Saturday, November 4, 2017

Dr. Lonnie Smith, Alvin Queen - Lenox & Seventh

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:23
Size: 117.6 MB
Styles: Soul jazz, B3 Organ jazz
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[6:18] 1. L.S. Blues
[5:50] 2. Slightly Monkish
[7:57] 3. Who Can I Turn To
[5:59] 4. Billie's Bounce
[9:07] 5. There Is No Greater Love
[4:55] 6. Minor Chant
[4:25] 7. Oleo
[6:48] 8. Chopsticks

LONNIE SMITH : organ; MELVIN SPARKS: guitar; ALVIN QUEEN : drums. Recorded at the Sysmo Studio, Paris ; May 28, 1985.

Dr. Lonnie Smith was born in Lackawanna, New York, into a family with a vocal group and radio program. Smith says that his mother was a major influence on him musically, as she introduced him to gospel, classical, and jazz music. He was part of several vocal ensembles in the 1950s, including the Teen Kings which included Grover Washington Jr. on sax and his brother Daryl on drums. Art Kubera, the owner of a local music store, gave Smith his first organ, a Hammond B3.

Lenox & Seventh

Ana Caram - The Other Side Of Jobim

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:57
Size: 116.6 MB
Styles: Bossa Nova, Brazilian jazz
Year: 1992
Art: Front

[4:43] 1. Esperanca Perdida
[4:00] 2. Olha Maria
[6:27] 3. Demais
[5:47] 4. Ana Luiza
[4:46] 5. Correnteza
[3:40] 6. Sem Voce
[3:17] 7. Falando De Amor
[3:36] 8. Samba Torto
[5:05] 9. Eu Te Amo
[5:28] 10. Caminhos Cruzados
[4:05] 11. Eu Nao Existo Sem Voce

Exalted as "The George Gershwin of Brazil," Antonio Carlos Jobim was an incredibly prolific composer who wrote many songs that became standards in Brazilian and jazz circles. But in fact, Jobim also composed many great songs that aren't standards, and on this absorbing CD, Ana Caram insightfully spotlights some of the Jobim pearls that aren't nearly as well known as "The Girl From Ipanema," "Triste" or "Corcovado." Indeed, The Other Side of Jobim underscores the fact that for every "Desafinado" or "One Note Samba" he wrote, there was a lesser-known treasure like "Ana Luiza," "Olha Maria" or "Esperanca Perdida." Even those with an extensive knowledge of Brazilian music may not be familiar with "Correnteza" or "Demais," but as Caram obviously realizes, they certainly deserve to be. ~Alex Henderson

The Other Side Of Jobim

Renato Sellani, Danilo Rea - Amapola

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:55
Size: 100.5 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[5:04] 1. My Foolish Heart
[5:29] 2. My Funny Valentine
[4:40] 3. Mi Sono Innamorato Di Te
[4:12] 4. Volare
[4:02] 5. Quando
[5:58] 6. Once Upon A Summertime
[4:32] 7. Afternoon In Paris
[3:21] 8. Amapola
[3:05] 9. Wave
[3:28] 10. You Never Told Me

Renato Sellani - piano, Danilo Rea - piano. Recorded at The House Recording Studio in Rome on January 2 & 3, 2008.

Amapola

Bob Reynolds - Hindsight

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:24
Size: 92.5 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[3:35] 1. Ready, Set
[7:07] 2. Step Aside
[7:52] 3. When It's Over
[5:24] 4. Swedish Blues
[4:15] 5. Fight Or Flight
[7:03] 6. Silver Lining
[5:06] 7. Late In The Game

I’m excited to release my latest album, Hindsight. It features 3 of my favorite musicians—Aaron Goldberg (piano), Reuben Rogers (bass), and Obed Calvaire (drums)—on 7 original songs.

Bob Reynolds is an impressive tenor-saxophonist with an original tone who has gained fame for his work with Snarky Puppy and John Mayer. Hindsight is his seventh CD as a leader and his first studio album leading a classic jazz quartet.

Reynolds was born in Morristown, New Jersey and spent much of his childhood growing up in Jacksonville, Florida. While he was originally interested in film music and becoming a director, once he started playing the alto sax in junior high school (three years later switching to tenor), he became devoted to becoming a musician. Reynolds gained experience playing with much older musicians in the Beaches Preservation Swing Band, worked locally, and earned a degree from Berklee where he had influential lessons from Hal Crook and George Garzone. After moving to New York he performed in a wide variety of styles with many groups including five years with singer-songwriter Jonah Smith and six on which he toured the world with John Mayer. Bob Reynolds, who moved to Los Angeles in 2008, has in recent years been playing, touring and recording with Snarky Puppy; he is featured on We Like It Here.

“My agenda for the CD,” says the saxophonist, “was to use a traditional tenor-piano-acoustic bass-drums quartet and create some unexpected colors and sounds. I sought to create the illusion that this is a larger band than it actually is, as if there were (sometimes) a vocalist and a soloist.” The music on Hindsight was recorded a few years ago. “We recorded too much material,” he admits, “and these performances were put aside until I recently rediscovered them and immediately knew they had to be released.”

Hindsight

Bridget Maynes - In The Key Of Swing 2

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:51
Size: 123.3 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals, Swing
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[3:04] 1. You Hit The Spot
[3:29] 2. This Can't Be Love
[3:29] 3. I'll Remember April
[4:52] 4. If I Had You
[2:53] 5. Baby, What Do You Have In Mind
[4:49] 6. A Nightengale Sang In Berkeley Square
[2:37] 7. When You're Smiling
[5:24] 8. Dreamer
[4:39] 9. Popsicle Toes
[3:35] 10. Just Friends
[4:00] 11. Guess Who I Saw Today
[3:27] 12. I Love Being Here With You
[4:10] 13. Baby, Baby All The Time
[3:17] 14. Come Back To Me

"As an independent female vocalist born in Phoenix Arizona and raised in Glendale, I studied piano and keyboards with my brother Glendale's Pianist Robin Maynes. Fortune allowed me to meet many wonderful local artists from the local music scene and beyond including “the Aug” Auggie Mendoza. As a singer and song stylist, our CDs: IN THE KEY OF SWING 1 & 2 (Big-Band Style Jazz) were pure pleasure to create and produce.

In The Key Of Swing 2

Oliver Jones Trio - Cookin' At Sweet Basil

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:32
Size: 131.7 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 1988/2016
Art: Front

[6:36] 1. Snuggles
[7:03] 2. The Sweetness Of You
[6:28] 3. Looking For Lou
[5:32] 4. Bossa For C.C.
[7:20] 5. If I Were A Bell
[7:29] 6. My Funny Valentine
[8:36] 7. Stay Young
[8:24] 8. Jitterbug Waltz

Veteran Canadian pianist Oliver Jones, who was finally becoming famous in the U.S. in 1987, is heard on this live set in N.Y.C. playing with bassist Dave Young and drummer Terry Clarke. Jones performs five of his diverse but consistently swinging originals, including "Snuggles" plus "If I Were a Bell" and "My Funny Valentine." An excellent example of the impressive pianist's playing talents. ~Scott Yanow

Cookin' At Sweet Basil

Junior Mance Trio - At The Village Vanguard

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1961
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:27
Size: 98,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:08)  1. Looptown
(4:50)  2. Letter From Home
(4:01)  3. Girl Of My Dreams
(6:20)  4. 63rd Street Theme
(6:39)  5. Smokey Blues
(5:13)  6. 9h20 Special
(4:44)  7. Bingo Domingo
(5:29)  8. You Are Too Beautiful

Pianist Junior Mance has long been typecast as a soulful blues player so, as if to confuse listeners, he starts off this live set with an uptempo "Looptown" on which he displays technique worthy of Oscar Peterson. Mance's many fans have no reason to despair though for, in addition to a boppish rendition of "Girl of My Dreams," the pianist does perform a generous amount of blues and soulful pieces. Bassist Larry Gales and drummer Ben Riley also help out . ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/at-the-village-vanguard-mw0000652735

Personnel: Junior Mance (piano); Larry Gales (bass); Ben Riley (drums)               

At The Village Vanguard

Della Reese - Moody

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1965
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 39:13
Size: 72,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:15)  1. The Good Life
(3:36)  2. Then You'll Know
(2:54)  3. Don't Worry 'Bout Me
(2:35)  4. The End Of A Love Affair
(2:45)  5. Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out To Dry
(4:22)  6. All By Myself
(3:22)  7. More Than This I Cannot Give
(2:55)  8. My Silent Love
(2:57)  9. I Should Care
(4:48) 10. Little Girl Blue
(2:35) 11. Can't We Talk It Over
(3:04) 12. Have A Good Time

Renowned as both a television star and a top-flight interpreter of jazz, blues, R&B, gospel, and straight-ahead pop music, Della Reese's many talents have ensured a long, varied, and legendary show biz career. In addition to being nominated for both an Emmy and a Grammy and receiving a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, Reese is also an ordained minister in the Universal Foundation for Better Living, an association of churches she helped found in the early '80s.  Born Deloreese Patricia Early on July 6, 1931, the young Reese began singing in the Baptist church choir in her hometown of Detroit at age six. In 1945, having developed quite rapidly, she caught the ear of legendary gospel queen Mahalia Jackson, who invited Reese to join her touring choir; Reese did so for the next five summers. Upon entering Wayne State University to study psychology, Reese formed a women's gospel group, the Meditation Singers, but her college career was cut short by the death of her mother and her father's serious illness. Reese worked odd jobs to help support the rest of her family; she also continued to perform with the Meditation Singers and various other gospel groups. Encouraged by her pastor, Reese began singing in night clubs in hopes of getting a singing career off the ground; recently married to a factory worker named Vermont Adolphus Bon Taliaferro, her name was too long to fit on marquees, and she eventually arrived at her performing alias by splitting up her first name. After impressing a New York agent, who promptly signed her, Reese moved to New York and joined the Erskine Hawkins Orchestra in 1953. A year later, she had a recording contract with Jubilee, for whom she scored hits like "And That Reminds Me," a 1957 million-seller.

Switching to RCA Victor, Reese landed her biggest hit in 1959 with "Don't You Know," a song adapted from Puccini's La Bohème; this cemented her career, leading not only to plentiful appearances on variety shows, but successful nightclub tours of the country and eventually nine years of performances in Las Vegas, as well as recording contracts with a variety of labels over the next few decades. Building on her previous variety show experience, Reese made a small bit of television history in 1969 when she became the first woman to guest-host The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. Later that year, she became the first black woman to host her own variety show, the syndicated Della, which ran until 1970. Following its cancellation, Reese returned to her night club tours, often putting in guest appearances on television shows like The Mod Squad, Sanford and Son, and Chico and the Man; after three prior failed marriages, Reese also found a lasting relationship with producer Franklin Lett, whom she married in 1978. On October 3, 1980, while taping a song for The Tonight Show, Reese suffered a brain aneurysm which nearly proved fatal; however, thanks to a successful operation, she was able to make a full recovery. She kept up her singing career and appeared on television shows like Designing Women, L.A. Law, and Picket Fences, as well as the Eddie Murphy films Harlem Nights and The Distinguished Gentleman. Most recently, Reese starred in the Redd Foxx sitcom The Royal Family from 1991-1992, and in the inspirational drama series Touched by an Angel. ~ Steve Huey https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/moody/id952371210

Moody

Clyde McPhatter - Deep Sea Ball: The Best Of Clyde McPhatter

Styles: Vocal, R&B, Soul
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:11
Size: 106,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:15)  1. I Can't Stand Up Alone
(2:30)  2. Seven Days
(2:11)  3. Treasure Of Love
(2:16)  4. Rock And Cry
(2:32)  5. I'm Lonely Tonight
(2:58)  6. Without Love (There Is Nothing)
(2:21)  7. Deep Sea Ball
(2:23)  8. Just To Hold My Hand
(2:42)  9. My Island Of Dreams
(2:06) 10. No Matter What
(1:45) 11. Come What May
(2:34) 12. Lovey Dovey
(2:41) 13. I'm Not Worthy Of You
(2:36) 14. A Lover's Question
(2:10) 15. Thirty Days
(2:29) 16. You Went Back On Your Word Little Girl
(2:44) 17. No Love Like Her Love
(2:25) 18. Long Lonely Nights
(2:25) 19. Since You've Been Gone

This is about as perfect a summary of Clyde McPhatter's solo years with Atlantic as there is to buy, in the absence of a box of his complete output for the label or a Sequel Records reissue of his Atlantic LPs. Those who are most familiar with McPhatter's singing from his days with the Drifters will be pleased by all 19 songs here, which represent a more mature voice and embody musical ambitions that carried McPhatter toward the same kind of expansive, pop-oriented R&B that Sam Cooke also started working toward (and would hit bigger with) a couple of years later. He could still rock out, as on the title track, but he also had a sense of the dramatic in his singing and used it to powerful effect on songs like "Without Love." "Treasure of Love" and "A Lover's Question" may be McPhatter's best remembered solo hits, but even the non-chart sides here, like "I Can't Stand Up Alone" (which harks back to McPhatter's roots as a gospel singer) and the big-band R&B of "I'm Lonely Tonight," are gorgeous pieces of music that demand to be heard. The only drawback is that the material isn't in chronological order, which wouldn't be a problem at all if the recording dates had been listed next to the tracks in the notes. But it sounds fine and the music is so compelling that it holds up regardless of the programming decisions. ~ Bruce Eder https://www.allmusic.com/album/deep-sea-ball-the-best-of-clyde-mcphatter-mw0000675213                 

Deep Sea Ball: The Best Of Clyde McPhatter

Jo Jones - Our Man, Papa Jo!

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop, Swing
Year: 1977
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:03
Size: 151,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:43)  1. Take the 'A' Train
(5:41)  2. My Last Affair
(7:09)  3. Stompin' at the Savoy
(6:18)  4. Broadway
(3:00)  5. As Time Goes By
(3:29)  6. Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams
(4:24)  7. Solitude
(4:39)  8. It Don't Mean a Thing
(6:49)  9. I've Found a New Baby
(5:35) 10. All of Me
(6:50) 11. The Days of Wine and Roses
(6:22) 12. Dissertation

The final session for a jazz legend. Drummer Jo Jones was nearing the end when he got together with his old friends, pianist Hank Jones and bassist Major Holley, for this 1982 session. He still managed to play with some degree of authority and anchor the rhythm section, while saxophonist Jimmy Oliver and Jones took care of solo responsibilites. This has been reissued on CD. ~ Ron Wynn https://www.allmusic.com/album/our-man-papa-jo%21-mw0000649591

?Personnel: Jo Jones (drums), Jimmy Oliver (tenor saxophone), Hank Jones (piano), Major Holley (acoustic bass).      

Our Man, Papa Jo!

Azar Lawrence - Legacy And Music Of John Coltrane

Styles: Saxophone Jazz 
Year: 2007
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 70:21
Size: 129,1 MB
Art: Front

(13:54)  1. I Want to Talk About You
(16:17)  2. Mr. P.C.
(27:31)  3. Impressions
(12:37)  4. My Favorite Things

Does the world really need another John Coltrane tribute album? It gets exhausting to choose among the multitudes that already exist. However, if even half of them were as vital and powerful as tenor saxophonist Azar Lawrence’s Legacy and Music of John Coltrane, there’d be no need for jadedness. Despite being a marginal name in post-’60s hard-bop and avant-jazz, Lawrence paid his dues in McCoy Tyner’s ’70s band and appeared on some of the era’s seminal albums, including Miles Davis’ Dark Magus and Woody Shaw’s The Moontrane. He even recorded three fairly well-received albums for Prestige from 1974-76. Lawrence is as good a candidate as any for a Coltrane tribute, and his lower-profile status over the past three decades makes the concept more intriguing. For this live date, recorded at Cincinnati’s Hyatt Regency, Lawrence is augmented by tenor saxophonist Edwin Bayard’s Quartet, rounded out by pianist William Mennefield, bassist Dean Hulett and drummer Mark Lomax II. Choosing two standards (Billy Eckstine’s “I Want to Talk About You” and Rodgers and Hammerstein’s “My Favorite Things”) and two Coltrane originals (“Mr. P.C.” and “Impressions”), the ensemble really nails the Coltrane sound of 1963-1965. Lawrence leads the set with a solo prefacing “I Want to Talk About You,” expertly navigating the chord changes with robust tone. Throughout the recording he proves readily schooled in Coltrane’s “sheets of sound” approach, avoiding the screeching multiphonics of post-1965 Trane. Undoubtedly the highlight, “Impressions” reveals Bayard as Eric Dolphy to Lawrence’s Trane, the two trading off on modal solos with boundless energy, conviction and astonishing sympathy. The rhythm section of Hulett and Lomax cook throughout, especially the latter, whose forceful drumming would have made Elvin Jones proud. Overall, this is a tribute well worth any Coltrane fan’s time. 
~ Scott Verrastro https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/azar-lawrence-edwin-bayard-quartet-legacy-and-music-of-john-coltrane/

Personnel:  Azar Lawrence - tenor sax;  Edwin Bayard - tenor sax;  William Mennefield - piano;  Dean Hulett - bass;  Mark Lomax II - drums

Legacy And Music Of John Coltrane