Thursday, May 31, 2018

Stanley Turrentine - Sugar

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:04
Size: 135.2 MB
Styles: Soul-Jazz, Post Bop, Modal
Year: 1971/2001
Art: Front

[10:03] 1. Sugar
[10:45] 2. Sunshine Alley
[14:10] 3. Impressions
[ 9:36] 4. Gibraltar
[14:28] 5. Sugar (Live)

Bass – Ron Carter; Congas – Richard "Pablo" Landrum; Drums – Billy Kaye; Electric Piano – Lonnie L. Smith, Jr.; Guitar – George Benson; Organ – Butch Cornell; Tenor Saxophone – Stanley Turrentine; Trumpet – Freddie Hubbard. Recorded at Van Gelder Studios November, 1970.

If ever there were a record that both fit perfectly and stood outside the CTI Records' stable sound, it is Sugar by Stanley Turrentine. Recorded in 1970, only three tracks appear on the original album (on the reissue there's a bonus live version of the title track, which nearly outshines the original and is 50 percent longer). Turrentine, a veteran of the soul-jazz scene since the '50s, was accompanied by a who's who of groove players, including guitarist George Benson, Lonnie Liston Smith on electric piano, Freddie Hubbard on trumpet, bassist Ron Carter, organist Butch Cornell, and drummer Billy Kaye, among others. (The live version adds Airto, flutist Hubert Laws, drummer Billy Cobham, and organist Johnny Hammond.) The title track is a deep soul blues workout with a swinging backbeat and the rhythm section fluidly streaming through fours and eights as Benson, Hubbard, and Turrentine begin slowly and crank up the heat, making the pace and stride of the cut simmer then pop -- especially in Hubbard's solo. This is truly midnight blue, and the party's at the point of getting really serious or about to break up. By the time Benson picks up his break, full of slick, shiny, warm arpeggios, the seams are bursting and couples are edging into corners. Butch Cornell's "Sunshine Alley" is a solid, funky groover, paced by organ and double fours by Kaye. Turrentine and Hubbard stride into the melody and keep the vamp in the pocket, riding out past the blues line into a tag that just revs the thing up even further. But the big surprise is in the final track, one of the most solidly swinging, from-the-gut emotional rides of John Coltrane's "Impressions" ever taken. Turrentine is deep inside his horn, ringing out in legato with everything he has -- and it is considerable. Ron Carter's bass playing flows through the modal interludes, creating a basis for some beautifully intervallic invention by Benson and Smith by building a series of harmonic bridges through the mode to solos. It's hard to believe this is Turrentine, yet is could be no one else. If jazz fans are interested in Turrentine beyond the Blue Note period -- and they should be -- this is a heck of a place to listen for satisfaction. ~Thom Jurek

Sugar 

Lee Gibson - The Nearness Of You

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:15
Size: 126.5 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1996
Art: Front

[3:36] 1. Time After Time
[4:07] 2. Never Let Me Go
[5:43] 3. They Can't Take That Away From Me
[4:46] 4. Good Morning Heartache
[4:21] 5. Here's That Rainy Day
[5:08] 6. Nice 'n' Easy
[3:09] 7. The Lady Is A Tramp
[5:40] 8. A Foggy Day
[4:01] 9. Please Don't Talk About Me When I've Gone
[5:36] 10. The Nearness Of You
[4:23] 11. Teach Me Tonight
[4:42] 12. I Only Have Eyes For You

This is an album for anyone who loves jazz singing but feels a little starved of late. Sure there are some great singers around making interesting noises, but they can make demands on the listener too. What’s on offer either verges on the esoteric, or there’s too strong an admixture of soul, or the album is largely made up of the singer’s own (often uncompromisingly subjective) compositions. The difference between a singer and a jazz singer is that the latter always swings. ‘Phrasing like a horn’ is a well worn cliché but it serves the purpose of defining the critical essence of jazz singing, a genre which is perhaps more complex to understand and requires more of its audience than ‘popular’ singing. And the ability to invest sometimes banal lyrics with meaning and worth is another weapon essential weapon in a jazz singer’s armouryThe difference between Lee Gibson and many another jazz singer is that she swings in so many different ways, sometimes subtle, sometimes sensuous, sometimes joyful but always musical. Throughout this CD she never sacrifices respect for her listeners or fellow musicians; each song is presented with love and clarity, pitched to perfection.

Lee’s uninhibited delivery and unstoppable swing never occlude her concern for the meaning of the lyrics. There’s an overall excitement about the album, from which you can’t help getting the impression that each musician can hardly wait to join her. This is musicians’ singer. Every tune on this CD will reward repeated listening, right through to the exhilarating, high octane I Only Have Eyes For You with its cross rhythms and breakneck tempo."
~Jonathan Abbott

The Nearness Of You mc
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Ronald Tomas Nonet - Travels

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:23
Size: 90.2 MB
Styles: World Fusion
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[3:11] 1. Chili Con Pasyon
[3:38] 2. Pandango Palawan
[3:11] 3. Very Early
[4:12] 4. Joselynang Baliwag
[3:54] 5. Dum Da Dee Dum
[4:09] 6. Duyog Sunrise
[4:32] 7. Ground Zero
[3:57] 8. Ramut
[5:01] 9. Natutulog Ka Na Ba Sinta
[3:36] 10. Sinulugang Taktak

A brave kaleidoscope of musical fare from all over the world textured with indigenous Philippine rhythms and melodies over jazz as foundational bedrock. This in essence is the core of what the music of Ronald Tomas Nonet and their full length album “Travels” is all about.

Progressive and at the same time traditional in approach complemented by strong performances is what the group unapologetically radiates in every track. The new “Travels” album is in the “Sounds Like” category of Miles Davis’ Nonet of Birth of the Cool featuring the arrangements of Gil Evans, Joe Lovano Nonet’s 52nd Street Themes, Kalayo, Bob Aves and traditional Philippine Pasyon, Harana, Kundiman, Kulintang and Kalinga music.
Unique in vision and unprecedented in musical treatment, this record is tightly arranged and produced by Ronald Tomas, engineered by Shinji Tanaka and Johnoy Danao and mastered by Darryll Swann (record producer, songwriter, educator and musician who has worked with prominent artists including Macy Gray, Black Eyed Peas, Mos Def among others and has also done substantial work for Atlantic Records, Sony Records, and Universal Records.)

This trailblazing effort has both energy and driving power coupled with class, sensitivity and style thus making the group and the album project one broad spectrum of musical soundscape all rolled in one neat package.

Travels mc
Travels zippy

Matt Savage - Piano Voyages No. 12

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:02
Size: 119.1 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[4:14] 1. Got To Get You Into My Life
[5:17] 2. Green
[3:56] 3. 5 Percent
[4:45] 4. Southie To Soho
[5:35] 5. To The Sky
[0:57] 6. Virtual Blues
[4:29] 7. The End
[4:55] 8. The Day Before
[5:39] 9. Maiden Voyage
[5:35] 10. Road Song
[6:33] 11. Lullaby For Boston

For those who have not had the pleasure, Matt Savage, born in 1992, is a most remarkably gifted pianist and composer. He was a precocious infant who walked early and learned to read by age 18 months. He was diagnosed with pervasive developmental disorder, a form of autism, at age three. Matt did not like any noises or music during his early childhood. At age six, Matt taught himself to read piano music. He studied classical piano for less than a year before discovering jazz, which became his main focus. He began studying at the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston, Massachusetts in the fall of 1999. He continued his classical studies as well. Among Matt's talents are hyperlexia and perfect pitch. Coupled with his extremely high intelligence, these abilities have allowed him to achieve other distinctions as well, such as winning a statewide geography bee. Despite his young age and his autism, and even without formal instruction in musical composition, Matt is an accomplished musician and composer. He has released several albums, both as a solo performer and as part of the Matt Savage Trio. By the age of 14, he had also performed with Chaka Khan and other popular singers. Matt's compositions tend toward the technical, but they are still very approachable and often humorous. ~Grady Harp

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Piano Voyages No. 12 zippy

Milt Jackson, J.J. Johnson, Ray Brown - Jackson, Johnson, Brown & Company

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:36
Size: 88.4 MB
Styles: Bop, Vibraphone jazz
Year: 1983/2006
Art: Front

[8:28] 1. Jaybone
[5:04] 2. Lament
[5:49] 3. Our Delight
[5:35] 4. Bags' Groove
[4:47] 5. Watch What Happens
[5:09] 6. My One And Only Love
[3:41] 7. The Jumpin' Blues

The interplay between vibraphonist Milt Jackson and trombonist J.J. Johnson is the main reason to acquire this set. With fine backup from pianist Tom Ranier, guitarist John Collins, bassist Ray Brown and drummer Roy McCurdy, Jackson and Johnson are in top form on a variety of bop standards, including Johnson's "Lament," "Our Delight," "Bags Groove" and "My One and Only Love." Enthusiastic, consistently swinging music from some of the best. ~Scott Yanow

Jackson, Johnson, Brown & Company

Howe Gelb - Future Standards

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:40
Size: 84.0 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[3:50] 1. Terribly So
[3:47] 2. Irresponsible Lovers
[3:32] 3. A Book You've Read Before
[2:56] 4. Relevant
[3:09] 5. Ownin' It
[2:47] 6. Clear
[2:28] 7. Impossible Thing
[3:34] 8. The Shiver Revisted
[2:05] 9. Mad Man At Large
[3:42] 10. May You Never Fall In Love
[2:38] 11. Sweet Confusion
[2:05] 12. Mad Man At Home

Howe Gelb - piano, voice; Thøger Lund - bass; Andrew Collberg - drums. With guests: Lonna Kelley - voice; Naim Amor - guitar. Recorded and mixed in Tucson, AZ at Wavelab Studio by Chris Schultz.

These are ‘Future Standards’ by The Howe Gelb Piano Trio, taking an outsider view of early gospel and rhythm and blues both part of the American musical socialization that he touched on with 2006’s ‘Sno Angel’. Now he’s on a jazz-tinged trip, bending the genre, taking it back to his shack.

On ‘Future Standards’, Gelb duets with the equally laconic Lonna Kelley as the pair come on like a seasoned duo managed by Broadway Danny Rose in Woody Allen’s film of the same name. Gelb’s piano sinks to a pedal-depressed ambience as his cavalier vocal boasts of new love and faded times, all In the best tradition of the American Songbook that he’s pretty damn cleverly adding a new volume to.

"This is an attempt at writing a batch of tunes that could last through the ages with the relative structure of what has become known as "standards". The likes of Cole Porter and Hoagy Carmichael done up by Frank Sinatra or Billie Holiday," suggests Howe. "Julie London had a lot to do with it."

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David Friesen, Joe Henderson, Chick Corea - Voices

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:19
Size: 122.1 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2001/2015
Art: Front

[ 8:13] 1. Amber Skies
[10:16] 2. Blue And Green
[ 5:54] 3. Underlying
[ 4:39] 4. Jenelle Number Four
[ 8:51] 5. In The Place Of Calling
[ 6:11] 6. Sitka In The Woods
[ 9:11] 7. Voices

Once in a great while, a musician emerges with such authority and such seemingly effortless originality that his place in the front ranks of his instrument is unquestioned. So it is with David Friesen. ~Nat Hentoff

David Friesen has recorded over 78 CD's as a leader/co-leader and appeared as a sideman or featured artist on more than 100 recordings. He has performed and/or recorded with many of the great names and legends of jazz including: Stan Getz, Dexter Gordon, Joe Henderson, Sam Rivers, Michael Brecker, Bud Shank, Dizzy Gillespie, Woody Shaw, Freddy Hubbard, Art Farmer, Clark Terry, Joe Venuti, Mal Waldron, Jaki Byard, Kenny Drew Sr., Chick Corea, Milt Jackson, Slim Gaillard, John Scofield, Philly Joe Jones, Elvin Jones, Paul Motian, Jack Dejohnette, Airto Moreira, and many others. He has performed in concert as a soloist (Friesen is one of two or three bassists in the world that is able to play a solo concert and keep an audience riveted) and with his own groups throughout the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Germany, Belgium, Switzerland, The Netherlands, France, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Austria, Hungary, Slovenia, Turkey, Poland, Japan, Czech Republic, Ukraine, New Zealand, Australia, China and South America.

Friesen's music, which is imbued with certain ingredients of jazz, is also characterized by folk-flavored things and classical and Jewish veins with substantial spontaneity, lyrical strength, warmth and creative discoveries in the musical wilderness. ~Dr. Herb Wong

Voices mc
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Hailey Tuck - Junk

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:10
Size: 98.8 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz vocals
Year: 2018
Art: Front

[3:28] 1. That Don't Make It Junk
[2:42] 2. Cry To Me
[4:32] 3. Cactus Tree
[4:17] 4. Some Other Time
[3:14] 5. Say You Don't Mind
[2:38] 6. Alcohol
[4:22] 7. Last In Line
[4:18] 8. My Chemical Life
[3:11] 9. I Don't Care Much
[3:13] 10. Trouble In Mind
[4:10] 11. Underwear
[2:58] 12. Junk

Hailey Tuck’s story sounds like a far-fetched film script. A teenager from Texas with a bob borrowed from Louise Brooks and a suitcase stuffed full of vintage dresses takes off for Paris with her college fund and a dream of becoming a jazz singer. An Italian countess becomes her benefactor, she wows the crowds in crazy cabaret clubs and finds herself at underground jazz venues before her music wins her fans around the world and a legendary producer invites her to L.A. to record her debut album. As unlikely as that sounds, those are just the bare bones of Hailey’s tale. Throw in a Baptist military boarding school, a brush with a member of Maroon 5 and a chiselled tap dancer doing a Josephine Baker striptease and you’re still only scratching the surface.

Already lauded for her live shows and tipped by Interview, Nylon, People magazine and Marie Claire, Hailey is on a mission to turn jazz on its head. Junk, her spectacular debut album, is infused with her powerhouse personality, her love of the dark side of life and her carefree approach to convention.

Junk

Michael Formanek - The Rub And Spare Change

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:52
Size: 132.5 MB
Styles: Bop
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[ 8:31] 1. Twenty Three Neo
[ 9:25] 2. The Rub And Spare Change
[ 5:59] 3. Inside The Box
[ 7:27] 4. Jack's Last Call
[17:11] 5. Tonal Suite
[ 9:16] 6. Too Big To Fail

Michael Formanek: double-bass; Tim Berne; alto saxophone; Craig Taborn: piano; Gerald Cleaver: drums.

With a discography that's growing with each passing year—expanding into territories new to both the label and music in general—it's difficult to understand the need for some to apply a reductionist stance to the music of ECM, whitewashing it with descriptions like "melancholy," or "Nordic cool." One listen to bassist Michael Formanek's ECM debut, The Rub And Spare Change, quickly dispenses with these—and many other—mythic generalizations that simply cannot describe a label that, in its fifth decade and with over a thousand releases, represents the broadest purview in the history of jazz, improvised music, and beyond.

Formanek's diminutive discography as a leader contrasts with busy work as a sideman, extending from the modern mainstream of pianist Fred Hersch to saxophonist Tim Berne's left-of-center nexus of complex form and unfettered freedom, Bloodcount. The Rub And Spare Change gravitates more towards Bloodcount's avant-edged extremes; those accusing ECM of avoiding dense, angular free play need look no further than the 17-minute "Tonal Suite." Here, Formanek combines an intro that actually swings (another ECM myth debunked), with a gradually expanding improvisational radius, where pianist Craig Taborn's assertive stance gradually morphs into a time-based yet still temporally fluid free-for-all, as the bassist and drummer Gerald Cleaver somehow retain an undercurrent of groove, even as Berne, who rounds out the quartet, avoids the obvious—layering, instead, lines that range from pulsating, counter-rhythmic support to rapid-fire soaring ascensions—curiously kept out of the front of the mix to engender an even more completely collaborative ambiance.

Egalitarian it may be, but with Formanek contributing all of The Rub And Spare Change's six compositions, it still possesses a leader with perspicacious focus. Amidst the organized chaos of "Too Big Too Fall," Taborn's dissonant note block chords—with Berne layering slow-built but powerful lines—quickly contrast with darker passages, where spare but oblique melodies, working from the same premise of repetition as their more extreme thematic cousins, gradually intensify, signalling a return to Taborn's quarter-note voicings with relentless inevitability.

There are moments of beauty as well, though the persistent, irregular-metered piano figure that drives the mid-eastern-tinged "Twenty Three Neo" creates an unsettling foundation for Formanek's arco and Berne's equally considered alto, which move, in turns, from orbiting gravitational opposites to lucid, coincident partners. Cleaver—who, with his work alongside bassist Miroslav Vitous, both separately and in trio with guitarist Terje Rypdal, has emerged as a new percussion affiliate to the label—moves effortlessly across Formanek's always demanding music, combining textures, both atmospheric and grounded, with complex rhythmic subdivisions and attention to the smallest detail. The ubiquitous Taborn continues to posit an encyclopaedic stance, ready to turn on a dime with absolute precision.

The Rub And Spare Change is Formanek's first album as a leader since Am I Bothering You? (Screwgun, 1998). With a group this vibrant and instinctive, performing music that combines rigor and reckless abandon, on a label ideal for Formanek's expansive artistic purview, here's hoping another decade doesn't have to pass before the bassist reconvenes this group for another go around. ~John Kelman

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Willie Williams - Spirit Willie

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:38
Size: 168.5 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1994
Art: Front

[8:48] 1. Spirit Willie
[4:26] 2. Out
[5:36] 3. Sarge In Charge
[8:50] 4. Benita
[4:51] 5. Figure 10
[4:57] 6. Afternoon In Africa
[9:34] 7. Andrae's Theme
[4:07] 8. Leapin' And Weepin'
[5:58] 9. After All This Time
[5:39] 10. Misty
[4:16] 11. Song For Me
[6:31] 12. Quittin' Time

Bass – Christian McBride; Drums – Victor Lewis; Piano – Geoff Keezer; Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Willie Williams. Recorded March 20 & 21, 1992 by Rudy Van Gelder at Van Gelder Studios, Englewood Cliffs, N.J.

Tenor saxophonist Willie Williams comes on strong, but no wonder, since the liner notes of this, his second recording in more than half a decade, proclaim 1992 the year he'll receive his due. He's got a good, straightforward sound. It doesn't break any barriers, but the music seems to come from something true within. He travels in good company, too. Gifted pianist Geoff Keezer backs him up beautifully. ~Jack Fuller

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Greg Abate - Bop City Live at Birdland

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:02
Size: 165,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:02)  1. Bop City
(5:05)  2. Minorism
(4:16)  3. What is this thing called love?
(7:58)  4. The Gypsy
(8:17)  5. Peaks Beaks
(5:11)  6. Basting The Bird
(6:17)  7. Andromeda
(6:38)  8. These Foolish Things
(7:46)  9. The Young 'uns
(5:23) 10. Opportunity
(6:36) 11. Gemini Mood
(3:27) 12. Sax O'Blues

Journeyman saxophonist Greg Abate makes a decent modern hard bop recording on this 1992 session. His playing is solid and sometimes frenetic, but also derivative. The compositions are straightforward and long enough for Abate and cast to make effective solos, yet short enough not to become tiring. He has a first-rate rhythm section with pianist James Williams, bassist Rufus Reid, and drummer Kenny Washington. ~ Ron Wynn https://www.allmusic.com/album/bop-city-live-at-birdland-mw0000602278   

Personnel: Greg Abate (soprano saxophone, alto saxophone, tenor saxophone); James Williams (piano); Rufus Reid (bass instrument); Kenny Washington (drums).

Bop City Live at Birdland

Amy Holland - The Journey To Miracle River

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:09
Size: 122,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:45)  1. Don't Lose Your Faith In Me
(3:16)  2. Backdown
(4:01)  3. Miracle River
(4:49)  4. Hate Love A Little
(4:40)  5. A Few Short Hours
(4:30)  6. Witness
(4:04)  7. You Move Me That Way
(3:40)  8. Everybody Wants To Be Your Friend
(3:59)  9. Surrender
(5:07) 10. Nothin' Left To Believe In
(4:21) 11. My Little Rebel
(4:52) 12. Honest Emotion

Amy Holland’s career began at 15 years old when she migrated to LA to sign with Brother records a label started by the Beach Boys. Though no album was to materialize, it was a ticket out of palisades NY straight into the music business of the 70’s in that mecca known as Hollywood California. Amy Boersma came to LA as a singer songwriter in 1970 and during the typical string of artist development deals that for some reason, don’t quite pan out, she met and captured the interest of more than a few distinguished record producers. Among these were Jack Daugherty (the Carpenters. Paul Williams) and Rick Jarrard (Jefferson Airplane, Nillson, Jose Feliciano). However it was a randomly brief but fortuitous rehearsal encounter with a relatively unknown composer, and for the moment, piano accompanist Michael McDonald, during these early years that would lead ultimately to Amy Hollands success at radio years later, winning her a best new artist nomination at the Grammy Awards of 1980. McDonald who, years later, remembering the allure of her vocal style, would join forces with keyboardist/composer/producer, Patrick Henderson to produce her first Capitol LP from which the top 20 hit “How do I Survive,” (composed by Paul Bliss), emerged on to the charts, taking Amy Holland around the world as an American 80’s ingénue. This period of Amy’s career is documented by TV appearances in Japan and the US that can still be found on You Tube. A second Capitol LP titled “On Your Every Word” and musical contributions to films such as “Scar Face” and “Teen Wolf” (Some of those tracks produced and written by the infamous Georgio Maroder) along with her contributions to the projects of other artist’s such as Kenny Loggins, Joni Mitchell, Tim Weisburg, Doobie Brother Patrick Simmons and McDonald’s solo projects, would mark her career path for the next few years. During this time her music business relationship with producer McDonald had developed into something much more and with their marriage and the subsequent birth of their two children, Amy found herself embracing the role of wife and mother. discovering along the way that she had to somewhat relax her grip on her lifelong dream of being a recording artist. After a much longer than intended hiatus due to a battle to survive breast cancer, Amy has found a renewed inspiration in the making and release of her most recent CD “The Journey To Miracle River”. 

Produced by Bernie Chiaravalle, this Album is very much the autobiography of a personal sojourn she was destined to return from at this point in her life, It’s her first solo CD release in over 20 years. With songs co-written by Amy with friends Jon Vesner, John Goodwin, Michael McDonald and Bernie Chiaravalle. The much anticipated album is slated for an early fall release and features contributions from Vince Gill, Michael McDonald, Shannon Forrest, Bernie Chiaravalle, Stuart Duncan, Tim Akers, and her son, Dylan McDonald to name a few. Most recently, Amy’s voice can be heard on Willie Nelson’s release of “Whatever Happened To Peace On Earth”. A poignant call to conscience featuring other artists such as Ben Harper, Jack Johnson, Michael McDonald, and Pat Simmons with all proceeds going to benefit the National Veterans Foundation. https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/amyholland

The Journey To Miracle River

Joe Lovano Nonet - On This Day at the Vanguard

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:38
Size: 163,2 MB
Art: Front

( 9:33)  1. At The Vanguard
( 8:12)  2. Focus
( 7:39)  3. After The Rain
(14:13)  4. Good Bait
( 5:26)  5. Laura
(15:26)  6. On This Day (Just Like Any Other)
( 9:05)  7. My Little Brown Book

"Ah, they don't make records like this anymore," you might find yourself sighing upon first hearing On This Day At The Vanguard. But look at the liner notes: the artist is Joe Lovano, and this fantastic album was recorded live at the Village Vanguard in September of 2002. This is the same nonet with which Lovano recorded the Grammy-winning 52nd Street Themes a few years back. While that record was a well-conceived and well-executed exploration of composer/arranger Tadd Dameron's legacy, there was something a bit restrained about it, as if the nonet were still finding its sound together. This live album is a decidedly looser, more exciting affair, delivering on the promise of the earlier record. Right from the start of the first track, a punchy Lovano original called "At The Vanguard," it's clear that this group has found its groove. At times recalling Gerry Mulligan's Concert Jazz Band (whose excellent 1962 Vanguard album was recently rereleased by Verve), the soloists' explorations are punctuated by encouraging brass blasts from the band, beautifully maintaining the energy level as the tune rolls along. Lovely arrangements of the chestnut "Laura" (by Willie "Face" Smith) and Coltrane's "After The Rain" (by altoist Steve Slagle) allow the nonet's members to demonstrate their ability to finesse a ballad. 

The latter is especially wonderful, with a mysterioso intro arising straight out of the "classic quartet" playbook before the group enters to put their own stamp on the tune. But the heart of the album is two 15-minute up-tempo tunes: an unbelievably exciting, rollicking version of Dameron's "Good Bait" which features a fabulous solo by baritonist Scott Robinson (which really gets the crowd going), among many other great ones; and the Lovano original "On This Day (Just Like Any Other)." This tune, dedicated to the late Billy Higgins, begins with a free episode for drums and two saxophones that recalls the classic Ornette Coleman group in which Higgins played, continuing with simple themes based on the syllables of the title and Higgins' name, explored freely to great effect by the group. A quartet version of "My Little Brown Book" closes the album with a late night feel, Lovano playing in his most reflective voice. The quality of the nonet's playing rises to a consistently high level throughout the disc, but special mention must be made of Lewis Nash's impeccable drumming, especially the funky little hi-hat punctuations that continually stoke the engines of the up-tempo tunes, and John Hicks' tasteful piano comping. After listening to this record, one can't help but feel grateful for Joe Lovano's presence in modern jazz. Thanks to him, they do make records like this anymore. ~ Joshua Weiner https://www.allaboutjazz.com/on-this-day-at-the-vanguard-joe-lovano-blue-note-records-review-by-joshua-weiner.php

Personnel: Joe Lovano- Tenor Saxophone,Steve Slagle: Alto Saxophone, George Garzone: Tenor Saxophone, Ralph Lalama: Tenor Saxophone, Scott Robinson: Baritone Saxophone, Barry Ries: Trumpet,Larry Farrell: Trombone, John Hicks: Piano, Dennis Irwin: Bass, Lewis Nash: Drums

On This Day at the Vanguard

Johnny Hodges - Storyville Masters Of Jazz

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:02
Size: 173,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:50)  1. Don't Get Around Much Anymore
(4:13)  2. Passion Flower
(2:56)  3. Perdido
(1:55)  4. All Of Me
(2:30)  5. C Jam Blues
(2:23)  6. I Got It Bad And That Ain't Good
(7:10)  7. In A Mellotone
(3:42)  8. Cambridge Blues
(4:37)  9. Brute's Roots
(2:51) 10. Bouncing With Ben
(5:16) 11. One For The Duke
(5:49) 12. Walkin' The Frog
(4:52) 13. Rabbit Pie
(4:17) 14. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
(3:36) 15. Good Queen Bess
(2:53) 16. The Jeep Is Jumpin'
(5:22) 17. Things Ain't What They Used To Be
(2:34) 18. Jeep's Blues
(4:05) 19. Dooji Wooji

Johnny Hodges is forever associated with Duke Ellington as one of his principle soloists, though he recorded extensively as a bandleader himself beginning in the '50s. This compilation draws from earlier Storyville releases, including a number of features for the alto saxophonist with Ellington, highlighted by "All of Me" and "Jeep's Blues." But the bulk of this CD contains all ten tracks of Hodges' earlier disc, Masters of Jazz, Vol. 9, which features the saxophonist leading two separate groups of all-stars in club settings. Six tracks come from a 1960 set at The Cellar in San Francisco, with Ben Webster providing a perfect foil for Hodges, all originals by the leader. Four selections come from a Norman Granz-sponsored European tour in 1961, where Hodges led a group of fellow Ellington veterans (Harry Carney, Ray Nance, Lawrence Brown, Aaron Bell and Sam Woodyard, with pianist Al Williams). Hodges' swinging take of "On the Sunny Side of the Street" is brilliant, with the other horn providing lush background and soft rifts for the soloist. In addition to Hodges, Brown also solos in both "Good Queen Bess" and a rousing "Things Ain't What They Used to Be." Highly recommended! ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/masters-of-jazz-mw0000547336      

Personnel: Johnny Hodges (alto saxophone); Herb Ellis, Fred Guy (guitar); Russell Procope (clarinet, alto saxophone); Harry Carney (bass clarinet, baritone saxophone); Oett "Sax" Mallard (alto saxophone); Jimmy Hamilton, John Coltrane, Paul Gonsalves, Ben Webster (tenor saxophone); Harold Baker, Al Killian, Ray Nance, Rex Stewart, Shelton Hemphill, Francis Williams , Wallace Jones, Cat Anderson (trumpet); Joseph Nanton, Lawrence D. Brown, Juan Tizol, Quentin Jackson, Tyree Glenn (trombone); Victor Feldman, Duke Ellington, Lou Levy, Billy Strayhorn (piano); Gus Johnson , Sam Woodyard, Sonny Greer (drums).

Storyville Masters Of Jazz

Arturo Sandoval - Ultimate Duets

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:46
Size: 126,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:19)  1. Don´t You Worry 'Bout A Thing
(5:56)  2. Corazón Partio
(6:28)  3. People
(4:48)  4. Granada
(3:31)  5. Arturo Sandoval
(5:20)  6. Solo Esta Soledad
(5:01)  7. La Bilirrubina
(4:41)  8. Andante, Andante
(5:14)  9. El Ruido
(4:59) 10. After All
(4:25) 11. Quimbara

Although a superstar in the jazz community, trumpeter Arturo Sandoval is a broadly celebrated performer whose titanic trumpet chops and charismatic stage presence are recognized around the globe. His life story, punctuated by his dramatic defection from Fidel Castro's Cuba, is legendary, and even resulted in the 2000 HBO film For Love or Country: The Arturo Sandoval Story, starring Andy Garcia. From his early days with the innovative Afro-Latin ensemble Irakere, to his own jazz, fusion, and classical recordings, Sandoval has cultivated a wide-ranging cultural footprint, and earned the respect of music fans from disparate stylistic corners. It's with that wide, stylistic, and cultural scope that he crafted his 2018 album, Ultimate Duets. Produced by Sandoval and multi-Grammy Award-winning drummer Gregg Field, the album finds the trumpeter showcased alongside a series of high-profile guest performers from across the music industry. Included are spots from Stevie Wonder, Alejandro Sanz, Al Jarreau, Josh Groban, and others. From his sparkling, brightly arranged cover of Wonder's "Don't You Worry 'Bout a Thing" featuring Prince Royce, to his dramatic, flamenco-tinged reading of "Granada" with Placido Domingo and Vicente Amigo, Sandoval lifts Ultimate Duets with a joyous, theatrical passion. It's also fun to hear him take on some more cheeky, pop-oriented material, as on his buoyant, Eurovision-ready rendition of ABBA's "Andante. Andante" with Anni-Frid Lyngstad. Admittedly, a few of these grand studio productions, like the Latin groove of "Arturo Sandoval" featuring Pharrell Williams and Ariana Grande, feel less cohesive. Surprisingly compelling is his album-ending match-up with the late Cuban vocal legend Celia Cruz on "Quimbara." As Cruz passed in 2003, the track is a digital reworking of an older recording. Nonetheless, it sounds absolutely fresh, and roils with an earthy glee, as if Sandoval and Cruz were smiling at each other in the studio. Similarly engaging is the lush, gorgeously rendered Spanish classical piece "Solo Esta Soledad," featuring Groban. Cinematically arranged, it finds Sandoval answering Groban's yearning vocals with his warm, burnished trumpet lines. While Ultimate Duets intermittently transcends its studio confines, Sandoval soars throughout, imbuing the album with all the heartfelt love and enthusiasm one feels from his live concerts. ~ Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/album/ultimate-duets%21-mw0003169269 

Ultimate Duets