Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Kenny Dorham - Jerome Kern Showboat

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1960
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:27
Size: 74,5 MB
Art: Front

(6:02)  1. Why Do I Love You?
(5:41)  2. Nobody Else But Me
(6:37)  3. Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man
(5:49)  4. Make Believe
(4:15)  5. Ol' Man River
(4:01)  6. Bill

This CD reissue of a Kenny Dorham session that was originally on the Time label features the talented trumpeter and an all-star quintet (with Jimmy Heath on tenor, pianist Kenny Drew, bassist Jimmy Garrison and drummer Art Taylor) playing six famous themes from the Jerome Kern play Show Boat. All of the melodies ("Why Do I Love You?," "Nobody Else but Me," "Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man," "Make Believe," "Ol' Man River" and "Bill") are heard in likable and swinging versions. This is one of Dorham's better sessions from the era and is easily recommended to his fans and collectors of hard bop. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/show-boat-mw0000197461

Personnel:  Kenny Dorham – trumpet;  Jimmy Heath - tenor saxophone;  Kenny Drew – piano;  Jimmy Garrison – bass;  Art Taylor - drums

Jerome Kern Showboat

Emilie-Claire Barlow - So Many Stars

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:55
Size: 152,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:13)  1. Gentle Rain
(5:29)  2. Like A Lover
(4:12)  3. Bem Bom
(7:18)  4. La Belle Vame Sans Regret
(4:46)  5. So Danço Samba
(8:45)  6. Jobim Medley
(5:31)  7. De Flor Em Flor
(5:14)  8. Retrato Em Branco E Preto
(4:01)  9. Jardin d' Hiver
(2:54) 10. De Conversa Em Conversa
(2:59) 11. Little Boat (O Barquinho)
(5:29) 12. So Many Stars

Toronto's Emilie-Claire Barlow is a Juno Award-winning singer with a warm, lithe vocal style and a knack for tackling urbane jazz standards. Born in Toronto in 1976, Barlow grew up in a musical family. Her father is jazz drummer Brian Barlow, who has also recorded as Brian Leonard and is best known for his work with the Boss Brass (a Canadian big band led by trombonist Rob McConnell). Not surprisingly, the drummer instilled an appreciation of jazz in his daughter and encouraged her to sing and to study several instruments, including piano, violin, cello, and clarinet. By the time she was seven, Emilie-Claire Barlow was singing for television and radio commercials. She went on to become quite active on Toronto's jazz scene, and in 1997 she and her father formed the Barlow Group an acoustic-oriented octet whose soloists have included trombonist Russ Little and saxman John Johnson. She co-produced her first album, Emilie-Claire Barlow Sings, with her father in 1998 before recording Tribute (also co-produced with Brian Barlow) in 2000. Both albums were released independently in Canada on the Rhythm Tracks label, and both garnered Juno Award nominations for Vocal Jazz Album of the Year. A third Rhythm Tracks album, Happy Feet, appeared in 2003. Barlow then founded her own Empress Music Group and delivered a handful of well-received albums, including 2005's Like a Lover, 2006's holiday-themed Winter Wonderland, and 2007's The Very Thought of You, for which she earned her third Juno Award nomination. 

The following year, she won Female Vocalist of the Year at Canada's National Jazz Awards. Two more Juno Award-nominated albums followed with 2009's Haven't We Met and 2010's The Beat Goes On. In 2011, Barlow delivered Seule Ce Soir, her ninth studio recording and first sung entirely in French. Much lauded, the album earned the singer her first Juno Award win for Vocal Jazz Album of the Year, as well as an ADISQ Award for Album of the Year Jazz Interpretation. A concert album, Live in Tokyo, followed in 2014. In 2015 she returned with Clear Day, which featured backing from the Dutch Metropole Orkest. The album showcased jazz reworkings of modern pop, rock, and folk standards, including songs by David Bowie, Joni Mitchell, Van Morrison, and others. It won the Juno Award for Vocal Jazz Album of the Year. ~ Alex Henderson http://www.allmusic.com/artist/emilie-claire-barlow-mn0001839872/biography

So Many Stars

Thelonious Monk - The Thelonious Monk Orchestra At Town Hall

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:19
Size: 123,3 MB
Art: Front

( 3:04)  1. Thelonious (Complete Version)
( 9:32)  2. Friday the 13th
(10:27)  3. Monk's Mood
( 8:56)  4. Little Rootie Tootie
( 7:56)  5. Off Minor
( 4:53)  6. Crepuscule With Nellie
( 8:29)  7. Little Rootie Tootie (Encore)

Pianist Thelonious Monk's appearance with a tentet at a 1959 Town Hall concert was a major success. With Hal Overton contributing arrangements of Monk's tunes (including a remarkable transcription of Monk's original piano solo on "Little Rootie Tootie") and solos provided by trumpeter Donald Byrd, trombonist Eddie Bert, altoist Phil Woods, Charlie Rouse on tenor, and baritonist Pepper Adams, this date was a real standout. There would only be one other recorded occasion Monk's 1963 Philharmonic Hall concert when the unique pianist was as successfully featured with a larger ensemble. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-thelonious-monk-orchestra-at-town-hall-mw0000200098

Personnel: Thelonious Monk (piano); Phil Woods (alto saxophone); Charlie Rouse (tenor saxophone); Pepper Adams (baritone saxophone); Donald Byrd (trumpet); Robert "Brother Ah" Northern (French horn); Eddie Bert (trombone); Jay McAllister (tuba); Sam Jones (bass guitar); Art Taylor (drums).

The Thelonious Monk Orchestra At Town Hall

Lucinda Williams - The Ghosts Of Highway 20 Disc 1 And Disc 2

Disc 1

Styles: Country
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:42 + 42:33
Size: 100,5 MB + 97,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:19)  1. Dust
(5:28)  2. House Of Earth
(5:46)  3. I Know All About It
(5:13)  4. Place In My Heart
(6:14)  5. Death Came
(5:34)  6. Doors Of Heaven
(9:05)  7. Louisiana Story

Disc 2

( 7:20)  1. Ghosts Of Highway 20
( 4:07)  2. Bitter Memory
( 4:01)  3. Factory
( 5:36)  4. Can't Close The Door On Love
( 5:09)  5. If My Love Could Kill
( 3:34)  6. If There's A Heaven
(12:42)  7. Faith & Grace

Calling her own shots seems to agree with Lucinda Williams. While the singer/songwriter has long had a reputation for taking her time between albums, she's back with another double-disc set, The Ghosts of Highway 20, just a year-and-a-half later. She launched her own label with Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone in the fall of 2014. In many ways, The Ghosts of Highway 20 feels like a companion piece to Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone in its emotionally direct approach and willingness to let the songs play themselves out at their own pace, they drift with the current, but they don't meander, and they get where they're going in their own sweet time. Most of the performances on Highway 20 are anchored by the guitar interplay of Bill Frisell and Greg Leisz (the latter also co-produced the album with Williams and Tom Overby), and while their performances seem low on flash, especially given the estimable talents of these players, they have a faultless instinct for the moods and rhythms of these songs, and this is an album where nuance truly takes center stage. However, while Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone was an album that covered a wide variety of themes, the 14 songs on The Ghosts of Highway 20 all seem to turn on some sort of struggle against depression ("Dust"), against the limitations of our lives on Earth ("Doors of Heaven"), against the past ("Bitter Memory" and the title song), and against betrayal ("I Know All About It"). 

Even as Williams calls up nostalgic images of life in Louisiana ("Louisiana Story"), she's still trying to free herself from memories of hurts inflicted by her loved ones, and her appeals to the Lord for guidance and peace ("If There's a Heaven" and "Faith & Grace") sound and feel sincere, as if the shackles of her physical being are just too much for her. Williams' vocal performances here represent a remarkable high-wire act, as she brings her emotions to the surface without resorting to histrionics. Her musical adaptation of Woody Guthrie's "House of Earth," a curiously erotic dialogue between a whore and a customer, is all the more striking for its refusal to play broad. After releasing one of the best and boldest albums of her career with Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone, Williams goes from strength to strength with The Ghosts of Highway 20, and it seems like a welcome surprise that she's moving into one of the most fruitful periods of her recording career as she approaches her fourth decade as a musician. ~ Mark Deming http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-ghosts-of-highway-20-mw0002901047

Personnel:  Lucinda Williams - acoustic guitar, electric guitar, lead vocals, background vocals;  Carlton "Santa" Davis – drums;  Bill Frisell - electric guitar;  Greg Leisz - acoustic guitar, electric guitar;  Val McCallum - electric guitar;  Butch Norton - drums, percussion, background vocals;  Ras Michael - hand drums, background vocals;  David Sutton - bass guitar, background vocals

The Ghosts Of Highway 20 Disc 1 And Disc 2

Rachid Taha - The Definitive Collection

Styles: World
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:55
Size: 182,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:17)  1. Ya Rayah
(4:36)  2. Rock El Casbah
(5:13)  3. Nokta
(5:16)  4. Voila Voila
(7:28)  5. Habina
(4:50)  6. Kelma
(7:13)  7. Bent Sahra
(3:40)  8. Douce France
(4:21)  9. Indie
(4:04) 10. Jungle Fiction
(5:58) 11. Ida
(4:32) 12. Hey Anta
(4:26) 13. Barbes
(5:48) 14. Barra Barra
(5:05) 15. Menfi

The Definitive Collection is a compilation album by raï singer Rachid Taha. It was released by Wrasse Records in 2007. The album's initial release was limited to 2000 copies, which were accompanied by a DVD that documented Taha's return to Algeria. The album was released in the U.S. in 2008 under the title Rock el Casbah: The Best of Rachid Taha. Video clips have been made for "Barbès" (1991),"Ya Rayah"(1997),"Ida"(1998), "Hey Anta" (2000), & "Voilà, Voilà" (2012). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Definitive_Collection_(Rachid_Taha_album)