Friday, March 30, 2018

Jane McDonald - Jane

Size: 122,6 MB
Time: 52:24
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2008
Styles: Pop
Art: Front

01. Doctor's Orders (2:43)
02. Time For Love (4:19)
03. Song For You (3:25)
04. Mas Que Nada (2:43)
05. If I Knew Then (4:19)
06. How Do You Keep The Music Playing (4:50)
07. Sweet Talker (3:17)
08. If You Love Me (2:58)
09. Nine Times Out Of Ten (3:56)
10. Even Now (4:04)
11. You Do It All For Me (3:33)
12. The Hungry Years (4:05)
13. Not A Day Goes By (4:45)
14. One Voice (3:20)

Having been propelled to fame by a now long-forgotten TV reality show, The Cruise, Jane McDonald was in danger of being swallowed up by a plethora of new young singers, fresh out of talent shows. She had always been slightly different than these bright new young things, however, as her style was more akin to a cabaret lounge, or indeed a cruise ship, than a polished TV studio. And her choice of songs had always been paramount -- as definitely shown to be the case on her seventh album, Jane, released in the autumn of 2008. There was a maturity that had been lacking on several of her previous albums and indeed, McDonald's voice had improved from her early days in the recording studio at the beginning of the century. Five of the 14 songs were not even cover versions, but co-written by McDonald and Lisa Harman. The album opened with a very faithful reproduction of the Sunny Leslie hit from 1974, "Doctor's Orders," even including the phone call in the middle of the song, and continued with two slow piano-led jazzy ballads, "Time for Love" and "Song for You." What may have seemed a strange choice, the Brazilian samba rhythmic "Mas Que Nada," worked very well, and then the songs varied from uptempo 1960s-style numbers "Nine Times Out of Ten" and "Sweet Talker" to ballads "How Do You Keep the Music Playing" and "Not a Day Goes By." There were a couple of Barry Manilow covers, "Even Now" and "One Voice," and one of the highlights of the album was her version of Neil Sedaka's "The Hungry Years." One of Jane McDonald's better albums. ~by Sharon Mawer

Jane

Kate McGarry, Keith Ganz, Gary Versace - The Subject Tonight Is Love

Size: 141,0 MB
Time: 60:39
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Prologue The Subject Tonight Is Love (1:16)
02. Secret Love (5:00)
03. Climb Down - Whiskey You're The Devil (6:44)
04. Gone With The Wind (4:16)
05. Fair Weather (7:58)
06. Playing Palhaço (4:43)
07. Losing Strategy, #4 (2:57)
08. My Funny Valentine (6:20)
09. Mr. Sparkle What A Difference A Day Made (5:05)
10. She Always Will - The River (7:39)
11. Indian Summer (6:54)
12. Epilogue All You Need Is Love (1:40)

The ancient Greeks spoke of love's many forms, codifying and distilling the essence of every one in detailed thought and language. Each of those documented variants rightly differs from the others, yet the keen mind can certainly discern that all of them basically stem from the same roots: connectivity and understanding. In something of a musical parallel, this outing presents as an exploration, cataloguing, and summation of love in many states. While different aspects of the topic at hand are examined within each track, all are in agreement in their adoption of its foundational pillars.

The trio of vocalist Kate McGarry, guitarist Keith Ganz, and multi-instrumentalist Gary Versace is ideally suited for these investigations of the heart, telescoping each song's core value(s) while also expanding on their meaning. In doing so, this tightknit group proves that it's as perceptive as they come. McGarry may serve as the primary focal point, but this album remains a statement of artistic fellowship between all three of these artists.

The title track—a recitation of a concise work from 14th century Persian Poet Hafiz—serves as a brief scene-setter of a prologue, but the first proper number comes in the form of "Secret Love." This reflection on clandestine bonding proves to be one of the standout tracks on the album, evolving into a soul-searching statement on finding one's inner passion(s). Opening with hush-hush ideals before easing into a buoyant zone featuring a joyous guitar solo from Ganz, it hits every mark its meant to while shining a light on a few that were heretofore unseen. McGarry follows that up by calling to her Irish ancestors on "Climb Down," a slow, spare, and bluesy evocation that moves through humid air. That five-and-a-half minute work stands firmly on its own, yet it resonates on a deeper level when it segues into an Irish folk song—"Whiskey You're The Devil"—with guest Obed Calvaire's martial snare drum calling in the distance.

Those first three numbers make it clear that these simpatico spirits don't deem any single source sufficient for uncovering or expressing love's magic and mysteries; the material that follows, likewise, speaks to varied origins and vantage points. "Gone With The Wind" touches on elegiac sentiments while countering them with suggestions of sunny swing and a light-and-loose departure, Egberto Gismonti's "Playing Palhaço" presents new lyrics from Jo Lawry and deals with love's reality apart from its appearance, "My Funny Valentine" is given a glistening facelift through Ganz's reharmonization, and McGarry's "Losing Strategy # 4," benefitting from Versace's coloristic contributions, investigates the topic of retribution and damaged love in the most heartbreaking of tones.

This album is full of emotional ups and downs, serving as a true reflection of life's rollercoaster, but the ever optimistic epilogue—a brief stroll through "All You Need Is Love" graced by Ron Miles' horn—closes things out with a welcome dose of optimism. That exit is a lesson to the masses in these troubled times about how to move forward, and this album is a gift to us all from a trio with something real and true to express. ~Dan Bilawsky

Personnel: Kate McGarry: vocals, piano (7); Keith Ganz: acoustic guitar, electric guitar, acoustic bass guitar; Gary Versace: piano, keyboard, organ, accordion; Obed Calvaire: drums (3); Ron Miles: trumpet (12).

The Subject Tonight Is Love

Noah Preminger - Genuinity

Size: 145,6 MB
Time: 62:48
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front & Back

01. Halfway To Hartford (8:13)
02. The Genuine One (6:19)
03. Mad Town (5:36)
04. Ts And Her Spirit (6:41)
05. Ah (6:58)
06. My Blues For You (6:33)
07. Nashua (7:22)
08. Walking On Eggshells (5:20)
09. Acknowledgement (9:43)

Thirty-year-old tenor saxophonist Noah Preminger's debut on Criss Cross in a pianoless context with trumpeter Jason Palmer and bassist Kim Cass, who record here with the brilliant drummer Dan Weiss for the first time on this occasion.

The hour-long program consists of nine Preminger originals. Each evokes a different mood and ambiance with strong melodies and percolating grooves that provoke unfailingly cohesive, thematic improvisations by Preminger and Palmer.

Genuinity

Debbie Deyo - When You Live Alone

Size: 118,1 MB
Time: 50:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. It Don't Mean A Thing If It Ain't Got That Swing (4:51)
02. Take The 'a' Train (3:10)
03. Prelude To A Kiss (5:50)
04. How Insensitive (5:19)
05. Live Alone (4:14)
06. Whisper Not (4:00)
07. Good Morning, Heartache (4:26)
08. All The Things You Are (5:34)
09. Through The Eyes Of Love (5:40)
10. They Can't Take That Away From Me (4:03)
11. In My Life (3:33)

This mellow collection of classic jazz standards plus one original composition is newly arranged for a quartet of instrumentals and vocals. The singer/pianist is blind, but it doesn't stop her and her band from making insightful and expressive music.

I have been singing and playing since the age of five years old. I love collaborating with the other musicians in my band and have been a long time classical and jazz musician myself. My training as a classical pianist comes from years of studying and multiple degrees in music, music therapy, and music education. I started learning jazz at a very early age from my wonderful piano teacher James Woods. He introduced me to Braille music, and I was able to continue my journey studying classical music with another blind pianist named Audrey Friend. I currently study classical piano with Dalia Sakas and jazz piano with Michael Cochrane in New York City.

I'd like to thank my fellow musicians and dedicate this work in memory of my late husband Geoffrey who was a great supporter of my music.

When You Live Alone

The Manhattan Transfer - The Junction

Size: 102,3 MB
Time: 43:17
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. Cantaloop (Flip Out!) (4:43)
02. Swing Balboa (Down On Riverside) (3:11)
03. The Man Who Sailed Around His Soul (3:49)
04. Blues For Harry Bosch (4:25)
05. Shake Ya Boogie (Galactic Vocal Version) (4:23)
06. Sometimes I Do (4:53)
07. Ugly Man (4:48)
08. The Junction (4:56)
09. Tequila - The Way Of The Booze (3:04)
10. Paradise Within (Paradise Found) (5:00)

The Manhattan Transfer is THRILLED to announce the release of their latest album, THE JUNCTION! Remembering Tim Hauser and welcoming Trist Curless, The Manhattan Transfer has embraced new dynamic and fresh possibilities for their legendary sound in this eclectic new recording produced by five-time Grammy winner Mervyn Warren.

“The concept behind THE JUNCTION is this special meeting place a junction merging our four and a half decade musical legacy with something new,” says Alan Paul. “It wasn’t exactly a seamless transition because Tim is irreplaceable, he and Trist are very different singers. We weren’t looking to replace Tim’s unique personality, but found in Trist someone who could add a new element to the group, and take care of the bottom of the quartet with his true bass.”

“It’s a whole different ball game, but one we feel is still musically very viable and exciting,” Janis Siegel adds.

Curless reflects, “My personal desire was that the album would sound like The Manhattan Transfer, keeping with what they’ve done, but bringing a new energy that would come naturally with my strengths as an artist, becoming a part of theirs.”

The songs The Manhattan Transfer have chosen are rife with cool new musical twists and Warren’s sparkling vocal arrangements, perfectly reflect the band’s forward-thinking aesthetic.

Cheryl Bentyne penned sly lyrics to saxophonist Grace Kelly’s moody, film noir-ish “Blues for Harry Bosch” which reference numerous classic detective movies. Paul co-write “Swing Balboa (Down on Riverside)” mixing the classic Balboa swing sound with edgy, modern electro-swing. Siegel co-wrote and sings lead on the hip, uptempo Shake Your Boogie (Galactic Vocal Version), whose story cleverly incorporates a playful element of Star Wars. And Curless brings us to The Junction  an homage to the TMT classic Tuxedo Junction.

TMT finds new joy in harmonizing the classic rap of Us3’s early 90’s hip-hop/jazz hit “Cantaloop (Flip Fantasia)” – based on Herbie Hancock’s soul-jazz treasure “Cantaloop Island” which the quartet fashions into Cantaloop (Flip Out!). They also bring newfound pleasures and a party energy to the crowd pleaser, Tequila: The Way of the Booze, with lyrics by Paul. Balancing these optimistic bursts are more pointed social commentaries  XTC’s The Man Who Sailed Around His Soul and Rickie Lee Jones’ harmonically dissonant Ugly Man.

“As the work on this album reflects  democracy is the fabric of the group. It has been from the beginning,” says Bentyne. “We all have a different take on music and appreciate different styles, so each member brings something to the table that is unique. We have tremendous faith in that process. This album is completely us, a true snapshot of who we are right now, having survived so many hardships, but looking forward to exciting new chapters in the band’s story. We give great credit to Mervyn Warren, without whom this project would not have come together as beautifully as it did. His participation, oversight, brilliant arrangements and production helped us make one of our strongest musical statements ever.”

The Junction  

Tyrone Jackson - From The Mind Of Tyrone Jackson

Size: 167,1 MB
Time: 72:11
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz: Contemporary Jazz, Smooth Jazz
Art: Front

01. F.T.M.O ( 4:46)
02. Come Together ( 4:32)
03. Scenario ( 5:39)
04. Anyone Who Had A Heart ( 5:03)
05. Go Higher ( 5:41)
06. By Chance (10:03)
07. Doot Doot ( 4:01)
08. Benin Intro ( 1:49)
09. Benin ( 8:20)
10. Love Is A Game ( 4:18)
11. Misery Loves Company ( 6:15)
12. Tangled ( 5:19)
13. Inner City Blues (Make We Wanna Holler) ( 4:58)
14. F.T.M.O. Reprise ( 1:22)

In life we have all met people that stand out for one reason or another (be it positive or negative). Then, if we're fortunate, we cross paths with excellence, high vision, professionalism, and extreme talent. This describes pianist Tyrone Jackson. This recording is just a mere appetizer of what he brings to the table musically, but yet after listening to "From The Mind Of" you feel totally satisfied but have the question like "Who Is This Man?", "Where did he come from?", and "Why doesn't he have a household name?"-The answers are simple; his name is Tyrone Jackson,he is from New Orleans, and lastly the answer is because everything happens when It's time. With the unveiling Of F.T.M.O., you will now know him and won't soon forget his name. This recording takes you on a journey that makes you feel like you need a passport. It's a sophisticated, groove oriented masterpiece and you will listen and want to keep playing it over and over. In my opinion Tyrone Jackson will be the next Quincy Jones with touches of George Duke and this recipe is one that the world will be enjoying for eternity. EC3

From The Mind Of Tyrone Jackson

Mimi & The Podd Brothers - Live In Brooklyn

Size: 130,7 MB
Time: 56:28
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. I Feel Pretty (Live) (3:05)
02. Gimme A Pigfoot (Live) (4:44)
03. Blues In The Night (Live) (5:38)
04. There'll Be Some Changes Made (Live) (4:23)
05. Whatever Lola Wants (Live) (5:28)
06. Kiss (Live) (3:26)
07. Cheek To Cheek (Live) (4:59)
08. Come Together (Live) (4:54)
09. Exactly Like You (Live) (4:35)
10. Dream A Little Dream Of Me (Live) (4:38)
11. Ain't Misbehavin (Live) (5:28)
12. Creep (Live) (5:04)

Based in NYC, Mimi & the Podd Brothers are a fresh take on early jazz with classical trimmings and soulful underpinnings. They pride themselves on re-inventing the classics and retrograding the contemporary. Feisty, fun, soulful and honkey-tonk all at once, Mimi and the Podd brothers will take you from Harlem to New Orleans, to France and the tin-pan alley.

Live In Brooklyn

Dave Tull - Texting And Driving

Size: 174,8 MB
Time: 75:00
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. The Texting Song (Feat. Randy Waldman) (3:49)
02. Henrietta (5:01)
03. The Moment (Feat. Inga Swearingen & George Stone) (4:44)
04. Please Tell Me Your Name (Feat. Wayne Bergeron, Doug Webb & Andy Martin) (7:19)
05. I'm Forever In A Fog (Feat. Randy Porter) (6:34)
06. I Will Sing To You (Feat. Larry Koonse) (5:29)
07. The Stoplight At The End Of The Street (Feat. Randy Porter) (5:37)
08. Tell Me That I'm Wrong (3:40)
09. Watch Your Kid (Feat. Randy Porter) (6:39)
10. The Date (Feat. Cheryl Bentyne) (5:15)
11. Clapping On One And Three (Feat. Doug Webb) (5:09)
12. This Summer Night (Feat. Randy Porter) (4:43)
13. You Remind Me (Feat. Kevin Axt) (4:02)
14. I'm So Confused (Feat. Les Benedict) (3:50)
15. Fly By The Seat Of My Pants (3:00)

Wallflower. The word has zero application to describe jazz drummer, vocalist and composer/arranger/producer, Dave Tull. He's more like a Venus Fly-Trap of talent, devouring all those activities and offering a keen eye for life's surrealities. He demos all on his second CD, texting and driving. It might just be what's needed for a long, endless drive from, say, St. Louis to Gallup, New Mexico.

Tull's drum credits are formidable—with Barbra Streisand (whose legendary pickiness imprimaturs Tull's chops), performing with Chuck Mangione, et al. With texting and driving Tull offers 15 (that's a plenty!) solid, swinging selections—all engaging originals—in which he vocalizes, vocaleses, and, with an elite cadre of L.A.'s best (Cheryl Bentyne, Wayne Bergeron, Doug Webb, George Stone, et al), does all that splendidly.

The title-related tune, "The Texting Song" launches the upbeat session with Tull backed by a cooking big band. And, while s(w)inging, he weaves fine lyric, hipster vocalese, and scat. "Henrietta" is a lilting woodwind-backed boy-meets-girl-with-unique-sobriquet thing. Lush strings embrace Tull's fine romancing, a la Jackie Cain and Roy Kral) with Inga Swearingen on the ballad "The Moment." "Please Tell Me Your Name" Latins away with some tasty Lou Rawls vocal embellishments on the swing section. He gets funky on the side-winding "The Stoplight at the End of the Street," too.

Vocally, Tull is more jazzer than pure crooner—think Dave Frishberg, or, perhaps Scatman supreme, Giacomo Gates. He's got solid pipes that invite. His vocal dexterity and word-work is hand-glove with the material throughout. You can't help but really like this Cat. He puts his own tasty seasoning on his recipes of "I'm Forever in a Fog," as well as on the Antonio Carlos Jobim-esque "I Will Sing to You" and on the ballad, "Tell Me that I'm Wrong").

As a composer/lyricist, Tull homers with smarts, wry humor, and pungency throughout the session, on tunes like the faux admonishment, "Please Watch Your Kid," the tasty contrapuntal duet with Bentyne on "The Date," the soul-slick "Clapping on One and Three," and the boss bossa complete with neat Tull set work, "You Remind Me." "I'm So Confused," a flashback ballad with a tasty Les Benedict bone ride that could "reflect" an Astaire classic and the carefree stroll, "Fly By the Seat of My Pants" close the session.

texting and driving is a marvelous panorama of Tull's and his pals' talents. Go for a ride and enjoy "Tull's Merry Pranks"—but, you take the wheel; he's rather involved with his fine texting and driving. ~By Nicholas F. Mondello

Personnel: Dave Tull: drums, vocals; Randy Porter: piano; Randy Waldman: piano (1); Larry Koonse: guitar (1,4,6,15); Kevin Axt: basses; Wayne Bergeron: trumpet (1,4,7,14); Dog Webb: saxes (1,4,7,11,14,15), clarinet (8); Cheryl Bentyne: vocal (10); George Stone: piano, flugelhorn (3), trumpet (9); Les Benedict: trombone (14); Inga Swearingen: vocals (3); Peter Olstad: trumpet (1,4,); Mike Guiterrez: trumpet (1,4); Dave Becker: flute, clarinets (2), saxes (9); Andy MArtin: trombone (1,4,7); Bill Hulting: percussion (6,13); Brynn Albanese: violin (3); Peter Jandula-Clark: viola (3); Ken Hustad: cello (3).

Texting And Driving

Jimmy Heath - Triple Threat

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:21
Size: 85.5 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1962/2000
Art: Front

[6:09] 1. Gemini
[5:14] 2. Bruh Slim
[7:07] 3. Goodbye
[5:03] 4. Dew And Mud
[3:42] 5. Make Someone Happy
[4:21] 6. The More I See You
[5:42] 7. Prospecting

Bass – Percy Heath; Drums – Albert Heath; French Horn – Julius Watkins; Piano – Cedar Walton; Saxophone [Tenor] – Jimmy Heath; Trumpet – Freddie Hubbard.

Jimmy Heath has long been at least a triple threat as a musician (tenor, flute and soprano), arranger and composer. On this 1998 CD reissue, Heath sticks to tenor, performing "Make Someone Happy" and "The More I See You' while joined by pianist Cedar Walton and his two brothers, bassist Percy Heath and drummer Albert "Tootie" Heath. The other five numbers consist of four of his originals (best-known is "Gemini") plus a reworking of the ballad "Goodbye." For these selections, the quartet is augmented by young trumpeter Freddie Hubbard (who takes a few fiery solos) and Julius Watkins on French horn. The arrangements of Heath uplift the straightahead music and make each selection seem a bit special. ~Scott Yanow

Triple Threat mc
Triple Threat zippy

Mary Black - Mary Black Sings Jimmy MacCarthy

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:46
Size: 102.5 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[3:55] 1. No Frontiers
[4:12] 2. Adam At The Window
[5:03] 3. There Is No Night
[3:30] 4. Love's Last Chance
[3:59] 5. Bright Blue Rose
[3:47] 6. What We Came Here For
[3:45] 7. Wonderchild
[4:26] 8. Katie
[4:55] 9. Mystic Lipstick
[3:57] 10. Another Day
[3:10] 11. As I Leave Behind Neidín

For the last quarter-century, singer Mary Black has been a dominant presence in Irish music, both at home and abroad. She has shared stages, tv shows and recording studios with some of the most revered performers of her time. She has also played a frontline role in bringing Irish music, past and present, to an increasingly appreciative and ever-growing global audience. The San Francisco Chronicle has described her as "One of the best interpretative singers around".

At a time when less adventurous performers preferred to stick exclusively to the well-worn ballads from Ireland’s rich music heritage and the more obvious hits from contemporary writers, Mary explored the best work available from new composers and mined the rich seams they offered. That commitment to fresh material, combined with her unique interpretations of the songs she chooses, saw her release numerous albums that achieved platinum sales status and spawned countless hits. Indeed, one of Mary’s albums - No Frontiers - spent more than a year in the Irish Top 30!

To the acclaim and awards Mary has received over the years from both the public and the critics must also be added the esteem she has generated from her fellow artists. Indeed, many of them have recorded and performed live with her, including Emmylou Harris, Mary Chapin Carpenter, Joan Baez and Van Morrison, not to mention a host of Irish traditional musicians and singers. Along the way she has also recorded and performed with her siblings in The Black Family and with her highly successful sister Frances.

Coming from an intensely musical family, with her mother a fine singer and her father an entertaining fiddle player, Mary first came to the music public’s attention in the late ‘70s as a member of the group General Humbert with whom she recorded and toured. In 1983 she teamed up with guitarist/producer Declan Sinnott (later to become Christy Moore’s musical sidekick) and released her eponymously-named debut solo album. It reached No. 4 in the Irish Charts and is ranked among the best Irish albums of the early 1980's. It won her the Irish Independent Arts Award for Music, the first in a staggering sequence of awards that continue to come her way.

Mary Black Sings Jimmy MacCarthy mc
Mary Black Sings Jimmy MacCarthy zippy

Krzysztof Urbanski - Urbanski

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:29
Size: 127.0 MB
Styles: Classical, Symphony Orchestra
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[ 7:23] 1. Szarmancki Lawirant
[10:12] 2. Giant Steps
[ 6:23] 3. Touch Her Soft Lips And Part
[10:59] 4. Your History
[ 7:11] 5. You Must Dance To My Music
[ 4:00] 6. When Frank Dances Funk
[ 9:17] 7. B.H. Blues

Krzysztof Urbański is music director of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, main conductor and artistic leader of the Trondheim Symfoniorkester as well as the first guest conductor of the Tokyo Symphony Orchestra. During the 2015 / 2016 season he was the first guest conductor of NDR Sinfoniorchester – the symphonic orchestra of North German Radio. He looks more like a teen idol than a grizzled maestro and his interpretations are suffused with a youthful freshness and frankness – Tagesspiegel wrote in January 2013 about a performance of Lutosławski – His left hand’s gesture targeting the orchestra is obvious: ‘Ladies and Gentleman – let’s rock!’ Musicians eagerly picked up the gauntlet: rarely do they play with such a spontaneity, precision and virtuosity as they did performing the breakneck Lutosławski concert – it was a storm which left no space for signs of musical lassitude or sluggishness.

In 2007 he graduated from the Conducting Faculty of the Fryderyk Chopin University of Music in Warsaw under Professor Antoni Wit. He honed his skills in masterclasses with Kurt Masur. He has only taken part in two conducting contests - he placed second and received an award for Most Outstanding Artistic Personality at the 4th Witold Lutosławski International Review of Young Conductors in Białystok, Poland, and won the International Conducting Contest in Prague in 2007 (part of Prague Spring Festival / Pražské Jaro Festival).

Urbanski mc
Urbanski zippy

Sammy Davis Jr - I've Gotta Be Me: The Best Of Sammy Davis Jr

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:40
Size: 97.7 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[3:45] 1. Lush Life
[3:45] 2. A Stranger In Town
[3:24] 3. What Kind Of Fool Am I
[2:12] 4. Once In A Lifetime
[2:23] 5. Someone Nice Like You
[3:04] 6. As Long As She Needs Me
[2:58] 7. Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me)
[2:16] 8. Here's That Rainy Day (With Laurindo Almeida)
[3:05] 9. I Want To Be With You
[2:41] 10. Night Song
[2:53] 11. The Shelter Of Your Arms
[2:57] 12. I've Gotta Be Me
[2:14] 13. Yes I Can
[2:21] 14. Gonna Build A Mountain
[2:34] 15. If I Ruled The World

I've Gotta Be Me: The Best of Sammy Davis, Jr. on Reprise is a thorough 15-track retrospective of Davis' '60s recordings for Reprise, featuring the bulk of his hit singles -- including "What Kind of Fool Am I," "As Long as She Needs Me," "The Shelter of Your Arms," and "I've Gotta Be Me" -- plus album tracks that illustrate Davis' depth as a singer. The album is assembled as an argument for Davis' skills as a vocalist and entertainer, shunning many of his lighter numbers for show tunes and interpretations of '60s professional songwriters. The gambit works, since I've Gotta Be Me not only showcases Davis' immense vocal talent, but also the variety of his '60s recordings. Though these sometimes exhibit a glossy Vegas sheen, they are more varied and intriguing than his later work, while they demonstrate a versatility that his earlier Decca work only hinted at. In short, I've Gotta Be Me captures much of the essence of Sammy Davis, Jr. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

I've Gotta Be Me: The Best Of Sammy Davis Jr mc
I've Gotta Be Me: The Best Of Sammy Davis Jr zippy

The Mastersounds - Introducing The Mastersounds: Water's Edge

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:45
Size: 132.2 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[3:51] 1. Un Poco Loco
[3:40] 2. Wes' Tune
[4:56] 3. Lover
[4:53] 4. Dexter Deck
[3:53] 5. If I Should Lose You
[5:34] 6. That Old Devil Moon
[4:42] 7. The Queen And I
[5:23] 8. Spring Is Here
[3:32] 9. Water's Edge
[3:06] 10. Drum Tune
[6:30] 11. Bela By Barlight
[7:39] 12. Caravan

Buddy Montgomery (vib), Richie Crabtree (p), Monk Montgomery (Fender electric bass), Benny Barth (d).

With almost the same instrumentation as the Modern Jazz Quartet, The Mastersounds burst on the late-50s scene when the MJQ was already established as the pre-eminent small group in jazz. But they were no imitators. Where the MJQ was all seriousness and sophisticated classical borrowings, the Mastersounds set out to get feet tapping, aided by the distinctive sound of Monk Montgomerys Fender bass. It worked. After securing a three-month booking at a club in Seattle during January 1957, the group went to play at San Franciscos Jazz Showcase, where producer Dick Bock discovered them. They were on their way, becoming the most successful quartet since the MJQs advent. Popular (and once voted best new small combo in Down Beats critics poll) they disbanded in 1961. This CD presents their debut recordings, redolent of the time when they first caught the moment.

Introducing The Mastersounds: Water's Edge mc
Introducing The Mastersounds: Water's Edge zippy

Russell Gunn - Smokin Gunn

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:49
Size: 130,6 MB
Art: Front

( 3:43)  1. (From the Freedom Suite) The Paris Masses Begin / the San Domingo Masse
( 4:24)  2. Amnesia
( 5:01)  3. El's Kitchen
( 7:49)  4. Groid
( 5:26)  5. Yvette
( 8:59)  6. Memory of Waterford
( 8:12)  7. The Beeach
( 2:51)  8. Delfeayo's Dilemma
(10:21)  9. Crescent

Following 1999's hip-hop/jazz foray Ethnomusicology, Vol. 1, trumpeter Russell Gunn returns to straight-ahead jazz on Smokin Gunn, where he's joined by altoist Bruce Williams, pianist Marc Cary, bassist Eric Revis, and drummer Terreon Gully. Compositionally, there's a distinct flavor of early Wynton Marsalis in Gunn's originals. One hears the influence of the elder trumpeter in the bashing, blistering tempo of "Groid," the modal changes of "Amnesia," and "The Beeach," and the odd phrase lengths of "El's Kitchen." Gunn even pays direct tribute to Marsalis with a brief trio rendition of "Delfeayo's Dilemma," a track off of Black Codes (From the Underground). The presence of Eric Revis, Branford Marsalis's bassist of choice at the time of this recording, makes the Marsalis connection even stronger. Gunn opens and closes the album with bold strokes, beginning with excerpts from his "Freedom Suite" (not to be confused with Sonny Rollins's) and ending with the Coltrane masterpiece "Crescent." (It's particularly refreshing to hear a trumpeter tackle something so closely identified with a tenor player.) But Smokin Gunn, despite its many highlights, falls short of being a major individual statement. That said, it's a very good way to encounter the hard-edged and inventive piano playing of Marc Cary. And anything with Terreon Gully at the drums is bound to swing like crazy. ~ David R.Adler https://www.allmusic.com/album/smokingunn-mw0000066429

Personnel: Russell Gunn (trumpet); Bruce Williams (alto saxophone); Marc Cary (piano); Eric Revis (bass); Terreon Gully (drums).

Smokin Gunn

Jane McDonald - Hold the Covers Back

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:02
Size: 114,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:18)  1. One Step at a Time
(3:22)  2. I'll Not Be Beaten
(4:23)  3. I See It in Your Eyes (feat. Tony Hadley)
(4:21)  4. I'll Be There
(3:26)  5. Let the Light in
(3:10)  6. One More Day
(4:56)  7. The Singer of Your Song
(3:41)  8. Step Outside Your Door
(3:39)  9. The Hand That Leads Me
(4:06) 10. Hold the Covers Back
(5:38) 11. Winner
(4:57) 12. When I Look at You

One of the U.K.'s first successful reality TV recording artists, cabaret singer Jane McDonald became an overnight sensation after appearing in BBC docu-soap The Cruise. Born in Wakefield in 1963, McDonald started her singing career performing at various workingmen's clubs across the North of England, employing her father as her roadie. After working as an entertainer on several cruise ships, she retired from the business for nine months until a call from her agent persuaded her to take up one final job, a residency on The Galaxy. Coincidentally, the BBC was filming a fly-on-the-wall documentary about the day-to-day running of the cruise liner and asked McDonald if she would like to appear. Thanks to her down to earth nature and Northern sense of humor, she became the show's biggest star, and following its huge ratings success, she was signed to Focus Records. In 1998, her self-titled debut album reached number one in the U.K. charts, where it stayed for three weeks; she performed a sold-out show at the London Palladium, and her televised marriage to Henrik Brixen attracted 14 million viewers. In 2000, she returned with second album Inspiration (number six) and became a TV presenter for the BBC, fronting both The National Lottery and Star for a Night, a talent show which helped launch Joss Stone. A year later, her third album, Love at the Movies, reached number 24 and she appeared in the West End production of Romeo and Juliet: The Musical. In 2005, she released her fourth album, You Belong to Me (number 21) and became a regular panelist on ITV chat show Loose Women. In 2008, following an appearance on a program revisiting the stars of The Cruise, her fifth studio album, Jane, saw her return to the Top Ten for the first time in eight years and she embarked on a sold-out theater tour across the U.K. In 2014, she released the album Singer of Your Song, and the same year embarked on a tour in support of the album. Two years later the singer launched the Making Memories tour, and the popularity of the performance extended the show's run into 2017. That same year, McDonald released her seventh album. Hold the Covers Back featured original material, and a guest spot from Spandau Ballet's Tony Hadley. ~ Jon O'Brien https://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/hold-the-covers-back/1299033996

Hold the Covers Back

Mike Richmond - Dance For Andy

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:01
Size: 169,9 MB
Art: Front

( 8:44)  1. Conflictions
( 6:53)  2. Invitation
( 8:44)  3. Emily
(10:14)  4. Dance For Andy
( 8:28)  5. I Remember Clifford
( 8:58)  6. Gospel
( 5:18)  7. Witchi-Tai-To
( 7:08)  8. Blues For Spock
( 9:30)  9. You And The Night And The Music

“ This is an excellent example of CD’s advantage over LP. The playing time is almost 1 1/4 hours and the sound is superb DDD; the music is all of a very high quality…I’ve played this CD a good many times since receiving it, and its appeal has in no way diminished. Could be one for my Top Ten of 1991.” (Mike Shera, Jazz Journal International )

Personnel:  Mike Richmond - bass;  Larry Schneider - tenor & soprano sax;  Jim McNeely - piano;  Keith Copeland - drums

Dance For Andy

Elmo Hope - Informal Jazz

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:43
Size: 88,8 MB
Art: Front

(11:13)  1. Weeja
( 8:41)  2. Polka Dots and Moonbeams
( 9:05)  3. On It
( 9:43)  4. Avalon

The Prestige label turned out records like this at the rate they roast ducks in Chinatown, and there are plenty of happy souls who can't get enough of either. If this particular session hasn't assumed the legend of a jazz classic, it's because, on the whole, some little spark seems to be missing. If this element could be defined easily, and put into words quickly and efficiently, then record producers and musicians would know exactly how to create the perfect jam session record. The people involved in this record know much more about such a science then the average musician and record producer. These are musicians very far down the road from being average, all of this underscoring the difficulty of creating a spontaneous recording session at which moments of improvisational genius are expected to pop up. While the album's title is another example of how cleverly labels such as this can describe what they are selling, there are really many aspects of these proceedings that are hardly informal at all. Describing these in the order in the importance, the obvious place to start is the drum and bass team of Philly Joe Jones and Paul Chambers. The playing of these gentlemen here is worth the price of the record alone, even if the copy is secured from a tightwad used-record store owner somewhere in the Ozarks who only opens the doors of his establishment for gold credit card owners. This is hardly the kind of rhythm section playing heard at a jam session, except possibly in heaven. Elmo Hope mans the piano bench at the helm of this dream team, and while the liner notes call him the "nominal leader" for the blowing date, he earns actual leader status by accomplishing two things. First, his solo spots are the best part of the record, especially the part of "Weeja" where even Jones drops back, eventually adding some strange filigree. At this point the rhythm section seems to be making a statement about having gone through the rigmarole of backing all the previous horn solos in an exercise that is supposed to produce great moments of jazz, but maybe didn't. They play as if in relief, as if happy it is up to them for a change. What happens is truly memorable, but it sounds more like professional musicians who have worked together many times hitting a genius moment, not a jam session.

Second, Hope provides original material that helps give the record its personality. It is typical to pass off the tunes at sessions such as this as just simple contrivances to launch soloists, but again it is a stretch to imagine an "informal" recording session where even material as complicated as this is played. Both of the standards have arrangements that would leave jazz students, and some of their teachers, tying their shoes on the bridge. Hope's "Weeja" has a simple fanfare of a theme, sure, but it is arranged within a nifty series of short blowing spots. This is where the merry listener gets the treat of hearing Donald Byrd, Hank Mobley, and John Coltrane introduce themselves instrumentally, the latter tenor giant making a great ride of the bridge. Everything is tight, together, and without a hitch. Squeaking mouthpieces from Mobley and Coltrane are the only casual aspects. 

These tenor titans are promoted as being involved in reviving the instrumental battle popularized by Gene Ammons and others here, but a real duel would require some kind of interaction between the participants. Mobley and Coltrane really don't seem to be paying much attention to each other, pursuing their own agendas. Mobley has the whisk broom and the fluff brush, enjoying an effortlessly fluid tone with a sound a bit like Warne Marsh at times. Coltrane continually blasts ringing melodic variations on various hard bop licks, each of them worthy of being chiseled into marble. The trumpeter's acrobatics are familiar, pole-vaulting through the changes, running the 440 through the bridge, then a standing broad jump in the trades with Jones. Can anyone else play like Byrd? It hasn't happened yet. The overall best performance is probably "Polka Dots and Moonbeams" since it is the one slow tune of the bunch, it gets the most special treatment. Shorn of nothing but moments of sheer brilliance, a shorter and better version of this album would feature only the piano solos and the parts where everyone trades fours with the drummer. ~ Eugene Chadbourne https://www.allmusic.com/album/informal-jazz-mw0000907736

Personnel:  Elmo Hope — piano;  Donald Byrd — trumpet;  John Coltrane, Hank Mobley — tenor saxophone;  Paul Chambers — bass;  Philly Joe Jones — drums

Informal Jazz

Romero Lubambo - Só - Brazilian Essence

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:08
Size: 131,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:18)  1. Aquarela Do Brasil
(3:36)  2. Brigas Nunca Mais
(4:20)  3. Paquito in Bremen
(4:05)  4. Pedra Bonita
(4:01)  5. Voce E Eli
(4:56)  6. Song For Kaya
(3:03)  7. Luisa
(3:43)  8. Coisa Mais Linda
(5:56)  9. Insensatez
(5:39) 10. Samambaia
(5:13) 11. By The Stream
(4:01) 12. A Felicidade
(4:12) 13. Laura

Since his arrival in the States from Rio nearly three decades ago, Romero Lubambo has served as a sideman and session hand to the likes of Dianne Reeves, Luciana Souza and numerous others; as a leader in the studio; and as a member of Trio da Paz. But he’s always shined brightest as an unaccompanied solo guitarist. Só: Brazilian Essence is that and nothing more-Lubambo alone, taking it back home-and it sure is delicious. Lubambo’s virtuosity is absolute; his command of his instrument is total, his execution flawless. But what makes him so engaging is that, although he could simply exploit his skillfulness and be done with it, he’s most decidedly not about that. Unearthing the essence of a melody-understanding the song’s intent and using that as his jump-off point-is his first order of business, and only after he’s comfortable in a song’s skin does he begin to develop and embellish. On the opener, Ary Barroso’s “Aquarela do Brasil,” Lubambo dives in boldly, establishing his approach with elaborate filigrees that tease at flamenco with their dramatic, classically informed flourishes. Meshing his own leads throughout with perfect rhythmic counterpoint, he tosses theatrical flares into the air, calms it all down deftly, and then shoots more fireworks. It’s a tool he employs often on Só, but it’s one that never gets old. Of Lubambo’s three self-penned tunes (and one dually composed piece), the peaceful, soothing “Song for Kaya” is a highlight, and his nimble touch on the Raksin-Mercer standard “Laura” exposes the song’s intrinsic tenderness. Jobim is represented with a pair, including the oft-interpreted and always welcomed “Insensatez,” given a straightforward, unadorned treatment that downplays its bossa rhythm in order to more openly reveal the heartbreak of the melody.~ Jeff Tamarkin https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/romero-lubambo-so-brazilian-essence/

Personnel:  Guitar – Romero Lubambo;  Vocals – Romero Lubambo (tracks: 8)           

Só - Brazilian Essence