Sunday, June 3, 2018

Miles Davis - Birdland 1951

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:23
Size: 154.3 MB
Styles: Bop, Trumpet jazz
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[ 6:11] 1. Move
[ 7:31] 2. Half Nelson
[ 7:11] 3. Down
[ 5:51] 4. Out Of The Blue
[ 7:40] 5. Half Nelson
[ 6:42] 6. Tempus Fugit
[12:08] 7. Move
[ 8:36] 8. The Squirrel
[ 5:29] 9. Lady Bird

Bass – Charles Mingus, Tommy Potter; Drums – Art Blakey; Piano – Billy Taylor, Kenny Drew; Tenor Saxophone – Big Nick Nicholas, Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, Sonny Rollins; Trombone – J.J. Johnson; Trumpet – Miles Davis.

These nine tracks, taken from radio broadcasts from the legendary Birdland in 1951, represent a particularly fruitful period in Miles Davis' development as a bandleader. There are three different broadcasts included here; two comprising six cuts in total were from June and September and have been issued in various forms on bootlegs over the decades. Four cuts, however, taken from a broadcast on February 17, have never been available in any form and it is these as well the marginally better fidelity of the entire set that makes this worth owning for Miles freaks -- and only Miles freaks. The sextet on the February and June dates included J.J. Johnson, Sonny Rollins, Art Blakey, Tommy Potter, and Kenny Drew. In September, Charles Mingus, Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, Billy Taylor, and Big Nick Nicholas joined Davis and Blakey. The fidelity here is listed on the sleeve as "primitive." That's a nice way to say it sucks bad. These are better than Charlie Parker's Dean Benedetti recordings, but not by much. Soundwise, the best that can be said is that one can hear all of the instruments. The performances, however, particularly as delineated in the three different versions of the cut "Move," are stellar. They are inspired, furious, and cutting. Rollins outdoes himself in the June performance of the cut, and the latter band transforms it entirely. For the record, it is the only duplicate selection. Also, the live version of "Tempus Fugit," with its knotty head and punched-up rhythm, is revelatory in the manner of arrangement for those days and points a solid direction for the immediate future -- check the tempos and structure of the solo breaks on the September session for evidence. While this set is exclusively for those Miles fans who have to have absolutely everything, it is nonetheless worth it for those who have the bootlegs because of the heightened fidelity and the new session. ~Thom Jurek

Birdland 1951

Tango Negro Trio - S/T

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:32
Size: 111.1 MB
Styles: Latin jazz, Tango
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[5:00] 1. La Retirada
[4:31] 2. Que Lindo
[3:01] 3. Quere Partir
[4:47] 4. Viva El Candombe Negro
[2:32] 5. Serafin
[3:36] 6. Tango Que Me Hiciste Mal
[2:54] 7. Bar Florida
[2:26] 8. Vendras
[2:30] 9. Este Tango
[5:35] 10. Que Es Lo Que Queda
[3:03] 11. Suenos
[3:22] 12. Ciudad De Mi Corazon
[2:47] 13. El Choclo
[2:20] 14. La Retirada (Piano Solo)

J.C. Caceres is a well known Argentinian composer, singer and pianist and a master of modern Tango. His conception of art and music make him an extremely unconventional artist, one almost impossible to classify, though there are many who regard him as South America's answer to Paolo Conte. Accompanied by Marcello Russillo on drums, Carlos "El Tero" Buschini on double bass and special guest Daniel Binelli on bandoneon. The music flows along both mysterious and concrete, evocative yet earthy, fiery and glacial at the same time, in a perfect balancing act between tradition and innovation.

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Leon Thomas - Blues And The Soulful Truth

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:23
Size: 97.0 MB
Styles: Soul/Funk/Jazz
Year: 1973/2014
Art: Front

[ 4:22] 1. Let's Go Down To Lucy's
[ 2:51] 2. L-O-V-E
[10:15] 3. Gypsy Queen
[ 3:13] 4. Love Each Other
[ 5:21] 5. Shape Your Mind To Die
[ 4:50] 6. Boom-Boom-Boom
[ 5:05] 7. China Doll
[ 6:21] 8. C.C. Rider

Bass – Donald Pate, Gordon Edwards; Drums – Bernard Purdie; Guitar – Cornell Dupree, Larry Coryell; Percussion – Baba Feme; Piano – Neal Creque; Piano, Tenor Saxophone – Pee Wee Ellis; Trombone – John Eckert; Vocals, Percussion – Leon Thomas.

The late Leon Thomas was a vocalist who has proven to be influential among jazz and blues saxophonists, guitarists, and pianists, who've admitted their debt to his innovation. However, though there are many vocalists who have benefited from his style as well, he is seldom acknowledged for his highly original -- and idiosyncratic -- contribution to them. One can only speculate as to why, though Thomas' full-throated style which employed everything from yodels to Joe Turner-ish growls and shouts may have been too wide for anyone to grasp in its entirety without overtly sounding as if they were aping him. Blues and the Soulful Truth is among the artist's most enduring performances, either as a leader or sideman. There is his trademark, otherworldly modal improvisation on Gabor Szabo's exotica classic "Gypsy Queen," the deep, greasy gutbucket, funky blues of "Let's Go Down to Lucy" and "L-O-V-E," and the traditional tune "C.C. Rider" -- though Thomas' arrangement is anything but -- among a lengthy, eight-song set. Perhaps the most revealing examples of his singularity is his ability to interpret a song like John Lee Hooker's "Boom, Boom" as funky, jazzed-out, angular R&B -- enabled mightily by the saxophone stylings of Pee Wee Ellis and the criminally under-appreciated pianism of Neal Creque and the wild violin of John Blair -- after coming out of a pop-oriented soul tune such as "Love Each Other," written with a groove prevalent among commercial jazz and R&B recordings of the time, both sounding sincere, authentic, and completely full of the singer's presence. Indeed, on the aforementioned "Gypsy Queen" or his own "Shape Your Mind to Die," Thomas inhabits his material fully, as if nobody ever had ever sung or heard these songs and would ever sing them again. Also, the production innovation and percussive touches many of these tunes have yet to be repeated (Pharoah Sanders, Thomas' previous employer who introduced the singer to the world, adopted some of the artist's percussive techniques permanently), like the firecrackers raining against Airto Moreira's drums and Larry Coryell's ethereal guitar riffs, or the use of a "prepared" vibraphone and coat hangers in "China Doll," as they slip against the singer's wail and moan, and the elegant stick and brushwork of Bernard "Pretty" Purdie. In sum, Blues and the Soulful Truth (Which does echo Oliver Nelson's Blues and the Abstract Truth in vision as well as title), is a tour through the depth and dimension of Thomas' mind-blowing abilities as a singer in a wide range of African American musical traditions, proving at the time, and now again, that he was far more than a free jazz singer. Indeed, the artist not only was a stylist of originality, but a composer, arranger, ethnomusicologist, and a singer of startling beauty and power -- no matter the song. This album is a singular achievement, even among the fine recordings in Thomas' own catalogue, and should be considered first by those curious enough to look into his work -- you won't be disappointed no matter what you find, but this one will take you places you never anticipated going. ~Thom Jurek

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John Basile - Outside/In

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:50
Size: 100.4 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2018
Art: Front

[4:22] 1. Soldiers Field
[2:48] 2. Bolera
[3:46] 3. Fatback
[3:58] 4. All Three Judges
[4:14] 5. Its Probably Me
[4:30] 6. Bugs
[4:08] 7. Camelot
[4:05] 8. Over And Over
[3:36] 9. Cory's Dimemma
[4:44] 10. Stuffit
[3:33] 11. Outdide In

When asked about his most important influences, the first two names he mentions are not other guitar players; Frank Sinatra heads the list and then Bill Evans. Perhaps this explains why John Basile is one of a select group of jazz instrumentalists who doesn’t sound like everyone else. Musically, his guitar style utilizes a finger-style technique that approaches the guitar like a piano. For John, the challenge of comping harmonic chord fragments and playing melodies simultaneously provides a backdrop for a more open style of playing and improvising. John's latest in 2018 is a collection of eclectic originals entitled "Outside/In".

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Jeri Brown - April In Paris

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:52
Size: 130.2 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1996
Art: Front

[4:39] 1. Gentle Piece
[4:03] 2. Once Upon A Summertime
[5:31] 3. The Twelfth Of Never
[6:19] 4. When April Comes Again
[8:51] 5. Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me)
[4:12] 6. Morning Lovely
[5:35] 7. I Could Have Loved You
[4:44] 8. Summertime
[0:40] 9. As The Mist Leaves No Scar
[4:27] 10. Greensleeves
[7:47] 11. The Windmills Of Your Mind

Jeri Brown, who has emerged to become one of the top jazz singers of the 1990s, pays tribute to the passion of Paris on this CD without performing the title cut. Sticking to ballads (other than a medium-tempo "Summertime"), Brown's sensuous voice (particularly her low notes) are well suited to the complex material, which includes a song co-written with Kenny Wheeler ("Gentle Piece"), a pair of Michel Legrand numbers that add the effective accordion of Roberto De Brashov, a brief poem, a couple of standards and mostly high-quality obscurities. The music is atmospheric and sometimes haunting, swinging lightly and filled with subtle invention by the talented singer and her supportive trio. ~Scott Yanow

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Alex Acuna, Jan Gunnar Hoff, Per Mathiesen - Jungle City

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:41
Size: 145.8 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[5:07] 1. Jungle City
[6:03] 2. Jangala
[5:59] 3. Blessing
[7:31] 4. One For Jaco
[4:49] 5. Voices
[6:20] 6. Maya Pejo
[4:13] 7. Det Bästa
[5:23] 8. Africa
[4:03] 9. Visions
[7:00] 10. Tribute
[7:09] 11. Night Zone

Peruvian drummer and percussionist Alex Acuna learned trumpet and piano from his father, while teaching himself the rudiments of drumming. He became a studio musician in Lima at 16, and joined Prez Prado's band in 1964, coming with them to Las Vegas. Acuna worked from 1966-1975 as a studio musician in Puerto Rico and Los Angeles as well as Las Vegas, then joined Weather Report. He alternated roles there during his two-year stint, splitting time between being their percussionist and drummer. Acuna made two albums with Weather Report, among them the hugely successful Heavy Weather, before leaving. He formed his own band, Koinoni, in 1980. Acuna has not attained the high profile of other Latin percussionists like Airto or Nana Vasconcelos, but has a lengthy list of professional credits, including recording dates with Clare Fischer, Ella Fitzgerald, Tania Maria, Chick Corea, Paco De Lucia and Joni Mitchell, plus a stint in guitarist Lee Ritenour's group. He's merged traditional Peruvian and modern Latin rhythms into a charged personal style that also reflects the influence of Elvin Jones and Tony Williams, among others. His current band has recorded for JVC, and mixes Afro-Latin and Latin jazz with funk and fusion.

Per Mathisen is a Norwegian jazz musician (upright bass and guitar bass) and composer, known from collaborations with great jazz musicians like Terri Lyne Carrington, Geri Allen, Gary Thomas, Bill Bruford, Alex Acuña, Gary Husband, Ralph Peterson, Nguyen Le and Terje Rypdal.[1][2] He is married to pianist Olga Konkova, and the brother of jazz musicians Hans Mathisen (guitar), Nils Mathisen (keyboards, guitar and violin) and Ole Mathisen (saxophone and clarinet).

Jan Gunnar Hoff is one of Norway´s most experienced piano- and keyboardplayers, born in Bodø 1958. He performs extensively in bandsettings with artists like Mike Stern and Alex Acuña and with his new Hoff/Mazur/Henriksen/Jormin- quartet. Hoff was the arranger and ensemble leader of Quiet Winter Night, Grammy-nominated for Best Surround Sound in 2013, an album where he successfully merges elements of jazz, folk and popular music (with Arild Andersen, Mathias Eick, Helene Bøksle a.o).

Jungle City

Milt Jackson - Sunflower

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 1972
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:28
Size: 79,0 MB
Art: Front

(10:10)  1. For Someone I Love (What's Your Story)
( 7:00)  2. What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?
( 8:23)  3. People Make the World Go Round
( 8:52)  4. Sunflower

With a series of mainstream dates to his credit dating back to the early 1950s not to mention charter membership in the now-legendary Modern Jazz Quartet (MJQ) and one-offs with everyone from bop saxophonist Charlie Parker to "new thing" saxophonist John Coltrane vibraphonist Milt Jackson was the clear link between his instrument's swing era beginnings with Lionel Hampton and more progressive things to come with then-relative youngsters Gary Burton and Bobby Hutcherson. Still and despite the label's centrist-leaning proclivities on one hand, balancing out its more groove-centric tendencies on the other Jackson's signing with CTI Records was something of a surprise, as was his first project, Cherry (1972), an uneven collaboration with label-hit Stanley Turrentine. His first release for the label as a full-out leader, 1972's Sunflower fares much better, even with the presence of Don Sebesky, an arranger who brought out some of the worst of CTI's easy listening tendencies, but, equally, delivered some tremendously inventive and tasteful orchestral work. Here, with a harpist and 11-piece string ensemble, Sebesky gives Jackson's opening ballad, "For Someone in Love," a burnished sheen, but it can't take away from the vibraphonist's ethereal touch, flugelhornist Freddie Hubbard's more propulsive approach, or pianist Hancock's abstract impressionism; all making for a stunning intro to an album that posits Jackson in even broader contexts than his discography to date. The Legrand/Berman ballad, "What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?," the Grammy-nominated song from Richard Brooks' 1969 film, The Happy Ending, swings with the kind of graceful elegance that Jackson had honed in the MJQ, but Hancock's more exploratory accompaniment drives the tune into unexpected places, even as Ron Carter's low, resonant bass notes support the tune with perfect simplicity. What was, back in the day, side one of Sunflower was, then, a bit of a shift for Jackson into more accessible territory, but nothing earth-shattering. Tectonic plates didn't move for those who put on side two of the disc, either, but opening with The Stylistics' oft-covered hit, "People Make the World Go Round,"was something new, as the vibraphonist entered light funk territory. Carter, locked-in with drummer Billy Cobham, proves that, at a time when electric bassists like Stanley Clarke and Alphonso Johnson were on the cusp of becoming fusion stars with {Return to Forever}} and Weather Report, the acoustic bass was still the absolute funkiest low-end instrument of all. Hubbard's closing title track is also a foray into light Latin music, with a soft string cushion broadening the soundscape when the tune moves into double-time during Hubbard's plangent solo. The closing bonus track (not new, it's been on CD issues since 1997), Jackson's "SKJ," feels like something of an anomaly, both in its hard-swinging pulse and production rawer, and less refined than the rest of the set. It speaks to the truth that musicians may move around stylistically during their long careers, but they don't forget where they came from. A beautiful record that expands an already broad view of Jackson, this CTI Masterworks reissue brings one of the vibraphonist's best albums back into print. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/sunflower-milt-jackson-cti-masterworks-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Milt Jackson: vibraphone; Freddie Hubbard: flugelhorn; George Marge: clarinet,bass clarinet,alto flute, English horn; Phil Bodner: flute, alto flute, piccolo, English horn; Romeo Penque: alto flute, oboe, English horn; Herbie Hancock: piano, electric piano (5); Jay Berliner: guitar; Ron Carter: bass; Billy Cobham: drums; Ralph MacDonald: percussion; Max Ellen: violin; Paul Gershman: violin; Emanuel Green: violin; Charles Libove: violin; Joe Malin: violin; David Nadien: violin; Gene Orloff: violin; Elliot Rosoff: violin; Charles McCracken: cello;, George Ricci: cello; Alan Shulman: cello; Margaret Ross: harp; Don Sebesky: arranger, conductor.

Sunflower

Nellie McKay - My Weekly Reader

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:07
Size: 110,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:09)  1. Sunny Afternoon
(3:09)  2. Quicksilver Girl
(3:36)  3. Poor People / Justice
(5:30)  4. Murder in My Heart for the Judge
(3:49)  5. Bold Marauder
(3:27)  6. Itchycoo Park
(2:12)  7. Mrs. Brown You've Got a Lovely Daughter
(5:16)  8. Not So Sweet Martha Lorraine
(2:40)  9. If I Fell
(3:37) 10. Red Rubber Ball
(2:26) 11. Don't Let the Sun Catch You Crying
(4:35) 12. Hungry Freaks, Daddy
(4:34) 13. Wooden Ships

Last time Nellie McKay took a stroll through the past, she doffed her hat at Doris Day, an obvious tribute for a singer as besotted with the stage as Ms. McKay. My Weekly Reader, the album that functions as the sequel to 2010's all-original Home Sweet Mobile Home, is a surprise as it shines a spotlight directly on some of the shadowy corners of the '60s. Despite opening with a cover of the Kinks' "Sunny Afternoon" and a leisurely reading of the Beatles' "If I Fell," McKay doesn't spend much time with the familiar. She gravitates toward folky introspection and songs that allow her to strut, two kinds of vintage styles that suit her well, but My Weekly Reader also shows her fondness for weirdo social satire, a quirk that at first glance seem like an odd fit for the singer. Upon second glance, Frank Zappa & the Mothers of Invention's "Hungry Freaks, Daddy" and Moby Grape's "Murder in My Heart for the Judge" seem odd: they're stage-bound theatrical productions fueled by cutesy curtseys, an attitude that unravels during the latter as McKay threads in protest lines from 2014, ending with a whispered "I can't breathe." Nevertheless, that ambition is admirable and its very presence is appreciated, particularly compared to the lighter pop tunes of Small Faces' "Itchycoo Park" and Herman's Hermits' "Mrs. Brown You've Got a Lovely Daughter," tunes that allow McKay to mince about more than necessary. Where My Weekly Reader shines is on the quieter moments, which range from the loveliness of Crosby, Stills & Nash's "Wooden Ships," the nostalgic gleam of Gerry & the Pacemakers' "Don't Let the Sun Catch You Crying," and the spookiness of Richard & Mimi Fariña's "Bold Marauder." Here, McKay achieves a delicate balance between '60s reverence and a sly modern wink, a blurring of eras that plays to her strengths. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine https://www.allmusic.com/album/my-weekly-reader-mw0002816266

My Weekly Reader

Greg Abate Quintet - Bop Lives!

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:07
Size: 148,2 MB
Art: Front

( 7:41)  1. Love's No Secret
( 5:39)  2. Happenin'
( 4:04)  3. Blues for H.O.
( 7:23)  4. This I Dig of You
( 6:40)  5. Bop Lives!
( 9:39)  6. Ask Me Now
( 5:16)  7. Voyage
( 6:50)  8. Children's Waltz
(10:51)  9. Speak Low

With a title such as Bop Lives, it is a bit surprising to realize that there are actually no bop standards on this CD. However the playing by altoist Greg Abate (whose sound recalls Phil Woods and Richie Cole) is certainly in the bop tradition; he is a heated and frequently exciting improviser. Trumpeter Claudio Roditi is aboard for five of the nine selections and is a perfect frontline partner for Abate. Of the repertoire, three tunes are by the leader and there is one apiece from Roditi, pianist Kenny Barron (who leads a rhythm section also including bassist Rufus Reid and drummer Ben Riley), Mark Morganelli, Hank Mobley ("This I Dig Of You"), Thelonious Monk and Kurt Weill (a nearly 11-minute rendition of "Speak Low"). The well-rounded program features Greg Abate at his best and this uncomplicated but generally chancetaking bop set is easily recommended.~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/bop-lives%21-mw0000610795    

Personnel: Greg Abate (alto saxophone); Claudio Roditi (trumpet, flugelhorn); Kenny Barron (piano); Ben Riley (drums).

Bop Lives!

Tommy Flanagan, Ron Carter, Tony Williams - The Trio

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1983
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:19
Size: 171,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:32)  1. It Don't Mean A Thing
(5:36)  2. St. Thomas
(5:48)  3. Angel Eyes
(4:08)  4. New Song #3
(4:41)  5. Minor Mishap
(4:20)  6. Misterioso
(4:44)  7. Milestones
(6:05)  8. Good Bait
(3:15)  9. Afternoon In Paris
(3:44) 10. Giant Steps
(6:49) 11. Blues in the Closet
(7:16) 12. Sister Cheryl
(6:25) 13. My Ship
(3:48) 14. Moose the Mooche

On June 16 & 17, 1983, three legendary instrumentalists recorded what would be their only collaboration as a unit. While the group's instrumentation consisted of a standard piano trio, the combination of Flanagan together with Carter and Williams was anything but standard. The studio sessions produced 14 tracks of superlative music - mostly modern jazz standards (including Rollins' "St.Thomas", Monk's "Misterioso", Davis' "Milestones", Dameron's "Good Bait" and many more great choices). The date also featured three classic standards as well as an original by each member of the trio. https://www.freshsoundrecords.com/tommy-flanagan-albums/4232-the-trio.html

Personnel:  Tommy Flanagan - piano;  Ron Carter - bass;  Tony Williams - drums

The Trio

Donald Fagen - Morph The Cat

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:54
Size: 122,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:48)  1. Morph the Cat
(5:15)  2. H Gang
(6:01)  3. What I Do
(7:17)  4. Brite Nitegown
(7:37)  5. The Great Pagoda of Funn
(6:11)  6. Security Joan
(4:15)  7. The Night Belongs to Mona
(6:30)  8. Mary Shut the Garden Door
(2:56)  9. Morph the Cat Reprise

There are no surprises in sound and style on Morph the Cat, Donald Fagen's long-awaited third solo album, nor should any be expected ever since Steely Dan's 1980 masterwork, Gaucho, his work, either on his own or with longtime collaborator Walter Becker, has been of a piece. Each record has been sleek, sophisticated, and immaculately produced, meticulously recorded and arranged, heavy on groove and mood, which tends to mask the sly wit of the songs. When it works well as it did on Fagen's peerless 1982 solo debut, The Nightfly, or on Steely Dan's 2001 comeback, Two Against Nature the results go down smoothly upon first listen and reveal their complexity with each spin; when it doesn't quite succeed both 1993's Kamakiriad and the Dan's 2003 effort Everything Must Go didn't quite gel the albums sound good but samey on the surface and don't quite resonate. Morph the Cat belongs in the first group: at first it sounds cozily familiar, almost too familiar, but it digs deep, both as music and song. Sonically, at least superficially, it is very much a continuation of the two Steely Dan records of the new millennium not only does it share Fagen's aesthetic, but it was recorded with many of the same musicians who have shown up on the Dan projects. There are slight differences without Becker around, there's a greater emphasis on keyboards and the songs stretch on a bit longer than anything on Everything Must Go but this, at least on pure sonics, could have functioned as a sequel to Two Against Nature. But Morph the Cat is very much a solo affair, fitting comfortably next to his first two solo albums as a conclusion to what he calls a trilogy. If The Nightfly concerned the past and Kamakiriad was set in a hazy future, Morph the Cat is rooted in the present, teeming with the fears and insecurities of post-9/11 America. Fagen doesn't camouflage his intent with the gleefully enigmatic rhymes that have been his trademark: his words, while still knowingly sardonic, are direct, and in case you don't want to bother reading the lyrics or listening closely, he helpfully offers brief explanations of the songs (for instance, on "Mary Shut the Garden Door," he writes "Paranoia blooms when a thuggish cult gains control of the government," a statement that's not exactly veiled). 

On top of this unease, Fagen faces mortality throughout the album he talks with the ghost of Ray Charles, borrows W.C. Fields' phrase for death for "Brite Nitegown," writes about attempted suicides and every song seems to be about things drawing to a close. It's a little disarming to hear Fagen talk so bluntly although he came close to doing so on the deliberately nostalgic The Nightfly, the fact that he was writing about the past kept him at a bit of a distance but despite the abundance of morbid themes, Morph the Cat never sounds dour or depressing. In large part this is due to Fagen's viewpoint he never succumbs to mawkishness, always preferring to keep things witty and sardonic, which helps keep things from getting too heavy but it's also due to his smooth jazz-rock, which always sounds nimble and light. This, of course, is how Fagen's music always sounds, but here, it not only functions as a counterpoint to the darkness creeping on the edges of the album, but it's executed expertly: as spotless as this production is, it never sounds sterile, and when the songs start stretching past the five-minute mark two cuts are over seven minutes it never gets boring, because there's a genuine warmth to the clean, easy groove. More so than on Kamakiriad, or on the tight Everything Must Go, there is a sense of genuine band interplay on this record, which helps give it both consistency and heart something appropriate for an album that is Fagen's most personal song cycle since The Nightfly, and quite possibly his best album since then. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine https://www.allmusic.com/album/morph-the-cat-mw0000342064

Personnel: Donald Fagen (melodica, piano, Fender Rhodes piano, organ, background vocals); Donald Fagen (vocals); Ken Wessel, Frank Vignola, Hugh McCracken, Ken Emerson (guitar); Howard Levy (harmonica); Roger Rosenberg (bass clarinet, baritone saxophone); Walt Weiskopf (alto saxophone, tenor saxophone); Mark Patterson (trombone); Ted Baker (piano, Fender Rhodes piano); Tedd Baker (Fender Rhodes piano); Harlan Post, Jr. (acoustic bass); Art Smith (drums); Jennifer Battista, Candice Predham, Eddie Jackson , Camille Meza (clappers); Gordon Gottlieb (percussion, background vocals); Bashiri Johnson , Joe Passaro (percussion); Cindy Mizelle, Jerry Barnes, Amy Helm, Carolyn Leonhart (background vocals); Jon Herington, Wayne Krantz (guitar); Lawrence Feldman (flute, clarinet, tenor saxophone); Illinois Elohainu (flute); Marvin Stamm (trumpet); Phonus Quaver (vibraphone, marimba); "Ready" Freddie Washington (bass guitar); Keith Carlock (drums).

Morph The Cat