Friday, June 1, 2018

Friend 'N Fellow - Silver Live

Size: 132,0 MB
Time: 56:54
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. Train Of Tears (Live) (5:10)
02. Lemon Yellow Sun (Live) (4:22)
03. My Baby Just Cares For Me (Live) (3:55)
04. Hope (Live) (3:16)
05. Elf (Live) (3:40)
06. A Dog (Live) (4:30)
07. Light My Fire (Live) (2:37)
08. Ring Of Fire (Live) (3:48)
09. Face In The Book (Live) (4:02)
10. Turn The Light On (Live) (3:14)
11. Signpost (Live) (3:42)
12. With Or Without You (Live) (5:26)
13. Crazy (Live) (9:06)

There is an anniversary to celebrate in 2016. Friend ’n Fellow is looking back on 25 musical years together.

Since 1991, when it all began with a concert in Leipzig, a lot has happened:
Tours throughout Europe, Asia and the USA
10 CDs and over 100,000 recordings sold
Evenings with Ray Charles, Al Jarreau and Luther Allison
Music for Box-Events and Formel 1 teams…

But what is much more special are the intimate, unique and moving moments during one of their live concerts.

Depth, class and entertainment – and focussing on the essence of good songs.
And so their new album Silver Live offers a whole hour of pure Friend ’n Fellow – recorded up close in full intensity during their About April tour in 2015.
Wonderful guitar sound and an extraordinary voice, or as one critic wrote so fittingly: One voice, one guitar – and the rest is amazement.

Silver Live

Marcus Miller - Laid Black

Size: 125,6 MB
Time: 53:51
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Trip Trap (6:59)
02. Que Sera Sera (6:04)
03. 7-T's (5:56)
04. Sublimity ‘Bunny’s Dream’ (6:43)
05. Untamed (4:47)
06. No Limit (5:36)
07. Someone To Love (4:41)
08. Keep 'Em Runnin (5:19)
09. Preacher's Kid (7:43)

Miller Time, Marcus Miller’s three-hour exploration of the funky side of jazz, as the legendary bassist puts it, has become appointment radio for me. If I’m in my ride on a Sunday evening, I’m flipping over to Sirius radio station 67 to check out Miller Time.

Miller, who has worked with the likes of Miles Davis, Luther Vandross, Aretha Franklin, Eric Clapton and Meshell Ndegeocello, has view of jazz that is rangy and iconoclastic yet respectful to the art form’s traditions. He is after, all, the cousin of Wynton Kelly, who played the piano on “Freddy Freeloader,” the second song on Davis’ Kind of Blue. All of this explains why a Miller Time segment can include a hard bop classic such as Horace Silver’s “Song for My Father,” and then something straight funky from Incognito. Miller draws on his encyclopedic knowledge of jazz, funk, soul and hip-hop to educate listeners on how it all fits together. He’ll chuckle, ‘ha-ha’ when the tune ends if he’s really feeling it.

Miller chuckles at the end of “Trip Trap,” the live number that opens his upcoming album Laid Black. This cut finds Miller flipping the script on the hip-hop crowd by incorporating the percussive elements of Trap music - mainly its use of hi-hats, 808 kick drums into an improvised jazz setting. The cut features Miller showing why he remains one of the most creative improvisors on the bass and then ends with a freaky jam session between the keyboardist and horn player gives way to audience applause and Miller’s signature chuckle.

The second track on Laid Black, “Que Sera Sera,” is a tune Miller heard Doris Day sing both on the big screen and on her TV sit-com that ran from 1958 – the year before Miller was born – until 1973, when Sly and the Family Stone made the funkified cover version that the bassist reprises. Miller’s version finds the band wrapping a combination of slow driving blues funk, jazzy horns and sanctified backing vocals around Belgian singer Selah Sue’s wistful vocals.

Another remake finds Miller reimagining Earth, Wind & Fire’s “Runnin’,” an instrumental that served as a showcase for Verdine White’s bass work on that legendary band’s All ‘n All album. Miller transforms the track into a hip-hop cut where his percussive and percolating creativity on the bass serves as the focal point.

“Sublimity, ‘Bunny’s Dream,” finds Miller returning the theme of his 2015 project Afrodeezia, where he collaborated with musicians west and north Africa, Brazil and the Caribbean to honor the ancestors brought from the Motherland to these shores during the trans-Atlantic slave trade. “Sublimity” sports a gentle swing and finds Miller laying back and fitting in with west African styled percussion.

As is always the case with a Marcus Miller project, Laid Black reveals him as an artist as comfortable with a finger on the pulse of what is going on now as he is serving as caretaker of tradition. It’s another highlight in a career filled with highlights. Strongly Recommended. ~by Howard Dukes

Laid Black

Tiffany Austin - Unbroken

Size: 140,8 MB
Time: 60:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Blues Creole (For Amede) (4:12)
02. Greenwood (3:50)
03. Ain't No Grave (Can Hold My Body Down) (5:11)
04. You Must Believe In Spring (5:37)
05. The Blessing (4:01)
06. Con Alma (5:45)
07. King Of Pleasure (6:14)
08. Better Git It In Your Soul (4:38)
09. Someday We'll All Be Free (4:20)
10. Music's Gonna Meet Me There (5:08)
11. Resolution (7:35)
12. Keep Your Eyes On The Prize (4:08)

One of the greatest talents of the great talent, vocalist Betty Carter, was her ability to sing in different voice personalities. She could purr the purest ballad, scat the fastest bop run, and dig the deepest in the blue notes. Carter's legacy has been wanting for a new talent to bestow its mantle...and that talent is Tiffany Austin. Add to this talent the vision for selecting an integrating theme to the repertoire and Unbroken, the sophomore release after 2015's Nothing but Soul (Con Alma Music) emerges as a fully formed masterpiece. The integrating theme here is the celebration of the robust spirit of African-American Culture and with the spirit of Betty Carter flowing through this recital, Austin draws a line in the sand...a deep one.

At the center of "Unbroken" is the indelible connection between the blues and jazz. Austin notes that she has encountered multiple instances were modern jazz has tried to separate the two, remarking the folly therein, saying, "How can you divide the music that comes from the same diaspora, the same spirit." In that spirit, Austin carefully illustrates through a dozen originals and standards the indivisible spirit of blues-jazz and Black America, themselves, together, indivisible. Rather than a repertoire of twelve songs, Austin weaves an extended tone poem that reaches in all directions, touching all things.

Austin opens with her original composition, Unbroken, her homage to the great Louisiana singer/composer/accordionist Amede Ardoin (1898—1942), whose violent end mirrored so many of the period. Ardoin's complete catalog of recordings was compiled and released by Tomkins Records on Mama, I'll Be Long Gone: The Complete Recordings of Amede Ardoin 1929—1934 (2011). "Blue Creole (for Amede)" is a bouncing swing-jazz, propelled by the crack rhythm section of pianist Cyrus Chestnut, bassist Rodney Whitaker, and drummer Carl Allen, all once part of the Wynton Marsalis vernacular. Austin sings with all of the sensual gusto and abandon that Bessie Smith did in her homage to a pigfoot and a bottle of beer, but Austin's message is densely serious and grave. It is a unique juxtaposition of weighty subject matter versus ebullient music and singing.

But, just when the listener might have a grasp on direction of this recital, Austin introduces another original, "Greenwood." Again, against a brightly swinging back stop, Austin tells the sordid tale of mass murder in 1920s Tulsa Oklahoma's prosperous "Black Wall Street" neighborhood of "Greenwood" with a happy sweetness of the best Dinah Washington. Austin means to throw the listener off with these disparate messages of conflicting lyrics and delivery. She means to show that this Spirit will not be laid low, even when recalling low points. It is a triumph of the spirit and will.

The dramatic character of the disc is maintained with the traditional "Ain't No Grave (Can Hold My Body Down)." This spiritual gained attention recently appearing on Johnny Cash's final American Recordings release, Johnny Cash: American VI: Ain't No Grave (2010) and Tom Jones' excellent Praise and Blame (Island Records, 2010). These performances were that of the Prophet Elijah justifying his existence and mettle. Not so with Austin, who turns the spiritual on it ear, giving it a thorough contemporary make over at no expense to the necessary earthiness of the song. What Austin has done is refine the old song, gilding it with jazz splendor. She takes the dirt from her vocals on "Blue Creole" mixing it alchemically with the sophistication she brings to "Greenwood" to patent her "Grit and Grace."

Austin proves herself the vocalese/scat master throughout the disc. She has penned lyrics to Ornette Coleman's "The Blessing" and Charles Mingus' "Better Git It In Your Soul." These can immediately be considered major additions to the vocalese songbook, and Austin may take her place with Dorian Devins, Alyssa Allgood and Andrea Claburn as the best modern practitioner of the craft. Tiffany Austin has arrived. Period. ~C. Michael Bailey

Personnel: Tiffany Austin: vocals; Ashlin Parker: trumpet; Mitch Butler: trombone; Teodross Avery: tenor sax; Cyrus Chestnut: piano; Rodney Whitaker: bass; Carl Allen: drums.

Unbroken

Melinda Hughes - Weimar & Back

Size: 118,8 MB
Time: 50:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz Vocals, Cabaret
Art: Front

01. In Berlin (3:02)
02. Berlin Im Licht (2:32)
03. We've Been Here Before (4:55)
04. Monotonous Night (2:08)
05. Illusions (3:52)
06. Das Lila Lied (The Lavender Song) (3:10)
07. All The Best Men Are Gay (4:58)
08. I Loves My Man (4:00)
09. Where A Stolperstein Stands (3:28)
10. Youkali (Tango Habanera) (5:40)
11. Chuck All The Men Out Of The Reichstag (2:07)
12. Britannia Waives The Rules (4:16)
13. Please Don't Invite Me To Your Country Estate (3:28)
14. Der Mensch Muss Eine Heimat Haben (3:16)

Melinda’s show takes a then-and-now journey through Weimar Cabaret, bringing alive songs by famous Jewish composers; Kurt Weil, Mischa Spolianksy and Friedrich Hollaender. A wealth of diverse songs were written during the late 20's and into 1930's depression amidst a cultural, intellectual surge of creativity and Germany on the brink of war. Music is interspersed with excerpts from the 1938 “Entartete Musik” (forbidden music) pamphlet and Christopher Isherwood’s “Goodbye to Berlin” the inspiration for the film Cabaret, making this unique show not only hugely entertaining but also educational.
Weimar & Back has been performed in Paris, New York and at the The London Festival of Cabaret.

Weimar & Back

Phil Denny - Align

Size: 112,9 MB
Time: 48:19
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz: Smooth Jazz
Art: Front

01. Switch Up (4:27)
02. Feel Alright (3:49)
03. Got It Like That (4:35)
04. Tryst (4:19)
05. Brio Bounce (3:44)
06. Solux (4:04)
07. Ride With Me (3:51)
08. Kinda Wanna (4:39)
09. Align (4:35)
10. Honey Step (4:13)
11. Absence Of Filters (5:59)

Saxophonist Phil Denny has already released four albums in a short time: Crossover (2012), The Messenger (2013), Upswing (2015) and this year Align. Performances on many festivals will not rest him on his laurels. With his 2nd annual Armory Smooth Jazz Fête he is among the exclusive circle of promoters.

His fourth album Align was written by Phil in parts with the support of participating musicians. Phil performs on this album tenor, alto and soprano sax, EWI. Further joining musicians are Matt Godina (keys, guitar, programming), Nathaniel Kearney Jr., Mel Brown (bass), Eric Valentine (drums), David P. Stevens (guitar), Lew Laing (keys, bass, programming), Adam Hawley (various instruments), Big Mike Hart (guitar, acoustic guitar), programming), Andrew Freeman (rhythm guitar), Buddy Bangs (keys, programming), Joe Archie (keys, guitar, synth bass, programming, strings) and Stacey Lamont Sydnor (percussion).

First track of the album is Switch Up which already climbs the charts as a single release. The forceful rhythmically-charged song encapsulates Phil Denny as a prolific artist quickly appearing on your screen. Feel Alright featuring David P. Stevens is spreading good mood going with confidence through the roof.

The mid-tempo Got It Like That offers a heavy dose of saxy groove. Tryst aptly creates a romantic message for your special lover. Brio Bounce is bursting with zest for life and if I did not know better, the song could easily go through as disco stomp. The soprano sax is often associated with lovely melodies. Phil makes no difference to this instrument. On So Lux he offers the tenor saxophone to the soprano sax as second part.

Ride With Me plays with the double meaning of the idiom. Special feature of this piece is the use of strings as their own instrumental voice. Perhaps it serves the listener to the subsequent piece Align, which has a pronounced orchestral arrangement. The soprano sax is particularly dominant, as it is to some extent overdubbed with the same instrument.

On Honey Step and Absence of Filters Denny focuses on the strength of his expressive power and playing technique. If he leaves the elegiac away as with Kinda Wanna, also the play joke comes to light.

Still a new artist for some listeners, Phil Denny has built with his sparkling and expressive album Align the foundation of a rising star. ~Hans-Bernd Hulsmann

Align

Rebecca Angel - What We Had (Feat. Jason Miles)

Size: 76,8 MB
Time: 32:58
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz/Pop/Samba Vocals
Art: Front

01. Winter Moon (5:13)
02. What We Had (3:52)
03. Agora Sim (3:15)
04. Feel Alive (3:51)
05. Stand By Me (4:04)
06. Jet Samba (Samba Jazz Happiness) (Radio Mix) (4:08)
07. Stand By Me (Electro Mix) (Bonus Track) (4:03)
08. Jet Samba (Samba Jazz Happiness) (Ipanema Mix) (Bonus Track) (4:30)

Four quick “s” adjectives come to mind when you first hear Rebecca Angel, making for some nice descriptive alliteration: smooth, soulful, sensual and sultry. Listening to her soulfully produced and exquisitely arranged debut What We Had, we can top that off with sexy and unabashedly sentimental as well. The emerging NYC based singer makes every emotionally compelling track an invitation – to dream, to love, to reminisce wistfully about beautiful times gone by which infuse every waking thought of today. With every swaying breeze of her distinctive voice, whether she’s singing romantic lyrics or sharing her artful sense of vocalese, Rebecca tempts us to explore her cool and edgy contemporary update on the deeply exotic vibe of classic artists like Sade and Brazilian greats Bebel Gilberto and Astrud Gilberto.

She weaves this laid back magic over the old school soul, easy funk, ear tingling electronica and infectious grooves created by renowned jazz/R&B producer Jason Miles, who grounds every mix in the shimmering retro sounds of the Fender Rhodes, Vox Continental and Wurlitzer. He brought in some of New York’s finest for the various sessions. Rebecca’s dreamy and sensual twist on Hoagy Carmichael’s wistful (and not frequently covered) “Winter Moon” features acoustic bassist James Genus, percussionist Mino Cinelu and soprano saxophonist Hailey Niswanger. The equally nostalgic title track “What We Had,” a slowly swaying look back at enduring memories of the sensory joys of a past romance, was penned by Rebecca and her father, trumpeter Dennis Angel, with additional lyrics by guitarist Jonah Prendergast. In addition to Miles’ keyboards and percussion loops, it features Christian Ver Halen’s crisp guitar licks and the easy grooving rhythm section of Reggie Washington (bass) and Brian Dunne (drums).

On the other tracks, Miles leads an ensemble featuring Ver Halen, Dunne, bassist Adam Dorn, and percussionist Cyro Baptista. Special guests include Prendergast, renowned acoustic guitarist Ricardo Silveira and cellist Sebastian Stoger on a playful, spirited cover of the Brazilian gem “Agora Sim,” featuring Miles’ intoxicating electro-percussion. Also featured are Dennis Angel and flutist Gottfried Stoger.

The EP includes two versions each of the rock classic “Stand By Me,” and “(Samba Jazz Happiness (Jet Samba),” the latter of which was a popular radio single for Rebecca, who released the festive, playfully rhythmic track to coincide with the Rio Olympics in 2016. The song, originally penned and recorded as an instrumental by Brazilian composer Marcos Valle, reached high on the FMQB Adult Contemporary chart. The EP includes an “Ipanema Beach” remix featuring danceable, hypnotic and carnivalesque percussion textures. The first version of “Stand By Me” also lends itself to a trip-hoppy hypnosis via electro-percussion behind Rebecca’s wistful vocals. The second, which closes the set, has a more mainstream, seductive vibe, perfect for adult contemporary radio. Rebecca and Dennis also co-wrote the set’s other original, “Feel Alive,” a charming and innocent declaration of love and how it changes the heart, which breezes along like a brisk stroll on a balmy evening without end.

Rebecca recently graduated with a degree in voice from Ithaca College, where she studied with Roseanna Vitro, Cyrille Aimee (whose version of “Stand By Me” inspired Rebecca to record it), Carol McAmis, Kim Nazarian and Maya Azucena; Azucena helped the singer take her vocal on “What We Had” to another level. With her unique vocal timbre, Rebecca could certainly venture into any genre she likes. Those engaging with her artistry for the first time will be glad she’s chosen to go the sophisticated chill samba route.

What We Had

George Kahn - Straight Ahead

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:32
Size: 145.5 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2018
Art: Front

[4:40] 1. Rumour Has It
[5:37] 2. Work Song
[5:53] 3. Thieves In The Temple
[5:37] 4. Wonton Kelly
[5:31] 5. Can't Feel My Face
[4:07] 6. Roger Killowatt
[4:54] 7. Get Naked
[5:47] 8. Secrets
[4:19] 9. Thinking Out Loud
[6:11] 10. Dreamin'
[4:10] 11. Red's Riff
[6:42] 12. Follow Your Heart

George Kahn: piano; Alex Acuna: drums; Lyman Medeiros: bass.

Los Angeles-based pianist George Kahn likes to think of the standard piano trio format as a gateway drug into jazz. He may be right. Think of the classic trios, those of Red Garland, Nat "King" Cole, Bud Powell. Their sounds are addictive—and distinctively different—but they share the pared-down purity of purpose and relative simplicity of dynamic range that distills the listening experience to its essence. With that essence in mind, Kahn offers up the first trio outing of his career, Straight Ahead.

Kahn, who has been active in the Los Angeles jazz scene since the 1990s, has a charming accessibility. Catchy melodies and upbeat grooves are the name of the game with him. If he comes out of a school of the piano trio tradition, it must be the school of Ahmad Jamal. His sound is, like Jamal's, a straight ahead, unpertentious sea of sparkling effervescence, ebullient rhythms and life affirming positively. Refusing to stay with the expected jazz repertoire, Kahn and his trio-mates—drummer Alex Acuna and bassist Lyman Medeiros—open with pop singer Adele's "Rumor Has It," giving the tune a jaunty ride before they percolate into Nat Adderely's "Work Song," as a prelude to a dance-inducing take on Prince's "Thieves In The Temple." The trio also nods to some of the jazz legends with Kahn's original compositions: "Wonton Kelly" (Wynton Kelly, "Roger Killowatt" (Roger Kellaway), and "Red's Riff" (Red Garland), to offer up Kahn-tinted takes on the classic sounds of the legends. Kahn sounds right at home in the trio format, with the hihgly engaging Straight Ahead. ~Dan McClenaghan

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Helen Carr - Down In The Depths On The 90th Floor (Remastered)

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 24:56
Size: 57.1 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 1955/2014
Art: Front

[3:01] 1. Not Mine
[5:15] 2. I Don't Want To Cry Anymore
[2:20] 3. Tulip Or Turnip
[2:48] 4. Memory Of The Rain
[3:11] 5. Down In The Depths Of The 90th Floor
[2:54] 6. You're Driving Me Crazy
[2:58] 7. I'm Glad There Is You
[2:25] 8. Moments Like This

Charlie Mariano: Alto Saxophone; Don Fagerquist: Trumpet; Helen Carr: Vocals; Max Bennett: Bass; Donn Trenner: Piano; Stan Levy: Drums.

One of the darkest vocal jazz albums of the 50s - packaged with a great title and cover image that features a lone lit window in a New York skyscraper! Helen has incredible backing on the record - a small combo that includes Charlie Mariano on alto sax, Don Fagerquist on trumpet, and Donn Trenner on piano - all gently sliding in behind Carr's blue vocals in a way that's similar to some of the Chris Connor work on Bethlehem from the same time. Titles include a near-perfect reading of 'Down In The Depths On The 90th Floor', plus 'Not Mine', 'Tulip Or Turnip', 'Moments Like This', 'I'm Glad There Is You', and 'Memory Of The Rain'.

Down In The Depths On The 90th Floor 

'Killer' Ray Appleton, Melvin Rhyne Quartet - Latin Dreams

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:55
Size: 118.9 MB
Styles: Bop, Swing
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[6:15] 1. Night Vigil
[5:21] 2. I'll Take Romance
[5:38] 3. Cariba
[6:04] 4. The Very Thought Of You
[6:14] 5. Melvin's Masquerade
[4:27] 6. Lolita
[4:40] 7. Blue 'n' Boogie
[6:14] 8. Tequila
[6:58] 9. Full House

Despite the title, the musical direction of this 2004 recording isn’t Latin jazz. Instead, the real foundation of this session goes back to the Wes Montgomery Trio, circa 1955 in Indianapolis. That edition of the guitarist’s group featured drummer “Killer” Ray Appleton and Hammond B3 organ player Melvin Rhyne. Joined here by the great Latin percussionist Milton Cardonas and up-and-coming guitarist Ilya Lushtak, Appleton and Rhyne lead a laid-back excursion through a mixed bag of material ranging from a couple of swinging Rhyne originals, standards like “I’ll Take Romance” and “The Very Thought of You,” Dizzy Gillespie’s “Blue ‘n’ Boogie” and an energetic take on that old warhorse, “Tequila.”

Unlike a lot of B3 players, Rhyne takes a musical direction that’s decidedly more bop- than blues-oriented, adding plenty of interesting variations to his B3 grooves. Cardona’s presence on congas allows Appleton room to shine on cymbals-and the pair meld to create a rhythmic groove that finds a nice balance point between bop and Latin jazz. Add sparkling versions of Montgomery classics such as “Cariba” and “Full House” and you’ve got a strong recording that serves as a fitting reminder of the underappreciated talents of Rhyne and Appleton. ~Terry Perkins

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Quadro Nuevo, Cairo Steps - Flying Carpet

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:50
Size: 169.0 MB
Styles: World music
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[6:33] 1. Shams
[7:33] 2. Flying Carpet
[6:20] 3. Symphony For The Sheik
[6:32] 4. Nilade
[6:29] 5. Dance Du Nil
[3:44] 6. Ikarus' Dream
[4:32] 7. Café Cairo
[6:14] 8. Gardens Of Damanhur
[6:47] 9. Tiepolo
[6:22] 10. Sansibar
[5:24] 11. Arabiskan
[7:14] 12. Gnossienne No. 1

Hailing from Germany, Quadro Nuevo has built a career assimilating musical influences from around the globe. While it's not unjustified to call them a jazz group, they've elevated their sound exploring the worlds of Argentinian tango, Austrian classical traditions, Indian raga, and Romanian folk customs, among others. The term “world music" may be a bit diluted and vague after years of being thrown about by record labels and PR firms (besides, isn't all music of our world?), but Quadro Nuevo has unquestionably earned the title considering their passport-friendly approach to composition and improvisation over the past 20 years.

With Flying Carpet they've collaborated with Cairo Steps, a relatively new collective by way of Egypt spearheaded by pianist Matthias Frey and oud virtuoso Basem Darwisch. Based on their first collaboration from back in January 2017, Flying Carpet features Quadro Nuevo and Cairo Steps building their unified sound augmented by the inclusion of flute, string quartet, and notable Sufi singers Ali El Helwabi and Sheikh Ehab Younis. The album features a tasteful blending of instruments and musical elements of widely divergent cultures, albeit while still exploring familiar ground for Quadro Nuevo. The Cairo Steps flex their musical influence right away in open track “Shams". A darbuka and duduk (Arabic percussion and wind instruments, respectively) open the tune with an exotic soundscape, later built up by Bollywood-inspired strings. Darwisch, Quadro's sax player Mulo Francel, and Cairo's duduk player Rageed William shine as they toss around the melody and trade solos, accentuating the drama without indulging in improvisational cliches. Title track “Flying Carpet" is more reserved, built upon a slow, alluring groove with ample space and ambiance.

Inevitably, most of the tracks on the album fall within the same structure of trading melodies and solos around the group, giving everyone a chance to shine. It's the path Quadro Nuevo tends to take (and Cairo Steps readily adapts) of blending global influences into song and improvisation structures at home in jazz. Despite treading on familiar territory, this variety of musical influences keep Flying Carpet feeling fresh and energized. The songs themselves may sound traditional, but it's the uniting of colors between European and Arabic instruments on tracks like “Tiepolo" and “Ikarus' Dream" gives the album depth. Inevitably, both Quadro Nuevo and Cairo Steps risk exploiting their diverse character as style over substance. It's intriguing to hear the blending of different musical cultures, but groups that embrace the “world music" tag for commercial purposes, inevitably, tend to sound stale. Notably, much of Flying Carpet works as both groups use the album to explore their sounds and test interactions. The Egypt-meets-Vienna waltz of “Café Cairo" thrives on its cross-cultural character, while the driving “Nilade" shines through the subtle yet colorful harp work of Evelyn Huber.

The closing track, a reading of Erik Satie's “Gnossienne No. 1" recorded live, best sums up the spirit of Flying Carpet. The French composer's work becomes source material primarily for improvisation, specifically from Cairo Steps who use their musical language to explore how Arabic elements fit within the Western classical tradition. While the recording does not break any new musical ground, it stands as a fine release for both groups, and a testament to how music can unite cultures under the same structures. ~Andy Jurik

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Various - The Very Best Of Cole Porter

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:26
Size: 152.1 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals, Easy Listening
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[3:46] 1. Ella Fitzgerald - Too Darn Hot
[2:07] 2. Peggy Lee - My Heart Belongs To Daddy
[3:24] 3. Tony Bennett - Begin The Beguine
[3:59] 4. Sarah Vaughan - You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
[2:06] 5. Jeri Southern - It's De-Lovely
[2:30] 6. Dean Martin - True Love
[3:50] 7. Shirley Horn - Love For Sale
[3:05] 8. Helen Merrill - Anything Goes
[8:40] 9. Ella Fitzgerald - Let's Do It (Let's Fall In Love)
[3:27] 10. Eartha Kitt - Let's Misbehave
[2:59] 11. Billie Holiday - Easy To Love
[2:54] 12. Mel Tormé - What Is This Thing Called Love
[2:05] 13. Anita O'day - Just One Of Those Things
[6:18] 14. Dinah Washington - I Get A Kick Out Of You
[4:47] 15. Aaron Neville - In The Still Of The Night
[3:01] 16. Carmen Mcrae - Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye
[4:58] 17. Fred Astaire - Night And Day
[2:21] 18. Ella Fitzgerald - You Do Something To Me

The Very Best Of Cole Porter

Chet Baker - Live at the Trade Winds 1952

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:19
Size: 152,2 MB
Art: Front

(16:18)  1. Out of Nowhere
( 7:00)  2. Bernie's Tune
( 5:27)  3. My Old Flame
( 5:55)  4. Avalon
(11:15)  5. How High the Moon
( 7:01)  6. There Will Never Be Another Yo
( 5:47)  7. Sweet Georgia Brown
( 7:33)  8. I'll Remember April

Chet Baker was a primary exponent of the West Coast school of cool jazz in the early and mid-'50s. As a trumpeter, he had a generally restrained, intimate playing style and he attracted attention beyond jazz for his photogenic looks and singing. But his career was marred by drug addiction.Baker's father, Chesney Henry Baker,Sr., was a guitarist who was forced to turn to other work during the Depression; his mother, Vera (Moser) Baker, worked in a perfumery. The family moved from Oklahoma to Glendale, CA, in 1940. As a child, Baker sang at amateur competitions and in a church choir. Before his adolescence, his father brought home a trombone for him, then replaced it with a trumpet when the larger instrument proved too much for him. He had his first formal training in music in junior high and later at Glendale High School, but would play largely by ear for the rest of his life. In 1946, when he was only 16 years old, he dropped out of high school and his parents signed papers allowing him to enlist in the army; he was sent to Berlin, Germany, where he played in the 298th Army Band. After his discharge in 1948, he enrolled at El Camino College in Los Angeles, where he studied theory and harmony while playing in jazz clubs, but he quit college in the middle of his second year. He re-enlisted in the army in 1950 and became a member of the Sixth Army Band at the Presidio in San Francisco. But he also began sitting in at clubs in the city and he finally obtained a second discharge to become a professional jazz musician.  Baker initially played in Vido Musso's band, then with Stan Getz. (The first recording featuring Baker is a performance of "Out of Nowhere" that comes from a tape of a jam session made on March 24, 1952, and was released on the Fresh Sound Records LP Live at the Trade Winds.) His break came quickly, when, in the spring of 1952, he was chosen at an audition to play a series of West Coast dates with Charlie Parker, making his debut with the famed saxophonist at the Tiffany Club in Los Angeles on May 29, 1952. That summer, he began playing in the Gerry Mulligan Quartet, a group featuring only baritone sax, trumpet, bass, and drums -- no piano -- that attracted attention during an engagement at the Haig nightclub and through recordings on the newly formed Pacific Jazz Records (later known as World Pacific Records), beginning with the 10" LP Gerry Mulligan Quartet, which featured Baker's famous rendition of "My Funny Valentine."..More.. ~ William Ruhlmann https://www.allmusic.com/artist/chet-baker-mn0000094210/biography                

Personnel:  Chet Baker (trumpet) Sonny Criss (alto sax) Wardell Gray, Dave Pell (tenor sax) Jerry Mandell (piano) Harry Babasin (cello, leader) Bob Whitlock (bass) Lawrence Marable (drums)

Live at the Trade Winds 1952

Beata Przybytek Quintet - You Don't Know What Love Is

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:14
Size: 105,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:38)  1. Is You Is, or Is You Ain't
(7:10)  2. I Thought About You
(3:43)  3. Someday My Prince Will Come
(7:11)  4. My Funny Valentine
(8:36)  5. Angels Eyes
(3:32)  6. Sugar
(4:47)  7. I Fall In Love Too Easily
(3:00)  8. Softly, As In A Morning Sunrise
(4:34)  9. You Don't Know What Love Is

This is the debut album by Polish Jazz vocalist Beata Przybytek, recorded with her quintet, which comprises of saxophonist / flautist Marcin Zupanski, pianist Dorota Zaziablo, bassist Robert Szewczuga and drummer Ryszard Balcer. Violinist Krzysztof Maciejowski guests on one track. The album presents nine classic Jazz vocal standards, sung in their original English version. There are no arrangement credits on the album's liner notes. The album was recorded while Przybytek was a student at the Academy of Music in Katowice where she studied Jazz vocals and her group comprises of her fellow students from the same school as well as students from the Academy of Music in Krakow.The result is certainly well above the expectations one might have from a group of very young and inexperienced musicians. Both the vocals and the instrumental backing are quite excellent and most importantly have a unique sound and afresh approach to these standards, which have been tried countless times before. The arrangements include enough space for the instrumentalists to be able to show their skills, which they do repeatedly. Przybytek unveils her warm and expressive voice, which she playfully stretches between seductive meows and heartbreaking howls, all in good taste and with obvious talent. She does not use often the husky tone, which she utilizes on her later recordings, but her enormous potential is quite evident here. She also is one the very few Polish vocalists that can get away with singing in English without sounding utterly ridiculous, which works in her favor. Her intonation tends to be on the Gospel / Blues side, which suits her well. Overall, although not very innovative or groundbreaking, this is a very solid offering, which as a debut can be definitely regarded as an outstanding effort. Vocal Jazz fans will find this quite delightful, combining youthful enthusiasm and innocence with talent and dedication. Well done! By Adam Baruch

Personnel:  Beata Przybytek - vocals;  Marcin Zupanski - saxophone & flute;  Dorota Zaziablo - piano;  Robert Szewczuga - bass;  Ryszard Balcer - drums

You Don't Know What Love Is

Gerald Albright - Bermuda Nights

Styles: Crossover Jazz, Saxophone Jazz 
Year: 1988
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:53
Size: 103,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:06)  1. When You Say You Love Me
(5:43)  2. In The Mood
(5:53)  3. Bermuda Nights
(5:39)  4. The Hook
(6:37)  5. Feeling Inside
(5:23)  6. Still In Love
(5:02)  7. Truth
(5:28)  8. Too Cool

Smooth jazz usually enjoys a bad reputation with critics, who tend to complain that the music is shallow and bereft of any personality. It's thanks to albums like Gerald Albright's Bermuda Nights that this style is often dismissed. There is virtually nothing on the album which is actually worth hearing. Sure, Albright's saxophone playing is competent, but he shows little excitement and even less personal style. The backing musicians include session cats such as drummer Harvey Mason and guitarist Paul Jackson, Jr., but they do not add anything to the proceedings. Basically, the songs tend to sound alike, and even though most feature different musicians, all of them offer the same pseudo-lush plastic-keyboard approach. There are many smooth jazz albums which show that the genre is not as terrible as critics pretend, but Bermuda Nights certainly doesn't fall into this category. This album is in its essence an inoffensive piece of fluff, recommended only to fans of Albright who would later record better smooth jazz albums himself. ~ Christian Genzel https://www.allmusic.com/album/bermuda-nights-mw0000202303   

Bermuda Nights

Harry James & His Orchestra - You'll Never Know

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:32
Size: 122,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:39)  1. You'll Never Know
(2:44)  2. Fly Me to the Moon
(2:45)  3. A Man and a Woman
(2:10)  4. Time After Time
(3:20)  5. Gigi
(2:43)  6. Blue Skies
(2:15)  7. My Melancholy Baby
(2:58)  8. Three Coins in the Fountain
(2:09)  9. Pennies from Heaven
(3:02) 10. I'll Be Seeing You
(2:28) 11. By The Time I Get To Phoenix
(2:42) 12. I Can Dream Can't I?
(3:11) 13. Willow Weep for Me
(2:27) 14. Poor Butterfly
(2:00) 15. My Heart Cries for You
(2:42) 16. This Guy's in Love with You
(3:06) 17. Traces
(2:25) 18. Anytime
(2:26) 19. Three O'Clock In The Morning
(3:12) 20. A Taste of Honey

While this British import is a reasonable compilation of Dick Haymes recordings from 1940 to 1946, including four tracks by the Harry James Orchestra and 20 of Haymes solo recordings for Decca, the album's subtitle, "24 Hits!" is misleading. The singer's sole hit with James, "I'll Get By (As Long as I Have You)," is included, as are 11 of his 27 singles chart entries as a solo artist during the period, among them the million-selling number one title track and such major hits as "It Can't Be Wrong," "I'll Buy That Dream," "Together," "It Had to Be You" (the last three duets with Helen Forrest), and "It Might as Well Be Spring." But other equally big hits, such as "Long Ago (And Far Away)," "Till the End of Time," "Oh! What It Seemed to Be," and "Put Your Arms Around Me, Honey (I Never Knew Any Girl Like You)," are missing (not to mention Haymes hits from after 1946), and half the tracks, while often worthy inclusions (such as "It's a Grand Night for Singing," a Rodgers & Hammerstein song that Haymes sang in the film State Fair, and "For You, For Me, For Evermore," a Gershwin song that Haymes sang in the film This Shocking Miss Pilgrim, here presented as a duet with Judy Garland), are not actually hits. Hence, this is not the ideal Haymes hits collection, though it does present some of his best and most popular material. The tracks contain a fair amount of surface noise, and there is a good, brief biographical essay. ~ William Ruhlmann https://www.allmusic.com/album/youll-never-know-asv-mw0000086051 

You'll Never Know