Wednesday, February 15, 2017

Martin Lechner - Gentlemen Are Hard To Find: The Music Of Nat King Cole

Size: 145,3 MB
Time: 61:37
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2011
Styles: Jazz/Soul Vocals
Art: Front

01. Sweet Lorraine (3:27)
02. Satchel Mouth Baby (3:23)
03. Don't Blame Me (3:42)
04. Walkin' My Baby Back Home (2:32)
05. That Ain't Right (3:14)
06. I'm Through With Love (4:22)
07. That's My Girl (1:41)
08. Nature Boy (4:59)
09. That's The Beginning Of The End (3:47)
10. Straighten Up And Fly Right (3:30)
11. Too Marvelous (3:55)
12. Little Girl (2:21)
13. But She's My Buddy' Chick (2:55)
14. The Best Man (2:58)
15. Lush Wife (5:34)
16. When I Take My Sugar To Tea (2:30)
17. I'm Lost (3:13)
18. Gentlemen Are Hard To Find (3:26)

Martin Lechner is literally a natural talent. Without having ever completed a single singing session, he interprets jazz classics with his characteristic voice and thus gives the songs a convincing independence. His sympathetic appearance, the warm timbre of his voice, the excellent rhythmic feeling as well as his sovereign phrasing, make Martin Lechner an exceptional release. And only a few years ago did he begin singing for his own pleasure. Following "open mic" appearances in 2006, Martin Lechner founds his own band with Swiss musicians. In the meantime, a project has been set up, which has achieved a great deal in a very short time. After his successful debut album "Gentlemen Are Hard To Find", his second litter is "Somethin 'Old & Somethin' New - Somethin 'Else!". ~Google translation

Gentlemen Are Hard To Find

Angie Wells & Raphael Lemonnier - Love And Mischief

Size: 131,2 MB
Time: 46:01
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Jazz/Blues Vocals
Art: Front

01. Peel Me A Grape (3:59)
02. The Moon Is Swinging On A Line (5:37)
03. She Ain't The Kinda' Girl (4:47)
04. You're My Thrill (5:36)
05. Come Rain Or Come Shine (2:26)
06. Nature Boy (3:58)
07. Ain't Misbehavin (3:39)
08. I'm In Moody's Mood For Love (5:24)
09. Nice Girls Don't Stay For Breakfast (4:45)
10. Baby It's Cold Outside (2:35)
11. One Mint Julep (Bonus Track) (3:11)

Angie Wells has a smokey well rounded voice that can give listeners goosebumps on a ballad and then turn around to get them tapping their feet when she swings. She has the ability to entertain her audience in a way that is truly captivating. She gives a show in the true sense of the word with glamorous costume changes, humorous banter and a voice that keeps her audience hanging on to every note. She truly believes a performance is a symbiotic exchange of energy between herself and her audience and gives her all at every moment.

Her performance as part of the 24th annual Jazz at LACMA series earned her a standing ovation and a wonderful critique by jazz journalist Scott Yanow in LA Jazz Weekly.

Angie began her singing career in an intimate little supper club in St. Germain des Pres in Paris when she joined the trio playing that night for a few tunes. Since then she has returned to France to tour with French pianist Raphael Lemonnier and has played and recorded at home with some of America's best jazz musicians including John Belzaguy,
Peter Buck, Carl Burnett, Bill Cunliffe, Quentin Dennard, Kenny Elliot,
Tim Emmons, Henry Franklin, Jim Hughart, Joe LaBarbera, Harry Kim, Paul Kreibich, James Leary, Jack Lecompte, Tom Warrington and Doug Webb. She has performed as guest vocalist with
Jeff Goldblum and The Mildred Snitzer Orchestra and with New Orleans' own Kermit Ruffins and The Barbecue Swingers at The Telluride Jazz Festival and The San Jose Summer Jazz Fest.

Love And Mischief

The Dixie Giants - Dressed And Ready To Go

Size: 105,0 MB
Time: 44:31
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Jazz, Dixieland
Art: Front

01. The Fifth Light Down (2:59)
02. One Hatchet, One Pitchfork (3:55)
03. Moopin' & Boopin' (2:43)
04. It Is Still (4:49)
05. Loophole (3:32)
06. Shutdown Stomp (2:30)
07. Three On The Tree (4:25)
08. Silver & Coal (5:06)
09. My Glasses (3:47)
10. How Neat Is That (3:45)
11. Mr. & Mrs. J (3:48)
12. Olympia (3:06)

Personnel:
Casey Jones - Clarinet/Tenor Sax
Jesse Shantor - Alto Sax
Jason Thor - Trombone
Nick Pulley - Sousaphone
Dan Charles - Banjo
Ricky Lomeli - Drums
Taylor Cuffie - Drums

“California Trad Jazz & more. No trumpet required.” For the past 4 years the Sonoma County-based group, The Dixie Giants, have brought their own special version of New Orleans music to the Bay Area. Whether they’re playing in clubs or on the streets, The Dixie Giants are infamous for radiating an infectious energy and always having a blast. While continuing to play the music of their heroes (Louis Armstrong & The All Stars, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Thelonious Monk, Jackson 5), they have also been writing original music in an effort to continue to evolve the idiom of Traditional New Orleans Jazz.

The Dixie Giants have shared the stage with such acts as Bonnie Raitt, Galactic, Rebirth Brass Band, The Wood Brothers, Charlie Musselwhite, New Orleans Suspects, Tuba Skinny, Dustbowl Revival, and many more. Their sounds have been heard at Strawberry Music Festival, Petaluma Music Festival, San Jose Jazz Fest, Healdsburg Jazz Fest, Sausalito Arts Festival, Lagunitas Beer Circus and Honk Fest West, and have appeared at events and in commercials for the San Francisco Giants. Winners of the North Bay Bohemian's "North Bay's Best Jazz Band" award in 2014.

Dressed And Ready To Go

Judith Nijland - A Jazz Tribute To Abba

Size: 110,8 MB
Time: 47:05
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do (3:01)
02. I Have A Dream (4:00)
03. Waterloo (4:30)
04. Lay All Your Love On Me (3:37)
05. Head Over Heels (3:02)
06. Dancing Queen (4:41)
07. Thank You For The Music (4:02)
08. One Of Us (4:25)
09. Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (4:18)
10. Summer Night City (3:41)
11. Voulez-Vous (4:10)
12. Money, Money, Money (3:32)

“It has taken me 40 years to appreciate ABBA. Coming of age in the 1970s, I was opposed to Disco and Disco-related music. The music, of course, didn’t give the least damn what I though and still permeated my delicate musical psyche to the point that it became an integral part of my young adulthood. How ABBA would translate into the language of jazz might be best not considered. However, Dutch vocalist Judith Nijland had no such compunction, arranging a dozen of ABBAs songs into this tidy, well-programmed package. Using a standard acoustic jazz ensemble, Nijland ably transforms the ABBA songbook. This could have been one of those ambitious projects that so often go so wrong. But Nijland pulls it off, making “Waterloo,” “Head Over Heels,” and “Dancing Queen” sound fresh and new. Danny van Kessel proves the ideal catalyst to Nijland overt musicality. His playing is sparkling and sharp, directing the course for Nijland. Those of you, who are of a “certain age” enjoy this! ~All About Jazz, C. Michael Bailey

A Jazz Tribute To Abba

Enrique Haneine - Instants Of Time

Size: 156,1 MB
Time: 67:02
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Contemporary Jazz, Latin Jazz
Art: Front

01. Angularity Within (5:06)
02. If You Know What I Mean (5:47)
03. Houston (4:14)
04. Esperanza (4:19)
05. Slippery When Dry (4:06)
06. Inside The Journey (6:29)
07. Color And Space (6:06)
08. By Choice (6:58)
09. The East Side Of Lloyd (5:22)
10. The Tear And Smile Of An Angel (6:05)
11. Let The Cedar Tell The Story (6:22)
12. Who's Willing (6:01)

New York based multi-instrumentalist Enrique Haneine dazzled the music world with superb pianism on the 2005 collaborative release At the End of the Day (Foxhaven, 2005). Ten years later, he leads his sextet on the gripping and spirited Instants Of Time this time from the drummer seat.

Haneine is a native of Mexico of Lebanese ancestry so he peppers his intricately designed compositions with a vibrant Latin groove and Levantine lyricism. Some pieces lean in one direction or another, most, however, are a deft blend of his many heritages.

The cinematic "Let The Cedar Tell The Story" has a definite Middle Eastern folk motif at its core. Haneine propels the tune forward with his commanding drumming, embellished with chiming, tambourine beats. Saxophonist Catherine Sikora blends east and west in an expressive and pastoral soprano improvisation as the band performs an exuberant chorus laced with melancholy.

Sikora opens the sensual "Esperanza," the most distinctly Spanish song on the disc, with her unaccompanied, thick and wistful tenor lines. Vocalist Lori Cotler steals the spotlight with her delightfully haunting wordless singing that undulates over trumpeter Lex Samu's clear burnished tones.

Samu's warm, languid phrases meander between Sikora's poetic tenor solo and trombonist Michael Rörby's pensive growl on the mystical "By Choice." The amalgam of rolling Afro Cuban flavored rhythms and lilting, Arabesque harmonies brings forth an Andalusian style romanticism to the richly textured music.

Rörby's expressive horn opens the simultaneously intimate and tense "The Tear And Smile Of An Angel." Over Haneine's percolating thuds and thrums the frontline blows a serpentine and soulful melody. Bassist Carlo De Rosa thrills with his virtuosity as he handles his instrument with breathtaking agility and vibrant spontaneity. His and Haneine's sharper, more angular refrains complement perfectly the horns' fluid interwoven vamps giving the track its dramatic edge.

Intriguingly inventive Haneine's first release under his own name showcases his many talents and skills. His evocative, richly colored works are sublimely balanced to allow for individual extemporizations without sacrificing their thematic essence. His brilliant percussion rivals his elegant and superlative piano playing heard on earlier albums and his leadership underscores synergistic individualism of his side musicians. Hopefully it won't be another 10 years before Haneine records again.

Personnel: Lori Cotler -voice (1,5 & 7); Lex Samu: trumpet; Catherine Sikora:tenor and soprano saxophones; Michael Rorby: trombone; Carlo de Rosa: acoustic bass; Enrique Haneine: drums, cymbals, Udu drum & tambourine.

Instants Of Time

Oleta Adams - Third Set

Size: 140,4 MB
Time: 60:31
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Jazz/Soul Vocals
Art: Front

01. It's Alright With Me (8:58)
02. Only The Lonely (7:20)
03. Don't Interrupt The Sorrow (4:58)
04. River (6:35)
05. Do I Move You (6:04)
06. Evolution (Acoustic) (5:57)
07. Rhythm Of Life (Acoustic) (3:41)
08. Blowin' In The Wind (6:16)
09. Wilted Roses (6:54)
10. His Loving Eyes (3:44)

Still singing her song...Oleta Adams releases “Third Set” ...Her first new album in eight years
“At this point in my life it’s kind of cool that I don’t have to ask anybody’s permission anymore about what I want to sing.” – Oleta Adams

Iconic, Grammy-award nominated vocalist Oleta Adams celebrates her 45th year in the music industry with a new collection of classic songs entitled Third Set. Inspired by the early days of her career, when she played multiple shows nightly in lounges and piano bars across the globe, Third Set highlights the music that Adams and her band always loved to play during that halcyon hour when the evening’s final set arrived.

“Before my break, I was playing in the clubs for 17 years,” Adams recalls. “I played a lot of hotel gigs where we would have to cater to all kinds of people. In the first two sets of the night, we didn’t know who we were catering to, so we had to do the songs that were the most familiar. But then, after a while, the third set became the one I designated as my set or the musician’s set. It was when we played what we wanted to play. I grew very fond of that set because it was in that third set that the greatest amount of creativity happened – when the crowds were smaller and we were under less pressure to do what the crowd wanted.”

Though Third Set may be comprised of the music that Adams and her band revel in playing for themselves, it is likewise filled with stunning arrangements of all-time favorite songs that music lovers will also no doubt stand up and applaud in much the same way that audiences have done as the velvety-voiced songstress has worked out the songs on the road over the last year.

Included on Third Set are “Oleta-fied’ versions of everything from jazz standards like Frank Sinatra’s, “Only The Lonely”, a haunting and desolate meditation on the despair of loneliness, and Cole Porter’s “It’s Alright With Me”, which Adams refreshingly interprets with sassy, sultry resolve, to an anthemic new take on Bob Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind” and a soul-stirring reimagining of Joni Mitchell’s folk rock masterpiece “Don’t Interrupt the Sorrow”, which becomes a soaring musical deliberation on the eternal war between the sexes in Adams’ capable hands.

Of her song choices, Adams explains that, “These are not necessarily songs that people would have thought I would choose but I chose songs that have meaning.”

“At this point in my life, it’s kind of cool that I don’t have to ask anybody’s permission anymore about what I want to sing,” she continues.

An elegant remake of Joni Mitchell’s “River’, a bluesy revision of Nina Simone’s “Do I Move You”, acoustic revisitations of her own recordings, “Evolution” and “Rhythm of Life”, as well as two new uplifting contemporary gospel tracks “Wilted Roses” and “His Loving Eyes”, round out Adams’ latest offering.

“It needs to have a great lyric and I have to relate to it in some way,” the songbird says of the songs that attract her. “I’ve found that pain is pain, it doesn’t matter who’s feeling it. When people are lonely and hurt or even when they’re happy I can’t imagine that it is any different for one than it is for another. Whether it’s me or somebody I know and I’m speaking for them, there has to be something in a song that I feel enough people can relate to. “

And relate they undoubtedly shall.

Third Set

Paul Bley - My Standard

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:53
Size: 150.8 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 1987/1994
Art: Front

[2:55] 1. I'm Glad There's You
[3:06] 2. Santa Claus Is Coming To Town
[5:30] 3. Lover Man
[2:59] 4. All The Things You Are
[4:26] 5. Long Ago And Far Away
[4:44] 6. Black And Blue
[2:27] 7. How Long Has This Been Going On
[6:18] 8. A.R.B
[3:08] 9. Blues Waltz
[3:44] 10. I Wish I Knew
[3:06] 11. If I'm Lucky
[4:57] 12. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
[4:04] 13. I Can't Get Started
[4:42] 14. The Theme
[5:08] 15. Becky
[2:15] 16. Bolivar Blues
[2:14] 17. Goodbye

Double Bass – Jesper Lundgaard; Drums – Billy Hart; Piano – Paul Bley. Recorded in Sound Track Studio, Copenhagen, December 8, 1985.

When one considers that Paul Bley is a constant improviser, the repertoire he chose for this set (ten standards, most of which are from the '40s and '50s) is rather surprising. But even on tunes such as "Santa Claus Is Coming to Town," "Long Ago and Far Away" and "I Can't Get Started," pianist Bley (accompanied by bassist Jesper Lundgaard and drummer Billy Hart) avoids the obvious and comes up with something new to say. ~Scott Yanow

My Standard

Roy Orbison - The Ultimate Collection

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:17
Size: 174.7 MB
Styles: Pop/Rock, Rockabilly, AM Pop
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[2:56] 1. Oh, Pretty Woman
[3:45] 2. I Drove All Night
[3:29] 3. You Got It
[2:45] 4. Crying
[2:24] 5. Only The Lonely (Know The Way I Feel)
[2:48] 6. In Dreams
[2:26] 7. Love Hurts
[3:03] 8. Claudette
[2:28] 9. Blue Bayou
[2:31] 10. Dream Baby (How Long Must I Dream)
[2:53] 11. Walk On
[2:20] 12. Falling
[2:11] 13. Running Scared
[3:56] 14. California Blue
[2:39] 15. Leah
[2:23] 16. Mean Woman Blues
[3:14] 17. Crawling Back
[3:26] 18. Ride Away
[2:47] 19. Too Soon To Know
[4:14] 20. She's A Mystery To Me
[2:50] 21. Blue Angel
[2:46] 22. It's Over
[2:12] 23. Ooby Dooby
[2:57] 24. Heartbreak Radio
[3:23] 25. Traveling Wilburys - Not Alone Anymore
[3:18] 26. Traveling Wilburys - Handle With Care

Roy Orbison The Ultimate Collection is the most definitive career-spanning collection of hits by Rock & Roll legend Roy Orbison and for the first time ever, includes tracks from the Sun, Monument and MGM years, plus songs from Roy s incredible late-career works, both solo and with The Traveling Wilburys all on one collection. The Ultimate Collection is comprised of singles from Roy s Monument, MGM, & Sun Records catalog and the track listing has been lovingly compiled by Roy's son Alex Orbison. The collection features the hits "Pretty Woman", "You Got It", "Crying", "Only The Lonely" and "In Dreams" plus more. This collection also features The Traveling Wilburys tracks "Not Alone Anymore" and "Handle With Care".

The Ultimate Collection

Leny Andrade - Bossas Novas

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:43
Size: 104.7 MB
Styles: Bossa Nova, Brazilian jazz
Year: 1998/2013
Art: Front

[2:33] 1. E Nada Mais
[4:17] 2. Canto Livre
[3:22] 3. Pode Ir
[2:57] 4. Ao Amigo Tom
[4:57] 5. Dois Corações
[2:44] 6. Nas Quebradas Da Vida
[3:18] 7. Esperança Perdida
[2:23] 8. O Chinês E A Bicicleta
[3:13] 9. Pássaro Imortal
[2:48] 10. Pra Que Chorar
[3:51] 11. Alegria Para Cantar
[2:39] 12. Samba Da Pergunta
[2:59] 13. Abajur Lilás
[3:35] 14. I'll See You In Rio

Andrade, considered by many the greatest singer of Brazilian jazz, has never had great commercial success, but is a well-respected jazz artist. She has been described by Tony Bennett as the "Ella Fitzgerald of Brazil". In Europe where she toured, she was the Brazilian First Lady of Jazz, building a huge fan base in the Netherlands and Italy.

New York Times critic Stephen Holden wrote of Andrade's performance at Birdland on August 27, 2008, "To describe Ms. Andrade as both the Sarah Vaughan and Ella Fitzgerald of bossa nova only goes so far in evoking a performer whose voice seems to contain the body and soul of Brazil."

Bossas Novas

Bob Curnow's L.A. Big Band - Music Of Pat Metheny & Lyle Mays

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:29
Size: 165.9 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 1994
Art: Front

[7:23] 1. It's Just-Talk
[5:22] 2. Always And Forever
[8:50] 3. The First Circle
[2:50] 4. Letter From Home
[4:53] 5. Are We There Yet
[8:38] 6. If I Could
[4:35] 7. See The World
[8:06] 8. Minuano
[5:20] 9. Dream Of The Return
[7:00] 10. Every Summer Night
[3:19] 11. In Her Family
[6:07] 12. Have You Heard

Alto Saxophone – Bob Sheppard, Danny House; Baritone Saxophone – Tom Peterson; Bass – Tom Warrington; Bass Clarinet – Tom Peterson; Bass Trombone – Dana HughesClarinet – Bob Sheppard, Danny House, Jerry Pinter, Rob Lockart, Tom Peterson; Drums – Steve Houghton; Flugelhorn – Bobby Shew, Buddy Childers, Don Rader, Ron Stout, Wayne Bergeron; Flute – Bob Sheppard, Danny House, Jerry Pinter, Rob Lockart, Tom Peterson; Guitar – Paul Viapiano; Percussion – Brian Kilgore; Soprano Saxophone – Bob Sheppard; Tenor Saxophone – Jerry Pinter, Rob Lockart; Trombone – Alex Iles, Andy Martin, Chuck Hughes, Rick Culver; Trumpet – Bobby Shew, Buddy Childers, Don Rader, Ron Stout, Wayne Bergeron.

Arranger Bob Curnow transcribed a dozen compositions by Pat Metheny and/or Lyle Mays (originally recorded by the Pat Metheny Group) and adapted them for his Stan Kenton-influenced big band. The instrumentation differs drastically from Metheny's quartet and some of the pieces were originally very electric, but somehow these new renditions make the songs sound as if they were originally designed for this orchestra. The 20-piece big band is full of some of the cream of L.A.'s jazz scene and includes such soloists as trombonists Andy Martin and Rick Culver; saxophonists Bob Sheppard, Rob Lockart, and Danny House; pianist Bill Cunliffe; and a mighty trumpet section. This is an unusual concept that somehow works perfectly and with surprising logic. ~Scott Yanow

Music Of Pat Metheny & Lyle Mays

David Hazeltine Trio - Pearls

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:47
Size: 111.7 MB
Styles: Bop, Straight ahead jazz
Year: 2001
Art: Front

[5:36] 1. What Kind Of Fool Am I
[4:05] 2. My Old Flame
[8:02] 3. The Masquerade Is Over
[7:17] 4. His Lordship (For Cedar Walton)
[5:40] 5. Somewhere
[6:06] 6. Darn That Dream
[5:02] 7. Pearls
[6:56] 8. Close Enough For Love

Bass – Peter Washington; Drums – Joe Farnsworth; Piano – David Hazeltine. Recorded at Studio in New York on November 18 and 19, 2000.

"A player and writer with great respect for the melody, Hazeltine can be surprisingly inventive with the harmonic and rhythmic possibilities in a tune. Unobtrusive yet frequently exciting, Hazeltine always sounds as if he is digging what he's playing, and his approach makes well-known tunes sound fresh...." ~Aaron Steinberg,

Pearls

Ann Hampton Callaway - After Ours

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:30
Size: 136.2 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 1997/2009
Art: Front

[5:12] 1. Time After Time
[3:25] 2. Teach Me Tonight
[6:40] 3. My Funny Valentine
[4:07] 4. Old Devil Moon
[4:44] 5. The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face
[4:57] 6. All Blues
[4:30] 7. They Can't Take That Away From Me
[6:03] 8. The Music You Leave Inside My Mind
[4:53] 9. You Are My Sunshine
[6:57] 10. It Never Entered My Mind
[3:33] 11. Fallin In Love Again
[4:22] 12. Untitled Track

Ann Hampton Callaway is one of the top cabaret singers of the past decade. She has always been influenced a bit by jazz, and this 1997 release was her first full jazz recording. Callaway has a haunting voice and, as with most cabaret singers, a great respect for the lyrics she interprets; her singing on "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" is a bit eerie. Pianist Kenny Barron, Bob Mintzer on tenor and soprano, and trumpeter Randy Brecker all get a generous amount of solo space, while bassist Jay Leonhart and percussionist George Jinda are fine in support; considering the high quality of her sidemen, it is a major compliment to the singer to say that her vocals do not cause the set to sag or the listener to lose his interest. On "All Blues" and "Old Devil Moon" in particular, she shows the potential of becoming a significant jazz singer in the future if she sticks to this path. Strangely enough, an intriguing original blues (clocking in around four-and-a-half minutes) is included at the end of the program, but not mentioned on the back cover or in the liners. Recommended. ~Scott Yanow

After Ours

Harold Ashby - On The Sunny Side Of The Street

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:17
Size: 151,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:14)  1. Out Of Nowhere
(4:42)  2. There Is No Greater Love
(5:08)  3. Honeysuckle Rose
(5:02)  4. Pennies From Heaven
(5:57)  5. It's The Talk Of The Town
(5:47)  6. Satin Doll
(5:37)  7. These Foolish Things (Remind Me Of You)
(6:08)  8. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
(8:33)  9. Scufflin'
(7:45) 10. In My Solitude
(6:19) 11. Just Squeeze Me

Harold Ashby's a tremendous tenorist almost like Von Freeman or Buck Hill, in that he had years of experience before getting a bit of wider experience on records thanks to albums like this! The set's got Ashby's great raspy tone in perfect formation with a trio led by pianist Horace Parlan himself experiencing a big new wave of exposure at the time, on some of his other Timeless sessions, which marked a move to spacious, more tradition-filled playing which makes him a great partner for Ashby on this set! The rest of the group features Wayne Dockery on bass and Steve McRaven on drums and although the tracks are short, Ashby delivers volumes in a very small space on titles that include "Out Of Nowhere", "Satin Doll", "Talk Of The Town", "Scufflin", "These Foolish Things", and "In My Solitude". © 1996-2017, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/764029

Personnel: Harold Ashby (tenor saxophone); Horace Parlan (piano); Steve Mcraven (drums).

On The Sunny Side Of The Street

Barbara Carroll - I Wished On The Moon

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:39
Size: 141,7 MB
Art: Front

(6:17)  1. But Beautiful
(6:13)  2. Gee Baby Ain't Good To You
(5:06)  3. Can't We Be Friends
(4:27)  4. I've Got A Crush On You
(6:48)  5. How Am I To Know
(6:11)  6. Prelude To A Kiss
(8:58)  7. Where Or When
(4:36)  8. I Wished On The Moon
(6:27)  9. You Are Not My First Love
(6:36) 10. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To

In the year 2005, Barbara Carroll could boast that she has began playing piano for a grand total of 75 years. Not without a pause to sleep and eat, obviously, but with a determination that might suggest such extremes. Born Barbara Carole Coppersmith, she began the instrument at only five-years-old and went on to classical training three years later, eventually graduating from the New England Conservatory. In terms of professional stagecraft, her initial training ground was a USO tour during the second World War in which she was part of an all-girl trio. This was quickly followed by leading her own trio on New York City's famous lane of jazz, 52nd Street, where she adopted her middle name of Carole as a stage name. The pianist was associated with such fine players as guitarist Chuck Wayne and bassist Clyde Lombardi, but what would develop into an extensive discography began in 1949 with a recording session backing up multi-instrumentalist Eddie Shu for the Rainbow label. Among female piano players, Carroll is known as the first to venture into the progressive bebop style that was especially associated with Bud Powell. Unlike the infamous Billy Tipton, Carroll also did not think it was necessary to hide the fact that she was a woman in jazz but this was New York City, not Oklahoma or Washington state. Not that Carroll had an easy time in a genre dominated by men. "People tended to put you down before they ever heard you," she has commented in interviews. "If you were a girl piano player, the tendency was to say: 'Oh, how could she possibly play?' You never even got a chance to present what you could do. But then, if you did prove yourself, it almost became a commercial asset, in a sense; you were regarded as unique." One audience that found Carroll to their liking was the high society crowd, becoming enamored with her during an extended run at the ultra-chic Embers supper club. Her group at the latter venue included the bassist Joe Shulman, whom she married in 1954. Carroll did not ignore the pop styles of subsequent decades, yet always managed to keep a strong jazz flavor present in whatever material she performed. If swing was a bay leaf, it would be said that Carroll has a large bush growing right outside her kitchen window. She has recorded for many of the best labels in the genre including Verve and Atlantic and continues to be in demand at clubs and cabarets. Carroll works as an actress on occasion, such as the Broadway play entitled Me and Juliet. ~ Eugene Chadbourne http://www.allmusic.com/artist/barbara-carroll-mn0000788256/biography

R.I.P.

Born: January 25, 1925, Worcester, Massachusetts, United States
Died: February 11, 2017

I Wished On The Moon

Michael Cochrane Quartet - Cutting Edge

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:58
Size: 155,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:59)  1. Lines Of Reason
(9:14)  2. Moon And Sand
(5:41)  3. You're My Everything
(6:40)  4. Autumn In New York
(6:26)  5. Celia
(5:20)  6. Mirror Mirror
(6:36)  7. Cutting Edge
(6:47)  8. I Thought About You
(8:43)  9. Shami
(6:28) 10. Long Walk

His resume is an imposing one, marked by gigs with Sonny Fortune, Jack Walrath, Eddie Gomez, Clark Terry, Michael Brecker, Chip White, the Spirit of Life Ensemble, Nancy Monroe, and many more. Add to that beneficial training from the likes of Jaki Byard, Eleanor Hancock and the legendary Madame Chaloff. This gives you just a simple point of reference for approaching the work of pianist Michael Cochrane, whose debut SteepleChase set, The Cutting Edge is just now getting an American release. While not without its moments of collective risk-taking, this set falls into the category of conservative mainstream fare that SteepleChase is known for and in Cochrane they have a solid pianist who has learned his lessons well. He certainly knows how to pace a set, the ten selections including some top-drawer standards and four of his own well-developed lines. Cochrane, bassist Ron McClure, and drummer Yoron Israel go it as a trio for Bud Powell’s “Celia” and “I Thought About You,” while the rest of the date features the lead voice of alto saxophonist David Gross. 

A new name to this reviewer, Gross speaks volumes with a tart yet seductive tone that puts him in the same league with fellow alto man Jon Gordon. In the final analysis, everything sits just right with The Cutting Edge, even if doesn’t quite live up to the implications of its title. ~ C.Andrew Hovan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/cutting-edge-michael-cochrane-steeplechase-records-review-by-c-andrew-hovan.php
 
Personnel:  Michael Cochrane- piano,  David Gross- alto saxophone,  Ron McClure- bass,  Yoron Israel- drums

Cutting Edge

Michael Dease - Father Figure

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:11
Size: 142,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:28)  1. Church Of The Good Hustler
(5:04)  2. Brooklyn
(5:41)  3. Cry Of The Wolf
(4:59)  4. The Pursuit For Inspiration
(5:18)  5. Confirmation
(5:58)  6. Riff Raff
(4:59)  7. Annette' s For Sure
(6:58)  8. Marian The Librarian
(6:06)  9. Wingspan
(4:41) 10. Till There Was You
(5:55) 11. Father Figure

Paying it forward is simply a given in jazz. Long before the music was welcomed in ivory tower institutions and codified for classroom consumption at all levels, seasoned musicians were sharing their hard-earned knowledge with aspiring youngsters on bandstands and in basements, serving as guides, exemplars, nurturers, and teachers all at once. Those experienced players were musical father figures, helping the next generation(s) along on their quest to join them, and that's a role that trombonist Michael Dease aspires to on this, his third date for Posi-Tone and his seventh release in total. Dease's paternal instincts have, no doubt, grown by leaps and bounds since he took on a larger role in jazz education at Michigan State University and became a father himself. Both experiences feed into Dease's need to do his part to bridge the gap between generations and bolster the ranks of those on the rise. Or at least that's what this album seems to say. Rather than build a band solely around known quantities for this date, Dease decided to tap into the youthful stream of musicians out there who are ready and eager to make their move. 

All of his choices in that department prove wise. Bassist Endea Owens is the biggest revelation here, possessing a wonderfully wide beat, an incredibly fine-tuned internal compass, pitch-perfect intonation, and solid technique. Then there's drummer Luther Allison, a player fully capable of working well in mellow and molten environments, and alto saxophonists Markus Howell and Immanuel Wilkins, strong-minded horn men who work well together and apart. Add to that list two established musicians vibraphonist and label mate Behn Gillece and pianist Glenn Zaleski and you have a solid band ready for action. The eleven tracks presented by that band touch on the old and new. There are originals, songs from The Music Man, winners from the likes of trumpeter Claudio Roditi and the late pianist-educator Mulgrew Miller, and classics from the respective books of saxophonist Charlie Parker and trombonist Grachan Moncur III. This crew proves adept at handling all of it. They mine bluesy veins ("Church Of The Good Hustler," Moncur's "Riff Raff"), bop along with the best of them (Parker's "Confirmation"), swim in strong Brazilian currents (Roditi's "Annette's For Sure"), and capture the pure beauty embedded in the music ("Till There Was You"). Everybody gets a chance to shine, but it's Dease who shines brightest. His buttery tone, monster chops, and impeccable sense of musicality lead the way. He sets the bar high here, as any father figure would, and his bandmates rise to the challenge. ~ Dan Bilawsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/father-figure-michael-dease-posi-tone-records-review-by-dan-bilawsky.php
 
Personnel: Michael Dease: trombone;  Behn Gillece: vibraphone;  Glenn Zaleski: piano;  Endea Owens: bass;  Luther Allison: drums;  Markus Howell: alto saxophone (1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9);  Immanuel Wilkins: alto saxophone (1, 2, 3, 5).

Father Figure

Ricky Ford - Hot Brass

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:25
Size: 137,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:35)  1. Ford Variations
(5:48)  2. Banging, Bashing, Bowing and Blowing
(7:11)  3. A Night in Valencia
(5:51)  4. 11/15/91
(3:33)  5. Cop Out
(8:16)  6. Hot Brass
(7:25)  7. Mood Blues
(6:42)  8. Speak Now
(7:32)  9. Carbon 14
(2:28) 10. It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)

Nice session matching tenor saxophone standout Ricky Ford with crew of fiery trumpet and trombone players, plus bassist Christian McBride, drummer Carl Allen, and percussionist Danilo Perez. Ford was a young lion back in the '70s, when there was no hype. He's now an experienced, skilled veteran, and teams superbly with trumpeters Lew Soloff and Claudio Roditi and trombonist Steve Turre. ~ Ron Wynn http://www.allmusic.com/album/hot-brass-mw0000094556

Personnel: Ricky Ford (tenor saxophone); Christian McBride (bass guitar); Claudio Roditi, Lew Soloff (trumpet); Steve Turre (trombone); Danilo Pérez (piano); Carl Allen (drums).

Hot Brass