Saturday, September 8, 2018

Lew Soloff - Rainbow Mountain

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:50
Size: 167,2 MB
Art: Front

( 9:30)  1. Frog Legs
( 9:36)  2. Rainbow Mountain
( 7:53)  3. Don't Speak
( 8:58)  4. Up from the Skies
( 7:04)  5. Quiero No Puedo
( 4:56)  6. Suzie Q
(10:23)  7. Starmaker
( 4:47)  8. Born on the Bayou
( 3:40)  9. Stairway to Heaven
( 5:56) 10. Tout Va Lews

Rainbow Mountain is a current example of a blowing session, featuring groove-oriented material, including a number of songs borrowed from the rock arena (Led Zeppelin’s “Stairway to Heaven,” John Fogerty’s “Born on the Bayou,” Jimi Hendrix’s “Up From the Skies”). The album rewards casual listening, mainly due to the high skill level and musicality of the participants. Soloff has been one of the best and most complete jazz trumpeters on the scene for a very long time, while Lou Marini, best known for his appearance in the first Blues Brothers movie, comes across well on saxes and flute, and contributes a lovely ballad, “Starmaker.” Joe Beck’s tastefully chorused guitar is the glue that holds the ensemble together, while electric bassist Mark Egan and drummer Danny Gottlieb (the Sly & Robbie of groove jazz) keep the beat lively while avoiding monotony. This CD would make a good gift for someone who harbors the typical prejudices against jazz: that it’s boring, old-fashioned or lacking in connections to post-rock musical culture. In New York, you occasionally hear young groups playing in a style similar to this, but seldom at such length, or as masterfully. As for whether this is jazz or pop, I can’t put it any more eloquently than Chip Stern did in his excellent liner notes. ~ Greg Robinson https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/lew-soloff-and-company-rainbow-mountain/

Personnel:  Trumpet – Lew Soloff, Miles Evans;  Bass – Mark Egan, Will Lee;  Drums – Danny Gottlieb, Jeff "Tain" Watts ;  Guitar – Hiram Bullock, Joe Beck;  Organ – Paul Shaffer;  Saxophone, Flute – Lou Marini;  Synthesizer – Delmar Brown

Rainbow Mountain

Rosemary Clooney - With Love

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 1981
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:31
Size: 93,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:13)  1. Just The Way You Are
(5:05)  2. The Way We Were
(4:57)  3. Alone At Last
(4:55)  4. Come In From The Rain
(3:51)  5. Hello Young Lovers
(4:48)  6. Meditation
(3:21)  7. Just In Time
(5:12)  8. Tenderly
(3:06)  9. Will You Still Be Mine

Rosemary Clooney sings both old and new songs on this 1980 Concord album. With the emphasis on ballads (including "Just the Way You are," "The Way We Were," "Hello Young Lovers" and "Tenderly"), there is less variety on this set than usual although a swinging rendition of "Will You Still Be Mine" is a fine closer. Clooney is heard in prime voice as usual and there are some fine concise solos by tenor saxophonist Scott Hamilton, cornetist Warren Vache, guitarist Cal Collins, pianist Nat Pierce and guest vibraphonist Cal Tjader. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/with-love-mw0000191616

Personnel:   Vocals – Rosemary Clooney; Tenor Saxophone – Scott Hamilton;  Vibraphone [Vibes] – Cal Tjader;  Bass – Bob Maize;  Drums – Jake Hanna;  Flugelhorn, Cornet – Warren Vaché;  Guitar – Cal Collins;  Piano – Nat Pierce. 

With Love

David Benoit - Freedom at Midnight

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1987
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:46
Size: 107,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:12)  1. Freedom at Midnight
(4:07)  2. Along the Milky Way
(4:38)  3. Kei's Song
(4:18)  4. The Man with the Panama Hat
(3:16)  5. Pieces of Time
(4:22)  6. Morning Sojourn
(4:41)  7. Tropical Breeze
(5:13)  8. Passion Walk
(6:03)  9. Del Sasser - David Benoit, Jones, Sam
(5:52) 10. The Last Goodbye

Pianist David Benoit's debut for GRP was a big seller and set the tone for the next decade of his career. In general, Benoit's piano is heard in the forefront, joined by oversized rhythm sections (including the Rippingtons' Russ Freeman) and a string section. A strictly boppish quartet rendition of "Del Sasser" with altoist Sam Riney is a nice change of pace, but otherwise, the music is melodic, lightweight, and better for backgrounds than for close listening. Overall, this program is pleasant and not at all objectionable, but difficult to remember once the CD is finished. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/freedom-at-midnight-mw0000649402

Personnel:  David Benoit - piano, synthesizer;  Sam Riney - saxophone;  Randy Kerber - synthesizers;  Abraham Laboriel - bass;  John Pattitucci - bass;  Tony Morales - drums;  Jeff Porcaro - drums;  Joe Porcaro - percussion;  Russ Freeman - guitar;  Dann Huff - guitar;  Bob Feldman - bass;  Michael Fisher - percussion;  Osamu Kitajima - koto

Freedom at Midnight

Buster Williams Quartet - Live At The Montreux Jazz Festival 1999

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop 
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:44
Size: 136,4 MB
Art: Front

( 9:53)  1. Tokudo
(13:45)  2. The More I See You
( 1:15)  3. Announcement
(12:04)  4. You And The Night And The Music
( 7:08)  5. Christine
(14:37)  6. Rhythm-A-Ning

Venerable jazz bassist and session musician of choice, Buster Williams steers this thoroughly swinging quartet through a set of vibrant standards and original compositions along with an ace front line consisting of pianist Mulgrew Miller and vibist Steve Nelson. Recorded live in 1999 at the Montreux Jazz Festival, the bassist once again exhibits his seasoned musical persona via fluent lines, limber soloing, and a comprehensive sense of swing. Meanwhile, Nelson and Miller share most of the soloing opportunities as they consistently demonstrate a keen harmonic relationship atop drummer Carl Allen's masterstrokes and the leader's sinewy walking bass patterns. Hence, Nelson's deft articulations in concert with Miller's swirling clusters and impacting block chords provide an abundance of contrasting elements, as the synergistic interaction provides the winning edge. However, it is all about refinement and a relaxed sense of urgency as the musicians make every note and subtle nuance speak encyclopedic volumes amid the occasional burst of fireworks. No frills or hidden agendas here. Just small ensemble jazz music performed with a touch of class and sophistication. ~ Glenn Astarita https://www.allmusic.com/album/live-at-the-montreux-jazz-festival-1999-mw0000119665

Personnel:  Bass – Buster Williams;  Drums – Carl Allen;  Piano – Mulgrew Miller;  Vibraphone – Steve Nelson

Live At The Montreux Jazz Festival 1999

Xavier Davis - Rise Up Detroit

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:20
Size: 112,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:15)  1. Prologue
(5:36)  2. Detroit Underground
(4:52)  3. Oh Henry
(6:27)  4. The Great Migration
(1:48)  5. Black Paradise (Interlude)
(4:17)  6. Black Paradise
(1:56)  7. The Unfreeway (Interlude)
(4:50)  8. Exodus
(3:10)  9. Exodus (Interlude)
(6:00) 10. Model City 2.0
(4:03) 11. Meditation

Now, having returned to Michigan, his home state, the accomplished performer, composer, arranger and producer is Associate Professor of Jazz Piano at Michigan State University. After being awarded a Humanities and Arts Research Program (HARP) grant, which provides funding to faculty for research leading to creative and performance projects in the arts and humanities, Davis embarked on his concept for “Rise Up Detroit,” his first recording on the Detroit Music Factory label.“When I think of a lot of my favorite recordings, John Coltrane’s ‘A Love Supreme,’ Miles Davis’s ‘A Kind of Blue,’ they had concepts to them that tied the whole record together,” says Davis. “My previous recordings, I would go into the studio first and then later think through it to discover what tied the music together. With this record, I went in already understanding what the connections were.”The shift if in process, according to Davis, was impactful. “Rise Up Detroit” stands apart from his previous works.“Rise Up Detroit” is more than just a Detroit-inspired jazz record. Taken individually, any one of the suite’s movements can stand alone as an outstanding piece of music; it has all the elements: beautiful composition, skillful arrangement, excellent musicianship … But Davis’s approach to “Rise Up Detroit” is much more deliberate, much more intentional. It’s wholistic. It’s storytelling. Each of the movements in “Rise Up Detroit” represents a particular historical aspect of the African American experience in a city with a rich and storied past. From its crucial significance to the Underground Railroad, to the influence of the Southern migration into Henry Ford’s factories, and its later experience of exodus and healing, Davis’s suite captures the energy of a culture whose influence spans generations and the globe. With musicians such as Regina Carter on violin and Rodney Whitaker on bass, both of whom have the spirit of Detroit (perhaps even the Spirit of Detroit) intrinsically woven into their playing, the musicianship on this record is multi-layered, multi-faceted, but definably Detroit. Carter, who leads the album’s string quartet, brings an energy and feel that translates right through the rest of the string section. And while technically Whitaker may be Davis’s boss (Whitaker is the Director of Jazz Studies at Michigan State), it’s his “undeniably distinctive bear-sized bass tones” that dictated he was the obvious choice for “Rise Up Detroit.” “I’ve been a fan of Rodney since I was in college,” says Davis. “He’s just a few years older than me, but I just have so much respect for him musically and personally.”Davis also credits Carter and Whitaker as inspirations for the album, with all of their insight and knowledge of the city and its history. Not surprisingly, there’s a special chemistry between Davis and the album’s drummer, Quincy Davis. The two are brothers, and although they now live in separate states, they played together with jazz trumpeter Tom Harrell when the brothers were both in New York. “He hears things similar to me,” says Davis. “That makes it really easy to play with him.”

As Davis takes us through the aural history of African Americans in Detroit, he’s careful not to simply replicate the music of the eras he’s exploring. He comes at the music with an originality that isn’t tethered to the sound of a particular period. Take “Black Paradise,” for example, which captures the spirit of two of Detroit’s most historically significant African American neighborhoods: Black Bottom and Paradise Valley. It’s a driving, rhythmic toe-tapper with harmonic intensity, but the “storytelling” is not an attempt to emulate. Instead, Davis paints the mood and energy of a thriving community in a much more personal way. For a jazz record, Davis’s instrumentation is unconventional and emotive. His use of strings brings an expressiveness and color that is particularly evident in the emotion that Carter draws from her violin. The texture from the pizzicato cello on “The Great Migration” and “Oh Henry” brings an energy and sound that just isn't found in the typical trumpet/tenor frontline of most jazz groups. You can tell Davis loves writing for strings by the way he dives into their versatility and finds different ways to use them throughout “Rise Up Detroit.” In “Exodus,” Davis opens with the somber, heart-wrenching voice of the cello playing the melody in a kind of dirge, accompanied only by the piano. It slowly grows, layer by layer, to include the full string quartet, plus the trio playing the melody. The energy of “Exodus” becomes dire with the driving groove of Davis’s piano solo, reminiscent of McCoy Tyner or John Coltrane. Possibly the pinnacle of the album, “Exodus” is bittersweet and nearly cinematic. Make no mistake, “Rise Up Detroit” is not an objective piece of work. It’s as passionate and intentional as it is beautiful. Like any great work, “Rise Up Detroit” is as much about the voice of the storyteller as it is about the story. http://www.detroitmusicfactory.com/artists/xavier-davis-rise-up-detroit

Rise Up Detroit