Saturday, February 11, 2017

Jimmy Witherspoon With Jay McShann & His Band - Spoon Calls Hootie

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:20
Size: 78.6 MB
Styles: Urban blues, Jazz-blues
Year: 1966/2010
Art: Front

[2:46] 1. Skid Row Blues
[2:59] 2. In The Evening
[2:45] 3. Frog-I-More
[2:25] 4. McShann Bounce
[3:04] 5. How Long Blues
[2:53] 6. Money's Gettin' Cheaper
[2:43] 7. Spoon Calls Hootie
[2:56] 8. Ain't Nobody's Business 2
[3:08] 9. Ain't Nobody's Business
[3:01] 10. Jumpin' With Louis
[3:04] 11. Backwater Blues
[2:31] 12. Destruction Blues

The great veteran pianist Jay McShann (also known as Hootie) enjoyed a long career and it is unfair to primarily think of him as merely the leader of an orchestra that featured a young Charlie Parker. He was mostly self-taught as a pianist, worked with Don Byas as early as 1931 and played throughout the Midwest before settling in Kansas City in 1936. McShann formed his own sextet the following year and by 1939 had his own big band. In 1940 at a radio station in Wichita, KS, McShann and an octet out of his orchestra recorded eight songs that were not released commercially until the 1970s; those rank among the earliest of all Charlie Parker records (he is brilliant on "Honeysuckle Rose" and "Lady Be Good") and also feature the strong rhythm section team McShann had with bassist Gene Ramey and drummer Gus Johnson. The full orchestra recorded for Decca on two occasions during 1941-1942 but they were typecast as a blues band and did not get to record many of their more challenging charts (although very rare broadcasts have since surfaced and been released on CD by Vintage Jazz Classics). In addition to Bird (who had a few short solos), the main stars were trumpeter Bernard Anderson, the rhythm section, and singer Walter Brown. McShann and his band arrived in New York in February 1942 and made a strong impression, but World War II made it difficult for any new orchestras to catch on. There was a final session in December 1943 without Parker, but McShann was soon drafted and the band broke up. After being discharged later in 1944, McShann briefly re-formed his group but soon moved to Los Angeles, where he led combos for the next few years; his main attraction was the young singer Jimmy Witherspoon. McShann was in obscurity for the next two decades, making few records and mostly playing in Kansas City. In 1969 he was rediscovered and McShann (who had first sung on records in 1966) was soon a popular pianist/vocalist. Sometimes featuring violinist Claude Williams, he toured constantly, recorded frequently, and appeared at many jazz festivals, being active into the mid-'90s. Jay McShann, who recorded through the years for Onyx (the 1940 radio transcriptions), Decca, Capitol, Aladdin, Mercury, Black Lion, EmArcy, Vee Jay, Black & Blue, Master Jazz, Sackville, Sonet, Storyville, Atlantic, Swingtime, and Music Masters among others, was a vital pianist and an effective blues vocalist who keept a classic style alive. A live album, Hootie Blues, recorded in 2001 in Toronto and released in 2006 by Stony Plain, showed that McShann could still bring it at the age of 85. He died at the age of 90 on December 7, 2006. ~ bio by Scott Yanow

Witherspoon was born in Gurdon, Arkansas. He first attracted attention singing with Teddy Weatherford's band in Calcutta, India, which made regular radio broadcasts over the U. S. Armed Forces Radio Service during World War II. Witherspoon made his first records with Jay McShann's band in 1945. He first recorded under his own name in 1947, and two years later with the McShann band, he had his first hit, "Ain't Nobody's Business," a song which came to be regarded as his signature tune. In 1950 he had hits with two more songs closely identified with him: "No Rollin' Blues", "Big Fine Girl", as well as "Failing By Degrees" and "New Orleans Woman" recorded with the Gene Gilbeaux Orchestra which included Herman Washington and Don Hill on the Modern Records label. These were recorded from a live performance on May 10, 1949 at a "Just Jazz" concert Pasadena, CA sponsored by Gene Norman. Another classic Witherspoon composition is "Times Gettin' Tougher Than Tough".

Witherspoon's style of blues - that of the "blues shouter" - became unfashionable in the mid-1950s, but he returned to popularity with his 1959 album, Jimmy Witherspoon at the Monterey Jazz Festival, which featured Roy Eldridge, Woody Herman, Ben Webster, Coleman Hawkins, Earl Hines and Mel Lewis, among others. He later recorded with Gerry Mulligan, Leroy Vinnegar, Richard "Groove" Holmes and T-Bone Walker.

Spoon Calls Hootie

Michael Kaeshammer - Days Like These

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:34
Size: 108.9 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[3:38] 1. Cinnamon Sun
[4:12] 2. My Love
[4:17] 3. Stop That Train
[3:46] 4. Too Far Down
[3:40] 5. Days Like These
[4:33] 6. If You Knew
[4:03] 7. I Found A New Baby
[6:00] 8. First Time Ever I Saw Your Face
[3:59] 9. Free Of Love
[5:16] 10. St James Infirmary
[4:05] 11. I Left A Note

When Harry Connick, Jr. was in the early days of his career, every release seemed full of hunger, like a wound-up horse out of the gate desperate to bolt into competition and win the race. Canadian singer-pianist Michael Kaeshammer's fifth CD, Days Like These, contains that same abundance of sass and passion, evident immediately on the blistering self-penned opening track "Cinnamon Sun." In fact, almost half of the disc is written by Kaeshammer; for the most part, his tracks are soft bayou-tinged soul with funky overtones, from his New Orleans-affected title track to the gospel-driven "I Left a Note." His creations are not all upbeat and glee, however: the self-penned "Two Far Down" is an intensely dark, lyrical number (including the lines "I like living this life/I'm telling my gun") while "Free Of Love" is a samba-meets-soul ode to a broken heart wishing to never love again. The intrigue continues when things slow down considerably: Kaeshammer's poignant delivery of Nina Simone's "If You Knew," as well as "First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" (made famous by Roberta Flack), both have significant staying power, the latter track additionally memorable because of the rich co-vocals provided by respected Canadian jazz singer Dione Taylor. In fact, the collective strength of each of Kaeshammer's players is very much a part of why Days Like These is so strong, likely to attract both jazz purists and adult contemporary music fans alike. ~Denise Sheppard

Days Like These m

Ella Fitzgerald - Songs In A Mellow Mood

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:54
Size: 86.8 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1954/2011
Art: Front

[3:06] 1. I'm Glad There Is You
[3:19] 2. What Is There To Say
[3:09] 3. People Will Say We're In Love
[3:33] 4. Please Be Kind
[2:55] 5. Until The Real Thing Comes Along
[3:05] 6. Makin' Whoopee
[2:35] 7. Imagination
[4:00] 8. Stardust
[2:36] 9. My Heart Belongs To Daddy
[3:05] 10. You Leave Me Breathless
[3:47] 11. Baby, What Else Can I Do
[2:37] 12. Nice Work If You Can Get It

Ella Fitzgerald's Songs in a Mellow Mood finds the singer in the ideal and intimate company of pianist Ellis Larkins. A precursor to her equally stunning Gershwin set with the pianist, this 12-track set includes such first-tier standards as "Imagination," "You Leave Me Breathless," and "Until the Real Thing Comes Along." Presaging her masterful series of songbook recordings, Fitzgerald is equally at home with Gershwin, Porter, and Rodgers & Hammerstein, never faltering while she balances vocal power and interpretive nuances. Larkins only adds to the rarefied atmosphere with supple voicings of his own. A perfect way to soak up one of jazz's most glorious singers. ~Stephen Cook

Songs In A Mellow Mood

Great Jazz Trio: Hank Jones, Mads Vinding, Billy Hart - Standard Collection Vols. 1 & 2

Billy Hart (drums) & Hank Jones (piano) & Mads Vinding (bass).

Pianist Hank Jones has had quite a few editions of the Great Jazz Trio, from the original with Tony Williams and Ron Carter in 1975 to the latest with John Patitucci and Omar Hakim (2006; VRCL-18835). The Great Jazz Trio with Danish bassist Mads Vinding and drummer Billy Hart, formed in 1998, was the fourth edition.

In 2007, Japanese label Pony Canyon took materials recorded by the fourth GJT between 1988 and 1990, remastered with the latest DSD technology and released them as three compilation CDs: Prelude to a Kiss, Stardust, and My Funny Valentine, with subtitles "The Greatest Hits of Standards Vol. 1, 2, and 3," respectively. Selections of familiar standards are played beautifully by the maestro and his superb supporting cast. The talented Mads Vinding is given generous solo spaces and shows his lyrical abilities. While not ground-breaking, each performance is crafted with impeccable taste and an elengat sense of swing. Piano trio fans will not be disappointed!

Album: Standard Collection Vol. 1
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:53
Size: 123.4 MB
Styles: Bop
Year: 1996/2008
Art: Front

[5:36] 1. After You've Gone
[5:44] 2. Summertime
[4:06] 3. The Days Of Wine And Roses
[7:17] 4. As Time Goes By
[4:33] 5. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
[4:48] 6. Summer Knows
[5:04] 7. Georgia On My Mind
[3:16] 8. Prelude To A Kiss
[5:48] 9. St. Louis Blues
[7:37] 10. Danny Boy

Standard Collection Vol.1    

Album: Standard Collection Vol. 2
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:02
Size: 128.3 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[7:56] 1. Angel Eyes
[5:53] 2. Autumn Leaves
[4:57] 3. Black Orpheus
[6:06] 4. Gone With The Wind
[4:56] 5. Over The Rainbow
[4:03] 6. Softly As In A Morning Sunrise
[4:41] 7. Misty
[7:19] 8. On Green Dolphin Street
[7:02] 9. Alone Together
[3:03] 10. Dark Eyes

Standard Collection Vol.2       

Gene Vincent - Capitol Collectors Series

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:40
Size: 111.4 MB
Styles: Rock n Roll, Rockabilly
Year: 1990/2016
Art: Front

[2:33] 1. Be-Bop-A-Lula
[2:30] 2. Woman Love
[2:01] 3. Race With The Devil
[2:23] 4. Gonna Back Up Baby
[2:21] 5. Bluejean Bop
[2:20] 6. Important Words
[2:12] 7. Crazy Legs
[2:13] 8. B-I-Bickey-Bi, Bo-Bo-Go
[2:35] 9. Five Days, Five Days
[2:09] 10. Lotta Lovin'
[2:43] 11. Wear My Ring
[2:13] 12. Dance To The Bop
[2:05] 13. I Got It
[2:15] 14. I Got A Baby
[2:34] 15. Walkin' Home From School
[2:27] 16. Baby Blue
[2:08] 17. True To You
[2:07] 18. Rocky Road Blues
[2:23] 19. Git It
[2:14] 20. Say Mama
[2:07] 21. Rocky Road Blues [instrumental]

Gene Vincent may have been one of rock & roll's first great Dixie-fried wild men, but consistency was not his strong suit, and for every work of lunatic genius in his catalog (such as "B-I-Bickey-Bi, Bo-Bo-Go" and "Woman Love"), there are a few failed ballads and novelty tunes foisted upon him by clueless A&R men back in the day. This compilation from Capitol Records' fine Collectors Series line represents a noble and largely successful attempt to skim off the cream from his Capitol masters; while the material has been remixed for compact disc release, the new versions honor the sound and spirit of the original (though the mono versions have a shade more punch), and the track listing offers plenty of meat with little filler. While Razor & Tie's later collection The Screaming End: The Best of Gene Vincent rocks harder, Capitol Collectors Series in many ways offers a more accurate look at Vincent's career, with the wildness starting to seriously fade near the end of the disc without skidding into his really dire material. Even on the lesser tunes, Vincent's gloriously prurient vocals are upfront throughout, and the superb fretwork of Cliff Gallup, Paul Peek, and John Meeks prove the guy had great taste in guitar players. Added bonus: an instrumental take of "Rocky Road Blues" that will help make you the coolest person at karaoke night. ~Mark Deming

Capitol Collectors Series

Guido Basso, Dave Turner - Dedications

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:09
Size: 146.9 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[5:25] 1. Hip Snake Dance
[6:14] 2. Samba Em Preludio
[7:31] 3. Heath's Row
[5:01] 4. The Elegance Of Duke
[5:12] 5. In A Boppish Sort Of Way
[7:33] 6. Eye Of The Mist
[5:16] 7. Cannon Fodder
[4:09] 8. Nowhere To Go
[4:18] 9. Guido Swings
[5:48] 10. Sweet Lady Day
[7:37] 11. Gone Too Soon

GUIDO BASSO (trumpeter, flugelhornist, harmonica-player, arranger, composer, conductor) was born September 27, 1937 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He was only nine years old when he began playing the trumpet, becoming recognized as a prodigy while studying at Montreal’s Conservatoire de musique du Quebec. He was just a teenager when he was already becoming prominent on the Montreal club scene, where singer Vic Damone first heard him and took him on international tour with him for two years.

In 1958 he joined singer Pearl Bailey and her bandleader husband, famed drummer Louis Bellson, touring North America with them for three years before moving to Toronto to join the busy studio and television scene there. His playing career as a stand-out sideman and leader, soared, and he became one of the biggest jazz names in the country, and beginning in 1975, frequently organized and led big band concerts at Toronto’s Canadian National Exhibition featuring jazz luminaries including Dizzy Gillespie, Quincy Jones, Woody Herman, Benny Goodman, Duke Ellington, and Count Basie. He can be heard on hundreds of record albums, playing and recording with stars from Buddy Rich and Oliver Jones to Carol Welsman and Diana Kralll. He is currently featured on vocalist Diana Panton’s latest release “Pink”.

Formed in October 1998 to record an improvisational set in Montreal's Maison de la Culture Frontenac (which would result in the album, Year of the Tiger, released in 1999), the Dave Turner Quartet brought together some of Canada's most experienced jazz musicians. Saxophonist Dave Turner and pianist Jean Beaudet formed the home-town core of this group, aided by Toronto musicians Barry Elmes on drums and Steve Wallace on bass. The resulting sound was heavily steeped in bop and swing, with the bulk of the songs featuring Turner's compositions and arrangements.

Dedications

Roy Eldridge - What It's All About

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1976
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:34
Size: 97,6 MB
Art: Front

( 6:18)  1. I Still Love Him So
( 7:52)  2. The Heat's On
( 8:23)  3. That Thing
( 6:49)  4. Recado Bossa Nova
(13:09)  5. Melange

What It's All About is swinging, building up solos to potentially ferocious levels and going for broke. That was always the philosophy that Roy Eldridge followed and, even though it was rather late in his career by the time he recorded this Pablo set, he was still pushing himself. His septet on the album is full of talented veterans including altoist Norris Turney, Budd Johnson on tenor, pianist Norman Simmons, and (on half of the set) vibraphonist Milt Jackson. The music (three Eldridge originals and two obscurities) features plenty of lengthy and spirited soloing. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/what-its-all-about-mw0000173957

Personnel: Roy Eldridge (trumpet); Norris Turney (alto saxophone); Budd Johnson (tenor saxophone); Milt Jackson (vibraphone); Norman Simmons (piano); Ted Sturgis (bass); Eddie Locke (drums).

What It's All About

Cybill Shepherd - At Home With Cybill

Styles: Jazz, Vocal 
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:22
Size: 104,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:22)  1. I've Learned A Lot About The Blues
(3:20)  2. My Romance
(2:15)  3. Sophisticated Lady
(2:30)  4. I Could Write A Book
(3:31)  5. You Took Advantage Of Me
(3:10)  6. Someone To Watch Over Me
(4:24)  7. Begin The Beguine
(4:01)  8. Fields Of Gold
(4:18)  9. Graceland Revisited
(2:25) 10. Why Don't We Run Away
(3:58) 11. If I Had My Way
(3:05) 12. The Child In Me Again
(3:45) 13. I Have Dreamed
(1:12) 14. All Of Me

Every once in a while, the actress Cybill Shepherd records a vocal album. She has a nice voice and a straightforward delivery, and expresses warmth and an understanding of the lyrics that she interprets. Not much of an improviser, Shepherd nevertheless swings lightly and does a good job on these 14 songs. Accompanied by pianist Tom Adams, Shepherd is at her best on the veteran standards. There is a bit of a slump on the five more contemporary pieces (cuts eight through 12), which are pop-oriented, a bit too straight, and of lesser interest. More rewarding are her versions of "My Romance," "You Took Advantage of Me," "Begin the Beguine," and "All of Me." This set also included a CD-ROM of publicity material plus versions of "Menopause Blues" and a second take of "Graceland Revisited." ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/at-home-with-cybill-mw0000687213

Personnel: Cybill Shepherd (vocals);  Tom Adams (piano).

At Home With Cybill

Peter Zak - The Eternal Triangle

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:00
Size: 157,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:17)  1. I Believe In You
(6:08)  2. A Body At Rest
(6:10)  3. A Weaver Of Dreams
(7:01)  4. Goodbye, Little Dream, Goodbye
(9:22)  5. The Walk-Up
(8:02)  6. The Eternal Triangle
(4:57)  7. I'll Keep Lovin' You
(6:27)  8. Hittin' The Jug
(6:11)  9. The Hymnotist
(7:20) 10. George Washington

There are few jazz pianists performing today who excel in the art of the straight-ahead piano-bass-drums trio as brilliantly as does Peter Zak. The empathy that he, bassist Peter Washington, and drummer Willie Jones III achieve on all 10 tracks of The Disciple the Los Angeles-born, New York- based pianist’s tenth album in 10 years for SteepleChase Productions and eighth such trio recording for the esteemed Danish label is nothing short of breathtaking. “The fact that the piano is the lead instrument in terms of playing the melody appeals to me,” Zak says of the trio format. “There’s that, and the hookup between the ride cymbal and the bass doesn’t get any better than that. The reason I play jazz is basically for that feel.” Critics are sure to rave about The Disciple, much as they have for his earlier trio recordings.“Peter Zak has developed into a pianist who knows what to leave out when playing, giving his music a buoyancy often lacking in trio CDs,” Ken Dryden wrote in NYC Jazz Record of Zak’s previous release, 2013’s The Eternal Triangle with bassist Washington and drummer Billy Drummond. “[T]his,” Dryden added, “is an interactive trio of equals, not just a leader and sidemen.” “The three musicians are as tight as a regularly working trio, even though they don’t play together too often,” Lee Hildebrand said of the same album in Oakland’s East Bay Express. And, in his review for the Newark Star-Ledger of 2008’s Blues on the Corner: The Music of McCoy Tyner with bassist Paul Gill and drummer Quincy Davis, Zan Stewart opined, “The inventive, poised pianist and composer Peter Zak  he of bebop-and-beyond heart creates beguiling passages of flowing melody driven by an assured swing.”

Zak is a stylistic disciple of some of the greatest jazz pianists of the bop and post-bop eras. He salutes six of them on The Disciple with personalized interpretations of compositions by Chick Corea, Elmo Hope, Horace Silver, Herbie Hancock, Hampton Hawes, and Thelonious Monk, along with three of his own and one by the Russian classical composer and pianist Alexander Scriabin. He hadn’t initially planned a CD of tunes made up entirely of tunes by piano players. It just turned out that way, as did the fact the set opens and closes with waltzes: Chick Corea’s “The Loop” and his own “The Disciple.” His decisions must have been subconscious, as he has long shown himself to be master of programming music who often selects great yet little-known songs for his recordings and live performances.“I want to do things that are off the beaten track, something that hasn’t been done a lot,” he explains. “I guess that’s one way of trying to make it a little more distinctive, but I also do things that are not overlooked, like ‘Weaver of Dreams’ and ‘The Eternal Triangle’ on my last record and ‘Criss Cross’ on this one.” A friend turned Zak on to “The Loop” from Corea’s 1984 ECM album Trio Music Live in Europe. “I really like stuff that’s not overwrought,” Zak says of the song. “Chick’s music is kind of brittle and sparse at times but really harmonically hip.” Since recording his own up-tempo samba “Montserrat,” Zak has been playing a quintet arrangement on gigs with Carlos Abadie’s quintet, but it had not been recorded previously. “It has kind of a static melody over moving chord changes,” he explains. “It’s something Cedar Walton did a lot. I’m drawn to that structure.” “Barfly” is a ballad that Hope recorded on a trio album in 1959. “I really like people who are able to take that bebop vocabulary and just point it in a different direction and personalize it, “Zak says.

Silver’s “Nutsville,” on which the groove switches between mambo and swing, first appeared on his classic 1965 The Cape Verdean Blues album. “The voicing that I play is the way the quintet and the piano played it with three melodies kind of scrunched together in a cluster,” Zak explains. “Horace’s timing is just so funky and flawless. He doesn’t overdo it.” “Prelude Op. 35 #2” is the oldest song on the CD, written by Scriabin in 1903, and the only one Zak plays without accompaniment. “This is somewhat like a Tin Pan Alley song of the ’20s, ’30s, and ’40s, the way it’s put together,” Zak says. “He used these tri-tone connecting devices that were used 40 or 50 years later in bebop. And he used kind of jazz voicings.” The minor, gospel-imbued blues “Requiem” is an early Hancock composition that made its debut on Royal Flush, a 1961 Blue Note album by trumpeter Donald Byrd. “He’s great like nobody else can be,” Zak says of Hancock. Zak adds that Washington convinced him to play it at a slower tempo than Byrd had. Hawes wrote the bebop blues “Jackie” and recorded it in 1952 at The Haig in Los Angeles with saxophonist Wardell Gray. “He often sounds like he’s leaving something in reserve; at the same time he’s just really personal,” Zak says of Hawes. Washington takes the first solo, which begins with a quote from “C Jam Blues” played in, the pianist points out, “a different key than the tune is in.” Solos by Zak and Jones follow. Monk’s “Criss Cross” is the best known song in the set. “I like Monk tunes that kind of rest on one chord a lot,” Zak says. “Monk is best played at a medium swing. I like playing that groove, anyway.”

Zak says that his ballad “Nightfall in Kandy” is named for a beautiful region of Sri Lanka, the country from which his girlfriend hails. He adds that the title is a play on the ballad “Dusk in Sandi” by Bud Powell, another of his piano heroes.The disc closes with the title track. “It starts off with a vamp that’s kind of neither major nor minor,” Zak says of the swinging waltz. “It’s modal and open, and has some tension and release.” The Disciple is the fourth straight Zak album in a row on which the prolific Washington has played. The two had rehearsed together a few times in the mid-’80s when they lived in the San Francisco Bay Area, but they became better acquainted musically after they relocated to New York City. “He’s one of the best musicians I’ve ever played with,” Zak says of the bassist. “He really knows how to break up the time and to really find the groove when it needs to be found. He hears everything that’s happening immediately.” Zak’s association with Jones dates to 1998 when both were sidemen on trumpeter Ryan Kisor’s The Usual Suspects CD. “He’s got a lot of energy but he’s not bombastic,” Zak says of the much-in-demand drummer. “I just like his sensibility about swinging.” Peter Zak was born on May 13, 1965, in Los Angeles and grew up in Columbus and Kent, Ohio. When he was five, his mother taught him the basics of piano playing and reading music, and after six months, he began a decade-long series of private lessons, including a period with internationally renowned concert pianist Margaret Baxtresser. After the family moved to Oakland when Zak was 16, he developed an interest in jazz when his high school band director showed him how to play the chord changes to “Stella by Starlight.” Studies with Susan Muscarella, now president of the California Jazz Conservatory, followed at UC Berkeley, where he also played in the UC Jazz Ensembles and earned a B.A. in history. He was soon gigging around Northern California with saxophonist John Handy, among others.

Upon relocating to New York City in 1989, he began participating in Sunday afternoon jam sessions at the Village Gate and quickly fell in with an ever- widening group of like-minded players at Augie’s on the Upper West Side. They included Eric Alexander (who recently appeared as a member of the pianist’s quartet at Smalls), Joe Farnsworth, Joel Frahm, John Webber, and Scott Wendholt. Zak has accompanied such jazz greats as Jimmy Cobb, George Coleman, Junior Cook, Scott Hamilton, Billy Hart, Jon Hendricks, and Etta Jones at clubs and concerts and has, in addition to his own 10 CDs, recorded with Ryan Kisor, Walt Weiskopf, Tom Guarna, Vincent Gardner, Stephen Riley, and others. In 2005, Zak received a $10,000 grant from the Doris Duke Foundation and Chamber Music America to compose and perform a new work for his trio. He has also been on the faculty of the New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music since 1995 and currently teaches an ensemble class there. “In jazz, the music has to grab you somehow,” Zak states. “Even if it’s really complex, it still has to be catchy. My primary goal is to create something that listeners find interesting and enjoyable.” The Disciple is a glowing manifestation of those principles, as well as an example of the art of the piano trio at its finest. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/peterzak

Personnel:  Peter Zak piano;  Peter Washington bass;  Billy Drummond drums.

The Eternal Triangle

Ricky Ford - Hard Groovin

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:10
Size: 109,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:14)  1. Masaman
(5:45)  2. M.R. C.P.
(6:15)  3. New Bop
(6:57)  4. D.D. Blues
(5:33)  5. Hard Groovin
(7:00)  6. Fundamental Mood
(5:03)  7. Jitterbug Waltz
(4:23)  8. Minority

The consistent tenor-saxophonist Ricky Ford, who was often the youngest player on the bandstand when he first emerged in the late '70s, is easily the oldest musician on this energetic modern bop album. Trumpeter Roy Hargrove, pianist Geoff Keezer, bassist Bob Hurst and drummer Jeff "Tain" Watts are among the main Young Lions of the late '80s and '90s but Ford (heard on both alto and tenor) is easily the most impressive solo voice on this high-quality outing. Ford and his quintet perform five of his originals, a Geoff Keezer song and the standards "Jitterbug Waltz" and "Minority" with driving swing and personable creativity. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/hard-groovin-mw0000273304

Personnel: Ricky Ford (alto & tenor saxophones); Roy Hargrove (trumpet).

Hard Groovin

Jools Holland - Piano

Styles: Piano, R&B
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:14
Size: 136,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:20)  1. May
(3:00)  2. Grand Hotel
(3:03)  3. Last Date
(3:16)  4. Bumble Boogie
(3:29)  5. Dorothy
(4:14)  6. Eruption
(3:06)  7. Upright And Grand
(4:07)  8. Christabel
(2:42)  9. Midnight Hour Blues
(3:31) 10. I Had It But It's All Gone Now
(2:59) 11. How Long Blues
(3:01) 12. Blue Lamp
(3:40) 13. Romantic Ruin
(2:39) 14. Bang And Pop
(2:25) 15. Red Ragtime
(3:16) 16. Strange Cargo
(2:53) 17. Rool 'Em
(3:23) 18. I'm In The Mood For Love

This record features eight of Jools' original compositions as well as 10 carefully selected pieces interpreting the work of the pianists and composers that he loves. It opens with Jools' own May, a unique field recording of his piano in conversation with songbirds, influenced by French composer Olivier Messiaen, followed by Grand Hotel, co-written with Sting a while ago and here completely reinvented with a mix of contemporary dance rhythms and stride piano. Next is a collaboration with iconic musician and producer Brian Eno, who sings backing vocals and experiments with soundscapes on Track 3, Last Date. The album also sees Jools performing alongside his acclaimed Rhythm & Blues Orchestra on three of the tracks: Strange Cargo; Romantic Ruin; and Bumble Boogie (in which he quotes Bach's Prelude No 1). The stylistic range is broad, taking in the baroque counterpoint of Christabel and the blistering boogie woogie of Bang And Pop as well as paying tribute to works by great Jazz artists Mary Lou Williams, Sidney Bechet, Freddie Slack, and Erroll Garner. In contrast, the middle of the album showcases a four-strong blues segment inspired by Jimmy Yancey and Lloyd Glenn. Jools pays tribute to his friend and collaborator Dr. John (Mac Rebennack) by covering Rebennack's Dorothy, but perhaps the greatest example of Jools' breadth of approach is his arrangement of Eruption by Dutch prog rock group Focus. The album was overseen by Jools' long-time producer Laurie Latham, with engineer Ron Box, and was recorded with vintage equipment in a variety of locations, including the Kent Marshes. http://www.joolsholland.com/newreleases.htm

Piano