Sunday, July 16, 2017

Barney Kessel - Let's Cook!

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:55
Size: 91.4 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 1957/1999
Art: Front

[11:17] 1. Let's Cook!
[ 4:18] 2. Time Remembere
[ 4:56] 3. Just In Time
[ 9:49] 4. Tiger Rag
[ 9:33] 5. Jersey Bounce

This is an excellent session from guitarist Barney Kessel. Kessel is matched with vibraphonist Victor Feldman, pianist Hampton Hawes, bassist Leroy Vinnegar, and drummer Shelly Manne for a blues-with-a-bridge (the 11-minute "Let's Cook"), Vernon Duke's ballad "Time Remembered," and "Just in Time." The second half of the album has modernized versions of "Tiger Rag" and "Jersey Bounce" as played by the guitarist, tenor saxophonist Ben Webster, trombonist Frank Rosolino, pianist Jimmie Rowles, Vinnegar, and Manne. Throughout, Kessel keeps with the other all-stars, swinging hard while paying tribute to the legacy of Charlie Christian. ~Scott Yanow

Let's Cook  

Morelenbaum2, Ryuichi Sakamoto - A Day In New York

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:08
Size: 103.3 MB
Styles: Bossa Nova
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[4:03] 1. Desafinado
[2:11] 2. Bim Bom
[4:20] 3. Insensatez
[4:10] 4. Coracao Vagabundo
[3:48] 5. Falando De Amor
[3:30] 6. Chora Coracao
[4:54] 7. Sabia
[5:35] 8. Tango (Versao Em Portugal)
[3:15] 9. Chega De Saudade
[4:45] 10. Samba De Aviao
[4:32] 11. Fotografia

A Day in New York, recorded at the end of a U.S. tour the group made in 2002 in support of the Casa release is, simply, Morelenbaum Squared's live set performed -- live -- in a New York studio. The emphasis, of course, is on songs by Antonio Carlos Jobim, although Caetano Veloso, João Gilberto, and even Ryuichi Sakamoto and Paula Morelenbaum get a look in. The music is exquisite, gently understated, and shimmering like a heat mirage. Morelenbaum is a more than capable singer, and often a delight here (as on "Fotografia"), while Sakamoto is the real revelation of the album. He blends in so perfectly it's hard to believe he's not Brazilian; he's deft in rhythmic support, and never pushes too much on his solos. Cellist Jacques Morelenbaum is the veteran, but he keeps a sense of discovery in his playing, and the inclusion of the bowed instrument offers an almost chamber music-feel to this music, bringing another dimension to the sound. The three are the focal points, but kudos too, to the guitarist and drummer, who keep in the background, but offer vital support. It's remarkable just how familiar many of these songs are; not merely the obvious "Desafinado" and "Chega De Saudade," but "Samba De Avião" and "Fotografia." In a way, it's like chancing upon an old friend after many years, and finding a new richness. A joy to the ear. ~Chris Nickson

A Day In New York

Raul Malo - Lucky One

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:39
Size: 118.2 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[4:31] 1. Lucky One
[4:16] 2. Moonlight Kiss
[3:43] 3. Something Tells Me
[3:29] 4. Hello Again
[4:41] 5. Ready For My Lovin'
[4:45] 6. Crying For You
[3:25] 7. You Always Win
[3:17] 8. Lonely Hearts
[5:28] 9. One More Angel
[4:51] 10. Rosalie
[4:18] 11. Haunting Me
[4:49] 12. So Beautiful

2009 release from the former leader of The Mavericks. Lucky One is his first album of original material in seven years. Drawing on his deep love of Country, Rock, Jazz and Latin music. Malo displays not only his eclectic taste but a crystal clear voice unmatched by any other singer today. 11 tracks including the first single 'Hello Again'.

On "Lucky One," his first album of original material in seven years, Raul Malo has shed his musical shackles. "I have been fighting my whole life against people who want to pigeonhole music. We fought that in the Mavericks. I feel like I've got no restrictions anymore," the Grammy winner says. "I'm not really writing for any specific genre. I feel like I can do whatever I want."

Clearly, followers of Malo's eclectic career--both with the Mavericks and after-- know he's always chafed at placing any confines on music. Or, as he laughingly confesses, "if most people do what I've done in my career, they'd be driving a taxi by now." However, a talent as mighty as Malo's simply can't be denied. His glorious voice has been rapturously described by The New York Times as "exceptional" and the Wall Street Journal as "exquisite." Its crystal purity is simply unmatched by any other singer's today. And a voice like his deserves a loving, sturdy melody to wrap itself around. Although completely contemporary, the music on "Lucky One" recalls the great tunes of the `50s, `60s and `70s, made famous by Malo's musical heroes like Elvis Presley, Roy Orbison, Merle Haggard and Buck Owens.

The songs on his Fantasy Records debut range from the silly to the sublime, by Malo's own design, and draw on his deep love of country, rock, jazz and Latin music. "Moonlight Kisses" features a playful male chorus and a snazzy tuba (!!), while songs such as "One More Angel" and "Rosalie" take on gut wrenching loss of life. Malo wrote "Lucky One" over a two-year period at his Nashville home and was so happy with the result that several of his home demos appear as final versions on the CD. For the rest, he enlisted co-producer Steve Berlin, best known for his work with Los Lobos. "I trust Steve musically," Malo says. "Art comes first with him. That's the most important quality of all; nothing gets in the way of that."

"Lucky One" follows "You're Only Lonely" and "After Hours," two CDs of cover songs written by many of Malo's favorite tunesmiths including Kris Kristofferson, Dwight Yoakam, Roger Miller and Willie Nelson. "How could that not influence my songwriting on `Lucky One,'" Malo asks. "It certainly had an effect on how I wrote for this. [There's] an appreciation for song structure, melody and lyric that these guys certainly had."

After close to 20 years of making music, Malo is having more fun than ever. "I get to play exactly what I want. I have a great band. I have great fans," he says. "It's really fantastic. And the creative freedom I have now, I wouldn't trade that for the world." The liberation that true talent and vision bring has led to the ultimate freedom so lovingly evident on "Lucky One": "I know that at the end of the day I can go somewhere with my guitar and someone will come see me."

Lucky One

Ken Fowser, Behn Gillece - Duotone

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:34
Size: 131.8 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz, Vibraphone jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[5:06] 1. Overcooked
[5:40] 2. Spontaneity
[6:30] 3. Attachment
[6:45] 4. Back To Back
[3:24] 5. Come Around Again
[7:40] 6. In The Twilight
[5:41] 7. Low Ball
[5:22] 8. Bongo
[7:20] 9. Offset
[4:01] 10. One For G

"Duotone" is a term that belongs to the world of photography, but it makes perfect sense when applied to this recording. Tenor saxophonist Ken Fowser and vibraphonist Behn Gillece superimpose their tonal colors and personalities against one another, to create an aural portrait that's both traditional and modern.

While the supporting personnel have changed on each of their three Posi-Tone dates, the basic template by which their music is designed remains, essentially, the same. On each album, the pair employs a quintet to deliver melodically-inviting material with impressive soloing , but they also branch out beyond this general description. "Spontaneity" features a wide developmental arc, which begins with impressionistic piano and loose, searching statements, eventually arriving at propulsive swing, and "Come Around Again" is an intimate, musical-dream sequence.

Both men own equal shares in this music but, as on Little Echo (Posi-Tone, 2010), Gillece serves as the primary composer. Fowser's contributions—the breezy, Brazilian-tinged "Bongo" and the hip, swinging "One For G"—come at the end of the album, after Gillece has already established himself as the compositional kingpin of the group. His music can be hypnotic ("Offset"), relaxed and carefree ("Low Ball"), or caffeinated and swinging ("Back To Back"), depending on the moment, but all of it remains highly accessible.

While the solid architecture of each piece speaks to the writing skills of Gillece, and Fowser on a smaller scale, jazz remains an improviser's art, and this album features plenty of soloing to attest to their strengths in this area. While they take the large majority of the solo spots, pianist Donald Vega is an almost-equal partner in this department. He steals the show on the up-tempo "Back To Back," and his bluesy piano work on "Offset" takes the song in a different direction.

The team of bassist David Wong, of drummer Roy Haynes' Fountain of Youth band fame, and überdrummer Willie Jones III are as good a rhythm duo as can be hoped for, and they provide superb support throughout the program. When the music requires intensity, they push and prod to perfection, but they also underline the cool characteristics of the slower, swinging material on the album.

Duotone isn't a radical departure from Full View (Posi-Tone, 2009) and Little Echo, but that's just fine. It's a winning program of original tunes that continues to show off the chemistry which exists between two exciting instrumental voices bound for the big time. ~Dan Bilawsky

Duotone

Joan Stiles - Love Call

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:53
Size: 121.1 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[4:33] 1. Spherical
[6:44] 2. When I Fall In Love
[4:11] 3. Daahood
[4:40] 4. Creole Love Call
[5:43] 5. Surrey With The Fringe On Top
[4:38] 6. Tea For Two
[3:55] 7. Blood Count
[4:14] 8. Take The A Train
[3:59] 9. I've Never Been In Love Before
[4:47] 10. My Man's Gone Now
[5:25] 11. Almost Like Being In Love

The back cover of Love Call, Joan Stiles' first album as a leader, lists her as a "pianist and arranger." Why was it necessary for Stiles to point out that she's an arranger? Because it's a major part of her musical identity -- an identity that serves the native New Yorker well on Love Call, which was recorded in 1998 and boasts major names like Clark Terry (trumpet, flugelhorn), Frank Wess (tenor sax), and Warren Vaché (trumpet), as well as trombonist Benny Powell, saxman Jerry Dodgion, and Joe Temperley (an excellent but underexposed baritone saxophonist who is also heard on bass clarinet). Different combinations of players are employed on different songs, but whoever Stiles is featuring on this bop-oriented CD, she brings a real bandleader/arranger mentality to the table. Stiles' arrangements are consistently tasteful, and her sidemen have no problem bringing them to life. If Love Call has any noticeable shortcoming, it is Stiles' tendency to be much too conservative in her choice of material -- most of the time, she sticks to warhorses that have been beaten to death over the years. Describing "Surrey With the Fringe on Top," "When I Fall in Love," and "Almost Like Being in Love" as warhorses isn't saying that they aren't great songs, only that they're overdone -- and instead of being so warhorse-minded, Stiles would do well to surprise us with more gems that haven't been recorded so often. She obviously has quite an ear for the rich and vast Duke Ellington/Billy Strayhorn songbook; instead of yet another version of "Take the A Train," how about surprising us with some of the Duke's lesser-known treasures? Ellington was an amazingly prolific composer, and he wrote countless gems that never became standards -- gems that would work well for Stiles (such as "The Mystery Song" or "The Eighth Veil"). But despite the warhorse factor, Love Call is an enjoyably solid and promising debut from Stiles, who is well worth keeping an eye on. ~Alex Henderson

Love Call

Eddie Gomez Trio - Live In Italy

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:45
Size: 155.1 MB
Styles: Straight ahead jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[12:37] 1. How Deep Is The Ocean
[11:26] 2. Con Alma
[12:54] 3. You Don't Know What Love Is
[ 8:31] 4. On Green Dolphin Street
[12:10] 5. My Funny Valentine
[10:04] 6. Blues Out Of The Closet

The best recordings are not necessarily the most publicized. One can find hidden gems like this one. Great straight ahead jazz. The introduction in Italian emphasizes that it's a live recording, and transports the listener to that moment. You Don't Know What Love is features great drumming, the brushes are cleanly heard. Very well recorded. My Funny Valentine, is presented in a very memorable way, including some latin rhythms. The final number Blues out of the Closet features fiery solos from the pianist. A number of excellent solos are featured throughout the recording, with a superb interaction between the musicians. ~Rodolfo Romanach-suarez

Live In Italy