Tuesday, June 13, 2017

Stanley Turrentine - Hustlin'

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1964
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:57
Size: 113,3 MB
Art: Front

(7:51)  1. Trouble (No. 2)
(7:39)  2. Love Letters
(6:03)  3. The Hustler
(6:26)  4. Ladyfingers
(6:16)  5. Something Happens To Me
(7:07)  6. Goin' Home
(7:32)  7. Trouble (No. 2) (alt. take) (bonus track)

This is a typically excellent recording from the husband-wife team of tenor saxophonist Stanley Turrentine and organist Shirley Scott. With assistance from guitarist Kenny Burrell, bassist Bob Cranshaw, and drummer Otis Finch, Turrentine (who always had the skill of playing melodies fairly straight but with his own brand of soul) and Scott dig into "Love Letters," Lloyd Price's "Trouble," "Something Happens to Me," a couple of basic originals, and "Goin' Home." The Turrentine-Scott team never made an unworthy disc; all are easily recommended, including this one. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/hustlin-mw0000228132

Personnel: Stanley Turrentine (tenor saxophone); Shirley Scott (organ); Kenny Burrell (guitar); Bob Cranshaw (bass); Otis Finch (drums)

Hustlin'

Archie Shepp - Down Home New York

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1984
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:15
Size: 97,2 MB
Art: Front

(10:59)  1. Down Home New York
( 9:16)  2. 'Round About Midnight
( 9:12)  3. May 16th
( 6:08)  4. The 4th World
( 6:39)  5. Straight Street

Archie Shepp was the picture of rebellion and anger in the 1960s, but he became the voice of swing, blues and classicism in the 1980s. Shepp displayed his penchant for honking R&B and soulful blues on this 1984 date. The title piece was a jaunty stroll, as was the celebratory "Straight Street." Shepp turned to impressionistic fare with his version of Thelonious Monk's "Round Midnight." The group included a great drummer in Marvin Smith and also other competent players, although Saheb Sarbib sometimes did not offer as full and aggressive a backbeat as needed. But Shepp's swaggering, confident tone and style maintained the pace. ~ Ron Wynn http://www.allmusic.com/album/down-home-new-york-mw0000188764

Personnel: Archie Shepp (vocals, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Charles McGhee (vocals, trumpet); Kenny Werner (vocals, piano); Saheb Sarbib (vocals, electric bass, bass guitar); Marvin Smith (vocals, drums); Bazzi Bartholomew Gray (vocals).

Down Home New York

Kathryn Williams - Crown Electric

Styles: Vocal, Folk
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:57
Size: 114,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:38)  1. Underground
(3:19)  2. Gave It Away
(3:35)  3. Heart Shaped Stone
(3:29)  4. Count
(3:31)  5. Out Of Time
(3:35)  6. Monday Morning
(3:38)  7. Darkness Light
(4:49)  8. Picture Book
(4:50)  9. Morning Twilight
(3:16) 10. Arwen
(3:35) 11. Tequila
(4:56) 12. Sequins
(3:40) 13. The Known

Before Elvis Presley was crowned the King of Rock N Roll and basically changed the music world forever, he worked as a truck driver and delivery man for a company called Crown Electric. It’s that company which gives Kathryn Williams‘ 10th album its title, and although it’s unlikely to eventually power her to Presley-style success, her most accessible album yet should win her a fair proportion of new fans. So often dismissed as a ‘folkie’, with all the niche interest that implies, Williams in fact sounds nothing less than a contemporary singer/songwriter, and it’s a sound that’s been refined and perfected on Crown Electric. There isn’t a track that wouldn’t sound out of place on the radio without turning overtly poppy or dumbing down, it typifies the kind of quiet, pretty songs she’s specialised in since 1999. As ever, beneath the beauty of Williams’ melodies lies a darkness. Opening track Underground skips along irresistibly, but concerns the mundane existence of commuters “I see the same people on the train, I don’t say hello, I don’t even wave” muses Williams, before deciding “I don’t want to live like this till I’m underground”. As with her best work, it’s like having your hair stroked before being punched in the gut.

There’s certainly an existential theme running through Crown Electric, with several songs concerning the passing of time as Count explicitly states “I’ve got to make these hours count, these seconds count”. It’s a subject revisited in the gentle jazz swing of Out Of Time, with the heart-rendering line “when you’re supposed to know you’re in your prime, until it’s behind you”, while the gently lilting Monday Morning is a plea to stop wishing the days away. Williams’ long-term producer Neill MacColl sprinkles his usual magic on the album, with the lovely, string-accompanied Heart Shaped Stone already sounding like a hit in waiting, and the second half of the record sees a couple of collaborations with Ed Harcourt which give Williams’ music an added depth. The swirling torch ballad Darkness Rises is probably the best of these, but Sequins (apparently written by Williams in Harcourt’s bath) is a definite highlight, if only for the line “If I walked the afterlife with no make-up on, I’d  be frightening the angels for good”. It’s little lyrical gems like that which make Crown Electric such a joy to listen to. The title track cleverly compares the life of tragic icons like Presley, Michael Jackson and Whitney Houston to the travails of the ordinary singer/songwriter (“well, stones can feel just as heavy as gold”) while Tequila contains probably the album’s key line, “Be brave enough to be yourself”. It’s been Williams’ ability to be herself that’s let her quietly grow into being an immensely talented songwriter. Crown Electric is not so much a case of ‘if it ain’t broke don’t fix it’ but rather ‘it ain’t broke, but let’s make it even better’. ~ John Murphy https://www.musicomh.com/reviews/albums/kathryn-williams-crown-electric

Crown Electric

Makoto Ozone - My Witch's Blue

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:21
Size: 126,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:55)  1. Bouncing in My New Shoes
(4:53)  2. My Witch's Blue
(4:31)  3. Gotta Get It!!
(5:59)  4. Longing for the Past
(6:28)  5. So Good!!
(6:18)  6. Take the Tain Train
(5:21)  7. Time We Spent Together
(5:12)  8. Nova Alvorada
(4:48)  9. Solo Improvisation 'Continuum'
(6:51) 10. Satin Doll

Japans most famous Jazz pianist, Makoto Ozone, releases My Witch's Blue with the Makoto Ozone Trio. Makoto Ozone Trio features Christian McBride & Jeff Tain Watts. The trio recorded My Witch's Blue in New York in May. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/My-Witchs-Blue-Ozone/dp/B008UTV5KC

A premier jazz musician in Japan, Makoto Ozone has made a successful transition to America, where he became equally prominent in this nation's improvisational community. He began on organ at four, then took up piano as a teenager. He went to Berklee in 1980 and studied composing and arranging. He was noticed by Gary Burton and later recorded with him and was part of his band. Ozone's striking ability (especially on mid-tempo pieces) and impressive technique made him a big hit at the Kool Jazz Festival. His 1984 debut recording featured Burton and bassist Eddie Gomez. It was a stunning example of complete knowledge and mastery of the full jazz piano spectrum. Ozone later worked with European pianist Michel Petrucciani and spent extensive time studying classical music. ~ Ron Wynn https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/my-witchs-blue/id561504267

Personnel:  Makoto Ozone – Piano;  Bass – Christian McBride;  Drums – Jeff "Tain" Watts

My Witch's Blue

Konstantin Klashtorni - Smooth Jazz IV

Styles: Saxophone Jazz, Smooth Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:50
Size: 101,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:01)  1. If I Told You
(4:02)  2. Hills and Valleys
(4:39)  3. I Feel It Coming
(4:07)  4. Everywhere I Go
(4:28)  5. Give Me Your Eyes
(4:19)  6. I Need You
(3:57)  7. You Look Good
(4:28)  8. Moondance
(5:32)  9. Find Your Wings
(4:12) 10. Made a Way

Multi-instrumentalist Konstantin Klashtorni is known by his projects Kool & Klean, Chillaxing Jazz Kollektion, Love Suggestions and Smooth Jazz. His newest album of the latter is Smooth Jazz IV (2017). The front photo indicates Konstantin's musical main weight, the saxophone. In order to avoid a false impression, Konstantin plays all his instruments himself, composes all the pieces and produces them. Releasing more than 30 tracks each year makes him to the most productive artist of the smooth jazz scene. Listening to the first track If I Told You immediately comes Grover Washington's The Two Of Us into mind. The soul searing beauty of the melody can compete with the great inspiration. With Hills and Valleys Konstantin not only presents a catchy melody but also invests time and efforts in a sophisticated rhythmic background. On I Feel It Coming arrangement and composition have reached a high degree of artistry. Horns and piano are interwoven to form a highly complex musical whole of extreme smartness. Everywhere I Go is comparable with music by Gerald Albright or Richard Elliot: the sax in the center of interest with great overdub effects. Give Me Your Eyes fuels the groove with a saxy intensity reinventing the smooth jazz idea on a higher level. I Need You relies on the shuffle principle with flute as dialogue partner and piano as instrumental main speaker in interchange with guitar all in a conceptual natural flow. Slowing down the pace to a romantic mood You Look Good is not only an acoustic compliment for the listener. Moondance smiles with guitar, sax and a wonderful synth tapestry of ambient finesse. Find Your Wings is a clap along song in the best sense. For which the rhythm offers the occasion, the melody provides the argumentative underpinnings. Made a Way is the follow up in the same style and fire to touch your heart.There are musicians in the search for the ultimate harmony and there are artists like Konstantin Klashtorni who realize melodious perfection again and again with effortless ease. Smooth Jazz IV is a sonic power package of juvenile freshness. http://smooth-jazz.de/firstview/Klashtorni/SmoothJazz4.htm

Smooth Jazz IV