Sunday, March 12, 2017

Sonny Stitt - Sonny Stitt Blows The Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:46
Size: 84.2 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1960/2010
Art: Front

[4:28] 1. Blue Devil Blues
[4:23] 2. Home Free Blues
[3:07] 3. Blue Prelude
[5:31] 4. Frankie And Johnny
[5:58] 5. Birth Of The Blues
[4:06] 6. Blues Offering
[6:10] 7. Hymnal Blues
[2:59] 8. Morning After Blues

Alto Saxophone – Sonny Stitt; Bass – Leroy Vinnegar; Drums – Mel Lewis; Piano – Lou Levy.

Sonny Stitt led a number of excellent record dates in 1959, especially at the end of the year when he produced three LPs for Verve over a span of three sessions with pianist Lou Levy, bassist Leroy Vinnegar, and drummer Mel Lewis. Playing alto sax throughout this album, Stitt hardly sounds like a Charlie Parker clone, something that unfortunately was a frequent claim by tin-eared critics throughout a fair portion of his career. The music includes several potent originals, especially "Hymnal Blues" (which is based on an old hymn) and the slow, powerful "Morning After Blues." Even an old warhorse like "Frankie and Johnnie" (which actually dates back to the early 1800s, according to liner note writer Leonard Feather) sounds fresh in the quartet's hands, with great solos by Stitt, Levy, and Vinnegar. ~Ken Dryden

Sonny Stitt Blows The Blues

Bonnie Tyler - Wings

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:52
Size: 132.5 MB
Styles: Contemporary Pop/Rock
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[3:40] 1. Louise
[2:55] 2. Celebrate
[3:08] 3. Driving Me Crazy
[3:44] 4. Hold Out Your Heart
[3:28] 5. Run Run Run
[4:05] 6. Wings
[3:18] 7. It's A Heartache
[3:30] 8. Stand Up
[3:33] 9. Crying In Berlin
[3:49] 10. Total Eclipse Of The Heart
[4:15] 11. I'll Stand By You
[4:44] 12. All I Need Is Love
[3:35] 13. I Won't Look Back
[3:29] 14. Streets Of Stone
[2:54] 15. Chante Avec Moi
[3:37] 16. Louise (French Vers)

2005 album from the veteran golden throated singer. Most of the 13 tracks are co-written by Bonnie herself, including the first single "Louise" which has a video that was shot in Paris. All but two songs on the CD are new, while the two older songs are actually re-recorded versions of the hits "Total Eclipse Of The Heart" and "It's A Heartache".

Wings

David Clayton-Thomas - The Evergreens

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:31
Size: 136.2 MB
Styles: Pop-rock
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[5:06] 1. Mornin' Blues
[3:45] 2. Last Chance
[4:37] 3. The Evergreens
[4:07] 4. Blackberry Wine
[4:30] 5. Dancin' To Labelle
[5:28] 6. Surely You Know
[4:36] 7. A Blues For Doc
[2:47] 8. Donnybrook
[4:58] 9. Fifteen Minute
[4:27] 10. I Can't Complain
[5:51] 11. Hell Or High Water
[4:11] 12. Doubletalk
[5:01] 13. It's Only A Song

David Clayton-Thomas: Vocals; Keyboards and Arrangements – Doug Riley; Trumpet, Flugelhorn & EVI – Bruce Cassidy
Drums – Paul Delong; Electric Bass – Howard Ayee; Acoustic Bass – George Koller; Guitar – Bernie LaBarge; 1st Trumpet – Jason Logue; Saxophones – Michael Stuart; Saxophones & Flute – Vernon Dorge; Trombone – Russ Little; Bass Trombone – Larry Sheilds; Percussion – Rosendo “Chendy” Leon; Piano; Lou Pomanti “A Blues For Doc” & “Blackberry Wine”; Trumpet – Kevin Turcotte “A Blues For Doc”; Singers – Dione Taylor, Sharon Lee Williams, Cal Dodd; Duet on “Surely You Know” – Dione Taylor. Recorded and Mixed at Metalworks Studios, 
March 15 to March 29 and May 3 to May 11 2007.

David Clayton-Thomas began his amazing journey as a homeless street kid and developed into one of the most recognizable voices in music, to date selling over 40 million records. In 1996 he was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame and in 2007 his jazz/rock composition “Spinning Wheel” was enshrined in the Songwriter’s Hall Of Fame. In 2010 David received his star on Canada’s Walk Of Fame. His 1968 debut album with Blood Sweat & Tears sold 10 million copies worldwide. The self-titled record topped the Billboard album chart for seven weeks, and charted for a staggering 109 weeks. It won an unprecedented five Grammy awards, including Album Of The Year and Best Performance By A Male Vocalist. It featured three hit singles, “You Made Me So Very Happy” “And When I Die”,” and “Spinning Wheel” as well as an irresistible rendition of Billie Holiday’s “God Bless The Child” that became a signature song for David. A 1969 summary in the Los Angeles Times proclaimed that “Blood Sweat & Tears just may be the most important pop music group of the decade”.

He was born David Henry Thomsett in Surrey, England, on Sept, 13, 1941. His father Fred Thomsett, was a Canadian soldier, his mother Freda, a British music student. After the war, the family settled in Willowdale, a suburb of Toronto. From the beginning David and his father had a troubled relationship. By the time David was fourteen he left home, sleeping in parked cars and abandoned buildings, stealing food and clothing to survive. A tough, angry street kid with a hair-trigger temper, it wasn’t long before he ran afoul of the law and was arrested several times for vagrancy, petty theft and street brawls. He spent his teen years bouncing in and out of various jails and reformatories. David inheirited a love for music from his mother and when a battered old guitar came into his possession, left behind by an outgoing inmate, he began to teach himself to play. Before long he was singing and playing at jailhouse concerts and for the first time in his life, he found acceptance. Now he had a dream and his life had direction… he put the reformatory years behind him and he never looked back.

The Evergreens  

Jimmy Rosenberg - Portrait Of Jimmy Rosenberg

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:26
Size: 142.9 MB
Styles: Gypsy jazz
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[2:41] 1. Some Of These Days
[2:09] 2. Love Is Back
[3:39] 3. Aladdin Theme
[3:54] 4. Jimmy The Kid
[4:40] 5. The Flying Dutchmen
[4:15] 6. Swing For Ninine
[9:47] 7. Manoir De Mes Rêves
[5:02] 8. Nuits De Saint Germain Des Prés
[4:25] 9. Dans Le Regard De Laura
[3:22] 10. Them There Eyes
[3:29] 11. Cocquette
[6:10] 12. Nature Boy
[3:06] 13. It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
[3:40] 14. Salla
[1:59] 15. Limehouse Blues

This album, a musical portrait of Jimmy, was originally produced to promote his European Quartet in 1999. However, only a few months later a new success in Carnegie Hall was followed by one last golden contract, but with the money came an acceleration in the drug abuse, and the contract was cancelled. After the turn of the millennium Jimmy and I continued for another four turbulent years together before the chemistry went bad, in August 2004.

This first chapter about Jimmy Rosenberg is now over, the dust is slowly settling, and the wounds are gradually healing, but Jimmy has silenced. What is left in public is a handful of albums by one of the most amazing guitar talents ever. For more than a decade we were like brothers in arms, but now I can only hope for a miracle – that one day my little brother will return to planet Earth and continue his magic. ~Jon Larsen

Portrait Of Jimmy Rosenberg

Blair Casdin - Cheek To Cheek

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:58
Size: 93.8 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[4:21] 1. Cheek To Cheek
[3:45] 2. The Very Thought Of You
[4:49] 3. Getting To Know You
[4:06] 4. I Don't Know Why
[3:32] 5. Them There Eyes
[4:01] 6. I Thought About You
[3:30] 7. The Greatest Discovery
[4:05] 8. You Are So Beautiful
[4:11] 9. Come Rain Or Come Shine
[3:03] 10. Your Mother Should Know
[1:30] 11. How Can I Tell You

Blair Casdin’s voice has been described as soulful, dynamic, bluesy, languid, and enchanting. Scott Healy, keyboardist on Late Night with Conan O'Brien says "Blair Casdin isn't just for kids. With great charts, a top-notch band and something for everybody, this mom is an R and B diva with a sultry, bluesy, style." San Francisco jazz pianist Larry Vuckovich called her “a soulful singer with a real affinity for the blues.” Blair Casdin is a singer of many moods. From blues to pop to jazz to latin, Blair brings a soulfulness and depth of feeling to whatever style she's interpreting. And Blair loves performing. Over the last 15 years, Blair has been delighting audiences in a wide range of settings--night clubs, cafes, private parties, corporate events, and anywhere they'll give her a mic and room for her band.

New Orleans is where Blair got her start, singing with local blues and funk bands. A few years later, she deepened her love of sophisticated melodies and harmonies while traveling with the a cappella group Something Like the Blues. Blair found her jazz voice in the San Francisco Bay Area, performing in local clubs and coffee shops, studying with Madeline Eastman, and collaborating with jazz veterans Larry Vuckovich and Akira Tana on her first CD in 2003. In 2007, Blair produced 2 CD's for families. On Cheek to Cheek: Sophisticated Songs for Jazzy Parents, Blair re-imagines jazz and pop standards as expressing a parents' love. With the help of grammy nominated producer-arranger Pete McGuinness Blair gathered together some of the finest musicians on Broadway and the New York City music scene, including Dave Pietro on clarinet, flute, and sax, Dan Levine on trombone, Pete McCann on guitar, Ted Kooshian on piano, Mary Ann McSweeney on bass, and Scott Neumann on drums. Cheek to Cheek is a must-have for all music-loving parents and kids! Following up on the success of her first New York project, Blair teamed up with Scott Healy, keyboardist with Late Night with Conan O'Brien, to produce Music From Morningside. Featuring parents, kids, and teachers from their children's preschool, Morningside Montessori, the CD raises money for the school’s scholarship fund. Among the contributing parents were the principal trumpeter with the Metropolitan Opera, an emmy-winning producer for Nick News, Scott and Blair, and an assortment of other talented singers and musicians. The CD includes a variety of kids' favorites from I've Been Working on the Railroad to Itsy Bitsy Spider to sophisticated songs like Swinging on a Star.

Cheek To Cheek

Hugh Masekela - The Collection

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 81:13
Size: 185.9 MB
Styles: Trumpet jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[ 2:36] 1. Grazing In The Grass
[ 4:04] 2. The Boy's Doin' It
[ 5:10] 3. Mama
[ 9:37] 4. Part Of A Whole
[ 7:53] 5. The Big Apple
[ 4:42] 6. Child Of The Earth
[10:12] 7. A Felicidade
[ 3:04] 8. Emavungweni
[ 2:54] 9. Phatsha-Phatsha
[ 6:45] 10. Ha Lese Le Di Khanna
[ 3:17] 11. Zulu And The Mexican
[ 5:32] 12. Up Up And Away
[ 3:09] 13. U, Dwi
[ 5:46] 14. Mama
[ 6:26] 15. The Boy's Doin' It

Hugh Masekela has an extensive jazz background and credentials, but has enjoyed major success as one of the earliest leaders in the world fusion mode. Masekela's vibrant trumpet and flügelhorn solos have been featured in pop, R&B, disco, Afro-pop, and jazz contexts. He's had American and international hits, worked with bands around the world, and played with African, African-American, European, and various American musicians during a stellar career. His style, especially on flügelhorn, is a charismatic blend of striking upper-register lines, half-valve effects, and repetitive figures and phrases, with some note bending, slurs, and tonal colors. Though he's often simplified his playing to fit into restrictive pop formulas, Masekela is capable of outstanding ballad and bebop work. He began singing and playing piano as a child, influenced by seeing the film Young Man with a Horn at 13. Masekela started playing trumpet at 14. He played in the Huddleston Jazz Band, which was led by anti-apartheid crusader and group head Trevor Huddleston. Huddleston was eventually deported, and Masekela co-founded the Merry Makers of Springs along with Jonas Gwangwa. He later joined Alfred Herbert's Jazz Revue, and played in studio bands backing popular singers. Masekela was in the orchestra for the musical King Kong, whose cast included Miriam Makeba. He was also in the Jazz Epistles with Abdullah Ibrahim, Makaya Ntshoko, Gwanga, and Kippie Moeketsi. Masekela and Makeba, his wife at that time, left South Africa one year before Ibrahim and Sathima Bea Benjamin in 1961. Such musicians as Dizzy Gillespie, John Dankworth, and Harry Belafonte assisted him. Masekela studied at the Royal Academy of Music, then the Manhattan School of Music. During the early '60s, his career began to explode. He recorded for MGM, Mercury, and Verve, developing his hybrid African/pop/jazz style. Masekela moved to California and started his own record label, Chisa. He cut several albums expanding this formula and began to score pop success. The song "Grazing in the Grass" topped the charts in 1968 and eventually sold four million copies worldwide. That year Masekela sold out arenas nationwide during his tour, among them Carnegie Hall. He recorded in the early '70s with Monk Montgomery & the Crusaders. Masekela moved in a more ethnic direction during the '70s. He traveled to London to play with Nigerian Afro-beat great Fela Kuti & Africa 70; then came a session with Dudu Pukwana, Eddie Gomez, and Ntshoko, among others, that resulted in his finest jazz/African album, Home Is Where the Music Is. Masekela toured Guinea with the Ghanian Afro-pop band Hedzoleh Soundz, then recorded a series of albums with them both in California and Africa with guest stints from the Crusaders, Patti Austin, and others. Masekela alternated between America and Africa, cutting a successful pop/dance album with Herb Alpert in the late '70s. During the '80s, Masekela returned to South Africa. He visited Zimbabwe and Botswana, and recorded two albums with the Kalahari Band that once more merged jazz-rock, funk, and pop. Masekela was part of Paul Simon's Graceland tour in the mid-'80s, while he continued recording and produced sessions by Makeba. Starting in the mid-'90s, Masekela began releasing a stream of albums and collections that showed his versatility and growth in South African jazz. He continued to be active into the first decade of the 21st century, issuing Live at the Market Theatre in 2007, Phola in 2009, and a pair of albums in 2012, Friends (with Larry Willis) and Jabulani, inspired by South African wedding traditions Masekela remembered from his childhood. Though the jazz content of his work has varied over the years, Hugh Masekela has far more material on the plus side than the negative. ~ bio by Ron Wynn

The Collection

Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass - Whipped Cream & Other Delights

Styles: Jazz Pop
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 29:41
Size: 68,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:49)  1. A Taste of Honey
(1:32)  2. Green Peppers
(2:49)  3. Tangerine
(1:45)  4. Bittersweet Samba
(2:25)  5. Lemon Tree
(2:35)  6. Whipped Cream
(2:58)  7. Love Potion No. 9
(2:13)  8. El Garbanzo
(2:46)  9. Lady Fingers
(2:14) 10. Butterball
(2:13) 11. Peanuts
(3:14) 12. Lollipops and Roses

One time in high school I flipped through my parents' records hoping that they might have purchased some Led Zeppelin or Pink Floyd albums without my knowledge. No such luck, but tucked in between Barbara Streisand and John Denver was a copy of Whipped Cream and Other Delights. "This must be great. Look at the cover! I thought to myself. Then I put it on the turntable. Nope. Foiled again. My parents were just as uncool as ever. But there's no denying that millions of Americans were hooked by this album in 1966, or at least by the cover featuring an alluring model covered in whipped cream (shaving cream, as it turns out). Whipped Cream gave Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass an overnight success that made them popular with just about everybody. It was an appropriate title for an album that many people consumed en masse but critics claimed was light, fluffy, and had little substance or content. Even though there are probably millions of copies of Whipped Cream available for a dime in flea markets and garage sales, Shout! Factory has reissued a remastered version, along with several other Alpert titles, as part of its Herb Alpert catalog.You know at least two songs on here already: the title track, which was used for the bachelors' theme on The Dating Game, and "A Taste Of Honey, which was Alpert's first big hit (even today Alpert's music is inescapable). The concept of Whipped Cream is a collection of songs with titles all having to do with food, although this makes little difference once the songs get filtered through Alpert's idiosyncrasies. Almost forty years later it's a bit surprising that his blend of Dixieland, pop, mariachi, and just about everything else caught on like it did. Perhaps it was just that there was a little something there for everyone.

But beyond the two hits are plenty of catchy instrumentals that are superbly arranged. The Tijuana Brass was a tight outfit filled with impeccable musicians (at least one, guitarist John Pisano, going on to earn serious jazz credentials). At the very least, Alpert was a gifted arranger who understood the architecture of successful pop music and managed to create an unexpected hit record. Today, once you can get past the initial recoil of listening to music this obviously dated, it's apparent that Alpert was on to something. Much of this material is very catchy and appealing, and there's enough variety in the basic concept to ensure that it doesn't get run into the ground. A lot of fashionable music from the past sounds dated today, as Alpert's does, but that doesn't detract from its charm. Fifteen years after I scoured my parents' records, I'm forced to conclude that Whipped Cream and Other Delights isn't a bad record after all. However, it's probably all the Alpert one needs in their collection. Which bring up an interesting question: who is the target audience for this release? It's hard to believe that there are people out there who are salivating for it. Perhaps the serious retro enthusiasts will pick it up, or maybe the cover will lure others in just like the initial release. (A side note: Shout! Factory has included a full-size reproduction of the original cover in the packaging.) Regardless, since you've heard the Tijuana Brass before, your mind may be already be made up. But as a piece of pop culture, Whipped Cream and Other Delights is a great example of slick sixties instrumental pop, and not nearly as bad as you think. Check it out. ~ David Rickert https://www.allaboutjazz.com/herb-alpert-and-the-tijuana-brass-whipped-cream-and-other-delights-by-david-rickert.php

Personnel: Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass.

Whipped Cream & Other Delights

Ute Lemper - Blood & Feathers - Live At Cafe Carlyle

Styles: Vocal, Cabaret
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:56
Size: 157,5 MB
Art: Front

( 7:32)  1. Pirate Jenny
( 6:35)  2. Milord
( 3:08)  3. Blood And Feathers
( 5:36)  4. The Ladies Who Lunch
( 2:02)  5. Bilbao Song
( 2:19)  6. Moon Dance
( 3:36)  7. Moon Over Bourbon Street
( 0:52)  8. Moon Of Alabama
( 2:53)  9. Moon At The Window
( 2:34) 10. It's Only A Paper Moon
( 4:03) 11. Grapefruit Moon
( 2:31) 12. Lili Marlene
( 8:19) 13. Muenchhausen / The Baron Of The Lies
(10:15) 14. Accordeoniste
( 5:33) 15. Cabaret Medley

Slinky Germanic singer-actress Ute Lemper made her Broadway debut in Chicago and is known internationally for her interpretations of theatre music, European cabaret songs and tunes by Kurt Weill. Lemper's gig at the Caf‚ Carlyle in Manhattan was recorded live on Feb. 25. 

Blood and Feathers was Ute Lemper's 2005 cabaret show at New York's Café Carlyle. It's a partial survey of her career, nodding to, among other things, her affinity with Kurt Weill ("Pirate Jenny") and her Sally Bowles role in (a Cabaret medley). She incorporates more Weill ("Bilbao Song," "Moon Over Alabama") into a "Moon Medley" that includes Van Morrison's "Moon Dance," Sting's "Moon Over Bourbon Street," Joni Mitchell's "Moon at the Window," the standard "It's Only a Paper Moon," and Tom Waits's "Grapefruit Moon." Lemper also tosses in Sondheim's "The Ladies Who Lunch" and a tribute to fellow German chanteuses Marlene Dietrich and Edith Piaf, and even delivers some of her patter in German and French. To call it an eclectic mix would be an understatement, and she's brash, she's bold, and she leaves it all out there not your normal honey voiced cabaret singer. But that also means Blood and Feathers isn't like the last hundred smooth, generic-sounding cabaret recordings you've heard. That's definitely a good thing. ~ David Horiuchi https://www.amazon.com/Blood-Feathers-Live-Cafe-Carlyle/dp/B0009J4OBS

Blood & Feathers - Live At Cafe Carlyle

Mike Richmond, Larry Schneider And Adam Nussbaum - On The Edge

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1988
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:02
Size: 149,4 MB
Art: Front

( 8:48)  1. On The Edge
( 5:01)  2. Northern Lites
( 6:56)  3. Adam and The Tribe
( 4:25)  4. Soft Focus
( 6:02)  5. Someday My Prince Will Come
( 6:01)  6. In A Sentimental Mood
(10:07)  7. Sand and Sea
( 8:47)  8. For D.R.
( 8:50)  9. Gospel

Mike Richmond has expressed his love of music on a global level. In addition to accompanying such stellar jazz musicians as Miles Davis and Stan Getz and folk/blues singer/songwriter Richie Havens, the Philadelphia-born bass player has performed in concert with Indian sitar player Ravi Shankar and the South Indian Orchestra and has served as chief instructor for the National German Jazz Orchestra. Initially a guitar player, Richmond was inspired by a Bill Haley and the Comets show that he attended with his parents in the mid-'50s. He switched to the bass after joining his high school orchestra. Richmond's understanding of world music developed at an early age. His mother frequently played Middle Eastern records in the family home. His interests in Indian music were sparked by the soundtrack of the late-'40s television series Ramar of the Jungle and the Beatles' involvement with Indian music. 

Richmond has been involved in some of jazz's most impressive projects. He participated in the Miles Davis and Quincy Jones-collaborative concert in Montreux, Switzerland, which became Davis's final performance. He subsequently replaced Charles Mingus in the Mingus Dynasty. On his debut solo album Basic Tendencies, Richmond was accompanied by harp player Lois Colin, percussionists Glen Velez and Joe Passaro, and oud player Simon Shaheen. Richmond received a Teacher of the Year award in 1994 for his teaching at New York University. ~ Craig Harris https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/mike-richmond/id5324858#fullText

Personnel:  Bass – Mike Richmond;  Drums – Adam Nussbaum;  Flute, Soprano Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Larry Schneider

On The Edge

Randy Reinhart - As Long As I Live

Styles: Cornet And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 67:57
Size: 126,4 MB
Art: Front

( 5:45)  1. At The Jazz Band Ball
( 7:17)  2. As Long As I Live
( 6:33)  3. Too Late Now
( 6:16)  4. Nobody's Sweetheart
( 3:21)  5. I Guess I'll Have To Change My Plan
( 2:50)  6. Weatherbird Rag
( 4:36)  7. Mood Indigo
( 9:53)  8. The Blues My Naughty Sweetie Gives To Me
(10:59)  9. Yellow Dog Blues
( 4:15) 10. More Than You Know
( 6:07) 11. Clarinet Marmalade

A critic's job is to critique, and while that doesn't necessarily mean finding fault, it does mean that you're supposed to be able to hear the good and bad together and comment on both. The problem comes when an album is so consistently appealing that you have a hard time getting distance from its charms. That's exactly the problem with this live album from cornettist and trombonist Randy Reinhart, who coats every tune on this winning program of trad and swing standards with a tone so sweet and burnished that listening to it makes you feel like you're eating ice cream. The fact that his accompanists include clarinetist Kenny Davern, trombonist Dan Barrett, and pianist John Sheridan only adds to the difficulty of gaining critical distance. So suffice it to say that the band's charging rendition of "At the Jazz Band Ball" is a masterpiece of group-improv tension and release, that their ten- and 11-minute-long versions of "Blues My Naughty Sweetie Gives to Me" and "Yellow Dog Blues" are too short, and that when Reinhart and Barrett switch instruments on "I Guess I'll Have to Change My Plan" the only reason you notice is that their brilliance changes color slightly. And when you listen closely to the opening head on "As Long as I Live," you'll hear harmony work between the cornet, trombone, and clarinet that is liable to make you tear up. Innovative? Not in the slightest. Masterful, brilliant, inspiring? Absolutely. ~ Rick Anderson http://www.allmusic.com/album/as-long-as-i-live-mw0000350778

Personnel: Dan Barrett (cornet, trombone); Frank Tate (double bass); James Chirillo (guitar); Kenny Davern (clarinet); Randy Reinhart (cornet, trombone); John Sheridan (piano); Tony DeNicola (drums).

As Long As I Live

Julia Hülsmann Trio - Sooner And Later

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:33
Size: 114,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:44)  1. From Afar
(4:58)  2. Thatpujai
(4:25)  3. You & You
(4:07)  4. Biz Joluktuk
(4:23)  5. All I Need
(5:04)  6. The Poet (for Ali)
(4:33)  7. Offen
(4:13)  8. J.J.
(3:58)  9. Soon
(4:27) 10. Later
(5:36) 11. Der Mond

After expanding to an instrumental quartet a quintet, with the vocalist Theo Bleckmann included pianist Julia Hülsmann returns to a trio formation on her fourth ECM release, Sooner And Later. Bassist Marc Muellbauer and drummer Heinrich Köbberling have been part of that core through the previous three ECM outings, The End of a Summer (2008), Imprint (2011) and A Clear Midnight Kurt Weill and America (2015) as well through Hülsmann's act music years. Despite a long, productive career and considerable recognition in Europe, Hülsmann is not well known in the US. A native of Bonn, Germany, she has been playing piano since the age of eleven. After moving to Berlin in the early 1990s, Hülsmann joined a jazz orchestra and later went on to record several albums with her trio and a succession of vocalists. A teacher at the Jazzinstitut Berlin, Muellbauer a London native has a broad cross-genre background that includes classical, jazz and tango music. He leads the ensemble Kaleidoscope, originated the Wood & Steel Trio and plays with the Lisbeth Quartet. Köbberling, a German born drummer and educator, has worked with some high profile jazz artists including Aki Takase and Anat Fort and was leader on Pisces (Nabel, 2002) with Marc Johnson, Ben Monder and Matt Renzi.

With more than a decade of collaboration, it shouldn't be surprising that the trio all composers in their own rite contribute pieces that are an intrinsic blend of their own strengths and those of the group. The opener, "From Afar" and the subsequent "Thatpujai" are subtle and sophisticated, very much in the vein of more familiar ECM piano trios. A perennial favorite rock source among jazz performers, Radiohead's "All I Need" opens with a beautiful duet from Muellbauer and Hülsmann before Köbberling quietly works his way in and gradually moves the piece up tempo. "You & You," "J.J." and "Later" are more challenging conventions and demonstrate a willingness to push the envelope. Sooner And Later is an album that grows in appeal with repeated listening. The trio masters interplay and while that dynamic takes precedence over solo time, there are numerous opportunities to appreciate each of the players individually. The quieter moments are warm and enveloping, each with a distinct personality. Where the trio displays their more energetic side, they show a brilliance for creating complex and highly engaging melodies. Sooner And Later is a significant achievement for a trio that had set a high bar, long ago. ~ Karl Ackermann https://www.allaboutjazz.com/sooner-and-later-julia-hulsmann-trio-ecm-records-review-by-karl-ackermann.php
 
Personnel: Julia Hülsmann: piano; Marc Muellbauer: double bass; Heinrich Köbberling: drums.

Sooner And Later