Monday, October 15, 2018

Barbara Dane - Trouble In Mind

Size: 83,1 MB
Time: 35:28
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1957/2011
Styles: Jazz/Blues Vocals
Art: Front

01. Good Mornin' Blues (3:48)
02. Trouble In Mind (2:57)
03. Mighty Rumbling Blues (2:45)
04. Special Delivery Blues (5:04)
05. Ain't Nobody Got The Blues Like Me (3:22)
06. Misery Blues (3:48)
07. See, See Rider (3:36)
08. Oh, Papa (3:38)
09. Prescription For The Blues (2:52)
10. Muddy Water (3:33)

Personnel:
Vocals – Barbara Dane
Bass – Pops Foster
Clarinet – Darnell Howard
Piano – Don Ewell
Trombone – Bob Mielke
Trumpet – Pete Stanton

Interpretative singer who made series of standard and ballad-laden albums in late '50s, early '60s, including one '59 session for Dot with Benny Carter, Herbie Harper, Leroy Vinnegar and Shelly Manne among the supporting cast. ~by Ron Wynn

Trouble In Mind

Abigail Rockwell - Autumn Noir

Size: 111,0 MB
Time: 47:48
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Summer Me, Winter Me (3:53)
02. Libertango (3:22)
03. Slow Burn (4:04)
04. So In Love (4:04)
05. Miss Brown To You (4:05)
06. Autumn (3:45)
07. Almost Blue The Thrill Is Gone (4:46)
08. Am I Blue (3:51)
09. Summer Erotic (3:49)
10. Voodoo Swing (3:07)
11. Lane Closed (3:41)
12. I Wish You Love (4:57)

Personnel:
Quinn Johnson — keys
Kevin Winard — drums, percussion
Robert Mitchum — bass
Guests: Harry Allen, Jim Hynes, Mauro Refosco and Davi Vieira, Bernd Schoenhart, David Mann, Bob Mann and Bill Brendle.

"This album was born from beauty and friction. It is my love letter to the east and west coasts: the craggy edges of the east, the vast expanse of the west, and all the dark alleyways in between." ~ AR

Why Noir? That haunting sax solo line running through "Taxi Driver", the distant blow of a conch and those voodoo drums from "I Walked With A Zombie"... shadings of light and shadow... music and images that left a stamp of recognition on me like a raised brand I couldn't get rid of. That post-war, atomic age desperation still ripples that dark lake off Highway 2. Femme fatale, Lady Fate, I never know quite what she has in store for me. All I can do is surrender and go for a ride. She drives like the night, blinded but knowing, to a destination of her own choosing.

A fresh blend of originals and standards.

"Her voice is a bit deeper and fuller, but her phrasing, her use of occasional melisma, and the breathy sexiness of her sound call to mind Morgana King. I mean this as high praise.' ~ Gerry Geddes

"Although many vocalists have included torch singing in their repertoire, few have made it a specialty as has Abigail Rockwell. With her breathy, smoky voice and sultry demeanor, she is most reminscent of Julie London. What Rockwell brings to this table of torch is poetry." ~ Marilyn Lester

"Abigail Rockwell's deep, sultry tones will seduce you like an irresistible siren - entreating your heated heart to open and reveal its unspoken longings and dark mysteries." ~ Gary Catona

Autumn Noir

Raphael Wressnig With Alex Schultz & James Gadson - Chicken Burrito

Size: 74,5 MB
Time: 31:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz, Hammond Organ
Art: Front

01. Chunky Thighs (3:21)
02. Nasty (4:56)
03. Born To Roam (5:28)
04. Tiny Dog Blues (4:16)
05. Chicken Burrito (4:56)
06. Get Down With It (5:36)
07. One Mo' Time (3:24)

Austria's funkiest B3 Hammond organ specialist returns with his new album "CHICKEN BURRITO". In collaboration with his longtime partner in crime ALEX SCHULTZ and the R&B drummer legend JAMES GADSON, Raphael now proudly presents a splendid, well danceable Funk & Groove album. In contrast to the soulful predecessors SOUL CONNECTION, SOUL GUMBO and SOUL GIFT, CHICKEN BURRITO is reduced to the essentials, and with only a few exceptions, it contains almost no vocals. By the way, for the first time in his career Raphael himself contributed these few vocals. JAMES GADSON , the previously mentioned drummer, is one of the most recorded drummers in Rhythm & Blues history, and has been a session musician for Bill Withers, Freddie King, Martha Reeves, Randy Crawford, Quincy Jones, Herbie Hancock, BB King, Albert King, Paul McCartney and many, many more.

Chicken Burrito

Scott Hamilton - Blue 'N' Boogie

Size: 157,0 MB
Time: 67:47
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Saxophone Jazz, Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. How Deep Is The Ocean (6:09)
02. Blue 'N' Boogie (7:48)
03. Body And Soul (9:24)
04. This Can’t Be Love (4:31)
05. Come Sunday (4:58)
06. Who Can I Turn To (8:18)
07. Maybe You'll Be There (5:01)
08. Yours Is My Heart Alone (7:48)
09. Estate (7:10)
10. The Sheik Of Araby (6:35)

Personnel:
Scott Hamilton - Tenor Saxophone
Francesca Tandoi - Piano & Vocals (track 4,7 & 9)
Hans Mantel - Double Bass
Frits Landesbergen - Drums

Hearing Scott Hamilton play, is like listening to a declaration of love that already lasts for many years but still is as potent as then. And what a joy to recognize how the tenorman absorbed the musical idiom of the jazzgreats of his youth, from Coleman Hawkins to Ben Webster, and shaped his very own language and pronounciation for it. On his musical journeys in a stylistically mixed-up world, he always found in any country musicians who were glad to speak that language with him.

As in the Netherlands in OAP’s ‘Blue 'N' Boogie’: the contagious swing of drummer Frits Landesbergen, light when it can, forceful when it has to be. Or bassplayer Hans Mantel who lovingly provides his punctuation marks and reminds one (e.g. in Franz Léhars ‘Yours is my heart alone’) of a George Mraz. Italian pianoplayer and singer Francesca Tandoi is a discovery. Who heard her play and sing Bruno Martino’s ‘Estate’ doesn’t want it any other way; the romance of ‘Maybe you’ll be there’ is matching. Within her stylistically pure piano adventures always a nose for the right ‘blue notes’. Hamiltons choice of repertory mirrors the timelessness of his taste. Dizzy Gillespie’s swinging titlesong next to ‘The sheik of Araby’ that dates from 1921 but sparklingly is lifted over years and time. Or the non-sentimental beauty of ‘Body and soul’. Or Duke Ellington’s ‘Come Sunday’, with echoes of Johnny Hodges.
‘Blue 'N' Boogie’ is sheer pleasure.

Blue 'N' Boogie

Karla Harris - Certain Elements

Size: 127,8 MB
Time: 54:37
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Set Sophia Free (5:08)
02. The Way He Makes Me Feel (4:27)
03. Certain Elements (4:41)
04. Folds (4:31)
05. When Michael (4:00)
06. Interlude (6:51)
07. Do I Still Figure In Your Life (5:24)
08. Give This All To Me (5:13)
09. Cherish (4:42)
10. Lean On Me (3:59)
11. Flow (1:08)
12. Certain Elements (Atl Groove V.) (4:34)

Of Certain Elements, the third album from acclaimed jazz vocalist Karla Harris, it can be said that this is a place where lush contemporary comes alongside deft acoustic mainstream jazz to create the potent signature sound of this collection. Intriguingly mystical and invitingly earthy, with an aural quality all its own, the record’s tunes of varying feels – Latin, contemporary, swing, blues-inspired – showcase the velvety, dynamic range of Harris’ considerable talent to compelling effect.

Certain Elements follows up on Harris’ second release, Karla Harris Sings the Dave and Iola Brubeck Songbook, released in 2015 on Summit Records and featuring jazz all-stars Tom Kennedy on bass, drummer Dave Weckl, saxophonist Bob Sheppard and pianist/arranger Ted Howe. Harris’ vocal versions of Brubeck classics proved to be an expertly executed and well-received homage showcasing the singer’s technical chops and interpretive ability. Of the record, jazz reviewer Thomas Cunniffe wrote, “She makes these seldom-heard lyrics come alive,” and Jazziz said, “The Brubecks would be pleased.”

Harris’ new recording demonstrates evolving artistry. She leans creatively into a fuller spectrum of her gifts on Certain Elements, teaming with acclaimed producer Trammell Starks to create tracks where her authenticity and emotive power come shining through. The record’s 12 tracks feature several originals penned by the vocalist, her first outing as a songwriter, and beautifully curated cover tunes, including the album’s first single, a contemporary jazz remake of the 1960s hit “Cherish.” Harris’ “Cherish” gets lush, romantic treatment, thoughtful rhythmic variation, and nuanced delivery of those longing lyrics. Released to contemporary jazz radio mid-September, it’s generating buzz quickly. The tune’s composer, Terry Kirkman, comments that it is a “beautiful surprise” for him, and that Harris’ “rich, warm, depth throughout her range is incredible … truly inspirational.”

“Cherish” was one of the last tracks produced for the collection, which unrolled organically over a period of years. “This project actually started in 2013 – I just didn’t know it at the time,” Harris says. It was then that she recorded in Portland, Oregon, her former home, a cover of the Peter Dello tune and Joe Cocker hit, “Do I Still Figure in Your Life,” at the suggestion of Latin percussionist and bandleader Bobby Torres, who toured with Cocker for years. Torres arranged the song for Harris’ voice, creating a stripped-down ballad version of the tune that packs an emotional punch. The track stayed tucked away following a move that took Harris to Atlanta.

Not too long after that move, she experienced a period of time she describes as “creatively intense, where the muses were kind.” Riding the wave, Harris wrote several songs, six of which are included on Certain Elements. From the poetic, transcendent title track to the whimsical wordplay of the swinging “When Michael;” from the grown-up sensuality of “Folds” to the story-based blues of “Interlude” and more, Harris’ songwriting shows a love for words and wrapping them into a lyric and a melody.

“From the moment they formed, I became committed to these songs, performed them on occasion at live shows to great response, and wanted to record them, simply to complete a creative process,” Harris says. However, after bringing her material to Starks, the vision grew along with the producer’s enthusiasm over what he was hearing from the singer/songwriter. He encouraged Harris to further build out the project, and set to arranging some of her originals.

Meanwhile, Harris pulled in covers of songs arranged for her over the years by close colleagues, including that 2013 track and another done by Torres, a sultry Latin version of the Legrand/Bergman tune, “The Way He Makes Me Feel.” Harris also includes a jazz-influenced take on the Bill Withers classic “Lean on Me,” arranged by pianist Mark Simon, a close friend of Harris’ who passed away before he could finish tracking the tune. His brother, Chicago pianist Fred Simon, completed it for the recording.

The record honors other friendships made across Harris’ musical journey and features many more bright lights, from Portland, Seattle and Atlanta, including pianists Randy Porter, George Colligan, Kevin Bales, Dan Gaynor, Tyrone Jackson; bassists Sam Sims, Damian Erskine, Jeff Johnson, Neal Starkey; saxophonists Sam Skelton, Mace Hibbard; trumpeter Darren English; drummers Todd Strait, Marlon Patton, Lil’ John Roberts, Reinhardt Melz; percussionists Rafael Pereira, Bobby Torres, Carmelo Torres; guitarists Dan Baraszu, Chris Blackwell; and Trammell Starks on keyboards and programming.

“A dancing tendril on the edge of flame.”… It’s a lyric from the album’s first track, a Latin-infused tune of Harris’ called “Set Sophia Free” that carries a powerful message of awakening with its world-music, spiritual vibe. Like that dancing tendril, Harris is set to light a fire within jazz fans’ hearts

Certain Elements

Dizzy Gillespie - To Diz with Love

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:22
Size: 152,2 MB
Art: Front

(14:43)  1. Billie's Bounce
(10:37)  2. Confirmation
(12:52)  3. Mood Indigo
(11:28)  4. Straight No Chaser
(16:40)  5. A Night in Tunisia

Dizzy Gillespie's final recording, taken from a month he spent featured at the Blue Note in New York, matches the aging giant with such fellow trumpeters as Jon Faddis, Wynton Marsalis, Claudio Roditi, Wallace Roney, Red Rodney, Charlie Sepulveda and the ancient but still brilliant Doc Cheatham (who cuts both Diz and Faddis on "Mood Indigo"). Although Gillespie was no longer up to the competition, the love that these fellow trumpeters had for him (and some fine solos) makes this historic CD worth getting. ~Scott Yanow
https://www.allmusic.com/album/to-diz-with-love-diamond-jubilee-recordings-mw0000077323

Personnel:  Dizzy Gillespie - trumpet;  Doc Cheatham (track 3), Jon Faddis (track 3), Wynton Marsalis (tracks 2 & 4), Claudio Roditi (tracks 1 & 5), Wallace Roney (tracks 1 & 5), Charlie Sepulveda (track 4), Lew Soloff (unbilled, track 5) - trumpet;  Red Rodney - flugelhorn (track 2);  Junior Mance - piano;  Peter Washington - bass;  Kenny Washington - drums

To Diz with Love

Sandy Mosse - Relaxin' With Sandy Mosse

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:08
Size: 71,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:12)  1. Fools Rush In
(4:35)  2. I'm Old Fashion
(9:23)  3. Birks Works
(1:55)  4. Stella By Starlight
(2:53)  5. Love Is for the Very Young
(2:38)  6. Speak Low
(3:26)  7. My Man's Gone Now
(3:02)  8. Cocoanut Sweet

An obscure side featuring the equally obscure Chicago tenor player Sandy Mosse. Mosse works here in two settings one side features a quartet with Junior Mance on piano, Bob Cranshaw on bass, and Marty Clausen on drums; the other side features the same quartet, but with Eddie Higgins on piano, and additional string quintet backings by Bill McRea. The sound on both sides is very tight not that challenging, but very much in the pocket, especially on Mosse's solos, which are all well-placed and economical. The album's a good document of the downtown Chicago scene of the 50s  and demonstrates the players' ability to swing easily in two different formats. Titles include "Speak Low", "Birk's Works", "Fools Rush In", and "Stella By Starlight". (White label Argo promo pressing, with deep groove. Record and cover are nice and clean!)  © 1996-2018, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/38711/Sandy-Mosse:Relaxin-With-Sandy-Mosse

Personnel:  Tenor Saxophone – Sandy Mosse;   Bass – Bob Cranshaw;  Cello – Harry Wagman   Conductor [String Quartet] – Bill McRea;  Drums – Marty Claussen;  Piano – Junior Mance;   Viola – Harold Kupper;  Violin – Arthur Tabachnick, Carl Racine, George Palermo

Relaxin' With Sandy Mosse

Andre Canniere - The Darkening Blue

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:02
Size: 133,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:20)  1. Autumn Day
(4:42)  2. Going Blind
(6:06)  3. Bluebird
(6:32)  4. Splash
(6:08)  5. Area of Pause
(5:46)  6. Concession
(5:15)  7. Hug the Dark
(6:41)  8. Evening
(4:53)  9. Lament
(5:34) 10. Sunflower (For Emelie)

Five of the ten numbers here are songs with lyrics, four of which are translations of poems by Bohemian-Austrian poet Rainer Maria Rilke and one is written by Monique Canniere, whose words were inspired by American author Charles Bukowski's "Bluebird." The pastoral solo piano opening to "Autumn Day" belies the strong entrance by the whole sextet including Brigitte Beraha's vibrant vocals and Andre Canniere's strident trumpet, also heard again to good effect on the swinging "Going Blind" again benefitting from Beraha's exquisitely limpid vocal delivery. On "Bluebird" Beraha's crystalline voice evokes the essence of British jazz diva Norma Winstone. The first instrumental track "Splash," is a lively outing for the quintet, with Canniere leading the solos, closely followed by Tori Freestone on tenor whilst all the while Michael Janisch's rich double bass maintains the momentum. Two thirds of the way into "Area Of Pause" the song dramatically changes gear, from a reflective mood, accelerating into an fast-paced foot-tapping excursion driven by Ivo Neame's keyboard and a keen rhythm section. The wistful "Concession" is a perfect canvas for both Canniere and Neame, heard here on acoustic piano, whilst the fuzzy menacing of "Hug The Dark" combines with the horns to produce a memorably enticing head and follows with searching trumpet over echoey electronics, resolving into the unison ensemble once again. Beraha's near-whispered vocals dominate the ballad-like first half of "Evening" which transmutes into a frenetic collective improvisation in its middle section, concluding with an ensemble finale and a satisfying return to the original opening melody. 

"Lament" sees Ivo Neame double-tracked on piano and evocative accordion, all neatly juxtaposed with Beraha's yearning vocals. Ted Poor meticulously measures out an irregular beat on the languorous closer "Sunflower (for Emelie)," whilst Canniere's pellucid trumpet delivers a lustrous solo.  Following Pennsylvania-raised, London-based Andre Canniere's first two albums Forward Space (2012) and Coalescence (2014), this is a fine example of a stellar line-up achieving a remarkable amalgam of depth, warmth and sensitivity. ~ Roger Farbey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-darkening-blue-andre-canniere-whirlwind-recordings-ltd-review-by-roger-farbey.php

Personnel: Andre Canniere: trumpet; Brigitte Beraha: voice; Tori Freestone: tenor saxophone; Ivo Neame: piano, keyboards, accordion; Michael Janisch: electric & double bass; Ted Poor: drums.

The Darkening Blue

Bjarne Nerem - Embraceable You

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:48
Size: 150,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:14)  1. What's New
(7:38)  2. Mood Indigo
(3:31)  3. Stardust
(7:56)  4. Just Squeeze Me
(4:26)  5. I Got It Bad
(6:32)  6. Embraceable You
(4:38)  7. This Is Always
(6:41)  8. If I Had You
(3:45)  9. Cabin In The Sky
(4:06) 10. Blue And Sentimental
(6:32) 11. Autumn Nocturne
(5:44) 12. More Than You Know

Bjarne Arnulf Nerem (31 July 1923 in Oslo, Norway – 1 April 1991 in Oslo), was a Norwegian jazz musician (tenor saxophone, alto saxophone and clarinet), known from several recordings, and was among the absolute foremost soloists in Norwegian jazz. He was a very talented musician in the tradition of Lester Young, Stan Getz and jazz in the 1950s. Nerem achieved international recognition for his performances. Nerem started his career playing clarinet during World War II, and participated on an album with «Syv Muntre» (1943) and participated, among others within Rowland Greenberg's ensembles. He eventually went over to the tenor and alto saxophone, and started in 1947 a more than 20 years career in Stockholm, Sweden, where he became one of the first bebop performers and quickly became one of Sweden's most renowned, first in the orchestras of Thore Jederby and Santa Skoog (1947–49). After three years within Karl Westby's orchestra at Rainbow (Oslo), Nerem went into several Swedish bands including with Simon Brehm (1952 to 1954) and Harry Arnold's radio band (1956). In recent years he has also played within Carl-Henrik Norin's band (1968–71) and on releases by Ove Lind, Siljabloo Nilsson, Lasse Sjösten, Arne Domnérus, Monica Zetterlund, Thore Ehrling and Nils Lindberg. The period culminated with the album How long has this been goin 'on (1971). Nerem returned to Norway in 1973 and led his own Bjarne Nerem Kvartett releasing the album Everything happens to me (1976), awarded Spellemannprisen 1976. They also released This is always (1984), and contributed in Nerem solo album More than you know (1987). Furthermore, figured Nerem on releases with Karin Krog (1974), «Sandvika Storband» (1980) and Kristian Bergheim (The rainbow sessions, 1990). Internationally, he collaborated with Kenny Davern and Flip Phillips (1987), Al Grey (Al meets Bjarne, 1988). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bjarne_Nerem

Embraceable You

Debra Mann - Full Circle: The Music of Joni Mitchell

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:50
Size: 151,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:40)  1. Black Crow
(4:55)  2. Jericho
(3:51)  3. Be Cool
(5:23)  4. Goodbye Pork Pie Hat
(5:32)  5. Both Sides Now
(7:51)  6. The Circle Game
(2:53)  7. Big Yellow Taxi
(4:22)  8. Blue
(6:07)  9. A Case of You
(4:41) 10. The Dry Cleaner from Des Moines
(6:51) 11. Urge for Going
(6:38) 12. Woodstock

Joni Mitchell's metamorphosis from acoustic chanteuse of folk music to sophisticated performer of jazz, accompanied by geniuses like Pastorius, Shorter, Metheny, and Brecker, among others, made an indelible impression on Debra Mann. The piano/voice teacher and Berklee College grad seized on the idea of taking Mitchell's material further into jazz and began performing in small concert venues. It captivated her audiences in the same way it did Mann herself. ''Joni's lyrics, combined with her gorgeous melodies, carried on the wind of her unique voice, struck deep chords of feeling within me.'' 'Full Circle' reflects on a lifetime of admiration for an artist who has been uncompromising in her approach to music, and this on the occasion of Mitchell turning 75 years old this year. ''This is very inspiring material to work with,'' says Mann. ''Joni's music stirs powerful emotions with its universal themes and timeless beauty.'' On 'Full Circle', Mann and her sidemen saxophonist Dino Govoni, guitarist Jay Azzolina, bassist, Dave Zinno, and drummer Marty Richards reimagine some of Mitchell's most popular tunes, holding onto the timeless melodies while overlaying it with an irrepressible swing feel, especially on songs like Big Yellow Taxi (from 1970's Ladies of the Canyon), Be Cool, and The Dry Cleaner From Des Moines. The haunting ''Blue'' (the title track from her epic 1971 disc) features jazz pianist/arranger Paul Nagel, and ''A Case of You'' is rendered in bossa nova style. ''I've tried to keep the original vibe while putting a jazz lens on it.'' For Mann, that's mission accomplished. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Debra-Mann-Circle-Music-Mitchell/dp/B07FCVJ3RG

Personnel: Debra Mann - vocalist, pianist, arranger;  Dino Govoni - tenor sax;  Steve DeConti - guitar groover;   Dave Zinno -  basst ,  Marty Richards - drum

Full Circle: The Music of Joni Mitchell