Monday, January 23, 2017

Jose Feliciano - The King: By Jose Feliciano

Size: 104,4 MB
Time: 45:11
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Pop Rock
Art: Front & Back

01. Don't Be Cruel (3:16)
02. You Are Always On My Mind (3:39)
03. I Remember You (3:41)
04. All Shook Up (3:33)
05. Loving You (3:24)
06. Lonesome Tonight (3:50)
07. Can't Help Falling In Love With You (4:10)
08. Love Me Tender (3:59)
09. I Want You, I Need You, I Love You (5:03)
10. Teddy Bear (2:27)
11. It's Midnight (4:01)
12. In The Ghetto (4:03)

With a career that has earned him nine Grammy Awards, including the LARAS Lifetime Achievement Award, and worldwide acclaim that has spanned three generations, Jose Feliciano now indulges himself in a lifelong dream to honor his childhood hero - Elvis Presley. The King: By Jose Feliciano visits some of Elvis' greatest hits as well as some of Jose's favorite songs. The highly acclaimed guitarist, singer and composer returns to his youth to rekindle his passion for Elvis. After over a year in his private studio, Jose handpicked 12 Elvis songs. He arranged each one, played all of the instruments, recorded all of the background vocals and branded each song with his own distinctive voice and guitar genius

The King

Doug Munro & II-V-I - Up Against It

Size: 131,8 MB
Time: 56:55
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2002
Styles: Jazz: Guitar Jazz, Hammond Organ
Art: Front

01. Donna Lee (4:42)
02. Doggett (3:56)
03. Bop (5:10)
04. E Thang (8:35)
05. Up Against It (5:00)
06. Softly As In A Morning Sunrise (6:49)
07. Thoughts Of You (4:49)
08. Old Style (6:35)
09. Caravan (6:35)
10. Soul Lullaby (4:41)

Guitarist Doug Munro has a chicken-scratch sound and penchant for brief melodic statements that can be infuriating for those jazz passengers waiting for aural liftoff. John Scofield-isms aside, Munro's Up Against It does contain some inventive arrangements based around the Hammond B-3 organ of Jerry Z. Despite a humdrum version of Miles Davis and Charlie Parker's "Donna Lee," most of Up Against It is easily recommended. Notably, Munro's version of "Softly As in a Morning Sunrise" utilizes a creepy, Munsters-sounding background organ riff, while the title track is straight-up '60s soul-jazz. ~by Matt Collar

Up Against It

Fem Belling - Now Then

Size: 100,2 MB
Time: 40:21
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Lose Yourself (3:37)
02. Happy (3:52)
03. Can't Get You Out Of My Head (3:39)
04. Moves Like Jagger (4:20)
05. Angels (4:21)
06. Single Ladies (3:14)
07. Physical (3:08)
08. Moving (3:14)
09. Hello (4:56)
10. Family Guy (2:55)
11. War (3:00)

An infectious collection of hit tunes with a vintage twist. A swingin’ 7 piece band. Fem’s sophisticated voice and spectacular range slays on some unexpected genres. Think Ella meets Eminem, Nina Simone meets Newton John Hip reinventions.

South African born jazz vocalist and violinist, Fem Belling, has exploded onto the Melbourne Jazz Scene.

She is emerging as one of Australia's formidable and exciting new jazz performers. Her African Jazz and theatre roots augment her unique musicality, choices and interpretations evidencing a rich thread of international cultural exchange.

Her versatile voice and powerful stage presence, lends authenticity, verve and warmth to the jazz classics. Fem finished playing the role of Liza Minnelli opposite Todd McKenney in The Smash Hit THE BOY FOM OZ

This ARIA nominated artist has sung and played with many of the jazz greats from South Africa, London (Ronnie Scotts) and Australia including John Foreman, The Joe Ruberto Trio, The Public Opinion Afro Orchestra (earning an ARIA nomination), The Grand Wazoo, JMQ, Rory Clarke, The Daryl Mckenzie Jazz Orchestra, George Washingmachine and can be seen in Melbourne's top music venues including Dizzys Jazz Cafe and Bennetts Lane Jazz Club.

Now Then

Mads Tolling & The Mads Men - Playing The 60s

Size: 158,2 MB
Time: 67:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Instrumental/Vocals Jazz
Art: Front

01. A Taste Of Honey (4:57)
02. Meet The Flintstones (3:55)
03. Georgia On My Mind (5:21)
04. My Girl (Feat. Kalil Wilson) (3:51)
05. The Pink Panther (4:55)
06. All Along The Watchtower (4:35)
07. The Look Of Love (Feat. Spencer Day) (3:58)
08. Mercy Medley (5:23)
09. Mission Impossible (4:20)
10. A Time For Us (3:34)
11. The Good, The Bad And The Ugly (4:04)
12. What A Wonderful World (Feat. Kenny Washington) (5:44)
13. Peter Gunn (3:41)
14. Hawaii 5-0 (4:44)
15. Beautiful Savior (Feat. Stanley Clarke) (4:42)

Mads Tolling is a Danish classically trained violinist currently living in San Francisco. After touring with jazz bassist Stanley Clarke and an eight year stint plus two Grammy Awards with the jazz string ensemble the Turtle Island Quartet, he is now on his own.

His press release states that his new release, Playing The 60s, “draws material from the era evoked by the award-wining series AMC series Mad Men.” I’m not sure how much the series influenced the song selection, but Tolling manages to take an eclectic group of ‘60s material and give them jazz interpretations.

The violin is a rarely used jazz instrument, but in the right hands it and setting, it can provide an interesting sound. Tolling surrounds himself with keyboardist/accordion player Colin Hogan, bassist Sam Bevan, drummer Eric Garland, and singers Kalil Wilson, Spencer Day, and Kenny Washington. Also on hand as a guest is his former boss Stanley Clarke. Together, they provide a nice foundation for Tolling to improvise on the various melodies.

Television themes such as “Peter Gunn,” “Hawaii 5-0,” “Mission Impossible,” “The Pink Panther,” and “Meet The Flintstones” are modernized nostalgic pieces.

The old Herb Alpert hit, “A Taste Of Honey,” undergoes a number of tempo changes and concludes with a tasty drum solo. “Beautiful Savior” is an old German hymn that is a vehicle for a violin/bass duet between Tolling and Clarke. Perhaps the most interesting track is his Latin version of the rock classic “All Along The Watchtower.”

The vocal tracks travel in a number of directions. Spencer Day gives an understated vocal on “The Look Of Love.” Kalil Wilson fuses a soul vocal with a jazz foundation on “My Girl.” Kenny Washington presents the most traditional interpretation with “What A Wonderful World.”

Mads Tolling’s sound is a little unusual but is brilliant in places. His ability to use his jazz training as the impetus for his jazz sets him apart from most of his contemporaries. Playing The 60s is a nice introduction to a musician with an unusual approach to his craft. ~by David Bowling

Playing The 60s

Ada Montellanico - Abbey's Road

Size: 142,8 MB
Time: 61:20
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Abbey (4:44)
02. Bird Alone - Singing In The Night (6:22)
03. First Song (5:17)
04. Long As You're Living (4:31)
05. Driva Man - Freedom Day (3:06)
06. Throw It Away (7:27)
07. Wholey Earth - Giant Hand (6:09)
08. When Love Was You And Me (4:07)
09. Talking To The Sun (4:32)
10. Just Do It (3:24)
11. Rainbow (5:38)
12. Caged Bird (5:57)

Personnel:
Ada Montellanico (Voce)
Ermanno Baron (Batteria)
Filippo Vignato (Trombone)
Giovanni Falzone (Tromba)
Matteo Bortone (Contrabbasso)

Abbey Lincoln rappresenta una figura leggendaria non solo in ambito musicale ma per l’intero movimento Black Power. Cantante e autrice di autentica originalità, dal sound aspro e sensuale e dalle coloriture africane, Abbey Lincoln è stata iniziatrice di una nuova strada del jazz vocale, collocandosi idealmente vicina ad altre grandi artiste quali Billie Holiday e Nina Simone.
Dagli anni ’60 a fianco di Max Roach, la sua carriera artistica, è stata sempre unita alla sua intensa attività in seno alla comunità nera, facendo sì che la sua musica diventasse cassa di risonanza nella denuncia delle discriminazioni razziali vissute dalla popolazione afroamericana.

Su questo percorso di impegno sociale si colloca il nuovo progetto di Ada Montellanico che cammina sulla strada di Abbey abbracciando con passione i contenuti della sua vita artistica e politica.
Abbey’s road, esplora la Lincoln autrice senza tralasciare il suo lato di magnifica interprete di composizioni che hanno reso ricco quel panorama jazzistico, in cui la musica ha rappresentato un forte messaggio per l’emancipazione del popolo nero. Gli arrangiamenti sono totalmente originali tesi a restituire il senso profondo del repertorio di questa grande artista la cui dote Nat Hentoff ha descritto ammirevolmente come “capacità di diventare essa stessa parte di una canzone”.

Ada Montellanico, preziosa interprete tra le più importanti del panorama nazionale, presenta questo omaggio con etrema originalità ed empatia mettendo in risalto la forza narratrice delle composizioni della Lincoln ed esaltando quello che è il carattere africano della suo mondo sonoro e la sua profonda trasgressività. La scelta di creare una band atipica, caratterizzata dalla mancanza di uno strumento armonico dona a questa particolare formazione un sound energico e coinvolgente, esaltato dagli arrangiamenti curati dal grande trombettista Giovanni Falzone. A loro si uniscono alcuni degli astri nascenti del jazz italiano: Matteo Bortone al contrabbasso, vincitore del Top Jazz 2015, Filippo Vignato al trombone e Ermanno Baron alla batteria.

Abbey's Road

Junior Mance Trio - Soul Eyes

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:04
Size: 130.6 MB
Styles: Soul jazz
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[4:18] 1. You'd Be So Nice To Come To
[5:44] 2. Stormy Monday
[4:54] 3. Jubilation
[6:07] 4. Jitterbug Waltz
[7:25] 5. Take The A Train
[5:13] 6. God Bless The Child
[5:10] 7. Funky Carnival
[5:36] 8. Soul Eyes
[6:03] 9. Lester Leaps In
[6:29] 10. Solitude

Junior Mance (p) Paul West (b) Idris Muhammad (dr).

Junior Mance is well-known for his soulful bluesy style, but he is also expert at playing bop standards. He started playing professionally when he was ten. Mance worked with Gene Ammons in Chicago during 1947-1949, played with Lester Young (1950), and was with the Ammons-Sonny Stitt group until he was drafted. He was the house pianist at Chicago's Bee Hive (1953-1954), worked as Dinah Washington's accompanist (1954-1955), was in the first Cannonball Adderley Quintet (1956-1957), and then spent two years touring with Dizzy Gillespie (1958-1960). After a few months with the Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis/Johnny Griffin group, Mance formed his own trio and has mostly been a leader ever since. He has led sessions for Verve, Jazzland, Riverside, Capitol, Atlantic, Milestone, Polydor, Inner City, JSP, Nilva, Sackville, and Bee Hive, among other labels. ~ bio by Scott Yanow

Soul Eyes

Frank Sinatra - In The Wee Small Hours

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:19
Size: 112.9 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 1955/2002
Art: Front

[3:01] 1. In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning
[3:27] 2. Mood Indigo
[2:32] 3. Glad To Be Unhappy
[3:39] 4. I Get Along Without You Very Well
[2:46] 5. Deep In A Dream
[3:20] 6. I See Your Face Before Me
[2:45] 7. Can't We Be Friends
[3:10] 8. When Your Lover Has Gone
[2:31] 9. What Is This Thing Called Love
[3:13] 10. Last Night When We Were Young
[2:56] 11. I'll Be Around
[3:46] 12. Ill Wind
[2:38] 13. It Never Entered My Mind
[2:54] 14. Dancing On The Ceiling
[3:02] 15. I'll Never Be The Same
[3:33] 16. This Love Of Mine

Expanding on the concept of Songs for Young Lovers!, In the Wee Small Hours was a collection of ballads arranged by Nelson Riddle. The first 12" album recorded by Sinatra, Wee Small Hours was more focused and concentrated than his two earlier concept records. It's a blue, melancholy album, built around a spare rhythm section featuring a rhythm guitar, celesta, and Bill Miller's piano, with gently aching strings added every once and a while. Within that melancholy mood is one of Sinatra's most jazz-oriented performances -- he restructures the melody and Miller's playing is bold throughout the record. Where Songs for Young Lovers! emphasized the romantic aspects of the songs, Sinatra sounds like a lonely, broken man on In the Wee Small Hours. Beginning with the newly written title song, the singer goes through a series of standards that are lonely and desolate. In many ways, the album is a personal reflection of the heartbreak of his doomed love affair with actress Ava Gardner, and the standards that he sings form their own story when collected together. Sinatra's voice had deepened and worn to the point where his delivery seems ravished and heartfelt, as if he were living the songs. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

In The Wee Small Hours

The Ladd McIntosh Swing Orchestra - Everything Is Jumpin'

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:18
Size: 144.9 MB
Styles: Swing, Big band
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[4:53] 1. One O'clock Jump
[4:16] 2. Street Of Dreams
[3:34] 3. Undecided
[3:27] 4. Is You Is Or Is You Ain't
[3:59] 5. Somebody Loves Me
[3:55] 6. Carioca
[3:36] 7. My Baby Just Cares For Me
[3:04] 8. Variety Stomp
[5:18] 9. Everything Is Jumpin'
[1:54] 10. Eeny Meeny Miney Mo
[5:07] 11. Moten Swing
[4:12] 12. Just You, Just Me
[3:33] 13. Nevertheless
[2:42] 14. Between The Devil And The Deep Blue Sea
[3:48] 15. Tea For Two
[3:06] 16. Down South Camp Meeting
[2:49] 17. Doot Doot Dow

This band is all about swing music. Not modern swing, but authentic swing, as it was played and danced to at the height of the swing era. The library of the Ladd McIntosh Swing Orchestra is an eclectic mix of authentic swing classics--lovingly transcribed by McIntosh and enthusiastically performed by the band--and several fresh arrangements by Ladd on wonderful standards of the swing era. All of the music on this CD comes from a time when popular music in America was swing; and swing was king. Whether Benny Goodman, Artie Shaw, Count Basie, or Fletcher Henderson et al, this band recreates the fantastic sound and feel of each band in as authentic a manner as you could possibly hope to hear today. And the new arrangements by Ladd on standards of the era sound as fresh and innovative as the classics did when first introduced to the American public. This is a band for the ages.

Everything Is Jumpin'

Carol Sloane - Carol Sings

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:45
Size: 95.6 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1985/1995
Art: Front

[3:19] 1. Cheek To Cheek
[6:25] 2. Morning Star
[4:35] 3. An Older Man (Is Like An Elegant Wine)
[4:53] 4. Frasier (The Sensuous Lion)
[3:36] 5. Medley: If Dreams Come True/Don't Be That Way
[4:20] 6. Prelude To A Kiss
[5:46] 7. Looking Back
[5:21] 8. Checkered Hat
[3:28] 9. My Leopard (Isfanhan)

Alto Saxophone – Norris Turney; Bass – George Mraz; Drums – Joe LaBarbera; Piano – Jimmy Rowles; Tenor Saxophone [Also Flute] – Frank Wess; Vocals – Carol Sloane. Recorded October 28, 29, 1978 at the Downtown Sound Studio, N.Y., N.Y.

Originally released by Progressive, this Carol Sloane album is quite definitive. After 15 years of neglect, the appealing jazz singer began to emerge on records again in 1977. On her effort, Sloane performs ten superior songs, which range from swing standards such as "Cheek to Cheek" and "Prelude to a Kiss" to lesser-known numbers such as a pair of Johnny Mercer-Jimmy Rowles collaborations ("Morning Star" and "Frasier the Sensuous Lion"), Norris Turney's "Checkered Hat" and "An Older Man Is Like an Elegant Wine." The singer is ably assisted by pianist Rowles (who also arranged the tunes), tenor saxophonist Frank Wess, altoist Norris Turney (who guests on his composition), bassist George Mraz and drummer Joe LaBarbera. Recommended. ~Scott Yanow

Carol Sings

Charlie Byrd - Byrd And Brazil (2-Disc Set)

Charlie Byrd (guitar), Joe Byrd (bass), Wayne Phillips (drums on disk one), Charles Redd (drums on disk two), Bud Shank (alto saxophone on disk two)

Once again Concord Records has reissued two simpatico dates as a budget two-CD collection, this time two live sets by guitarist Charlie Byrd, originally issued as '80's Sugarloaf Suite and '82's Brazilville. Both sets are indicative of Byrd's lightweight and low-key approach to Brazilian music, which he discovered while in his mid-30s and dedicated much of his musical career to afterwards. Somewhat unique in that he worked in jazz ensembles using strictly a classical guitar, he went on to popularize such forms as the bossa nova and the samba, especially on his '62 collaboration with Stan Getz, the largely popular Jazz Samba.

Disc One, Sugarloaf Suite, is a live recording from the '79 Concord Jazz Festival, and it finds Byrd in a trio setting with brother Joe on bass and Wayne Phillips on drums. With a programme that mixes original Brazilian-informed tunes with pieces by Jobim, Caymmi and Bonfa, the pace is easy-going and unhurried. Even up-tempo numbers like the up-tempo waltz "Na Praia (At the Seaside)" and the bossa "Sapatos Novos (New Shoes)" breeze along with a relaxed approach that makes the entire set pleasantly engaging, if not a little bland. This is not music that demands attention, but there is no doubt that Byrd, who passed away in '99 after a long bout with cancer, understood the source of the music that so captured his spirit.

Disc Two, Brazilville, a live club date from '81, is notable for the addition of Bud Shank on alto saxophone. Less emphasis on original material and more on Brazilian composers, as well as some standards, makes this a slightly more varied set. While also known to be a passionate player in the Phil Woods/Jackie McLean mould, here Shank is definitely playing more in the West Coast "cool" form, as even and gentle as Byrd, although moments of fire occasionally slip through. Even tunes like Kurt Weill's "Speak Low" get the balmy South American treatment.

While there are plenty of artists, including Egberto Gismonti and Nana Vasconcelos, who have shown that Brazilian music can be rawer and more full of fire, the popularized American variant of the music seemed to be at its most successful when at its least confrontational. In that respect Byrd is the perfect proponent, with a tasteful and lyrical approach that is sure to appeal to a wider audience. But it would have been nice, just occasionally, to hear him let his hair down and attack the material with a little intensity and spirit. Still, for those looking for an easy-listening couple of hours of light jazz, one could do far worse than listen to Charlie Byrd and Byrd & Brazil. Well-played and with a clear understanding of its roots, Byrd's work could never be accused of being anything less than authentic. ~John Kelman

Album: Byrd And Brazil (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:45
Size: 100.2 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz, Samba
Year: 2004

[6:44] 1. Primeira Palavra (First Word)
[4:07] 2. Triste
[4:06] 3. Favela
[4:49] 4. Na Praia (At The Seaside)
[5:30] 5. Meninas Brincando (Little Girls At Play)
[6:19] 6. Saudade De Bahia
[8:24] 7. Sapatos Novos (New Shoes)
[3:43] 8. The Gentle Rain

Byrd And Brazil (Disc 1)

Album: Byrd And Brazil (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:12
Size: 101.2 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz, Samba
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[5:11] 1. Brazilville
[5:39] 2. What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life
[4:30] 3. Zingaro
[5:48] 4. Speak Low
[6:01] 5. How Insensitive
[5:08] 6. Saquarema
[5:07] 7. Charlotte's Fancy
[6:43] 8. Yesterdays

Byrd And Brazil (Disc 2)

Kenny Burrell Trio - Handcrafted

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:22
Size: 81,9 MB
Art: Front

( 4:43)  1. You And The Night And The Music
( 6:27)  2. So Little Time
( 8:15)  3. I'm Glad There Is You
(10:08)  4. All Blues
( 5:47)  5. It Could Happen To You

Steady, consistently swinging trio date with Burrell's fine guitar playing as the focus, and bassist Reggie Johnson and drummer Sherman Ferguson effective but subdued in a supporting mode. There's nothing exceptional here, but the breezy pace and bluesy feel are nice. ~ Ron Wynn http://www.allmusic.com/album/handcrafted-mw0000060164

Personnel:  Kenny Burrell – guitar; Reggie Johnson – bass;  Sherman Ferguson – drums

Handcrafted

Ella Johnson With Buddy Johnson - Say Ella

Styles: Vocal, Piano, R&B
Year: 1983
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:25
Size: 106,7 MB
Art: Front

(2:30)  1. Stand Back and Smile
(3:25)  2. I Don't Care Who Knows
(2:20)  3. Did You See Jackie Robinson Hit That Ball
(3:09)  4. As I Love You
(2:40)  5. You Git to Walk That Chalk Line
(3:02)  6. Satisfy My Soul
(3:24)  7. Somehow, Somewhere
(2:52)  8. This New Situation
(2:25)  9. Till My Baby Comes Back
(3:16) 10. That's How I Feel About You
(3:13) 11. Hittin' on Me
(2:55) 12. One More Time
(3:09) 13. Mush Mouth
(2:46) 14. No! I Ain't Gonna Let You Go
(2:53) 15. Don't Turn Your Back on Me
(2:18) 16. Don't Shout At Me Daddy

Juke Box Lil's Say Ella contains 16 songs Ella Johnson recorded with her brother Buddy's big band for Decca and Mercury between 1942 and 1957. In other words, these 16 songs are among her very best recordings, containing such classics as "I Don't Care Who Knows," "You Got to Walk That Chalk Line," "Somehow, Somewhere," "'Til My Baby Comes Back," "That's How I Feel About You," "One More Time" and "Mush Mouth." 

In other words, it's an excellent single-disc introduction to one of the finest female R&B vocalists of her era. ~ Thom Owens http://www.allmusic.com/album/say-ella-mw0000569273

Say Ella

Rich Perry - At The Kitano 2

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 63:08
Size: 116,2 MB
Art: Front

( 8:26)  1. My Shining Hour
(15:07)  2. Love Walked In
(12:07)  3. Just In Time
(17:20)  4. Autumn Leaves
(10:06)  5. Wee

Tenor saxophonist Rich Perry met pianist Harold Danko when both of them were a part of the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra in the 1970s. Since the '90s, they have both led numerous sessions for Steeplechase, often playing on each other's dates and regularly working clubs with a quartet that included drummer Jeff Hirschfield and bassist Jay Anderson. This second volume of performances from two nights at the Kitano Hotel in New York City finds them playing five very familiar songs, though they find a good deal of new ground as they stretch out a bit more than usual. Perry takes a bit of an angular approach to "My Shining Hour," utilizing the chord changes to build his improvisations without needing to establish the melody. He sets up "Love Walked In" over Anderson's walking bass and Hirschfield's soft brushes with Danko initially laying out, playing a loping yet intricate solo. Perry's sense of humor comes out in the spunky rendition of "Just in Time," with Danko playing eclectic chords behind him à la Jaki Byard. "Autumn Leaves" seems to float, barely touching at the essence of the song. Oddly enough, the bop favorite "Wee" ends up being the most straight-ahead performance, though it has its share of surprises. ~ Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/at-the-kitano-vol-2-mw0000793980

Personnel:  Rich Perry, tenor sax;  Harold Danko,  piano;  Jay Anderson, bass;  Jeff Hirschfield, drums

At The Kitano 2

Alex Garnett - Serpent

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 52:05
Size: 83,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:43)  1. Lydia
(7:20)  2. Three For A Moor
(6:16)  3. Blueprint
(6:34)  4. Dracula's Lullaby
(7:49)  5. Saluda Hakim
(6:10)  6. The Pimp
(5:40)  7. Serpent
(6:29)  8. Atonement

The Alex Garnett who peers out of the cover of Serpent looks a little aggressive and wil0- eyed, with odd vertical slits where his pupils should be a serpent indeed. The Garnett on the inside is more benign, but with a contemporary hipness. In the excellent black and white back cover photo, the besuited saxophonist is cool and focused, the stylish bopper who could easily have been photographed on a 52nd street club stage in the '50s. When he plays, Garnett reveals himself to be all three men: wild, hip and cool in turn. The British alto and tenor saxophonist has been a professional player for 20 years, a first-call sideman for artists as diverse as Scott Hamilton, Wynton Marsalis and Van Morrison and a regular member of the Ronnie Scott's All Stars. Serpent is his recording debut as leader: a straight-ahead session strongly infused with the blues. Recorded in one day in 2009 at Systems Two in Brooklyn, this all-originals session impresses on numerous levels, including the quality of Garnett's writing, the playing skills of the individual musciians and the way in which they lock in together as a unit despite relatively little rehearsal (a deliberate strategy on Garnett's part).

Garnett is accompanied by a trio of top American players. UK-based bassist Michael Janisch, pianist Anthony Wonsey and drummer Willie Jones III form a strong partnership, supporting Garnett's lead playing sympathetically and seizing their chances to solo. Serpent features two slow but contrasting tunes: "Three For A Moor" is a warm and inviting ballad; and "Dracula's Lullaby," as befits its title, has more of a noir-ish feel thanks, especially, to Wonsey's sparse chordal work and Janisch's bass solo. More upbeat tunes, like the catchy "Blueprint," which features a surprisingly funky arco solo from Janisch, and the slinky, Latin sound of "The Pimp," swing from the first note. "Saluda Hakim" is a tribute to Charlie Parker, a swinging bop composition with an irresistible hook and fine solos from every musician, while "Atonement" is Garnett's smoothly flowing take on "When The Saints Go Marching In."  Serpent's title is a reference to a precursor of the saxophone, and recognition of the inventiveness of Adolphe Sax. It's the musicians' inventiveness that stands out on the album, however, a belated but emphatic debut for Garnett as bandleader. ~ Bruce Lindsay https://www.allaboutjazz.com/serpent-alex-garnett-whirlwind-recordings-ltd-review-by-bruce-lindsay.php
Personnel: Alex Garnett: alto saxophone, tenor saxophone; Anthony Wonsey: piano; Michael Janisch: bass; Willie Jones III: drums.

Serpent

Alice Coltrane - Eternity

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1976
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:38
Size: 84,2 MB
Art: Front

( 2:58)  1. Spiritual Eternal
( 3:09)  2. Wisdom Eye
(11:25)  3. Los Caballos
( 9:40)  4. Om Supreme
( 3:25)  5. Morning Worship
( 5:59)  6. Spring Sounds from Rite of Spring

Within the first 30 seconds of "Spiritual Eternal," the opening track on Alice Coltrane's final studio album, Eternity, the listener encounters the complete palette of Alice Coltrane's musical thought. As her organ careens through a series of arpeggiated modal drones, they appear seemingly rootless, hanging out in the cosmic eternal. And they remain there ever so briefly until an entire orchestra chimes in behind her in a straight blues waltz that places her wondrously jagged soloing within the context of a universal everything  at least musically in that she moves through jazz, Indian music, blues, 12-tone music, and the R&B of Ray Charles. This is the historical and spiritual context Alice Coltrane made her own, the ability to open up her own sonic vocabulary and seamlessly enter it into an ensemble context for an untold, unpredictable expression of harmonic convergence. While many other players have picked up on it since, Coltrane's gorgeous arrangements and canny musical juxtapositions never seem forced or pushed beyond the margins. Perhaps, as evidenced by "Wisdom Eye," "Om Supreme," and the "Loka" suite, it's because Coltrane already dwells on the fringes both musically and spiritually, where boundaries dissolve and where everything is already inseparable. But this does not keep her music from being strikingly, even stunningly beautiful check out the killer Afro-Cuban percussion under her soloing on "Los Caballaos," which is rooted in a harmonically complex, diatonic series of whole tones. In numerous settings from orchestra to trio, Ms. Coltrane finds the unspeakable and plays it. Nowhere is this more evident than in "Spring Rounds" from Igor Stravinsky's "Rite of Spring," which closes the album. Her faithfulness to the material with a complete orchestra under her control is one of shimmering transcendence that places the composer's work firmly in the context of avant-jazz. Her control over the orchestra is masterful, and her reading of the section's nuances and subtleties rivals virtually everyone who's ever recorded it. Eternity is ultimately about the universality of tonal language and its complex expressions. It is an enduring recording that was far ahead of its time in 1976 and is only now getting the recognition it deserves. ~ Thom Jurek http://www.allmusic.com/album/eternity-mw0000217533

Personnel : Organ, Timpani, Cymbal – Alice Coltrane;  Bass - Charlie Haden;  Bass, Percussion [Drum], Gong – Ben Riley;  Bassoon – Don Christlieb, Jack Marsh;  Cello – Anne Goodman, Jackie Lustgarten, Ray Kelley;  Clarinet – Jackie Kelso, Terry Harrington;  Clarinet [Bass] – Julian Spear;  Contrabassoon – Jo Ann Caldwell;  English Horn – Ernie Watts;  Flute – Fred Jackson, Hubert Laws;  Flute [Alto] – Jerome Richardson;  French Horn – Alan Robinson, Art Maebe, Marylin Robinson, Vince De Rosa;  Oboe – Gene Cipriano, John Ellis;  Piccolo Flute – Louise Di Tullio;  Trombone – Charlie Loper, George Bohanon Trumpet – Oscar Brashear, Paul Hubinon;  Tuba – Tommy Johnson;  Viola – Mike Nowack, Pamela Goldsmith, Rollice Dale;  Violin – Gordon Marron, Murray Adler, Nathan Kaproff, Polly Sweeney, Sid Sharp, Bill Kurasch

Eternity