Thursday, June 21, 2018

The Supremes - The Supremes Sing Country Western & Pop

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:43
Size: 72.6 MB
Styles: Soul, Motown
Year: 1965/2014
Art: Front

[3:08] 1. Funny (How Time Slips Away)
[2:55] 2. My Heart Can't Take It No More
[3:25] 3. It Makes No Difference Now
[2:30] 4. You Didn't Care
[2:17] 5. Tears In Vain
[2:16] 6. Tumbling Tumbleweeds
[3:36] 7. Lazybones
[2:55] 8. You Need Me
[2:21] 9. Baby Doll
[3:11] 10. Sunset
[3:03] 11. (The Man With The) Rock And Roll Banjo Band

The Supremes made a series of change-of-pace albums designed to show off their versatility as all-around entertainers in contrast to the pop/R&B style of their hit singles. The concept here seemed to be to reveal the group's affinity for country standards like Willie Nelson's "Funny How Time Slips Away," the leadoff track. But Motown must have decided not to let much of the song publishing out -- seven out of 11 songs were written by producer Clarence Paul, either alone or with 14-year-old Stevie Wonder or company president Berry Gordy. As a result, the collection has an ersatz quality -- Nashville by way of Detroit. ~William Ruhlmann

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Paolo Alderighi, Stephanie Trick - Broadway And More

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:05
Size: 142.1 MB
Styles: Easy Listening, Broadway
Year: 2018
Art: Front

[6:25] 1. Call Me Madam Medley
[4:51] 2. Marie
[4:56] 3. Make Believe
[3:45] 4. Lambeth Walk
[6:41] 5. Torna A Surriento Anema E Core
[4:00] 6. If I Had A Million Dollars
[3:25] 7. Heartaches
[7:03] 8. The Music Man Medley
[4:48] 9. An Affair To Remember
[7:23] 10. West Side Story Medley
[4:52] 11. Penny Lane
[3:52] 12. Mr. Sandman

Stephanie Trick (from St. Louis), a leading exponent of stride piano, and Paolo Alderighi (from Milan), one of Italy’s foremost jazz pianists, met at a piano festival in Switzerland in 2008. Three years later, they started to collaborate on a four-hands piano project dedicated to classic jazz, preparing arrangements of songs from the swing era, as well as drawing from the ragtime and blues repertoire. Following the release of their first album, "Two for One" (2012), they have been invited to perform widely in the United States, Europe, and Japan. A second CD, "Sentimental Journey" (2014), shows Stephanie and Paolo’s commitment to the formula of four-hands duets on one piano, rarely used in jazz. Their partnership continued with "Double Trio Live 2015" and "Double Trio Always" (2016), recorded in the piano trio setting, but with two pianists instead of one. In 2018, they released this album, which is their first on two pianos.

The husband-and-wife duo have performed in a variety of venues, including Jazz at Filoli, the Musical Instrument Museum in Phoenix, the Sacramento Music Festival, the West Coast Ragtime Festival in Sacramento, the Monterey Dixieland Jazz Festival, the San Diego Jazz Festival, the Kobe Jazz Street Festival in Japan, the London Jazz Festival, the Edinburgh Jazz & Blues Festival, the Ascona Jazz Festival in Switzerland, the Silkeborg Riverboat Jazz Festival in Denmark, the Bohém Ragtime & Jazz Festival in Hungary, Teatro Dal Verme Milano, Jazzland in Vienna, Jazz Bistro in Toronto, and other jazz clubs.

Broadway And More                 

The Inmates - Meet The Beatles

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:45
Size: 118.5 MB
Styles: Garage Rock/Pop
Year: 1987/2003
Art: Front

[2:10] 1. Little Child
[2:54] 2. I'll Get You
[3:25] 3. She's A Woman
[2:56] 4. You Can't Do That
[3:02] 5. Day Tripper
[2:28] 6. Back In The Ussr
[2:37] 7. We Can Work It Out
[2:15] 8. I Wanna Be Your Man
[1:40] 9. Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
[2:31] 10. Birthday
[2:57] 11. I Saw Her Standing There
[3:46] 12. Get Back
[2:43] 13. I'm Down
[4:31] 14. Hey Jude
[4:24] 15. Dirty Water
[2:46] 16. Jeannie, Jeannie, Jeannie
[4:35] 17. Tell Me What's Wrong

Bass – Ben Donnelly; Drums – Eddie; Guitar, Backing Vocals – Peter Gunn (4), Tony Oliver; Lead Vocals – Bill Hurley. Recorded live at la Villette, June 20, 1987.

In 1987, French leading newspaper Liberation invited British R&B stalwarts The Inmates to perform a concert in Paris to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the Sgt Pepper album. The Inmates delivered a legendary show made of pumped-up versions of Beatles classic rockers. The CD also features the encore: 3 classic Inmates songs, including their hit single "Dirty Water"

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Guy Lafitte, Wild Bill Davis, Alvin Queen - Three Men On A Beat

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:36
Size: 131.9 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[3:30] 1. Wrap On
[5:09] 2. Three Men On A Beat
[4:57] 3. Johnny Come Lately
[3:52] 4. The Jeep Is Jumpin'
[5:26] 5. I Should Care
[5:14] 6. Comin' On
[4:21] 7. Somebody Loves Me
[4:29] 8. Blue Lou
[5:35] 9. She's Funny That Way
[4:19] 10. Ooh Ah Dee Dee Dee
[5:13] 11. Free, Frantic And Funny
[5:24] 12. Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams

Drums – Alvin Queen; Organ – Wild Bill Davis; Tenor Saxophone – Guy Lafitte. Recorded on January 15th 1983 at Sysmo Studio, Paris.

A fine swing tenorman whose main inspiration was always Coleman Hawkins, Guy Lafitte appeared in many mainstream settings through the years. LaFitte started out paying clarinet including with swing-oriented gypsy bands. After switching to tenor in 1947 and moving to Paris, he worked with Big Bill Broonzy (1950), Mezz Mezzrow (1951), Bill Coleman (off and on starting in 1952), Dicky Wells and Buck Clayton. Through the years, Lafitte has frequently led his own mainstream combos and was also often utilized by veteran American players who were visiting France including Lionel Hampton (1956), Duke Ellington (for the 1961 film Paris Blues), Milt Buckner, Wallace Davenport, Arnett Cobb and Wild Bill Davis. As a leader, Guy Lafitte led many sessions during the 1954-93 period (particularly 1954-64) including for CFD, Duc-Thomson, Pathe, French Columbia, VSM, French RCA, Vega, Black & Blue and CTPL. ~bio by Scott Yanow

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Dan Adler, Joey DeFrancesco, Byron Landham - Back To The Bridge

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:10
Size: 146.9 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[5:11] 1. Silver And Gold
[6:32] 2. Oh, Look At Me Now
[5:24] 3. Joy Spring
[5:18] 4. Back To The Bridge
[6:52] 5. Good Old Days
[7:44] 6. A Beautiful Friendship
[7:15] 7. Yatzanu At (We Left Slowly)
[5:07] 8. Between Jobs
[6:34] 9. I've Never Been In Love Before
[8:08] 10. The Smudge

Dan Adler: guitar; Joey DeFrancesco; organ; Byron Landham: drums.

Guitarist Dan Adler's debut, All Things Familiar (Emdan Music, 2009), demonstrated his formidable skills, and brought together a noteworthy roster of artists, such as saxophonist Grant Stewart, to fill out a quintet lineup. For his followup, the Israeli-born, New York-based six stringer pares things down and goes with an organ trio format, enlisting the most renowned and recognizable organist of the modern era, Joey DeFrancesco, and longtime drummer, Byron Landham.

The music, as might be expected, is largely made up of swinging songs in the mid-to-up-tempo range, and plenty of the songs adhere to the predictable form of head-solo-solo—sometime solo trading with drums—head. The good thing is that performance trumps occasional form predictability every time, and with players this good, it's hard not to be impressed. In addition, Adler does find ways to spice things up, regardless of some relatively conventional structures. His tempo twists and retooling work on Clifford Brown's "Joy Spring" create one such moment. Book-ending "A Beautiful Friendship" with some NOLA notions, superbly delivered by Byron's crushed snare drum sounds, represents another. The inclusion of a chill-inducing, mournful Israeli-standard/ballad, "Yatzanu At (We Left Slowly)," decidedly atypical fare for an organ album, is, yet, a third.

DeFrancesco's jaw-dropping technique and lightning quick reflexes show up here and there with a quick mid-solo run, but he largely reins in those tendencies and works, in a more sympathetic manner with, what Adler lays out for him. Sometimes, as on "Oh, Look At Me Now," the well-crafted organ bass lines are as easily noticed as any other work from DeFrancesco. Adler, likewise, demonstrates terrific facility and a clean-toned clarity throughout his playing. He self-edits with great taste, never overplaying or throwing in needless licks. Landham's snappy swing, clean brushwork and quick thinking give spark to these songs. When he pulls a reverse Art Blakey, playing a de-cresendoing press roll during the solo trading on "Oh, Look At Me Now," he demonstrates intelligence in simplicity.

Other highlights include a Sonny Rollins-style calypso original from Adler ("Between Jobs"), snappy version of "I've Never Been In Love Before"—which gives the guitarist a chance to throw in a quick "Surrey With The Fringe On Top" quote—and the album opener, "Silver And Gold," a tribute to pianist Horace Silver. It's hard to think of the organ trio tradition without thinking of the blues, and Adler closes the album with "The Smudge"—a mid-tempo blues vehicle from the late Oscar Peterson. Back To The Bridge is a fine showcase for Adler's writing, arranging and guitar playing skills, and presents ten tracks of organ trio music in all its glory. ~Dan Bilawsky

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Beady Belle - Dedication

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:16
Size: 108.2 MB
Styles: Soul, R&B
Year: 2018
Art: Front

[3:52] 1. Mercy
[4:26] 2. Out Of Orbit
[3:30] 3. I Run You Ragged
[5:35] 4. Traces
[3:48] 5. Hold Your Breath
[3:09] 6. Dedication
[5:22] 7. Mooring Line
[2:57] 8. Waste Of Grace
[5:04] 9. My Religion
[5:34] 10. Last Drop Of Blood
[3:53] 11. Can You Smile

Music, lyrics, production, lead vocals: Beady Belle; Prophet 5, Minimoog, Juno 60, Arp, Fender Rhodes, Clavinet, Hammond organ, grand piano, electric guitar, auto harp and glockenspiel: David Wallumrød; Drums, shaker and tambourine: Bjørn Sæther; Electric bass: Marius Reksjø; Backing vocals: LaDonna Harley-Peters Sharlene Hector and Vula Malinga - LaSharVu; Percussion: Martin Windstad; Electric sitar: Bjørn Charles Dreyer.

With "Dedication", Beady Belle has drawn together all the threads of inspiration at the core of who she is and has woven a brand new tapestry that is vibrant, organic, energetic, cool, emotional, intimate, and unequivocally funky. Soul and R&B have always been close to Beady Belle's heart, and with "Dedication", she is fully immersed in these twin worlds. "I associate this music with the 70's," she says. "It's recorded live with old, original instruments. Raw and unpolished. With the groove as an unstoppable engine. It's a tribute to my great heroes - Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, Donny Hathaway and Aretha Franklin, while there are whispers of younger Soul artists like Alicia Keys, Raphael Saadiq, Lauryn Hill and Frank Ocean."

The title, "Dedication", refers to the most important thing in life - at any given time - as you go through hell and high water to achieve it. It is the battle that requires full dedication to win. But winning is never guaranteed ... The prize can be a breath of happiness, a sigh of relief, a roaring victory or a restful calm. The road ahead often seems darker than it really is as the goal ahead shines so brightly. But if an honest path is found, and one is true to oneself, that shining objective may not be so far away after all. The roads to Rome are many ...

"Dedication" is in many ways a continuation of the previous album, "On my own" (2016). The organic live feeling there has been developed further here, but now with a clear step closer to Soul and with the driving rhythm and groove solidly placed centre-stage. Beady Belle writes - and has always written - pop music. She conjures catchy and intuitive melodies, while at the same time adds deliberate - and sometimes intricate ? themes and musical depth. But the dress of her music has varied and developed in accordance with the fluctuations that have affected her life along the way. The lyrical themes are also carried forward from the previous release, where all the songs were about "otherness," about being different, standing on the outside and not knowing how to get in. About not fitting in where you are supposed to feel at home.

Beady Belle also began a process of introspection and self-examination after a close family member's health drastically changed. Discovering new challenges in the fresh perspective on life this brought, it became therapeutic to convey her experiences and thoughts in her lyrics and music, and in turn, the songs could perhaps give others courage and comfort.

Beady Belle's music has moved from a rather clubby Neo soul to Electronics Inspiration, through Nashville-inspired Country and Jazz. But her love for Soul and R & B has coloured all the songs. "Honesty is the key in all the words and music I've written. On all my records, I'm searching for a core that is close to my heart, but this changes as life goes and I change. What was me before may not be me anymore. Therefore, my music has always changed character from release to release - but always with a clear signature from my heart. There is always something open, revealing in it."

Beady Belle often writes songs with surprising juxtapositions of lyric and melody: the lyrics and melody often seems to be from opposite moods. Jamie Cullum once said, "Your song is a real mindfuck". It occurs when, for example, you are drawn to your feet to dance and sing along to a joyful tune that lyrically is about something downbeat and serious. Should you cry or laugh? Beady Belle finds great inspiration and power in this dichotomy. "Contrasts and duality are the stuff of life," she says, "I rarely feel that something is purely either joyous or sad. And smiling through tears is an expression of the strongest emotions. I want to write music and words that convey this."

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Tommy Alexander - Tommy Alexander Presents His Golden Trombones (Remastered)

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:14
Size: 71.5 MB
Styles: Big band, Vocal jazz
Year: 1958/2010
Art: Front

[2:36] 1. Come Rain Or Come Shine (Feat. Bob Manning)
[2:11] 2. All Of Me (Feat. Bob Manning)
[2:35] 3. That's All I've Got To Say
[2:21] 4. Tea Time
[2:01] 5. I've Grown Accustomed To Her Face
[2:53] 6. I Hadn't Anyone Till You
[2:53] 7. Sunday Kind Of Love (Feat. Bob Manning)
[2:16] 8. Lullaby Of Birdland
[3:38] 9. Gone With The Wind
[3:27] 10. I Could Write A Book (Feat. Bob Manning)
[1:54] 11. Almost Like Being In Love
[2:22] 12. Minor Effort

This classic 1958 audiophile recording features West Coast pianist/arranger Tommy Alexander leading a big band featuring a trombone section with the superb Bob Manning featured as guest vocalist on "Come Rain Or Come Shine," "All Of Me," "Sunday Kind Of Love" and "I Could Write A Book." West Coast jazz legend Bill Holman helps out on arrangements. All selections newly remastered.

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Ray LeVier - Ray's Way

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:51
Size: 141.6 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[5:33] 1. Ray's Way
[4:03] 2. Manahatta
[9:23] 3. You Never Know
[5:45] 4. Song For Nury
[8:04] 5. Blues In The Closet
[8:23] 6. Bait Tone Blues
[7:21] 7. Ralph's Piano Waltz
[5:48] 8. Echoing
[7:27] 9. Wing And A Prayer

DAVE BINNEY - saxophone (1,3,4,6); FEDERICO TURRENI - soprano sax (8); JOHN ABERCROMBIE - guitar (1,2,4,7,8); MIKE STERN - guitar (3,5,6,9); JOE LOCKE - vibes (1,2,4,7,8); FRANCOIS MOUTIN - bass (1,2,3,4,6,7,8); NED MANN - bass (5,9); RAY LEVIER - drums.

New York drummer Ray LeVier brings together some of the world?s most creative jazz voices for his debut recording as a leader. With guitarists Mike Stern and John Abercrombie, saxophonist Dave Binney, vibist Joe Locke, and Francois Moutin on bass, among others, LeVier has produced a stirring and cohesive album of original music. From the hard-hitting grooves on several of Mike Stern's contributions to the flowing and fresh reading of John Abercrombie?s classic "Ralph's Piano Waltz," "Ray's Way" stands as an inspired introduction to a gifted composer, drummer and producer.

Ray's Way

Hank Jones, Oliver Nelson - Happenings

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:44
Size: 77.2 MB
Styles: Soul-jazz, Bop
Year: 1966/2001
Art: Front

[2:55] 1. Broadwalk Samba
[2:23] 2. Winchester Cathedral
[2:35] 3. Mas Que Nada (Pow, Pow Pow)
[2:31] 4. Lullaby Of Jazzland
[2:18] 5. Jazztime, U.S.A
[3:03] 6. Cul-De-Sac
[3:09] 7. Happenings
[4:21] 8. Lou's Good Dues Blues
[4:24] 9. Fugue Tune
[3:10] 10. Spy With A Cold Nose
[2:50] 11. Funky But Blues

Bass – George Duvivier, Ron Carter; Drums – Ed Shaugnessy, Grady Tate; Harpsichord [Electric] – Hank Jones; Percussion – Joe Venuto; Piano – Hank Jones; Trombone – Britt Woodman, J.J. Johnson, Jimmy Cleveland, Tom Mitchell; Trumpet – Clark Terry, Ernie Royal, Snooky Young, Joe Newman; Woodwind – Danny Bank, Jerome Richardson, Jerry Dodgion, Phil Woods, Robert Ashton, Romeo Penque. Recorded October 19, 1966 - October 21, 1966.

The combination of Hank Jones and Oliver Nelson, along with sidemen such as Clark Terry, Ernie Royal, and Jerry Dodgion, would normally have one expecting a great release. Unfortunately, Jones plays an electric harpsichord on seven of the 11 tracks from this mid-1960s LP, plus there are several dated pop numbers from the era, including "Winchester Cathedral" (though it has a campy pesudo-Satchmo vocal by Terry) and the bland "Mas Que Nada (Pow Pow Pow)," which has long since worn out its welcome. Jones' playing, Nelson's arrangements and his originals (including "Happenings" and "Lou's Good Due Blues"), and the work of the various sidemen is all first rate. But the forgettable sound of the electric harpsichord (an instrument that thankfully didn't catch on, contrary to liner note writer Stanley Dance's prediction that it was here to stay along with earlier electronic instruments) keeps this release from achieving the heights it would have if Jones had only stuck to the piano throughout the sessions. This disc will be sought only by those fans who must have everything Hank Jones has recorded. ~Ken Dryden

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Clifford Brown - New Star On The Horizon

Styles: Trumpet Jazz 
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 23:32
Size: 55,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:25)  1. Cherokee
(3:42)  2. Easy Living
(3:59)  3. Wail Bait
(4:33)  4. Minor Mood
(4:05)  5. Hymn Of The Orient
(3:46)  6. Brownie Eyes

2015 reissue from Blue Note Records' 75th Anniversary Vinyl Initiative series. New Star On The Horizon compiles some of American jazz trumpeter Clifford Brown's best moments for Blue Note. Brown died in a car accident at the age of 25, leaving only four years of recorded material. Within his short career, he managed to influence many future jazz trumpeters, like Freddie Hubbard and Lee Morgan. New Star On The Horizon is a part of Blue Note's 10" reissue series. Originally released in 1953. https://www.forcedexposure.com/Catalog/brown-clifford-new-star-on-the-horizon-10-/BN.5032LP.html

Personnel:  Trumpet – Clifford Brown;  Alto Saxophone, Flute – Gigi Gryce ;  Bass – Percy Heath ;  Drums – Art Blakey ;  Piano – John Lewis ;  Tenor Saxophone – Charlie Rouse

New Star On The Horizon

Patti LaBelle And The Bluebelles - Island Of Unbroken Hearts

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:06
Size: 108,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:36)  1. Island of Unbroken Hearts
(2:52)  2. One Phone Call (Will Do)
(2:58)  3. Have I Sinned
(2:42)  4. Go On (This Is Goodbye)
(2:46)  5. Impossible
(3:14)  6. Where Are You ?
(3:37)  7. Down The Aisle
(2:42)  8. Tear After Tear
(2:50)  9. Danny Boy
(2:50) 10. C'est La Vie
(2:59) 11. I Walked Right In
(2:01) 12. Itty Bitty Twist
(3:41) 13. When Johnny Comes Marching Home
(3:15) 14. You'll Never Walk Alone
(2:34) 15. Cool Water
(2:22) 16. I Sold My Heart To The Junkman

Soul diva Patti LaBelle has enjoyed one of the longest-lived careers in contemporary music, notching hits in a variety of sounds ranging from girl group pop to space-age funk to lush ballads. Born Patricia Holt in Philadelphia on May 24, 1944, she grew up singing in a local Baptist choir, and in 1960 teamed with friend Cindy Birdsong to form a group called the Ordettes. A year later, following the additions of vocalists Nona Hendryx and Sarah Dash, the group was rechristened the Blue Belles. With producer Bobby Martin at the helm, they scored a Top 20 pop and R&B hit in 1962 with the single "I Sold My Heart to the Junkman," and subsequently hit the charts in 1964 with renditions of "Danny Boy" and "You'll Never Walk Alone." In 1965, the quartet now known as Patti LaBelle & the Bluebelles signed to Atlantic, where they earned a minor hit with their version of the standard "Somewhere Over the Rainbow." The group's Atlantic tenure was largely disappointing, however, and in 1967 Birdsong replaced Florence Ballard in the Supremes. The remaining trio toured the so-called chitlin circuit for the remainder of the decade before signing on with British manager Vicki Wickham in 1970. Wickham renamed the group simply LaBelle and pushed their music in a funkier, rock-oriented direction, and in the wake of their self-titled 1971 Warner Bros. debut they even toured with the Who. The trio also collaborated with Laura Nyro on her superb R&B-influenced album Gonna Take a Miracle.    By 1973, LaBelle had gone glam, taking the stage in wildly theatrical, futuristic costumes. A year later they became the first African-American act ever to appear at New York's Metropolitan Opera House, a landmark performance that also introduced their lone chart-topping single, the Allen Toussaint-produced classic "Lady Marmalade." However, after two more albums 1975's Phoenix and the following year's Chameleon LaBelle disbanded, and its namesake mounted a solo career, issuing her eponymous debut on Epic in 1977. In addition to subsequent releases including 1979's It's Alright with Me and 1980's Released, LaBelle also turned to acting, co-starring in a 1982 Broadway revival of Your Arms Too Short to Box with God. Upon moving to the Philadelphia International label for three albums, LaBelle scored a number one R&B hit with "If You Only Knew," from 1983's I'm in Love Again. Two years later, she reached the pop Top 20 with her Beverly Hills Cop soundtrack contribution "New Attitude." Her subsequent MCA debut, 1986's The Winner in You, went platinum on the strength of the Burt Bacharach-penned "On My Own," a duet with Michael McDonald, while the follow-up, 1989's Be Yourself, featured a pair of cuts written by Prince. LaBelle recorded a little less frequently during the '90s, though all three of the studio albums released during the decade went either gold or platinum and peaked in the R&B Top Ten. Burnin', the first of the three, earned a Grammy for Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female. During this period, LaBelle also published her autobiography, Don't Block the Blessings: Revelations of a Lifetime, and released two live sets. The latter one, 1998's double-length Live! One Night Only, won a Grammy for Best Traditional R&B Performance. After LaBelle released her final work for MCA, 2000's When a Woman Loves, she briefly associated with Def Soul, where she issued 2004's Timeless Journey and 2005's all-covers Classic Moments. She switched labels and gears for The Gospel According to Patti LaBelle, a Universal-distributed Bungalo recording that topped Billboard's gospel chart in 2006. Save for some archival recordings, little was heard from LaBelle, though she frequently toured and landed occasional acting roles. Bel Hommage, a set of jazz standards supported by Sony, arrived in 2017.~ Jason Ankeny https://www.allmusic.com/artist/patti-labelle-mn0000017748/biography

Island Of Unbroken Hearts

William Parker - The Inside Songs Of Curtis Mayfield

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:08
Size: 169,8 MB
Art: Front

( 2:30)  1. The Makings of you
(12:02)  2. People get ready
( 9:43)  3. Inside song 1
(20:54)  4. When people are darker than blue
( 3:12)  5. Spoken introduction
(15:20)  6. Think
(10:24)  7. Freddie is dead

"William Parker is a bassist, improviser, composer, writer, and educator from New York City, heralded by The Village Voice as, "the most consistently brilliant free jazz bassist of all time." In addition to recording over 150 albums, he has published six books and taught and mentored hundreds of young musicians and artists.  Parker's current bands include the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra, In Order to Survive, Raining on the Moon, Stan's Hat Flapping in the Wind, and the Cosmic Mountain Quartet with Hamid Drake, Kidd Jordan, and Cooper-Moore. Throughout his career he has performed with Cecil Taylor, Don Cherry, Milford Graves, and David S. Ware, among others."
-William Parker Website http://www.williamparker.net/

Personnel:  William Parker - bass, arranger, liner notes, composer;  Hamid Drake - drums;  Dave Burrell - piano;  Lewis Barnes - trumpet;  Darryl Foster - tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone; Sabir Mateen - alto saxophone, tenor saxophone;  Leena Conquest  - vocals;  Amiri Baraka - voice, poetry, lyrics.

The Inside Songs Of Curtis Mayfield

Steely Dan - Come Back Baby

Styles: Vocal And Guitar Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:11
Size: 116,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:30)  1. Come Back Baby
(4:04)  2. Come Back Baby
(4:10)  3. Don't Let Me In
(3:18)  4. Barrytown
(2:42)  5. Parker's Band
(3:59)  6. Yellow Peril
(3:41)  7. Ida Lee
(5:49)  8. Brooklyn (Owes the Charmer Under Me)
(3:53)  9. Any World (That I'm Welcome To)
(2:55) 10. Stone Piano
(2:03) 11. Soul Ram
(4:00) 12. I Can't Function
(3:01) 13. Let George Do It
(2:58) 14. Brain Tap Shuffle

Most rock & roll bands are a tightly wound unit that developed their music through years of playing in garages and clubs around their hometown. Steely Dan never subscribed to that aesthetic. As the vehicle for the songwriting of Walter Becker and Donald Fagen, Steely Dan defied all rock & roll conventions. Becker and Fagen never truly enjoyed rock  with their ironic humor and cryptic lyrics, their eclectic body of work shows some debt to Bob Dylan -- preferring jazz, traditional pop, blues, and R&B. Steely Dan created a sophisticated, distinctive sound with accessible melodic hooks, complex harmonies and time signatures, and a devotion to the recording studio. With producer Gary Katz, Becker and Fagen gradually changed Steely Dan from a performing band to a studio project, hiring professional musicians to record their compositions. Though the band didn't perform live between 1974 and 1993, Steely Dan's popularity continued to grow throughout the '70s, as their albums became critical favorites and their singles became staples of AOR and pop radio stations. Even after the group disbanded in the early '80s, their records retained a cult following, as proven by the massive success of their unlikely return to the stage in the early '90s. Walter Becker (bass) and Donald Fagen (vocals, keyboards) were the core members of Steely Dan throughout its variety of incarnations. The two met at Bard College in New York in 1967 and began playing in bands together shortly afterward. The duo played in a number of groups  including the Bad Rock Group, which featured future comedic actor Chevy Chase on drums  which ranged from jazz to progressive rock. Eventually, Becker and Fagen began composing songs together, hoping to become professional songwriters in the tradition of the Brill Building. In 1970, the pair joined Jay & the Americans' backing band, performing under pseudonyms; Becker chose Gustav Mahler, while Fagen used Tristan Fabriani. They stayed with Jay & the Americans until halfway through 1971, when they recorded the soundtrack for the low-budget film You Gotta Walk It Like You Talk It, which was produced by the Americans' Kenny Vance. Following the recording of the soundtrack, Becker and Fagen attempted to start a band with Denny Dias, but the venture was unsuccessful. Barbra Streisand recorded the Fagen/Becker composition "I Mean to Shine" on her album Barbra Joan Streisand, released in August 1971, and the duo met producer Gary Katz, who hired them as staff songwriters for ABC/Dunhill in Los Angeles, where he had just become a staff producer. 

Katz suggested that Becker and Fagen form a band as a way to record their songs, and Steely Dan  who took their name from a dildo in William Burroughs' Naked Lunch were formed shortly afterward. Recruiting guitarists Denny Dias and Jeff "Skunk" Baxter, drummer Jim Hodder, and keyboardist/vocalist David Palmer, Becker and Fagen officially formed Steely Dan in 1972, releasing their debut, Can't Buy a Thrill, shortly afterward. Palmer and Fagen shared lead vocals on the album, but the record's two hit singles  the Top Ten "Do It Again" and "Reeling in the Years" were sung by Fagen. Can't Buy a Thrill was a critical and commercial success, but its supporting tour was a disaster, hampered by an under-rehearsed band and unappreciative audiences. Palmer left the band following the tour. Countdown to Ecstasy, released in 1973, was a critical hit, but it failed to generate a hit single, even though the band supported it with a tour. Steely Dan replaced Hodder with Jeff Porcaro and added keyboardist/backup vocalist Michael McDonald prior to recording their third album, Pretzel Logic. Released in the spring of 1974, Pretzel Logic returned Steely Dan to the Top Ten on the strength of the single "Rikki Don't Lose That Number." After completing the supporting tour for Pretzel Logic, Becker and Fagen decided to retire from live performances and make Steely Dan a studio-based band. For their next album, 1975's Katy Lied, the duo hired a variety of studio musicians  including Dias, Porcaro, guitarist Elliot Randall, saxophonists Phil Woods, bassist Wilton Felder, percussionist Victor Feldman, keyboardist Michael Omartian, and guitarist Larry Carlton  as supporting musicians. Katy Lied was another hit, as was 1976's The Royal Scam, which continued in the vein of its predecessor. On 1977's Aja, Steely Dan's sound became more polished and jazzy, as they hired jazz fusion artists like Wayne Shorter, Lee Ritenour, and the Crusaders as support. 

Aja became their biggest hit, reaching the Top Five within three weeks of release and becoming one of the first albums to be certified platinum. Aja also gained the respect of many jazz musicians, as evidenced by Woody Herman recording an album of Becker/Fagen songs in 1978. Following the release of Aja, ABC was bought out by MCA Records, resulting in a contractual dispute with the label that delayed until 1980 the release of their follow-up album. During the interim, the group had a hit with the theme song for the film FM in 1978. Steely Dan finally released Gaucho, the follow-up to Aja, in late 1980, and it became another Top Ten hit for the group. During the summer of 1981, Becker and Fagen announced that they were parting ways. The following year, Fagen released his solo debut, The Nightfly, which became a critical and commercial hit. Following the release of Aja, ABC was bought out by MCA Records, resulting in a contractual dispute with the label that delayed until 1980 the release of their follow-up album. During the interim, the group had a hit with the theme song for the film FM in 1978. Steely Dan finally released Gaucho, the follow-up to Aja, in late 1980, and it became another Top Ten hit for the group. During the summer of 1981, Becker and Fagen announced that they were parting ways. The following year, Fagen released his solo debut, The Nightfly, which became a critical and commercial hit.  Fagen didn't record another album until 1993, when he reunited with Becker, who produced Kamakiriad. The album was promoted by the first Steely Dan tour in nearly 20 years, and while the record failed to sell, the concerts were very popular. In 1994, Becker released his solo debut, 11 Tracks of Whack, which was produced by Fagen. The following year, Steely Dan mounted another reunion tour, and in early 2000 the duo issued Two Against Nature, their first new studio album in two decades. It won the Grammy Award for Album of the Year. Steely Dan followed it in 2003 with Everything Must Go. Fagen's solo album Morph the Cat was released in 2006, and Becker released Circus Money in 2008 as Steely Dan embarked on another tour. In September 2017, it was announced that Becker had died in Maui, Hawaii. He was 67 years old. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine https://www.allmusic.com/artist/steely-dan-mn0000011707/biography

Come Back Baby

Mark Soskin - Upper West Side Stories

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:00
Size: 158,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:55)  1. I've Never Been in Love Before
(5:35)  2. Gloria's Step
(6:10)  3. Remember
(8:05)  4. Ugly Beauty
(5:39)  5. Ummg - Upper West Side Stroll
(6:40)  6. Pee Wee
(5:09)  7. Un Poco Loco
(7:28)  8. Pensativa
(5:49)  9. Listening Room
(4:12) 10. Soiree
(6:13) 11. Fee-Fi-fo-Fum

A longtime sideman, most notably with Sonny Rollins, Mark Soskin has only had rare opportunities to lead his own sessions. He began taking piano lessons when he was seven. Although he later considered Cedar Walton to be his most important influence, Soskin actually spent his teenage years playing often with R&B bands. He studied classical music at Colorado State University in 1971 but transferred to the Berklee School of Music the following year. In 1975, he moved to San Francisco where he worked with Azteca, Joe Henderson, Bill Summers, Pete Escovedo, and Billy Cobham, touring with the CBS All-Stars, a group that also included Cobham, Tom Scott, Steve Khan, and Alphonso Johnson. During 1978-'90 and occasionally afterwards, Soskin was a member of Sonny Rollins' band, recording many sets with the great tenor. Since then he has remained active in the San Francisco Bay area. Soskin has recorded several dates as a leader, including Rhythm Vision for Prestige (1979), and Solo Piano for Vartan Jazz (1996). ~ Scott Yanow https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/upper-west-side-stories/1382198874

Personnel:   Mark Soskin - piano, composer;   Jay Anderson - bass;   Adam Nussbaum - drums

Upper West Side Stories