Thursday, December 14, 2017

Charlie Ventura - It Don't Mean A Thing

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:36
Size: 72.4 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[2:29] 1. It Don't Mean A Thing
[2:23] 2. Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home
[2:54] 3. Sweet Sue, Just You
[2:03] 4. Dark Eyes
[2:47] 5. Sophisticated Lady
[2:25] 6. Sweet Lorraine
[2:37] 7. Solitude
[2:43] 8. Runnin' Wild
[3:02] 9. I've Got You Under My Skin
[2:38] 10. Take The A Train
[2:20] 11. Honeysuckle Rose
[3:09] 12. When The Saints Go Marching In

A fine swing-oriented tenor saxophonist, Ventura is best-remembered for his attempt at popularizing bebop during the tail end of the music's mid- to late-'40s heyday. Born Charles Venturo, he came from a large, musically inclined family. His first instrument was C-melody sax. He switched to alto before eventually settling on tenor. Ventura left his day job at the Philadelphia Navy Yard in 1942 to join Gene Krupa's band. He became a featured soloist with Krupa, playing with the drummer from 1942-1943 and 1944-1946 (working in the interim with guitarist/bandleader Teddy Powell). Ventura achieved considerable popularity while with Krupa, winning a Down Beat magazine award as best tenor saxophonist in 1945. He started his own big band in 1946 with middling results. He had more success fronting a small band, one version of which included trumpeter Conte Candoli, trombonist Bennie Green, alto saxophonist Boots Mussulli, drummer Ed Shaughnessy, and vocalists Jackie Cain and Roy Kral. Ventura recorded for small labels before getting signed to RCA Victor, which at the time wanted to capitalize on the emergence of bebop. An RCA executive purportedly told him that they wanted the word "bop" in the band's name. Ventura came up with the phrase "Bop for the People," which implied an accessible form of the music. Ventura formed a big band in 1948, but soon cut it down to eight members, retaining Cain and Kral, who were crucial components of the band's sound. The Bop for the People band worked through 1949 (during which time Ventura employed modern jazz's greatest saxophonist, Charlie Parker, on a record date), but in the end Ventura's stab at making a commercial success of bop failed. Indeed, as fine a player as he was, Ventura himself was never really a bopper. During the early '50s Ventura led another big band; formed a highly acclaimed group called the Big Four with bassist Chubby Jackson, drummer Buddy Rich, and pianist Marty Napoleon; briefly ran his own night club in Philadelphia; and also worked again with Cain and Kral. Ventura's health was not the best, yet he continued to work with Krupa into the '60s. After the '50s, Ventura recorded commercially only once (in 1977, with pianist John Bunch for the Famous Door label). Still, he remained active. He worked in Las Vegas (with comedian Jackie Gleason), and fronted various groups in the '70s and '80s, before dying of lung cancer in 1992. ~bio by Chris Kelsey

It Don't Mean A Thing

Bruce Hector - Three's A Crowd

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:45
Size: 157.4 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[4:29] 1. Do Nothin Til You Hear From Me
[3:45] 2. Snowfall
[6:12] 3. Fotografia
[5:53] 4. A Song For You
[4:18] 5. Robbins Nest
[3:49] 6. Theme From The Pink Panther
[4:54] 7. Nuages
[4:03] 8. A Child Is Born
[6:31] 9. Willow Weep For Me
[4:52] 10. Slow Hot Wind
[4:09] 11. In A Mellow Tone
[5:02] 12. The Folks Who Live On The Hill
[4:36] 13. If I Had You
[4:07] 14. Change Partners
[1:57] 15. Come Sunday

This album is Bucky Pizzarelli’s fault. I first met him at a guitar workshop at the Cape May Jazz Festival in 2000. 39 players showed up with Martin dreadnoughts (!), but I showed up with a Gibson hollowbody and a small amp. When Bucky found I knew some standards, he asked me to comp for him while he taught. When we were done, to my delight, after finding I lived near him, he said, “you’re not bad – give me a call.”

A month later, I did. Bucky had me over and, in the course of an hour, did a virtual data dump of guitar knowledge, the first of many. It wasn’t long before Bucky said, as he does to so many other guitar players, “you gotta get a 7-string”. My wife insisted that I was having a John Nash “Beautiful Mind” moment, and didn’t actually know Bucky, but just wanted another guitar - she graciously relented anyway.

I found that Bucky wasn’t just incredibly generous with his knowledge, but with the bandstand as well. When I asked him to play at my son’s school, he said “on one condition – that you play a number with us at the end.” (“Us” by the way, turned out to be Howard Alden and Frank Vignola). When I went to see him at local gigs after that, Bucky would sometimes spot me and say, “you bring your guitar?”, and invite me up. So, based on that encouragement, in 2014, I summoned up the nerve to ask Bucky if he would record some tunes with me, and, incredibly, he said yes. The result is the six tunes you will hear on the album.

Since then, I had been telling myself I needed to build on these cuts for a full record, continuing with duets, but somehow life got in the way until now. How hard could it be? All I had to do was pick great tunes, and play them with great partners. Finally, with the aid of the likes of Ellington, Kern, Django, Mancini, Jobim, Thad Jones, and Leon Russell writing the tunes, and Bucky, Joe and Earl doing the playing, I hope we have done that here. But it all started with you, Bucky! Thank you.

Three's A Crowd

Esther Phillips - Capricorn Princess

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:15
Size: 99.0 MB
Styles: R&B/Soul
Year: 1975/2016
Art: Front

[2:56] 1. Magic's In The Air
[3:38] 2. I Haven't Got Anything Better To Do
[3:46] 3. Boy, I Really Tied One On
[5:16] 4. Candy
[2:52] 5. A Beautiful Friendship
[3:57] 6. (Your Love Has Lifted Me) Higher & Higher
[6:18] 7. All The Way Down
[3:51] 8. Dream
[7:12] 9. Magic's In The Air Boy I Really Tied One On
[3:25] 10. All The Way Down (Radio Edit)

Originally issued in 1976, Capricorn Princess was Esther Phillips' last Kudu album and makes its CD debut on Reel Music. After her worldwide hit with What A Diff'rence A Day Makes, Phillips' Kudu albums would always include a couple of dance oriented cuts, but there are plenty of classic ballads here including spectacular takes on I Haven't Got Anything Better To Do, Candy and Dream. Remastered in 24 bit from the original analog master tapes, this release is accompanied by a 16 page booklet with an essay by A. Scott Galloway who interviewed many of the people involved with this recording.

Capricorn Princess

Ernest Ranglin - Ranglypso

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:45
Size: 102.5 MB
Styles: Soul, Reggae, Jazz
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[4:44] 1. Mento Time In Jamaica
[6:47] 2. Feel Like Making Love
[5:32] 3. Escape To Villingen Blues
[4:11] 4. Tico Tico
[6:41] 5. Ranglypso
[5:41] 6. You Make Me Feel Brand New
[5:25] 7. Honky Tonk
[5:43] 8. Freeway

A pioneering force behind the rise of Caribbean music, guitar virtuoso Ernest Ranglin was born in Manchester, Jamaica, in 1932. He began playing ukulele as a boy, soon graduating to guitar; while in his teens he began performing live both locally and in the Bahamas, often in tandem with the young Monty Alexander. Ranglin's session work at the famed Studio One helped give birth to the ska phenomenon, which during the late '50s began taking Jamaica by storm. He finally began attracting international notice in 1964 when he traveled to London to perform at Ronnie Scott's jazz club, so impressing its owner that he remained on as the venue's resident guitarist for the next nine months. There he made a number of solo records for the fledgling Island label, and also collaborated with Prince Buster; additionally, Ranglin teamed with Jamaican singer Millie Small to cut the international smash "My Boy Lollipop." He soon returned to session work, arranging classics including the Melodians' majestic "Rivers of Babylon"; with his guitar leads on the Wailers' "It Hurts to Be Alone," he also laid the foundation for the rise of rockers reggae. Though remaining perhaps best known for his jazz prowess, in the '70s Ranglin toured with Jimmy Cliff; in 1973 he was awarded the Order of Distinction from the Jamaican Government for his contributions to music, and continued touring and recording regularly throughout the decades to follow, most notably signing to Chris Blackwell's newly formed Palm Pictures label to issue 1998's In Search of the Lost Riddim. E.B. @ Noon and Modern Answers to Old Problems arrived two years later, Grooving appeared in early 2001, and Alextown and Surfin' followed a year later by Earth Tones and Innovation. Both were collaborations with Jamaican guitarist Earl "Chinna" Smith and American jazz guitarist Charlie Hunter. Ranglin toured sporadically but shied away from recording. The second decade of the 21st century, saw an extensive series of reissues from his early back catalog reissued by several labels including Japan's Dub Store Records. In 2016, at age 84, he embarked on the Ranglin & Friends Farewell Tour accompanied by Courtney Pine, Tony Allen, Cheikh Lo, Ira Coleman, and others. ~ Jason Ankeny

Ranglypso

The Hot Club Of San Francisco - Claire De Lune

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:17
Size: 165.5 MB
Styles: Gypsy jazz, Swing
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[5:58] 1. Dark Eyes
[5:09] 2. All Of Me
[5:22] 3. Nadja
[4:25] 4. J'attendrai
[5:03] 5. Flambée Montalbanese
[6:36] 6. Claire De Lune
[4:11] 7. Place De Brouckrère
[1:17] 8. Arc En Ciel
[2:10] 9. Souvenir De Villigen
[4:32] 10. James
[8:09] 11. Crève Coeur
[5:23] 12. Till Tom Special
[7:13] 13. Swing 53
[5:04] 14. Tchavolo Swing
[1:36] 15. It's Not Exactly A Sonata For Renata

Recorded live at Filoli Gardens in Woodside, CA on August 20, 2000, this CD contains a dynamic performance by the Hot Club of San Francisco. With a mission to preserve the memory & music of Django Reinhardt's legendary group the Quintette du Hot Club de France, the Hot Club of S.F. has been delighting audiences since 1995. After several personnel changes, the group now consists of founder guitarist/vocalist Paul Mehling, violinist Evan Price, string bassist Joe Kyle, and rhythm guitarists Dave Ricketts & Michael Groh.

Claire De Lune

Karen Johns & Company - Peach

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:38
Size: 99.9 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals, Swing
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[3:01] 1. Sugarboo
[3:13] 2. Peach
[4:04] 3. I Speak Woman, You Speak Man
[4:05] 4. Rocket City
[4:15] 5. Red Bird
[3:24] 6. I Love You Forever
[3:23] 7. Five O'clock Shadow (Reprise)
[3:25] 8. Precious Find (Reprise)
[2:39] 9. Must-Be-Seen
[3:04] 10. Meglio Stasera
[3:09] 11. Chattanooga Choo Choo
[3:03] 12. How Glad I Am
[2:46] 13. Sentimentale

Another chart topping success with worldwide acclaim in 2012! Yes indeed- Karen Johns & Company keep it swing-swing-swinging! Full of exhilarating, upbeat, big band songs and sultry ballads with even a couple swoops into Italian Latin -all backed by one red-hot jazz band- this vocalist/composer fills out originals and beloved standards with the harmonies of a swing jazz choir and the romantic croon of the heart!

Peach

Freddie Redd - Under Paris Skies

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1971
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:24
Size: 88,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:22)  1. Diane I Love You
(5:59)  2. Bleeker Street Blues
(6:47)  3. To Bud With Love
(6:38)  4. This Heart Is Mine
(8:49)  5. You
(3:46)  6. My God Is Love

This recording of a 1971 date pairs legendary hard bop pianist Freddie Redd with an obscure French rhythm section. Didier Levallet and Didier Carlier on bass and drums, respectively, are certainly good musicians; they comp and center very well around the changes Redd sets out in his original tunes such as "Diane I Love You," "Bleeker Street Blues," "To Bud With Love," "This Heart of Mine," "You," and "My God Is Love." Their backing is tight and organized, and that's the problem. Redd is well-known for his occasional firebrand solos and rhythmically driven flights of fancy in improvisation. This pair is no match for his intricate melodic architecture, his gorgeous, shimmering ostinato phrasing that comes right out of the blues, and his swinging post-bop harmonic sense. The music here just floats along, adequate, beautifully played, but devoid of fire or emotion. It's all mechanics. Even though Redd had been known at the time to delve deeply into balladry, even here, there is no sense that the rhythm section feels these tunes any differently than they do a midtempo swinger. There are many Freddie Redd recordings out there, most of them very fine, so it's best to look elsewhere. ~ Thom Jurek https://www.allmusic.com/album/under-paris-skies-mw0000732290

Personnel: Piano – Freddie Redd;  Bass – Didier Levallet;  Drums – Didier Carlier

Under Paris Skies

Carminho - Fado

Styles: Vocal, Fado
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:06
Size: 86,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:14)  1. Escrevi Teu Nome No Vento
(2:14)  2. A Bia da Mouraria
(3:03)  3. Meu Amor Marinheiro
(1:44)  4. Palavras Dadas [Fado Rosita]
(3:14)  5. Espelho Quebrado
(2:35)  6. Marcha de Alfama
(2:38)  7. O Tejo Corre No Tejo
(3:44)  8. A Voz [Fado Licas]
(2:08)  9. Voltar a Ser
(2:32) 10. Carta a Lisboa [Fado Alexandrino Do Rocha]
(2:40) 11. Carta a Leslie Burke
(2:07) 12. Uma Vida Noutra Vida [Fado Pechincha]
(2:22) 13. Nunca e Silencio Vao [Fado Pedro Rodrigues]
(2:41) 14. Senhora da Nazare

Maria do Carmo Carvalho Rebelo de Andrade (born 20 August 1984, in Lisbon), better known as Carminho, is a Portuguese fado and popular music singer. She comes from a family of musicians, since her mother, Teresa Siqueira, was a famous fado singer. She is considered one of the most talented and innovative fado singers of her generation. She can be considered as a crossover artist, since her eclectic work shows the heritage of both traditional and contemporary fado, as she also delves into other genres such as Brazilian popular music. Carminho earned stardom status in Spain after being featured on Pablo Alborán's "Perdóname" which was a number-one single in the Spanish charts.[2][3] Carminho's albums Fado and Alma have achieved Platinum and Gold status in Portugal selling more than 50,000 copies combined. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carminho

Fado

Duke Ellington, Johnny Hodges - Back To Back

Styles: Piano And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:43
Size: 109,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:30)  1. Wabash Blues
(8:05)  2. Basin Street Blues
(7:39)  3. Beale Street Blues
(6:58)  4. Weary Blues
(5:51)  5. The St. Louis Blues
(7:13)  6. Loveless Love
(5:23)  7. Royal Garden Blues

Here we have an oddity in the Duke Ellington collection, a small-band record that includes not a single Ellington composition and only one Ellington musician, co-leader and alto sax king Johnny Hodges. The repertoire consists of seven classic blues, including three from the pen of W.C. Handy, and the results of this informal 1959 session are nothing short of remarkable. The other major solo voice is Harry "Sweets" Edison, a Count Basie-band veteran who seems particularly inspired on this day. His embrace of the melody on "Basin Street Blues" shows great tenderness laced with simply perfect blues-based accents. Hodges offers a virtual lesson throughout in how to build solos from the ground up, nuzzling the nostalgic melodies at first before adding colorful embellishments. Meanwhile, Ellington's spare improvisations and clever comping offer bold chord choices and typically idiosyncratic timing without overwhelming the basic structure and feeling of the blues. No question, a record of old standards and easygoing statements can be just as powerful as any. ~ Marc Greilsamer https://www.amazon.com/Play-Blues-Back-VME-Remastered/dp/B0000047CU

Personnel: Duke Ellington (piano); Johnny Hodges (alto saxophone); Les Spann (guitar); Harry "Sweets" Edison (trumpet); Jo Jones (drums). 

Back To Back

Anat Cohen & Marcello Gonçalves - Outra Coisa

Styles: Clarinet And Guitar Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:44
Size: 112,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:44)  1. Amphibious
(3:03)  2. Coisa No 1
(3:21)  3. Outra Coisa
(3:49)  4. Coisa No 6
(4:07)  5. Coisa No 10
(4:31)  6. Naña (Coisa No 5)
(3:48)  7. Coisa No 9
(4:31)  8. Mãe Iracema
(4:25)  9. Oduduá
(5:25) 10. Maracatucutê
(4:47) 11. Paraíso
(1:07) 12. Carrossel

This intimate jewel finds Cohen's clarinet and Marcello Gonçalves' 7-string guitar wrapped up in the work of one of Brazil's greatest composer-arrangers the late Moacir Santos. Gonçalves took Santos' scores and arranged/reduced them to fit this duo, reframing these songs while retaining the allure or duende, if you prefer endemic to the originals. Making this happen was no small musical feat, as there's quite a bit going on in Santos' compositions, but these two make it look easy. Moods and mannerisms vary here, but good chemistry remains a true constant. "Amphibious" utilizes unison lines and twining gestures in service of painting excitement, "Coisa No. 1" holds onto sportive sentiments while traveling on a cooler flow, "Outra Coisa" has an intoxicating rhythmic and melodic standing that proves potent, and "Coisa No. 6" appears as a picturesque starry night coming into its own. Further highlights include a somewhat frolicsome "Nanã (Coisa No. 5)," a "Mãe Iracema" that moves from uncertain beginnings into a hip and catchy groove stream, and a mournful "Paraíso" that wouldn't have felt out of place on Cohen's Poetica (Anzic Records, 2007). A dozen Santos tunes in total are given over to investigation here, and not a one carries a wasted thought. ~ Dan Bilawsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/anat-cohens-brazilian-bonanza-outra-coisa-and-rosa-dos-ventos-by-dan-bilawsky.php
 
Personnel: Anat Cohen: clarinet; Marcello Gonçalves: 7-string guitar.

Outra Coisa

D.Chambers/ J.Berlin/ D.Fiuczynski/ T.Lavitz - Boston T Party

Styles:  Jazz Fusion, Funk  
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:57
Size: 135,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:23)  1. D'funk'd
(5:37)  2. (Great) Ball Of Issues
(6:39)  3. Around About Way
(5:54)  4. I Hate The Blues...(But Here's One Anyway)
(6:44)  5. All Thought Out
(8:24)  6. Emotional Squalor
(1:44)  7. Deff 184
(3:08)  8. Last Trane
(7:44)  9. Constant Comment
(6:36) 10. Foxy Morons

If quirky titles and wacky cover art were award categories, the foursome of Dennis Chambers, Jeff Berlin, Dave Fiuczynski and T Lavitz would score major honors with their new release, Boston T Party. However, those are just attention getters. The real prize is the music quirky, wild, and most of all, fun. Some of the more interesting titles are "(Great) Ball of Issues, a humorous spin on Jerry Lee Lewis' "Great Balls of Fire, and a pair that put a creative twist on common phrases: "Around About Way and "Foxy Morons. Each player is an accomplished artist in his own right. Here, they come together for a fusion jam session. Drummer Dennis Chambers is known for his work with Santana, Steely Dan, P-Funk and other artists in the jazz, funk and fusion genres. Bassist Jeff Berlin has numerous recordings in his own name, but has also worked with Al DiMeola, Allan Holdsworth, John McLaughlin and Billy Cobham. Guitarist Dave "Fuze Fiuczynski has worked with the Screaming Headless Torsos and other progressive artists. T Lavitz, on keyboards, has worked with the Dixie Dregs, Jazz Is Dead and Widespread Panic.

Boston T Party, produced by Lavitz, provides an hour's worth of ten original songs. The quartet delivers a musical smorgasbord. There's a bit of rock, accented by jazz, fusion, funk and other assorted sounds sometimes all within a single track. The opening track, "D'funk'd, opens like a cross between early Herbie Hancock and a time warp from a science fiction film, then cranks up into a multifaceted jam. Lavitz's keyboard solo at the two-minute mark is reminiscent of some of the classic hard rock songs of the 1970s. From there, the song strikes a delicate balance between jazz fusion and the soundtrack from one of those quirky sci-fi flicks that predate "Star Wars. Chambers delivers some strong licks without getting in the way of his bandmates' solos. He skillfully shifts from snare to toms, keeping within the structure but at the same time playing with freedom to explore. The same can be said of all the musicians throughout the album. The group is perhaps most mellow if it can be said they're ever mellow on this album with the slower-paced "I Hate the Blues ... (But Here's One Anyway). 

Lavitz is solid on the B-3 organ. Chambers and Berlin set the pace in standard 3/4 time while Fuze takes us on a freewheeling jaunt. The rest of the album follows the same form which is to say, unrestrained. Even when the other musicians are playing somewhat structured rhythms in the background, Fuze just takes off with hyperdrive engines on maximum. Imagine, if you can, an electric guitar on steroids. And if the music isn't enough, there's the cover art, which depicts a giant teacup on the streets of old Boston. Floating in it are instruments, a capital "T and a drowning man. A black cat appears to be jumping from the cup, but it isn't wet. Quirky? You bet. ~ Woodrow  Wilkins https://www.allaboutjazz.com/boston-t-party-dennis-chambers-tone-center-review-by-woodrow-wilkins.php
 
Personnel: T Lavitz: keyboards; David Fiuczynski: electric guitar; Jeff Berlin: electric bass; Dennis Chambers: drums.

Boston T Party