Thursday, August 10, 2017

Cathy Menezes - A Dream

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:52
Size: 119,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:06)  1. Waves of Seven
(5:48)  2. Don't Know Yet
(6:46)  3. Quiet Moments
(5:24)  4. A Dream
(6:17)  5. White Swan
(5:22)  6. Will You Be Here
(5:47)  7. Beauty of the Sea
(5:04)  8. Zoe
(6:13)  9. Summer Day

Debut,fully original album by singer, composer and pianist, with powerful melodies and lyrics in a unique blend of Latin, blues and smooth jazz performs with some of the great masters of music, Russell Ferrante, Hussain Jiffry, Mike Shapiro and many more. 2012 Outstanding Creative Performance Award winner, Cathy, has found her musicianship taking her to another artistic level. This debut album was collaborated by some of the greatest masters in music namely: 2014 Grammy Award winner Hussain Jiffry, Russell Ferrante, Mick Shapiro, Allan Hinds, JP Mouro, Satnam, Jackson, Scott Mayo and Gregory Manning. Her compositions provide soulful enticing Latin and jazz grooves infused with colourful melodic improvisations, songs which will no doubt take listeners on an amazing journey. https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/cathymenezes

A Dream

Charnett Moffett - The Bridge

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:28
Size: 129,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:02)  1. Caravan
(3:26)  2. Eleanor Rigby
(1:56)  3. Black Codes
(3:01)  4. Fragile
(1:20)  5. Haitian Fight Song
(4:25)  6. Kalengo
(1:09)  7. Bow Song
(3:59)  8. Jousha Fought the Battle of Jericho
(3:07)  9. Skip Hop
(1:45) 10. The Slump
(4:18) 11. Monk Medley
(2:06) 12. Oversun
(1:58) 13. Swinging Etude
(4:08) 14. Walk Spirit, Talk Spirit
(3:43) 15. Truth
(2:41) 16. The Bridge (Solo Bass Works)
(0:44) 17. Nature Boy
(2:06) 18. Things Ain't What They Used To Be
(2:55) 19. All Blues
(4:27) 20. Free Your Mind

The sound of Charnett Moffett's bass resonates almost instantly straight to the depths of the soul. Over his career, Moffett has played in a tremendous variety of settings and explored seemingly every avenue, alley, and obscure landscape of both the upright and electric bass. Now with his first solo bass CD, The Bridge, audiences can experience Moffett's artisanship in its most concentrated form. Comprised of 20 pieces, The Bridge covers a lot of territory, acting as a portrait of Moffett's musical experience. Included on the album are touchstones to the many stages of his long career, from his early work with Wynton Marsalis to his run with the Manhattan Jazz Quartet, to his explosive experiments as a bandleader, as well as his partnership with McCoy Tyner. However, though touching on these various aspects of his development, it is not a simple march through time, but instead a distillation of the various components into a captivating whole. Moffett begins with a blistering take on "Caravan," followed immediately by "Eleanor Rigby" which in Moffett's hands undergoes a kind of sublimation that exposes the devastating salience of the original's commentary on the human condition. This ability to pair down and purify represents one of Moffett's signature abilities which he applies throughout The Bridge. A second powerful example is his brief 44-second rendition of "Nature Boy." Boldly approaching this classic, Moffett inverts the more usual jazz methodology of expanding on a tune's basic parts to instead render it into its most essential, emotive elements.

The remaining 18 selections continue this pattern, tapping both icons of the jazz repertoire, like Charles Mingus' "Haitian Fight Song" and a medley of Thelonious Monk works, and pop tunes like Sting's "Fragile." Moffett also contributes 8 original compositions that provide some additional standout moments, such as the Middle Eastern-themed piece "Kalengo" on which Moffett integrates pizzicato and bowed techniques in a virtuoso display. In fact, Moffett's bow work on this and several other pieces, including Miles Davis' "All Blues" and the closing, electric-tinged "Free Your Mind," represent some of the most redolent passages on the album. No recording can capture the distinct and uncannily haunting sound of Moffett's tone when experienced live, but The Bridge is an exceptionally actualized statement delivered by the practiced hand of a master during a resurgence of his creative powers. (It should be noted that The Bridge will be followed closely by an ensemble album, and was previewed by a marathon run of solo performances in New York.) In the end, as impressive as Moffett's technical facility on the bass and compositional talents are, it is his emotive clarity, the ability to cut to the core, that ultimately captures the imagination and moves the listener's inner being. His is a rare capacity to reach out sometimes with only one perfectly articulated note to touch the deepest aspects of our spirits and carry us forward. ~ Franz Matzner https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-bridge-charnett-moffett-motema-music-review-by-franz-a-matzner.php
 
Personnel: Charnett Moffett: Bass

The Bridge

Ray Brown - Bass Hit!

Styles: Jazz, Bop
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:38
Size: 124,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:04)  1. Blues For Sylvia
(4:00)  2. All Of You
(4:28)  3. Everything I Have Is Yours
(3:42)  4. Will You Still Be Mine
(4:52)  5. Little Toe
(4:46)  6. Alone Together
(2:30)  7. Solo For Unaccompanied Bass
(4:09)  8. My Foolish Heart
(5:36)  9. Blues For Lorraine
(2:50) 10. After You've Gone
(4:49) 11. After You've Gone (Complete Takle)
(3:01) 12. After You've Gone
(2:44) 13. After You've Gone (Complete Takle)

Since he played on some of the earliest Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker records in 1945, Brown is regarded as the father of modern bass playing. He made his name at that time with the groundbreaking role he played on Gillespie's One Bass Hit. He has been a leading virtuoso for half a century and his tone and dexterity are still something to wonder at, as was shown in an unforgettable master class that he gave to students for a BBC television broadcast. His "Solo for Unaccompanied Bass" here is another dazzling performance. Elsewhere, he's in an unusual setting before an all-star West Coast big band playing a set of arrangements by Marty Paich. Brown bites powerfully into his featured role, notably in an incredibly fast "After You've Gone," and he's helped by key soloists like trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison (reprising his role on Sinatra's albums) and clarinetist Jimmy Giuffre. If you're a bass player, be careful with this album. It might make you want to give up. ~ Steve Voce https://www.amazon.com/Bass-Hit-Ray-Brown/dp/B00000JNP2

Personnel: Ray Brown (bass); Marty Paich (arranger, conductor); Jack Dulong, Herb Geller (alto saxophone); Jimmy Giuffre (tenor saxophone, clarinet); Bill Holman (tenor saxophone); Harry "Sweets" Edison, Conrad Gozzo, Ray Linn, Pete Candoli (trumpet); Herbie Harper (trombone); Jimmie Rowles (piano); Herb Ellis (guitar); Mel Lewis, Alvin Stoller (drums).

Bass Hit!

The Isley Brothers & Santana - Power Of Peace

Styles: Vocal, Funk
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:08
Size: 151,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:26)  1. Are You Ready
(4:23)  2. Total Destruction to Your Mind
(5:13)  3. Higher Ground
(7:09)  4. God Bless the Child
(5:34)  5. I Remember
(5:22)  6. Body Talk
(7:03)  7. Gypsy Woman
(4:04)  8. I Just Want to Make Love to You
(3:12)  9. Love, Peace, Happiness
(5:29) 10. What the World Needs Now Is Love Sweet Love
(4:02) 11. Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)
(6:27) 12. Let the Rain Fall On Me
(4:37) 13. Let There Be Peace On Earth

Supergroup pairings rarely work. Either there are too many egos involved or the magic promised on paper doesn’t materialize because there are too many cooks in the kitchen, or record label and managerial bluster get in the way of actual spontaneity. That's not the case with Power of Peace, delivered by the Santana and Isley families in a Las Vegas studio without prior rehearsal. The material on this 13-song set is comprised mostly of iconic soul, funk, blues, and R&B covers. Carlos Santana and Ron Isley are joined by drummer Cindy Blackman Santana and Ernie Isley, the Santana road band, and a backing chorus of Kandy and Tracy Isley as well as Kimberley Johnson and Eddie Levert. "Are You Ready," the first of two Chambers Brothers tunes, opens the set with a Karl Perazzo conga workout followed by a funky bassline and Ernie on manic wah-wah guitar. Cindy's breaks and Carlos' leads push Ron to overdriven rock intensity with the backing chorus supports. It's a hard groover that introduces a rocking soul rave-up on Swamp Dogg's "Total Destruction to Your Mind." The pairing of Ron and Carlos here is fantastic. If it doesn’t get you on your feet, you're already dead. Things get more intense on Stevie Wonder's "Higher Ground" with Ernie evoking Jimi Hendrix's spirit in his fills and solo, while Cindy's drumming and Perazzo's whomping congas push it into the red. Eddie Kendricks' burner "Body Talk" gets the same treatment. There are some ballads here, too. Ron delivers a beautiful adaptation of Billie Holiday's "God Bless the Child" with Cindy on backing vocals. Santana's melodic presentation is matched by Ernie's tough blues phrasing. The lone original, "I Remember," is a gorgeous, bittersweet samba written and sung by Cindy; it's the only tune here that retains its restraint throughout (though Carlos is tempted to shred near the end). On Curtis Mayfield's "Gypsy Woman," Ron offers his sweetest falsetto amid a humid, atmospheric, Latin soul backdrop. Blues, hard rock, and funk collide in Willie Dixon's "I Just Want to Make Love to You," with Ernie shining in a burning solo. Only the Bacharach-David standard "What the Worlds Needs Now" and Leon Thomas' post-bop "Let the Rain Fall on Me" falter due to overly reverent presentations. That said, the gospelized Latin soul in Marvin Gaye's "Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)" is a monster. The set closes with a complete reinvention of "Let There Be Peace on Earth," offering a stellar portrait of what the Santana band does well (especially with an ace guitarist like Ernie aboard). Ron, whose voice is undiminished by time, soars above the band and chorus to end it all on a spiritual tip. Power of Peace is loose, but everybody brought their chops to the party. This is what happens when great musicians gather simply to see what happens and enjoy one another's company. ~ Thom Jurek http://www.allmusic.com/album/power-of-peace-mw0003062166

Personnel: Ronald Isley (vocals); Carlos Santana (guitar, percussion, background vocals);  Mathews, Jim Reitzel (keyboards); Karl Perazzo (percussion).

Power Of Peace