Monday, September 18, 2017

Baby Face Willette - Mo-Roc

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:15
Size: 87.6 MB
Styles: Bop, Soul-jazz
Year: 1964/2004
Art: Front

[4:46] 1. Mo-Roc
[5:15] 2. Bantu Penda
[5:25] 3. Dad's Theme
[4:08] 4. But Not For Me
[3:55] 5. Misty
[4:16] 6. Unseen And Unknown
[5:17] 7. Zip Five
[5:08] 8. Sight In Darkness

After recording a handful of sessions for Blue Note in the early '60s (including two albums as a leader), organist Baby Face Willette abruptly left the label and soon resurfaced on Argo. Mo-Roc (titled Mo' Rock on the front cover only) is the first of Willette's two 1964 albums for Argo, and it's further proof that if Willette hadn't been so underexposed, he certainly wouldn't be quite so underrated. Mo-Roc is recorded in a trio format with guitarist Ben White and drummer Eugene Bass, who may not be up to the caliber of Blue Note players like Grant Green and Ben Dixon, but are competent and swinging nonetheless. Willette shines brightest on the hard-driving up-tempo cuts, swinging like a madman and displaying more melodic imagination on his instrument than straight blues players. Highlights in this vein include the charging title cut -- dedicated to Chicago's Moroccan Village neighborhood, where Willette played frequently -- and "Zip Five," where the busy melody lines produce some explosive displays of chops from both Willette and White. Not all of the compositions make much of an impression -- some are basically just swinging, mid-tempo grooves -- but it's hard to miss the mysterious, atmospheric "Unseen and Unknown," Willette's tribute to an African witch doctor, which is punctuated by comically manic screams and dissonant, horror-film chords. Overall, Mo' Rock isn't quite up to the level of Willette's Blue Note sessions, but it's still a very respectable outing, and given the unfortunate skimpiness of his discography, his fans should find it rewarding enough to seek out the Japanese CD reissue. ~Steve Huey

Mo-Roc

Steve Howell & Jason Weinheimer - A Hundred Years From Today

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:18
Size: 80.8 MB
Styles: Blues-jazz guitar
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[2:39] 1. Lulu's Back In Town
[3:05] 2. Kansas City Blues
[3:43] 3. Going Back To Florida
[3:17] 4. Louis Collins
[4:23] 5. A Hundred Years From Today
[3:09] 6. I've Got The Blues, Can't Be Satisfied
[3:27] 7. Basin Street Blues
[2:53] 8. Limehouse Blues – After You've Gone
[4:02] 9. Who's Been Here
[4:35] 10. Rocking Chair

A few years ago, in 2015, Steve Howell pushed out an excellent acoustic blues release, ‘Friend Like Me’, which merely hinted at just how talented he truly is, an album that had a sparkling immediacy and gained plaudits across the blues and roots music world. With this ten-track follow-up, Howell again shows just how well he understands the music and its significance.

Originally from Texas, Howell has moved around a fair bit with spells in Loiusiana, Pennsylvania and the UK all adding to his background and back-history. Here, joined by veteran, bad-ass bassist Jason Weinheimer, Howell has again produced the blues-goods with a masterful album that includes covers of his own major influence, Mississippi John Hurt, and additions from Bo Carter, before moving effortlessly through some mighty fine jazz standards from the likes of Jack Teagarden’s title track, and smoky hints of Wes Montgomery, classic Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington all drifting through the mix.

Try his delightful take on the old classic Fats Waller signature tune, Lulu’s Back In Town for starters, a perfectly pitched display of raw ability and tasteful picking. Overall, this is an album of top-quality, sensitively styled and delivered acoustic blues and southern jazz music. A wonderful addition to Howell’s growing body of work. ~Iain Patience

A Hundred Years From Today

Terrie Richards Alden, Howard Alden - Love

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:11
Size: 114.9 MB
Styles: Swing, Vocal jazz
Year: 2001
Art: Front

[2:58] 1. The Lady Is In Love With You
[5:17] 2. Gone With The Wind
[2:58] 3. Miss Otis Regrets
[3:44] 4. Skylark
[3:54] 5. Just In Time
[4:24] 6. I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues
[4:17] 7. I Can't Give You Anything But Love
[4:13] 8. What A Little Moonlight Can Do
[4:16] 9. How Deep Is The Ocean
[2:45] 10. Trav'lin' Light
[3:26] 11. Everything I Have Is Yours
[4:10] 12. Almost Like Being In Love
[3:42] 13. Love Is The Thing

The lightly swinging singer Terrie Richards Alden's second CD is a series of intimate duets with her husband, the phenomenal guitarist Howard Alden. She savors each lyric with clear intonation, and has a knack for emphasizing the essence of each melody. Howard Alden, one of the greatest guitarists of his generation, tends to play the precise accompaniment to back his wife without trying to steal the spotlight for himself on most tracks, though he does allow himself a flashy chorus on "What a Little Moonlight Can Do." The singer restores the amusing but often omitted verse to "Just in Time" and takes her time with the sentimental "I Can't Give You Anything but Love, Baby." This enjoyable duo date should be considered an essential purchase by swing fans. ~Ken Dryden

Love

Bobby Short - Heebie Jeebies (2 parts)

Nightclub entertainer Bobby Short performed from the 1930s to the 2000s, primarily singing the songs of the masters of pre-rock popular song, especially Cole Porter, George Gershwin, Noël Coward, and Rodgers & Hart, while accompanying himself on piano. The quintessential cabaret artist, the dapper Short, who often made best-dressed lists, perfectly articulated the lyrics in a husky baritone, delighting his well-heeled customers, particularly at the ritzy Cafe Carlyle of the Carlyle Hotel on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, where he was in residence from 1968 to 2004. Live performance was his métier, but he also made a series of recordings for Atlantic Records, Telarc, and other labels, along with occasional forays into film and television acting as well as the musical theater.

The ninth of ten children born to Rodman Jacob Short, a coal miner, and Myrtle (Render) Short, a domestic, in Danville, IL, Robert Waltrip Short, nicknamed Bobby, took an early interest in the family piano and, despite a few lessons, was essentially self-taught. He began playing professionally in local roadhouses at the age of eight or nine. Soon, he was performing at society parties in a white tuxedo. In July 1936, when he was 11, he attracted the attention of booking agents who, with his mother's permission, took him to Chicago to perform in vaudeville and on radio. In June 1937, after finishing grade school, he traveled to dates in Cleveland and Toledo, then moved to New York City, where he appeared at the Frolics Cafe in October and at La Grande Pomme, as well as at other clubs and theaters around the country. He returned to Danville in the summer of 1938 to attend to high school and performed only in local venues over the next several years. But after graduating in 1942 he went back to show business permanently, opening at the Capitol Lounge in Chicago that July, followed by engagements in Cleveland, Omaha, and Los Angeles, where he settled in 1943. By the following year, however, he was working in Milwaukee and St. Louis, and in the spring of 1945 he was an opening act at the Blue Angel in New York City for four weeks. He then returned to California, by way of an appearance in Phoenix, where he performed at the Haig and the Café Gala over the next few years. While he was at the Haig, in the late '40s or early '50s, he made a record that was sold at the club. He also appeared without credit in the film musical Call Me Mister, released in January 1951, singing "Going Home Train."

Over the years, Short came to represent the elegance and sophistication of New York with his tuxedoed appearance and repertoire of standards. As a result, he became attractive to advertisers, who frequently featured him in television commercials and print ads for such products as perfume and designer jeans. He also got other opportunities to perform. In February 1979, he acted in the ABC television mini-series Roots: The Next Generations, and in May 1980 he was a producer and participant in the Broadway revue Black Broadway, which had a brief run at Town Hall. His other TV guest appearances included the series The Love Boat, Tattingers, In the Heat of the Night, Central Park West, Frasier, and 7th Heaven. There were also films. He was seen and heard as himself, performing Cole Porter's "I'm in Love Again" at the Cafe Carlyle in Woody Allen's Hannah and Her Sisters in 1989, and his recording of Porter's "I Happen to Like New York" was heard over the titles of Allen's Manhattan Murder Mystery in 1993. (Other soundtrack-only appearances included Savages [1972] and Love Affair [1994].) He also appeared in the films For Love or Money (1993) and Man of the Century (1999), and in the TV movies Hardhat and Legs (1980), A Night on the Town (1983), and Blue Ice (1992). He published a second memoir, Bobby Short: The Life and Times of a Saloon Singer, written with Robert Mackintosh, in 1995. He died of leukemia at the age of 80 on March 21, 2005. ~bio by William Ruhlmann

Album: Heebie Jeebies Part 1
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:27
Size: 122.4 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2016

[3:23] 1. You've Got That Thing
[2:40] 2. Heebie Jeebies
[2:24] 3. I'm In Love Again
[1:41] 4. The Younger Generation
[2:26] 5. Nagasaki
[2:53] 6. Don't Bring Lulu
[3:02] 7. Changes
[2:07] 8. At The Animals Ball
[3:05] 9. I've Got You On My Mind
[2:19] 10. I Love You Samantha
[2:44] 11. Hooray For Love
[2:12] 12. Down In Mexico
[2:47] 13. This Is What I Call Love
[2:22] 14. Be My Host
[3:45] 15. Delia's Gone
[2:51] 16. Bojangles Of Harlem
[3:37] 17. Something To Live For
[1:33] 18. Losing My Mind
[2:41] 19. Love Is Here To Stay
[2:46] 20. I Like The Likes Of You

Heebie Jeebies Part 1

Album: Heebie Jeebies Part 2
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:40
Size: 134.3 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[3:50] 1. Now
[2:26] 2. Island In The West Indies
[2:02] 3. You Are Not My First Love
[2:33] 4. Over And Over Again
[3:01] 5. Sweet Bye And Bye
[2:39] 6. From Now On
[3:44] 7. Dinah
[1:50] 8. You Make Me Feel So Young
[4:19] 9. Manhattan
[2:27] 10. I Can't Get Started
[3:34] 11. Autumn In New York
[2:10] 12. Gimme A Pigfoot
[3:44] 13. The Best Is Yet To Come
[2:23] 14. Witchcraft
[4:00] 15. I've Got Your Number
[2:30] 16. It Amazes Me
[2:38] 17. On The Other Side Of The Tracks
[2:51] 18. My Personal Property
[3:43] 19. Hey Look Me Over
[2:05] 20. I Walk A Little Faster

Heebie Jeebies Part 2

George Benson - Songs And Stories

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:11
Size: 142.4 MB
Styles: Guitar & Vocal jazz
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[3:48] 1. Don’t Let Me Be Lonely Tonight
[4:18] 2. Family Reunion
[4:17] 3. Show Me The Love
[5:54] 4. A Telephone Call Away
[6:20] 5. Someday We’ll All Be Free
[5:29] 6. Nuthin’ But A Party
[4:30] 7. Come In From The Cold
[5:28] 8. Exotica
[4:50] 9. Rainy Night In Georgia
[4:41] 10. One Like You
[7:14] 11. Living In High Definition
[5:16] 12. Sailing

George Benson is truly a legend; a guitarist of unparalleled chops and a vocalist with great emotional range and sophistication, and this 2009 release finds him at his very best! Songs and Stories is a collection of tunes penned by some of the most prolific and enduring songwriters of the last half-century. The combined talents of these writers and musicians make for a series of unforgettable tales, and Benson himself is the narrator who weaves it all together. Many of the songs were written specifically for this new recording, while others were hand-picked by Benson for their ability to convey simple but universal truths about the human experience. Features new material from songwriting legends Bill Withers, Lamont Dozier and Smokey Robinson and includes performances by special guests David Paich, Gerald Albright, Lalah Hathaway, Lee Ritenour, Norman Brown, Patti Austiin, Steve Lukather, Tom Scott and many others.

Songs And Stories

Charles McPherson - From This Moment On!

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1968
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:46
Size: 84,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:18)  1. Little Sugar Baby
(5:14)  2. Once in a Lifetime
(6:44)  3. The Good Life
(3:22)  4. Like the Way You Shake That Thing
(3:35)  5. From This Moment On
(7:13)  6. Without You
(6:16)  7. You've Changed

Some of the songs on this set by bop-influenced altoist Charles McPherson (reissued on CD in 1997) use boogaloo and pop rhythms. The repertoire ranges from a couple of OK originals ("Little Sugar Baby" and "Like the Way You Shake That Thing") to a recent show tune ("Once in a Lifetime") and a few standards. Pianist Cedar Walton, the young guitarist Pat Martino, bassist Peck Morrison and drummer Lennie McBrowne form the strong supporting cast. Not one of McPherson's most essential releases, as the material and arrangements are just not that strong; nevertheless, the altoist still plays well, and his fans will want to pick up this reissue. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/from-this-moment-on%21-mw0000031617

Personnel: Charles McPherson (alto saxophone); Cedar Walton (piano); Pat Martino (guitar); Peck Morrison (bass); Lenny McBrowne (drums).

From This Moment On!

Rondi Charleston - Love Is The Thing

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:16
Size: 111,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:08)  1. If I Were A Bell
(4:49)  2. You Fascinate Me So
(5:22)  3. Wouldn't It Be Loverly
(3:30)  4. I've Got Just About Everything
(5:17)  5. It Might As Well Be Spring
(3:32)  6. Talk To Me Baby
(3:41)  7. This Is Always
(4:01)  8. Love Is The Thing
(3:15)  9. Easy To Love
(5:28) 10. Something To Live For
(2:01) 11. Nobody Else But Me
(4:07) 12. A Time For Love

Love Is The Thing is a superlative collection of jazz and American popular standards, all united by an emerging musical star. Rondi Charleston proves herself as a jazz singer - she can swing in any tempo and puts a glorious sense of space, soul and simplicity in her ballads. Love Is The Thing features an all-star lineup of some of the world's finest jazzmen. https://www.amazon.com/Love-Thing-Rondi-Charleston/dp/B0002IQNCO

"A magnificent album...we haven't heard anything like this in years. Rondi Charleston is dynamite!" ~ WRTI (NPR)

"Even though Rondi Charleston has the pipes of an angel, she never shows off...utterly honest..." ~ New York Voices

"One of the most romantic albums in recent memory...one rich delicacy after another." ~ Cabaret Scenes

"Utterly delightful...she works her way into her listener's hearts...a joy to hear." ~ New York Times

Personnel: Rondi Charleston (vocals); Rondi Charleston; David Finck (bass instrument); Adam Rogers (guitar); Joel Frahm (alto saxophone); Glenn Drewes (trumpet); Peter Eldridge, Tedd Firth (piano); Erik Charleston (vibraphone); Lewis Nash (drums)

Love Is The Thing

Chris Standring - Velvet

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:06
Size: 126,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:34)  1. Silhouette
(4:34)  2. Sneaky
(4:38)  3. Coll Shades
(4:32)  4. West Coast Changes
(5:44)  5. Velvet
(4:38)  6. Steven
(4:26)  7. Shake
(4:53)  8. Solitaire
(5:31)  9. 'Nuff Said
(4:47) 10. Victoria Road
(6:42) 11. The Beautiful Woman of Scant Virture

It wouldn't be a surprise to find the glorious retro-soul CD Maxwell's Urban Hang Suite a fixture in Chris Standring's disc changer. Velvet, the guitarist's first solo effort after the blazing funk effort by Solar System (led by Standring and this album's keyboardist/producer Rodney Lee), is full of glittery synth-created Hammond B-3 and Fender Rhodes flavors, hypnotic synth washes and gentle shuffling grooves, punchy wah-wah harmonies and dreamy, otherworldly effects. If Maxwell could improvise like George Benson, this is what the hybrid might be. Standring waits till the tenth track, "Victoria Road," before giving us a truly infectious electric guitar melody that stands apart from its rhythmic base and doesn't seep into the next song. 

But the disc seems more about Standring's Benson-like precision and technique, and brilliant vibe-intensive production than just tunes. On standout tracks like "Silhouette" and the sax accented "Sneaky," Standring and Lee effortlessly swirl the electric guitar melody with subtle acoustic harmonies, effective wah-wah kicks and some Crusaders flavored key improvisations. ~ Jonathan Widran http://www.allmusic.com/album/velvet-mw0000035454

Personnel: Chris Standring (guitar); Dino Soldo (tenor saxophone, flute, harmonica, keyboards, programming); Kirk Whalum (tenor saxophone); Rick Braun (flugelhorn); Rodney Lee (keyboards, programming); Andre Berry (bass).

Velvet

Arne Domnérus & Bernt Rosengren - Face To Face

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 67:37
Size: 127,5 MB
Art: Front

(6:00)  1. Out Of Nowhere
(4:56)  2. Body And Soul
(5:47)  3. But Not For Me
(5:48)  4. Star Dust
(3:11)  5. That Tired Old Routine Called Love
(4:40)  6. St Louis Blues
(4:02)  7. My Old Flame
(6:39)  8. I Cover The Waterfront
(4:43)  9. Lover Man
(5:17) 10. Just Friends
(5:36) 11. Just One Of Those Things
(4:41) 12. What Kind Of Fool Am I
(6:09) 13. It Don't Mean A Thing

Swedish-born saxophonist Arne Domnérus looms large in the annals of European jazz his breakthrough performance at the Paris Jazz Fair of 1949 is widely cited as the tipping point of the Scandinavian bop movement. Born in Stockholm on December 20, 1924, Domnérus studied clarinet as a child and made his professional debut during the early '40s, playing alto sax in popular dance bands led by Lulle Ellboj and Simon Brehm. By 1942 he led his own group and made his recorded debut in 1945, honing an urbane, sophisticated style that nevertheless possessed an urgency often absent from the cool, remote tone often associated with Swedish jazz. American icons Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie were both in attendance for Domnérus 1949 Paris festival gig, a performance which served notice that players of European descent could offer their own authoritative interpretations of music largely considered an African-American phenomenon Parker was so impressed that he signed Domnérus for the Scandinavian tour he mounted a year later. Throughout the '50s Domnérus headlined the Stockholm jazz club Nalen, often appearing alongside trumpeter Rolf Ericson and baritone saxophonist Lars Gullin (who both turn up in the 1952 short film Arne Domnérus Spelar). Domnérus also joined Stockholm locals including pianist Bengt Hallberg for a landmark 1953 Swedish tour in support of American trumpeters Clifford Brown and Quincy Jones. From 1956 to 1965 Domnérus served as a member of Harry Arnold's Swedish Radio Big Band, continuing on with its successor Radiojazzgruppen through 1978 concurrently he wrote for television and films, most notably scoring 1966's Nattlek, a film produced by Mai Zetterling and based on her own novel. Domnérus' 1977 LP Jazz at the Pawnshop proved an unprecedented hit, selling more than half a million copies upon its original release a year later, he returned with Duets for Duke, a collaboration with Hallberg that captures both men at the zenith of their artistry. While remaining true to his bop roots, Domnérus cited traditional Scandinavian folk music as a growing influence throughout the later chapters of his career, and from the '70s on he regularly performed live in churches, inspired by Duke Ellington's own sacred concerts. He also toured the U.S. and Japan, and recorded with American notables including Clark Terry, James Moody and Jimmy Rowles. After several years in poor health, Domnérus died in Stockholm on September 2, 2008 at the age of 83. ~ Jason Ankeny http://www.allmusic.com/artist/arne-domn%C3%A9rus-mn0000075504/biography

Greatly influenced by Sonny Rollins, Bernt Rosengren has been one of Sweden's most respected tenor saxmen since the 1950s. The big-toned, hard-blowing improviser was 19 when he started to make a name for himself in Scandinavia as a member of the quintet Jazz Club 57, and at 21, he was hired to represent Sweden in the Newport Jazz Band in the U.S. In 1961, his tenor was heard in American director Roman Polanski's debut film, Knife in the Water. Over the years, several of Rosengren's albums topped Swedish jazz polls, including Stockholm Dues in 1965, Improvisations in 1969, and Notes From the Underground in 1974. It was during the mid-'60s that Rosengren played alongside trumpeter Thad Jones in a sextet led by American pianist George Russell, who was living in Europe at the time. Although he started out playing hard bop and never gave it up, he got more into post-bop experimentation in the late '60s, when trumpeter Don Cherry was in his quartet, and the early to mid-'70s, when he combined jazz with Turkish and Middle Eastern folk as part of the group Sevda. In 1975, he played regularly with Swedish baritone saxman Lars Gullin and formed his own big band. The 1980s found Rosengren working with American hard boppers ranging from guitarist Doug Raney to pianist Horace Parlan. And in the 1990s, his activities included a jazz salute to the music from Porgy & Bess (The Bernt Rosengren Octet Plays George Gershwin's Porgy & Bess) and being featured prominently on the great Swedish trumpeter Rolf Ericson's final recording before his death, I Love You So (1995, Amigo). Turning 60 in 1997, Rosengren still played with the energy and stamina of a young man. ~ Alex Henderson http://www.allmusic.com/artist/bernt-rosengren-mn0000048240

Personnel:  Alto Saxophone – Arne Domnérus (tracks: 1,3,4,7-10,13);  Bass – Hans Backenroth;  Clarinet – Arne Domnérus (tracks: 2,12);  Drums – Aage Tanggaard;  Flute – Bernt Rosengren (tracks: 2);  Piano – Jan Lundgren;  Tenor Saxophone – Bernt Rosengren (tracks: 1,3,6-11,13)

Face To Face

Jimmy Barnes - Soul Deep

Styles: Vocal, Rock
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:05
Size: 138,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:28)   1. I Gotcha
(3:04)  2. (Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher And Higher
(4:55)  3. When Something Is Wrong With My Baby (Duet with John Farnham)
(3:27)  4. Show Me
(3:06)  5. Many Rivers To Cross
(3:05)  6. Reflections
(2:23)  7. Ain't No Mountain High Enough
(3:05)  8. I Found A Love
(2:52)  9. Signed Sealed Delivered (I'm Yours)
(3:21) 10. Bring It On Home To Me (Duet with Diesel)
(3:50) 11. Here I Am (Come And Take Me)
(3:38) 12. River Deep Mountain High
(2:40) 13. Respect (Live)
(3:40) 14. Reach Out I'll Be There (Live)
(4:24) 15. Try A Little Tenderness (Live)
(3:16) 16. Stagger Lee (Live)
(3:44) 17. Sweet Soul Music (Live)

Jimmy Barnes did a funny thing when he released Soul Deep. Gone was the long hair and leather jacket. Barnes was now a soul crooner, complete with '50s suits and slicked hair. He performed soul standards like Jackie Wilson's "(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher," Sam and Dave's "When Something Is Wrong With My Baby," and Ike and Tina Turner's "River Deep, Mountain High." But the change is only a superficial one: Barnes is not a soul singer, and instead chooses to belt out these classics as if they were "Working Class Man." In other words, depending on your viewpoint, this album is either an abomination or a refreshing new take on some classic Motown songs. Purists will hate Barnes' gravelly delivery of these songs (which does descend into pointless screaming far too often), but Barnes has assembled a surprisingly cohesive tribute to '60s soul. It's typical Barnes, but with a twist, making this a brave, yet rewarding, step away from his stale blue-collar commercial rock. ~ Jonathan Lewis http://www.allmusic.com/album/soul-deep-mw0000470056

Personnel:  Jimmy Barnes – vocals;  Tony Brock - drums, percussion;  Diesel - guitar, vocals on track 10;  Jeff Neill – guitar;  Rick Will – guitar;  Michael Hegerty – bass;  Jimmy Haslip – bass;  Mal Logan – keyboards;  Phil Shenale – keyboards;  John Farnham - vocals on track 3;  Jimmy Barnes, Diesel, Marcy Levy, Wendy Fraser, Jessica Williams, Jeff Neill - backing vocals;  John Courtney – trombone;  Kevin Dubber – trumpet;  Mark Dennison - baritone saxophone;  Marty Hill - tenor saxophone.

Soul Deep