Sunday, August 26, 2018

Sidney Bechet, Django Reinhardt - Deux Geants Du Jazz

Styles: Saxophone And Guitar Jazz
Year: 1969
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:27
Size: 86,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:31)  1. Petite Fleur
(3:51)  2. Swing de Paris
(3:15)  3. Songe D'automne
(3:00)  4. September Song
(2:19)  5. Willow Weep For Me
(2:56)  6. Folie a Amphion
(3:19)  7. Nuages
(3:03)  8. Rose de Picardie
(2:51)  9. Dinette
(2:52) 10. Laura
(3:27) 11. Blues en Mineur
(2:57) 12. Dardanella

Despite the title, unfortunately guitarist Django Reinhardt and soprano-saxophonist Sidney Bechet do not actually play together. Instead they are heard on alternating tracks. Reinhardt's performances (taken from radio broadcasts) feature him in 1947 with his Quintet (starring clarinetist Maurice Meurnier) and are fine but it is the Bechet selections (which originated from a variety of sources between 1952-57) that are most exciting, particularly "Roses of Picardy," "Down by the Old Stream" and his hit "Petite Fleur." It's worth picking up as an introduction to these two classic jazzmen. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/django-reinhardt-sidney-bechet-deux-geants-du-jazz-mw0000957511

Personnel:  Sidney Bechet - Saxophone;  Django Reinhardt - Guitar.

Deux Geants Du Jazz

Ella Fitzgerald - In Budapest

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1970
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:18
Size: 179,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:29)  1. Crazy Rhythm
(5:02)  2. Medley: This Guy's in Love With You/I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write
(4:19)  3. Open Your Window
(2:41)  4. Satin Doll
(3:48)  5. Spinning Wheel
(3:33)  6. As Time Goes By
(2:06)  7. You'd Better Love Me
(2:49)  8. I'll Never Fall in Love Again
(4:10)  9. Hello, Young Lovers
(5:17) 10. Medley: Concentrate on You/You Go to My Head
(6:37) 11. The Girl from Ipanema
(3:21) 12. Cabaret
(3:13) 13. Dancing in the Dark
(5:41) 14. Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head
(3:04) 15. The Lady Is a Tramp
(3:02) 16. Summertime
(4:18) 17. You'll Have to Swing It (Mr. Paganini)
(8:04) 18. Mack the Knife
(3:36) 19. People

The year is 1970, and Ella is changing. The girlish voice is beginning to fray, and at times a faint rasp sneaks in. It becomes another weapon, giving some words urgency and other words charm. Her repertoire is mostly “modern”, with three tunes from Burt Bacharach. Her brief stay at Reprise Records had stressed such material, and here it works mostly. And some things never change: the frantic scatting, the swift imagination, and ferocious interplay with her trio. She was definitely “on” this night, and the massive applause isn’t enough.The piano starts right when Ella takes the stage; you can tell ‘cause the crowd starts to cheer. “Crazy Rhythm” is quickly dispensed, with fast leaps and high spirits. There’s a bit about the evening’s program (‘good songs, bad songs, true songs, new songs!”) then the tune returns as a gracious waltz. Tommy Flanagan then hits a funk vamp, and Ella gets another rap (“It’s your thing, what you wanna do/ Aretha Franklin and Tom Jones too!”) The song briefly returns, and the crowd begins. We’ve gone a long way in three minutes, and the pace rarely lets up. “Welcome to our show,” she says, in a voice both humble and – nervous? “We have some new songs, some old ones, and some of the now sounds.” One of these, “This Guy’s in Love with You”, gets a creamy reading, full of warm vibrato. It melts into “Write Myself a Letter”, using the Bacharach chords. It’s a nice touch, and hear the good bass in this passage. Nilsson’s “Open Your Window” is breathy and smooth, with her first lengthy scat. She’s a trumpet in the center, and at the end tears off a drum solo (“click shomp bomp  dooby dooby...”).  A shimmering “Satin Doll”, and then “Spinning Wheel”, the only misfire of the evening. The words sound silly from her lips, and she has little chance with a lyric that needs a rock delivery. But this soon passes: while the applause remains “As Time Goes By” comes in, soft as a dream (“To cool you off,” she says later) as just as lovely. The mix of old and new is a jolt, partly from what she chooses. (It’s surprising how well the Bacharach tunes compare to the standards.) And when she returns to the old, it’s like a hug from a friend. And you feel it all right.

With seamless grace “I Concentrate on You” becomes a medley, joined beautifully with “You Go To My Head”. (She sings “How can you hear me with your clicking?” to Flanagan; at the end she says “you’re throwing me off...” under her breath.) She does her own clicking on “Girl from Ipanema”, a percussion interlude shifting to a rambunctious reading, throwing in other sambas at the end. (This was later reworked into “The Bossa Scene”, a feature using many of these songs.) This particular scene is worth making! “Dancing in the Dark” has a nice edgy vamp at the end; Ella turns it into “That Old Black Magic”. “Raindrops Keep Falling” wears a big smile, and she recovers nicely from a bad cough at the end. (Flanagan starts playing “Oh Happy Day”, and Ella runs with it.) “The Lady is a Tramp” goes fast with the rare verse, and the elegant words twinkle as she says them. “Summertime” is low and lubricious, Flanagan ringing from a distant shore. It’s simple, and stands out on its own. The band comes through on “Mr. Paganini”; the bass is sly and Tommy has fun with the fast part. “Mack the Knife” doesn’t have her German lyrics, but it does have “12th Street Rag”, “On the Trail”, “Symphony Sid”, “Work Song”, and “Take Me Out to the Ball Game”! In a Louis Armstrong voice she signs off, introduces the band, and quotes “That’s My Desire” all in that voice. The encore is “People”; it’s a bit sappy but it fits, a soft fluffy cloud to drift away on. And there it ends: a special performance from one who kept doing it night after night. ~ AAJ Staff https://www.allaboutjazz.com/ella-fitzgerald-in-budapest-ella-fitzgerald-fantasy-jazz-review-by-aaj-staff.php

In Budapest

Roland Kirk - Verve Jazz Masters 27

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:18
Size: 154,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:09)  1. Three For The Festival
(6:11)  2. Blue Rol
(5:19)  3. Reeds And Deeds
(3:34)  4. Hip Chops
(6:29)  5. From Bechet, Byas And Fats
(2:48)  6. Berkshire Blues
(5:17)  7. A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square
(4:01)  8. March On, Swan Lake
(3:39)  9. The Haunted Melody
(3:40) 10. Meeting On Termini's Corner
(3:49) 11. Rolando
(4:09) 12. Blues For Alice
(5:24) 13. Black Diamond
(2:28) 14. You Did It, You Did It
(4:09) 15. Where Monk And Mingus Live / Let's Call This
(3:05) 16. Blues For C &

Rahsaan Roland Kirk's volume in Verve's Jazz Masters series is a distillation of the ten-disc Complete Mercury Recordings set. It covers the '60s with an emphasis on 1961-1962, and includes many of the best selections from Kirk LPs like Rip, Rig and Panic, We Free Kings, and Domino.

Those separate albums should be of more interest to fans, leaving this disc as an adequate collection for beginners or those unsure of where to start. ~ John Bush https://www.allmusic.com/album/verve-jazz-masters-27-mw0000120079

Personnel:  Rahsaan Roland Kirk - Tenor Saxophone, Flute;  Lonnie Liston Smith, Hank Jones, Harold Mabern - Piano;  Charli Persip - Drums;  Percy Heath, Wendell Marshall - Bass;  Bobby Bryan - Trumpet.

Verve Jazz Masters 27

Dave Valentin & Herbie Mann - Two Amigos

Styles: Flute Jazz 
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:45
Size: 116,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:57)  1. Bronx Bad Boys
(5:47)  2. Moonlight Walk
(5:53)  3. Jesse's Samba
(4:51)  4. First Date
(2:59)  5. RamboThe Cat
(5:24)  6. Two Amigos
(7:06)  7. Old Hill (Morro Velho)
(4:03)  8. Savana
(7:41)  9. Obsession

What a perfectly titled release, as Valentin and Mann's camaraderie on their five duets here is all at once playful and poignant, with healthy doses of improvisation thrown in for good measure. Bill O'Connell's standout solo piano sparkles throughout the sweet grooves of "Jesse's Samba" and the rousing eight minute closer "Obsession," but it is Valentin's perky way with the airy textures of his instrument which powers this flavorful collection. "Old Hill" begins as an improv laden duet with O'Connell and shows that Valentin is equally comfortable on moodier lines. Also enjoyable is the brassy "Savanna," on which Mann and Valentin trade of sweet eight bar solos. Two Amigos should appeal to lovers of Latin music and jazz flute, as well as anyone in the mood for a refreshing departure from the same old pop-jazz. ~ Jonathan Widran https://www.allmusic.com/album/two-amigos-mw0000689855

Personnel:  Herbie Mann, Dave Valentin (Flute); Robert Ameen (Drums); Oskar Cartaya (Bass Electric); Tony Cintron (Drums); Mark Falchook (Keyboards); Sammy Figueroa (Percussion); Lincoln Goines (Bass); Bill O'Connell (Piano); Marc Quiñones (Percussion); Rubén Rodríguez (Bass).

Two Amigos

Jeff Lorber Fusion - Impact

Styles: Jazz Fusion
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:12
Size: 108,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:39)  1. Sport Coat Makes Good
(4:26)  2. Pasadena City
(4:44)  3. Citizenship
(4:33)  4. Highline
(4:44)  5. Opt In
(5:22)  6. Quest
(4:24)  7. Sunny Sounds
(4:51)  8. Companion
(4:01)  9. Arda
(4:25) 10. Valinor

Superstar keyboardist, writer, producer Jeff Lorber is renowned as a pioneer in the jazz-fusion movement. Scoring #1 radio hits with Jeff Lorber Fusion and as a founding member of smooth jazz super-group Jazz Funk Soul, Lorber performs constantly before his dedicated fans from coast to coast!! Highlights include the spirited and funky "Highline," the soulful "Arda" and more Lorber originals. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Impact-Jeff-Lorber-Fusion/dp/B07DQ9JMQK

Impact