Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Jose Feliciano - Fantastic Feliciano

Size: 164 MB
Time: 32:03
File: FLAC
Released: 1966
Styles: Pop, Rock, Jazz
Art: Front

01. (I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons (2:30)
02. Someday (You'll Want Me To Want You) (2:42)
03. (I'm Afraid) The Masquerade Is Over (3:34)
04. You Know You Don't Want Me (So Why Don't You Leave Me Alone ) (2:08)
05. Goody Goody (2:14)
06. Nature Boy (2:50)
07. To Each His Own (2:48)
08. Quit While You're Ahead (2:05)
09. I Wish You Love (Remastered) (3:05)
10. Somebody Else Is Taking My Place (2:02)
11. I Miss You So (2:36)
12. Bye Bye Blackbird (3:24)

José Feliciano continues to refine his folk-jazz aesthetic via Fantastic Feliciano, a scattershot set of pop standards that pushes the singer in a series of new creative directions, some considerably more successful than others. Feliciano lends his signature stamp to familiar tunes like "Nature Boy," "For Sentimental Reasons," and "The Masquerade Is Over," shifting easily from stark, simple arrangements that spotlight his intricate guitar playing to fuller, R&B-inspired contexts that underline the soulfulness of his vocals. Not all of it works, and the album fails to hang together as a whole, but the pieces of the puzzle are in place, enabling his signature sound to achieve critical mass over the course of subsequent LPs. ~by Jason Ankeny

Fantastic Feliciano

Eve Fleishman - Atmospheric Epic

Size: 121,0 MB
Time: 37:47
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Jazz/Pop/Folk Vocals
Art: Front

01. Atmospheric (Windy Day) (4:07)
02. Lullaby Of The Leaves (3:07)
03. Carolina Girl (2:12)
04. Leavin' Tennessee (4:20)
05. So Many Tears Must Fall (3:35)
06. City Light (2:19)
07. Fog (3:32)
08. I Don't Have A Song (3:26)
09. You Gotta Go Through (4:04)
10. California (3:50)
11. Peace On Earth (3:11)

Eve Fleishman serves up an “old soul” sound, weaving together elements of smoky jazz, motowny pop, showtunes and even a dab of country folk to create a most unique listening experience. “I like a little bit of everything,” admits Fleishman. Since her days as a student at Berklee College of Music in Boston, Eve has honed her craft as a multi-faceted singer and songwriter.

Eve spent many years in Nashville, releasing four CDs in rapid succession: a collection of jazz standards; two albums of original kids’ music with her duo, Eve and Mare; and her solo album, Peace or Drama. Eve’s music has been played on radio stations world-wide (including XM) and she has appeared live on both TV and radio, including NPR, Mitch Albom Show and Art of the Song. She has graced the stage of renowned venues such as Eddie’s Attic (Atlanta), Cain’s Ballroom (Tulsa), The Salon (Philadelphia), Ryman Auditorium (Nashville), The Mint (Los Angeles) and Cairo Jazz Club (Egypt).

Atmospheric Epic

Ruby Braff - Where Is Freddie (Remastered)

Size: 128,1 MB
Time: 55:27
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1968/2015
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Don't Blame Me ( 4:22)
02. Mean To Me ( 6:27)
03. You've Changed ( 4:31)
04. Hear Me Talkin' To Ya ( 5:46)
05. No One Else But You ( 5:43)
06. Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out ( 6:08)
07. Where's Freddy ( 6:24)
08. Between The Devil And The Deep Blue Sea (10:24)
09. Smart Apex Blues ( 5:39)

One of the great swing/Dixieland cornetists, Ruby Braff went through long periods of his career unable to find work because his music was considered out-of-fashion, but his fortunes improved by the 1970s. A very expressive player who in later years liked to build his solos up to a low note, Braff's playing was instantly recognizable within seconds. Braff mostly worked around Boston in the late '40s. He teamed up with Pee Wee Russell when the clarinetist was making a comeback (they recorded live for Savoy), and after moving to New York in 1953, he fit easily into a variety of Dixieland and mainstream settings. Braff recorded for Vanguard as a leader, and with Vic Dickenson, Buck Clayton, and Urbie Green. He was one of the stars of Buck Clayton's Columbia jam sessions, and in the mid-'50s worked with Benny Goodman. But, despite good reviews and occasional recordings, work was hard for Braff to come by at times. In the 1960s, he was able to get jobs by being with George Wein's Newport All-Stars and at jazz festivals, but it was not until the cornetist formed a quartet with guitarist George Barnes, in 1973, that he became more secure. Afterward, Braff was heard in many small-group settings, including duets with Dick Hyman and Ellis Larkins (he had first met up with the latter in the 1950s), quintets with Scott Hamilton, and matching wits with Howard Alden. He remained one of the greats of mainstream jazz until his death in 2003. ~ Scott Yanow

Where Is Freddie

Serena Jewkes - The Carriage House Sessions (Feat. Noel Jewkes)

Size: 104,7+100,2 MB
Time: 45:16+37:02
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

CD 1:
01. Stairway To The Stars (6:08)
02. Darn That Dream (5:23)
03. Estate (7:05)
04. Moonlight In Vermont (5:49)
05. But Not For Me (5:24)
06. Them There Eyes (3:46)
07. Found Again (5:31)
08. You're Blase (6:09)

CD 2:
01. Get Out Of Town (4:53)
02. When I Fall In Love (5:49)
03. Skylark (4:22)
04. Tenderly (4:22)
05. Autumn In New York (6:46)
06. You Don't Know What Love Is (5:26)
07. Azalea (5:22)

Selection of Jazz Standards performed by Joe Bagg (piano), Chris Colangelo (bass), Kendal Kaye (drums), Noel Jewkes (horns, reeds, flute, vocal) & Serena Jewkes (vocals).

We recorded at The Carriage House Studio, an historic Angelean architectural relic that was once my family’s first home. It now belongs to the rare, wry and gifted Sheldon Gomberg, who recorded and produced this album. Sheldon, our dear friend/groomsman/son’s godfather, tenderly captained these songs to find our right interpretation.

With these songs I have stepped into my father’s world. This process revealed a home for us enjoy together. I had always known of my father’s musical virtuosity but had never experienced it. For this project I asked my father to play 7 different instruments. And so we packed up his car and drove them from his home in San Francisco to the studio in Los Angeles. The road trip, our time, the instruments, the experience of his sheer skill, all this memory lives in these songs. We know each other differently now and I will be forever grateful.

I had always wanted this. To record this music with an extraordinary backing band. To document these beautiful songs with my father for myself and for my family.

I am so grateful to my parents who, by their own example, have always inspired me to make music important in my life. I am nurtured by my husband and my son who bring the gift of artistry and music to our home. Huge love for you all!

I hope you enjoy these songs.
Sincerely,
Serena

My The Carriage House Sessions CD 1
My The Carriage House Sessions CD 2

Tom Waits - My Father's Place

Size: 180,5 MB
Time: 77:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Blues, Rock, Jazz
Art: Front

01. Standin' On The Corner (Live) ( 6:43)
02. I Never Talk To Strangers (Live) ( 4:01)
03. Pasties And G-Strings (Live) ( 6:31)
04. Invitation To The Blues/Eggs And Sausage (Live) ( 8:23)
05. Jitterbug Boy (Live) ( 6:24)
06. Step Right Up (Live) ( 5:19)
07. I Wish I Was In New Orleans/Small Change (Live) (11:55)
08. The Piano Has Been Drinking (Live) ( 3:47)
09. Emotional Weather Report (Live) ( 4:57)
10. Muriel (Live) ( 5:00)
11. Jack & Neal California, Here I Come (Live) ( 6:01)
12. Tom Traubert's Blues (Live) ( 8:36)

Music is likely the most universal of all arts. People play it in every city, village, berg, back-assed hole in the jungle hovel the world over. Albums are cut everyday in nearly every country in the universe. Usually those albums are simply released in their country of origin. For example if you sign to an American label you'll likely only see your album released in the US. Folks living elsewhere will have to have someone send it to them or just be out of luck.

If you are a rather popular artist, or are signed to a bigger label your record might get released in other countries. For some reason those release dates are often different than the initial release dates in the country or origin. Sometimes other countries also get bonus tracks tacked on. I don't really understand the reasons for this (especially in a time in which anybody with an Internet connection can grab the songs at any time) or the full machinations of it. I just know it happens.

I also know when I'm browsing Amazon looking for interesting new releases I often see albums with a little Import tag which tells me that album is being released elsewhere at the moment, not here. Again I don't understand the ins and outs of this, nor why Amazon only lists certain albums like this and not every album being released in the UK or wherever that doesn't have a proper US date. Perhaps some releases Amazon buys up and imports automatically with a willingness to sell it to you at a mark-up. Or maybe its something else, I dunno.

Normally I just ignore imports figuring they don't belong in an article about new releases in the good old US of A. But this week something really caught my eye.

Tom Waits is brilliant, just brilliant. He's a carnival barker, a preacher of sinners, patron saint of the underbelly. He writes beautiful songs about the ugly sides of life. In concert he is a master. He rarely tours anymore but from the many bootlegs I have of his, he is absolutely someone to catch anytime you can. I actually have the bootleg for this recording at tiny club in New York. It is an amazing piece of work. Recorded in 1977 Waits had only been performing for a few years and had but four eclectic albums under his belt. Still he already had his schtick down to an art and it is really quite something to hear here.

For most of the show he is in full on carnival barker of the damned mode barking out songs of sex, alcohol and the seedier sides of living. His songs are dark and sad and hilarious. Waits chats some between songs and he already shows he knows how to hold an audience in his palm.

Though it is an import I'm thrilled to see this classic show from Tom Waits at My Father's Place in New York City is getting an official release. Which is why I'm making it my Pick of the Week. ~Mat Brewster

My Father's Place 

Ike Quebec - Blue And Sentimental

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:10
Size: 114.9 MB
Styles: Soul jazz, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1962/2015
Art: Front

[7:24] 1. Blue And Sentimental
[6:35] 2. Minor Impulse
[7:00] 3. Don't Take Your Love From Me
[6:44] 4. Blues For Charlie
[5:18] 5. Like
[6:15] 6. Count Every Star
[6:02] 7. It's All Right With Me
[4:49] 8. Old Black Magic

Ike Quebec's 1961-1962 comeback albums for Blue Note were all pretty rewarding, but Blue and Sentimental is his signature statement of the bunch, a superbly sensuous blend of lusty blues swagger and achingly romantic ballads. True, there's no shortage of that on Quebec's other Blue Note dates, but Blue and Sentimental is the most exquisitely perfected. Quebec was a master of mood and atmosphere, and the well-paced program here sustains his smoky, late-night magic with the greatest consistency of tone. Part of the reason is that Quebec's caressing tenor sound is given a sparer backing than usual, with no pianist among the quartet of guitarist Grant Green, bassist Paul Chambers, and drummer Philly Joe Jones. It's no surprise that Green solos with tremendous taste and elegance (the two also teamed up on Green's similarly excellent Born to Be Blue), and there are plenty of open spaces in the ensemble for Quebec to shine through. His rendition of the Count Basie-associated title cut is a classic, and the other standard on the original LP, "Don't Take Your Love from Me," is in a similarly melancholy vein. Green contributes a classic-style blues in "Blues for Charlie," and Quebec's two originals, "Minor Impulse" and "Like," have more complex chord changes but swing low and easy. Through it all, Quebec remains the quintessential seducer, striking just the right balance between sophistication and earthiness, confidence and vulnerability, joy and longing. It's enough to make Blue and Sentimental a quiet, sorely underrated masterpiece. [Some reissues add three bonus cuts, all standards, which fit the program very nicely indeed.] ~Steve Huey

Blue And Sentimental

Marian McPartland - After Dark

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:19
Size: 80.9 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 1955/2011
Art: Front

[2:26] 1. Poor Little Rich Girl
[3:08] 2. Chelsea Bridge
[3:03] 3. I Could Write A Book
[2:49] 4. For All We Know
[2:27] 5. Sand In My Shoes
[3:01] 6. Struttin' With Some Barbecue
[3:14] 7. Easy Come, Easy Go
[2:43] 8. Falling In Love With Love
[3:36] 9. If I Love Again
[2:48] 10. Royal Garden Blues
[3:00] 11. I'll Be Around
[2:58] 12. Everything But You

Bass – Bill Crow; Cello – Lucian Schmit; Drums – Joe Morello; Harp – Betty Glamann, Margaret Ross; Piano – Marian McPartland.

The cover of this Marian McPartland record may give some the impression that this is an easy listening affair; that is definitely not the case. This 1955 studio date features her with her regular trio (bassist Bill Crow and drummer Joe Morello), which performed as the house band at the Hickory House in New York City during this period. Augmenting the trio on several numbers is one of two harpists, Betty Glaman and Margaret Ross, and occasionally cellist Lucien Schmit, who primarily seems to be present to add harmonies by playing arco and doesn't improvise. Highlights include a lush take of "Chelsea Bridge," swinging trio versions of "I Could Write a Book" and "Struttin' With Some Barbecue," and the intriguing interplay with the harp on an early version of her good friend Alec Wilder's timeless "I'll Be Around." All of the songs have stood the test of time well, even if some of them are no longer as popular. Expect to pay a fairly good sum if you can locate a copy of this long unavailable LP. ~Ken Dryden

After Dark

James Spencer - Blue Gardenia

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:46
Size: 113.9 MB
Styles: Jazz piano
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[2:46] 1. Blue Gardenia Sketch
[2:50] 2. The Dream's On Me
[4:26] 3. Easy Living
[6:07] 4. Last Summer
[5:21] 5. Play It Again, Jimmy
[2:45] 6. For Erroll
[3:43] 7. A Crush On You
[2:54] 8. Tenderly
[2:31] 9. Blue World
[2:15] 10. Southern Stars
[2:58] 11. When I Dance With You
[2:52] 12. Angel Eyes
[1:58] 13. Love Is Here To Stay
[2:34] 14. Laura Hunt
[3:38] 15. Autumn In N. Y

By popular demand, BLUE GARDENIA, the award winning 2013 cocktail jazz piano album arranged and performed by international recording artist James Spencer, is currently re-mastered for digital release by James Spencer and Gerald Adamowitcz with new album art by award winning artist Brandon Beane of Manhattan. Recorded on a Yamaha C-7 in Newport Coast and Westminster in Nov. of 2013, BLUE GARDENIA made the top 10 for jazz lounge charts in Sydney Australia. Debuting on THE COCKTAIL NATION with Koop Kooper (Sydney, Aus) with interview and radio play, BLUE GARDENIA soon got picked up by several radio stations specializing in lounge and vintage class jazz.

James Spencer is an internationally recognized piano coach, artist developer/agent. Currently residing in Southern CA, he teaches students of all ages in piano, digital keyboard, harpsichord, voice, acting, strings and theory composition.

Blue Gardenia

Paul Kuhn Big Band - Live At The Philharmonic Cologne (2 Parts)

On this double CD, old master Paul Kuhl plays on the first CD with his friends, especially Gustl Mayer on his tenor saxophone. He always reminds me of his strong tone at Illinois Jacquet. On the 2nd CD Paul plays with his big band. Both CD`s were live from 1995-2009 live in the Kölner Philharmonie. And offer excellent swinging jazz, as is accustomed to by Paul Kuhn. ~Waldonez

Paul Kuhn (12 March 1928 – 23 September 2013) was a German jazz musician, band leader, singer and pianist. He was the band leader of the SFB Big Band, the orchestra of the Sender Freies Berlin, the TV-Station of West Berlin, part of ARD. He was the conductor of the German entry in the 1972 Eurovision Song Contest. Kuhn was born the son of a croupier in Wiesbaden. In 1936, at the age of 8, he had a public gig at the 'Funkausstellung' in Berlin, playing the accordion. Some years later, he discovered jazz music (which was frowned upon during the nazi time (1933-1945)). In 1944, he was in Paris and had some gigs to entertain soldiers of the Wehrmacht, who still occupied Paris. After V-Day (8 May 1945), the USA formed an occupation zone in parts of Germany, amongst them the region around Frankfurt. Kuhn was hired by AFN (American Forces Network), he was live on radio almost every day, alone or with his band. He adopted the style and sound of Glenn Miller.

In the 1950s, he arranged and composed entertainment music. Around 1955, he increasingly launched pop songs, sung and played by himself. During the sixties, more and more west German households bought a TV; music shows, big bands and singers were very successful. In 1968, Kuhn was named head of the entertainment orchestra of Sender Freies Berlin. In 1980, this band was dissolved and Kuhn moved to Cologne and founded his own orchestra.

Album: Live At The Philharmonic Cologne (Part 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:42
Size: 177.9 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[ 5:19] 1. C. Jam Blues
[ 7:30] 2. Stitt's Tune
[ 4:51] 3. I Wish You Love
[ 7:48] 4. Broadway
[ 7:29] 5. Polkadots And Moonbeams
[10:42] 6. Take The A Train
[ 6:50] 7. Tenor Madness
[ 4:58] 8. Sister Sadie
[ 7:39] 9. I Don't Stand A Ghost Of A Chance
[ 3:10] 10. When I Take My Sugar To Tea
[ 7:47] 11. Scrapple From The Apple
[ 3:34] 12. Leap Frog

Live At The Philharmonic Cologne (Part 1)

Album: Live At The Philharmonic Cologne (Part 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:23
Size: 119.9 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[3:37] 1. You're Driving Me Crazy
[4:50] 2. Tuxedo Junction
[4:31] 3. So Easy To Love
[2:57] 4. Nightmare
[2:51] 5. Mr. Anthony's Boogie
[3:35] 6. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
[6:59] 7. Our Love Is Here To Stay
[4:37] 8. Honeysuckle Rose
[6:20] 9. With A Song In My Heart
[4:18] 10. I Fall In Love Too Easily
[4:14] 11. You Stepped Out Of A Dream
[3:29] 12. Apple Honey

Live At The Philharmonic Cologne (Part 2)

Traffic - The Definitive Collection

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:59
Size: 176.2 MB
Styles: Album rock, Jazz-rock
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[ 4:11] 1. Paper Sun
[ 3:00] 2. Hole In My Shoe
[ 4:14] 3. Heaven Is In Your Mind
[ 5:34] 4. Dear Mr. Fantasy
[ 3:35] 5. You Can All Join In
[ 4:16] 6. Feelin' Alright
[ 4:18] 7. Pearly Queen
[ 3:13] 8. (Roamin' Thro' The Gloamin' With) 40.000 Headman
[ 5:03] 9. Shanghai Noodle Factory
[ 6:57] 10. Glad
[ 5:29] 11. Freedom Rider
[ 4:32] 12. Empty Pages
[ 6:22] 13. John Barleycorn
[ 4:25] 14. Rock 'n' Roll Stew
[11:41] 15. The Low Spark Of High-Heeled Boys

The 2007 Traffic entry in Universal Music's series of best-ofs called The Definitive Collection is simply a retitled reissue of the 2000 compilation Feelin' Alright: The Very Best of Traffic. (It even has the same catalog number.) Though the two-CD set Smiling Phases finally put a comprehensive Traffic compilation on the market in 1991, the only readily available single-disc collection had long been Best of Traffic, originally issued halfway through the band's career. Thus, Feelin' Alright: The Very Best of Traffic, aka The Definitive Collection, a 77-minute sampler for the CD era, was long overdue. It combines the group's early singles hits like "Paper Sun" and "Hole in My Shoe" with lengthier album tracks like "Dear Mr. Fantasy" and "The Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys." Looking over the song list, any Traffic fan will be able to reel off omissions. But easy as it is to note what's missing, it's not so easy to figure out how such songs could be shoehorned into a single-disc set that is already packed with great material. Except in its first year in England, Traffic was not a band that made hit singles, but it did make a plethora of strong recordings, many of which were lengthy by the standards of the time. Several of the absolute necessities on a collection of their best work run longer than five minutes each; "The Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys" runs close to 12 minutes. Beyond those absolute musts are a bunch of other good songs, many more than could fit on one CD. Compilation producer Bill Levenson has made a reasonable choice among them to construct a well-balanced disc that shows off the band's many talents. Neophytes with a few extra dollars to spend are strongly urged to take the plunge and buy Smiling Phases or the more recent two-disc set, Gold, but as a one-CD collection of some of the highlights of Traffic's career, this album lives up to its title, either of them. ~William Ruhlmann

The Definitive Collection

Harold Mabern Trio - Falling in Love with Love

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:45
Size: 130,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:18)  1. For Every Man, There's a Women
(5:07)  2. Falling in Love with Love
(6:07)  3. Get Back Jack, Do It Again
(6:53)  4. Why Did I Choose You?
(6:00)  5. Kelly Colors
(5:04)  6. Someday My Prince Will Come
(4:54)  7. You Say You Care
(5:58)  8. The Chess Players
(5:50)  9. Only One
(5:32) 10. Summertime

One of several excellent hard bop pianists from the Memphis area, Harold Mabern has led relatively few dates through the years, but he has always been respected by his contemporaries. He played in Chicago with MJT + 3 in the late '50s and then moved to New York in 1959. Mabern worked with Jimmy Forrest, Lionel Hampton, the Jazztet (1961-1962), Donald Byrd, Miles Davis (1963), J.J. Johnson (1963-1965), Sonny Rollins, Freddie Hubbard, Wes Montgomery, Joe Williams (1966-1967), and Sarah Vaughan. During 1968-1970, Mabern led four albums for Prestige, he was with Lee Morgan in the early '70s, and in 1972, he recorded with Stanley Cowell's Piano Choir. Harold Mabern has recorded as a leader for DIW/Columbia and Sackville and toured with the Contemporary Piano Ensemble (1993-1995). https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/harold-mabern-trio/id364209791#fullText

Personnel: Harold Mabern (piano); George Mraz (bass); Joe Farnsworth (drums).

Falling in Love with Love

Aretha Franklin - Trouble in Mind

Styles: Vocal, Soul
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:43
Size: 168,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:51)  1. Rock-A-Bye Your Baby With a Dixie Melody
(2:34)  2. Lover Come Back to Me
(2:35)  3. Exactly Like You
(2:38)  4. It's so Heartbreakin
(2:41)  5. I'm Sitting On Top of the World
(2:38)  6. Are You Sure
(2:40)  7. You Grow Closer
(2:46)  8. I Surrender, Dear
(2:44)  9. Who Needs You?
(2:47) 10. Rough Lover
(2:52) 11. Blue Holiday
(2:53) 12. I Apologize
(2:50) 13. It Ain't Necessarily So
(2:56) 14. Operation Heartbreak
(2:53) 15. Trouble in Mind
(2:53) 16. Never Grow Old
(2:55) 17. All Night Long
(3:03) 18. God Bless the Child
(3:04) 19. Look for the Silver Lining
(3:06) 20. Won't Be Long
(3:20) 21. That Lucky Old Sun (Just Rolls Around Heaven All Day)
(3:21) 22. Don't Cry, Baby
(3:27) 23. I'm Wandering
(4:03) 24. Skylark

Aretha Franklin is one of the giants of soul music, and indeed of American pop as a whole. More than any other performer, she epitomized soul at its most gospel-charged. Her astonishing run of late-'60s hits with Atlantic Records "Respect," "I Never Loved a Man," "Chain of Fools," "Baby I Love You," "I Say a Little Prayer," "Think," "The House That Jack Built," and several others earned her the title "Lady Soul," which she has worn uncontested ever since. Yet as much of an international institution as she's become, much of her work outside of her recordings for Atlantic in the late '60s and early '70s  is erratic and only fitfully inspired, making discretion a necessity when collecting her records.  Franklin's roots in gospel ran extremely deep. With her sisters Carolyn and Erma (both of whom would also have recording careers), she sang at the Detroit church of her father, Reverend C.L. Franklin, while growing up in the 1950s. In fact, she made her first recordings as a gospel artist at the age of 14. It has also been reported that Motown was interested in signing Aretha back in the days when it was a tiny start-up. Ultimately, however, Franklin ended up with Columbia, to which she was signed by the renowned talent scout John Hammond.

Franklin would record for Columbia constantly throughout the first half of the '60s, notching occasional R&B hits (and one Top 40 single, "Rock-a-bye Your Baby with a Dixie Melody") but never truly breaking out as a star. The Columbia period continues to generate considerable controversy among critics, many of whom feel that Aretha's true aspirations were being blunted by pop-oriented material and production. In fact, there's a reasonable amount of fine items to be found on the Columbia sides, including the occasional song ("Lee Cross," "Soulville") where she belts out soul with real gusto. It's undeniably true, though, that her work at Columbia was considerably tamer than what was to follow, and suffered in general from a lack of direction and an apparent emphasis on trying to develop her as an all-around entertainer, rather than as an R&B/soul singer.

When Franklin left Columbia for Atlantic, producer Jerry Wexler was determined to bring out her most soulful, fiery traits. As part of that plan, he had her record her first single, "I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You)," at Muscle Shoals in Alabama with esteemed Southern R&B musicians. In fact, that was to be her only session actually at Muscle Shoals, but much of the remainder of her '60s work would be recorded with the Muscle Shoals Sound Rhythm Section, although the sessions would actually take place in New York City. The combination was one of those magic instances of musical alchemy in pop: the backup musicians provided a much grittier, soulful, and R&B-based accompaniment for Aretha's voice, which soared with a passion and intensity suggesting a spirit that had been allowed to fly loose for the first time.

In the late '60s, Franklin became one of the biggest international recording stars in all of pop. Many also saw Franklin as a symbol of black America itself, reflecting the increased confidence and pride of African-Americans in the decade of the civil rights movement and other triumphs for the black community. The chart statistics are impressive in and of themselves: ten Top Ten hits in a roughly 18-month span between early 1967 and late 1968, for instance, and a steady stream of solid mid- to large-size hits for the next five years after that. Her Atlantic albums were also huge sellers, and far more consistent artistically than those of most soul stars of the era. Franklin was able to maintain creative momentum, in part, because of her eclectic choice of material, which encompassed first-class originals and gospel, blues, pop, and rock covers, from the Beatles and Simon & Garfunkel to Sam Cooke and the Drifters. She was also a fine, forceful, and somewhat underrated keyboardist. Franklin's commercial and artistic success was unabated in the early '70s, during which she landed more huge hits with "Spanish Harlem," "Bridge Over Troubled Water," and "Day Dreaming." She also produced two of her most respected, and earthiest, album releases with Live at Fillmore West and Amazing Grace. The latter, a 1972 double LP, was a reinvestigation of her gospel roots, recorded with James Cleveland and the Southern California Community Choir. Remarkably, it made the Top Ten, counting as one of the greatest gospel-pop crossover smashes of all time. Franklin had a few more hits over the next few years "Angel" and the Stevie Wonder cover "Until You Come Back to Me" being the most notable. Her Atlantic contract ended at the end of the 1970s. She signed with the Clive Davis-guided Arista and scored number one R&B hits with "Jump to It," "Get It Right," and "Freeway of Love." Many of her successes were duets, or crafted with the assistance of contemporaries such as Luther Vandross and Narada Michael Walden. In 1986 Franklin released her follow-up to Who's Zoomin' Who?, the self-titled Aretha, which saw the single "I Knew You Were Waiting for Me," a duet with George Michael, hit the top of the charts. There was also another return to gospel in 1987 with One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism. Franklin shifted back to pop with 1989's Through the Storm, but it wasn't a commercial success, and neither was 1991's new jack swing-styled What You See Is What You Sweat.

Now solidly an iconic figure and acknowledged as one of the best singers of her generation no matter what her record sales were, Franklin contributed songs to several movie soundtracks in the next few years before releasing the R&B-based A Rose Is Still a Rose in 1998. So Damn Happy followed five years later in 2003 and again saw disappointing sales, but it did generate the Grammy-winning song "Wonderful." Franklin left Arista that same year and started her own label, Aretha's Records, two years later. A duets compilation, Jewels in the Crown: All-Star Duets with the Queen, was issued in 2007, followed by her first holiday album, 2008's This Christmas. The first release on her own label, A Woman Falling Out of Love, appeared in 2011. She signed to RCA and realigned with Clive Davis, who connected her with the likes of Babyface and OutKast's André 3000 for Sings the Great Diva Classics, for which she covered Gladys Knight, Barbra Streisand, and Adele, among others. Despite sometimes poor health, she continued to select new projects to work on; ever the institution, her reputation is secure as one of the best singers of the modern era. ~ Richie Unterberger  http://www.allmusic.com/artist/aretha-franklin-mn0000927555/biography

Trouble in Mind

Jane Bunnett - Jane Bunnett and the Cuban Piano Masters

Styles: Flute And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:10
Size: 142,7 MB
Art: Front

(6:14)  1. Dialogos
(5:07)  2. Son de la Loma
(6:42)  3. Poems of the Soul - Guantanamera
(8:43)  4. Caleidoscopio
(3:52)  5. Como Fue
(7:19)  6. Fugado y Son Nocturno
(4:35)  7. Social Club Buena Vista
(9:12)  8. Miradas Furtivas
(4:56)  9. Midnight Theme
(5:24) 10. Tony y Jesusito

Jane Bunnett, a talented flutist and soprano saxophonist from Canada, has consistently cut through red tape and bureaucracy in order to perform with Cuban musicians. For this project, Bunnett puts the focus on a pair of talented Cuban pianists (Jose Maria Vitier and Frank Emilio Flynn), performing in a variety of settings that also sometimes include bassist Carlitos del Puerto. The leader actually sits out on three of the ten songs. As strong as the playing is (and the interplay between Bunnett and the pianists is consistently delightful), the rich melodies (five by Vitier, one from Flynn and four obscurities) are most memorable. Influenced by classical music and the pianist's Cuban heritage, the highly appealing themes stick in one's mind long after the CD is finished. Several of the tunes could very well catch on as standards in the future, if enough musicians hear this CD. Recommended, as are all of Jane Bunnett's recordings to date. 
~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/jane-bunnett-and-the-cuban-piano-masters-mw0000185691

Personnel: Jane Bunnett (flute, soprano saxophone); Frank Emilio Flynn, Frank Flynn , Jose María Vitier (piano); Carlos del Puerto (acoustic bass).

Jane Bunnett and the Cuban Piano Masters

Rich Perry - To Start Again

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:46
Size: 150,9 MB
Art: Front

( 6:06)  1. Three and One
( 9:13)  2. Candlelight Shadows
( 9:07)  3. Retrato Em Branco e Preto
(10:36)  4. Aria
( 6:48)  5. My Lament
( 9:12)  6. Mean What You Say
( 7:52)  7. To Start Again
( 6:49)  8. Algae

On his debut as a leader, Rich Perry (a longtime member of the Mel Lewis Orchestra) often recalls Warne Marsh, playing harmonically advanced lines that are full of unusual twists. Occasionally he also sounds a little like Eddie Harris and Stan Getz, but in general his dry yet fairly colorful improvisations are quite original. With strong assistance from pianist Harold Danko, bassist Scott Colley, and drummer Jeff Hirshfield, Perry is in top form on a set dominated by obscure material, including two Thad Jones songs; Antonio Carlos Jobim's attractive "Retrato Em Braco E Preto"; and originals by Maria Schneider, Danko, and himself. This modern mainstream jazz contains plenty of fire along with a variety of moods. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/to-start-again-mw0000732652

Personnel:  Rich Perry (tenor sax);  Harold Danko (piano);  Scott Colley (bass);  Jeff Hirshfield (drums).

To Start Again

Eric Gale - Gingseng Woman

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1977
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:36
Size: 85,5 MB
Art: Front

(7:43)  1. Gingseng Woman
(3:52)  2. Red Ground
(6:21)  3. Sara Smile
(6:19)  4. De Rabbit
(6:12)  5. She Is My Lady
(6:07)  6. East End, West End

Good fusion, light jazz, and instrumental pop/R&B session from a talented guitarist who's made his living by carefully editing his solos and plugging into funk dates. Gale doesn't cut loose, but shows enough to hold interest, while the arrangements and production are geared for Urban and Adult Contemporary outlets and audiences. ~ Ron Wynn http://www.allmusic.com/album/ginseng-woman-mw0000865784

Personnel:  Eric Gale – guitar;  Bob James - Fender Rhodes, ARP, Yamaha YC 30 organ;  Richard Tee - acoustic piano;  Anthony Jackson – bass;  Steve Gadd – drums;  Ralph MacDonald – percussion;  Bass - Anthony Jackson, Gary King;  Cello - Alan Shulman , Charles McCraken;  Clarinet Bob James; Drums - Andrew Smith,  Steve Gadd;  Electric Piano [Fender Rhodes] - Bob James;  Organ - Richard Tee; Percussion - Ralph MacDonald;  Piano - Richard Tee ;  Saxophone - Eddie Daniels , George Young, Mike Brecker;  Saxophone [Solo] - George Young, Grover Washington, Jr. Steel Drums [Electric; ] Synthesizer - Bob James Tin Whistle - Grover Washington, Jr.;  Trombone - Dave Taylor , Wayne Andre;  Trumpet - Alan Rubin , Jon Faddis , Lou Soloff , Randy Brecker;  Viola - Emanuel Vardi , Lamarr Alsop;  Violin - David Nadien , Diane Halprin, Harold Kohon , Harry Cykman , Harry Glickman , Marvin Morgenstern , Max Ellen , Max Pollikoff , Paul Gershman Vocals - Lani Groves , Patti Austin , Ray Simpson , Vivian Cherry , Bill Eaton , Zack Sanders

Gingseng Woman