Saturday, April 22, 2017

Ellen Robinson - Don't Wait Too Long

Size: 165,5 MB
Time: 71:16
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Dance Only With Me (Live) (4:52)
02. Soon (Live) (6:47)
03. If (Live) (8:32)
04. Almost Like Being In Love (Live) (6:37)
05. The Storm (Live) (5:06)
06. You Must Believe In Spring (Live) (5:27)
07. Tick Tock (Live) (5:31)
08. Be Careful It's My Heart (Live) (7:26)
09. Our Day Will Come (Live) (4:34)
10. Calling You (Live) (5:02)
11. But Beautiful (Live) (6:27)
12. Don't Wait Too Long (Live) (4:50)

Bay-Area vocalist Ellen Robinson is a study in jazz grace and elegance. Rather than a bright and shiny repertoire of specialized training (of which there is nothing wrong), Robinson sports a music education degree from Manhattanville college with a major in piano, and rides an experiential arc in to the heart of the Great American Songbook. Robinson readily stakes her claim on the rich melodies of the stage and Tin Pan Alley, demanding that the lyrics move her before she commits to a song. Don't Wait Too Long is Robinson's third recording after 2006's Mercy! and 2001's On My Way to You, both on the singer's EMR Music label.

Her very successful modus operandi lies in her respect for melody and her far-reaching embrace of American song. This particular recital, supported by an empathic trio with saxophone, addresses songs on the edge of standards. Save for "Almost Like Being in Love," "You Must Believe in Spring" and "But Beautiful," the songs are off the beaten path. These are all songs favored by horn players and Robinson's no-nonsense delivery reveals why. These melodies are muscular and rich, requiring a strong and disciplined voice to deliver them properly. Robinson has this in spades.

Her keyboard support is exceptional, with Murray Low ably steering the band as he alternates between acoustic and electric piano. But Robinson is the principle, easily approachable and enjoyed. ~by C. Michael Bailey

Personnel: Ellen Robinson: vocals; Murray Low: piano, keyboards; Sam Bevan: bass; Dan Foltz: drums; Kristen Strom: soprano and tenor saxophone.

Don't Wait Too Long

Sarah Partridge - Bright Lights And Promises: Redefining Janis Ian

Size: 151,6 MB
Time: 65:07
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. A Quarter Past Heartache (4:16)
02. Tattoo (4:36)
03. Society's Child (6:05)
04. Forever And A Day (4:35)
05. Calling Your Name (4:13)
06. At Seventeen (5:53)
07. Belle Of The Blues (5:27)
08. Matthew (6:35)
09. Silly Habits (4:03)
10. Somebody's Child (3:59)
11. Bright Lights & Promises (5:29)
12. Orphan Of The Wind (5:35)
13. I'm Still Standing (4:14)

How did nobody think to go here before? With a glut of fine Joni Mitchell tributes on the market and a couple of engrossing Laura Nyro nods out there, how is it that no creative spirits in the jazz or cabaret camps thought to make the full-on jump to Janis Ian before now? Hearing Sarah Partridge dig into Ian's body of work makes this concept seem like a no-brainer—an incredibly natural fit, in fact—but that may very well have more to do with Partridge's vision and interpretive brilliance than it does with the material penned by the honoree.

Nobody familiar with Ian's oeuvre would argue against saluting her work, but the folk-ish qualities that carry her musical art, whether materializing through a flower power lens or tackling life's truest cruelties, don't necessarily call out for jazz rewrites. Fortunately, that didn't stop Sarah Partridge from pursuing this project. After connecting with Ian, she couldn't get the idea out of her head. She may have had her doubts about where she could go with the music, but those doubts didn't deter her one bit. Partridge's worries ultimately proved unfounded, as she put together a compelling program that touches on different facets and eras of Ian's career. It's neither disloyal to the originals nor congruent with them. It exists in its own space, leaning on the everlasting songs of Janis Ian while resting atop Partridge's firm artistic footing.

The playlist includes nuggets from the hippie days of the '60s, bluesy fare from the '70s, latter day works penned in the past two decades, and a pair of songs co-written by Partridge and Ian just for the occasion. Ian's best known work makes the cut, as it should, and it simultaneously fulfills and defies expectations. "Society's Child," for example, seems to merge the aesthetics of Steely Dan and Joni Mitchell without losing an ounce of its eye-opening purpose, and "At Seventeen" glides along in seven on an airy cloud while Partridge presents the song's bitter pill realizations with incredible poise. Both are highlights, but it's almost wrong to call out any individual songs for special praise. All thirteen tracks work beautifully. What's not to love with an album that includes a samba-fied "Calling Your Name," a soulful "Belle Of The Blues," a hard swinging "Silly Habits," a blues-drenched "Bright Lights & Promises," and a newly-penned "A Quarter Past Heartache" with Ian herself joining in?

One of Ian's chief gifts has always been her ability to mine the world's depressive truths and show us the horrors of reality. That certainly isn't lost on Partridge. In collaborating with Ian to create "Somebody's Child," a piece that touches on the understanding that the homeless and helpless of the world were once the young and innocent children of mothers and fathers, and in covering the chilling "Matthew," a song about the beating and killing of Matthew Shepard, Partridge follows Ian's path and makes us confront subjects that are often far too difficult to discuss. The same holds true with several other songs that receive emotionally reverberant interpretations—"Tattoo" and the aforementioned "Society's Child," most notably.

The musicianship here is superb throughout—you shouldn't expect anything less when Tim Horner is driving from the drums, Scott Robinson is covering reeds, Allen Farnham is manning the keys and arranging the material, and other heavy hitters are in the mix—and Partridge hits a bull's-eye on every single song. She can scat, strut, soar, and tear your heart and soul to shreds without ever breaking a sweat. She's that good, these performances are that memorable, and this album is most certainly one for the ages. ~by Dan Bilawsky

Personnel: Sarah Partridge: vocals; Janis Ian: vocals (1); Allen Farnham: piano; Bill Moring: bass; Tim Horner: drums, percussion; Scott Robinson: tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, flute, clarinet; Ben Williams: trombone; Paul Meyers: acoustic guitar; Ben Stein electric guitar.

Bright Lights And Promises

Joss Stone - 2 albums: Soul Sessions / Soul Sessions Vol. 2

Album: Soul Sessions
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:00
Size: 96.2 MB
Styles: Neo-soul
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[3:34] 1. The Chokin' Kind
[4:19] 2. Super Duper Love
[3:37] 3. Fell In Love With A Boy
[5:31] 4. Victim Of A Foolish Heart
[2:59] 5. Dirty Man
[3:54] 6. Some Kind Of Wonderful
[4:27] 7. I've Fallen In Love With You
[2:59] 8. I Had A Dream
[3:02] 9. All The King's Horses
[7:33] 10. For The Love Of You

Q: She's 16 and British, what can she possibly know about singing vintage American soul music? A: Enough to make you squirm, get off your ass, and dance close with anybody who'll have you. Joss Stone is a young woman who, if you believe the story, was about to record her wannabe pop smash debut and then be well on her way to becoming the next Britney/Christina. Then she heard some vintage American Miami soul made by the likes of Latimore, Little Beaver, Betty Wright, Timmy Thomas, and the like, and genuine inspiration took hold. The result of all this career changing (or diva postponement) is The Soul Sessions, a collection of ten badass soul classics recorded with all of the above folks -- soul princess Betty Wright and S-Curve's Steve Greenberg produced almost all of it in Miami, though a pair of tracks were recorded in New York with R&B wunderkind Mike Mangini and a souled-out cover of the White Stripes "Fell in Love With a Boy," guided by the Roots' ?uestlove (Ahmir Thompson) on the modern tip, was cut in Philly. These jams drip honey sweet and hard with tough, sexy soul, and Stone's voice is larger than life. It's true she's been tutored and mentored by Wright and her musical collaborators in the science of groove, but she keeps it raw enough to be real. Her reading of Harlan Howard's "The Chokin' Kind" reveals that it should have been an R&B tune all along -- check out Little Beaver's (Willie Hale) guitar solo. Her reading of Bobby Miller's "Dirty Man," a track associated with Wright, is gutsy and completely believable, and the interplay between Latimore's piano and Beaver's funky, shimmering guitaristry brings Stone's vocal down to street level.

For a woman as young as Stone to tackle Carla Thomas' "I've Fallen in Love With You" and Aretha Franklin's "All the King's Horses," not to mention John Ellison's nugget "Some Kind of Wonderful," takes guts, chops, or a genuine delusional personality to pull off. Stone has the former two. She has unique phrasing and a huge voice that accents, dips, and slips, never overworking a song or trying to bring attention to itself via hollow acrobatics. The strings and funky backbeat provided by Thompson on "I've Fallen in Love With You" are chilling in the way they prod Stone to just spill a need out of her heart that one would believe would be beyond her years. And speaking of Thompson, his production of the Stripes tune is more than remarkable; it conveys Jack White's intent but in an entirely new language. The set closes with Stone's radical reread of the Isleys' "For the Love of You," a daunting and audacious task. The way she tackles this song, prodded only by Angelo Morris' keyboard whispering alongside her, is far from reverential, but it is true, accurate, moving, and stunningly -- even heartbreakingly -- beautiful. This is a debut that, along with those fine practitioners in the nu-soul underground such as Peven Everett, Julie Dexter, Yas-rah, Fertile Ground, and a few others, is solid proof that soul is alive and well. And perhaps, given her youth and stunning looks, the perverse star-making machinery will use this unusual entry into the marketplace to reinvestigate the wonders of timeless depth and vision inherent in soul and R&B that are far from exhausted, as this record so convincingly proves. ~Thom Jurek

Soul Sessions

Album: The Soul Sessions Vol. 2 (Deluxe Edition)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:22
Size: 142.8 MB
Styles: Neo-soul
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[4:58] 1. I Got The..
[3:45] 2. (For God's Sake) Give More Power To The People
[3:26] 3. While You're Out Looking For Sugar
[3:37] 4. Sideway Shuffle
[5:01] 5. I Don't Want To Be With Nobody But You
[5:54] 6. Teardrops
[3:11] 7. Stoned Out Of My Mind
[4:43] 8. The Love We Had (Stays On My Mind)
[4:38] 9. The High Road
[4:41] 10. Pillow Talk
[3:50] 11. Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye
[3:37] 12. First Taste Of Hurt
[3:47] 13. One Love In My Lifetime
[3:23] 14. Nothing Takes The Place Of You
[3:44] 15. (1-2-3-4-5-6-7) Count The Days

Joss Stone launched her career by singing soul standards so when it came time for a reboot she went back to the beginning, dusting off the old blueprint for The Soul Sessions and following it to a T, right down to replicating its title and giving a contemporary alt-rock hit a soul makeover. First time around, the intent was to prove that teenage Joss had soul bona fides, but in 2012 the purpose of The Soul Sessions, Vol. 2 is to signal how she's done messing around with fleeting fashions and is getting back down to the real business. Stone doesn't dig deep into the crates this time around, nor does she stick to deep soul; she chooses to mine hits from the early '70s, favoring songs by the Dells, the Chi-Lites, and Sylvia, giving these smooth tunes a bit of a polished Southern spin. And "professional" is the operative word here: this is the work of seasoned veterans who play with every note falling neatly into place, stretching just enough to show off their chops but never enough to alter the DNA of a song. The exception to the rule is, of course, "The High Road," a Broken Bells song refashioned to sound old, thereby occupying the same space as Joss' White Stripes "Fell in Love with a Boy" cover did on the first Soul Sessions. This is the song to prove that Stone isn't living in the past but rather she's seeing the future through a retro prism that turns everything into something that feels classic. That Stone remains a bit too theatrical a singer, overemphasizing every phrase, is almost besides the point, as she's a diva and is expected to sing with more gusto than the song requires just as long as the overall package feels right. And, for the most part, The Soul Sessions, Vol. 2 does feel right: it has the form and sound of classic soul while never acknowledging that R&B continued to develop past, say, 1972. For an audience that agrees with that thesis, this is fun. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

The Soul Sessions Vol. 2 (Deluxe Edition)

Rune Gustafsson - Trio

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:57
Size: 118.9 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[3:35] 1. New Rhumba
[4:07] 2. The Duke
[3:46] 3. Time After Time
[3:08] 4. Noreen's Nocturne
[3:39] 5. One For My Baby
[3:31] 6. Get Him Fast
[4:55] 7. Love You Madly
[3:34] 8. Gypsy In My Soul
[4:30] 9. Just In Time
[3:12] 10. I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
[4:18] 11. Should I
[4:43] 12. My Favourite Things
[2:57] 13. Tangerine
[1:55] 14. If My Complaints

Bass – Hans Backenroth; Guitar – Rune Gustafsson; Keyboards – Kjell Öhman.

Heavily inspired by generations of blurry-toned jazz guitar maestros such as Jimmy Raney, Jim Hall, and Tal Farlow, this Swedish artist went on to compose critically acclaimed film soundtracks as well as pick and strum. The Swedish music scene in general is where documentation of Rune Gustafsson is most prevalent, his discography on Sonet, Metronome, and other labels even including a tribute to soul genius Stevie Wonder. The guitarist began performing folk music as a young teen, apparently under considerable prodding from an uncle who was already engaged in the same kind of activity. Gustafsson had evolved to playing jazz on stages in the early '50s, his bandleaders including Bert Dahlander, Putte Wickman, Hacke Bjorksten, and Lars Gullin. When profiled in Leonard Feather's Encyclopedia of Jazz in the '70s, Gustafsson talked about his ambitions in composing and arranging concert music, a promise he certainly made good on in the ensuing years. He also expanded his instrumental arsenal for some of these projects, recording on the banjo and the celeste, among other unusual axes. His film credits include the 1992 Ingmar Bergman release with the English title of Sunday's Children. ~bio by Eugene Chadbourne

Trio

Hank Mobley - Hi Voltage

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:20
Size: 92.4 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1967/2005
Art: Front

[8:05] 1. Hi Voltage
[6:07] 2. Two And One
[5:41] 3. No More Goodbyes
[5:58] 4. Advance Notice
[7:29] 5. Bossa De Luxe
[6:58] 6. Flirty Gerty

This 1967 date by tenor saxophone great Hank Mobley was a high watermark for the Blue Note label during that exceptional year. Mobley wrote all six tunes here, and they offer the breadth and depth of his mature compositional method. All but one of his collaborators on this project were label veterans -- Jackie McLean, Blue Mitchell, Billy Higgins, and Bob Cranshaw. The lone exception was pianist John Hicks, and the recording session benefits greatly from his contribution. Hicks is a very lyrical player, even when he gets tough and funky. He is right at home with the hard bop blues on the title cut, which opens the set and provides a wonderfully swinging bottom for the soloists to trade fours and burrow through. His chromatic prowess and subtlety are very evident on the moving ballad "No More Goodbyes," where his gently shaded harmonies and ostinatos offer Mobley a beautiful backdrop to solo from. Mobley's sense of rhythmic invention is showcased on the breezy yet finger-popping "Bossa De Luxe," and the three horns go deep into the groove -- using Higgins and Hicks as counterweights in the funky, greasy "Flirty Gerty" that closes the set. In all, this date is solid, ranking with the very best of Mobley's offerings for Blue Note. ~Thom Jurek

Hi Voltage

Michael Feinstein - The Sinatra Project Vol. 2: The Good Life

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:05
Size: 94.1 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[3:01] 1. Thirteen Women
[2:44] 2. Hallelujah I Love Her So
[2:51] 3. C’est Comme Ça
[3:15] 4. Is You Is Or Is You Ain’t My Baby
[3:31] 5. Sway
[3:52] 6. Luck Be A Lady/All I Need Is The Girl
[4:23] 7. I’ll Be Around
[4:01] 8. The Way You Look Tonight
[4:22] 9. The Lady Is A Tramp
[3:12] 10. For Once In My Life
[3:04] 11. The Good Life
[2:44] 12. Once In A Lifetime

Following up 2008's The Sinatra Project, Michael Feinstein's 2011 The Sinatra Project, Vol. 2: The Good Life features more of the urbane and polished singer/pianist's takes on Ol' Blue Eyes' catalog. Featuring both large and small ensembles, here Feinstein takes on a nice selection of both well-known and lesser-known cuts that Sinatra tackled at some point in his storied career. Included are such stand-out numbers as the big-band rhumba piece "Sway," the swinging medley "Luck Be a Lady/All I Need Is the Girl," and the romantic orchestral ballad "The Way You Look Tonight." While Feinstein is a pleasant vocalist, he's less of a dynamic crooner than Sinatra and not surprisingly, the best tracks here are the more intimate ones that find him accompanying himself on piano, as with the autumnal "C'est Comme Ca" and the poignant "I'll Be Around." Longtime Feinstein fans should find much to enjoy on this impeccably crafted homage to Sinatra. ~Matt Collar

The Sinatra Project Vol. 2: The Good Life

Passport Quartet + Raphaël Imbert - Invitation

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 9:51
Size: 22.6 MB
Styles: Bop
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[1:10] 1. Sandu
[1:13] 2. Tidal Breeze
[1:30] 3. Milestones
[1:07] 4. I'm A Fool To Want You
[1:08] 5. Love Your Spell Is Everywhere
[1:18] 6. Room 608
[1:10] 7. Valse Pour K
[1:11] 8. Mo' Better Blues

The Passport Quartet has been playing jazz in Briançonnais for many years. Their repertoire revisits the standards of the bop and hard-hop years and much more. These accomplices invite the saxophonist Raphaël Imbert, composer, unusual improviser, conductor and inventive visionary. The meeting will be amazing. (Translated from French.)

Invitation

Susan Egan - Softly

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:54
Size: 91.4 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[3:30] 1. Nocturnes
[3:53] 2. Think Of Me
[4:03] 3. Embraceable You /'til There Was You
[2:29] 4. Love To Me
[5:08] 5. Bewitched, Bothered And Bewildered
[3:09] 6. Anyone Can Whistle/Not While I'm Around
[3:17] 7. Make Believe
[2:37] 8. Lay Down Your Head
[4:02] 9. With You
[2:20] 10. A Quiet Thing
[5:21] 11. I Wish You Love

Softly is the culmination of Egan’s more than twenty-five years as a celebrated vocalist in the entertainment industry. Teaming with classical pianist and composer, Stephen Cook, and acclaimed Cuban jazz flutist, Danilo Lozano (album producer), Susan brings the music of her beloved Broadway to a mainstream audience with an easy, elegant, acoustic sound. Variety has called Susan’s soprano “beguiling in the extreme” and the New York Post labels her “divine.” Now, in light delivery, accompanied by Los Angeles’ best musicians, you will hear why. Whether relaxing with a bottle of wine or lulling the baby to sleep, Softly sets the mood and delivers distinguished hits of the New York stage in a way you have never heard before.

Softly