Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Various - Generation Django

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 104:40
Size: 239.6 MB
Styles: Gypsy jazz, Swing
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[4:17] 1. Biréli Lagrène - More
[2:58] 2. Biréli Lagrène - Daphne
[2:48] 3. Amati Schmitt - Gipsy Swing
[4:08] 4. Rocky Gresset - Time On My Hands
[2:31] 5. Dorado Schmitt - Bleu Citron
[3:31] 6. Biréli Lagrène - La Mer
[2:04] 7. Rocky Gresset - Ferber Swing
[4:52] 8. Biréli Lagrène - Place Du Tertre
[4:20] 9. Luis Salinas - Nubes
[3:47] 10. Rocky Gresset - Blue Skies
[2:55] 11. Biréli Lagrène - Les Yeux Noirs
[3:46] 12. Valérie Duchâteau - Danse Norvegienne
[9:18] 13. Biréli Lagrène - Minor Swing
[3:00] 14. Django Reinhardt - Blues Clair
[3:19] 15. Dorado Schmitt - My Blue Heaven
[3:10] 16. Gautier Laurent - Them There Eyes
[2:24] 17. Adrien Moignard - Dinette
[2:44] 18. Marcel Loeffler - Montagne Sainte Geneviève
[5:00] 19. Rocky Gresset - Tears
[3:17] 20. David Reinhardt - Nuits De Saint Germain Des Prés
[4:36] 21. Babik Reinhardt - Incertitudes
[2:16] 22. Sanseverino - La Cigale Et La Fourmi
[4:16] 23. Biréli Lagrène - Envie De Toi
[4:10] 24. Biréli Lagrène - Zurezat
[4:56] 25. Jean-Yves Dubanton - Frédo
[3:44] 26. Caravan Palace -Jolie Coquine
[6:22] 27. Stéphane Grappelli - Blues For Django And Stéphane

Larry Coryell's "Blues for Django and Stephane" (from a 1992 concert, featuring guitarists Philip Catherine and Marc Fossett, plus bass virtuoso Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen), plus a mesmerizing guitar trio rendition of "Tears" (with Rocky Gresset, Adrien Moignard, and Sylvain Luc) are here, off-setting some of the more contemporary arrangements, which aren't as interesting. Guitarist David Reinhardt's setting of Django's "Nuits de Saint Germain Des Pres" combines a more poppish/contemporary sound with Brazilian rhythm, organ, and flute, though it is innocuous. Babik Reinhardt's original "Incertitudes" is more like a cheesy smooth jazz track, with his effective electric guitar backed by mundane keyboards and an instantly forgettable pop rhythm. Worst of all, though, is Caravan Palace's "Jolie Coquine," which attempts to blend Andrews Sisters-style vocals with gypsy rhythm, then adds contemporary percussion that makes it sound like a modern dance club number, and a forgettable, overproduced effort. The liner notes are rather brief, when they could have been used to explain the selection process and background of some of the lesser-known artists. Many of the songs have previously been released elsewhere, though it is not made clear if anything was recorded specifically for this anthology. In total, a generally good, though inconsistent salute, to Django Reinhardt's lasting influence on jazz. ~Ken Dryden

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Michael Musillami - Archives

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:52
Size: 98.1 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz, Avant Garde jazz
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[5:29] 1. Archives
[8:24] 2. Bejing
[8:41] 3. The Young Child
[3:28] 4. Emmet Spencer
[8:10] 5. I Still Do It For The Music
[7:47] 6. Ry-Bop
[0:50] 7. Mohawk Mountian

Credited with “producing some of today’s finest music within a developing group format,” by AllAboutJazz-New York, guitarist/composer Michael Musillami is considered one of the most vital figures on today’s jazz scene. He has earned critical acclaim for both his work as founder/executive producer at Playscape and his increasingly recognized abilities as a musician and bandleader. Drawing on 20 years of professional experience, his working ensembles (his trio, quartet and octet) feature his unique approach to the guitar, a constant desire to continually evolve and create new music, and a close-knit group of respected veteran musicians he has collaborated with for the last several years.

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Spike Robinson, Derek Nash - Young Lions Old Tigers

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:18
Size: 142.6 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[4:33] 1. Rustic Hop
[8:54] 2. I Was Lost In Her Love
[5:16] 3. Water Jug
[7:09] 4. Ballad Medley: Smoke Gets In Your Eyes/I'm Through With Love/Gets Blue
[4:13] 5. P. Town
[6:55] 6. A Witty One
[4:20] 7. I've Still Got My Health
[5:40] 8. Dirty Butt Blues
[4:58] 9. Chasin' The Bird
[6:39] 10. In A Sentimental Mood
[3:35] 11. Young Lions-Old Tigers

Derek Nash join forces with US star, the late Spike Robinson, in a classic all swinging two sax front line band. Like Zoot and Al or Ronnie and Tubby, they are the perfect foil for each other, blending the beauty of Getz with the passion of Cannonball. "Add the hippest young rhythm section in town and, as the Young Lion roars, the Old Tiger still burns bright" ~Campbell Burnap. THE LINE UP Spike Robinson Tenor /Alto Sax Derek Nash Baritone/Alto/Tenor/Soprano Sax & Percussion Pete Cater Drums Nick Weldon Piano Rob Rickenberg Double Bass. "...handsome tone, amazingly agile technique, and flowing, uncliched phrasing." ~David Frankllin, Cadence Magazine

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Gabriela Diaz - A Case Of Joni

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:54
Size: 91.3 MB
Styles: Folk/Jazz vocals
Year: 2018
Art: Front

[3:42] 1. The Dry Cleaner From Des Moines
[2:44] 2. Court And Spark
[5:51] 3. River
[2:50] 4. The Fiddle And The Drum
[5:10] 5. Blue Motel Room
[3:02] 6. Twisted
[2:44] 7. Carey
[4:21] 8. A Case Of You
[2:21] 9. Big Yellow Taxi
[4:35] 10. Both Sides Now
[2:28] 11. You Turn Me On, I'm A Radio

Gabriela Díaz Voces; Hernán Jacinto Piano y teclados; Oscar Giunta Batería; Miguel Tallarita Trompeta; Nico Rainone Contrabajo; Jorge Armani Guitarras.

This album compiles a small collection of the most beautiful songs from Joni Mitchell's repertoire. Gabriela Díaz, exquisite jazz singer, carefully selects a variety of songs from the different periods of Joni's discography, albums, which are today Jewels of contemporary music: from Hejira to Blue, from Mingus to Court and Spark, from For the roses to clouds, etc. A new opportunity to listen to these songs by one of the most important artists of the 20th century, the Canadian composer and artist Joni Mitchell. Very rarely versioned, can be heard in these renewed versions as an original point of view of the work of this very personal artist, but also as a respectful tribute. (Translated from Spanish.)

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Kurt Rosenwinkel & OJM - Our Secret World

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:58
Size: 151.0 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz, Big band
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[ 6:32] 1. Our Secret World
[ 9:15] 2. The Cloister
[ 8:45] 3. Zhivago
[11:33] 4. Dream Of The Old
[ 6:37] 5. Turns
[10:08] 6. Use Of Light
[13:04] 7. Path Of The Heart

Kurt Rosenwinkel: guitar; João Mortágua: alto saxophone (1, 5, 7), soprano saxophone (5, 7); João Pedro Brandão: alto saxophone (1, 3-6), clarinet (1, 3), soprano saxophone (2), flute (4, 5, 7); Mário Santos: tenor saxophone (1-6), clarinet (2-4); José Pedro Coelho: tenor saxophone, flute (1); Rui Teixeira: baritone saxophone (1-3, 5), bass clarinet (3, 4, 6, 7); Nick Marchione: trumpet; Erick Poirrier: trumpet;Susana Santos Silva: trumpet (1, 3-6), flugelhorn (2, 7); Rogério Ribeiro: trumpet (1, 2, 6, 7); Michaël Joussein: trombone; Álvaro Pinto: trombone; Daniel Dias: trombone; Gonçalo Dias: trombone; Abe Rábade: piano (1-5) Demian Cabaud: double-bass (1-7); Marcos Cavaleiro: drums (1-7); Carlos Azevedo: arranger (1, 3-5), conductor (1, 3-5), piano (6, 7); José Luis Rego: alto saxophone (2), soprano saxophone (3, 6), clarinet (7); Pedro Guedes: arranger (6), conductor (2, 6, 7); Ohad Talmor: arranger (2, 7); José Silva: trumpet (3-5); Nuno Pinto: clarinet (4).

With the creative possibilities offered by its expanded palette, it's no surprise that so many artists who traditionally work in the context of more pliant, small ensembles turn to larger settings at least once in their career. For those already predisposed to greater compositional complexity, the intrinsic challenges are many; but so, too, are the ultimate rewards. It's no surprise, then, that Kurt Rosenwinkel—perhaps his generation's most influential guitarist, spawning almost as many imitators as Pat Metheny (himself, an early influence on Rosenwinkel)—has been collaborating with big bands in Europe for the last several years. What is surprising, however, is that Rosenwinkel has waited until 2010 to release an album featuring big band arrangements of some of his best writing. With a result as fine as Our Secret World, however, it's unlikely that many of the guitarist's large fan base would argue it's been anything but well worth the wait.

Following the slight sidestep of Rosenwinkel's Reflections (Wommusic, 2009)—a simmering album of mostly jazz standards, recorded with an empathetic trio that demonstrated just how much the guitarist's interpretive skills have grown since his early, similarly cover-heavy live album, East Coast Love Affair (Fresh Sound New Talent, 1997)—Rosenwinkel returns to a set of entirely original compositions. There's nothing actually new to be found, however, as the guitarist delves back to the lengthy, episodic "Dream of the Old," first heard on The Enemies of Energy (Verve, 2000) and forward to the equally colorful but more inherently effervescent "The Cloister," from Deep Song (Verve, 2005), an all-star session that also featured pianist Brad Mehldau and saxophonist Joshua Redman.

This time, however, Rosenwinkel eschews star-power for the built-in chemistry of Orquestra Jazz de Matosinhos (OJM), a near-15 year-old Portuguese ensemble that approached the guitarist with the idea of collaborating in 2007. That all but one chart ("Dream of the Old") was scored by OJM's Carlos Azevedo, Pedro Guedes or guest arranger Ohad Talmor without the guitarist's involvement, speaks to their surprisingly deep understanding of some of his most difficult compositions, and to the entire 16-piece ensemble's ability to traverse music that, at times, hints harmonically at Joe Zawinul and the orchestral expansiveness of Vince Mendoza, but ultimately sounds like nothing but Rosenwinkel.

Simply stunning throughout the disc, Rosenwinkel solos with particularly breathtaking vertical and horizontal movement on "The Cloister," while turning more lyrical on the balladic "Use of Light," one of three tunes culled from The Next Step (Verve, 2000), still considered by most to be a particular watershed in a discography that's nothing but high points. Rosenwinkel's ethereal mélange of heavily overdriven and harmonized guitar with his falsetto voice—blended so seamlessly as to create a singular whole—has never sounded so distinctive, despite an increasing number of guitarists constantly trying to copy his unique approach to sound, melody and harmony. A staple of Rosenwinkel's live performances for many years, "Turns" makes its first appearance on record here, its complex combination of rich timbres, knotty counterpoint and effortless, Afro-centric polyrhythms vividly contextualizing and recontextualizing Rosenwinkel's solo—a near-relentless push-and-pull of ascending and cascading linearity.

As much as Our Secret World represents some of his finest playing to date—eclipsing, even, his seemingly unmatchable invention on the double- disc The Remedy: Live at the Village Vanguard (Wommusic, 2008)—it's as much a reflection of Rosenwinkel's remarkable acumen as a writer, with an emergent compositional voice as early as The Enemies of Energy, only his third album as a leader, and the first to focus exclusively on original material. Amidst seven stunning arrangements, Azevedo's powerful rework of the groove-driven title track—originally on Rosenwinkel's "electronica" album, Heartcore (Verve, 2003)—turns it into something more organic, encouraging a solo from Rosenwinkel that, the first of the disc, sets the bar so high that it's hard to believe he actually manages to match and raise it even further throughout the rest of the 66-minute set.

With the brighter sonics of a brass and horn section, it's often easy for a big band album to hit visceral highs out of reach of smaller ensemble discs. But the excitement of Our Secret World—coupled with beauty that often reveals itself at the most unexpected moments—has nothing to do with the obvious, and everything to do with the perfect combination of compellingly unique source material; arrangers who dig, with perfect instinct and careful consideration, into the spirit and essence of the music to turn out charts of even greater complexity and depth; and a clearly talented ensemble, capable of navigating the scores with ease and an equally ideal mix of power and understatement. As undeniably fine as OJM is, however, it's hard to deny the real star of Our Secret World: Rosenwinkel. He is at the top of a game on the ascendancy with each successive album, and his gradually growing repertoire speaks of tremendous import and a continually evolving concept of sound, harmony and improvisation that's as personal, inimitable and, indeed, secret a world as it is inspirational and appealing to the guitarist's growing legion of fans—and aspiring musicians who continue searching for points of entry. ~John Kelman

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