Tuesday, September 4, 2018

Terry Blaine - Too Hot For Words

Size: 136,6 MB
Time: 57:51
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1999
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. A-Tisket A-Tasket (3:18)
02. Dinah (4:02)
03. Looking At You (4:00)
04. It's Too Hot For Words (2:36)
05. My Very Good Friend The Milkman (4:18)
06. It's You (3:04)
07. A Ship Without A Sail (4:34)
08. The Joint Is Jumpin' (3:22)
09. Concentratin' On You (4:02)
10. You Go To My Head (4:36)
11. My Mother's Son-In-Law (2:37)
12. I'm No Angel (3:16)
13. You Meet The Nicest People In Your Dreams (2:42)
14. It's Easy To Remember (4:51)
15. Repeal The Blues (2:29)
16. Goodnight My Love (3:54)

With this album of 16 "blasts from the past," Terry Blaine solidifies her position as one of the leading contemporary practitioners of the traditional/swing vocal style. The subtitle for this album is "Great Ladies of Swing," a tribute to those song birds of the past who enthralled the public and, in doing so, set the standards for singers of this musical genre who were to follow. The technique Terry Blaine and Mark Shane use in presenting this tribute is as fascinating as the tribute itself. On most of the cuts, Blaine refines a technique she used in her earlier album, Whose Honey Are You?, by over-dubbing her voice to create background singers. Here she manages to sound as if she is accompanied by the Boswell Sisters, giving each of them a separate and distinct voice. The result is some very interesting vocal combinations, which is Blaine and Shane's objective. On "Looking at You," Cole Porter's under-recorded gem, it's as if Lee Wiley has the Boswell Sisters backing her. An unlikely combination is Mae West backed by these harmonious siblings on "I'm No Angel." On "My Very Good Friend the Milkman," made famous by the inimitable Fats Waller, Shane does Waller's piano while Blaine and her "background singers" do a jivy version of this perky tune. While most of the cuts are indeed "hot," there are some slowly turned-out ballads. Alan Vache's clarinet noodles behind Blaine's poignant delivery of "You Go to My Head" before he takes a patented soft, Benny Goodman-like solo. Blaine's interpretation and style on this tune recalls Bea Wain's with the Larry Clinton Orchestra. Another slow-tempo tune, "It's Easy to Remember," showcases Russell George's arco bass. Many other singers of the past are recalled on this entertaining album, among them Mildred Bailey, Peggy Lee, Ethel Waters, and, of course Ella Fitzgerald on the kick-off song "A-Tisket A-Tasket." Blaine does not imitate the voices of these singers of the past; rather, she sings in a similar style. She has garnered an extraordinary and likeminded set of musicians to work with her on this album. The Texas tailgate trombone of Joel Helleny and Ed Polcer's cornet go a long way in recreating the swing aura of the 1920s-1940s. Mark Shane's piano, however, is the glue which holds the set together. He sets exactly the right mood and pace, promoting Blaine's delivery and phrasing. That these two are musical soulmates is apparent.

Too Hot for Words serves as a reminder of how enduring the works of the great stylists of the past (and some from the relatively recent past) are, and of the very rich vocal legacy they left behind. In the hands of talented professionals, the reminder is a very entertaining one indeed. ~by Dave Nathan

Too Hot For Words

Dexter Gordon - Tokyo 1975

Size: 146,8 MB
Time: 63:38
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Fried Bananas ( 9:28)
02. Days Of Wine And Roses ( 8:45)
03. Misty (10:52)
04. Jelly, Jelly, Jjelly ( 7:41)
05. Rhythm-A-Ning (14:06)
06. Old Folks (12:44)

Elemental Music is a record label that can be uttered in the same breath with Omnivore Records and Resonance Records. These labels can be credited with significant additions to the universal jazz catalog. Near recent examples of unreleased performances put out by Elemental Music include: Art Pepper Live At Fat Tuesday's (2015) and Red Garland's Swingin' On The Korner: Live At Keystone Korner (2015), as well as Jimmy Giuffre: New York Concerts (2014).

Elemental Music has since found some previously unreleased performances of Dexter Gordon recorded in Tokyo in 1975, a year prior to the saxophonist's repatriation to the United States after a 14-year residence in Europe, mostly in Paris and Copenhagen. This particular disc contains four performances from the Yubin Chonkin Hall in Tokyo on October 1, 1975. The remaining two selections, Monk's "Rhythm-a-Ning" and "Old Folks," were performed in De Boerenhofstee July 18, 1973 and New Haven Conn, May 5, 1977, respectively, with different rhythm sections. The Tokyo performance falls between two recording dates that resulted in Dexter Gordon -The 1975 SteepleChase Artist. Gordon's return to the United States, marked by his recording Homecoming (Columbia, 1976) captured December 11-12, 1975 at the Village Vanguard in New York City. This was an edgy, progressive date that featured trumpeter Woody Shaw.

In comparison, Dexter Gordon Quartet—Tokyo 1975 is a sedate and straight-forward date. The recital begins with the Gordon original "Fried Bananas," a composition long in the Gordon songbook. He provides a lengthy workout and allows bassist Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen, who performs at the highest level possible. His rhythmic, center-of-the-tone approach and his acute precision add an additional, almost clinical, level to the recording. Ørsted Pedersen's immediate impact can be heard after the head release into Gordon's first solo, when pianist Kenny Drew drops out and Gordon plays trio. Virile and muscular, Ørsted Pedersen wills the beat. Gordon solos well within the lines, proving he is well ensconced at the height of his powers. "Days of Wine and Roses" and "Misty" are dispatched well. The surprise is a performance of Billy Eckstine's "Jelly, Jelly Jelly." Gordon sings as well as blows the blues with gusto and grace. Thelonious Monk "Rhythm-a-Ning," from the Laren show demonstrates why this song was so long in Gordon's playbook. Again playing as a trio, this time with Ørsted Pedersen and drummer Espen Rud, Gordon stretches out, giving a lengthy performance. "Old Folks" from the New Haven show is reedy and organic, the sonics not as good as the Tokyo performances, but nevertheless showing Gordon's command of the ballad. Dexter Gordon Quartet—Tokyo 1975 proves an admirable addition to the Gordon discography. ~Michael C. Bailey

Personnel: Dexter Gordon: tenor saxophone; Kenny Drew: piano; Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen; Albert “Tootie” Heath: drums; Espen Rudd: drums (5); Ronnie Matthews: piano (6); Stafford James: bass (6); Louis Hayes: drums (6).

Tokyo 1975

Rebecca Hardiman - Rain Sometimes

Size: 94,5 MB
Time: 40:35
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Look For The Silver Lining (6:01)
02. I Didn't Know What Time It Was (5:04)
03. No More Blues (3:57)
04. It's A Most Unusual Day (2:42)
05. Rain Sometimes (4:26)
06. The Things We Did Last Summer (2:09)
07. Make The Man Love Me (4:25)
08. The Late Late Show (2:44)
09. The Night Has A Thousand Eyes (4:30)
10. Something Cool (4:32)

Rebecca started her professional career with the Boston based vocal jazz group The Ritz, performing at the 1987 Montreal Jazz Festival as well as jazz clubs throughout the country. While with The Ritz, she recorded a CD entitled The Ritz for Denon Columbia Records. Rebecca moved to Portland Oregon in 1990 and started the vocal jazz group Euphoria, performing throughout the Northwest for over a decade, most notably opening for Mel Torme’ in 1993 at the Hult Center in Eugene Oregon. In 2013 she embarked on a solo career and quickly became a favorite vocalist with jazz musicians. Rebecca’s style is often compared to Ella Fitzgerald, June Christy, and Nancy Wilson. Rebecca is also a co-founder of an annual jazz festival, and has helped develop several jazz venues in the Willamette Valley area in her home state of Oregon. She performs throughout the Northwest, as well as jazz clubs and various venues in New England, Hawaii, and California. Her CD’s include: The Ritz (1987), My Father’s Business (2009) I’ll Remember April (2013), Easy Living (2015), The Merriest (2016), Honoring Ella: A 100th Birthday Tribute (2017).

Rain Sometimes

Woody Shaw - Tokyo 1981

Size: 169,4 MB
Time: 73:25
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Rosewood (10:40)
02. 'Round Midnight (15:32)
03. Apex ( 6:51)
04. From Moment To Moment ( 7:45)
05. Song Of Songs (16:13)
06. Theme For Maxine ( 1:47)
07. Sweet Love Of Mine (14:36)

That trumpeter Woody Shaw is considered "underrated" may be a considerable understatement. Shaw died at age 44 in 1989, but he managed to release 33 recordings as a leader (27 in his lifetime) and worked in collaboration with Gary Bartz, Art Blakey, Chick Corea, Stanley Cowell, Eric Dolphy and most notably with Dexter Gordon, on his 1976 Homecoming: Live at the Village Vanguard (Columbia). His recording, Rosewood (Columbia, 1978), his first major label release, is considered his masterpiece. Shaw's seamlessly melodic 69 bars of "Rosewood" inaugurates the newly found, unreleased performance from Tokyo, December 7, 1981. This release is a sister to the recently released Dexter Gordon Quartet: Tokyo 1975, appropriate as Shaw and Gordon enjoyed a fruitful musical relationship.

Tokyo 1981 contains six selections from the said performance, augmented by a single performance of the Paris Reunion Band recorded at Den Haag, July 14, 1985. Shaw's brand of jazz was very much a product of the period in which he recorded. The trumpeter favored compositions with complex melodic and harmonic elements. Shaw's tone is lyrical with a hard edge. That contrasts well with the fluid playing of trombonist Steve Turre, evidenced on the ballad "From Moment to Moment." This show is closed with two Shaw originals, the modal-extended "Song of Songs," which as introduced is reminiscent of Lee Morgan's "Search For a New Land," and "Theme for Maxine" composed for Shaw's manager, Maxine Gordon (and wife of Dexter Gordon). "Song of Songs" is an outgrowth of the post-bop pioneered by Miles Davis 15 years before. Tony Reedus's drumming is forward progressive and Mulgrew Miller's piano potently clear in a McCoy Tyner sense. Tokyo 1981 is a worthy addition to the Woody Shaw catalog. Is there more of this music lurking in the shadow? ~C. Michael Bailey

Personnel: Woody Shaw: trumpet, flugelhorn; Steve Turre: trombone, percussion; Mulgrew Miller: piano; James Stafford: bass; Tony Reedus: drums.

Tokyo 1981

Marissa Mulder - Two Tickets Left: Songs Of Hope

Size: 108,9 MB
Time: 46:39
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz Vocals, Cabaret
Art: Front

01. Chelsea Morning (3:09)
02. Hand In My Pocket (3:44)
03. Goodbye Yellow Brick Road (5:11)
04. It's Amazing The Things That Float (4:38)
05. Old Fashioned Hat (4:19)
06. Martha (5:31)
07. Chasing The Sun (4:45)
08. I Remember (3:44)
09. Beautiful (2:27)
10. End Of The World (4:05)
11. Take It With Me (5:02)

Marissa Mulder is a natural; a rarity among cabaret singers. You never hear her struggling to tell a story or to make a point or to show off the range and beauty of her sparkling perfectly pitched soprano. Whatever she sings just seems to spill out of her without forethought or calculation.
Her choices of songs on her exquisite album, “Two Tickets Left” are as instinctively right as her unaffected delivery, bolstered by the sensitive contributions of her musical compatriot Nate Buccieri on piano and backup vocals. Always, the emotional truth of whatever she sings is right there in front of you. Even when she’s telling someone else’s story, she makes it hers.
Her voice sparkles like a sunlit fountain in Joni Mitchell’s “Chelsea Morning,” the album’s opening cut. You can see “the sun through yellow curtains, the rainbow on the wall,” and can savor her breakfast of milk and toast and honey, and feel the warmth of the sun pouring in “like butterscotch” and “sticking” to her senses. She makes romantic happiness, when it comes, seem easy.
Her version of the Elton John-Bernie Taupin ballad, “Goodbye Yellow Brick Road” cuts through any grandiosity to reveal a free-spirited narrator determinedly rejecting show business glamor to embrace her country roots. As her voice glides with fearless ease over the song’s challenging, semi-operatic intervals she never loses the thread or the note.
The persona who inhabits many of the songs on “Two Tickets Left” shrugs off contradictions and embraces simplicity like the frisky narrator of the Alanis Morrissette hit, “Hand in My Pocket,” who declares, “I’m broke but I’m happy,” “I’m high but I’m grounded, “I’m green but I’m wise.” Or in the language of Walt Whitman, “Do I contradict myself? Very well, Then, I contradict myself. I am large. I contain multitudes.” In other words, So what? I’m just happy to be alive.
She infuses “It’s Amazing the Things That Float,” Pete Mills’s song about a flood, with a powerful sense of wonder. More than a disaster, the flood is an adventure.
So is Matt Alber’s “End of the World,” in which passionate lovers riding a rollercoaster debate whether to break up or to continue. “I don’t wanna fall, I don’t wanna fly/ I don’t wanna be dangled over the edge of a dying romance, but I don’t wanna stop.”
A deeper sense of wonder infuses “Martha” and “Take It With Me,” two great songs by Tom Waits that evoke the preciousness of memory and of ordinary things that in retrospect loom as achingly transcendent illuminations. A humble space like “Beulah’s porch” on which two lovers once fell asleep decades earlier assumes a monumental personal significance.
At the core of Mulder’s sensibility is a belief in an essential innocence. It shines out of her in every note and syllable. ~Stephen Holden

Two Tickets Left

McCoy Tyner - McCoy Tyner And The Latin All-Stars

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:52
Size: 143,3 MB
Art: Front

(11:02)  1. Festival In Bahia
( 6:59)  2. Poinciana
(12:23)  3. Afro Blue
(10:34)  4. A Song For Love
( 8:36)  5. La Habana Sol
( 5:24)  6. We Are Our Father's Sons
( 6:51)  7. Blue Bossa

McCoy Tyner's percussive piano style has always worked well within an Afro-Cuban groove, and this recording provides an excellent setting for him and his all-star lineup to work in. Mixing genre classics like "Afro Blue" and "Poinciana" with original material, Tyner's first release for the Telarc label provides a completely satisfying, highly rhythmic experience. Regular bassist Avery Sharpe combines with a three-man percussion section to propel the group's extended explorations. Besides the leader's instantly recognizable pianistic flurries and fat, two-handed chords, the front-line foursome of flute whiz Dave Valentin, saxophonist Gary Bartz, trumpeter Claudio Roditi and bone-and-shell man Steve Turre is superb, both in ensemble passages and individual solo spots. In the course of his long career, McCoy Tyner has recorded in nearly every conceivable setting. Though many of his solo, trio and quartet dates are superb, his expansive style has often been most enjoyably showcased in the company of multiple horns. From the rollicking opener "Festival in Bahia," to the beautiful "A Song for Love," to the straightforward timbale-driven Latin groove of "We Are Our Father's Sons," McCoy Tyner & the Latin All-Stars makes a potent case for inclusion in the upper tier of Tyner's catalog. ~ Jim Newsom https://www.allmusic.com/album/mccoy-tyner-the-latin-all-stars-mw0000235460

Personnel: McCoy Tyner: piano;  Gary Bartz: saxophones; Claudio Roditi: trumpet, flugelhorn; Steve Turre: trombone; Dave Valentin: flute; Avery Sharpe: bass; Ignacio Berroa: drums;  Johnny Almendra: timbales;  Giovanni Hidalgo: percussion

McCoy Tyner And The Latin All-Stars

Roberta Gambarini - The Shadow Of Your Smile - Homage To Japan

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:58
Size: 154,3 MB
Art: Front

(7:07)  1. The Shadow Of Your Smile
(5:01)  2. Fly Me To The Moon
(3:58)  3. Someone To Watch Over Me
(5:15)  4. Embraceable You
(2:20)  5. Nobody Else But Me
(4:40)  6. Rainy Days And Mondays
(5:43)  7. Moanin
(4:12)  8. Poor Butterfly
(3:58)  9. My Shining Hour
(4:05) 10. Whisper Not
(5:29) 11. I Remember Clifford
(5:29) 12. Satin Doll
(4:40) 13. Close To You
(5:01) 14. My One And Only Love

Between 2006 and 2009, Italian émigré Roberta Gambarini delivered a trio of albums that earned her widespread plaudits as the heir apparent to Ella or Sarah or both. Then … a deafening silence. A trickle of fresh Gambarini material did appear last year with her four-track appearance on the Pratt Brothers Big Band’s terrific 16 Men & a Chick Singer Swingin’. Now, at last, Gambarini has released a new (if slightly difficult to obtain) disc. The album was recorded in New Jersey earlier this year with an ace quartet of saxophonist/flutist Justin Robinson, pianist George Cables, bassist John Webber and drummer Victor Lewis. But you won’t find it at your local CD outlet. Like the majority of her vocalist peers, Gambarini has an enormous following in Japan. The affection is mutual, and The Shadow of Your Smile is her exclusive billet-doux to them. (It is even subtitled Hommage [sic] to Japan.) And fortunate the Japanese are, for this is Gambarini’s finest outing to date, her plush, round notes and pearlescent tone shown to superb advantage. The mood is generally mellow, with lithe readings of “Someone to Watch Over Me,” “Embraceable You,” “Poor Butterfly,” “My One and Only Love” and the haunting title track plus a double-dip into the Carpenters’ songbook for “Close to You” and “Rainy Days and Mondays.” But she also gives her chops a healthy workout on a down-‘n’-dirty “Moanin’,” a scat-infused “Satin Doll” and a breezy “Fly Me to the Moon” that’s at once Sassy-warm and Sinatra-cool. https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/roberta-gambarini-the-shadow-of-your-smile/

Personnel:   Roberta Gambarini (vo);  George Cables (p);  John Webber (b);  Victor Lewis (ds);  Justin Robinson (as)

The Shadow Of Your Smile - Homage To Japan

Jazz Crusaders - Freedom Sound

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:00
Size: 76,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:40)  1. The Geek
(5:56)  2. M.J.S. Funk
(4:46)  3. That's It
(8:26)  4. Freedom Sound
(3:49)  5. Theme From Exodus
(4:22)  6. Coon

The first album by the Jazz Crusaders (which started an extensive series for Pacific Jazz) introduced the colorful quintet. With trombonist Wayne Henderson and tenor saxophonist Wilton Felder giving the ensembles a unique sound, the group (also featuring regular members pianist Joe Sample and drummer Stix Hooper along with guests Jimmy Bond on bass and guitarist Roy Gaines) managed to strike a balance between creative hard bop and accessible soul-jazz. In addition to their version of "Theme From Exodus" (hoping to jump on the bandwagon created by Eddie Harris' hit rendition), the Jazz Crusaders perform originals by Felder, Henderson, and Sample ("Freedom Sound"). ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/freedom-sound-mw0000677988

Personnel:  Wayne Henderson - trombone;  Wilton Felder - tenor saxophone;  Joe Sample - piano;  Roy Gaines - guitar (tracks 1 & 4);  Jimmy Bond - bass;  Stix Hooper - drums

Freedom Sound

Franck Avitabile - Just Play

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:48
Size: 143,8 MB
Art: Front

( 4:01)  1. Resonance
( 3:42)  2. Lettre A Loïse
( 5:07)  3. My Romance
(11:15)  4. August In Paris
( 3:56)  5. Memories
( 3:25)  6. Magic Mirror
( 3:48)  7. Smile
( 2:39)  8. Moddy Piano
( 4:22)  9. Morning Star
( 3:01) 10. Dreamland
( 5:13) 11. Isopod
( 4:32) 12. Real Addict
( 2:59) 13. Corps & Ames
( 4:40) 14. Nature Boy

Franck Avitabile (born 24 November 1971) is a jazz pianist who also has a master's degree in Discrete mathematics from the École Normale Supérieure de Lyon.  Avitabile was born in Lyon, France. At nine, he began to study music at the Lyon Conservatoire, including Bach, Mozart and Debussy. At seventeen, he became interested in jazz, particularly Keith Jarrett and Chick Corea. Later, he became the only musician for whom Michel Petrucciani produced a record. Both are synesthesia[1] composer and performer. He is also the composer of 60 published compositions.[2] In 2016, Franck Avitabile became record producer of Michel Petrucciani with the album Both Worlds Live North Sea Jazz Festival (1998), including a LIve with The Hague Philharmonic (1997) and a duet with Steve Gadd at Montreux Jazz Festival (1998). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franck_Avitabile

Just Play

Ulf Wakenius - Eternity: Solo Acoustic Guitar

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:10
Size: 99,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:42)  1. Mash
(4:50)  2. Two For The Road
(3:26)  3. Once Upon A Time In America
(2:30)  4. When You Wish Upon A Star
(3:14)  5. Summertime
(4:37)  6. Alfie
(4:31)  7. Cheek To Cheek
(6:10)  8. Danny Boy
(5:28)  9. Ain't Misbehavin
(3:38) 10. There Is No Business Like Show Business

Born: April 16t, 1958 in Halmstad, Sweden. Ulf Wakenius. A jazz guitarist extraordinaire acclaimed and celebrated all over the world. Between 1997 and 2007 Ulf held what may have been the most prestigious spot in jazz for a guitarist: a chair in the Oscar Peterson Quartet.This was the coronation of a career which included many record-breaking moments.Wakenius guitar duo Guitars Unlimited rocked Scandinavia in the early 80s, culminating in the 1985 Melody Grand Prix, which was seen by 600 million viewers, probably the largest audience a jazz guitar duo ever had. Shortly after that Wakenius started a extremely successful and long-lasting collaboration with the legendary bass player Niels-Henning Örsted Pedersen.( NHOP), and both of his duo albums with bass icon Ray Brown, topped the US Jazz Charts.The last few years he's been touriing the world with the amazing Korean singer Youn Sun Nah. Oscar Peterson has publicly described Ulf as one of the greatest guitarists alive in the world today and many of today’s most acclaimed jazz guitarists are among Ulf’s fans, including Pat Metheny, John McLaughlin, John Scofield and Mike Stern. Great Rhythmic feel combines with a extraordinary lyrical touch- his emphasis is always on melodies and groove. He has been filmed by Clint Eastwood. His next release on ACT will be Ulf Wakenius-Solo "Momento Magico" http://www.ulfwakenius.net/

The guitar solo album of this time declared "I'm dedicating to Joe Pass", but there you can see what kind of mind can afford. That's because Wolf has thought that this time he painted his own music world, whereas the previous solo album showed the performance under the influence of the pass. This time I feel strongly about the same era sex. 

And you can listen to the highly artistic musical expressions that let him know about his Verschuzo. Based on jazz, musicality such as bossa nova and classic is also reflected, not music for music, jazz for jazz, thought for the scene of the heart of one musician named Wolf Waschenius and beautiful things It is a spelled work. https://translate.google.com.br/translate?hl=en&sl=ja&u=http://spiceoflife.shop-pro.jp/%3Fmode%3Dcate%26cbid%3D909895%26csid%3D3%26sort%3Dn%26page%3D2&prev=search

Eternity: Solo Acoustic Guitar