me Feel So Young
[3:24] 3. Strangers In The Night
[4:07] 4. The Way You Look Tonight
[4:15] 5. All The Way
[3:50] 6. New York, New York
[3:23] 7. The Lady Is A Tramp
[3:12] 8. I've Got The World On A String
[4:21] 9. Young At Heart
[3:01] 10. In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning
[4:44] 11. Witchcraft
[4:13] 12. Summer Wind
[3:48] 13. I've Got You Under My Skin
[3:52] 14. One For My Baby

Beegie Adair has shared the stage with some of the biggest names in Jazz. She has interviewed them too, when she hosted her own radio show, "Improvised Thoughts" in the 1990's - and her own star continues to rise. Her extensive collection of songwriter series CD's are critically acclaimed and her international releases have made her a sensation.

Denis Solee has lived in Nashville since 1974 and his superb playing on saxophone, clarinet, and flute has been heard and recorded in virtually every style of music. Denis has played in military bands, symphony orchestras, Broadway shows, big bands, and small groups. He has appeared on radio, TV, films, and recordings for artists from Ray Stevens to Ray Charles; Mel Tillis to Mel Torme; Louis Bellson, Sammy Davis, Jr., Sarah Vaughn, Amy Grant, Liberace, Aretha Franklin.... and the list goes on. Denis has released four CD's as a leader, including 2007's "Sinatra on Sax" with the Beegie Adair Trio.

Sinatra On Sax

John Lewis - Grand Encounter: 2 Degrees East-3 Degrees West

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:10
Size: 83,2 MB
Art: Front

(8:23)  1. Love Me Or Leave Me
(3:36)  2. I Can't Get Started
(4:19)  3. Easy Living
(6:12)  4. 2 Degrees East - 3 Degrees West
(3:10)  5. Skylark
(9:28)  6. Almost Like Being In Love

Also reissued as 2 Degrees East, 3 Degrees West and occasionally listed under tenor saxophonist Bill Perkins' name, this classic session is the ultimate in cool jazz. Perkins' mellow tone matches quite well with the quiet but inwardly passionate playing of pianist John Lewis, guitarist Jim Hall, bassist Percy Heath, and drummer Chico Hamilton. Lewis is featured with the rhythm section on "I Can't Get Started," Hall is added for "Skylark," and the full group plays three standards plus Lewis' memorable (and atmospheric) "2 Degrees East, 3 Degrees West."~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/grand-encounter-2-degrees-east-3-degrees-west-mw0000194407

Personnel:  John Lewis – piano;  Bill Perkins - tenor saxophone;  Jim Hall – guitar;  Percy Heath – bass;  Chico Hamilton - drums

Grand Encounter: 2 Degrees East-3 Degrees West