Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Charles Brown - So Goes Love

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:11
Size: 126.3 MB
Styles: Urban blues, West Coast blues
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[4:39] 1. New Orleans Blues
[5:28] 2. My Heart Is Mended
[3:24] 3. Oh Oh What Do You Know About Love
[3:57] 4. Money's Gettin' Cheaper
[4:47] 5. She's Gone Again
[3:47] 6. I'll Get Along Somehow
[4:09] 7. So Goes Love
[3:59] 8. Stormy Monday
[4:57] 9. Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child
[6:06] 10. Ain't No Use
[5:58] 11. You'll Never Know
[3:55] 12. Blue Because Of You

Charles Brown - Vocals; Harvey Wainapel - Sax (Alto); Danny Caron - Guitar; Ruth Davies - Bass; Teddy Edwards - Sax (Alto), Sax (Tenor); Mary Fettig - Sax (Alto); Allen Smith - Trumpet; Marty Wehner - Trombone; Recorded April 1-4, 1996 at The Plant, Sausalito, California.

Like his previous two efforts for Verve, These Blues and Honey Dripper, So Goes Love doesn't really offer anything new from Charles Brown, but that' hardly a bad thing. Again, he serves up a collection of appealing, laidback blues that often drifts into jazz territory. The repertoire is a tad too predictable ("Stormy Monday," "Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child"), but the performances are so lovely that there's no reason to complain. So Goes Love is hardly the first album to pick up if you're beginning a Brown collection, but once you've been introduced to his charms, it's quite welcome. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

So Goes Love   

Seawind - Reunion

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:32
Size: 159.2 MB
Styles: West Coast jazz
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[4:40] 1. Kept By Your Power
[5:54] 2. You're My Everything
[6:53] 3. Sunshadow
[6:38] 4. Hold On To Love (Featuring Al Jarreau On Vocals)
[5:28] 5. Follow Your Road
[6:44] 6. Free
[6:34] 7. Wayne
[5:42] 8. He Loves You (Featuring Al Jarreau Vocal Solo)
[5:16] 9. Devil Is A Liar
[5:07] 10. Pearl
[4:08] 11. Everything Needs Love
[6:22] 12. Liquid Spies

Seawind was a band formed in Hawaii in the mid-seventies that prominently featured a horn section of University of Indiana alums. The horn sections leader, Jerry Hey, would go on to be THE pop horn arranger of the eighties and nineties (often with the Seawind horns in tow for many of those sessions). Micheal Jackson, Earth Wind and Fire, and literally hundreds of others artists have used Jerry's arranging skills to add some restrained melodic punch to their recordings. Give a listen to the horn arrangement of Jackson's "Working Day and Night" - brilliant. That's what Hey did over and over again.

Seawind was more than just a springboard for Jerry Hey and the Seawind horns however. Seawind was also a highly musical and accomplished band that released four records during their career. Some of drummer Bob Wilson's songs, ("Devil is a Liar" "Follow Your Road" and "Free") are timeless jazz/rock compositions and could easily be in the rotation on any of today's few remaining jazz stations. ~Jim Stalker

It has been 29 years since Seawind's last new release!! This 12 song CD includes beautifully performed, updated 2009 arrangements of "Follow Your Road", "Free" , "Devil Is A Liar" and "He Loves You" (which also features vocalist Al Jarreau). This is by far, Seawind's best ever, recording!

Reunion

Bulow/Besiakov Quartet - A Primera Vez

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:49
Size: 164.4 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[7:50] 1. You're My Everything
[6:49] 2. Inutil Paisagem
[5:46] 3. A Primera Vez
[6:06] 4. Only The Lonely
[9:16] 5. The Best Things In Life Are Free
[6:33] 6. Loose
[6:47] 7. The Way You Look Tonight
[8:15] 8. Carminhos Cruzados
[6:13] 9. In The Last Minute Blues
[8:09] 10. How Long Has This Been Going

Christina von Bülow: altosax; Ben Besiakov: piano; Daniel Franck: bass; Frands Rifbjerg: drums.

This quartet from Denmark is lead by Christina von Bülow (alto sax) and Ben Besiakov (piano). After playing together for years as sidemen in different groups – Ben and Christina decided in 2001 to start a quartet together. It seemed an obvious choice to have Frands Rifbjerg on drums and Anders Christensen on bass, who later (in 2005) was replaced by Daniel Franck – indeed a very swinging rhythm section!

This is what you would call a ‘true’ jazz quartet inspired by groups led by Stan Getz, Miles Davis, Dexter Gordon, Sonny Stitt and many more. The roots of jazz mean a great deal to this group. As a young teenager Ben became very good friends with Ben Webster, who was living in Denmark at that time (in the early 70’s). Webster used to call him ‘little’ Ben and they hung out and played together – an outstanding inspiration for a young and very talented musician. Years after Christina had the rare opportunity to get private lessons from Stan Getz at his home in Malibu (1990), a year before he passed away. As Webster was for Ben, Getz became a mentor for Christina.

Ben and Christina shares a great love of Brazilian music too – a passion that for them both started at a very young age. So among the jazz tunes on their repertory, there is always a couple of Brazilian tunes too from composers like A.C. Jobim, Joao Donato, etc. At the heart of their repertory is the good melody. The quartet released their first album in February 2004, called ‘A Primera Vez’ on the the Danish label Music Mecca. (www.cdjazz.dk) This cd was nominated at the Danish Music Awards for the best jazz recording in 2004.

A Primera Vez

Doug Raney - Blue And White

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:17
Size: 119.7 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 1984/1995
Art: Front

[6:16] 1. Blue And White
[7:07] 2. I Love You
[9:33] 3. Gingerbread Boy
[6:55] 4. That Old Devil Moon
[5:43] 5. Old Folks
[9:15] 6. Straight Street
[7:24] 7. Minority

Doug Raney has recorded extensively for Steeplechase since his debut as a leader in 1977. On this 1984 session, the cool-toned guitarist is accompanied by pianist Ben Besiakov, bassist Jesper Lundgaard, and drummer Aage Tanggaard, sounding reminiscent of his father, the late Jimmy Raney. The leader is the primary soloist throughout most of the date, offering lyrical takes of standards like "I Love You" and "Old Folks." His intricate interpretation of Jimmy Heath's "Gingerbread Boy" and John Coltrane's "Straight Street" also has extensively feature Besiakov to good effect. Because Doug Raney has recorded almost exclusively for European labels, he isn't as well known in his homeland, but his CDs are well worth exploring. ~Ken Dryden

Blue And White

Artie Shaw - King Of The Clarinet (1938-39 Live Performances) Disc 2

Styles: Clarinet Jazz, Swing
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:51
Size: 161,7 MB
Art: Front

(0:50)  1. Artie Speaks
(3:01)  2. Moonray (with Helen Forrest)
(3:19)  3. What Is This Thing Called Love
(4:06)  4. Small Fry (with Tony Pastor)
(2:25)  5. Lambeth Walk
(3:03)  6. Lillacs In The Rain (with Helen Forrest)
(3:21)  7. Out Of Nowhere
(3:37)  8. Man From Mars
(3:50)  9. Deep In A Dream (with Helen Forrest)
(2:40) 10. Softly, As In A Morning Sunrise
(2:18) 11. I Used To Be Color Blind (with Tony Pastor)
(2:34) 12. Just You, Just Me
(3:44) 13. Stardust
(2:36) 14. Night Over Shanghai (with Helen Forrest)
(4:13) 15. If I Had You
(2:30) 16. Put That Down In Writing (with Tony Pastor)
(3:32) 17. Sweet Sue
(3:23) 18. Between A Kiss And A Sigh (with Helen Forrest)
(3:08) 19. Together
(2:50) 20. St. Louis Blues
(2:25) 21. You're A Lucky Guy (with Tony Pastor)
(5:16) 22. Shine On Harvest Moon

One of jazz's finest clarinetists, Artie Shaw never seemed fully satisfied with his musical life, constantly breaking up successful bands and running away from success. While Count Basie and Duke Ellington were satisfied to lead just one orchestra during the swing era, and Benny Goodman (due to illness) had two, Shaw led five, all of them distinctive and memorable. After growing up in New Haven, CT, and playing clarinet and alto locally, Shaw spent part of 1925 with Johnny Cavallaro's dance band and then played off and on with Austin Wylie's band in Cleveland from 1927-1929 before joining Irving Aaronson's Commanders. After moving to New York, Shaw became a close associate of Willie "The Lion" Smith at jam sessions, and by 1931 was a busy studio musician. He retired from music for the first time in 1934 in hopes of writing a book, but when his money started running out, Shaw returned to New York. A major turning point occurred when he performed at an all-star big band concert at the Imperial Theatre in May 1936, surprising the audience by performing with a string quartet and a rhythm section. He used a similar concept in putting together his first orchestra, adding a Dixieland-type front line and a vocalist while retaining the strings. Despite some fine recordings, that particular band disbanded in early 1937 and then Shaw put together a more conventional big band. 

The surprise success of his 1938 recording of "Begin the Beguine" made the clarinetist into a superstar and his orchestra (who featured the tenor of Georgie Auld, vocals by Helen Forrest and Tony Pastor, and, by 1939, Buddy Rich's drumming) into one of the most popular in the world. Billie Holiday was with the band for a few months, although only one recording ("Any Old Time") resulted. Shaw found the pressure of the band business difficult to deal with and in November 1939 suddenly left the bandstand and moved to Mexico for two months. When Shaw returned, his first session, utilizing a large string section, resulted in another major hit, "Frenesi"; it seemed that he could not escape success. Shaw's third regular orchestra, who had a string section and such star soloists as trumpeter Billy Butterfield and pianist Johnny Guarnieri, was one of his finest, waxing perhaps the greatest version of "Stardust" along with the memorable "Concerto for Clarinet." The Gramercy Five, a small group formed out of the band (using Guarnieri on harpsichord), also scored with the million-selling "Summit Ridge Drive." Despite all this, Shaw broke up the orchestra in 1941, only to re-form an even larger one later in the year. The latter group featured Hot Lips Page along with Auld and Guarnieri. After Pearl Harbor, Shaw enlisted and led a Navy band (unfortunately unrecorded) before getting a medical discharge in February 1944. Later in the year, his new orchestra featured Roy Eldridge, Dodo Marmarosa, and Barney Kessel, and found Shaw's own style becoming quite modern, almost boppish. But, with the end of the swing era, Shaw again broke up his band in early 1946 and was semi-retired for several years, playing classical music as much as jazz.

His last attempt at a big band was a short-lived one, a boppish unit who lasted for a few months in 1949 and included Zoot Sims, Al Cohn, and Don Fagerquist; their modern music was a commercial flop. After a few years of limited musical activity, Shaw returned one last time, recording extensively with a version of the Gramercy Five that featured Tal Farlow or Joe Puma on guitar along with Hank Jones. Then, in 1955, Artie Shaw permanently gave up the clarinet to pursue his dreams of being a writer. Although he served as the frontman (with Dick Johnson playing the clarinet solos) for a reorganized Artie Shaw Orchestra in 1983, Shaw never played again. He received plenty of publicity for his eight marriages (including to actresses Lana Turner, Ava Gardner, and Evelyn Keyes) and for his odd autobiography, The Trouble With Cinderella (which barely touches on the music business or his wives), but the outspoken Artie Shaw deserves to be best remembered as one of the truly great clarinetists. His RCA recordings, which were reissued in complete fashion in a perfectly done Bluebird LP series, have only been made available in piecemeal fashion on CD. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/artist/artie-shaw-mn0000511029/biography

King Of The Clarinet (1938-39 Live Performances)   Disc 2

Lani Misalucha - Lani Misalucha

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:35
Size: 139,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:21)  1. Very Special Love
(4:59)  2. I Live For Your Love
(5:04)  3. These Dreams
(4:24)  4. Love Me Again
(4:44)  5. Come In From The Rain
(4:40)  6. Someone In The Dark
(4:04)  7. Never Knew Love Like This Before
(3:11)  8. A Certain Sadness
(3:48)  9. All In Love Is Fair
(5:56) 10. Hold Me
(4:52) 11. Always and Forever
(4:05) 12. Never My Love
(3:13) 13. I Just Wanna Stop
(3:07) 14. Christmas Won't Be The Same Without You

It didn't take long for Filipino singer Lani Misalucha to shed the title of Multiplex Queen and trade it in for the appellation "Asia's Nightingale". During the early years, the vocalist with the exotic looks put in time doing covers of songs made famous by such divas as Celine Dion, Toni Braxton, Barbra Streisand, Whitney Houston, and Mariah Carey. By the mid-'90s, critics of popular music in Misalucha's native country were calling her a diva in her own right. She took home an award as Best Singer from the Asia Song Festival in 1998. The following year saw her star shine brighter yet when she took home top honors in the Aliw Awards category of Best Lounge Act. The Awit Awards also took notice. For the single "Can't Stop Loving You," the awards competition gave Misalucha her second consecutive prize for Best Performance by a Female Recording Artist. Also in 1999, she received a Best Stage Actress nomination from the Awit Awards for her starring role as Sita in the theater production Rama and Sita, a three-hour musical. In addition to winning over the critics, Misalucha also won the hearts of a wide and steadily growing fan base, including Manila's President Joseph Estrada, who invited the vocalist to perform during his daughter's wedding and reception.

Music was always a part of Misalucha's life. Mother Esperanza Dimalanta and father Benjamin Bayot sang opera, she as a coloratura soprano and he a tenor. During Misalucha's childhood, her parents emphasized singing practice, as well as an interest in sports. Her sister, May, also grew up to enter the music business. Three more siblings, Karlyn, Novi, and Osi, were also encouraged musically, but none followed in their singing sisters' footsteps. From the age of 15, Misalucha pursued an interest in school drama productions. She triumphed with the top prize from a 1986 singing contest for gospel music, and went on to work in stage productions with the Andres Bonifacio Concert Chorus for the Cultural Center of the Philippines. She continued to win competitions, including one sponsored by the Manila Institute of Religion. Later, at Manila's Philippine Christian University, Misalucha joined the glee club. Holidays, too, gave her the opportunity to pursue her love of singing, such as when she spent Christmas holidays singing at tree-lighting ceremonies held by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, also known as the Mormons. Misalucha still belongs to the church, along with spouse Noli Misalucha and daughters Lian and Louven.

The vocalist's first professional gig came in 1993, when she sang backup in the band Law of Gravity, which was led by Bodjie Dasig. With encouragement from the bandleader and his wife, Odette Quesada, Misalucha started work on her first album, the Alpha Records release More Than I Should. The 1996 debut picked up half a dozen Katha Award nominations and a pair of Awit Award nominations. In 1998, after she performed at the Asian Song Festival, she put out her second CD, which was her first for Viva Records. ~ Linda Seida https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/reminisce/id850038135

Lani Misalucha

Astor Piazzolla - The Lausanne Concert

Styles: Latin Jazz, World Fusion
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:37
Size: 155,2 MB
Art: Front

( 4:30)  1. Tanguedia III
( 6:31)  2. Milonga del Angel
( 5:37)  3. Buenos Aires Hora Cero
( 8:30)  4. Adios Nonino
(10:53)  5. Mumuki
(10:35)  6. Contrabajismo
(11:13)  7. Reality
(10:28)  8.  Operaciyn Tango.mp3
( 6:22)   9. Nuevo Tango
( 3:21) 10. Camorra II

Piazzolla was nearing the end of his distinguished career when he performed this concert in Switzerland in 1989; he divided it between playing classic material and debuting compositions. The first half was devoted to songs from the 1950s to the late '80s, while the second portion featured new material titled "Tango Nuevo, Nuevo." Each section was marked by swaying, hypnotic bandoneon solos with full lines, elegant melodies and romantic passages. This wasn't issued until a year after Piazzolla's death; it's a wonderful reminder of his greatness. ~ Ron Wynn http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-lausanne-concert-mw0000098773

Personnel:  Soloist [Bandoneon] – Astor Piazzolla;  Bandoneon – Daniel Binelli;  Cello – Angel Ridolfi;  Cello [Violincello] – Carlos Nozzi;  Guitar – Horacio Malvicino;  Piano – Gerardo Gandini

The Lausanne Concert

Terry Callier - Timepeace

Styles: Guitar Jazz, Funk, Soul
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:20
Size: 175,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:50)  1. Ride suite ride (intro)
(8:28)  2. Lazarus man
(4:54)  3. Keep your heart right
(5:15)  4. Java sparrow
(6:50)  5. People get ready/Brotherly love
(4:29)  6. Love theme from 'spartacus'
(5:45)  7. No more blues
(8:55)  8. Timepeace
(6:37)  9. Following your footprints
(5:04) 10. C'est la vie
(4:51) 11. Coyote moon
(4:49) 12. Aka new york al
(3:21) 13. Traitor to the race
(4:07) 14. Love theme from spartacus - zero 7 remix (Bonus Track)

For far too long, folk-jazz mystic Terry Callier was the exclusive province of a fierce but small cult following; a singer/songwriter whose cathartic, deeply spiritual music defied simple genre categorization, he went all but unknown for decades, finally beginning to earn the recognition long due him after his rediscovery during the early '90s. Born in Chicago's North Side also home to Curtis Mayfield, Jerry Butler, and Ramsey Lewis and raised in the area of the notorious Cabrini Green housing projects, Callier began studying the piano at the age of three, writing his first songs at the age of 11 and regularly singing in doo wop groups throughout his formative years. While attending college, he learned to play guitar, eventually setting up residency at a Chicago coffeehouse dubbed the Fickle Pickle and in time coming to the attention of Chess Records arranger Charles Stepney, who produced Callier's debut single, "Look at Me Now," in 1962. In 1964, Callier met Prestige label producer Samuel Charters, and a year later they entered the studio to record his full-length bow, The New Folk Sound of Terry Callier; upon completion of the session, however, Charters traveled to Mexico with the master tapes in tow, and the album went unreleased before finally appearing to little fanfare in 1968. Undaunted, Callier remained a fixture of the Windy City club scene, and in 1970 he and partner Larry Wade signed on with his boyhood friend Jerry Butler's Chicago Songwriters Workshop. There they composed material for local labels including Chess and Cadet, most notably authoring the Dells' 1972 smash "The Love We Had Stays on My Mind." The song's success again teamed Callier with Stepney, now a producer at Cadet, and yielded 1973's Occasional Rain, a beautiful fusion of folk and jazz textures that laid the groundwork for the sound further explored on the following year's What Color Is Love?

Despite earning strong critical notices and building up a devoted fan base throughout much of urban America, Callier failed to break through commercially, and after 1975's I Just Can't Help Myself he was dropped by Cadet; in 1976, he also suffered another setback when Butler closed the Songwriters Workshop. Upon signing to Elektra at the behest of label head Don Mizell, Callier resurfaced in 1978 with the lushly orchestrated Fire on Ice; with the follow-up, 1979's Turn You to Love, he finally cracked the pop charts with the single "Sign of the Times," best known as the longtime theme for legendary WBLS-FM disc jockey Frankie Crocker. He even appeared at the Montreux Jazz Festival. However, when Mizell exited Elektra, Callier was quickly dropped from his contract; after a few more years of diligent touring, he largely disappeared from music around during the early '80s; a single parent, he instead accepted a job as a computer programmer, returning to college during the evenings to pursue a degree in sociology. Although he had essentially retired from performing, Callier continued composing songs, and in 1991 he received a surprise telephone call from fan Eddie Pillar, the head of the U.K. label Acid Jazz. Pillar sought permission to re-release Callier's little-known, self-funded single from 1983, "I Don't Want to See Myself (Without You)." Seemingly overnight, the record became a massive success on the British club circuit, and the singer was soon flown to Britain for a pair of enormously well-received club dates. In the coming months, more gigs followed on both sides of the Atlantic, and in 1996, Callier even recorded a live LP, TC in DC. In 1997, he teamed with British singer Beth Orton, another of his most vocal supporters, to record a pair of tracks for her superb EP Best Bit; the following year, Callier also released his Verve Forecast debut Timepeace, his first major-label effort in close to two decades. Lifetime followed in 1999, and two years later came Alive, recorded live at London's Jazz Cafe. Callier returned in 2002 with Speak Your Peace and 2005 with Lookin' Out. In May of 2009, Hidden Conversations, co-written and produced by Massive Attack, was released on Mr. Bongo in the U.K.; a release in the United States followed in the fall of 2010. Two years later, however, he died from cancer in Chicago on October 27, 2012. Terry Callier was 67 years old. ~ Jason Ankeny http://www.allmusic.com/artist/terry-callier-mn0000027916/biography

Personnel:  Acoustic Guitar – Terry Callier;  Bass – Dave Barnard, Eric Hochberg;  Double Bass [Bass Violin] – Eric Hochberg;  Drums – Alfredo Alias , Dave Trigwell, Morris Jennings;  Guitar – Dave Onderdonk, Jim Mullen, John Moulder;  Percussion – Boscoe D'Olivera, Pennington McGee;  Piano – Mark Edwards;  Producer – Brian Bacchus, Eric Hochberg;  Saxophone – Gary Plumley; Vocals – Terry Callier, Veronica Cowper

Timepeace

Shane Filan - Love Always

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:38
Size: 104,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:55)  1. This I Promise You
(3:45)  2. Don't Dream It's Over
(3:32)  3. Make You Feel My Love
(3:52)  4. Beautiful in White
(3:55)  5. Need You Now
(4:01)  6. Heaven
(3:36)  7. Completely
(3:49)  8. Unbreakable
(3:40)  9. Eyes Don't Lie
(4:13) 10. I Can't Make You Love Me
(3:11) 11. Crazy Over You
(3:09) 12. Eternal Flame

For 14 years, Shane Filan was a prominent member of the hugely successful boy band Westlife, an act that managed to amass no fewer than 14 U.K. number one hits before they marked their dissolution with a summer 2012 show in Dublin in front of 80,000 fans. Born in Sligo, Ireland during the last summer of the '70s, Filan went on to develop his singing voice as part of various school productions, as well as in performances at the local Hawk's Well Theatre. Before his 20th birthday he had already achieved his first number one single with Westlife, when they issued their Steve Mac -produced debut, "Swear It Again." From 1999's Westlife to 2010's Gravity, all but two of their ten studio albums reached the top of the Irish album chart, and following the October 2012 announcement of the band's plan to part ways, Filan was strongly rumored to be talking to various labels about a solo deal. 

He spent much of 2012 and early 2013 writing new material, and in April 2013, it was revealed that Filan had signed with London Records. His summer 2013 debut solo single, "Everything to Me," nodded to the mainstream folk of the Lumineers and Mumford & Sons, and an album, You & Me, was released that November. ~ James Wilkinson https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/love-always/id1253910517

Love Always