Friday, November 2, 2018

Don Byron - Bug Music

Styles: Clarinet And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:06
Size: 119,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:18)  1. The Dicty Glide
(2:52)  2. Frasquita Serenade
(2:53)  3. St. Louis Blues
(2:52)  4. Wondering Where
(1:41)  5. Bounce of the Sugar Plum Fairies
(2:48)  6. Charley's Prelude
(1:54)  7. Royal Garden Blues
(2:52)  8. Siberian Sleighride
(2:50)  9. The Penguin
(2:51) 10. The Quintet Plays Carmen
(2:55) 11. Powerhouse
(2:36) 12. Tobacco Auctioneer
(2:36) 13. War Dance for Wooden Indians
(2:49) 14. Cotton Club Stomp
(3:25) 15. Blue Bubbles
(9:47) 16. SNIBOR

Bug Music is a tribute to the music of the Raymond Scott Quintette, the John Kirby Sextet and Duke Ellington, headed by the remarkably versatile clarinetist Don Byron. Raymond Scott's legendary compositions feature eccentric song titles (including, on this set, "Siberian Sleighride," "Tobacco Auctioneer" and "War Dance for Wooden Indians"), complex and thoroughly composed arrangements (all of which were originally memorized rather than being written out) and unique melodies. Kirby's brand of swing, which is quite complementary to Scott's novelties, often utilized themes from classical music and had solos, but were also tightly arranged (even "St. Louis Blues" and "Royal Garden Blues"). The CD begins and ends with four Ellington/Strayhorn pieces that fit well into the idiom (particularly "The Dicty Glide" and "Cotton Club Stomp"). In addition to Byron, the key players on the project include altoist Steve Wilson (one of the best of the younger swing stylists), trombonist Craig Harris and pianist Uri Caine, in addition to four other horns and several rhythm sections. Other than a silly rendition of Ellington's "Blue Bubbles" and an adventurous interpretation of "Snibor," the selections are played with respect and great understanding of the somewhat forgotten style. None of the modern musicians sound as if swing were only their second language, making the continually surprising set a major success. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/bug-music-mw0000078877

Personnel:  Clarinet, Baritone Saxophone – Don Byron (tracks: 1, 14);  Alto Saxophone – Steve Wilson (2) (tracks: 1 to 7, 14);  Banjo – Paul Meyers (3) (tracks: 1, 14);  Bass – Kenny Davis (tracks: 1 to 14, 16);  Drums – Billy Hart (tracks: 2 to 7, 16), Joey Baron (tracks: 8 to 13), Pheeroan akLaff (tracks: 1, 14);  Guitar – David Gilmore (tracks: 16);  Piano, Vocals – Uri Craine (tracks: 4);  Tenor Saxophone – Robert DeBellis  (tracks: 1, 8 to 14);  Trombone – Craig Harris (3) (tracks: 1, 14);  Trumpet – Charles Lewis (2) (tracks: 1 to 3, 5, 6, 8 to 14), James Zollar (tracks: 1, 14), Steve Bernstein (tracks: 1 to 4, 7, 14);  Vocals – Dean Bowman (tracks: 14), Don Byron (tracks: 4)

Bug Music

Alyssa Graham - Echo

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:21
Size: 120,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:10)  1. America
(4:41)  2. Pictures Of You
(4:19)  3. Echo
(3:59)  4. Arkansas
(4:47)  5. My Love
(5:17)  6. Butterflies
(3:42)  7. I Burn For You
(5:38)  8. Involved Again
(4:03)  9. Once Upon A Summertime
(5:27) 10. Coming Home
(3:14) 11. Izaura

Jazz is a paradox that is both compromising and uncompromising. It is compromising as an assimilating art, one that absorbs all influences that touch it. It is uncompromising that jazz demands virtuosity and creativity. It is this paradox that allows the genre to contain both a Sarah Vaughan and Dianna Krall, and a Grant Green and John McLaughlin beneath its tent. It is jazz that welcomes the better angels of creation into its realm to manifest any number of delightful and inventive manners. Jazz, by its very nature, is evolving in four dimensions. Norah Jones, for example, with a crack band and a Country and Western sensibility, has reformed the interface between jazz and popular music. Think of Jones as Josef Haydn, a musical trailblazer inventing a new way to look at an established genre, one further perfected by Mozart's inevitable invention. Norah Jones' Mozart is Alyssa Graham. New York native Graham and guitarist/husband Douglas Graham recorded the singer's first release in their living room on a self-produced shoestring. The result was What Love Is (2005) which was selected for several Best of 2005 lists. Graham has since honed her musical approach to a fine edge, with Echo at once pure metal and perfect amalgam. Echo boasts a Latin influence and indeed one exists. But there is none of the piquant tartness of a typical Latin outing. Instead, the collective efforts of Jeff Haynes' essential percussion, guitarists Graham and Romero Lubambo and the Hendrik Meurkens-influenced Gregoire Maret are distilled into dense tension, sounding as if it has been there all the time. This is familiar music and that is its magic. Paul Simon's "America" is rendered as a siren song buoyed by purring congas and round nylon stings. This same formula transforms Michel LeGrand's "Once upon a Summertime" in a similar manner; quietly and with great grace. 

Pianist John Cowherd shares composing duties with both Bryan McCann ("Echo" and "Arkansas") and Douglas Graham ("Pictures of You" and "My Love") to anchor the disc. "Echo" is a sophisticated vignette, a cross between Burton Cummings and Bruce Hornsby. Graham's delicious intonation is perfectly balanced by Cowherd's Norah Jones-like octaves. "Arkansas" is a potent pastoral smart and informed and mysterious. "My Love" powerfully recalls Elton John's Tumbleweed Connection (MCA , 1971) and Jackson Browne's The Pretender (Asylum, 1976), especially in Cowherd's fine piano solo and Graham's solid high, rich alto. Into this mix is "Involved Again." Composed by Jack Reardon ("The Good Life"), "Involved Again" was written for Billie Holiday and was slated to be recorded by her, save for the singer's death in 1959. The song remained shelved until Reardon heard Alyssa Graham. The song would have been perfect next to "I'm A Fool to Want You" and "But Beautiful," from Holiday's Lady in Satin (Columbia, 1958). Graham captures perfectly the conflict of forgiven love, totally committed at a cost. She has spent her time wisely, perfecting her art and the art that came before her. Echo is a fine wine with a heady base and nose and an expansive finish. It is to be savored after many listenings. ~ C.Michael Bailey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/echo-alyssa-graham-sunnyside-records-review-by-c-michael-bailey.php

Personnel: Alyssa Graham: vocals; Jon Cowherd: vocals, French horn, piano, organ; Douglas Graham: guitars; Romero Lubambo: guitar; Elizabeth Lim-Dutton, Laura Seaton: violin; Lawrence Dutton: viola; Sachi Patitucci: cello; Gregoire Maret: harmonica; Doug Weiss: bass guitar; Obed Calvaire: drum; Jeff Haynes: percussion.

Echo

David Weiss & Point Of Departure - Venture Inward

Styles: Trumpet Jazz 
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:09
Size: 131,4 MB
Art: Front

(11:36)  1. I Have A Dream
( 7:20)  2. Black Comedy
(16:19)  3. Number 4
( 7:19)  4. Venture Inward
( 6:09)  5. Pax
( 8:24)  6. Snuck In

If music can be described as either masculine or feminine, then recordings by trumpeter David Weiss and his Point of Departure quintet are simply testosteronic. Built upon the legacy of trumpeter Miles Davis' second great quintet and saxophonist Billy Harper's Black Saint inheritance, Weiss presents dexterous arrangements of muscular, second wave hard bop music. This studio session, Venture Inward, was recorded in 2008, one day before the stunning live date at the Jazz Standard, released as Snuck In (Sunnyside, 2010) and Snuck Out (Sunnyside, 2011), with follow-up pieces made the following June for all three releases. While duplicating four tunes heard on the live discs, these studio sessions do not lack for that in-person sensation. Weiss' arrangements are tight and deceptively simple. Drummer Tony Williams' "Black Comedy" starts with the Miles In The Sky (Columbia, 1968) sound of the original, but expands out toward Williams' quintets of the late '80s and early '90s. Drummer Jamire Williams and bassist Luques Curtis power JD Allen's brawny tenor saxophone and the nimble fingers of guitarist Nir Felder. This macho music is felt in the rush of "Number 4," with Weiss drawing equal parts from trumpeters Freddie Hubbard and Lee Morgan. Much like the septet, The Cookers that Weiss organizes around hard bop veterans Billy Harper, trumpeter Eddie Henderson, saxophonist Craig Handy, bassist Cecil McBee, pianist George Cables, and drummer Billy Hart, Point Of Departure is a younger version, with perhaps a bit more fire in its belly. Weiss chooses pieces by pianist Herbie Hancock ("I Have A Dream"), and two each from Chicago pianist Andrew Hill and Detroit trumpeter Charles Moore. Weiss is able to simplify Hill's often abstract pieces and proffer them within the post-bop tradition. This band loves its music to be brawny and powerfully robust. ~ Mark Corroto https://www.allaboutjazz.com/venture-inward-david-weiss-posi-tone-records-review-by-mark-corroto.php

Personnel: David Weiss: trumpet; J.D. Allen: tenor saxophone; Nir Felder; guitar; Luques Curtis: bass; Jamire Williams: drums.

Venture Inward

Ada Rovatti - Disguise

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:55
Size: 149,6 MB
Art: Front

(7:19)  1. Ghost Stories
(6:59)  2. Alone in Traffic
(8:09)  3. TBA
(3:02)  4. Smile (Sax Solo Intro)
(5:53)  5. Smile
(8:08)  6. Moving Forward
(6:36)  7. Halfway
(5:12)  8. Tripping Step
(7:57)  9. Stairway to Heaven
(5:36) 10. Gentle Giant

An initial spin of saxophonist Ada Rovatti's Disguise says she hasn't lost a step since 2009's The Green Factor (Piloo Records). There's still the judicious funk grooves, the tight arrangements, and catchy and distinctive melodies that make for an engaging and edifying listening experience. And she's still a wonderfully soulful saxophonist. These are quintet, quartet and sextet offerings. In small group jazz outings, there has to be something that sets the effort apart. With Rovatti especially on Disguise that "something" is her arrangements, beginning with "Ghost Stories," one of eight (out of ten tunes) Rovatti originals. Bassist Janek Gwizdala, drummer Dana Hawkins and pianist Oli Rockberger lay down a terrific groove. Trumpeter Miles Davis, in his 1980's mode, would have loved this. His muted horn would have fit right in contemporary funk; but the secret here is Rovatti's sax joined by flutist {Anne Drummond}} for some ghostly harmony, playing a very memorable unison melody. Drummond is spirited in her solo, and makes an argument for more flute-in-the-front line outings. Rovatti doesn't step out until three and a half minutes in. She smolders beautifully in front of the shimmer of Rockberger's electric keys.  "Alone in Traffic" is surprisingly upbeat, considering the title. Maybe the composer (Rovatti) enjoys time alone on the expressways. She is joined here by trumpeter Randy Brecker, with his expansive, cool tone. If Brecker is cool, Rovatti is hot. Her solo cranks the thermostat up fifteen degrees in front of the controlled stumble of the drums and bass. "TBA" features Rovatti on soprano sax. Her tone is clean, gorgeous not always the case with the "straight horn." And her front line partner, Zach Brock on violin, gives the tune a sharp modern edge. His sound, playing alongside Rovatti, sounds like electronic spicing rather than singing strings. Stepping out on his solo he sears it, with a stretchy, elastic, brash sound. A funky, fabulously-arranged gem of a tune. Two familiar non-originals are included. Charlie Chaplin's "Smile," with a lonely, late night three minute intro by Rovatti on tenor. This is a quartet, the saxophonist and the rhythm section, and Rovati shows she can play the classic ballad with loads of emotion, with the rhythm guys flying free when she steps out. The there's "Stairway to Heaven," from the Led Zepplin songbook. She joined here by Randy Brecker again, with Adam Rogers on guitar (if it's Led Zepplin, you've got to have a guitar) on a fairly straight forward, very jazzy turn on the song. The disc closes with ballad full of contemplative joy, "Gentle Giant." Rovatti's tenor has a classic, expressive robustness. Could this be an Ode to Randy Brecker, Rovatti's husband and partner in music? Might be.~ Dan McClenaghan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/disguise-ada-rovatti-piloo-records-and-productions-llc-review-by-dan-mcclenaghan.php

Personnel: Ada Rovatti: tenor and soprano saxophones, composer/arranger; Janek Gwizdala: bass; Dana Hawkins: drums; Leo Genovese: piano (2, 3, 4, 8); Oli Rockberger: piano (1, 6, 10); Adam Rogers: guitar (9); Zach Brock: violin (3, 8); Anne Drummond: flute (1, 6); Randy Brecker: trumpet (2, 6, 9); Dean Brown: guitar (10).

Disguise

Jimmy Smith - The Champ

Styles: Soul Jazz, Hard Bop
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:17
Size: 92,4 MB
Art: Front

(8:34)  1. The Champ
(4:50)  2. Bayou
(7:12)  3. Deep Purple
(4:30)  4. Moonlight In Vermont
(6:29)  5. Ready'n Able
(4:10)  6. Turquoise
(4:29)  7. Bubbis

The Champ is an album by Jimmy Smith. It was recorded in New York City in 1956 and is an early example of hard bop jazz. Smith performs alone on this album. The Champ was re-released to CD by EMI Music Group in 2005. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Champ_(Jimmy_Smith_album)

Personnel: Organ – Jimmy Smith;   Drums – Donald Bailey;  Guitar – Thornel Schwartz;  Written-By – Dizzy Gillespie

The Champ