Thursday, October 18, 2018

Ryan Kisor Quartet - Battle Cry

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:47
Size: 146,3 MB
Art: Front

( 9:25)  1. Battle Cry
( 9:23)  2. It Happens
(10:00)  3. Falling In Love With Love
(10:45)  4. I'm Old Fashioned
( 6:40)  5. Birdlike
( 7:47)  6. Sweet Pumpkin
( 9:44)  7. If Ever I Would Leave You

This blowing session is one of Ryan Kisor's strongest recordings. The 24-year-old trumpeter is in prime form during two basic standards (his "It Happens" is based on the chords of "It Could Happen to You") and five standards, including Ronnell Bright's underrated "Sweet Pumpkin," Freddie Hubbard's "Birdlike" and a lengthy rendition of "I'm Old Fashioned." Kisor is joined by the underrated organist Sam Yahel, guitarist Peter Bernstein and drummer Brian Blade on the high-quality hard bop set. Recommended. 
Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/battle-cry-mw0000037389

Personnel: Trumpet – Ryan Kisor;  Drums – Brian Blade;  Guitar – Peter Bernstein;  Organ [Hammond B-3] – Sam Yahel

Battle Cry

Ebba Forsberg - Ebba Forsberg

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:35
Size: 91,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:14)  1. Boy You Owe Me
(2:32)  2. Hey
(4:41)  3. Committed
(5:08)  4. Keep It Plain
(4:07)  5. Kiss Of Life
(2:44)  6. Summer Night
(4:53)  7. Vera
(3:16)  8. Words
(3:09)  9. Cold Like Hell
(4:47) 10. Deep Denial

A singer, songwriter, and actress from Sweden, Ebba Forsberg's musical inspirations include some of the most iconic North American singer/songwriters to emerge in the '60s and '70s. Mixing acoustic reflection and the grittier side of adult contemporary, she released her solo debut, Been There, in 1997. Subsequent albums included tributes to Bob Dylan (2007's Dylan på Svenska), Tom Waits (2015's Om Jag Lämnar Dig), and Leonard Cohen (2009's Ta Min Vals and 2017's Take My Waltz). As an actress, she appeared in two Scandinavian TV series in the early 2000s. She has also written music for films, including 2005's Mun Mot Mun and 2011's Happy End.  Born Ebba Maria Knigge Forsberg in Stockholm, Sweden in 1964, Forsberg and her family moved to Tortola in the British Virgin Islands when she was five years old. Her older sister Kajsa Ribbing returned to Sweden after a year, but Forsberg stayed in Tortola until she was 12, when the family relocated to South Africa. Over the next eight years, Forsberg took in South African culture, including its jazz and pop music, and taught herself how to play the piano and sing. As a young adult, she returned to Sweden, where she worked as a supporting musician and vocalist for several popular Swedish acts, including Eldkvarn, Ulf Lundell, the Nomads, and from 1993 to 1995, Traste Lindéns Kvintett.

Eventually, Forsberg reunited with her sister and, with Forsberg writing the music and Ribbing writing the lyrics, the two collaborated on songs that formed the core of her solo debut. A demo tape led to a deal with Maverick Records, which released the Mats Asplen-produced Been There in 1997. It was reissued by Warner Bros. the following year. Forsberg followed it up with True Love in 2001, the same year she made her television acting debut in the series Anderssons Älskarinna (Andersson's Mistress), playing the title role. She returned to screens in the 2003 thriller series Talismanen. Forsberg then collaborated with Tobias Hylander on music for the 2005 film Mun Mot Mun before issuing her third solo album, 2006's Ebba Forsberg. An intimate English-language set, it charted at number 26 in Sweden.  Her next album was a collaborative one with singer/songwriter Mikael Wiehe; Dylan på Svenska (Dylan in Swedish) saw release in 2007. Two years later, she followed it with Ta Min Vals: Ebba Forsberg Sjunger Leonard Cohen. The Dylan album reached number 22 on Sweden's albums chart, and the Cohen album marked her debut in the Top Ten. In 2011, Forsberg provided the score for the crime drama Happy End and released Falling Folding Flipping Feeling, an album of original songs. It also charted, reaching number 18. She climbed to number 12 with 2015's Om Jag Lämnar Dig: Ebba Forsberg Sjunger Tom Waits, ten Swedish-language covers of Waits' songs. In 2017, Take My Waltz revisited Leonard Cohen's music, this time in English. ~ Marcy Donelson https://www.allmusic.com/artist/ebba-forsberg-mn0000172138/biography

Ebba Forsberg

Duke Ellington - Columbia Jazz Profiles

Styles: Piano Jazz 
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:48
Size: 142,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:35)  1. Take the 'A' Train
(3:17)  2. Rockin' in Rhythm
(3:14)  3. Creole Love Call
(6:38)  4. The Mooche
(3:17)  5. Sophisticated Lady
(3:11) 6. It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
(3:19)  7. In a Sentimental Mood
(2:42)  8. Caravan
(3:09)  9. I Let a Song Go Out of My Heart
(3:17) 10. Crescendo in Blue
(2:46) 11. Diminuendo in Blue
(4:43) 12. Jeep's Blues
(2:07) 13. I'm Beginning to See the Light
(3:47) 14. Mood Indigo
(7:55) 15. Come Sunday
(2:44) 16. Satin Doll

Duke Ellington, byname of Edward Kennedy Ellington, (born April 29, 1899, Washington, D.C., U.S.died May 24, 1974, New York, N.Y.), American pianist who was the greatest jazz composer and bandleader of his time. One of the originators of big-band jazz, Ellington led his band for more than half a century, composed thousands of scores, and created one of the most distinctive ensemble sounds in all of Western music. Ellington grew up in a secure middle-class family in Washington, D.C. His family encouraged his interests in the fine arts, and he began studying piano at age seven. He became engrossed in studying art during his high-school years, and he was awarded, but did not accept, a scholarship to the Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, New York. Inspired by ragtime performers, he began to perform professionally at age 17. Ellington first played in New York City in 1923. Later that year he moved there and, in Broadway nightclubs, led a sextet that grew in time into a 10-piece ensemble. The singular blues-based melodies; the harsh, vocalized sounds of his trumpeter, Bubber Miley (who used a plunger [“wa-wa”] mute); and the sonorities of the distinctive trombonist Joe (“Tricky Sam”) Nanton (who played muted “growl” sounds) all influenced Ellington’s early “jungle style,” as seen in such masterpieces as “East St. Louis Toodle-oo” (1926) and “Black and Tan Fantasy” (1927). Extended residencies at the Cotton Club in Harlem (1927–32, 1937–38) stimulated Ellington to enlarge his band to 14 musicians and to expand his compositional scope. He selected his musicians for their expressive individuality, and several members of his ensemble including trumpeter Cootie Williams (who replaced Miley), cornetist Rex Stewart, trombonist Lawrence Brown, baritone saxophonist Harry Carney, alto saxophonist Johnny Hodges, and clarinetist Barney Bigard were themselves important jazz artists. (The most popular of these was Hodges, who rendered ballads with a full, creamy tone and long portamentos.) With these exceptional musicians, who remained with him throughout the 1930s, Ellington made hundreds of recordings, appeared in films and on radio, and toured Europe in 1933 and 1939. The expertise of this ensemble allowed Ellington to break away from the conventions of band-section scoring. Instead, he used new harmonies to blend his musicians’ individual sounds and emphasized congruent sections and a supple ensemble that featured Carney’s full bass-clef sound. He illuminated subtle moods with ingenious combinations of instruments; among the most famous examples is “Mood Indigo” in his 1930 setting for muted trumpet, unmuted trombone, and low-register clarinet. (Click here for a video clip of Duke Ellington and his band playing “Mood Indigo.”) In 1931 Ellington began to create extended works, including such pieces as Creole Rhapsody, Reminiscing in Tempo, and Diminuendo in Blue/Crescendo in Blue. He composed a series of works to highlight the special talents of his soloists. Williams, for example, demonstrated his versatility in Ellington’s noted miniature concertos “Echoes of Harlem” and “Concerto for Cootie.” Some of Ellington’s numbers notably “Caravan” and “Perdido” by trombonist Juan Tizol were cowritten or entirely composed by sidemen. Few of Ellington’s soloists, despite their importance to jazz history, played as effectively in other contexts; no one else, it seemed, could match the inspiration that Ellington provided with his sensitive, masterful settings.

A high point in Ellington’s career came in the early 1940s, when he composed several masterworks including the above-mentioned “Concerto for Cootie,” his fast-tempo showpieces “Cotton Tail” and “Ko-Ko,” and the uniquely structured, compressed panoramas “Main Stem” and “Harlem Air Shaft” in which successions of soloists are accompanied by diverse ensemble colours. The variety and ingenuity of these works, all conceived for three-minute, 78-rpm records, are extraordinary, as are their unique forms, which range from logically flowing expositions to juxtapositions of line and mood. Tenor saxophonist Ben Webster and bassist Jimmy Blanton, both major jazz artists, were with this classic Ellington band. By then, too, Billy Strayhorn, composer of what would become the band’s theme song, “Take the ‘A’ Train,” had become Ellington’s composing-arranging partner. Not limiting himself to jazz innovation, Ellington also wrote such great popular songs as “Sophisticated Lady,” “Rocks in My Bed,” and “Satin Doll”; in other songs, such as “Don’t Get Around Much Any More,” “Prelude to a Kiss,” “Solitude,” and “I Let a Song Go out of My Heart,” he made wide interval leaps an Ellington trademark. A number of these hits were introduced by Ivy Anderson, who was the band’s female vocalist in the 1930s. During these years Ellington became intrigued with the possibilities of composing jazz within classical forms. His musical suite Black, Brown and Beige (1943), a portrayal of African-American history, was the first in a series of suites he composed, usually consisting of pieces linked by subject matter. It was followed by, among others, Liberian Suite (1947); A Drum Is a Woman (1956), created for a television production; Such Sweet Thunder (1957), impressions of William Shakespeare’s scenes and characters; a recomposed, reorchestrated version of Nutcracker Suite (1960; after Peter Tchaikovsky); Far East Suite (1964); and Togo Brava Suite (1971). Ellington’s symphonic A Rhapsody of Negro Life was the basis for the film short Symphony in Black (1935), which also features the voice of Billie Holiday (uncredited). Ellington wrote motion-picture scores for The Asphalt Jungle (1950) and Anatomy of a Murder (1959) and composed for the ballet and theatre including, at the height of the Civil Rights Movement, the show My People (1964), a celebration of African-American life. In his last decade he composed three pieces of sacred music: In the Beginning God (1965), Second Sacred Concert (1968), and Third Sacred Concert (1973).

Although Ellington’s compositional interests and ambitions changed over the decades, his melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic characteristics were for the most part fixed by the late 1930s, when he was a star of the swing era. The broken, eighth-note melodies and arrhythms of bebop had little impact on him, though on occasion he recorded with musicians who were not band members not only with other swing-era luminaries such as Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald, and Coleman Hawkins but also with later bop musicians John Coltrane and Charles Mingus. Ellington’s stylistic qualities were shared by Strayhorn, who increasingly participated in composing and orchestrating music for the Ellington band. During 1939–67 Strayhorn collaborated so closely with Ellington that jazz scholars may never determine how much the gifted deputy influenced or even composed works attributed to Ellington. The Ellington band toured Europe often after World War II; it also played in Asia (1963–64, 1970), West Africa (1966), South America (1968), and Australia (1970) and frequently toured North America. Despite this grueling schedule, some of Ellington’s musicians stayed with him for decades; Carney, for example, was a band member for 47 years. For the most part, later replacements fit into roles that had been created by their distinguished predecessors; after 1950, for instance, the Webster-influenced Paul Gonsalves filled the band’s solo tenor saxophone role originated by Webster. There were some exceptions to this generalization, such as trumpeter-violinist Ray Nance and high-note trumpet specialist Cat Anderson. Not least of the band’s musicians was Ellington himself, a pianist whose style originated in ragtime and the stride piano idiom of James P. Johnson and Willie “The Lion” Smith. He adapted his style for orchestral purposes, accompanying with vivid harmonic colours and, especially in later years, offering swinging solos with angular melodies. An elegant man, Ellington maintained a regal manner as he led the band and charmed audiences with his suave humour. His career spanned more than half a century most of the documented history of jazz. He continued to lead the band until shortly before his death in 1974. Ellington’s sense of musical drama and of his players’ special talents and his wide range of moods were rare indeed. His gift of melody and his mastery of sonic textures, rhythms, and compositional forms translated his often subtle, often complex perceptions into a body of music unequaled in jazz history. Charles Ives is perhaps his only rival for the title of the greatest American composer. Ellington’s autobiography, Music Is My Mistress, was published in 1973. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Duke-Ellington

Columbia Jazz Profiles

Greg Manning - The Calling

Styles: Jazz, Smooth Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:09
Size: 133,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:00)  1. Groovin'
(4:16)  2. Nick of Time
(4:39)  3. The Calling
(4:34)  4. Yeke Yeke Yo
(3:31)  5. After the Rain
(4:01)  6. It's Me
(3:53)  7. Shine a Light
(4:22)  8. Mountain View
(4:10)  9. Wayman
(5:13) 10. Tribal Sphere
(2:32) 11. Coming & Going
(3:43) 12. The Prayer
(4:16) 13. Sunday Morning
(4:53) 14. Home

The convergence of jazz, funk, and soul combined with musical inspiration from artists such as, Stevie Wonder and Herbie Hancock; and features the talents of acclaimed artist Keb'Mo', and smooth jazz artists Kirk Whalum and Mindi Abair. He is the internationality in person. Born in Nigeria Greg Manning grew up in Switzerland. In 2002 he moved to Los Angeles but still keep contact to the land of his youth. So he is a three-time certified platinum producer for Universal Music Switzerland, and has had several Swiss Chart toppers since 1996. Greg worked as musical director with Jonathan Butler and also performed with Brian McKnight, Kirk Whalum, Will Downing, Richard Elliot, Gerald Albright, Chante Moore, Mindi Abair and Keb' Mo' just to mention a few. His debut album Soulciety was released in 1999 and is unfortunately unavailable anymore. By chance I became aware of his new album The Calling, which was released in April 2010. Greg's new album features Mindi Abair, André Berry, Patrick Bettison, Tom Evans, Keb' Mo', Jimmy Reid, Kirk Whalum and Terry Wollman among others. Greg wrote, arranged, mixed and produced all songs except Nick Of Time. The Calling starts with the fulminate Groovin' featuring attractive Mindi Abair in her prominent role as raising sax star. Mindi recently entered the charts with her new album In Hi-Fi Stereo (2010). Also on the party Columbia University graduated jazz vocalist Dawn Norfleet, who we'll certainly see again. Bonnie Raitt wrote Nick Of Time in 1989 for her same-titled album, her personal break-through. With great taste for fine music art Greg chooses this song for featured saxophonist Jimmy Reid. Greg's arrangement has thanks to Jimmy's emotional interpretation and the choir background a real Gospel flavor. The Calling presents Patrick Bettison on chromatic harmonica. If it is the harmonica, the bass or African percussion Patrick always impresses with his personal musical intensity. Yeke Yeke Yo is Greg's orchestral approach with influences of African percussion. Colorful and picturesque. 

On After The Rain guitarist Keb’ Mo', a living blues legend, showcases his bluesy finger style. Greg always tailors a perfect song for each presented musician. On It's Me Greg Manning displays his pleasant-sounding personality. Jimmy Reid, Tom Evans and Greg blend into a fine arrangement. The dynamic Shine A Light reveals another aspect of the musician Greg Manning. He is a supreme vocalist beside his excellent skills as keyboardist and programmer. With the cordial Mountain View Greg walks on the path of Dan Siegel, Jim Brickman and Richard Clayderman. Wayman is Greg's tribute to the late Wayman Tisdale featuring André Berry on lead bass. André plays Wayman's signature slap bass reminding at this great musician. “The guy was always so happy, so positive, always had a smile, always made you feel great,” recently commented Peter White. On Tribal Sphere Greg shows a jazzy excursion into world music and jazz fusion in the style of Joe Zawinul. Excellent sax and keyboard work! With the interlude Coming & Going Greg mirrors his thoughts on solo piano. The romantic ballade The Prayer unites Terry Wollman on acoustic guitar with Greg's piano performance. An awesome melody seamlessly played. The lazy moment of a sunny Sunday, Greg catch this mood in Sunday Morning. Final tune of this brilliant album is Home featuring sax legend Kirk Whalum, who will release a tribute album to Donny Hathaway next month. Greg Manning's The Calling shines brightly. Give this album a listen, it's without no doubt worth to spend some of your precious time. https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/gregmanning1

Personnel:  Greg Manning (Keyboards, Piano, Programming, Shakers, Cymbals, Vocals); Mindi Abair (Alto & Soprano Saxophones); Jimmi Reid (Alto Saxophone); Tom Evans (Tenor Saxophone); Kirk Whalum (Tenor Saxophone); Terry Wollman (Electric & Acoustic Guitars, Hand Claps); Keb' Mo' (Acoustic Guitar); Fred Clark (Electric Guitar); Andre Berry (Bass); Hussain Jiffry (Electric Bass); Jamey Tate (Drums); Kevin Moore II (Drums, Percussion Programming); Munyungo Jackson (Percussion); Jan Stevens (Bongos, Hand Claps); Patrick Bettison (Chromatic Harmonica); Dawn Norfleet, Tiffany Smith (Vocals).

The Calling

Joe Beck - Nature Boy

Styles: Guitar Jazz 
Year: 1968
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:47
Size: 128,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:31)  1. Nature Boy
(3:16)  2. Spoon's Caress
(3:43)  3. Let Me Go
(6:04)  4. Come Back: Visions Without You
(3:20)  5. Maybe
(6:26)  6. No More Blues
(6:22)  7. Goodbye L.A.
(5:27)  8. Please Believe Me
(5:33)  9. Ain't No Use In Talking

"Originally released in 1969 on Verve, this is a truly lost jewel, released for the first time on CD. Joe Beck, one of the most famous jazz guitar players, recorded this album with fellow Donald MacDonald on drums and among guest musicians is Danny Whitten, guitar player of Crazy Horse before they worked together with Neil Young. On this album Beck, influenced by Eric Clapton and Jimi Hendrix, created a song-oriented psychedelic rock style with slight jazz influences showing his remarkable guitar skills, including some fine wah-wah treatments." https://www.forcedexposure.com/Catalog/beck-joe-nature-boy-cd/LHC.047CD.html

Personnel:  Bass, Guitar, Organ, Vocals, Liner Notes – Joe Beck;  Guitar, Vocals – Danny Whitten;  Trumpet – Randy Brecker ;   Bass – Don Payne

Nature Boy