Friday, August 17, 2018

Shelly Manne and His Men - Yesterdays

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1960
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:49
Size: 103,5 MB
Art: Front

( 6:38)  1. Cabu
(13:33)  2. Bag's Groove
( 7:48)  3. Poinciana
( 8:28)  4. Straight, No Chaser
( 8:21)  5. Yesterdays

Shelly Manne, who died suddenly of a heart attack on September 26, 1984, left behind an impressive body of recorded work as a leader and sideman. Like Dave Tough, one of his formative influences, Manne was a musician first and drummer second. Evincing an unusually nuanced approach to the trap set, he had no interest in technique for its own sake, instead tailoring his sticking and footwork to the demands of bands of varying sizes and instrumentation sometimes even working without a bassist. Every stroke was true and had a purpose. Moreover, Manne thought and played in melodic as well as rhythmic terms, often adapting accompaniment to a composition’s melody, and singing along with his own solos. An uncommonly versatile performer who was equally at home in a number of jazz styles (from Art Hodes to Ornette Coleman, as he once proudly declared), Manne had an extraordinary talent for getting to the heart of the music, and making an ensemble swing in a natural, unforced manner. Aside from the selfless nature of his musicianship, Manne’s playing is filled with unusual sounds such as drumming with his fingers and hands, dropping a coin on a drumhead, damping drums with a hand in order to bend the pitch of strokes, or simply not playing at all. These were not circus tricks, but rather integral parts of his vocabulary that functioned as part of the music. Consisting of previously unreleased tracks from Jazz At The Philharmonic concerts in Europe during February and March of 1960, Yesterdays is another first-rate addition to Manne’s discography. The antithesis of the crowd-pleasing antics that frequently characterized the JATP tours, his superb quintet shuns excess and radiates a joyful enthusiasm. Firmly lodged in the swing-to-bebop stylistic continuum, the band’s excellent musicianship, attention to detail, and willingness to consistently make changes within certain parameters, make the music lively and interesting. There’s a sense of balance between carefully arranged ensemble passages and solos which are usually kept to 3 to 5 choruses; background riffs are often used for color as well as to spur the soloist; the rhythm section is steadfast, responsive, and always finds ways to add something fresh to the presentation; moreover, the band displays a wide dynamic range. While all of the recording’s three primary soloists develop themes logically, each of them makes an impact in a different way. On the title track, pianist Russ Freeman, a cautious almost polite bebopper, begins his solo unhurriedly; at first playing lines that fit with bassist Monty Budwig’s pulse on beats 1 and 3 of each measure, then gradually becomes more expansive. Expertly riding Manne and Budwig’s foursquare swing, his melodically inventive themes continue to build in strength as the choruses mount; yet, Freeman doesn’t reach for a rousing climax. Instead, he simply yields to tenor saxophonist Richie Kamuca.

Not unlike Freeman, Joe Gordon’s five choruses on Milt Jackson’s “Bag’s Groove” are thoughtful and measured; nonetheless he manages to generate considerable heat. Gordon and Freeman bounce variations of triplet figures off one another on the first chorus; then the trumpeter settles in for some impassioned blues playing for the next two, showing off his fine, full tone, and well-ordered phrasing. When the band accents beats 1,2 and 3 in unison for the next 12 bars, Gordon brings down the volume and becomes a little subdued before rising again with some powerful bebop lines, then eases his way to the finish line. There’s something unrelentingly efficient in the way Richie Kamuca keeps on churning out variations of eighth-note lines during his solo on an up-tempo version of the standard “Poinciana.” The tenor saxophonist is in constant motion, sustaining a four-chorus improvisation almost without interruption, and feeding off of everything that’s going on around him. During this incessant, albeit calculated burst of energy, he displays a heightened awareness of where the pulse is, without feeling the need to always begin and end sequences on top of the beat. He flies over a Gordon riff that sounds like an abbreviated version of one of his phrases, and when Freeman lays out for the last two choruses, Kamuca isn’t thrown by Manne’s choppy, ground-shifting hits to the bass and snare drums. In addition to his customary reliable accompaniment, Manne serves as a catalyst for some of the record’s most exciting moments. Toward the end of “Bags' Groove,” he executes a continuous buzz roll over Budwig and Freeman’s laid-back, 12-measure promenade. Beginning at just a whisper and gradually working up to a roar, Manne creates an incredible amount of tension, setting the stage for a shout chorus by the whole band that explodes like a bomb. Manne, the anti-virtuoso, shapes a short, rubato introduction out of portions from the melody of Thelonious Monk’s “Straight, No Chaser.” Interspersing clusters of strokes (particularly the opening five-note phrase) to different combinations of drums (and a partially opened hi-hat cymbal) with brief silences, he brilliantly captures the spirit of the composition, and sounds nothing like a traditional, go for broke drum soloist. Almost before you can grasp the logic of what he’s doing it’s over. The band enters to play the melody in its original, fully recognizable form, and Manne reverts to his normal, crisply swinging ways. ~ David A.Orthmann https://www.allaboutjazz.com/shelly-manne-and-his-men-yesterdays-by-david-a-orthmann.php

Personnel: Shelly Manne—drums; Joe Gordon—trumpet; Richie Kamuca—tenor saxophone; Russ Freeman—piano; Monty Budwig—bass

Yesterdays

Aretha Franklin - The Queen Of Soul Disc 1 Of 4 Discs

Styles: Vocal Soul
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:23
Size: 178,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:52)  1. I Never Loved A Man (The Way I Love You) (Mono Version)
(3:15)  2. Do Right Woman - Do Right Man (Mono Version)
(2:26)  3. Respect
(4:06)  4. Drown In My Own Tears (Mono Version)
(2:38)  5. Soul Serenade (Mono Version)
(2:22)  6. Don't Let Me Lose This Dream (Mono Version)
(2:54)  7. Baby, Baby, Baby (Mono Version)
(3:21)  8. Dr. Feelgood [Love Is Serious Business]
(2:09)  9. Good Times (Mono Version)
(2:19) 10. Save Me (Mono Version)
(2:44) 11. Baby, I Love You
(2:40) 12. Satisfaction
(4:21) 13. You Are My Sunshine (Mono Version)
(2:55) 14. Never Let Me Go (Mono Version)
(2:59) 15. Prove It (Mono Version)
(4:24) 16. I Wonder (Mono Version)
(2:37) 17. Ain't Nobody (Gonna Turn Me Around) (Mono Version)
(3:46) 18. It Was You (Mono Version)
(2:47) 19. (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman
(2:48) 20. Chain Of Fools
(3:44) 21. People Get Ready
(2:27) 22. Come Back Baby
(3:58) 23. Good To Me As I Am To You
(2:25) 24. Since You've Been Gone (Sweet Sweet Baby)
(4:13) 25. Ain't No Way

Aretha Franklin is one of the giants of soul music, and indeed of American pop as a whole. More than any other performer, she epitomized soul at its most gospel-charged. Her astonishing run of late-'60s hits with Atlantic Records "Respect," "I Never Loved a Man," "Chain of Fools," "Baby I Love You," "I Say a Little Prayer," "Think," "The House That Jack Built," and several others earned her the title "Lady Soul," which she has worn uncontested ever since. Yet as much of an international institution as she's become, much of her work outside of her recordings for Atlantic in the late '60s and early '70s is erratic and only fitfully inspired, making discretion a necessity when collecting her records.  Franklin's roots in gospel ran extremely deep. With her sisters Carolyn and Erma (both of whom would also have recording careers), she sang at the Detroit church of her father, Reverend C.L. Franklin, while growing up in the 1950s. In fact, she made her first recordings as a gospel artist at the age of 14. It has also been reported that Motown was interested in signing Aretha back in the days when it was a tiny start-up. Ultimately, however, Franklin ended up with Columbia, to which she was signed by the renowned talent scout John Hammond.  Franklin would record for Columbia constantly throughout the first half of the '60s, notching occasional R&B hits (and one Top 40 single, "Rock-a-bye Your Baby with a Dixie Melody") but never truly breaking out as a star. 

The Columbia period continues to generate considerable controversy among critics, many of whom feel that Aretha's true aspirations were being blunted by pop-oriented material and production. In fact, there's a reasonable amount of fine items to be found on the Columbia sides, including the occasional song ("Lee Cross," "Soulville") where she belts out soul with real gusto. It's undeniably true, though, that her work at Columbia was considerably tamer than what was to follow, and suffered in general from a lack of direction and an apparent emphasis on trying to develop her as an all-around entertainer, rather than as an R&B/soul singer.  When Franklin left Columbia for Atlantic, producer Jerry Wexler was determined to bring out her most soulful, fiery traits. As part of that plan, he had her record her first single, "I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You)," at Muscle Shoals in Alabama with esteemed Southern R&B musicians. In fact, that was to be her only session actually at Muscle Shoals, but much of the remainder of her '60s work would be recorded with the Muscle Shoals Sound Rhythm Section, although the sessions would actually take place in New York City. The combination was one of those magic instances of musical alchemy in pop: the backup musicians provided a much grittier, soulful, and R&B-based accompaniment for Aretha's voice, which soared with a passion and intensity suggesting a spirit that had been allowed to fly loose for the first time. In the late '60s, Franklin became one of the biggest international recording stars in all of pop. Many also saw Franklin as a symbol of black America itself, reflecting the increased confidence and pride of African Americans in the decade of the civil rights movement and other triumphs for the black community. 

The chart statistics are impressive in and of themselves: ten Top Ten hits in a roughly 18-month span between early 1967 and late 1968, for instance, and a steady stream of solid mid to large-size hits for the next five years after that. Her Atlantic albums were also huge sellers, and far more consistent artistically than those of most soul stars of the era. Franklin was able to maintain creative momentum, in part, because of her eclectic choice of material, which encompassed first-class originals and gospel, blues, pop, and rock covers, from the Beatles and Simon & Garfunkel to Sam Cooke and the Drifters. She was also a fine, forceful, and somewhat underrated keyboardist. Franklin's commercial and artistic success was unabated in the early '70s, during which she landed more huge hits with "Spanish Harlem," "Bridge Over Troubled Water," and "Day Dreaming." She also produced two of her most respected, and earthiest, album releases with Live at Fillmore West and Amazing Grace. The latter, a 1972 double LP, was a reinvestigation of her gospel roots, recorded with James Cleveland and the Southern California Community Choir. Remarkably, it made the Top Ten, counting as one of the greatest gospel-pop crossover smashes of all time. Franklin had a few more hits over the next few years "Angel" and the Stevie Wonder cover "Until You Come Back to Me" being the most notable. Her Atlantic contract ended at the end of the 1970s. She signed with the Clive Davis-guided Arista and scored number one R&B hits with "Jump to It," "Get It Right," and "Freeway of Love." 

Many of her successes were duets, or crafted with the assistance of contemporaries such as Luther Vandross and Narada Michael Walden. In 1986 Franklin released her follow-up to Who's Zoomin' Who?, the self-titled Aretha, which saw the single "I Knew You Were Waiting for Me," a duet with George Michael, hit the top of the charts. There was also another return to gospel in 1987 with One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism. Franklin shifted back to pop with 1989's Through the Storm, but it wasn't a commercial success, and neither was 1991's new jack swing-styled What You See Is What You Sweat. Now solidly an iconic figure and acknowledged as one of the best singers of her generation no matter what her record sales were, Franklin contributed songs to several movie soundtracks in the next few years before releasing the R&B-based A Rose Is Still a Rose in 1998. So Damn Happy followed five years later in 2003 and again saw disappointing sales, but it did generate the Grammy-winning song "Wonderful." Franklin left Arista that same year and started her own label, Aretha's Records, two years later. A duets compilation, Jewels in the Crown: All-Star Duets with the Queen, was issued in 2007, followed by her first holiday album, 2008's This Christmas. The first release on her own label, A Woman Falling Out of Love, appeared in 2011. She signed to RCA and realigned with Clive Davis, who connected her with the likes of Babyface and OutKast's André 3000 for Sings the Great Diva Classics, for which she covered Gladys Knight, Barbra Streisand, and Adele, among others. 
~ Richie Unterberger https://www.allmusic.com/artist/aretha-franklin-mn0000927555/biography

R.I.P.
Born on March 25, 1942
Died on August 16, 2018

The Queen Of Soul  Disc 1

Pharoah Sanders - Rejoice

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1988
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:28
Size: 148,3 MB
Art: Front

(12:47)  1. Rejoice
( 7:42)  2. Highlife
(10:02)  3. Nigerian Juju Highlife
( 5:45)  4. Origin
( 6:28)  5. When Lights Are Low
( 5:20)  6. Moments Notice
( 5:47)  7. Central Park West
( 4:06)  8. Ntjilo Ntjilo/Bird Song
( 5:29)  9. Farah

A two-LP set on Theresa, Rejoice features Pharoah Sanders in excellent form in 1981. Sanders sounds much more mellow than he had a decade earlier, often improvising in a style similar to late-'50s John Coltrane, particularly on "When Lights Are Low," "Moments Notice," and "Central Park West." The personnel changes on many of the selections and includes such top players as pianists Joe Bonner and John Hicks, bassist Art Davis, drummers Elvin Jones and Billy Higgins, vibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson, trombonist Steve Turre, trumpeter Danny Moore, a harpist, and (on "Origin" and "Central Park West") five vocalists. The music always holds one's interest, making this one of Sanders' better later recordings. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/rejoice-mw0000196812

Personnel:  Pharoah Sanders - tenor saxophone, bells, vocals;  Danny Moore - trumpet (tracks 4-7);  Steve Turre - trombone (tracks 4-7);  Lois Colin - harp (tracks 7 & 8);  Bobby Hutcherson - vibraphone (tracks 1, 4, 6 & 7);  John Hicks - piano (tracks 4-7);  Joe Bonner - piano, vocals (tracks 1-3 8 & 9);  Peter Fujii - guitar, vocals (track 2 & 3);  Art Davis - bass (tracks 1 & 4-7);  Jorge Pomar - bass, vocals (tracks 2 & 3);  Elvin Jones (track 1), Billy Higgins (tracks 4-7) - drums;  Big Black - congas, vocals (tracks 2 & 3);  Babatunde Lea - bells, drums, shekere, vocals (tracks 1-3);  George V. Johnson Jr. - vocals (track 6);  B. Kazuko Ishida - voice (track 1);  Flame Braithwaite, Bobby London, Sakinah Muhammad, Carroll Wilson Scott, Yvette S. Vanterpool - vocals (tracks 4 & 7);  William S. Fischer (vocal arranger (tracks 4 & 7).

Rejoice

Thelonious Monk - Always Know

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1979
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 88:42
Size: 208,0 MB
Art: Front

( 1:42)  1. This Is My Story, This Is My Song (Take 1)
( 8:11)  2. Criss Cross
(12:51)  3. Light Blue (Live)
( 5:17)  4. Monk's Dream (Take 3)
( 7:35)  5. Played Twice
( 3:41)  6. Darn That Dream
( 5:08)  7. Epistrophy
( 7:34)  8. Coming On The Hudson (Take 3)
(11:06)  9. Bye-Ya
( 2:16) 10. Introspection
( 7:51) 11. Easy Street
( 5:26) 12. Shuffle
( 9:56) 13. Honeysuckle Rose (Live)

Thelonious Monk fans in particular are advised to search for this valuable two-LP set for it contains a variety of unissued material from the pianist/composer's six-year period with Columbia. Monk is heard on three piano solos, with his regular working quartet, heading a trio on "Easy Street" and at his renowned Lincoln Center concert with a nonet on "Light Blue" and "Bye Ya." 

The music on this two-fer is at the same consistent high level as his Columbia recordings of the 1960s and contains some surprising moments. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/always-know-mw0000893343

Personnel:    Thelonious Monk - Piano

Always Know

Rolf Kühn - Spotlights

Styles: Clarinet, Piano Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:05
Size: 131,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:00)  1. Conversation One
(3:19)  2. Pinocchio's Dream
(3:18)  3. Pinocchio's Dance
(6:22)  4. Don't Forget
(4:05)  5. Choro Do Portina
(4:02)  6. Broken City
(5:00)  7. Laura
(8:01)  8. Fingerprints
(3:36)  9. A Strange Sunrise
(3:40) 10. X-Ray
(2:01) 11. Flip-Flop
(3:26) 12. Autumn Leaves
(3:11) 13. Dexter's Tune (Bonus track)

Spotlights features nine of Rolf Kühn's own compositions, plus two jazz standards from the 1940s, and "Dexter's Tune" by Randy Newman and "Choro do Portina" by Hamilton de Holanda. The theme running through and joining up the album is of course the unmistakable sound of Rolf Kühn's clarinet. Hamilton de Halonda, the distinguished Brazilian expert on the bandolim, a kind of mandolin, immerses Kühn's clarinet in Latinsounding melancholy. Albrecht Mayer, international classical star and solo oboist with the Berlin Philharmonic, provides a fascinating angle with his highly sensitive playing and the rich facets of his art. Asja Valcic, the outstanding Croatian cellist, contributes her impressive, classical virtuosity and daring improvisation, as she races frantically through the notes with Kühn. Christian Lillinger, the exceptional percussionist with the Rolf Kühn Unit, adds his wild groove to the mix and like Berlin bassist Oliver Potratz  accentuates the tense dynamic mood. 

Ed Motta, heavyweight Brazilian singer and megastar in his homeland, brings out his baritone to sound like a synthesizer suffering voltage fluctuations, breathing and scatting his resounding word scraps into Kühn's compositions. And as if that were not enough, Rolf's famous younger brother, pianist Joachim Kuhn, weighs in with his inimitable style of playing, his rhythmic soul. The special attraction of these 13 Spotlights emanates from the extraordinary combination of instruments and styles, and above all from the fact that a group of virtuoso artists from very different musical backgrounds have come together to participate in a project very close to their hearts. "I have known my little big brother Joachim for over 70 years, have been friends with Albrecht for so long; I only got to know Asja, Ed and Hamilton personally last year and despite the fact that we are all so different, I believe there is nothing more wonderful than making music with old and new soul mates," enthuses the jazz clarinettist.https://www.hbdirect.com/album/3224071-rolf-kuhn-spotlights-digipak.html

Personnel: Rolf Kühn (clarinet, piano);  Hamilton de Holanda (bandolim);  Christian Lillinger (drums);  Asja Valcic (cello);  Albrecht Mayer (oboe);  Ed Motta, Joachim Kühn (piano);  Volker Greve (percussion).

Spotlights