Thursday, April 12, 2018

Red Garland Quintet, John Coltrane - Dig It!

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:35
Size: 76.9 MB
Styles: Bop, Piano jazz
Year: 1962/2012
Art: Front

[ 9:22] 1. Billie's Bounce
[ 3:25] 2. Crazy Rhythm
[ 4:40] 3. CTA
[16:05] 4. Lazy Mae


Bass – George Joyner; Drums – Arthur Taylor; Piano – Red Garland; Tenor Saxophone – John Coltrane; Trumpet – Donald Byrd. "CTA" recorded March 22, 1957; "Billie's Bounce," "Lazy Mae" recorded December 13, 1957; "Crazy Rhythm" recorded February 2, 1958.

Taken from "scraps" or "leftovers" of three different sessions, Dig It! presents distinct sides of Red Garland's straight-ahead jazz persona that manifests in trio, quartet, and quintet formats. One track was issued as led by drummer Art Taylor (Taylor's Wailers), ostensibly John Coltrane in Garland's quartet apart from their association with Miles Davis, and two separate recordings have trumpeter Donald Byrd added to comprise a five-piece combo. Memphis bassist George Joyner (aka Jamil Nasser) is on three cuts, with Taylor present throughout. Though the total time is shy of 34 minutes, this recording represents all of these musicians in transition from their sideman associations to the leadership roles they were in the process of wresting hold of. What have always been Garland's strong suits -- high-class discourse and fleet and fluid bebop -- are heartily dished out with no trace of arrogance. On the swing-era standard "Crazy Rhythm," the Garland trio with bassist Paul Chambers and Taylor plays a concise, hard-charging version with no wasted motion and the two-fisted chord progressions of the pianist. Coltrane's feature during Jimmy Heath's hard bop icon "C.T.A." is a bit tentative, as he plays only eighth notes in a reserved fashion. But the quintet take of "Billie's Bounce" has Trane rippin' it up in a fervor that doubles the note volume, animated and fast, while also expressing a soulful side. Byrd is fairly inconsequential, only soloing on this and the 16-minute vintage blues "Lazy Mae." It's Garland who takes liberties on this slow, languorous, sleepy-time jam, where he evokes the classic sounds of Teddy Wilson, Earl "Fatha" Hines, and especially the elegant Erroll Garner for a full eight minutes, also quoting the pop tune "Send for Me" and the rambling staircase triplet midsection of "After Hours" before Coltrane and Byrd settle into their own bluesy solos. Because of the lack of extra material or alternate takes, one might buy this just for the good music, but also the Rudy Van Gelder remastering factor that allows you to hear these genius musicians cleaner and brighter. ~Michael G. Nastos

Dig It! mc
Dig It! zippy

Bob Baldwin - Betcha By Golly Wow: The Songs Of Thom Bell

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:52
Size: 118.8 MB
Styles: Soul, Crossover jazz
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[5:18] 1. Didn't I (Blow Your Mind This Time) (Feat. Russ Freeman)
[5:43] 2. The Rubberband Man (Feat. Paul Brown & Ragan Whiteside)
[5:06] 3. La La Means I Love You (Feat. Vivian Green)
[5:02] 4. Gonna Be Sweeter
[5:10] 5. Break Up To Make Up (Feat. Will Downing)
[4:49] 6. You're As Right As Rain (Feat. Paul Taylor)
[4:44] 7. I'll Be Around (Feat. Marion Meadows)
[3:02] 8. Bell & Creed
[6:42] 9. Betcha By Golly Wow (Feat. Toni Redd)
[6:13] 10. People Make The World Go Round (Feat. Marion Meadows)

Grammy nominee and a bona fide hero of New Urban Jazz, keyboardist and arranger Bob Baldwin makes his debut on Peak/eOne with an all-killer, no-filler collection of classic tunes penned by Philadelphia soul immortal Thom Bell. This set hits the sweet spot from the first track and doesn t miss for a single minute of the entire program.

An all-star cast puts the project over the top, a real whos who of contemporary jazz and smooth R&B.It includes: WILL DOWNING, VIVIAN GREEN, GERALD ALBRIGHT, MARION MEADOWS, PAUL TAYLOR, RUSS FREEMAN (of THE RIPPINGTONS), PAUL BROWN. To top it all off, the legend himself, Thom Bell, has written a brand new song especially for this tribute, Gonna Be Much Sweeter. And Bob Baldwin proves one more time that it doesn t get any sweeter than his brand of soul and jazz.

Betcha By Golly Wow: The Songs Of Thom Bell mc
Betcha By Golly Wow: The Songs Of Thom Bell zippy

Various - Dinner In Andalucia

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:47
Size: 97.9 MB
Styles: World music, Easy Listening
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[3:50] 1. Bethree - Luisa
[3:36] 2. Robert Wolf - Madonna Negra
[5:20] 3. Quadro Nuevo - Our Spanish Love Song
[6:49] 4. Helmut Kagerer - Pintoso Querido Luis
[4:15] 5. Florian Poser - Spain
[3:19] 6. Quadrumana - Trenzinho Do Capira
[4:53] 7. Quadro Nuevo - El Pano Moruno
[4:04] 8. Quadro Nuevo - Flor De La Noche
[6:37] 9. Quadrumana - Farruca

Dinner In Andalucia mc
Dinner In Andalucia zippy

Sherry Williams - You Must Believe In Spring

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:33
Size: 115.8 MB
Styles: Vocal, Easy Listening
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[3:52] 1. The Last Day
[4:22] 2. On A Clear Day
[5:08] 3. You Must Believe In Spring
[4:00] 4. My Light Will Always Be There
[4:13] 5. In My Highest Place
[3:27] 6. Everything
[3:05] 7. I Believe In Love
[6:02] 8. On My Way To You
[2:31] 9. Blue Skies
[4:23] 10. Everything Must Change
[4:44] 11. Happiness
[4:41] 12. New World Coming

Sherry Williams' release, "You Must Believe In Spring", is a collection of popular songs that have thought provoking, profound lyrics which Williams uses to conjure up images that are illuminating and uplifting. The Bergman tune "On My Way to You" is a hauntingly beautiful self portrait. The timeless "You Must Believe In Spring" tells us that all things are possible. Brenda Russell's amazing "The Last Day" asks us to remember what it's like to live "in the moment like when we were young"... and to examine our inner beliefs. Sherry also turns the standard "Blue Skies" into a happy jazzy samba and briskly swings "On A Clear Day".

When you listen to Sherry on "You Must believe in Spring" you realize immediately that Sherry Williams is a consummate singer - the real thing. "The sound of her voice reminds one of a muted coronet" said colleague Mary Stallings. She is also more engaged in the meaning of a song than many artists will allow themselves to be. This is who she really is - open and accessible. This is a powerful and moving CD. When you listen to "You Must Believe In Spring", you will definitely feel a breath of fresh air.

You Must Believe In Spring mc
You Must Believe In Spring zippy

John Basile - Amplitudes

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:34
Size: 115.8 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[4:06] 1. Ralph's Piano Waltz
[4:17] 2. You're As Right As Rain
[3:47] 3. I've Told Every Little Star
[4:18] 4. My Funny Valentine
[3:49] 5. Moon River
[4:48] 6. Stolen Moments
[5:09] 7. It's Nice To Be With You
[4:22] 8. Celeste
[3:54] 9. Fotographia
[5:28] 10. Homesick
[4:03] 11. First Row
[2:29] 12. Some Other Time

Is it possible to overstate John Basile’s flair for the understated? Odds are fans of melodically alluring jazz guitar will be tempted to do just that after giving Amplitudes a spin. This collection of mostly pop and jazz standards is quiet testimony to Basile’s talent, taste and his autonomy, a solo recording that becomes more enjoyable with each listen. Granted, some of the tune choices aren’t exactly surprising-“Moon River,” “My Funny Valentine” and “Stolen Moments” make the cut-but no matter. Basile’s renditions of even the most oft-performed favorites gathered here are unfailingly inventive, elegant and, in a few instances, sublime. Because he plays three guitars on the album that have distinctive sounds-steel- and nylon-string models-and employs multiple guitar tracks that often contrast picked melodies or improvisations with fingerstyle accompaniment, the arrangements are delightfully textured and woven.

Basile credits guitarist John Abercrombie for suggesting some distortion on a harmonically recast version of “My Funny Valentine,” and thanks guitarist Jim Hall and composer Jane Hall for providing the inspiration (and chordal propulsion) for another album highlight, “It’s Nice to Be With You.” The latter is followed by Ralph Towner’s haunting ballad “Celeste,” a melody that softly glows and shimmers, thanks to the artful finesse Basile displays on nylon-string guitar.

How this CD came to be is a curious story that involves Basile’s fascination with iPhone technology and his affection for pianist Bill Evans’ landmark recording Conversations With Myself. Suffice it to say that admirers of Evans won’t have any trouble hearing the connection. ~Mike Joyce

Amplitudes mc
Amplitudes zippy

Hans & Candy Dulfer - Dulfer Dulfer

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:38
Size: 131,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:01)  1. Big Breakdown
(3:55)  2. Bumrush
(3:42)  3. Hands In The Air
(3:43)  4. Move Your Money
(4:22)  5. Modular
(1:35)  6. Modular (Groove Reprise)
(5:03)  7. Ooh Let's Go
(4:29)  8. Indian Vibes
(4:55)  9. Sambastic
(4:15) 10. Got Soul
(4:20) 11. Triphoppin' With Hans
(4:21) 12. Triphoppin' With Candy
(3:25) 13. Cool Criminal
(4:25) 14. Tribute

Like the father, and especially the daughter, can be here in the face of the fact that alto saxophonist Candy is the much better known of these two Dulfers, excellent to say. Already at the age of twelve, the daughter of Hans Dulfer, a tenor saxophonist who was well respected in Europe, above all in the native Dutch funk jazz crossover, also began to exploit the musical blast and had her first own band, Funky Stuff, at the age of 15. Internationally made famous by the session work with Prince, she reached the end of the eighties in a duet with Eurythmic Dave Stewart with the instrumental piece "Lily Was Here" from the same name in the charts and her solo debut, Saxuality (1990), worldwide at least half a million Sell ??it. On Dulfer Dulfer , the Dulfers now give each other their experiences and influences, and there is not much to guess: Tower of Power, David Sanborn, Grover Washington Jr. and Barbara Thompson have left their mark, the proximity to Maceo Parker is great , Bas Veeren, producer, programmer, arranger, DJ and composer in one person, has added the traditional funk box to House, some hip-hop and latin and R & B, adding a few requests to "wave your hands in the air", but otherwise made a little interesting, commercially absolutely waterproof album. Whether the playful possibilities of father and daughter over these always same, well-known dynamics and stylisms possibly go out remains, unfortunately, unclear. ~ Rolf Hunter https://www.amazon.de/Dulfer-Hans-Candy/dp/B000069DQR

Dulfer Dulfer

Joss Stone - Mind Body & Soul

Styles: Vocal, Soul
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:29
Size: 192,1 MB
Art: Front

( 4:43)  1. Right To Be Wrong
( 4:03)  2. Jet Lag
( 4:01)  3. You Had Me
( 4:05)  4. Spoiled
( 3:33)  5. Don't Cha Wanna Ride
( 4:19)  6. Less Is More
( 4:32)  7. Security
( 4:12)  8. Young At Heart
( 3:37)  9. Snakes & Ladders
( 3:49) 10. Understand
( 4:03) 11. Don't Know How
( 4:00) 12. Torn & Tattered
( 5:14) 13. Killing Time
(15:29) 14. Sleep Like A Child
( 2:44) 15. Untitled Track

On the cover of her debut, The Soul Sessions, Joss Stone's face is obscured by a vintage microphone, a deliberate move that emphasized the retro-soul vibe of the LP while hiding the youthful face that would have given away that Stone was a mere 16 years old at the time of the album's release. The point was to put the music before the image and it worked, selling the album to an older audience that might have stayed away, thinking that the teenager sang teen pop. If the debut was designed to give Stone credibility, her second album, Mind, Body & Soul, delivered almost exactly a year after its predecessor, is designed to make her a superstar, broadening her appeal without losing sight of the smooth, funky, stylish soul at the core of her sound. There's no radical revision here she still works with many of the same musicians she did on The Soul Sessions, including Betty Wright and Little Beaver but there are some subtle shifts in tone scattered throughout the record. Certain songs are a little brighter and a little more radio-ready than before, there's a more pronounced hip-hop vibe to some beats, and she sounds a little more like a diva this time around  not enough to alienate older fans, but enough to win some new ones. The album has a seductive, sultry feel; there's some genuine grit to the rhythms, yet it's all wrapped up in a production that's smooth as silk. By and large, the songs are good, too, sturdily written and hooky, growing in stature with each play. While Stone has developed a tendency to over-sing ever so slightly she doesn't grandstand like the post-Mariah divas, but she'll fit more notes than necessary into the simplest phrases she nevertheless possesses a rich, resonant voice that's a joy to hear. She may not yet have the set of skills, or the experience, to give a nuanced, textured performance one that feels truly lived-in, not just sung but she's a compelling singer and Mind, Body & Soul lives up to her promise. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine https://www.allmusic.com/album/mind-body-soul-mw0000150070               

Mind Body & Soul

John Abercrombie & Andy Laverne Quartet - Now It Can Be Played

Styles: Guitar And Piano Jazz
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:47
Size: 153,3 MB
Art: Front

(7:46)  1. Now It Can Be Played
(8:29)  2. I Wish I Knew
(8:33)  3. Shadow and Fog
(7:32)  4. John's Waltz
(9:09)  5. Cat Nap
(8:08)  6. Yesterdays
(7:57)  7. Labour Day
(9:08)  8. Waltz King

John Abercrombie and Andy LaVerne had worked together on a number of occasions with each other, and with bassist Steve LaSpina and drummer Jeff Hirschfield, though Now It Can Be Played marked the first occasion for all four musicians to work together on a recording session. The standard "I Wish I Knew" is a sparkling example of their listening to one another, while the influence of the late Bill Evans is obvious in LaVerne's solo. Their setting of "Yesterdays" is a bit unconventional, taking an angular post-pop approach that opens up new possibilities within this decades-old standard. LaVerne contributed several originals, including the intricate "Shadows and Fog" and the exotic "Waltz King." Abercrombie penned the mid-tempo cooker "Labour Day" and "John's Waltz," the latter previously recorded by the composer with LaVerne for their duo CD Natural Living. This is a fine date that is filled with many interesting twists. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/now-it-can-be-played-mw0000916762

Personnel: John Abercrombie (guitar); Andy LaVerne (piano); Jeff Hirshfield (drums).

Now It Can Be Played

Fausto Papetti - Sax Revelations

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1988
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:33
Size: 141,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:34)  1. Revelations
(4:14)  2. The Coldest Days Of My Life
(4:01)  3. Emotion
(5:40)  4. Us And Them
(3:34)  5. Sorry Seems To Be The Hardest Word
(3:26)  6. Anche Un Uomo
(3:08)  7. Alexandra
(3:44)  8. Europe
(3:52)  9. Ormai
(3:42) 10. Abrazame
(3:14) 11. L'ete  Indien
(3:43) 12. Ancora Ancora Ancora
(3:28) 13. Love In C Minor
(3:07) 14. Tempi D'Amore
(3:59) 15. Onyx
(2:57) 16. He

Fausto Papetti (28 January 1923 – 15 June 1999) was an Italian alto saxophone player. His recordings, sometimes under the pseudonym "Fausto Danieli", are also characterized by album art with sexy women posing half naked. His works have been widely known all over the world for the last six decades. He has played the majority of the most famous pop & jazz songs, in a career spanning 45 years.He was born at Viggiù in Lombardy.His performance of the song "Love's Theme" (originally by Barry White's Love Unlimited Orchestra) was featured on the breakbeat compilation "Ultimate Breaks and Beats".Papetti reached the height of his popularity in the 1960s and 1970s, and all of his new albums were hits (most of which were also released in the Latin American market). During the 1970s, Papetti also released two collections a year, the best-selling being the 20th one from 1975.These records are also characterized for their sexy covers, often featuring topless nudity. His influence on saxophone music was substantial and in the 1970s many imitators appeared, like Johnny Sax and Piergiorgio Farina. He died in San Remo. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fausto_Papetti

Sax Revelations

The Brubeck Brothers Quartet - Intuition

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:53
Size: 171,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:42)  1. West Of One
(8:48)  2. Sahara Moon
(9:08)  3. Parade Du Funk
(8:36)  4. Bullwinkle's Revenge
(9:18)  5. Still As Winter
(9:03)  6. Open Door
(6:23)  7. Jump Up, Get Down
(6:58)  8. Easy For You To Pray
(3:54)  9. Change Up

The prospect of reviewing an all-original release can strike apprehension if not actual fear in a critic's heart. With the growing ease of self-production, it's increasingly likely that such recordings will be monuments to tuneless self-indulgence.This is one reason why Intuition is such a treat: the compositions are not only fresh, melodic and memorable, but they're rendered with sublime expertise and considerable joy. From guitarist Mike DeMicco's swinging "West of One" through the tipsy second-line groove of "Parade du Funk" and the jubilant "Jump Up, Get Down" and "Change Up," jazz doesn't get any jollier than this.The music is laced with the intriguingly lopsided meters one would expect from Dave Brubeck's children. Moreover, Chris, who has a blessedly impeccable tone on fretless bass, shows considerable wit in his use of slide and vibrato on both guitar and trombone. Dan's cowbell provides its own sly humor, although his drum chops are as serious as they ever get.

Mike DeMicco supplies fine guitar work and two compositions that blend nicely with Brubeck's seven, while Pete Levin adds his churning B3 to three of them. Then there's the dazzling precocity of pianist Taylor Eigsti: just a young teenager when this was recorded, he's already consistently fluid and creative, and his ballad playing on "Still as Winter" is understated and gorgeous.To these ears, the standout track is the evocative and mysterious "Sahara Moon," where the dynamics shift and build as smoothly as desert sand. (Note: although the tune is a mix of jazz and funk, it also helps explain why Chris Brubeck is in such demand as a symphonic composer.) In sum, this recording lives up to the full possibilities of originality: crisply recorded, organically paced and beautifully played, it's a unique and sparkling delight. 
~ Dr Judith Schlesinger https://www.allaboutjazz.com/intuition-brubeck-brothers-quartet-koch-international-jazz-review-by-dr-judith-schlesinger.php

Personnel: Dan Brubeck: drums; Chris Brubeck: fretless bass, bass trombone; Mike DeMicco: guitar; Taylor Eigsti: piano; Pete Levin: organ.

Intuition