Friday, May 5, 2017

Beth Malvezzi - My Silver Lining

Size: 101,0 MB
Time: 37:14
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. All Of Me (3:01)
02. The Way You Look Tonight (4:29)
03. Look For The Silver Lining (2:49)
04. You Go To My Head (5:49)
05. Blue Skies (1:42)
06. I'm Old Fashioned (3:28)
07. I Love You For Sentimental Reasons (4:17)
08. So Nice (Summer Samba) (3:45)
09. I'm Beginning To See The Light (1:41)
10. Orange Colored Sky (2:03)
11. Mama (4:04)

Beth Malvezzi is a vocalist and pianist located in Southington who performs throughout greater Connecticut as a jazz singer, with favorite collaborative artists. She is a founding member, director and vocalist with the popular female vocal trio, Lady Luck, performing swing and jazz standards in an Andrews Sisters style. She has also sung with local Big Bands including The Stardusters and the Andy Nichols Big Band. Known for her clear tone, solid technique and ease of expression, she transitions easily from jazz to classical, secular to religious music.

Over the years, I have been blessed to experience so many facets of music-making and it is my gratitude for all of the opportunities and the outstanding performers with whom I have collaborated that inspired me to record my first album. Entitled, “My Silver Lining”, it is a collection of some of the joyous classics from the Great American Songbook to which I have long been drawn for their nostalgic sentiment, energizing rhythms and lyrical melodies that transport the listener back to a time of simplicity, earnestness and civility.

My Silver Lining

Pablo Ziegler Trio - Jazz Tango

Size: 162,0 MB
Time: 69:48
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Jazz: Latin Jazz
Art: Front

01. Michelangelo 70 (Live) (5:12)
02. La Fundicion (Live) (6:34)
03. Milonga Del Adios (Live) (9:39)
04. Buenos Aires Report (Live) (5:12)
05. Blues Porteno (Live) (7:40)
06. Fuga Y Misterio (Live) (5:30)
07. Elegante Canyenguito (Live) (5:59)
08. La Rayuela (Live) (5:38)
09. Muchacha De Boedo (Live) (9:27)
10. Libertango (Live) (8:52)

On JAZZ TANGO, the internationally acclaimed Argentinian Tango jazz pianist, composer and band leader Pablo Ziegler presents his US-based trio featuring bandoneonist Hector Del Curto, and guitarist Claudio Ragazzi in three Astor Piazzolla Tango standards and seven original Ziegler compositions. Each of the last five Ziegler ZOHO releases achieved a Latin Grammy nomination in the Tango category!

Jazz Tango

Tina May & Andy Lutter Trio - Cafe Paranoia: Sings Mark Murphy

Size: 169,8 MB
Time: 72:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Is The Circle Closing ( 2:11)
02. Aiming At The Moon ( 5:42)
03. Formerly Known As Moon ( 6:26)
04. Cafe Paranoia ( 2:46)
05. New York Skyline ( 9:39)
06. Sleepy People ( 1:21)
07. Age Only Matters ( 1:17)
08. Less & Less ( 6:36)
09. Bop 'til You Drop ( 6:29)
10. After A Year (12:04)
11. Tundraness ( 0:55)
12. Put Today With Yesterday ( 0:58)
13. If Anybody Asks ( 0:54)
14. Don't Fall Apart ( 1:51)
15. Dance Slowly (13:31)

Five people were essential to the creation of this album, of whom one is the late Mark Murphy. Famously a disciple of Jack Kerouac, Murphy took up the latter’s concept of the Western haiku: not quite the same as the strict 17-syllable Japanese verse form, but a looser jazz version of it, in which an idea could be briefly expressed in English, and riffed upon.

Murphy came to know and work with the Munich-based German pianist Andy Lutter during the 1990s, and the two began sharing their mutual interest in jazz haiku, Murphy later faxing through his texts as a basis for some future music. The years passed, and nothing happened. Or at least, very little.

Thankfully, however, that future music is here on this album, sung instead by our very own Tina May, backed by Lutter’s trio. They recorded it in Munich, and received the great man’s blessing for its release shortly before his death in 2015.

And it needs to be said straight away that it’s been worth the wait. Café Paranoia is a complete delight, stuffed with great playing and gorgeous melodies from Lutter, with admirable support from Thomas Hauser on bass and Sunk Poschl on drums. Some of the material is tricky, yet May carries it off in a light, hip, effortless style, putting over Murphy’s quirky wit and wisdom with terrific panache. There’s delicacy and vulnerability here too. I have never heard her sing better.

Age only matters if one is a cheese, begins one of the haikus. It was a one-liner Murphy enjoyed telling at gigs later in his career. Sleepy people don’t declare world wars, begins another. Some of the lyrics are splendidly anarchic, making poetic sense but no other kind: Alas awaste-but keep all that in / the devastated street speed, thanks a lot.

There are many tracks, too many to count. Eight of them are haikus, often less than a minute long. Others, such as Less And Less (I remember less and less/ - except you baby) are fully-fledged songs, this one Murphy’s lament for his gradually dimming faculties. Two tunes, the extended Dance Slowly and Formerly Known As Moon, were recorded live. May and Lutter have also contributed a couple of their own Murphy-influenced numbers. And in a fabulous ‘they think it’s all over’ moment right at the end… but I’ll let you find out for yourself. ~by Peter Jones

Cafe Paranoia

Linntett - Nature

Size: 169,8 MB
Time: 72:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Is The Circle Closing ( 2:11)
02. Aiming At The Moon ( 5:42)
03. Formerly Known As Moon ( 6:26)
04. Cafe Paranoia ( 2:46)
05. New York Skyline ( 9:39)
06. Sleepy People ( 1:21)
07. Age Only Matters ( 1:17)
08. Less & Less ( 6:36)
09. Bop 'til You Drop ( 6:29)
10. After A Year (12:04)
11. Tundraness ( 0:55)
12. Put Today With Yesterday ( 0:58)
13. If Anybody Asks ( 0:54)
14. Don't Fall Apart ( 1:51)
15. Dance Slowly (13:31)

The motto of the Double Moon labels remains: »Just Good Music«. The emphasis is on improvised music, but the stylistic range is nearly umlimited. From mainstream jazz to avantgarde, from acoustic jazz to electronic, from »world jazz« to »lounge« you will find a great variety of just good music. Among the main artists there are established names like Chico Freeman, Jean-Paul Bourelly and Enrico Rava and sidemen like Joe Lovano, Roy Hargrove, and Mark Turner.

The label moreover very much cares about new talents. In a unique series, launched together with the popular German jazzmagazine »Jazz thing«, Double Moon presents young artists that serve wider recognition – the next generation of jazz. With Nature by Lintett these series have reached its 68th volume. The dynamic, exciting and diverse sound experience on this debut album of Kira Linn and her band will take you on a journey through the diversity of nature.

Nature

Nicki Parrott - Dear Blossom

Size: 135,2 MB
Time: 58:02
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. I Wish You Love (4:36)
02. Everything I've Got Belongs To You (3:30)
03. I Walk A Little Faster (3:52)
04. Peel Me A Grape (4:21)
05. Inside A Silent Tear (4:13)
06. Devil And The Depp Blue Sea (4:14)
07. Dear Blossom (4:36)
08. I'm Hip (2:52)
09. Tout Doucement (4:08)
10. Try Your Wings (4:26)
11. Surrey With A Fringe On Top (4:18)
12. Rhode Island Is Famous For You (3:47)
13. It Amazes Me (3:46)
14. It Might As Well Be Spring (5:16)

Personnel:
Nicki Parrott - vocals and bass
Chris Grasso - piano
Chuck Redd - vibes
Lenny Robinson - drums

Special Guests:
Engelbert Wrobel - clarinet and tenor sax
Warren Vache - Cornet
Vince Cherico - percussion

Jazz bassist and vocalist Nicki Parrott presents her musical tribute to the legendary vocalist Blossom Dearie. Nicki Parrott is not simply a musician who sings. She is the complete vocalist with fine intonation, intuitive swing, flawless phrasing and a lovely sound. Parrott performed on bass for ten years with the legendary Les Paul. Paul declared that "she has that special gift you cannot buy in a music store."

Dear Blossom

Red Mitchell - A Declaration Of Interdependence

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:59
Size: 128.2 MB
Styles: Bop, Cool jazz
Year: 1990/2007
Art: Front

[6:14] 1. Come Rain Or Come Shine
[5:40] 2. But Beautiful
[4:59] 3. I Do Love Love
[8:56] 4. I'm Glad There Is You
[6:48] 5. A Declaration Of Interdependence
[3:56] 6. On A Keyboard
[4:47] 7. My Romance
[3:12] 8. Big'n' And The Bear
[4:11] 9. Tell It Like It Is
[3:46] 10. You Can Take Your Funny Money And Run Honey
[3:25] 11. Poles Apart

An out–of–the–ordinary 1988 session by the “Red Mitchell Trio,” which, courtesy of modern technology, is composed of Red Mitchell on bass, Red Mitchell on piano and Red Mitchell on vocals. The “leader,” of course, was known primarily as a bassist (the past tense is used because he passed away in November ’92), but his “sidemen” are respectable enough, especially pianist Mitchell who has an uncluttered, easygoing style and sensitive touch that lend themselves well to the trio format. On the other hand, vocalist Mitchell, who is heard on nine of the eleven selections, is rough–hewn, to say the least. He does sing, but it’s clear that’s not his primary means of employment, as his sincerity and charm far outpace his aptitude. He delves into songs on the order of a Mose Allison or Jimmy Rowles but is a shade less convincing, which is understandable, as they devoted more time to vocalizing than he. Donning yet another hat, Mitchell emerges as a more than respectable songwriter. His melodies (six of which are included here) are appealing, the lyrics caustic and hip (in spite of some dated references to current events on “Poles Apart”). Mitchell’s other vocals are on Wayne Shorter’s “Tell It Like It Is” (to which he added the lyrics) and the standards “Come Rain or Come Shine” and “I’m Glad There Is You.” He lays out on “But Beautiful” and “My Romance.” While bassist Mitchell performs as reliably as expected, the real surprise is pianist Mitchell who could perhaps have enhanced many a group in that capacity if his metronomic alter ego hadn’t been so earnestly sought–after. For Red Mitchell’s many admirers, a splendid souvenir of his memorable talents. ~Jack Bowers

A Declaration Of Interdependence

Anna Callahan - It's Just The Rain

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:13
Size: 135.6 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[5:50] 1. I'm Old Fashioned
[5:25] 2. September In The Rain
[3:51] 3. You'd Be So Nice
[6:24] 4. It's Just The Rain
[5:01] 5. Tomorrow I'll Tell You I Love You
[4:12] 6. What'll I Do
[5:06] 7. Let's Get Lost
[5:04] 8. First Kiss
[5:05] 9. I've Heard That Song Before
[3:59] 10. You're My Everything
[4:18] 11. I Fall In Love Too Easily
[4:52] 12. Secret Love

"Rarely have I encountered a musician, male or female, vocalist or instrumentalist, who is as in-control of her music as Anna Callahan. From each clever reharmonization to every in-the-pocket groove, Anna is responsible for it all, and the nuances of her vocal and trumpet performances on this CD back that statement up.

Yet, for all this harmonic and rhythmic innovation she imposes on tunes such as "what'll I do" (given a CRAZY funk workout) or "I've heard this song before" (rendered wistful by the insertion of a minor chord or two), she uses these devices as means to an end; that is, it's never about the clever changes she makes; rather, they are in the service of the mood and her artistic ends. Speaking as a pianist who has shared the bandstand with Anna, I have seen and felt firsthand how she communicates this artistry to her bandmates, as well as to the audience, with intensity, uncompromising integrity, and pure joy. This is a stunning CD from a truly exciting artist, knowledgable about the history of her music, but unafraid to take it into new territory." ~Mark Shilansky

It's Just The Rain

Tough Young Tenors - Alone Together

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:59
Size: 148.8 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1991/2005
Art: Front

[5:53] 1. Jim Dog
[5:33] 2. Just You Just Me
[5:32] 3. You Go To My Head
[7:12] 4. Stevie
[3:51] 5. The Break Through
[8:04] 6. Alone Together
[5:14] 7. Ask Me Now
[5:05] 8. Blues On The Corner
[6:42] 9. Chelsea Bridge
[5:41] 10. Calvary
[6:05] 11. The Eternal Triangle

Bass – Reginald Veal; Drums – Ben Riley; Piano – Marcus Roberts; Tenor Saxophone – Herb Harris, James Carter, Tim Warfield Jr., Todd Williams, Walter Blanding Jr..

Firespitter James Carter joins the Marcus Roberts Trio for 11 selections, and various other tenor saxophonists team up with the rhythm section to varying degrees of success. Carter's reading of "Chelsea Bridge" and Blanding on "Ask Me Now" stand out. Alone Together is an interesting mishmash -- it would be nice to hear each tenor on his own. ~Michael G. Nastos

Alone Together

Dr. John - Mercernary

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:31
Size: 113.4 MB
Styles: Pop/R&B/Jazz
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[4:37] 1. Blues In The Night
[3:39] 2. You Must Have Been A Beautiful Baby
[3:34] 3. Personality
[4:08] 4. Hit The Road To Dreamland
[4:16] 5. I'm An Old Cow Hand
[2:34] 6. Dream
[3:45] 7. Lazy Bones
[3:22] 8. That Old Black Magic
[5:26] 9. Come Rain Or Come Shine
[2:37] 10. Moon River
[4:35] 11. Tangerine
[3:13] 12. I Ain't No Johnny Mercer
[3:39] 13. Save The Bones For Henry Jones

Dr. John's been on a roll since he signed with Blue Note. Each title he's released on the label has been solid, full of New Orleans funk, hot R&B, and swinging, finger-poppin' jazz. Since the Hurricane Katrina disaster, dozens of Crescent City players have been active, and trying to bring the message of the music to the masses like never before. Mercernary is a program almost entirely made up of tunes by the legendary Johnny Mercer. There is no explanation for this, other than Mac Rebennack has always admired his lyricism and the striking rhythmic originality of the rhythmic possibilities in his music. Other than a few guests to fill out the proceedings here and there, the band on all tracks is Dr. John with his fine Lower 911. The music here is joyful, gritty, and slippery check out the opener "Blues in the Night" that just roars with backline funk, or the spit and polish on "You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby," both written with Harold Arlen. The switch-up is from the Mercer period, in the blues stroll of Johnny Burke and Jimmy Van Heusen's "Personality." "Hit the Road to Dreamland" is another blues, with gorgeous piano work by Rebennack. Herbert Hardesty's saxophone adds so much smoke and steam to the leisurely walk that the tune threatens at any moment to erupt into a full-on New Orleans jam, but never does. The reading of "I'm an Old Cow Hand" is a complete reworking of the tune, with killer second-line funky drumming courtesy of Herman V. Ernest III, and the middle-register piano magic by Dr. John struts the tune into the street effortlessly. Some may raise eyebrows at the big horns of Charlie Miller, and John Fohl's electric guitar on "Old Black Magic," but to hell with 'em. This old nugget is given new life, breadth, and an entirely new feel here. Likewise "Moon River," given a soul-jazz strut, will make some cry heresy, but they'll be drowned out by the joyous resonance of the performance itself because it has never been heard this way. Dr. John's interpretive singing is as fine as can be on Mercernary, and on this performance in particular. As if to address his critics, the good doctor lays down his own "I Ain't No Johnny Mercer," a nocturnal, B-3 driven groover that is full of hoodoo sass and greasy funk. Mercernary gives Johnny Mercer's age-old pop songs a new soul twist. And if the man is turning in his grave, he's probably shaking his skeleton, baby! One is struck at just how easy the Lower 911 and Dr. John make this material seem. They virtually write a manual on how standards should be interpreted in the 21st century: with reverence for the creativity and sophistication of the originals, but bringing some of the blessed nightclub vulgarity back into the music, taking it out of the sky and the hallowed hall and putting into back into the barroom where the ears and asses of the people can take it in and shake it. ~Thom Jurek

Mercernary

Joan Stiles - Hurly-Burly

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:05
Size: 121.5 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[4:52] 1. The Brilliant Corners Of Thelonious' Jumpin' Jeep
[5:22] 2. Jitterbug Waltz
[5:16] 3. Hurly-Burly (J2 Mary Lou)
[3:05] 4. Pannonica
[4:48] 5. Past Imperfect
[3:47] 6. All Too Soon
[3:53] 7. What Would I Do Without You
[3:20] 8. 'round Midnight
[3:42] 9. Knowledge
[5:26] 10. The Peacocks
[4:28] 11. Bluesicity
[5:01] 12. In The Land Of Oo-Bla-Dee

Joan Stiles: vocals, piano; Lewis Nash: drums; Peter Washington: bass; Steve Wilson: alto saxophone; Jeremy Pelt: trumpet, flugelhorn; Joel Frahm: tenor saxophone.

Back with her own unique take on the piano's place in jazz, the aptly named Joan "mistress of many Stiles presents a session with myriad influences in a variety of formats with her sophomore effort, Hurly-Burly. Her first release, Love Call (ZoHo, 2004), was a breath of fresh air that more than hinted at clever arranging skills combined with an ability to interpret and present the "classics" on her own terms. Hurly-Burly makes good on that promise and is evidence that Stiles has a unique musical voice that doesn't sacrifice accessibility for originality.

With a band full of leaders in their own right, boasting a rhythm section composed of bassist Peter Washington and drummer Lewis Nash, and a three-horn frontline featuring trumpeter/flugelhornist Jeremy Pelt, Steve Wilson on alto and Joel Frahm on tenor, Stiles is able to get fairly complex this time around. She cooks up some very intriguing creations such as "The Brilliant Corners of Thelonious' Jumpin' Jeep," which has the full sextet weaving together three disparate tunes from Monk, Ellington and Johnny Hodges into a wonderfully up-tempo swinger. Other compositions by pianists as diverse as Fats Waller, Mary Lou Williams ("Knowledge and "In the Land of Oo-Bla-Dee ), Ray Charles and Jimmy Rowles ("The Peacocks ) all come out sounding crisp, clean and, well, new. Waller's "Jitterbug Waltz is given a Monkish treatment; the title track, an original, is a bluesy homage to Williams; and Charles' "What Would I do Without You? has Stiles vocally navigating this gospel-infused blues in a superb duet with Pelt's expressive horn. Ellington's "All Too Soon is swung hard by piano trio and Monk's "'Round Midnight is delivered as an achingly beautiful ballad in this classically-inspired solo piano presentation. An emotive yet precise player, Stiles also possesses a deliciously wry sense of musical humor. This is a fun take on jazz piano that effectively carves out a new place for a new talent. ~Elliott Simon

Hurly-Burly

Oscar Peterson, Stéphane Grappelli - Jazz In Paris: Quartet Vol. 1

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:03
Size: 89.4 MB
Styles: Bop, Piano jazz, Standards
Year: 2001
Art: Front

[4:47] 1. Them There Eyes
[5:35] 2. Flamingo
[4:34] 3. Makin' Whoopee
[4:45] 4. Looking At You
[4:59] 5. Walkin' My Baby Back Home
[9:45] 6. My One And Only Love
[4:36] 7. Thou Swell

One of the nice things about jazz is the cross-pollination of different players in multiple settings. No one would've thought of pairing swing violinist Stéphane Grappelli and bop pianist Oscar Peterson, for instance, but the match works very well. The pair have expanded into a quartet on this reissue with the aid of double bassist Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen and drummer Kenny Clarke. The set, recorded in 1973 in Paris, includes a handful of standards, from Pinkard/Tracey/Tauber's "Them There Eyes" to Rodgers & Hart's "Thou Swell." As one might guess, Grappelli is in his own element on upbeat, swinging pieces like "Makin' Whoopee" and "Walkin' My Baby Back Home." Peterson likewise joins in the spirit of these pieces, making them the most interesting interpretations on the album. Other material, like the lingering "Flamingo" and "My One and Only Love," are also enjoyable, but seem rather tepid in comparison. The latter composition is also handicapped by its nearly ten-minute length. Peterson and Grappelli end with a nice, bouncy version of "Thou Swell" that brings the whole affair to a satisfying close. Quartet, Vol. 1 isn't a perfect recording, but it is an enjoyable one, showing how much fun it is to pair unlikely musicians in the studio and see what happens. ~Ronnie D. Lankford Jr.

Jazz In Paris: Quartet Vol. 1

John Di Martino's Romantic Jazz Trio - Moliendo Cafe

Styles: Piano Jazz 
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:16
Size: 161,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:38)  1. Maria Cervantes
(4:22)  2. Angelitos Negros
(5:55)  3. Amapola
(5:11)  4. Obsesion
(5:03)  5. Te Quiero Dijiste
(3:42)  6. Babalu
(4:57)  7. Noche De Ronda
(4:43)  8. Quien Sera
(5:24)  9. Green Eyes
(5:52) 10. Granada
(5:20) 11. Moliendo Cafe
(4:58) 12. Yesterday I Heard The Rain
(5:09) 13. Miami Beach Rumba
(4:55) 14. Jungle Drums

Mr. di Martino enjoyed a long association with percussionist/ musicologist Bobby Sanabria. Their joint efforts include the grammy nominated CD “Live And In Clave”. John was born in Philadelphia in 1959. Since his student days with Lennie Tristano and Don Sebesky, John has performed everywhere from Carnegie Hall to the Peoples Republic of China. John di Martino has been described by Paul Pines as a musical “shape shifter”, inhabiting three different worlds. As a straight ahead jazz pianist, he has performed and recorded with such notables as Kenny Burrell, Pat Martino, James Moody and Eddie Gomez. Mr. di Martino is a sought after musical director and has accompanied Jon Hendricks, Diane Schuur and the late Billy Eckstine. He is active as on the world beat scene working with Paquito D'Rivera, South African bassist Bakithi Kumalo and Giovanni Hidalgo. John's talent as an arranger and keyboardist can be heard on the new release from Grady Tate “All Love” on the Sony label. Mr. di Martino continues to enjoy a long association with percussionist/musicologist Bobby Sanabria. Their joint efforts include the Grammy nominated CD, “Live And In Clave” on the Arabesque label, three instructional videos on Warner Bros. and numerous educational clinics and seminars. John is a long time member of Ray Barretto's “New World Spirit”, he is featured pianist/arranger on several recordings including the Grammy nominated CD “Contact”. Mr. di Martino has also recorded with Freddie Cole and legendary percussionist Patato Valdez. John is featured in the March/April 2001 issue of Piano Keyboard Magazine. As a teenager in his native Philadelphia, he was found most nights in Philly's local jazz clubs where he still returns to work with veteran musician Mickey Roker. Since his student days with Lennie Tristano and Don Sebesky, John has performed everywhere from Carnegie Hall to The Peoples Republic of China. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/johndimartino

Personnel:  John Dimartino (piano), Hanz Glawischnigs (bass) & Willie Martinez (drums)

Moliendo Cafe

Sonny Rollins - Now's the Time

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1964
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:56
Size: 80,1 MB
Art:

(4:05)  1. Now's the Time
(5:35)  2. Blue 'N' Boogie
(2:37)  3. I Remember Clifford
(4:34)  4. 52nd Street Theme
(3:59)  5. St. Thomas
(4:03)  6. 'Round Midnight
(2:45)  7. Afternoon in Paris
(7:13)  8. Four

Sonny Rollins will go down in history as not only the single most enduring tenor saxophonist of the bebop and hard bop era, but also as one of the greatest contemporary jazz saxophonists of them all. His fluid and harmonically innovative ideas, effortless manner, and easily identifiable and accessible sound have influenced generations of performers, but have also fueled the notion that mainstream jazz music can be widely enjoyed, recognized, and proliferated. Born Theodore Walter Rollins in New York City on September 7, 1930, he had an older brother who played violin. At age nine he took up piano lessons but discontinued them, took up the alto saxophone in high school, and switched to tenor after high school, doing local engagements. In 1948 he recorded with vocalist Babs Gonzales, then Bud Powell and Fats Navarro, and his first composition, "Audubon," was recorded by J.J. Johnson. Soon thereafter, Rollins made the rounds quickly with groups led by Tadd Dameron, Chicago drummer Ike Day, and Miles Davis in 1951, followed by his own recordings with Kenny Drew, Kenny Dorham, and Thelonious Monk. In 1956 Rollins made his biggest move, joining the famous ensemble of Max Roach and Clifford Brown, then formed his own legendary pianoless trio with bassist Wilbur Ware or Donald Bailey and drummer Elvin Jones or Pete La Roca in 1957, doing recorded sessions at the Village Vanguard. Awards came from DownBeat and Playboy magazines, and recordings were done mainly for the Prestige and Riverside labels, but also for Verve, Blue Note, Columbia, and Contemporary Records, all coinciding with the steadily rising star of Rollins. Pivotal albums such as Tenor Madness (with John Coltrane), Saxophone Colossus (with longstanding partner Tommy Flanagan), and Way Out West (with Ray Brown and Shelly Manne), and collaborations with the Modern Jazz Quartet, Clark Terry, and Sonny Clark firmly established Rollins as a bona fide superstar. He also acquired the nickname "Newk" for his facial resemblance to Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Don Newcombe. But between 1959 and 1961 he sought a less superficial, more spiritual path to the rat race society of the times, visiting Japan and India, studying yoga and Zen. 

He left the music business until 1962, when he returned with the groundbreaking and in many ways revolutionary recording The Bridge with guitarist Jim Hall for the RCA Victor/Bluebird label. Rollins struck up a working relationship with trumpeter Don Cherry; did a handful of innovative LPs for the RCA Victor, MGM/Metro Jazz, and Impulse! labels; did one record with his hero Coleman Hawkins; and left the scene again in 1968. By 1971 he came back with a renewed sense of vigor and pride, and put out a string of successful records for the Milestone label that bridged the gap between the contemporary and fusion jazz of the time, the most memorable being his live date from the 1974 Montreux Jazz Festival, The Cutting Edge. Merging jazz with calypso, light funk, and post-bop, the career of Rollins not only was revived, but thrived from then onward. He was a member of the touring Milestone Jazz Stars in 1978 with McCoy Tyner and Ron Carter, and gained momentum as a touring headliner and festival showstopper. His finest Milestone recordings of the second half of his career include Easy Living, Don't Stop the Carnival, G-Man, Old Flames, Plus Three, Global Warming, This Is What I Do, and Without a Song: The 9/11 Concert. He has worked extensively with road and recording bands that have included such artists as electric bass guitarist Bob Cranshaw; trombonist Clifton Anderson; pianists Tommy Flanagan and Stephen Scott; keyboardist Mark Soskin; guitarists Bobby Broom and Jerome Harris; percussionist Kimati Dinizulu; and drummers Jack DeJohnette, Perry Wilson, Steve Jordan, and Al Foster. Rollins formed his own record label, Doxy, through which he issued the CD Sonny, Please in 2006. Well into his eighth decade, Rollins continued to perform worldwide, and was documented on the three-volume Road Show series, also released on Doxy. ~ Michael G. Nastos  https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/sonny-rollins/id37020#fullText

Personnel: Saxophone [Tenor] – Sonny Rollins; Bass – Bob Cranshaw (tracks: 2 to 4, 8), Ron Carter (tracks: 1, 5 to 7);  Cornet – Thad Jones (tracks: 4);  Drums – Roy McCurdy;  Piano – Herbie Hancock (tracks: 1, 6, 7)

Now's the Time

Archie Shepp - Stream

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:48
Size: 149,1 MB
Art: Front

( 8:43)  1. Stream
(13:03)  2. Along Came Betty
( 7:24)  3. Blues For Donald Duck
(10:33)  4. U-Jamaa
(11:57)  5. Crucificado
(12:07)  6. Miss Tomi

Archie Shepp was born in 1937 in Fort Lauderdale in Florida. He grew up in Philadelphia, studied piano and saxophone and attended high school in Germantown; he went to college, became involved with theatre, met writers and poets, among them, Leroy Jones and wrote: «The Communist», an allegorical play about the situation of black Americans. In the late fifties, Archie Shepp also met the most radical musicians of the time: Lee Morgan, Bobby Timmons, Jimmy Garrison, Ted Curson, Beaver Harris ... his political consciousness found an expression in plays and theatrical productions which barely allowed him to make a living. In the beginning sixties he met Cecil Taylor and did two recordings with him which were determining.  In 1962 he signed his first record with Bill Dixon as co-leader. During the following year, he created the New York Contemporary Five with John Tchichai, made four records for Fontana, Storyville and Savoy and travelled to Europe with this group. Starting in August 1964, he worked with Impulse and made 17 records among which, Four For Trane, Fire Music, and Mama Too Tight, some of the classics of Free Music. His collaboration with John Coltrane materialized further with Ascension in 1965, a real turning point in Avant- Garde music. His militancy was evidenced by his participation in the creation of the Composers Guild with Paul and Carla Bley, Sun RA, Roswell Rudd and Cecil Taylor. In July 1969 he went for the first time to Africa for the Pan African Festival in Algiers where many black American militants were living. On this occasion he recorded Live for Byg the first of six albums in the Actual series. In 1969 he began teaching Ethnomusicology at the University of Amherst, Massachusetts; at the same time he continued to travel around the world while continuing to express his identity as an African American musician.

The dictionary of Jazz (Robert Laffont, Bouquins) defines him in the following way: «A first rate artist and intellectual, Archie Shepp has been at the head of the Avant-Garde Free Jazz movement and has been able to join the mainstream of Jazz, while remaining true to his esthetic. He has developed a true poli-instrumentality: an alto player, he also plays soprano since 1969, piano since 1975 and more recently occasionally sings blues and standards.»  He populates his musical world with themes and stylistic elements provided by the greatest voices of jazz: from Ellington to Monk and Mingus, from Parker to Siver and Taylor. His technical and emotional capacity enables him to integrate the varied elements inherited by the Masters of Tenor from Webster to Coltrane into his own playing but according to his very own combination: the wild raspiness of his attacks, his massive sound sculpted by a vibrato mastered in all ranges, his phrases carried to breathlessness, his abrupt level changes, the intensity of his tempos but also the velvety tenderness woven into a ballad. His play consistently deepens the spirit of the two faces of the original black American music: blues and spirituals. His work with classics and with his own compositions (Bessie Smith’s Black Water Blues or Mama Rose) contributes to maintaining alive the power of strangeness of these two musics in relationship to European music and expresses itself in a unique mix of wounded violence and age-old nostalgia. The scope of his work which registered in the eighties a certain urgency (at the cost of a few discrepancies) is a witness to the fact that in 1988 Archie Shepp was with Sonny Rollins one of the best interpreters in the babelian history of jazz. With his freedom loving sensitivity Archie Shepp has made an inestimable contribution to the gathering, the publicizing and the inventing of jazz. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/archieshepp

Personnel:  Archie Shepp – Saxophone;  Charles Greenlee – Trombone;  Dave Burrell – Piano;  Beaver Harris – Drums.

Stream

Diana Krall - Turn Up the Quiet

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:16
Size: 111,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:16)  1. Like Someone in Love
(4:28)  2. Isn't It Romantic
(4:21)  3. L-O-V-E
(4:38)  4. Night and Day
(3:23)  5. I'm Confessin' (That I Love You)
(5:15)  6. Moonglow
(4:37)  7. Blue Skies
(6:12)  8. Sway
(4:06)  9. No Moon at All
(4:03) 10. Dream
(3:53) 11. I'll See You in My Dreams

Diana Krall's latest album, Turn Up the Quiet, celebrates Jazz and the Great American Songbook, reuniting Diana with Grammy Award-winning producer, Tommy LiPuma. Diana Krall is the only jazz singer to have eight albums debut at the top of the Billboard Jazz Albums chart. To date, her albums have garnered five Grammy® Awards, eight Juno® Awards and have also earned nine gold, three platinum and seven multi-platinum albums. Krall's unique artistry transcends any single musical style and has made her one of the most acclaimed artists of our time. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Turn-Up-Quiet-Diana-Krall/dp/B01N80T6C6

Turn Up the Quiet