Monday, September 24, 2018

Duke Jordan - Do it Yourself Jazz Vol.1

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1955
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:50
Size: 120,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:55)  1. Sometimes I'm Happy
(7:30)  2. Embraceable You
(4:57)  3. Jordu
(4:31)  4. Oh Yeah
(7:14)  5. Pennies from Heaven
(7:51)  6. Yesterdays
(5:20)  7. It's Only a Paper Moon
(5:28)  8. You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To

Duke Jordan was a pianist whose work with the saxophonist Charlie Parker endures in the jazz pantheon. Jordan was regarded as one of the great early bebop pianists, the sound that he helped to create in the postwar era was something new, and it remains a cornerstone of jazz. Irving Sydney Jordan was born in New York in 1922, and began his formal piano studies at the age of eight.He continued to study piano until he was 16, playing in the school band at Brooklyn Automotive High. After graduation in 1939 he joined the septet of trombonist Steve Pulliam. This combo, appearing in an amateur contest at the New York World's Fair that summer, won a prize and earned the attention of John Hammond, who was impressed by the teen-aged efforts of young Duke. The unit stayed together for a year or two, after which Duke entered what, was almost certainly the most important formative phase of his career. Jazz was undergoing a quiet but vital upheaval in 1941. Around the time when Duke Jordan went to work at a club in Harlem, the experiments that were to crystallize in the form of bebop had gotten underway at several uptown clubs. The group was under the nominal leadership of Clark Monroe, the veteran night club host who was involved in the operation of a series of clubs, including his own Uptown House where Charlie Parker first worked in New York. Thus, though Duke gained his first experience in jazz through the records of Teddy Wilson, Art Tatum and their contemporaries, he was exposed early to the work of Bud Powell and Thelonious Monk, as well as to Gillespie and Parker. Duke was one of the very first to play in what was then a revolutionary new style; in fact the only other bop pianists of any note on the 52nd Street horizon, aside from Powell himself, were Al Haig, Billy Taylor and George Wallington. For a while Duke played with Coleman Hawkins at Kelly's Stable, in a combo similar to the one that had been organized by Clark Monroe. 

After this he returned to the uptown front, working for a year with a “jump band” called the Savoy Sultans, which functioned as a part-time house band at the late lamented Savoy Ballroom. Charlie Parker was sufficiently impressed by Duke to hire him for his quintet. Duke worked intermittently for Bird during this period (1946-48), the other members of the group being Miles Davis, Max Roach and Tommy Potter. A handful of recordings from 1947 and 1948 featuring Parker, along with Miles Davis on trumpet, Jordan on piano and Max Roach on drums, are considered masterpieces. They include “Embraceable You,” “Crazeology,” and “Scrapple From the Apple.” During the Bird years Duke played for a few months with Roy Eldridge, recording on a big band date with Roy. Later, after leaving Bird, he worked with the Stan Getz combo in 1949. During the 1950s he free-lanced around New York, gigging with Oscar Pettiford, with off-night groups at Birdland, and also spending some time with Gene Ammons' band. His work in the 1950’s sometimes embraced more of a blues and gospel feeling but never left the fundamentals of the bebop sound.It was about 1954 that Duke began to develop as a composer. His first and best known original, “Jordu,” was recorded first by the Max Roach-Clifford Brown quintet; soon after, Duke cut it as a sideman with a Julius Watkins group for a ten-inch LP on Blue Note. In 1958 he was in Europe for a time with Kenny Dorham, Don Byas and Kenny Clarke. Jordan's career drifted for a while in the late 60s, during which period he worked as a New York cab driver. In the 1970’s, he began a new life as a leader of trios and quartets in Copenhagen, where he settled permanently in 1978. He recorded more than 30 albums for the Danish label SteepleChase Records, but his 1960 date for Blue Note “Flight to Jordan,” remains his most recognized album endeavor. Duke Jordan remained in Denmark until his passing in August of 2006. Parts of this bio by Leonard Feather. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/dukejordan

Personnel: Duke Jordan - piano;  Oscar Pettiford - bass;  Kenny Clarke - drums

Do it Yourself Jazz  Vol.1

Laura Nyro - Angel in the Dark

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:25
Size: 129,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:06)  1. Angel in the Dark
(4:01)  2. Triple Goddess Twilight
(6:01)  3. Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow
(2:38)  4. He Was Too Good to Me
(4:28)  5. Sweet Dream Fade
(4:18)  6. Serious Playground
(3:03)  7. Be Aware
(2:15)  8. Let It Be Me
(2:46)  9. Gardenia Talk
(3:26) 10. Ooh Baby, Baby
(2:09) 11. Embraceable You
(4:20) 12. La La Means I Love You
(2:18) 13. Walk On By
(1:29) 14. Animal Grace
(3:24) 15. Don't Hurt Child
(5:32) 16. Coda

Angel in the Dark is a lovely recording featuring the graceful vocals and finely crafted songs that everyone expects from Laura Nyro. These sessions were completed in the summer of 1995 and represent the last music Nyro recorded. The title cut and "Sweet Dream Fade" mine the same soul terrain as her late '60s recordings, featuring horns and underlined by heavy guitar riffs. These upbeat pieces perfectly integrate voice, arrangements, and lyrics to create an organic whole, and are two of the best cuts on the album. Slower, piano-based songs like "Triple Goddess Twilight," "He Was Too Good to Me," and "Serious Playground" are mixed in-between these songs. These pieces are quieter and introspective, with Nyro's voice more intimate. 

It is almost as though she was sitting at the piano, late at night, and singing to herself. There are also several covers including "Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow" and "Let It Be Me." The first of these is over five minutes and has been slowed down so much that it drags. In fact, she slows down all of the covers as if to convert them into heartfelt ballads. This works best on "Ooh Baby, Baby," partly because the arrangement is fuller and more dynamic. One other standout is the upbeat "Gardenia Talk," filled with lively percussion and a sensual vocal. Angel in the Dark is a fine coda, perfect for late-night listening, and a perfect companion to Nyro's other recordings. ~ Ronnie D.Lankford, Jr. https://www.allmusic.com/album/angel-in-the-dark-mw0000116833

Personnel: Vocals – Laura Nyro;  Piano [Acoustic] – Laura Nyro (tracks: 2, 3, 4, 6 to 8, 10, 11, 14, 15);   Piano [Electric] – Laura Nyro (tracks: 1, 5, 9, 12, 13, 16);   Acoustic Guitar – John Tropea (tracks: 15);  Bass – Freddie Washington (tracks: 1, 5, 9, 15), Will Lee (tracks: 3, 7, 10, 12);  Drums – Bernard Purdie (tracks: 1, 5, 9, 15, 16), Chris Parker (2) (tracks: 3, 7, 10, 12);  Electric Guitar – John Tropea (tracks: 1, 5, 9, 15);  Guitar – Jeff Pevar (tracks: 3, 7, 10, 12);  Harmony Vocals – Laura Nyro (tracks: 1, 2, 6, 14 to 16);  Tenor Saxophone – Michael Brecker (tracks: 1, 5) Trumpet – Randy Brecker (tracks: 1, 5)

Angel in the Dark

Lou Rawls - Now Is The Time: Close Company

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:47
Size: 185,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:51)  1. (Will You) Kiss Me One More Time
(4:20)  2. Let Me Show You How
(4:35)  3. Ain't That Love Baby
(5:27)  4. When The Rain Comes Down
(3:41)  5. Now Is The Time For Love
(4:21)  6. Watch Your Back
(4:19)  7. It's Too Late (To Say Goodbye)
(3:26)  8. Back To You
(4:28)  9. This Love
(3:20) 10. All Time Lover
(4:18) 11. In The Middle Of The Night
(4:47) 12. Close Company
(3:57) 13. Pretty Eyes
(3:27) 14. When We Were Young
(3:36) 15. Ready Or Not?
(4:43) 16. Forever I Do (The Wedding Song)
(4:44) 17. The Lady In My Life
(3:15) 18. Say It Again
(4:02) 19. Sunshine (When You Are Coming My Way)

This reissue from Expansion features a pair of LPs by Lou Rawls: Now Is the Time and Close Company, originally issued on Epic in 1982 and 1984. Highlights among the 19 tracks include "All Time Lover," "When We Were Young," and "Ready or Not." Casual listeners should pick up The Very Best of Lou Rawls: You'll Never Find Another on Capitol before delving into these recordings. ~ Al Campbell https://www.allmusic.com/album/now-is-the-time-close-company-mw0001995173

Now Is The Time: Close Company

Vincent Peirani - Gunung Sebatu

Styles: Accordion Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:57
Size: 121,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:50)  1. Truc'Muche'
(7:20)  2. Untitled Suite
(3:49)  3. Ballade en re bemol
(3:01)  4. Anataule Ondulee
(5:06)  5. Les Yeux du jour
(5:08)  6. Gunung Sebatu
(3:55)  7. Every little thing she does is magic
(4:23)  8. Miniature
(3:51)  9. 56 33
(5:50) 10. My Little Girl
(6:38) 11. Still Song

The eleven poetic themes proposed here by accordionist Vincent Peirani in collaboration with saxophonist Vincent Lê Quang and, here and there, the remarkable guitarist Sylvain Luc , is a luminous testimony of wandering and friendship. The all-out opening to free music as the air allows them to run sometimes under the feverish light of flickering lanterns of a nostalgic musette ("Truc'Muche", which opens the album), sometimes looking for a Balinese melody gleaned by a heart exalted by the journey. This is the case of "Gunung Sebatu", which gives its title to this album; this beautiful and tender evocation of Sebatu - a Bali village between sea and rice field - allows Serena Fisseau to gently stir the sensitivity of a skin-deep theme. This delicacy of the compositions and their nomadic membership to fantasized landscapes imbue the disc with a subtle essence. The spontaneity and the diversity of the themes were forged in the intimist improvisations behind the scenes, without virtuosity misplaced but with an obvious jubilation, in the periods of waiting, in particular at the time of the bel Air Libre of Muvien, Céléa and Humair ... It is these encounters, and the notion of exchange attached to it, that found this "world" music in the sense that it travels freely, without contingencies. There is in Gunung Sebatu all the poetry of the stolen moments to see the fluffy atmosphere of the "Ballad in D flat", which allows to appreciate the depth of the sound of Lê Quang to the soprano, or the mischief almost childish d "Wavy Anatas", when Peirani and his saxophonist play hide-and-seek in a frenzied pursuit with rhythm. A rhythm that we find at the corner of a dilettante visit in the Indian modes and cycles on the beautiful "Untitled Suite". Drunk with travel and contrasting colors, Gunung Sebatu offers itself a few suspended moments of wandering poetry, letting go that take you into the universe of two accomplices, who take an undeniable pleasure to give the keys. A delightful crossing without compass. (Translate by Google) https://www.citizenjazz.com/Vincent-Peirani,3463878.html

Personnel:  Vincent Peirani (acc), Vincent Lê Quang (ss), Sylvain Luc (gu), Serena Fisseau (voc)

Gunung Sebatu

Sofi Hellborg - Sun & Rain

Styles: Vocal And Saxophone JAzz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:10
Size: 113,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:25)  1. What I Might Think Of
(5:03)  2. Sun & Rain
(4:16)  3. Do We Have to Run
(5:33)  4. The Morning Comes
(5:29)  5. Mali
(5:20)  6. No Yesterday No Tomorrow
(4:35)  7. Love's First Fever
(4:52)  8. Her Voice of Liberty
(5:46)  9. Our Time Is Here Today
(3:48) 10. Borja Om Igen

Sofi Hellborg is a Swedish jazz musician and composer . She plays soprano saxophone and sings. She first went to the musician line at Svalöv Folk High School and then moved to Cameroon as a 20-year-old, where she studied pygmy music. Then she moved to London . She moved to Paris in 1985, where she spent full time music until 1999, when she moved back to Lund . Some well-known names she worked with while in France are Mory Kante , Charlelie Couture and Wasis Diop. https://translate.google.com.br/translate?hl=en&sl=sv&u=https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sofi_Hellborg&prev=search

Sun & Rain