Saturday, December 30, 2017

Stan Getz, Cal Tjader Sextet - Stan Getz With Cal Tjader Sextet

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:30
Size: 97.3 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz, Vibraphone jazz
Year: 1958/2011
Art: Front

[10:58] 1. Ginza Samba
[ 3:57] 2. I've Grown Accustomed To Her Face
[ 5:42] 3. For All We Know
[ 8:18] 4. Crow's Nest
[ 3:46] 5. Liz-Anne
[ 4:32] 6. Big Bear
[ 5:15] 7. My Buddy

Stan Getz: tenor saxophone; Cal Tjader: vibraphone; Vince Guaraldi: piano; Eddie Duran: guitar; Scott LaFaro: bass; Billy Higgins: drums.

The presence of Latin and Afro-Cuban enthusiast, vibraphonist Cal Tjader, has created a widespread misconception that Sextet was the album which sparked tenor saxophonist Stan Getz's fascination with Brazilian music and, ultimately, bossa nova. The notion has, over the years, been reinforced by the inclusion of pianist Vince Guaraldi's "Ginza Samba," whose theme statements were played over a samba beat, and which, as plain "Ginza," was the third track on side one of the album's original LP release. During the Stateside bossa nova craze of the early-to-mid-1960s, "Samba" was added opportunistically to the tune's title, and was sequenced as track one, side one on a rerelease of Sextet. It remains in prime position on this 24-bit remastered edition.

The Getz/bossa-gestation idea is, however, fanciful. Aside from the theme statements of "Ginza Samba," Sextet is set in the sumptuously lyrical but altogether "hotter," and firmly US-centric style with which Getz, under the guidance of his manager, Norman Granz, had become a major star by the late 1950s. Getz's Damascene moment came a few years later, via guitarist Charlie Byrd. On a tour of Brazil in 1961, Byrd fell in love with bossa nova; once returned to the US, he sought out Getz, played him the LPs he had brought back from Brazil, and suggested they get together and record their own album in the style. Getz needed no persuading, instantly recognizing that he and bossa nova were made for each other. The result was Getz and Byrd's Jazz Samba (Verve, 1962), plus, in due course, its hit single "Desafinado" (and, over the years, Byrd's acrimonious, and finally successful, pursuit of Getz for a bigger slice of the royalties pie).

A case could, more credibly, be made for Sextet as an album which later reignited Getz's interest in recording with a vibraphonist, following Hamp And Getz (Clef), made with Lionel Hampton in 1955. In 1964, at the height of the bossa boom, Gary Burton joined Getz's band, with which he toured and, in 1964, recorded the album Nobody Else But Me (only released, on Verve, 30 years later). Video footage of Getz and Tjader together does not exist, but Sextet's vibraphone connection provides an excuse to enjoy some wonderfully cheesy US TV footage of the Getz/Burton group (see the second YouTube clip below).

Getz and Tjader had known each other since the early 1950s. Tjader, as a member of pianist George Shearing's group, had been on the February 12, 1954 tour bus journey from Portland to Seattle, at the conclusion of which Getz was arrested for trying to score some heroin by attempting to rob a drug store. The two had long planned to record together, but the opportunity did not arise until their separate touring schedules coincidentally had them both in San Francisco on February 8, 1958, when they recorded Sextet for the Fantasy label. Granz, normally highly protective of his artists, allowed Getz to make the date because, the year before, Fantasy had loaned alto saxophonist Paul Desmond to Granz's Clef label for a quartet record with baritone saxophonist Gerry Mulligan.

Getz and Tjader each brought two colleagues to the session. Tjader brought pianist Guaraldi and guitarist Eddie Duran. Getz brought two precociously talented 21 year olds, bassist Scott LaFaro and drummer Billy Higgins. Both were on the cusp on stardom; LaFaro with pianist Bill Evans' trio, Higgins as a member of alto saxophonist Ornette Coleman's iconoclastic "free" group.

With a lineup like that, you would expect Sextet to make for prime listening, and, indeed, it does. Most OJC reissues include additional material in the shape of unreleased tracks or alternate takes. Sextet does not, because the session went so swimmingly (it was completed in around three hours) that legend holds that second takes were not necessary. Intriguingly, however, critic Ralph Gleason, who was in the studio for the last hour or so, wrote that "no tune, except two, had more than one take and even then it was a tossup as to which to use."

If second takes of such quality were recorded and were still extant in 2011, OJC's remaster would, presumably, include them. The likelihood is that the tapes containing them have been long lost. But no matter. Over the course of its 43 minutes' playing time, Sextet—though not the prologue to Getz's bossa nova—proffers ample delights. ~Chris May

Stan Getz With Cal Tjader Sextet mc
Stan Getz With Cal Tjader Sextet zippy

Hal Gaylor, Walter Morris, Billy Bean - The Trio

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:38
Size: 86.2 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 1961/1999
Art: Front

[5:19] 1. Grooveyard
[4:57] 2. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
[5:09] 3. The End Of A Love Affair
[3:22] 4. Scramble
[4:10] 5. Out Front
[4:07] 6. Che-Low
[5:28] 7. For Heaven's Sake
[5:03] 8. D. & D.

In the early 1960s, bassist Hal Gaylor founded a noteworthy but short-lived group that he called the Trio. With Gaylor on upright bass, Walter Norris on acoustic piano, and Billy Bean on electric guitar, the Trio favored a drumless format that recalled the Nat King Cole Trio of the 1940s. But anyone who listens to this bop-oriented 1961 session, which was produced by the ubiquitous Orrin Keepnews, will realize that the Trio never went out of its way to emulate Cole's group. While the Nat King Cole Trio is an influence, Norris is far from a Cole imitator — in 1961, the pianist was well aware of what everyone from Bill Evans to Lennie Tristano to Thelonious Monk had accomplished. Norris was only 29 when this album was recorded, and while The Trio isn't as adventurous as some of the albums that he recorded as a leader in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s, it is a pleasing bop date. Gaylor (who switches to cello on his lively "Che-Low") enjoys a strong rapport with Norris and Bean on original material as well as performances of "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes," "The End of a Love Affair" and "For Heaven's Sake." Regrettably, Gaylor and Bean both ended up leaving the music world; in fact, Gaylor gave up jazz to become a certified drug counselor. Norris, thankfully, never left jazz and was still recording when the 21st century arrived. And we can also be thankful that the Trio, although underexposed and short-lived, is documented on this enjoyable album. ~Alex Henderson

The Trio

Nancy Wilson - Like In Love

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 25:36
Size: 58.6 MB
Styles: Standards, Vocal
Year: 1960/2001
Art: Front

[1:39] 1. On The Street Where You Live
[2:31] 2. Night Mist
[2:24] 3. You Leave Me Breathless
[2:08] 4. The More I See You
[2:19] 5. I Wanna Be Loved
[1:43] 6. Almost Like Being In Love
[1:54] 7. People Will Say We're In Love
[2:23] 8. Passion Flower
[1:43] 9. Sometimes I'm Happy
[2:48] 10. Fly Me To The Moon (In Other Words)
[1:50] 11. All Of You
[2:08] 12. If It's The Last Thing I Do

Capitol Records was the place to be a jazz-pop vocalist in the 1950s and early '60s, and with this winning debut, Nancy Wilson proved herself to be up to the challenge of recording alongside such labelmates as Frank Sinatra, Nat "King" Cole, and Peggy Lee. Only 22 years old on her first recording date, Wilson's Sarah Vaughan-meets-Dinah Washington vocal style was already firmly in place and is perfectly in sync with star arranger Billy May's typically expert big band jazz charts. Many of May's backings, particularly the ballads such as "Fly Me to the Moon," have a subtle Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn luster to them. Not only does Duke's star alto saxophonist Willie Smith contribute some choice solos on this date, but Wilson gets to sing Strayhorn's sublime "Passion Flower." While this solid release had the swank Capitol house sound down, it was actually Wilson's two small-group jazz recordings with George Shearing and Cannonball Adderley that would break her to the general public and help turn her into the label's biggest-selling act of the early '60s. As good as those small group sessions were, Wilson would thankfully continue working with the gifted Billy May and their next recording together, 1960's Something Wonderful, somehow managed to improve on this winning debut and remains one of her all-time best albums. ~Nick Dedina

Like In Love mc
Like In Love zippy

Jon Lucien - A Time For Love

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:22
Size: 145.1 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[6:15] 1. A Time For Love
[5:45] 2. Angelina
[3:55] 3. I Believe In You
[4:46] 4. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
[2:56] 5. The Way You Look Tonight
[7:09] 6. Lazy Afternoon
[6:19] 7. Memory
[5:54] 8. Mi Bolero
[5:59] 9. Quiereme Mucho
[4:56] 10. People
[4:22] 11. Speak Low
[5:02] 12. This Is All I Ask

The launch of Jon's own Sugar Apple imprint in 2001 has made his music even better because he now has total creative and artistic control. A Time For Love is Jon's fourth release on Sugar Apple and yet another masterpiece. Musically Jon keeps his fans satisfied with the special blend of jazz, latin, and soul, a niche he has cared successfully for himself over the years. Except for one cut the songs are all cover versions, but there's no need to worry that you get the umpteenth version of songs you're tired of hearing because you have heard them too often. In fact, all songs get the Jon Lucien treatment that turns these songs into something special and makes you wonder if the songs haven't longed to be recorded this way all the time.

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A Time For Love zippy

Krzysztof Popek - Fresh Air Project

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:28
Size: 92.7 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[6:40] 1. Nicole's Soul
[6:27] 2. Assunta
[8:41] 3. Fresh Air
[4:59] 4. So It Seems
[7:19] 5. Letters And Leaves
[5:16] 6. Yes Or No
[1:03] 7. Outro

Krzysztof Popek: alto flute; Piotr Wojtasik: trumpet, flugelhorn; Nicolas Simion: tenor saxophone, bass clarinet; George Cables: piano; Cameron Brown: bass; Victor Lewis: drums.

Time has stamped Krzysztof Popek as a potent force on the Polish jazz scene. The flautist could have found a comfort zone in his native land given the accolades he accumulated there. Instead, he gathered a varied supporting cast of international musicians over the years,and built a strong edifice to his musical explorations. He stamps his credentials all over again on this recording. Popek explores through the senses of several composers including himself. His "Letters and Leaves" gets a luminous head from George Cables before the melody dances in. Popek flows in with languid lines, turning in a captivating conversation with the pianist. The edge comes from Piotr Wojtasik, the trumpet cutting in; the dynamic fleshing the whole with just the right intensity.

"Nicole's Soul" has a translucent beauty ushered in by the ebb and flow of the flute. Wojtasik, who has long been part of Popek's journey, is convoluting and flinty as he feeds into the permutations without fragmenting the mood. And when it comes to the ensemble, the playing is silky and emotive, the finesse shining. The bop driven "So It Seems" not only offers contrast but also shows the ability of the band to find its comfort zone in different settings. The heated swell of Nicolas Simion's tenor, the pulsing lines of Cameron Brown's bass, the rhythmic snap of Victor Lewis's drums propulse the groove are the glove to the inventive hand of the front line.

Popek is a craftsmen hewing both to the mainstream yet never shying from improvising with a vibrant sense of adventure. He has a fine band to go with these sensibilities. And he has an enjoyable record to go with it. ~Jerry D'Souza

Fresh Air mc
Fresh Air zippy

Charlie Byrd - Bossa Nova Pelos Passaros

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:05
Size: 105.5 MB
Styles: Bossa Nova, Latin jazz
Year: 1963/1992
Art: Front

[1:56] 1. Yvone
[2:20] 2. Um Abraco No Bonfa
[3:10] 3. Meditation
[2:53] 4. Voce E Eu (You And I)
[2:38] 5. Coisa Mais Linda
[1:54] 6. O Barquinho (Little Boat)
[2:28] 7. Desafinado
[2:00] 8. Samba Triste
[1:49] 9. Bim-Bom
[2:11] 10. Ho-Ba La-La
[2:33] 11. Ela Me Deixou
[3:08] 12. O Passaro (The Bird)
[3:14] 13. Outra Vez
[3:26] 14. Presente De Natal (Christmas Gift)
[2:57] 15. Insensatez
[2:21] 16. Three Note Samba
[2:00] 17. Samba Da Minha Terra
[2:59] 18. Limehouse Blues

Having been a major part of Stan Getz's very popular Jazz Samba album, it was only fitting that guitarist Charlie Byrd would start recording his own bossa nova records. This CD reissue brings back the 12 songs originally on the Riverside LP Bossa Nova Pelos Passaros plus six of the 11 tunes from Once More! Bossa Nova. Byrd and his trio (which included bassist Keter Betts and drummer Bill Reichenbach) are augmented on some selections by strings, extra percussion, plus horns. In reality the background musicians are not needed since Byrd was at the top of his form in those days. Unlike some of his earlier sets, these pretty and melodic recordings are very concise (lacking a sense of adventure), clocking in between one-and-a-half and three-and-a-half minutes, and looking toward the guitarist's later Columbia dates. Highlights include "Meditation," "O Barquinho," "Desafinado," "Bim Bom," "O Passaro" and "Limehouse Blues." ~Scott Yanow

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Bossa Nova Pelos Passaros zippy

Nicolas Folmer - Sphere

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:01
Size: 135,4 MB
Art: Front

( 7:13)  1. Stratosphere
(10:45)  2. Volcano
( 1:17)  3. Courant D'Air
( 9:13)  4. Tumulte Et Fracas
( 1:22)  5. Lunaire Part 1
( 1:11)  6. Lunaire Part 2
( 8:31)  7. Lunaire Part 3
( 8:09)  8. Bulles D'Amour
(11:15)  9. Boules De Neige

After the album " Lights " in which Nicolas Folmer inviting Daniel Humair had begun to explore a path where it was not expected, the trumpet player with this new album composes a music with forms even more open, more suggestive than frozen, still more mobile and flexible. The musicians who accompany Nicolas Folmer have an important role in this evolution, Daniel Humair, already present on the previous album has made him give up the comfort of a game too predictable, the guests of this new album did not to reinforce Nicolas Folmer's attraction to turbulent shores, Dave Liebman, Miles Davis' fellow-traveler with the spirit of Coltrane, and Michel Portal, European songwriter of improvisation. And for playgrounds at these beautiful meetings, the Opera de Lyon which for several days hosted Nicolas Folmer and his guests resulting in a superb concert / album which, once again, will leave us to think that jazz is always alive ...

What Vincent Bessières, journalist at Jazz News, says ..."It's the art of great artists not to be where we expect them. To give us to see, to hear, to read, to contemplate, works that we did not suspect they could create. Capable not in the sense of competence or technique, but in the sense of the disposition of mind, mental representations: those which make it possible to project oneself elsewhere, that one manages to draw from oneself something of new, unexpected, sometimes unexpected, a new form in which one reveals oneself to be different.

In jazz more than in any music, this ability to be in the becoming of oneself has become almost a categorical imperative since Miles Davis established the principle. Miles Davis, a musician who, with time, Nicolas Folmer seems to get closer insensibly. Not in sound, nor in style, but in attitude towards music, its nuances, its circulation, its provocation. It is likely that Sphere will be a surprise for those who have not heard Nicolas Folmer for a long time. A good surprise, that goes without saying. The brilliant instrumentalist, whose mastery earned him the esteem of colleagues of Wynton Marsalis' caliber, eclipsed it in front of the musician in search, on the lookout for new sensations. The talented conductor and arranger, a lover of slender melodies and funky spinners, gives way to a composer with open forms, more suggestive than fixed, mobile and modular, who does not matter what is noted on the score that this that his partners are doing in the moment of improvisation. We must salute this metamorphosis, which is not a radical revolution but the natural evolution of a musician who, after having assimilated a lot, feels ready to dispose of himself and his knowledge.

The musicians who accompany Nicolas Folmer in this adventure are not for nothing in this evolution. Daniel Humair, drummer with whom he laid the foundation of the group, strongly encouraged this desire for change, breaking his last reluctance to release the bridle, encouraging him to give up the comfort of a game too predictable and engage in these new directions for which his attraction was growing. Waves that did not cause that the two guests of this real fake "live" disc (recorded on several days but mounted like a single concert, without false connection), David Liebman and Michel Portal, which are like the poles of this Sphere to which the album owes its title. On the one hand, Liebman, companion of Miles Davis, saxophonist marked by the spirit of John Coltrane, and who carries in him all the legacy of modern jazz, even in its innermost depths; on the other, Portal, which for several decades has been the instigator of another way of apprehending the gesture of improvisation, attentive to what the urgency of the moment can bring forth as spontaneous sources of music. . Between them, basically, less differences than kinship and, above all, a way of being constantly on the brink, to bend to the demands of the interaction, without false pretense, which gives to this album a part of its coherence and his inspiration. Faced with such partners, Nicolas Folmer has rebuffed the cards of his game to give free rein to his expression but also to reposition himself inside the music and match with those he invited to explore with him. In this configuration, Emil Spanyi at the piano and Laurent Vernerey at the double bass find their place brilliantly, whether they contribute to defining the perimeter of evolution of the music or that they intervene directly in his heart. With a success that will bluff more than one, Nicolas Folmer wins on a territory where we did not expect, shaking our prejudices, sweeping our certainties. Sovereign of his instrument, as formerly, but rising to the challenge of music, collective play, endangering. What, once again, invite us to consider jazz as the space of all reinvivations. " http://nicolasfolmer.com/js_albums/sphere

Personnel:  Trumpet, Composed By – Nicolas Folmer;  Bass Clarinet, Soprano Saxophone – Michel Portal;  Double Bass – Laurent Vernerey;  Drums – Daniel Humair;  Piano – Emil Spanyi;  Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Flute – David Liebman

Sphere

Pamala Stanley - It's All In The Game

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:31
Size: 129,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:58)  1. Bye Bye Blackbird
(5:28)  2. Do You Know What I Means To Miss New Orleans
(4:50)  3. We Are In Love
(4:47)  4. Someone To Watch Over Me
(2:46)  5. Where Or When
(4:44)  6. Moonlight In Vermont
(5:11)  7. Saturday Night Fish Fry
(6:19)  8. Summertime
(4:17)  9. Too Darn Hot
(5:01) 10. It's All In The Game
(3:50) 11. It Had To Be You
(5:15) 12. What A Wonderful World

A fresh and intimate approach to great jazz classics. An exciting vocalist with wonderful musicians. Easy and pleasurable to listen too. This is one of Pamala's best...Easy style jazz classics. Her voice glides through the classics with ease and sensuality. The musicians are among the best in the country...Eddie Higgins on piano, Eric Allison on sax, Danny Berger on Drums. They meld together in a beautiful musical love affair. https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/pamalastanley

Pamala Stanley was never well known in the pop or R&B markets, but in dance music, the singer was held in high regard in the late '70s and early to mid-'80s. A native and resident of Dallas, Stanley first grabbed the attention of dance/club DJs in 1979, when she recorded her debut album, This Is Hot, for EMI. The LP fared well in Latin and gay clubs, both of which proved to be equally receptive to three singles she recorded in the '80s: "I Don't Want to Talk About It" in 1983, "Coming Out of Hiding" in 1984, and the rock-influenced "If Looks Could Kill" in 1985. The latter was recorded that same year by Heart, who approached the song as arena rock instead of dance-pop. After that, Stanley retired from music to be a full-time mother, much to the dismay of her fans. In 1990, Beachwood released Coming Out of Hiding: The Sequel, a CD containing remixes of Stanley's club hits, and in the mid-'90s, "Coming Out of Hiding" received a folk-rock makeover from the New York-based female group Her Sister. ~ Alex Henderson https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/its-all-in-the-game/48822323

It's All In The Game

Jan Harbeck Quartet - Variations in Blue

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:25
Size: 111,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:15)  1. East St. Louis Toodle-Oo (feat. Walter Smith III)
(7:24)  2. Nordic Echoes (feat. Walter Smith III)
(6:49)  3. Don't Let the Sun Catch You Cryin' (feat. Walter Smith III)
(4:17)  4. Salvation (feat. Walter Smith III)
(8:22)  5. Blues in the Night (feat. Walter Smith III)
(5:25)  6. Oblivion (feat. Walter Smith III)
(6:53)  7. Third Time to Tango (feat. Walter Smith III)
(3:57)  8. May Each Day (feat. Walter Smith III)

Jan Harbeck lives and breathes for his music and to tell a story with his saxophone. Jan was born in Aarhus, Denmark in 1975 and has been playing music most of his life. He studied at the Royal Academy of Music in Aalborg as well as New School in New York. Besides his two orchestras Jan Harbeck Quartet and Live Jive Jungle, Jan plays with numerous other orchestras (see the list here). In 2011, Jan was presented with the prestigious Danish award Bent Jædig Prize as well as Walter Klæbel Prize in 2006. Not least, Jan won a Grammy in 2009 for the best album of the year.

In 2015, Jan Harbeck Quartet released the album ‘Variations in Blue’ with Walter Smith III and the world’s leading jazz magazine DownBeat wrote the following:

‘Danish saxist Jan Harbeck has put together a gorgeous set of bluesy standards, tangos and originals. Since the tracks are all unhurried recorded live with no cuts or overdubs the whole program slips down like a vintage port. Despite the familiarity of “Don’t Let the Sun…” and “Blues In the Night”, Harbeck’s originals fit the rundown like silk stockings, slowly unfurling.’

– 4 of 5 stars ~ Michael Jackson, DownBeat Magazine, March 2015.

Danish newspaper ‘Politiken’ furthermore described Jan Harbeck Quartet’s show at Copenhagen Jazz Festival, in a review by music editor Thomas Michelsen: “Harbeck demonstrated, that nobody can put their soul into a jazz ballad like he can”, and previously in the same newspaper, he also wrote: “the tenor saxophone is the essential sound of jazz. The soul of the genre. Once upon a time we had Ben Webster in Copenhagen to put the soul to life again. Today we have Jan Harbeck.”  http://www.janharbeck.com/

Personnel:  Tenor Saxophone – Jan Harbeck, Walter Smith III;  Bass – Eske Nørrelykke;  Drums – Anders Holm ;  Piano – Hendrik Gunde

Variations in Blue

Frank Morgan - City Nights

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:24
Size: 150,3 MB
Art: Front

( 5:16)  1. Georgia On My Mind
(10:26)  2. Cherokee
( 7:45)  3. Summertime
( 7:27)  4. All Blues
( 7:41)  5. I Mean You
( 6:20)  6. Round Midnight
(12:09)  7. Equinox
( 8:17)  8. Impressions

Jazz careers are predictably unpredictable. Some musicians shine young, some are late bloomers, and others maintain a steady flame for decades. Then there's that intriguing handful who come back after years of obscurity; contemporary examples include Henry Grimes, Sonny Simmons, and alto saxophonist Frank Morgan. Born in 1930, Morgan was fortunate to be part of the legendary 1940s Central Avenue scene in Los Angeles. In his early years, Morgan played with Bird, Miles, and West Coast mainstays such as Wardell Gray, but due to jail stays and personal problems, he was absent from the jazz scene almost entirely after the mid-fifties. In 1985 he made a much-heralded comeback, and now in 2004 he's still going strong; witness City Nights. Recorded live at the Jazz Standard in November, 2003, the CD features compositions by Miles ("All Blues"), Monk ("I Mean You" and "Round Midnight"), and Coltrane ("Equinox" and "Impressions"), plus "Cherokee," "Georgia on My Mind" and "Summertime." Morgan has a rich, clear tone, and he swings with deep expression. Certainly it helps to have good support, and you can't ask for a better rhythm section than bassist Curtis Lundy and drummer Billy Hart. Plus pianist George Cables has been playing with Morgan almost 25 years, and they have that magical telepathy so wonderful to witness in jazz. The quartet shines on all the songs, but particularly enjoyable are a buoyant "All Blues" and a warm, shimmering "Equinox."Despite his stature in the jazz world, Morgan still considers himself a student of the music; as he says in the liner notes, "I'm on a Monk journey." This fresh approach combined with years of experience gives City Nights a wonderful vitality. It's 64 minutes of pure delight, jazz at its classic best played by a living master. ~ Florence Wetzel https://www.allaboutjazz.com/city-nights-frank-morgan-review-by-florence-wetzel.php?width=1920

Personnel: Frank Morgan (alto saxophone); Curtis Lundy (bass); Billy Hart (drums); George Cables (piano)

City Nights

Vanessa Mae - The Violin Player

Styles: Violin Classical
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:38
Size: 107,0 MB
Art: Front

(7:49)  1. Toccata And Fugue In D Minor
(3:52)  2. Contradanza
(3:24)  3. Classical Gas
(5:08)  4. Theme From 'Caravans'
(3:41)  5. Warm Air
(3:33)  6. Jazz Will Eat Itself
(4:00)  7. Widescreen
(3:29)  8. Tequila Mockingbird
(4:35)  9. City Theme
(3:18) 10. Red Hot
(3:45) 11. Classical Gas (Reggae Version)

?Vanessa-Mae was just a teenager when her major-label debut, The Violin Player, was released. This may account for her ability to successfully fuse old-world classical styles with a contemporary new age sensibility. She comes out scorching on the Bach classic "Toccata and Fugue in D Minor," showing off her world-class talent as a revolutionary violinist. The new arrangements by producer Mike Batt add a flavorful world music appeal that both compliments and showcases her masterful skill. While all ten tracks are performed as instrumentals, Vanessa-Mae manages to squeeze every ounce of passion out of a note, transcending the necessity for lyrics. Her ability to play off of other instruments is brought to the forefront on the final track "Red Hot." She goes toe to toe with a forceful electric guitar and her four-string violin leaves the challenging six-string in the dust. This record will delight those who are bold enough to challenge themselves by listening to a collection of songs that defy standard genre classifications. ~ Erik Crawford https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-violin-player-mw0000173198

Personnel: Vanessa-Mae (programming); Dave "Clem" Clempson, Martin Bliss (guitar); Vasko Vassilev (violin, viola); Dick Morgan (oboe); Philip Todd (saxophone); Murphy , Maurice Murphy (trumpet); Mike Batt, Ian Wherry (keyboards, programming); Gareth Cousins (programming) Violin Player .

The Violin Player