Monday, December 11, 2017

Jim Hall - Where Would I Be?

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:25
Size: 90.2 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 1971/1991
Art: Front

[4:18] 1. Simple Samba
[5:11] 2. Where Would I Be
[4:55] 3. Careful
[3:26] 4. Baubles, Bangles And Beads
[8:09] 5. Minotaur
[3:50] 6. I Should Care
[3:55] 7. Vera Cruz
[5:37] 8. Goodbye, My Love

Bass – Malcolm Cecil; Drums – Airto Moreira; Guitar – Jim Hall; Piano – Benny Aronov. Recorded at Mediasound Studios, NY City July 1971.

Although the rhythm section was more "modern" than he usually used (keyboardist Benny Aronov, bassist Malcolm Cecil, and Airto Moreira on drums and percussion), guitarist Jim Hall (who always had a harmonically advanced style anyway) has little difficulty adapting to the fresh setting. Highlights of the well-rounded CD reissue include Hall's "Simple Samba," "Baubles, Bangles and Beads," an unaccompanied "I Should Care," and Milton Nascimento's "Vera Cruz." ~Scott Yanow

Where Would I Be?

Susan Krebs - Jazz Gardener

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:34
Size: 122.6 MB
Styles: Jazz-blues vocals
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[3:48] 1. In The Name Of Love
[4:54] 2. Skylark
[4:55] 3. Compost Blues
[3:12] 4. You Don't Know What Love Is
[4:44] 5. Small Day Tomorrow
[4:45] 6. Cockeyed Optimist
[4:04] 7. What'll I Do
[4:41] 8. My Foolish Heart
[6:55] 9. The Blues Are Brewin'
[2:47] 10. Give Me The Simple Life
[4:56] 11. Don't Fence Me In
[3:47] 12. Jazz Gardener

Given the wide diversity of music, arrangements, and vocal styles represented on her maiden album, Susan Krebs' "jazz garden" must be bursting with a plethora of blossoms. Although there's a touch of the blues in virtually everything she touches, Jazz Gardener sings the blues most notably on "Compost Blues" (a blues with a Latin beat) and "The Blues Are Brewin." There are also ballads, like Irving Berlin's "What'll I Do?" in a very soulful, somber mood, which Gary Foster's doleful soprano saxophone helps to create and maintain. Contemporary pop music is represented by Jerry Rankin's "In the Name of Love," while smooth, jazzy sounds are found in "You Don't Know What Love Is." "Don't Fence Me In" is a pop blast from the past, and "Cockeyed Optimist" from the Broadway musical South Pacific starts off in a melancholy atmosphere before seguing into a bossa nova. Krebs can also swing, as seen on "My Foolish Heart" with Jerry Kalaf's brushes whisking the meolody along. The playlist and arrangements are like the weather; if you don't fancy what you're hearing now, wait a track or two and things will change. Categorizing Krebs' voice is not easy; it is anything but prissy and dry, but filled with emotion ranging from a deep, throaty hue to a girlish, higher-pitched tone. Although there's no scatting or other wordless vocalizing, Krebs vocals swoop, drop behind the beat, and generally stay just a little off center. "Skylark," more than any of the other cuts, demonstrates her vocal gymnastics and her emotional intensity. After she delivers a song, Krebs leaves nothing on the table. Her excellent diction and interpretative abilities pay tribute to her teacher, the inestimable Sue Raney. There's outstanding help and support on this variegated agenda of tunes. Guest Gary Foster lends his alto to a rendition of "Small Day Tomorrow" and his tenor to "The Blues Are Brewin." He seems to be a favorite of female songbirds, having been a guest on albums by Natalie Cole, Monica Mancini, and Wesla Whitfield. Louis Durra's organ and Jerry Kalaf's vibes provide a smooth background for "You Don't Know What Love Is." Durra is equally facile on the piano and provides solid accompaniment for Krebs throughout the session. Joe Romano's trumpet helps to end the album on an upbeat note with his muted contributions on "Jazz Gardener," one of two originals on the record. For most, more than one listening of Jazz Gardener will be necessary to fully appreciate Susan Krebs' way with music. This album is well worth the time and effort. ~Dave Nathan

Jazz Gardener

Arne Domnerus - Jazz At The Pawnshop 2

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:13
Size: 137.8 MB
Styles: Bop
Year: 1991/2011
Art: Front

[ 7:16] 1. Over The Rainbow
[ 7:30] 2. Gubben Och Kallingen
[10:30] 3. In A Mellow Tone
[ 6:33] 4. Nancy With The Laughing Face
[ 5:56] 5. High Life (Take 2)
[ 3:56] 6. Poor Butterfly
[ 6:14] 7. Exactly Like You
[ 9:09] 8. Things Ain't What They Used To Be
[ 3:05] 9. It Don't Mean A Thing It Don't Mean A Thing

The second of four volumes that fully document a 1976 engagement at the Pawnshop Jazz Club in Stockholm, Sweden, this set differs from the others in that vibraphonist Lars Erstrand is not present. Arne Domnerus (on alto and clarinet) heads a quartet also featuring pianist Bengt Hallberg, bassist Georg Riedel and drummer Egil Johnasen. Other than an African folk song (a second version of "High Life,") and a Swedish folk song, the repertoire is dominated by swing standards; highlights include a lengthy "In a Mellow Tone," "Poor Butterfly" and "Things Ain't What They Used to Be." ~Scott Yanow

Jazz At The Pawnshop 2

Luciana Souza - Book Of Chet

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:08
Size: 105.6 MB
Styles: Brazilian jazz vocals
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[5:37] 1. The Thrill Is Gone
[5:13] 2. Forgetful
[4:21] 3. He Was Too Good To Me
[5:40] 4. I Get Along Without You Very Well
[4:13] 5. Oh You Crazy Moon
[2:51] 6. The Touch Of Your Lips
[5:05] 7. The Very Thought Of You
[4:25] 8. I Fall In Love Too Easily
[4:12] 9. I Don't Stand A Ghost Of A Chance With You
[4:25] 10. You Go To My Head

Brazilian vocalist Luciana Souza pays tribute to legendary trumpeter/singer Chet Baker on her 2013 album The Book of Chet. The third album Souza has recorded with husband and producer Larry Klein, The Book of Chet also features guitarist Larry Koonse, bassist David Piltch, and drummer Jay Bellerose. Interestingly, while Souza has picked a handful of songs that will certainly will be recognizable to longtime Baker fanatics, these are definitely lesser known standards from Baker's catalog. Subsequently, there is no "My Funny Valentine" or "There Will Never Be Another You," and instead Souza delves into evocative versions of "Forgetful," "He Was Too Good to Me," "The Touch of Your Lips," and others. These are intimate, reflective recordings that capture Baker's laid-back melodicism. ~Matt Collar

Book Of Chet

Mariza - Live In London

Size: 173,9 MB
Time: 75:57
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2004
Styles: Fado, World
Art: Front

Personnel:
Guitar (Portuguese) – Luis Guerreiro
Acoustic Guitar – António Neto
Bass (Acoustic) – Fernando Baptista De Sousa
Piano – Tiago Machado
Trumpet – Guy Barker

The new queen of the Portuguese folk music known as fado shines in the impressive Mariza Live in London, a 2003 concert recorded at the Union Chapel in London. The twenty something Lisbon resident has been hailed as the successor to fado legend Amália Rodrigues; now, after two well-received CDs, comes Mariza's first filmed concert performance, and it is stunning.

No wonder fado has been compared to the blues: the actual musical content is different, but in terms of both origin (both come from a variety of cultures, in this case including strains of Spanish, Brazilian, and African sounds) and lyrical bent (with its constant element of saudade, roughly translated as yearning or longing, fado, like blues, is mournful, soulful music), it's every bit as deep.

Mariza is backed primarily by acoustic guitar, acoustic bass guitar, and "Portuguese guitar," a 12-string instrument that looks something like a lute and sounds a bit like a Greek bouzouki; there is some piano as well, and Guy Barker's muted trumpet provides "O Deserto" with a pronounced jazzy feel. But the singer is the main attraction here, and the power and passion of Mariza's delivery on "Barco Negro" and nearly all the others in the 16-song set, including more upbeat, celebratory numbers like "Oica La o Senhor Vinho" (the introductions are in English, but the tunes are all in Portuguese) are undeniable. Add to that Mariza's black cloak and clothing, her stylish, peroxide-blonde perm, and her highly theatrical movements and expressions, along with the darkened chapel and superb lighting, and you've got an audio-visual experience so dramatic and moving that it easily renders the language barrier irrelevant. ~Sam Graham

Live In London

Pee Wee Russell & Coleman Hawkins - Jazz Reunion

Styles: Clarinet Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:36
Size: 105,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:29)  1. If I Could Be With You One Hour
(8:56)  2. Tin Tin Deo
(7:18)  3. Mariooch
(7:33)  4. All Too Soon
(7:26)  5. 28th And 8th
(7:52)  6. What Am I Here For

This LP (whose contents have been reissued on CD) features a reunion between tenor-saxophonist Coleman Hawkins and clarinetist Pee Wee Russell; they revisit "If I Could Be with You," a song they had recorded together in a classic version back in 1929. Russell was beginning to perform much more modern material than the Dixieland music associated with the Eddie Condon players and on this set (which also features trumpeter Emmett Berry, valve trombonist Bob Brookmeyer, pianist Nat Pierce, bassist Milt Hinton and drummer Jo Jones), he plays a couple of Duke Ellington tunes, two originals and "Tin Tin Deo." Hawkins is also in fine form and this somewhat surprising program is quite successful. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/jazz-reunion-mw0000195279

Personnel: Pee Wee Russell (clarinet); Coleman Hawkins (tenor saxophone); Emmett Berry (trumpet); Bob Brookmeyer (trombone); Nat Pierce (piano); Milt Hinton (bass); Jo Jones (drums).          

Jazz Reunion

Barbara Carroll - Old Friends

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1988
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:40
Size: 102,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:38)  1. Old Friends
(4:23)  2. Together Wherever We Go
(3:59)  3. Early Autumn
(4:21)  4. There Will Never be Another You
(3:29)  5. Looking At You
(6:13)  6. Dancing On The Ceiling
(3:59)  7. Can't We Be Friends
(5:08)  8. Too Soon
(3:43)  9. Aus Nossos Silhos
(5:44) 10. You Stepped Out Of A Dream

Entering her nineties, Barbara Carroll could boast that she had been playing piano for over 85 years. Not without a pause to sleep and eat, obviously, but with a determination that might suggest such extremes. Born Barbara Carole Coppersmith, she began the instrument at only five years old and went on to classical training three years later, eventually graduating from the New England Conservatory. In terms of professional stagecraft, her initial training ground was a USO tour during World War II in which she was part of an all-girl trio. This was quickly followed by leading her own trio on New York City's famous lane of jazz, 52nd Street, where she adopted a variation of her middle name, Carole, as a stage name. The pianist was associated with such fine players as guitarist Chuck Wayne and bassist Clyde Lombardi, but what would develop into an extensive discography began in 1949 with a recording session backing up multi-instrumentalist Eddie Shu for the Rainbow label.

Among female piano players, Carroll was known as the first to venture into the progressive bebop style that was especially associated with Bud Powell. Unlike the infamous Billy Tipton, Carroll also did not think it was necessary to hide the fact that she was a woman in jazz but this was New York City, not Oklahoma or the state of Washington. Not that Carroll had an easy time in a genre dominated by men. "People tended to put you down before they ever heard you," she commented. "If you were a girl piano player, the tendency was to say: 'Oh, how could she possibly play?' You never even got a chance to present what you could do. But then, if you did prove yourself, it almost became a commercial asset, in a sense; you were regarded as unique."

One audience that found Carroll to their liking was the high society crowd, becoming enamored with her during an extended run at the ultra-chic Embers supper club. Her group at the latter venue included the bassist Joe Shulman, whom she married in 1954. Carroll did not ignore the pop styles of subsequent decades, yet always managed to keep a strong jazz flavor present in whatever material she performed. If swing was a bay leaf, it would be said that Carroll had a large bush growing right outside her kitchen window. She recorded for many of the best labels in the genre including Verve and Atlantic and continued to be in demand at clubs and cabarets into her nineties, playing a regular gig at Manhattan's Birdland venue until December 2016. Carroll also worked as an actress on occasion, such as the Broadway play entitled Me and Juliet. She died in February 2017 at the age of 92. ~ Eugene Chadbourne  https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/old-friends/889301524

Personnel:  Barbara Carroll - Vocal; Phil Bodner - Reeds;  Jay Leonhart - Bass;  Grady Tate - Drums         

Old Friends

Milton Nascimento - Courage

Styles: Vocal, Brazilian Bossa Nova 
Year: 1969
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:27
Size: 81,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:52)  1. Bridges (Travessia)
(3:13)  2. Vera Cruz
(2:45)  3. Tres Pontas
(4:12)  4. Outubro (October)
(3:27)  5. Courage
(3:23)  6. Rio Vermelho
(3:26)  7. Gira Girou (Round 'N' Round)
(4:28)  8. Moro Velho
(2:31)  9. Catavento
(3:07) 10. Canção Do Sol (Saltworkers Song)

Milton Nascimento's first album for North American ears, recorded at Van Gelder Studios in New Jersey under the watchful eye and discerning ear of Creed Taylor, is a masterpiece, a gorgeously executed tour through his early songs. Backed beautifully by Eumir Deodato's lush orchestrations and a clutch of sidemen from the Taylor stable (including Herbie Hancock, Airto Moreira, and Hubert Laws), Nascimento unveils one first-class tune after another, many of which would ignite a rush of cover versions. Among the songs North Americans heard for the first time were "Vera Cruz," "Tres Pontas," "Morro Velho," the scatted "Catavento," and the intensely moving "Bridges" ("Travessia")" the latter which launched Nascimento's name on the world music scene. Singing in English, Portuguese, and often with no words at all, Nascimento's odd yet masculine and expressive baritone stands out like a moaning foghorn from the smooth A&M/Taylor sonic formula, a haunting combination. This was Nascimento before tropicalismo, when he latched onto the tail end of the bossa nova movement and quickly became one of its most inspired performers and songwriters. To some admirers, Courage remains his best record, period. ~ Richard S.Ginell https://www.allmusic.com/album/courage-mw0000199723   

Personnel:  Milton Nascimento - vocals;  Wayne Andre, Paul Faulise, John Messner, Tony Studd, Bill Watrous, Chauncey Welsch - trombone;  Burt Collins, Marvin Stamm - flugelhorn;  Ray Alonge, Joe DeAngelis, Paul Ingraham - French horn;  George Marge - clarinet;  Danny Bank, Harvey Estrin, Hubert Laws, Romeo Penque, Jerome Richardson, Bill Slapin, Joe Soldo - flute;  Herbie Hancock - piano;  Eumir Deodato - organ, arranger, conductor;  Jose Marino - bass;  João Palma - drums;  Airto Moreira - percussion;  David Nadien, Anahid Ajemian, Frederick Buldrini, Alexander Cores, Harry Cykman, Lewis Eley, Harry Glickman, Emanuel Green, Raoul Poliakin, Max Pollikoff, Matthew Raimondi, Joyce Robbins, Tosha Samaroff, Avram Weiss, Jack Zatde, Joseph Zwilich - violin;  Alfred Brown, Harold Coletta, Theodore Israel, David Mankovitz, Emanuel Vardi - viola;  Charles McCracken, George Ricci, Lucien Schmit, Alan Shulman - cello;  Anamaria Valle - vocal

Courage

Pat LaBarbera - The Wizard

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1978
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:26
Size: 77,3 MB
Art: Front

(9:53)  1. Night And Day
(7:14)  2. Cattin'
(7:17)  3. You're A Weaver Of Dreams
(7:01)  4. The Wizard

The older brother of Joe LaBarbera (drummer with Bill Evans during 1978-1980) and arranger/trumpeter John LaBarbera, Pat has been a fixture in Toronto since moving to Canada in 1974. He played in a family band early on, attended Berklee (1964-1967), and gained recognition for his exciting solos with Buddy Rich's big band (1967-1973). After settling in Toronto (where he has done quite a bit of studio work), LaBarbera toured with Elvin Jones (1975-1978). He has recorded as a leader for PM, Sackville, and Justin Time. ~ Scott Yanow https://itunes.apple.com/sg/album/the-wizard/id632794082

Personnel:  Tenor Saxophone [Tenor Sax] – Pat LaBarbera;  Bass – Andy McCloud;  Drums – Bruno Biriaco;  Guitar – Roland Prince          

The Wizard