Wednesday, April 25, 2018

¡Cubanismo! - Mardi Gras Mambo

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:06
Size: 128.4 MB
Styles: Latin jazz
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[4:45] 1. Marie Laveaux
[5:14] 2. Mother In Law
[3:23] 3. Paso En Tampa
[6:17] 4. Shallow Water Suite
[4:12] 5. Mardi Gras Mambo
[0:25] 6. Monteorlines
[5:17] 7. It Do Me Good
[6:14] 8. Alemañy's Boogaloo
[4:31] 9. Rampart Street Rhumba
[4:02] 10. Nothing Up My Sleeve
[5:00] 11. Gumbo Son
[6:40] 12. Cuborleans

This album is the product of Cubanismo's self-professed love of New Orleans, also the city in which the band held its first concert. Jesus Alemany arranges the works here for his band in conjunction with a number of New Orleans resident players and singers. The result is often good, though it can be seemingly plagued by competition between the two major rhythmic thoughts, with the Cubans occasionally overpowering the residents or vice versa. In general, the best works are the ones written specifically for this project, with some of the more standard numbers falling by the wayside. The rap number also fails to some degree, with perhaps too many styles represented in a single work. Overall though, almost anything coming from Alemany's musical genius is worth listening to, and this is worthwhile as such, though perhaps mildly inferior to the purely Cuban albums (Cubanismo, Reencarnacion). ~Adam Greenberg

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Duane Eubanks - Things Of That Particular Nature

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:35
Size: 122.7 MB
Styles: Trumpet jazz
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[7:06] 1. Purple, Blue, And Red
[4:07] 2. As Is
[3:39] 3. Rosey
[7:46] 4. Holding Hands
[4:57] 5. Beer And Water
[3:32] 6. Anywhere's Paradise
[3:33] 7. Dance With Aleta
[6:22] 8. Aborted Dreams
[7:41] 9. Slew Footed
[4:47] 10. P

Duane Eubanks - trumpet, flugelhorn; Abraham Burton - tenor saxophone; Marc Cary - piano, Fender Rhodes; Dezron Douglas - bass; Eric McPherson - drums; Steve Nelson - vibraphone.

Sometimes all one needs to move along is a little prompting. With a bit of discipline, motivation and, maybe, a little help from the Universe, opportunities will arise and lead the willing to his goal. Philadelphia trumpeter, Duane Eubanks is thankful for the motivation the Universe has provided him with and dedicates his new recording – Things of that Particular Nature – to his main influences and motivators: his father, his mentor, Mulgrew Miller, and his wife. These three individuals were the driving forces behind the creation of his new recording, Eubanks’s first in nearly a decade.

Eubanks was also fortunate to have strong role models while growing up. His father, William Eubanks, was stern and strong, a veteran and police officer, who moved through the ranks to detective, a rare feat for an African American man at that time. He passed his own moral compass and level headedness on to his four sons, three of whom became tremendous musicians with their father’s full support. The late, great pianist Mulgrew Miller provided another brotherly role model for Eubanks as he began his career as a professional musician. Miller’s personality was much like Eubanks’ father’s, allowing their professional relationship to become more akin to that of mentor and friend. It was Miller’s advice and support that helped nurture Eubanks in becoming the musician he is.

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Mulo Francel - Mocca Swing (2-Disc Set)

CD1: Mulo Francel Quartet Recordings: Mulo Francel / tenor saxophone, clarinet; David Gazarov / piano; Sven Faller / bass; Robert Kainar / drums. CD2: Orchestra Works: Mulo Francel & Münchner RundfunkorchesterEnrique Ungarte / conductor, accordion; Quadro Nuevo; Café del Mundo; Paulo Morello / guitar; Max Klaas / percussion; David Gazarov , Robert Kainar & Sven Faller. Recorded, mixed and mastered by Stefan Gienger at Mastermix Studio, Munich, Nov. 2016 & May 2017.

Many people who have never heard the name of Mulo Francel will nonetheless be aware of his playing, because the saxophonist is one of the founder members of Germany's most successful world music group Quadro Nuevo, which has been in existence since 1996. For Francel, this band provides the ideal means to channel any need he might have for travel, and also to give musical expression to his innate curiosity about other cultures. Quadro Nuevo brings him into contact with musicians, myths and melodies from all over the world, and these encounters happen “in the spirit of jazz”: freely, spontaneously and non-judgementally. That said, Francel’s musical roots are unquestionably in jazz. His legacy from a father who died too soon was a collection of jazz records, which became the door to a new world for the young Mulo.

Album: Mocca Swing (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:39
Size: 127.4 MB
Styles: Good time jazz
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[5:32] 1. Aphrodisia
[7:07] 2. Mocca Swing
[4:25] 3. Laqueur
[8:40] 4. Sunshine In A Honeypot
[5:00] 5. Pixinguinha
[7:22] 6. Atahualpa
[7:50] 7. Retrospective On A Broken Man
[9:40] 8. Polka Dots And Moonbeams

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Album: Mocca Swing (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:13
Size: 131.0 MB
Styles: Good time jazz
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[6:31] 1. Everything That Was
[6:39] 2. Mocca Swing (Orchestra Version)
[7:18] 3. Flying Carpet
[4:47] 4. Robert's Waltz
[5:35] 5. Die Abenteurer
[6:06] 6. Poet In Italia
[4:25] 7. Goethe Sulla Strada
[3:21] 8. Serenade For Young Lovers
[6:41] 9. Taquito Militar
[5:45] 10. Misty

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Sylvia Copeland - The August Child

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:14
Size: 80.7 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1965/2018
Art: Front

[2:06] 1. The Portuguese Washerwoman
[3:09] 2. Meditation
[3:10] 3. Dearly Beloved
[3:45] 4. Angelitos Negros
[2:29] 5. Wild Is Love
[3:21] 6. Warm Blue Stream
[2:47] 7. Those Were The Days
[2:57] 8. Mira
[2:23] 9. Formidable
[4:02] 10. Meantime
[3:12] 11. Soon It's Gonna Rain
[1:49] 12. On The Other Side Of The Tracks

One of the most unique jazz singers of the 60s – an artist we only know from this one album on Mainstream – which got top-shelf treatment by arranger Don Sebesky! Sylvia Copeland sings with lots changes throughout the set – sometimes flowing in a Morgana King mode, sometimes a bit crisp and biting, ala Eartha Kitt – and also even introducing some tunes with an exotic voice that almost sounds European – even though Sylvia was born in Cleveland! There's almost a current of drama to the whole production – which serves to unify the tunes into a complete package of listening – with titles that include "Mira", "Angelitos Negros", "Soon It's Gonna Rain", "Meantime", "On The Other Side Of The Tracks", and "Warm Blue Stream".

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Charlie Mariano, Sadao Watanabe - Charlie Mariano & Sadao Watanabe

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:05
Size: 94.1 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1967/2013
Art: Front

[3:17] 1. Come Home Baby
[4:24] 2. Black Orpheus
[3:31] 3. One Note Samba
[3:41] 4. Work Song
[5:38] 5. Oh Lord Please Don't Let Them Drop That Atomic Bomb On Me
[3:42] 6. The Shadow Of Your Smile
[5:22] 7. Goin' Home
[3:19] 8. On The Trail
[4:45] 9. My Romance
[3:21] 10. Secret Love

Alto Saxophone – Charlie Mariano; Alto Saxophone, Flute – Sadao Watanabe; Bass – Masanaga Harada; Drums – Masahiko Togashi; Piano – Masabumi Kikuchi. Recorded June 27, 1967 at Victor Studio, Tokyo, Japan.

In 1967, Sadao Watanabe and Charlie Mariano recorded a pair of albums in Japan, Charlie Mariano & Sadao Watanabe on Victor and Iberian Waltz on the Takt Jazz Series label. Each album has been reissued in Japan, the U.S., and several European countries.

Sadao: "I learned so much from Charlie. Bird was my idol and Charlie’s too, but most of my Bird influence came from Charlie Mariano." Born in Utsunomiya city in Tochigi prefecture in 1933, Sadao Watanabe grew up around music including his father who sang and played the biwa, a Japanese flute. In high school, Sadao Watanabe first started playing clarinet, crediting the 1941 musical Birth Of The Blues with inspiring this decision. After relocating to Tokyo at the age of 18, Sadao Watanabe began playing alto saxophone for the first time. During the next decade, he honed his skills in sessions with various groups including Toshiko Akiyoshi’s Cozy Quartet, which he assumed leadership of when she moved to the United States in 1956. In 1961, he released his first of more than sixty albums as a leader, Sadao Watanabe.

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Bill Hardman Quintet - Saying Something

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:20
Size: 113,5 MB
Art: Front

( 7:12)  1. Capers
( 5:57)  2. Angel Eyes
( 9:53)  3. Jo B
(10:46)  4. Buckeye Blues
( 6:12)  5. Assunta
( 5:21)  6. It Ain't Happened Yet
( 3:57)  7. With Malice Towards None (Bonus Track)

Trumpeter Bill Hardman's debut album as a leader was his only chance to lead a record date until 1978. Teamed up with altoist Sonny Red, pianist Ronnie Matthews, either Doug Watkins or Bob Cunningham on bass, and drummer Jimmy Cobb, Hardman performs originals and obscurities, with "Angel Eyes" being the only standard. 

The music overall is solid hard bop, very much of the period but still fairly fresh. This music was last available on a 1986 reissue Savoy LP. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/saying-something-mw0000895310 

By the time trumpeter Bill Hardman made his leader debut for Savoy with this album, his grasp of the contemporary bop idiom had established him as a prolific and reliable sideman. Born in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1933, he gigged with Tadd Dameron while a teenager, and recorded rhythm and blues with Tiny Bradshaw between 1952 and 1954. He played with Charles Mingus in 1956, along with alto sax Jackie McLean, and their friendship led to a McLean album introducing Bill, Jackie s Pal , recorded that summer. Shortly thereafter both joined Art Blakey s Jazz Messengers, where Bill began to gain recognition as a soloist during the following two years Saying Something CD music. In this 1961 debut album his only chance to lead a record date until 1978 he teamed up with altoist Sonny Red, pianist Ronnie Mathews, either Doug Watkins or Bob Cunningham on bass, and drummer Jimmy Cobb Saying Something album for sale. The music overall, mostly originals with Angel Eyes the only standard, is solid hard bop, very much of the period but full of the energy, fire and invention required Saying Something songs. Urgent and edgy, with a raw, tart, and slightly pinched tone, Hardman s playing was well-suited to the soulful style Saying Something buy CD music. He believed in the jazz ideal of Saying Something while there is still time, and remained active until his death in Paris in 1990. His message speaks for itself. Saying Something album for sale by Bill Hardman Quintet / Bill Hardman was released Oct 02, 2012 on the Fresh Sound label.

Personnel:  Bill Hardman (trumpet), Sonny Red (alto sax, except on #7), Ronnie Mathews (piano), Bob Cunningham (bass), Jimmy Cobb (drums).

Saying Something

Joss Stone - The Best Of Joss Stone 2003-2009

Styles: Vocal, Soul
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:27
Size: 140,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:39)  1. Fell In Love With A Boy
(4:20)  2. Super Duper Love
(4:00)  3. You Had Me
(4:41)  4. Right To Be Wrong
(3:33)  5. Don't Cha Wanna Ride
(4:03)  6. Spoiled
(2:51)  7. Tell Me 'Bout It
(4:36)  8. Baby Baby Baby
(4:24)  9. Tell Me What We're Gonna Do Now (feat. Common)
(4:17) 10. Bruised But Not Broken
(2:49) 11. L-O-V-E
(3:53) 12. Free Me
(4:17) 13. Stalemate (feat. Jamie Hartman)

Before she’s truly freed from the shackles of EMI, Joss Stone must endure one final indignity: that standard end-of-contract ploy, a greatest-hits album, covering her six years with the label. Every one of her 12 singles for the label is here, with the Jamie Hartman duet “Stalemate” originally released on Ben’s Brother’s 2009 album added as a concluding track. If this doesn’t dig deep, it nevertheless hits all the highlights her White Stripes cover “Fell in Love with a Boy,” her Top Ten U.K. hit “You Had Me,” “Don’t Cha Wanna Ride,” her only charting U.S. single “Tell Me 'Bout It,” the Common duet “Tell Me What We’re Gonna Do Now”drawing a picture of the decade when Stone was always on the cusp of stardom yet never quite truly there. As introductions go, it’s a solid one, capturing her potential and promise, alternating between singles frustrating and fun. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-best-of-joss-stone-2003-2009-mw0002095249

The Best Of Joss Stone 2003-2009

Azar Lawrence - People Moving

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1976
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:37
Size: 89,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:21)  1. Theme For A New Day
(6:46)  2. The Awakening
(6:45)  3. Kickin' Back
(5:50)  4. People Moving
(4:18)  5. Can't Hide Love
(4:54)  6. Canticle For The Universe
(4:39)  7. Gratitude

Azar Lawrence led a very musical childhood and began playing drums at the age of five and moved onto violin and piano under the direction of his mother Ima Lawrence. Ima, a gifted musician and teacher from whom Azar received his acute flair for all things music has shaped many successful musicians. Azar began playing with the USC JR Orchestra at the age of five. He played violin until the age of 8. He performed vocals accompanied by his mother during elementary school where she taught sixth grade and music. At age eleven he began hearing a different musical voice. He was an accomplished pianist, violinist and vocalist in his own right at the time. He thought it was time to learn viola. But something happened. Lonnie a long time friend of Mr. Lawrence, and of the family, who often brought his flute when he visited, came by for a swim, and brought his alto sax. Azar was not poolside but he had to see who was playing that cool sound. His father his biggest supporter and fan who had bought all of Azar’s instruments purchased him an alto sax, and Azar began taking instruction from Mr. Schumaker once a week. In high school Azar played with the Dorsey High Jazz Band, and played a jazz workshop with Herbert Baker, “one of the greatest pianist that ever lived and I feel blessed to have been in his presence.” Azar played everyday with Herbert Baker until a tragic car accident took his teacher and mentor’s life, Azar’s senior year in high school. “That event made me reach deeper and I knew I had to carry on what I had learned.”

Drummer, Reggie Golson, introduced Azar to “the music”, and that’s when he began to get into the creation. Nightly he went to Reggie’s house. Reggie had a room full of records, and he would play them all, over time. Coltrane, Miles, Monk, Shorter. “Reggie prepared me. “ After high school at the age of 19, Azar played with Candy Finch, Larry Gales, and Woody Shaw at a regular gig at a club on 54th St. in Los Angeles. Soon he would perform with Ike & Tina Turner, Watts 103rd St. band, and War. He then joined Elvin Jones for two years and after leaving Elvin, he joined McCoy Tyner’s group for five years and then back to Elvin for a year, and in the meantime recorded with Roberta Flack. “Miles Davis used to come and hear me when I played with McCoy Tyner in New York, as well as when I was with Elvin.” Miles approached Azar about joining his group, and he wasn’t ready to commit cause he wasn’t “feeling it.” Azar’s first performance with Miles was in DC and then they performed in New York at Carnegie Hall where Dark Magus was recorded. Azar Lawrence’s history has been impressive since the age of five, throughout his musical sojourn he’s played sax alongside names like Woody Shaw, Horace Tapscott, Ron Carter, McCoy Tyne, Elvin Jones, Henry Butler and Buddy Collette. Azar has been a force since he graduated from high school, releasing three albums of his own before the age of twenty-five, Bridge Into the New Age, People Moving People, and Summer Solstice. During the eighties he wrote and performed for Earth Wind & Fire, on one of their highly acclaimed releases Powerlight. He collaborated with Earth Wind & Fire’s leader Maurice White. Azar is known to bring jazz to popular music he can be heard on the late Frank Zappa’s music to Busta Rhymes.

There has been much speculation that Azar disappeared off the jazz scene, quite the contrary, although he wasn’t in the limelight, his credits are numerous one being the highly acclaimed, Grammy award winning album, Marvin Gaye’s, Hear My Dear. “After my biggest supporter passed, it was as if I passed with him.” Azar’s biggest fan and supporter was Azel Lawrence, his father. He would travel to gigs, he went to see Azar in Detroit when he was playing with McCoy and also to the Houston Astrodome. He needed to feel it like the first time when Lonnie played poolside at the house where he grew up. In the eighties and nineties, Azar began searching for a sound of his own, and began to write songs even more seriously than when preparing for his first three projects while recording for Fantasy records. He began working with Chuck Jackson who is known in part for his role as producer for all of Natalie Coles hit recordings. They co wrote twenty songs all of which were placed on projects such as Stanley Turentine’s, Coming Home. He formed a band, called Chameleon which recorded for Electra Records. Patrice Banks, Chocolate, of Grande Central Station was a member of that team. Currently, Azar is in residence at The World Stage, also known as the house of Billy Higgins who he recorded and performed many times with the great until his death. He is a member of The World Stage Pan Afrikan Peoples Arkestra, which was under the direction of the great Horace Tapscott until his death in the late nineties. Being successful at such a young age has can have draw backs. His musical career was meteoric to say the least. 

Azar had performed on six continents before the age of 21. “You could say my life was fast and furious I had forgotten what I was taught, by my great teachers, my mother being the first, and she’s still teaching me in her 90’s.” “Music is your voice, keep it pure and share your gift not for the fame or fortune, but for the creator, as it was given to you by him at no cost. If you should make a living from your gift then that’s just gravy.” “If hadn’t run out of it, (manna) I would have died.” Playing for his mind, body and soul, and for self.  https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/azarlawrence

People Moving

Randy Reinhart & Jesper Thilo Sextet - For Basie

Styles: Trumpet, Trombone And Clarinet Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:40
Size: 180,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:32)  1. Undecided
(9:10)  2. When I Grow Too Old To Dream
(5:40)  3. Blue And Sentimental
(5:23)  4. I'll See You In My Dreams
(8:43)  5. Moten Swing
(8:46)  6. Lady Be Good
(5:50)  7. Medley  Echoes Of Spring All God's Chillun Got Rhythm
(6:11)  8. One O'clock Jump
(6:56)  9. If I Had You
(7:27) 10. I Would Do Most Anything For You
(6:56) 11. Lester Leaps In

In 2004 trumpeter/trombonist Randy Reinhart joined the Danish saxophonist Jesper Thilo's sextet to celebrate the centenary of the birth of the legendary Count Basie's birth. Rather than copying Basie recordings not for note, the musicians recreate a musical way of thinking and feeling epitomized by the Basie band and its smaller spinoffs in the great pre-war period. This sextet plays in the great tradition but bring to it their own inventiveness. The result is simultaneously modern and nostalgic, idiomatic and timeless. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Basie-Randy-Reinhart/dp/B000EQ44UM

Personnel: Randy Reinhart - (trumpet, trombone), Jesper Thilo - (tenor sax, clarinet, vocals), Rossano Sportiello - (piano), Rudolf `Pluto' Kemper - (guitar), Nico Gastreich - (bass), Moritz Gastreich - (drums)               

For Basie