Friday, November 30, 2018

Andrew Hill - Dance With Death

Styles: Piano Jazz 
Year: 1980
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:55
Size: 105,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:32)  1. Yellow Violet
(5:51)  2. Partitions
(7:31)  3. Fish 'N Rice
(6:39)  4. Dance With Death
(6:44)  5. Love Nocturne
(6:24)  6. Black Sabbath
(7:10)  7. Dance With Death (alternate take)

In a little over seven years beginning in '63, pianist Andrew Hill recorded over a dozen albums as a leader for Blue Note, yet it is only in recent years that the importance of these recordings is being recognized. Although he was overshadowed at the time by more eminently approachable pianists including Herbie Hancock and McCoy Tyner, the truth is that while Hill's somewhat more oblique style kept him from reaching a broader audience, time and Blue Note's reissue of several key Hill recordings are painting a picture of an artist who created a complex world of rhythms and harmonies, examining music on the left without losing sight of memorable thematic constructs and clever, shifting grooves. Groove may not be a word that comes immediately to mind when thinking of Hill, but one listen to the lightly funky "Fish 'n Rice" and the more subtly insistent pulse of both versions of the title track included on the recently reissued Dance With Death and it becomes clear that Hill is as capable of captivating rhythms as he is more complex shifts. His more challenging side is in evidence on the aptly-named "Partitions," where the piece is broken up into discrete segments of varying tempi that still manage to hang together as a conceptual whole. Hill's time sense, with front-line instruments seeming to follow each other as they walk through the complicated theme of the balladic "Love Nocturne" until they eventually converge, is more elastic, less rigid than many of his contemporaries. Hill's sometimes convoluted compositions could sound clumsy in the wrong hands, but as was the case on '64's classic Point of Departure, Hill has surrounded himself with a stunning, albeit generally less well-known lineup. 

Woodwind multi-instrumentalist Joe Farrell, who would achieve his greatest success with Chick Corea a few years down the road, was already an established player with a robust tenor sound and a less nasal soprano sound than Coltrane, and would go on to grace Hill's more overtly ambitious '69 date, Passing Ships . Charles Tolliver, whose thick trumpet tone differentiated him from other fine contemporaries like Woody Shaw, never achieved the level of attention he deserved, although he is featured on many fine recordings by artists including Horace Silver, Jackie McLean and Booker Ervin, and released a number of intriguing albums as a leader in the '70s. Bassist Victor Sproles may be the least-known member of the quintet, but he possesses an approach not unlike Ron Carter's and, along with drummer Billy Higgins, the best-known player on the session, he navigates the challenging meters without losing sight of the inherent swing of the material, most notably on "Yellow Violet." Meanwhile Hill the pianist solos with an intriguing combination of lyricism and odd eccentricity. Dance With Death may not be the unequivocal masterpiece that Point of Departure is, nor is it as monumentally ambitious as Passing Ships , but it comes close an outstanding small ensemble work that continues to demonstrate what people have been missing and are only now beginning to realize. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/dance-with-death-andrew-hill-blue-note-records-review-by-john-kelman.php?width=1920

Personnel: Charles Tolliver (trumpet), Joe Farrell (tenor sax, soprano sax), Andrew Hill (piano), Victor Sproles (bass), Billy Higgins (drums)

Dance With Death

Shirley Scott - Happy Talk (Remastered)

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:48
Size: 80,2 MB
Art: Front

(8:43)  1. Happy Talk
(5:28)  2. Jitterbug Waltz
(4:51)  3. My Romance
(5:17)  4. Where or When
(5:01)  5. I Hear a Rhapsody
(5:26)  6. Sweet Slumber

An admirer of the seminal Jimmy Smith, Shirley Scott has been one of the organ's most appealing representatives since the late '50s. Scott, a very melodic and accessible player, started out on piano and played trumpet in high school before taking up the Hammond B-3 and enjoying national recognition in the late '50s with her superb Prestige dates with tenor sax great Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis. Especially popular was their 1958 hit "In the Kitchen." Her reputation was cemented during the '60s on several superb, soulful organ/soul-jazz dates where she demonstrated an aggressive, highly rhythmic attack blending intricate bebop harmonies with bluesy melodies and a gospel influence, punctuating everything with great use of the bass pedals. Scott married soul-jazz tenor man Stanley Turrentine, with whom she often recorded in the '60s. The Scott/Turrentine union lasted until the early '70s, and their musical collaborations in the '60s were among the finest in the field. Scott wasn't as visible the following decade, when the popularity of organ combos decreased and labels were more interested in fusion and pop-jazz (though she did record some albums for Chess/Cadet and Strata East). But organists regained their popularity in the late '80s, which found her recording for Muse. Though known primarily for her organ playing, Scott is also a superb pianist  in the 1990s, she played piano exclusively on some trio recordings for Candid, and embraced the instrument consistently in Philly jazz venues in the early part of the decade. At the end of the '90s, Scott's heart was damaged by the diet drug combination, fen-phen, leading to her declining health. In 2000 she was awarded $8 million in a lawsuit against the manufacturers of the drug. On March 10, 2002 she died of heart failure at Presbyterian Hospital in Philadelphia. ~ Alex Henderson and Ron Wynn https://itunes.apple.com/ca/album/happy-talk-remastered/915593021

Personnel:  Shirley Scott - organ;  Earl May - bass;  Roy Haynes - drums

Happy Talk (Remastered)

Joe Diorio & Joe Giglio - Rainbow Shards

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:58
Size: 156,1 MB
Art: Front

(12:25)  1. Wine & Roses
(16:38)  2. Body & Soul
(11:29)  3. You Or No 1
(14:32)  4. Black Orpheus
(12:52)  5. O O N (Out of Nowhere)

A steadfast champion of jazz guitar duos  a longstanding tradition that goes back to the first Eddie Lang/Lonnie Johnson collaborations from the late ‘20s (“Guitar Blues,” “Handful of Riffs”) and has continued through the decades with such modern pairings as John Scofield & John Abercrombie (1982’s Solar), George Van Eps & Howard Alden (1992’s Hand-Crafted Swing) and Jim Hall & Bill Frisell (2009’s Hemispheres) Joe Giglio organized a regular Friday night hang for his fellow plectrists at 107 West, an intimate restaurant in his Upper West Side neighborhood that served as the primary scene for guitar aficionados in New York City for eight years. During that period, Giglio played duos with a whole fraternity of accomplished, swinging and like-minded players as Jack Wilkins, Howard Alden, Paul Bollenback, Peter Bernstein, Carl Berry and others. On one memorable occasion in May 2004, jazz guitar master Joe Diorio made it down to 107 West to play duets with Giglio, and the two Joes established rare chemistry through the course of their harmonically and rhythmically sophisticated extrapolations on familiar jazz standards. That one-time performance, documented here on Rainbow Shards, is underscored by uncanny finesse on ballads and bristling with an exuberant, uninhibited swing feel on the up tempo numbers. It stands with some of the finest examples in the guitar duo genre and also represents one the last recordings that the great Joe Diorio made before being sidelined in 2005 by a stroke that robbed him of full use of his left hand. While the 73-year-old guitar great has been on the mend, going through a rigorous physical rehab regimen, ever-so-slowly making progress on the road to recovery, Rainbow Shards captures Diorio in full command of his powers, swinging and burning up the fretboard with a beautiful balance of technical mastery and sheer abandon. And Giglio rises to the occasion with some inspired six-string work of his own. The two Joes open with a jaunty, loosely swinging rendition of Henry Mancini’s melancholy “Days of Wine and Roses” with Diorio’s warm-toned, velvety-smooth lines flowing on top of Giglio’s insistent comping. They switch roles midway through as Diorio supplies dreamy chord voicings behind Giglio’s linear burn. When Diorio returns for his second solo through the last two-minutes of the piece, he blows over the barline with a sense of ease and melodic ingenuity until the piece reaches its sublime conclusion.  The oft-recorded jazz standard “Body and Soul” is handled here as a gently insinuating bossa nova, with Giglio’s rhythmic chording underscoring Diorio’s elegant melody line. By the 4-minute mark the two begin opening up the piece and at the 6-minute mark, as Giglio drops out, Diorio takes off on a daring right-brain solo extrapolation on the theme.

Giglio returns at the 7:45 mark with a brief unaccompanied statement of his own before Diorio begins comping lightly beneath him with a myriad of beautiful chord voicings through the next four-plus minutes of Giglio’s solo. They return to the head and take it out just as they had begun, in subtle samba fashion with Diorio blowing over the changes in his inimitable style, culminating in a short burst of furious speed licks at the tag before a sublime finish.  Sammy Cahn’s “You Or No One” is taken at a brisk clip, with Giglio carrying the melody first over Diorio’s lush chord work before opening up with a fleet-fingered solo. They switch roles at 4:40 and Diorio begins his solo with a bit of restraint before erupting with a fusillade of notes by the 5:30 mark. They interpret Luiz Bonfa’s melancholy bossa nova “Black Opheus” with tenderness and a touch of reverence for the original. Diorio’s unaccompanied intro simultaneously states and extrapolates on the theme, drawing on his vast harmonic language. Giglio enters at the 2:45 mark and they head into some intricate counterpoint playing that runs through the 5-minute mark before Diorio commences some freewheeling fretboard excursions. At the 7-minute mark, Giglio begins exploring in daring, unaccompanied fashion, alternating between rich chord voicings and deftly-spun single note lines. Diorio comps gently behind him at the 9-minute mark and returns to his opening role of playing the melody over Giglio’s changes through the remainder of the piece. Their expansive treatment is book-ended with Diorio’s two-minutes of gently introspective unaccompanied guitar that ends in a hush. The two Joes close out this telepathic session with an inventive take on “Out of Nowhere,” a romantic nugget introduced in 1931 by a young crooner named Bing Crosby. Their two-guitar version opens as a kind of fugue, with one guitarist shadowing the other, before they settle into the familiar form on this jazz standard, swinging the changes to a rousing climax while interweaving complex lines along the way. Diorio feeds Giglio with sly, shifting chord voicings before launching into an adventurous, unaccompanied solo of his own that he gradually develops to some impressionistic heights of six-string fantasia. And they return to the subdued fugue for the outro, putting a pretty bow on this gift to all guitar fans. Says Giglio of his intimate encounter with the revered guitarist: "It is an honor to know and make music with Joe Diorio. He has been an inspiration to me since I started to play jazz and his influence is more profound with each passing day. Joe has helped me to reach a deeper level in my expression, both through his playing and his deep insights into life. He has reached a zenith through deep inquiry and love." Those qualities come into play in a big way on this highly intuitive session that has both players pushing the harmonic envelope and nonchalantly flashing technical virtuosity on the fretboard while remaining wide open and strictly in the moment. https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/jdioriojgiglio

Rainbow Shards

Betty Buckley - Hope

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 84:10
Size: 196,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:17)  1. Ecotopia
(6:01)  2. Any Major Dude Will Tell You
(5:56)  3. Falling in Love
(5:32)  4. Long Ago & Far Away
(4:08)  5. Intro to Hope
(5:01)  6. Hope - Live
(3:34)  7. My Least Favorite Life
(7:01)  8. Don't Take Me Alive
(5:14)  9. Little Eyes / Except Goodbye
(4:06) 10. Every Little Thing - Live
(7:53) 11. Shades of Scarlett Conquering
(4:09) 12. Dope Island
(3:47) 13. I Feel Lucky
(6:28) 14. Quiet - Live
(3:47) 15. Gilda's Story
(2:54) 16. Prisoner in Disguise
(3:12) 17. Young at Heart

Tony Award-winning Broadway legend Betty Buckley will release her inspiring and emotionally-compelling new live album Hope a profound mix of Americana, pop, rock and standards from Palmetto Records in physical, digital and streaming formats on Friday, June 8. Buckley will celebrate the album at Joes Pub at the Public in New York with an exclusive four-concert engagement from June 5 to 9. Buckley will also offer a Five Day Performance Workshop at New York s T. Schreiber Studio from June 2 to 8. The album Hope coincides with her debut as Madame L Angelle in the AMC television hit Preacher the third season begins June 25 and rehearsals this summer for her starring role in the first National Tour of the smash Tony-winning revival of Hello, Dolly! These successes follow a remarkable year which included co-starring in M. Night Shyamalan s film Split (the #1 Movie in America and an International Box Office hit) opposite James McAvoy, and a recurring role in the CW hit Supergirl. Hope, Buckley s eighteenth album, features her quartet of musicians including the renowned multi-Grammy-nominated Christian Jacob, Buckley s long-term Pianist, Arranger and Music Director; Oz Noy on guitar; Tony Marino on bass; and Dan Rieser on drums. Buckley commented, this recording is a collection of songs by some of my favorite composers and songwriters. All were chosen as a response to all that we, as a World Community, have experienced from late 2016 through 2017 until now. I hope this musical journey will allow listeners to experience, feel, dream and, hopefully, inspire you to claim your highest hope for brighter days for our beautiful planet and our united human family. The Tony Award-winning composer and lyricist Jason Robert Brown who also contributed two numbers to Buckley s previous album, the two-disc Story Songs provided the album s reflective title song, which serves as a thematic centerpiece to the recording. 

Other highlights include two numbers from the seminal jazz-rock fusion group Steely Dan, including the wry Any Major Dude Will Tell You and the scintillating rock groove of Don t Take Me Alive. Several selections originate from Buckley s favorite singer/songwriters. Falling In Love is a plaintive ballad by Grammy Award-winner Lisa Loeb, while the noir-inspired deep cut Shades of Scarlett Conquering comes from the iconic Joni Mitchell. The joyously rollicking I Feel Lucky from Mary Chapin Carpenter bristles with life. Buckleys childhood friend and collaborator T Bone Burnett provided three compositions from the album, including the haunting My Least Favorite Life, which he wrote with Rosanne Cash and Lera Lynn for the HBO Series True Detective. And true to her love of the great standards, the album features two timeless classics, a sensitive interpretation of the Jerome Kern and Ira Gershwin gem Long Ago and Far Away. BETTY BUCKLEY, in an award-winning career that has encompassed TV, film, stage and concert work around the globe, is probably best known as one of theater s most respected and legendary leading ladies. She won a Tony Award for her performance as Grizabella, the Glamour Cat, in Andrew Lloyd Webber s Cats. 

Buckley received her second Tony Award nomination for Best Actress in a musical for her performance as Hesione in Triumph of Love, and an Olivier Award nomination for her critically-acclaimed interpretation of Norma Desmond in the London production of Andrew Lloyd Webber s Sunset Boulevard, which she repeated to more rave reviews on Broadway. She is a 2012 Theatre Hall of Fame inductee. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Hope-Betty-Buckley/dp/B07C9D5PCP

Hope