Sunday, March 26, 2017

Robyn Spangler - On A Liquid Afternoon

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:11
Size: 94.3 MB
Styles: Easy Listening
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[3:15] 1. Everything
[4:23] 2. Come To Your Senses
[3:24] 3. 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover
[3:43] 4. Hit Me With A Hot Note
[2:56] 5. In A Restaurant By The Sea
[3:30] 6. Willin
[4:15] 7. You're Everything
[3:27] 8. Faithless Love
[3:01] 9. The Way You Do The Things You Do
[2:59] 10. Every Time I Look At You I Fall In Love Again
[2:46] 11. You're Free, I'm Gone
[3:28] 12. Live

This is a wonderful CD , showcasing the marvelous voice of Robyn Spangler. Great listening for the daily commute, very highly recommended. ~J.W. Spencer

Robyn got her first acting part at the age of six. Not yet able to read a script her mother repeated the lines and the lines were memorized by rote. She started singing and performing professionally at 17. (She would have started sooner but her parents forbid it and an underage singer would have been kicked out of most of the clubs and bars anyway.) Needless to say, Robyn has had an interesting and varied career working both in front of audiences and behind the scenes with a who's who in both the theater and film industries.

On A Liquid Afternoon

Paul Tillotson - Funky Good Time

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:00
Size: 105.3 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[7:54] 1. Loungin' @ The Evelyn
[6:09] 2. Seltzer (The Snow Song)
[4:51] 3. Dear Old Dad
[7:27] 4. Chartreuse
[4:04] 5. Funky Good Time
[4:22] 6. Where's Eric
[5:16] 7. Morphine
[5:53] 8. Dizzy

Paul Tillotson, piano; Mike Merritt, bass; and James Wormworth, drums. Based in New York City, where they make regular live appearances, the trio fills audiences with undeniable love.

Mike Merritt, son of the legendary jazz Bassist Jymie Merritt, currently appears nightly on the NBC hit TV show, Late Night with Conan O'Brien. James Wormworth, son of the great jazz drummer Jimmy Wormworth, is a successful freelance drummer appearing on numerous CD's, TV and live with leaders such as Johnnie Johnson and Donald Fagen. Paul Tillotson, composer, arranger, leader and spontaneous pianist is originally from Boise, Idaho. He has spent most of his life seeking and playing with the greatest musicians New York City and the world has to offer. The music on Funky Good Time offers a glimpse into the heart and soul of his journey.

Funky Good Time is their first recording together! Released in 2002, this CD features eight original Tillotson songs. Beginning with the funky rocking Loungin' @ the Evelyn and Funky Good Time to the Latin favors of Seltzer, Where's Eric? and Dizzy, to the sultry ballads Chartreuse and Morphine and all the way to the swinging Dear Old Dad, there is something for everyone here!

Funky Good Time

Scan-Am Quartet - Atlantic Bridges

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:53
Size: 164.6 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[9:58] 1. Calixto´s Way
[5:54] 2. 18th Letter Of Silence
[9:58] 3. San Fran Blues
[7:04] 4. Organic Fusion
[6:28] 5. Melancholia
[5:57] 6. The Man With Two Left Feet (He Ain´t Going Nowhere)
[8:32] 7. Purple And Orange
[5:34] 8. Nights In Brooklyn
[8:32] 9. Mean Gene
[3:52] 10. In Our Lifetime (Nov. 4. 2008. 10 Pm Cst)

The Scan-Am Quartet features top musicians from Denmark, Sweden and the USA: Swedish stellar alto man Fredrik Kronkvist, Danish New York-resident, pianist Søren Møller and Danish bassist Morten Ramsbøl (these three had previously collaborated on a project with the world-famous drummer Antonio Sanchez - ”A Tribute to Trane” released in 2007). To this trio they added another top-notch drummer : Jason Marsalis - youngest brother to Wynton and Branford - who has been re-defining the vocabulary of jazz drumming since the early 90´s and is known for his exciting rhythmic drive. These four musicians speak the same universal language of improvised music - and on this album take the listener on a musical journey that includes spiritual Coltrane-inspired Afro grooves, New Orleans swing with a modern twist, lyrical Scandinavian ballads, Latin jazz rhythms, American fusion and much more - with compositions by all members of the band.

Atlantic Bridges

Cory Weeds Quintet - Everything's Coming Up Weeds

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:04
Size: 120,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:33)  1. B.B.'s Blue Blues
(7:19)  2. Biru Kirusai
(5:42)  3. Ella's Walk
(5:22)  4. Little Unknown One
(5:59)  5. I've Never Been in Love Before
(5:48)  6. Bailin' on Lou
(4:44)  7. 323 Shuter
(5:14)  8. Cyclaman
(5:20)  9. The Pour

Everything's Coming Up Weeds, the 50th release from the Cellar Live stable, is a stellar recording featuring an extraordinary quintet. At first blush, it recalls the energy and fervor of wonderful Benny Golson bands and, if the memory can be stretched a wee bit further, also some memorable sessions of Jazztet or even a Jazz Messengers middle passage. The date is led by the big tenor sound of Cory Weeds saxophonist, broadcaster, jazz impresario extraordinaire and owner of Canada's leading West Coast nightspot, The Cellar Restaurant and Jazz Club. There is also excellent work from pianist Ross Taggart, trumpeter Jim Rotundi, bassist John Webber and drummer Willie Jones III.  There are several remarkable aspects to this record. First, the writing of the originals is of the very highest order. The music is wonderfully crafted with an extraordinary ear for tonal colors and rhythmic textures, whether it is a blues such as Taggart's "BB's Blue Blues," which appears to be an oblique tribute to Thelonious Monk, or an exotic narrative from Rotundi, "Biru Kirusai," which is almost a title in Bunga Emas (the language of Malaysia) and conjures up images of the sights and smells of exquisite Southeast Asia. The highlight, of course, is Weed's writing, which is mature and exquisitely crafted, with a fine sense of the sonority and sliding elegance of the tenor saxophone. On his "Little Known One," Weeds paints sonic images of Dexter Gordon. And like Gordon, Weeds is able to bend his fat sound to practically cry at the most tender moments of the song.

On Frank Loesser's "I've Never Been in Love Before," Cory Weeds establishes his mastery over the ballad, digging deep into his horn an extracting a genuine, glowing warmth that few tenor saxophonists today have been able to summon, even in balladry. Weeds also exhibits remarkable command of the bebop rhythm with his "Bailin' On You" and "323 Shuter." His chart, "The Pour," sounds like a classic tune from a Jazz Messengers songbook. But make no mistake, this is all Cory Weeds. This is, in fact, the second remarkable aspect of this record. It is bursting with ideas and superb expression. Few small ensembles playing today complement each other with sensitivity to each other's sound. It is like an Duke Ellington band, where each of the players, like alchemists, forge tones that meld into one another. The interplay is almost seamless, with Taggart's "Cyclaman" and Weeds' "The Pour" bringing that molten sound of the quintet to sublime fruition. This is also a wonderfully tongue-in-cheek title: Everything's Coming Up Weeds. If anything, there is jazz in full bloom here, end-to-end. ~ Raul D’Gama Rose https://www.allaboutjazz.com/everythings-coming-up-weeds-cory-weeds-cellar-live-review-by-raul-dgama-rose.php

Personnel: Cory Weeds: tenor saxophone; Jim Rotundi: trumpet; Ross Taggart: piano; John Webber: acoustic bass; Willie Jones III: drums.

Everything's Coming Up Weeds

Reuben Brown Trio - Ice Scape

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:07
Size: 144,9 MB
Art: Front

( 4:17)  1. Billy
(10:18)  2. Mack The Knife
( 5:17)  3. Night In Tunisia
( 6:44)  4. Ice Scapes
( 5:39)  5. Joe
( 6:45)  6. It's The Night I Like
( 3:57)  7. Lonely Afternoon
( 9:00)  8. Twilight At Duke's Place
( 6:27)  9. Lush Life
( 4:40) 10. Catania

Nearly every urban community is blessed with one or more jazz treasures who chose to stay at home. Piano-wise, in D.C. one of those has long been pianist Reuben Brown, whose roll has been slowed by illness in recent years. At places like One Step Down, Brown has eased the fears of many a traveling soloist dealt the often iffy “local rhythm section” card. Thankfully in 1994 Nils Winther of SteepleChase took some time to chronicle Brown’s marvelous, swinging and soulful touch at the piano. Assisted by masters Rufus Reid on bass and homeboy Billy Hart on drums, Brown brings his classic touch to the world. Among the highlights of this date are his unusual, hushed treatment of “Mack The Knife,” given new life courtesy of Reuben’s arrangement. Other standards include “A Night In Tunisia” and a gorgeous solo “Lush Life.” Otherwise Brown displays his keen compositional skills on the remaining seven tracks. ~ Willard Jenkins https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/reuben-brown-trio-ice-scape/

Personnel: Reuben Brown (piano);  Billy Hart (drums);  Rufus Reid (bass)

Ice Scape

Etienne Charles - Creole Soul

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:24
Size: 132,7 MB
Art: Front

(0:19)  1. Creole (Intro)
(6:25)  2. Creole
(5:20)  3. The Folks
(5:55)  4. You Don't Love Me
(6:30)  5. Roots
(6:03)  6. Memories
(5:42)  7. Green Chimneys
(4:54)  8. Turn Your Lights Down Low
(6:52)  9. Midnight
(4:52) 10. Close Your Eyes
(3:26) 11. Doin' The Thing

With his simple declaration, "sound is my art...I just try to create," Trinidadian jazz trumpeter Etienne Charles puts into context his role of creator and producer in relation to his latest recording. This new album, previewed earlier this year in Tobago at Jazz on the Beach at Mt Irvine, reveals an evolution of his art that parallels the jazz idiom's most eclectic trumpeter and influence. The fourth studio album from this US-based musician and teacher bristles with a kind of energy that comes from the realization that one has gone beyond; beyond the usual expectations of a Caribbean existence, beyond the boundary of the usual sonic influences that have paved the way for this jazz lion. The familiar tropes of calypso rhythm inflected jazz that have been a hallmark of our jazz here for decades from Duke Ellington's A Drum is a Woman (1956) to Rupert Clemendore's Le Jazz Trinidad (1961) and Dizzy Gillespie's Jambo Caribe (1964)are abandoned for a modern post-bop and jazz fusion take on the material and all its thematic and stylistic influences in the New World. Thematically, this should come as no surprise. Charles has posited that the vision of this album is the showcasing of the influences of all this music in the African diaspora, a melting pot of sounds that shape and determine who he is as a musician and who we are as a people. Etienne Charles tells New York-based jazz writer Eric Sandler: "Creole to me means a world within a world...I'm Trinidadian, but being Trinidadian means that I have many different cultural influences as well as many different influences based on my bloodline." This statement echoes a famous stanza of Nobel Prize winning St Lucian poet Derek Walcott's: "I have Dutch, nigger, and English in me/and either I'm nobody, or I'm a nation." We are all creole.

The artistic parallel does not stop there. Deciphering an arc in the themes of the four albums by Charles to date, one sees in Culture Shock (2006), the name says it all, a musical diary of the newly minted artist in his New World of America. Folklore (2009), the suite based on local legends and Kaiso (2011) are his "Trinidad" albums; going back to the source of inspiration. Now, with Creole Soul, he takes flight. A parallel to VS Naipaul: after his first four books set in Trinidad, he began to travel ..."my writing ambition grew. But when it was over I felt I had done all that I could do with my island material. No matter how much I meditated on it, no further fiction would come..." ultimately to a Nobel prize. Where Charles will go from here is the surprise that jazz holds in store for listeners.  On this recording, there are two distinctive threads, the original compositions and the covers. On the original compositions, we can hear the rhythmic melange that defines a creole soul. Haitian mascaron dance groove meets bomba rhythms and jazz syncopation on "Midnight" (an ode to the end of day), "The Folks" (a dedication to his parents) incorporating calypso's syncopated bass with rhythm & blues, and "Doin' The Thing" featuring jump blues and calypso, all majestically anchored by Grammy award-winning bassist Ben Williams and drummer Obed Calvaire.  Charles strategically makes use of the covers: Bob Marley's "Turn the Lights Down Low" and the Dawn Penn popularized "You Don't Love Me (No No No)" (the latter serendipitously being performed for millions on the BET Awards 2013 in June), position this CD to be heard in the right places by the right ears. Reggae/dancehall music is embedded into mainstream consciousness to a greater extent than calypso. The reverential cover of Winsford 'Joker' Devine's "Memories" and the bouncy cover of Thelonious Monk's "Green Chimneys" (with the "distinctive calypso lope to the beat" that relocates Monk in the old San Juan Hill district of Caribbean New York) completes this West Indian quartet of memorable melodies and artistic legacies that are easily saleable.

Creole Soul may also be considered as Charles' electric album. Landmark distinctions in popular music have been made by pioneers. Bob Dylan going electric in 1965 with Bringing It All Back Home, and Miles Davis' In A Silent Way and Bitches Brew in 1969/70 transformed their respective genres by utilising electric instruments. Charles, on this CD, introduces listeners to the sounds of the electric guitar marking a shift in the sound, previously all acoustic. The album opener, "Creole" (a reflection on his first Haitian sojourn in 2012), featuring the Haitian singer and Houngan Erol Josué combines the kongo drum rhythm of northern Haiti with the urgent funky electric guitar of Alex Wintz that forces one to get up and dance. This is spirit moving feet. This is jazz in the Caribbean. This is improvised joy. Kris Bowers' meandering Fender Rhodes on "The Folks" signals that the intention is to keep the arrangements and sound modern. 

The electric guitar and piano is again repeated on "Roots" (an ode to his family roots) featuring the Martiniquan belair rhythm; the French Caribbean rhythms seem to lend a place for the electric ascendance of Charles. An artist/producer subliminally makes commercial decisions that affect aesthetic outcomes. Charles disagrees, however: "I didn't really think about business when I was writing the music or choosing the tunes. Business happens after the music is made. Business folks will decide based on what they hear if it's worth selling. If we're not happy with what we record, we won't sell it." The sum of these songs says otherwise. That said, this CD can have an impact on the consideration of music from these islands. Like Geoffrey Holder a generation before who had a significant impact on Trinidad music via "House of Flowers," before Harry Belafonte's Calypso, Creole Soul is in that mould of trend setter. Ideas of jazz globalization, Caribbean trans-nation, and diaspora, which Etienne suggests is the arithmetic of creolization, as formulae to contextualise this recording clouds the simple fact that this is a exceptional record by an artist who has grown technically in both his playing and improvisation. We all are creole! ~ Nigel Campbell https://www.allaboutjazz.com/etienne-charles-creole-soul-by-nigel-campbell.php
 
Personnel: Etienne Charles: trumpet, flugelhorn, percussion; Brian Hogans: alto sax; Obed Calvaire: drums; Jacques Schwarz-Bart: tenor sax; Kris Bowers: piano & Fender Rhodes; Ben Williams: bass; Erol Josué: vocals (1, 2); Daniel Sadownick: percussion &vocals (5); D'Achee: percussion (2, 3, 7, 11), vocals(5); Alex Wintz: guitar (2, 5, 6).

Creole Soul

Lee Konitz - Rhapsody II

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:52
Size: 163,1 MB
Art: Front

(8:09)  1. Body And Soul
(1:12)  2. Short Cut #1
(4:38)  3. Another View
(4:10)  4. Lover Man
(1:02)  5. Short Cut #2
(5:48)  6. Kary's Trance
(3:40)  7. Trio #2
(0:59)  8. Indiana Jones #1
(6:49)  9. You Don't Know What Love Is
(2:09) 10. Variation #1
(5:48) 11. Variation #2
(7:53) 12. Some Blues
(1:17) 13. Short Cut #3
(1:31) 14. Indiana Jones #2
(3:33) 15. Round And Round And Round
(4:31) 16. Sittin' In
(1:33) 17. Indiana Jones #3
(6:02) 18. Body and Soul, Finale

This follow-up to Rhapsody is another eclectic mix, with 19 tracks featuring the veteran alto saxophonist in various small group settings. Baritone sax great Gerry Mulligan and the leader flesh out an inspired duet of "Lover Man" and pianist Peggy Stern joins them for the spacy, extemporaneous "Trio #2." The brilliant flugelhornist Clark Terry is only featured on three very brief improvisations based on "Indiana," which is wasting a great talent. Konitz switches to soprano sax for a moody version of "You Don't Know What Love Is" with vocalist Sheila Jordan and bassist Harvie Swartz. This is an interesting but not essential CD that falls short of its namesake predecessor and The Lee Konitz Duets (Original Jazz Classics). ~ Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/rhapsody-vol-2-mw0000081654

Personnel: Lee Konitz (soprano saxophone, alto saxophone, tenor saxophone); Judy Niemack, Sheila Jordan (vocals); Jeanfrançois Prins, John Scofield (guitar); Mark Feldman (violin); Toots Thielemans (harmonica); Gerry Mulligan (baritone saxophone); Clark Terry (flugelhorn); Kenny Werner (piano, synthesizer); Frank Wunsch, Peggy Stern, Yuko Fujiyama (piano); Jeff Williams (drums).

Rhapsody II