Wednesday, July 31, 2019

Sam Most - The Amazing Mr. Sam Most

Styles: Flute, Clarinet Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:24
Size: 70,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:46)  1. It Might as Well Be Spring
(6:09)  2. You Stepped Out of a Dream
(3:10)  3. Softly, as in a Morning Sunrise
(4:20)  4. Lover Man
(4:31)  5. Alone Together
(6:25)  6. When Your Lover Has Gone

One of the first great jazz flutists, a cool-toned tenor, and a fine (if infrequent) clarinetist, Sam Most was the younger brother of clarinetist Abe Most. He picked up early experience playing with the orchestras of Tommy Dorsey (1948), Boyd Raeburn, and Don Redman. By the time he led his first session (1953), Most was a brilliant flutist (among the first to sing through his flute) and he briefly had the jazz field to himself. Most recorded fine sessions for Prestige, Debut (reissued on Xanadu), Vanguard, and Bethlehem during 1953-1958, doubling on clarinet. He also worked in different settings with Chris Connor, Paul Quinichette, and Teddy Wilson. After playing with Buddy Rich's Orchestra (1959-1961), he moved to Los Angeles and became a studio musician. Sam Most worked with Red Norvo and Louie Bellson, gained some new prominence with his Xanadu recordings of 1976-1979, and became a local fixture in Los Angeles, sometimes playing in clubs with his brother. Most died of cancer in June 2013; he was 82 years old. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/sam-most-mn0000240834/biography

Personnel:  Sam Most - flute,  clarinet; Hall Overton - piano; Jimmy Raney - guitar; Addison Farmer - bass; Roy Haynes - drums

The Amazing Mr.Sam Most

Grace Knight - Gracious

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1999
Time: 43:50
Size: 70,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:16)  1. The Ability To Swing
(4:31)  2. Cry Me A River
(5:04)  3. Pappa Was A Rolling Stone
(3:50)  4. Good Morning Heartache
(4:21)  5. Moondance
(4:01)  6. Teach Me Tonight
(3:13)  7. Don't Set Me Free
(3:57)  8. I Need A Little Sugar In My Bowl
(3:47)  9. Come In From The Rain
(3:18) 10. Steamroller Blues
(3:28) 11. Que Sera Sera

After leading the successful Australian act the Eurogliders, U.K.-born singer Grace Knight launched a solo singing career which saw her become one of Australia's leading jazz divas. In her early teens, Knight sang in folk clubs and first met musician Bernie Lynch while singing on a cruise ship. They would form the highly successful Eurogliders in 1980 and go on to international success. After the Eurogliders split in 1989, Knight sang backup vocals in the Tania Bowra Band before recording the soundtrack to the ABC-TV miniseries Come in Spinner with jazz musician Vince Jones. The album featured 1940s jazz standards and marked a career change for Knight. The singles "I've Got You Under My Skin," "The Man I Love," and "Sophisticated Lady" propelled the album to number five on the national charts in May 1990. Her debut album, Stormy Weather (September 1991), reached number 14 on the national chart in October, and another cover, "Fever," was released as a single. Her second album, Gracious, contained more jazz standards and covers such as "On a Clear Day," "Moondance," "Cry Me a River," and "Papa Was a Rolling Stone." Knight released her fourth album, Live, in February 1996, a double album recorded over three nights at Sydney's jazz venue the Basement. She released her fourth solo album, Zeitgeist, in 2000, a collection which featured several original songs penned by Knight. ~ Brendan Swift https://www.allmusic.com/artist/grace-knight-mn0000194742

Gracious

Andy Laverne - Shangri-La

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:11
Size: 147,7 MB
Art: Front

(6:48)  1. Noteification
(5:59)  2. Give and Take
(5:56)  3. It's All Good
(6:47)  4. Waltz King
(6:51)  5. Bluestrain
(7:12)  6. Shangri-La
(5:45)  7. Resolute Pursuit
(9:11)  8. Guiding Light
(9:40)  9. Two in One

The previous recording in Andy LaVerne’s large SteepleChase discography (Faith, 2017) featured trumpeter Alex Sipiagin, bassist Mike Richmond, and drummer Jason Tiemann. This new album adds Jerry Bergonzi on tenor saxophone. Some good news about Shangri-La: Sipiagin and Bergonzi are special players. Sipiagin’s solos are complete bold statements and his tone on both trumpet and flugelhorn is penetrating and pure. Bergonzi’s tenor sound is delightfully impure, full of flutters and abrasions and nasal intensities. LaVerne writes some graceful themes. “Guiding Light” is one of two tunes here for the late John Abercrombie, LaVerne’s friend and collaborator. Sipiagin and Bergonzi take turns with the melody in heartfelt calls and responses, touching new emotions of love and loss on each pass. Nine LaVerne originals, balanced among blues, ballads, and postbop shout-outs, are carefully crafted. Some other news about Shangri-La: LaVerne’s well-made tunes sometimes sound generic. “Noteification” is rather like at least 100 convoluted anthems on at least 100 records since the birth of bebop. “Bluestrain” is also vaguely familiar because it could be anybody’s blues. 

When LaVerne solos, the level of creativity drops. His innocuous, pleasant piano work lacks compelling ideas. An unqualified success is the recorded sound of engineer Chris Sulit. In an era when great studios (Systems Two, Avatar, Bennett) keep closing, Sulit, working in his Trading 8s Studio in Paramus, New Jersey, has become a keeper of the flame. Shangri-La is a vivid, dynamic sonic portrayal of an accomplished new-millennium jazz quintet. ~ Thomaz Conrad https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/andy-laverne-shangri-la-steeplechase/

Personnel: Andy Laverne - piano; Alex Sipiagin - trumpet, fluegelhorn; Jerry Bergonzi - tenor saxophone; Mike Richmond - bass; Jason Tiemann - drums

Shangri-La

Walter Davis, Jr. - Scorpio Rising

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:54
Size: 140,1 MB
Art: Front

(6:50)  1. Backgammon
(8:55)  2. Why Did I Choose You?
(8:10)  3. Just One of Those Things
(7:04)  4. Pranayama
(6:44)  5. Two Different Worlds
(8:36)  6. Four Hundred Years Ago, Tomorrow
(5:30)  7. Skylark
(9:02)  8. Scorpio Rising

Near the end of his life, Walter Davis, Jr. was starting to get the recognition he long deserved. But this Steeplechase CD turned out to be his swan song, as he died the following year. Accompanied by bassist Santi Debriano and drummer Ralph Peterson, the pianist concentrates primarily on his provocative original works. "Backgammon" initially signals a bit of gospel influence before evolving into a solid but innovative hard bop vehicle, featuring solid solos by all three musicians. "400 Years Ago Tomorrow" also throws a curve with an initial Caribbean influence before taking flight into a furious setting. His most famous composition, "Scorpio Rising," is not just a rehash of earlier recordings but a blistering performance complemented by his rhythm section's intuitive playing. The standards are also worthy of praise. His spacious interpretation of "Skylark" and funky introduction to "Just One of Those Things" (before returning to his hard bop roots with Peterson's crisp brushwork) prove very refreshing. Two bonus tracks were added to the CD reissue, adding to its already considerable value. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/scorpio-rising-mw0000424075

Personnel:  Piano – Walter Davis Jr.; Bass – Santi Debriano; Drums – Ralph Peterson

Scorpio Rising

'Wild' Bill Davison - Swinging Wild

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:32
Size: 116,8 MB
Art: Front

(7:31)  1. Struttin' with Some Barbecue
(4:30)  2. Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams
(7:10)  3. Rose Room
(6:56)  4. What's the Use
(4:52)  5. I Can't Give You Anything but Love
(8:00)  6. Big Butter and Egg Man
(5:20)  7. Memories of You
(6:10)  8. Sweet Georgia Brown

Wild Bill Davison played in Europe quite a bit during the second half of the 1960s. While in England the cornetist was usually joined by the Alex Welsh band but this particular set (the 1965 date is an educated guess) teams Davison with a fine sextet filled mostly with players from Freddie Randall's band of the period. The music, released for the first time in 1999, finds Wild Bill in typically exuberant form playing seven of his favorite warhorses (including "Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams," "Memories of You," and "Sweet Georgia Brown") ,plus the relative obscurity "What's the Use." The ensembles are loose but coherent, Bruce Turner (on alto and clarinet) and trombonist Bert Murray get some solo space, and Wild Bill is in fine spirits. Solid Dixieland. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/swinging-wild-mw0000603684

Swinging Wild

Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Jackie Cain & Roy Kral - Forever

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:01
Size: 109,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:54)  1. The Duke
(5:01)  2. In A Sentimental Mood
(4:03)  3. I'm Just a Lucky So and So
(3:58)  4. Music is Forever
(4:27)  5. Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most
(2:13)  6. Cheerful Little Earful
(4:04)  7. Through The Windows of Cars
(2:27)  8. Fred Astaire
(2:31)  9. I Never Danced Before
(4:58) 10. The Continental
(6:18) 11. You Didn't Tell Me It Was Wrong
(3:00) 12. I Know That You Know

Jackie and Roy was an American jazz vocal team consisting of husband and wife singer Jackie Cain and singer / pianist Roy Kral. They sang together for 56 years and made almost 40 albums.  Kral's obituary in The New York Times said: "Their voices had similar ranges but were an octave apart, creating unusual harmonies." They first joined forces in 1946, and in 1996 they celebrated their 50th anniversary as a vocal duo. Jackie and Roy's stint with Charlie Ventura's band in 1948 and 1949 brought them recognition; Lou Stein's "East of Suez" was an unusual feature for their voices. Shortly after leaving Ventura in June 1949, they were married and worked together on a regular basis thereafter. Jackie and Roy had their own television show in Chicago in the early 1950s, worked in Las Vegas from 1957 to 1960, settled in New York in 1963, and appeared on some television commercials. They recorded many performances for a variety of record labels through the decades, and performed until Roy Kral died in August 2002. Fairly early in their career, Jackie and Roy were befriended by composer Alec Wilder, who wrote the liner notes for one of their earliest albums, Jackie Cain and Roy Kral (1955). They had always favored Wilder's songs and, ten years after his death, paid tribute by recording an entire album of them, An Alec Wilder Collection. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackie_and_Roy

Forever

Jorge Pardo - Djinn

Styles: Jazz, Flamenco
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:39
Size: 167,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:00)  1. Lo Se por el Talega
(4:42)  2. Ricardo y Tio Borrico
(4:33)  3. Kl3y2kop1o
(6:05)  4. El Observador y Mezclaito
(4:07)  5. El Gallo de Pedro
(8:56)  6. Djinn
(6:24)  7. Taranta
(5:32)  8. Estaba Soñando...La Deje Dormir
(1:21)  9. Ni Contigo Ni Con Nadie
(5:29) 10. Bulería de la Perla
(3:58) 11. Atlantico Puro
(7:47) 12. Viva el Borrico
(4:05) 13. Te Veia Yo
(4:34) 14. Entre Dos Aguas

Spanish jazz, flamenco and world music saxophonist and flutist Jorge Pardo has a new album titled Djinn. Djinn combines jazz grooves, electronic beats and flamenco. Pardo uses acid Hammond organ, powerful drums, electric bass and flamenco guitar along with guest DJs from the world of electronic music. Jorge Pardo was a member of pioneering Spanish salsa and Latin jazz band Dolores. He later worked with flamenco legends Paco de Lucia and Camarón. His essential albums include Vientos Flamencos, 10 de Paco, Huellas, and Historias de Radha y Krishna. Jorge Pardo will be touring Spain to promote the new album. The next concerts will take place Friday, October 28 at Círculo de Bellas Artes in Madrid and Saturday, October 29 at Sala Malandar in Sevilla. ~ Angel Romero https://worldmusiccentral.org/2016/10/23/jorge-pardo-releases-djinn/

Djinn

Rodolphe Raffalli, Renée Garlène - Avec georges brassens (J'ai rendez-vous avec vous)

Styles: Guitar and Vocal Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:11
Size: 142,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:35)  1. Pauvre Martin
(3:16)  2. Embrasse-les tous
(5:04)  3. Quatre-vingt-quinze pour cent
(3:03)  4. Philistins
(4:14)  5. La complainte des filles de joie
(5:17)  6. Brave Margot
(3:25)  7. Dans l'eau de la claire fontaine
(3:44)  8. Saturne
(3:43)  9. Le bistrot
(1:56) 10. Maman, papa (texte)
(3:04) 11. Maman, papa
(1:43) 12. Le vent
(3:42) 13. J'ai rendez-vous avec vous
(4:32) 14. Chanson pour l'auvergnat
(2:48) 15. Je suis un voyou - Instrumental
(3:44) 16. Le père Noël et la petite fille
(5:11) 17. Cupidon s'en fout

Guitarist Rodolphe Raffalli is known internationally for his performances of Georges Brassens material, and here he accompanies Renée Garlène, a singer whose precise, rare tone provides sensitive and delicate readings of the same composer s repertoire. Together they form an extraordinarily musical duo: the guitar s aerial phrases seem to hold conversations with the songs themselves, and the pair are backed by a wonderful rhythm section, notably partnered by Teofilo Chantre, the great musician from Cape Verde. Here the Brassens repertoire is tinted with jazz, swing and Brazilian rhythms, providing music that softly weaves through these songs to emphasize all the power of the poetry behind the melodies of Brassens. Augustin Bondoux & Patrick Frémeaux. https://www.amazon.fr/Avec-Georges-Brassens-Rendez-Vous-avec/dp/B07FSRBMCS

Avec georges brassens (J'ai rendez-vous avec vous)

Monday, July 29, 2019

Johnny Hodges & His Orchestra - In a Tender Mood (Remastered)

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:13
Size: 86,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:06)  1. Who's Excited
(3:22)  2. Sweepin' the Blues Away
(2:50)  3. Standing Room Only
(3:07)  4. Below the Azores
(6:04)  5. Sweet Georgia Brown
(6:08)  6. Duke's Blues
(3:21)  7. Tenderly
(3:03)  8. Tea for Two
(3:26)  9. What's I'm Gotchere
(2:43) 10. Nothin' Yet

Johnny certainly is in a tender mood here playing soulful ballads and mellow tunes with a small combo that includes Flip Phillips on tenor, Lawrence Brown on trombone, Leroy Lovett on piano, and Ray Brown on bass. The sound is laidback and easily swinging with a real focus on Johnny's warm and fluid alto work and the set features some nice original tunes that include "Who's Excited", "Sweepin The Blues Away", "Standing Room Only", "Below The Azores", and "Duke's Blues" plus "Tenderly" and "Nothin Yet".  © 1996-2019, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/366492

Personnel:   Johnny Hodges - alto saxophone; Emmett Berry - trumpet;  Lawrence Brown - trombone;  Leroy Lovett - piano

In a Tender Mood

YolanDa Brown - Love Politics War

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:47
Size: 183,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:12)  1. Million Billion Love
(6:16)  2. Time and Tide
(5:14)  3. Dream Dream Repeat
(4:27)  4. This Kind of Love
(4:55)  5. Heritage
(5:34)  6. Feel No Pain
(3:54)  7. No More War
(6:28)  8. Neutral Ground
(3:56)  9. Roll With It
(5:28) 10. Crocodile Tears
(6:20) 11. General PoliTricks
(5:04) 12. Prosper
(7:08) 13. Never Too Late
(4:25) 14. Sugarcane
(6:18) 15. Love At War

When YolanDa Brown plays live, she covers the stage, energetic and totally into her groove. On categorization of her music, YolanDa is keen not to be driven into any box, and jokes her music could best be described as “posh reggae yes, let’s go with that.” Whatever it’s called, Love, Politics, War features 15 eclectic, very enjoyable tracks. “Crocodile Tears” opens and is funky and starts with a salutation of sax from YolanDa Brown, before the theme reveals itself and follows through the track. There is a beautiful middle section with double saxes and a bounciness to the track which is totally in keeping with her irrepressible spirit. The final section is freer, which is glorious in itself.  “Dream Dream Repeat,” featuring Casey Benjamin of the Robert Glasper band, is a sashaying, reggae-steeped, rhythmic escapade with the saxophones bouncing off each other over the driving rhythms, while “Feel No Pain” (featuring three-time Grammy Award-winning Dame Evelyn Glennie) is, as you would expect, a deeply rhythmic and soul-drenched number which develops both in complexity and textures as the track progresses. The tenor solo is wonderfully rich, though I’m not sure about the playground sounds at the end. “General PoliTricks,” featuring Rick Leon James on bass, is gorgeous, rich and delivers a bounce throughout. That is until a break in rhythm for the sax solo, which is impressively register-crossing and verging on free as it soars and wails. Beautiful. “Heritage” is like a journey, as the sax sings over an ever subtly changing musical arrangement held together by a steady beat. That cadence changes only for a short section around the two-thirds mark, where keys and sax play over what sounds like a stuck record needle that acts as a metronome. “Love at War” is a poem set over music, worded beautifully by the poetess and vocalist Floacist. The stark words, backed by light, contrasting sax, somehow make the dialogue between spoken and sung vocals more interesting. “Million Billion Love” is reggae-infused and an enjoyable number before the arrival of “Neutral Ground.” Trumpeter Keyon Harrold and pianist Jon Cleary bring a NOLA vibe to the music, and the layers are peeled back to reveal sharper, deeper textures and a lovely change of tempo before the crystal clear trumpet solo in the middle section. Cleary’s deceptively laid back, yet intricate style of playing blends well with the sax style of YolanDa Brown on this track, and the minor key interlude just before the final flourish is ear catching. “Never Too Late” is slow, and opens with sax and bass in just off tandem, which is intriguing and clever, before it smooths out into a well-rounded thematic number. “No More War” features Phebe Edwards (Liam Gallagher, Adele, Rita Ora, Lemar, Primal Scream, Donna Summer, Gabrielle and others), and the emotive, gospel/soul-steeped style she uses works well with the exceptional sax. 

“Prosper” is a rhythmic, driving song/prayer about the search for freedom from discrimination and forgiveness, with lovely male vocals over the funky beat. “Roll With It” opens with quiet, rhythmic bass before brassy blares smother the gentleness. This is then replaced with a dance rhythm and funky vibes, under which the sax enters, rhythmic and seemingly settled into the groove before lifting up and over after the half way mark to lead. “Sugarcane” is easy, hanging behind the beat and laid back in style while never complacent. “This Kind Of Love,” featuring Raheem Devaughn on vocals, is gentle, strolling and packed with powerful words which belie the gentleness of the backing music and vocals. “Time and Tide” has a spiritual, moving cadence which the sax introduces and the gentle backing re-iterates. There is a sense of movement, a constant building and reflection. A super track to finish. Every track on YolanDa Brown’s Love, Politics, War has a certain eclecticism to it, with rhythm changes, tempo trips and gentle offset sections where a musician takes the central role, always on a changing basis. The sax is central, however, and key to the driving behind each track. There is a warmth running through this music, that opinion possibly being influenced by the very warm YolanDa I met and was greeted by with a huge bear hug a month or so back when I saw her play live. YolanDa Brown is coming of age. There is a confidence and quality to her playing, and she is more than willing to extend her range and try a different take on her music. She may joke about her genre being a new one but any way you name it, it is certainly in a class of its own. http://somethingelsereviews.com/2019/04/15/yolanda-brown-love-politics-war/

Love Politics War

Kirk Lightsey - Estate

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:41
Size: 146,4 MB
Art: Front

(8:35)  1. Estate
(7:23)  2. You and the Night
(9:32)  3. Heaven Dance
(8:32)  4. Infant Eyes
(4:29)  5. One Finger Snap
(8:57)  6. Goodbye Mr.Evans
(8:15)  7. Kutala
(7:54)  8. Vapallia

Three great, different, musical personalities sign this beautiful album, interacting freely on two main grounds of choice: the fervent inventiveness and an extremely mimetic approach, which leads the three musicians to regain possession of the sensibility as well as the formal principles most dear to fellow travelers. Here is Don Moye sinuously bending to the persuasive, soft harmonies of "Estate" with a subtle and refined drumming, full of precious found on the metric and beat plane. His soloism is always full of sudden and multidirectional solutions, in varying the post-baptism trend of the themes signed by the pianist.

All supported by incisive and broken plots, in the name of an equal dialogical comparison. Eccentric wheelies; free forms; elegant and refined atmospheres; rich and varied sounds. These are some of the trump cards of this trio, which thanks to the class of individual musicians succeeds in the difficult intent of making the most diverse improvisational and compositional traditions interact: Africa; cultured citations of academic language; the practice of the mainstream. On excellent levels the test of the chameleon-like Lightsey, in the continuous search for abstract and suspended notes, to better support the oblique and cultured solutions of the magnificent double-bass player Tibor Elekes. His is once again one of the most superb pianisms of the entire contemporary jazz scene, to incorporate two distinct trends in a wise harmonic thought: soft and cantabile sounds, reinvigorated by the angular and fragmented lines of the African-American piano heritage. But all three musicians are equally responsible for this extremely successful and composite journey, which the Italian label Itinera did well to promote and document.~ AAJ Italy Staff https://www.allaboutjazz.com/estate-kirk-lightsey-balance-point-acoustics-review-by-aaji-staff.php

Personnel: Kirk Lightsey (piano); Famodou Don Moye (battery); Tibor Elekes (double bass).

Estate

Larry Coryell - Traffic

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:55
Size: 145,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:12)  1. Judith Loves Jazz
(3:58)  2. Manic Depression
(7:35)  3. Door #3
(7:09)  4. Joyce's Favorite
(7:56)  5. Misterioso
(5:37)  6. Dedication
(7:18)  7. Drums & Bass
(3:43)  8. Jake's Lullaby
(5:14)  9. Overruled
(9:11) 10. Electric Jam

CBW are guitarist Larry Coryell, former Weather Report bassist Victor Bailey and drummer Lenny White a trio capable of ear-blasting blues and funk. What distinguishes this fierce but patchy jazz-rock set from its CBW predecessor, Electric, is an unplugged delicacy on a couple of slow tracks, and good reworkings of imports like Hendrix's Manic Depression and Monk's Misterioso. Coryell, who was a 1970s jazz-rock guitar pioneer, mixes raw fluency and an R&B player's boogieing drive on Door £3. A one-take exercise, the set has its insecurities (Bailey sounds initially uncertain of the famous ascending hook of Misterioso, and Coryell's time can waver), but a what-the-hell boldness usually wins out - like the guitarist's ghostly use of the slide on Misterioso, or Bailey's chord-playing and tapping effects on Drums & Bass. Lots of raw blues and power-playing - though perhaps everybody from Scofield to D'Angelo has reworked these surefire ingredients in more subtle ways. … we have a small favour to ask. More people are reading and supporting The Guardian’s independent, investigative journalism than ever before. And unlike many news organisations, we have chosen an approach that allows us to keep our journalism accessible to all, regardless of where they live or what they can afford. But we need your ongoing support to keep working as we do. ~ John Fordham More... https://www.theguardian.com/music/2007/jan/12/jazz.shopping1

Personnel: Acoustic Guitar – Larry Coryell; Drums – Lenny White; Electric Bass – Victor Bailey; Electric Guitar.

Traffic

Lorez Alexandria - Only Happy

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:58
Size: 173,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:27)  1. Trav'lin' Light
(2:10)  2. No Moon at All
(3:39)  3. Detour Ahead
(2:35)  4. Softly as in a Morning Sunrise
(3:13)  5. Don't Explain
(3:02)  6. I'm Just a Lucky So-And-So
(2:58)  7. Early in the Morning
(2:58)  8. Baltimore Oriole
(3:02)  9. Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year
(2:16) 10. Baby, Don't You Cry
(2:49) 11. Nature Boy
(3:23) 12. I Was a Fool
(3:28) 13. So Long
(2:50) 14. The End of a Love Affair
(3:45) 15. Traveling Down a Lonely Road (Love Theme from "La Strada")
(3:19) 16. Good Morning Heartache
(2:22) 17. Almost Like Being in Love
(3:49) 18. Love Look Away
(2:23) 19. I Ain't Got Nothin' but the Blues
(2:44) 20. Trouble Is a Man
(2:45) 21. It Could Happen to You
(2:53) 22. I Want to Talk About You
(3:04) 23. I Almost Lost My Mind
(3:11) 24. Baltimore Oriole II
(2:42) 25. Rocks in My Bed

A solid singer who is superior at interpreting lyrics, gives a soulful feeling to each song, and improvises with subtlety, Lorez Alexandria was a popular attraction for several decades. She sang gospel music with her family at churches starting in the mid-'40s and worked in Chicago nightclubs in the 1950s. With the release of several albums for King during 1957-1959, Alexandria became popular beyond her hometown, and by the early '60s she was living and working in Los Angeles. In addition to the King label, her earlier recording sessions were for Argo and Impulse, while her later albums were for Discovery and Muse. Despite a long period off records (only a few private recordings during the 1965-1976 period), Alexandria survived through the many changes in musical styles and could be heard in excellent form up until she retired in the mid-'90s. Not long after retiring, Alexandria suffered a stroke, and her health declined until her death in May 2001. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/lorez-alexandria-mn0000282731/biography

Only Happy

Sunday, July 28, 2019

William Parker - Mass For The Healing Of The World

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:53
Size: 163,6 MB
Art: Front

( 0:31)  1. Invocation
(13:22)  2. First Reading (dawn Song)
( 8:46)  3. Hallelujah
( 5:44)  4. Mysticism
(13:01)  5. Response (muezzin S Call)
(6:55) 6. Second Reading (cathedral In The Mountains)
( 8:36)  7. Willows (can You Give Me Back My Life)
(13:55)  8. Cantos (love God)

Mass for the Healing of the World provides instant nostalgia in the quick change world of modern jazz. Built around William Parker's luminous and now defunct In Order To Survive band, the disc delivers an encore taste of Cooper-Moore's big handed piano stylings and Susie Ibarra's pandemic percussion with Parker's subharmonic depth charges. Old friends Rob Brown and Roy Campbell, Jr. join tenor titan Assif Tshar and others to create this lively version of the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra. The Mass begins with an Invocation read by Alex Lodico in Italian. Portentously unfolding with Dave Hofstra's tuba and Ibarra's tympani, "First Reading (Dawn Song)" sets the tone invoking awe of the sacred. Cooper-Moore's broken glass fills keep the rapture grounded. The orchestra's tone colors recall serial Stravinsky as it heats up and stretches. Suddenly, Cooper-Moore uses low stately chords to set up Aleta Hayes' singing of Parker's inspirational lyric. He slips his accompanist's leash to tear into the opening of "Hallelujah." Dave Sewelson's mild baritone sax blows overwhelmed by a piano blizzard. As the rhythm section threatens to fly off the stage, it parts to reveal Parker, the driving heat at the core, firing on all pistons. A spacious opening of tiered fanfares prepares "Mysticism," then a heavy lockstep rhythm provides foundation for Chris Jonas' soaring, roiling soprano, Cooper-Moore breaking stride with shattering chord shards. Altered soprano and processed trombone get "Response (Muezzin's Call)" going, then space is replaced by swing as the rhythm section plays it fairly straight. Tshar blows some torrid tenor and soon enough Brown scorches the stage. Little Huey rolls and blares as Moore/Parker/Ibarra/Brown burn into the Italian night. Lewis Barnes' trumpet dances wildly with the ecstatic crew. "Second Reading (Cathedral in the Mountains)" sets a down blue groove in motion for Campbell to decorate. When Lodico returns with trombone, Campbell peels off sheets of brass a la Don Cherry. An emotional ballad, "Willows (Can you Give Me Back My Life)" has Darryl Foster's thoughtful soprano navigating the minors. Richard Rodriguez soulfully sweeps through on trumpet. "Cantos (Love God)" sounds like an outtake from the Peach Orchard, with its determined stride. Brown and Campbell restlessly wrestle through the rigid structure with unstoppable power. One wonders how many recorded Little Huey performances languish in the can. This one documents a night six years ago that is both timeless and a time capsule. Like all Little Huey projects, all manner of musics emanate from the assembled musicians, all the musics tinted blue. ~ REX BUTTERS https://www.allaboutjazz.com/mass-for-the-healing-of-the-world-william-parker-black-saint-review-by-rex-butters.php

Personnel: William Parker, bass, pocket trumpet; Rob Brown, Marco Eneidi, alto sax; Chris Jonas, soprano sax; Darryl Foster, tenor and soprano sax; Assif Tshar, tenor sax, bass clarinet; Dave Sewelson, baritone sax; Alex Lodico, Masaiko Kono, trombone; Roy Campbell, Lewis Barnes, Richard Rodriguez, trumpet; Dave Hofstra, tuba; Cooper Moore, piano; Susie Ibarra, drums, tympani; Aleta Heyes, vocals.

Mass For The Healing Of The World

Heather Bennett - All Through The Night

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:55
Size: 133,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:24)  1. All Through The Night
(6:18)  2. Mary
(4:31)  3. Blues Etude
(5:04)  4. Someday You'll Be Sorry
(5:35)  5. Dreamer
(7:04)  6. Nature Boy
(3:47)  7. When It's Sleepytime Down South
(5:40)  8. Lost Girl
(6:54)  9. All My Loving
(4:11) 10. Boo-Bop
(2:22) 11. Search For Peace

To listen to the Pianist, Composer, Singer Heather Bennett is to browse through a well-assorted choice of Straight-Ahead transformed for modern times. Echos of Hard-Bop, Bebop, Post-Bop, Originals, modern interpretations of Pop Numbers... With a definite knowledge of tradition, her compositions impressively present an intelligent path from the present to the future of Jazz through her expressive, powerful, but also lyrical piano playing. Heather Bennett, daughter of a classical pianist, majored in music in Texas and North Carolina (Magna cum Laude in Jazz-Performance) and has lived in the "Big Apple" since 1997 where she stays quite active in numerous musical projects. There she initiated, among other things, a female quintet with bassist Erin Wright, worked with muscians like Ingrid Jensen, Ed Schuller, Georg Schuller, Randy Brecker, Ari Hoenig and constantly plays with her groups in the NYC Jazz Clubs. Recently her 4th and latest CD "Suite Talk" appeared with, among others, Drummer Billy Hart and Bassist Rufus Reid. https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/hbennett2

Personnel:  Heather Bennett - Piano, Billy Heart - Drum, Dennis Irwin - Bass, Dave Pietro - Alto Sax

All Through The Night

Christian Sands - Facing Dragons

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:30
Size: 143,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:11)  1. Rebel Music
(7:17)  2. Fight for Freedom
(7:22)  3. Yesterday
(8:26)  4. Sangueo Soul
(7:29)  5. Sunday Mornings
(8:44)  6. Frankenstein
(7:12)  7. Her Song
(5:40)  8. Samba de Vela
(4:07)  9. Rhodes to Meditation

Save for a busy, perhaps too restrained take on The Beatles' "Yesterday" and the predictable South American rhythm driven "Sangueo Soul," Facing Dragons is pianist Christian Sands third powerhouse release in a shade over two years. Crisply performed by his core trio, bassist Yasushi Nakamura and the untiring Jerome Jennings on drums, Facing Dragons may not explode out at you like last year's Reach, his debut as a leader, or the concussive live energy that spilled over onto the EP Reach Further, but it certainly ups the ante and gives plenty of fuel to those who argue that Sands is the leading pianist of his generation. Mentored by Dr. Billy Taylor as a teen and recently named creative ambassador to The Erroll Garner Project, Sands, unbridled by the past and hugely aware of all the music around him, brings it all. Colored with clusters of block chords and a bright melody, "Rebel Music," the dynamic and nimble opener, finds the trio locked in synch and quickly setting the tone. Over a tumbling churn, saxophonist Marcus Strickland's deep tone holds front and center until trumpeter Keyon Harold joins the conversation. "Sunday Mornings" features an organic duet with guitarist Caio Afune and a gospel to reggae slide beat that's just exquisite to hear. Jennings is integral here, carrying the tune with a broad, bouncing strut.  "Her Song" is a lyrical, floating dialog between pianist and guitarist, yet Nakamura's resonant suppleness is the central key to the whole affair. "Frankenstein" with its shifts and subtleties may very well call to mind Chick Corea or Herbie Hancock, but there is no imitation going on here. To close the disc, Sands wanders his on Fender Rhodes for the spacey "Rhodes To Mediation" that some might find indulgent, but the recommendation is to just float along with it. ~ MIKE JURKOVIC https://www.allaboutjazz.com/facing-dragons-christian-sands-mack-avenue-records-review-by-mike-jurkovic.php

Personnel: Christian Sands: piano, Fender Rhodes; Caio Afune: guitar; Keyon Harrold: trumpet; Jerome Jennings: drums; Yasushi Nakamura: bass; Roberto Quintero, Cristian Rivera: percussion; Marcus Strickland: saxophone.

Facing Dragons

Saturday, July 27, 2019

Lou Tavano - For You

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:15
Size: 117,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:49)  1. Quiet Enlightenment
(4:50)  2. Emotional Riot
(2:33)  3. The Letter
(4:05)  4. Rest Assured
(3:49)  5. L'artiste
(4:05)  6. For You
(3:08)  7. It's a Girl
(4:30)  8. The Call
(0:22)  9. Baboushka
(3:57) 10. Petite Pomme
(4:11) 11. All Together
(5:18) 12. Afro Blue (Bali Hues)
(5:33) 13. Through a Nightmare

She is the new vocal-jazz sensation in a Parisian scene already jam-packed with impressive names. Now in her early 30s, Lou Tavano is bringing out her first album, a work that will attract the same attention as her trade-mark shock of fiery-red hair. Every song on 'For You' is its own little cosmos that reveals Tavano s extraordinary talent for creating a musical universe in which words carry just as much weight as the notes. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/You-LOU-TAVANO/dp/B019ZRVJIA

Personnel:  Alexey Asantcheeff / piano, spoken word in Russian; Arno de Casanove / trumpet, flugelhorn; Maxime Berton / soprano & tenor saxophones, bass clarinet, alto flute; Alexandre Perrot / acoustic bass; Ariel Tessier / drums; Background vocals and percussions performed by Lou Tavano & her musicians

For You

Chico Freeman - The Unspoken Word

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:06
Size: 179,4 MB
Art: Front

( 2:35)  1. The Unspoken Word
(14:29)  2. Gano Club
(11:13)  3. Playpen
( 9:19)  4. Infant Eyes
(10:01)  5. Peace Maker
(14:25)  6. Misty
(16:01)  7. Rythmn A Ning

An excellent tenor saxophonist and the son of Von Freeman, Chico Freeman has had a busy and diverse career, with many recordings ranging from advanced hard bop to nearly free avant-garde jazz. He originally played trumpet, not taking up the tenor until he was a junior in college. Freeman graduated from Northwestern University in 1972, played with R&B groups, and joined the AACM. In 1977, he moved to New York, where he worked with Elvin Jones, Sun Ra, Sam Rivers' big band, Jack DeJohnette's Special Edition, and Don Pullen, in addition to leading his own groups. He recorded a dozen albums as a leader during 1975-1982. Starting in 1984, Freeman has played on a part-time basis with the Leaders, he has recorded on a few occasions with his father and in 1989, he put together an electric band called Brainstorm. Chico Freeman has recorded through the years as a leader for Dharma, India Navigation, Contemporary, Black Saint, Elektra/Musician, Black Hawk, Palo Alto, Jazz House, and In & Out. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/chico-freeman-mn0000110829/biography

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone – Chico Freeman;  Alto Saxophone – Arthur Blythe; Bass – Curtis Lundy; Drums – Idris Muhammad; Piano – Julian Joseph; Sleeve – Richard Orr Design

The Unspoken Word

Ed Palermo - New York City Saturday Night Swing

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:23
Size: 78,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:11)  1. Eddie's Boogie
(3:13)  2. The Vamp Is Back
(2:40)  3. Ladies & Gentlemen
(3:30)  4. Jumpin' Jeans
(3:21)  5. Starlight Romance
(3:00)  6. Mambo Cabana
(2:41)  7. Swing Time
(2:58)  8. Feelin' Lucky
(2:47)  9. Broadway, Please
(3:24) 10. Home Base Blues
(2:34) 11. Easy Living

Ed Palermo has been leading his own big band for more than 25 years, an accomplishment all by itself. Prior to that he had performed or recorded with Aretha Franklin, Tito Puente, Eddie Palmieri, Celia Cruz, Lena Horne, Tony Bennett, Mel Tormé, Lou Rawls, Melba Moore, Debbie Gibson, the Spinners, and many others. He has also written and arranged for The Tonight Show, Maurice Hines, and Eddy Fischer, and his arranging talents were singled out by master arranger Gil Evans: "I first heard Ed Palermo's music in a small club in the SoHo section of Manhattan. He was using the instrumentation of a traditional 'big band' yet his arrangements and songs were anything but that. When I thought the music was going a certain direction, it would suddenly turn a corner. Ed has the ability to keep that important balance between cohesiveness and unpredictability. Ed Palermo's music is alive and represents now." Palermo has done arrangements of composers ranging from Jimi Hendrix and the Beatles to Shostakovich and Milhaud. However, he is probably best known for his arranging of the music of Frank Zappa for his big band, which has been performing the Zappa repertoire steadily for two decades. In 1997 he released the critically acclaimed The Ed Palermo Big Band Plays the Music of Frank Zappa on Astor Place, featuring the band with guest musicians Mike Stern and Mike Keneally. In July 2002, the Ed Palermo Big Band played at the Zappanale Festival in Bad Doberan, Germany, and a year later a Swedish version of the band performed at the Umeå Internationella Kammarmusik Festival in Sweden with guests Napoleon Murphy Brock and Keneally. Take Your Clothes Off When You Dance, their second recording of Zappa material, was released in May 2006. Three years later, Palermo and company returned with another Zappa-themed big-band effort, Eddy Loves Frank. Oh No!! Not Jazz!! Followed in 2014. In 2017 he delivered The Great Un-American Songbook, Volumes I & II, which featured jazz reworkings of songs by British rock acts including the Beatles, Cream, the Rolling Stones, Radiohead, and more. ~ Sean Westergaard https://www.allmusic.com/artist/ed-palermo-mn0000791880/biography

New York City Saturday Night Swing

Friday, July 26, 2019

YolanDa Brown - April Showers May Flowers Live Sessions

Styles: Saxophone Jazz 
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:07
Size: 106,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:27)  1. Dear John
(3:42)  2. TokYo Sunset
(3:09)  3. Fine Line
(2:14)  4. Yesterday
(5:32)  5. Today, Tomorrow
(4:32)  6. HeartBeat
(6:16)  7. Without You
(4:37)  8. Nothing To Say
(5:48)  9. BitterSweet
(3:45) 10. Good Morning

Having recently admired the Saxophone work on Johnny Borrell’s debut solo album, we thought it would only be fair to take this a step further and have a listen to one of the finest Saxophone players the UK has to offer. With two Mobo awards under her belt, Monday saw the release of YolanDa Brown’s ‘April Showers, May Flowers: Live Sessions,’ a live rework of her critically acclaimed debut. The album opens with ‘Dear John,’ showcasing some fine interplay between the saxophone, guitar and keys, whilst the beat is held behind and allows the band to flourish and surrender. The stops providing the respite before the Saxophone takes the lead and each instrument has its moment to freestyle amongst the blissfully lazy feel of the tune. Arguably, the stand out track comes in the form of next offering ‘Tokyo Sunset,’ a time shifting Reggae number that not only shows Brown’s ability to throw varying styles into the mix, but also allows her to make a statement of intent, jumping between poetic licks and sheer technical class as Brown shreds the saxophone in a manner that would make the guitarist from Tool question if there was any point in continuing.Furthermore, ‘Today Tomorrow’ sees Brown and her band tackle electronic music for the first time, with a collection of interspersed pads and pitch shifting organs providing the foundations for the Saxophone to execute some swelling trills amongst the accented chords and an impeccably defined rhythm section. Naturally, the most technically demanding number is saved until last, ‘Good Morning’ delivering Brown with the chance to showcase her ability to surge, fall and halt with effortless class, amongst a flurry of syncopated rhythms and varying time signatures. Throughout these recordings, you constantly have to remind yourself that everything was recorded live. Essentially this album is flawless and another reminder that pop musicians still have a long way to go if they are to reach the professional heights and supreme craft of musicians like YolanDa Brown. Whilst her technical gift is plain for all to see, the intrigue lies within her ability to blend a variety of different styles within the Jazz construct. All in all, creating an album that will not only impress Jazz enthusiasts, but hopefully bring a new generation of listeners to the fore. https://slatethedisco.com/2013/08/review-yolanda-brown-april-showers-may-flowers-live-sessions/

April Showers May Flowers Live Sessions

Yelena Eckemoff Quintet - In the Shadow of a Cloud

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 95:45
Size: 221,5 MB
Art: Front

(6:56)  1. In the Shadow of a Cloud
(5:12)  2. Saratovsky Bridge
(5:43)  3. Fishing Village
(8:54)  4. Waters of Tsna River
(7:13)  5. Acorn Figurines
(7:16)  6. On the Motorboat
(7:14)  7. Hammock Stories
(5:41)  8. Picnic in the Oaks
(6:09)  9. Waltz of the Yellow Petals
(6:35) 10. Trail Along the River
(5:32) 11. Lament
(6:49) 12. Vision of a Hunt
(7:50) 13. The Fog
(8:35) 14. Tambov Streets on a Summer Night

She may rarely perform live in this context, but Yelena Eckemoff has managed to build, over just seven years and a mammoth eleven releases including her second release of 2017, In the Shadow of a Cloud a loyal and growing following in the jazz world. It's all the more remarkable for a multi-talented expat Russian pianist who began life in the classical world, and only entered the jazz world in 2010 with Cold Sun. But there's even more to marvel at when it comes to Eckemoff, who relocated to the USA a little over a quarter century ago. Consider her accomplishments over the past seven years: she has released the entire body of jazz work on her own L&H Productions imprint, with only the help of publicists to help get the word out; has produced all of her recordings; and, since 2014's A Touch of Radiance, also contributed original paintings, as well as corresponding poetry to each composition. Few musicians could be compared to film auteurs who write, produce and direct their films, but it's clear that the term fits Eckemoff to a "T."  That said, looking at the large and diverse list of illustrious names with whom Eckemoff has collaborated on her recordings including Norwegians Arild Andersen, Jon Christensen, Mats Eilertsen and Tore Brunborg; and Americans like Peter Erskine, Billy Hart, Mark Turner, Darek Oleszkiewicz and George Mraz (two more expats), Joe Locke, Mark Feldman and Ben Street might suggest, to the more cynical-minded, a lesser-known artist with the funds to hire "ringers" name players who would give her recordings additional cachet.  But they would be wrong. Speak with most (if not all) of the musicians with whom Eckemoff has worked and that includes the all-Finn group of Blooming Tall Phlox, released earlier this year and which features a couple of names known to ECM and ACT fans (drummer Olavi Louhivouri and trumpeter Verneri Pohjola, respectively), along with two other up-and-comers on the Finnish scene and there seems to be a universal response: that Eckemoff is the real deal; a virtuosic pianist who has also evolved into a composer of significance. Andersen, in fact, has commented on the depth and challenge of her writing two descriptors that are both high praise and, for many musicians, precisely what they look for when hired for a session. It's also easy to tell when name artists have been hired as ringers; their performances are never less than impeccable, but they rarely demonstrate the kind of sparks that occur when they're truly enjoying themselves. Based on past albums though one need look no further than In the Shadow of a Cloud, where Eckemoff has surrounded herself with the all-star dream team of reed/woodwind multi-instrumentalist Chris Potter, guitarist Adam Rogers, bassist Drew Gress and drummer Gerald Cleaver it's clear that everyone has been nothing less than fully committed, completely engaged and utterly in-synch with the pianist and her compositions.  But there are still more praises to heap upon Eckemoff. While she has produced her recordings, she clearly appreciates the value of releasing albums where the sonics do justice to the music, collaborating with A-list engineers including Rich Breen, James Farbey and Jan Erik Kongshaug, who have been responsible, at various points, for recording, mixing and mastering her releases. While it would be incorrect to suggest that her recordings sound precisely like those produced by ECM Records, it is true that, in their own way, they approach the heralded Munich label's attention to sound and, most importantly, detail and clarity. Like Blooming Tall Phlox, In the Shadow of a Cloud is another double-disc set, this time featuring fourteen Eckemoff originals. And if Blooming Tall Phlox was a significant step forward for Eckemoff, whose lyrical and self-avowed romantic predispositions were all the more vividly contrasted by its more angular tone poems and some of the freest playing in her discography, In the Shadow of a Cloud takes its predecessor's advances and pushes them even further ahead, in no small part thanks to the intrinsic chemistry the pianist achieved by bringing together a quartet of additional musicians who may be playing with her for the first time, but have a couple of decades of experience working in various permutations and combinations (though never in precisely this grouping).

Just listening to the first disc's opening title track how it moves from Potter's spare delivery of Eckemoff's gentle melody, at first accompanied only by Cleaver but with Gress, Eckemoff and Rogers (who briefly reiterates the same melody) quickly joining in it's not long before the pianist's ability to create complex contrapuntal charts that nevertheless feel unhurried and filled with air is rendered crystal clear...as is the effortless empathy shared not just by her bandmates, but with Eckemoff as well. And while she has often left improvisation more decidedly to her musical partners, both her interpretive skills and a brief first solo suggest a growing comfort level in extemporaneous environs. The piece moves seamlessly between sections some, full group; others, with smaller subsets lending it the feeling of being much longer than its seven-minute duration. And with its brief dissolution into near-complete freedom, it's as if "In the Shadow of a Cloud" is an ideal primer, not just to the album but to Eckemoff's overall approach. Except that, as rich, finely detailed and open-ended as In the Shadow of a Cloud's title track is, it's far from all there is to Eckemoff and, in particular, her growing compositional acumen. There's no denying that her classical background has something to do with the way she often builds her compositions episodically, as if they were miniature suites; but, while the more common American jazz tradition is largely (but not entirely) absent, Eckemoff manages to build bridges and dissolve (mis)perceived differences between what some consider to be jazz of American and European varieties. The truth is that whatever dividing lines some might like to erect between music from various locales, what Eckemoff has done, with a discography that moves seamlessly between American and European groupings but has also brought musicians from both sides of the Atlantic together, as she did with 2015's The Lions and 2013's Glass Song is to demonstrate that such delineations are, indeed, nothing more than artifice. For so many jazz musicians in particular, naming compositions is often an afterthought...a task sometimes even left to others. But with Eckemoff's poetry the perfect complement to her music, she has also manages to accomplish a rare feat in creating music that reflects her own inspirations while, at the same time, providing plenty of opportunity for personal interpretation. With Potter's flute work floating over Eckemoff's delicate accompaniment, Cleaver's gossamer cymbal work and a contrasting line doubled by Rogers and Gress, there's an unmistakable sense of flow that evokes the image of "Waters of Tsna River," even if but a few have actually visited this waterway that was particularly significant in medieval Russia, as a connection between the Baltic Sea and Caspian Sea basins via the Tvertsa River. Just as rivers are unpredictable, so, too, are the performances here, in particular Potter, Rogers and, indeed, Eckemoff, all of whom seem to move back and forth from background to foreground, sometimes alone, but elsewhere interacting with each other, firmly supported throughout by Gress and Cleaver's understated but still muscular undercurrent. With a group this strong, Eckemoff is able to deliver her strongest set of compositions yet. "Acorn Figurines" may initially seem thematically knotty, but remains an elegant ballad with a hint of melancholy...and, ultimately, a serpentine yet singable melody that may take a few spins to fully absorb. The deception is that Eckemoff rarely (if ever) writes anything that resembles a simple sketch or head-solo-head construct; and yet, as challenging as her charts become under scrutiny, while simply listening and allowing the music to flow, In the Shadow of a Cloud is an album that's as appealing on a purely emotional level as it is intellectually compelling. Still, if any of this suggests music that lacks fire and is, instead, more soothing in complexion, the bright-tempo'd "On the Motorboat" not only demonstrates Eckemoff's greater breadth but takes advantage of the more fiery reputation of Potter, who turns in a relatively brief but characteristically potent and keenly focused tenor saxophone solo, followed by Eckemoff, whose spontaneity matches both that of her immediate predecessor and that of Rogers, who follows with a similarly vibrant turn that rapidly ascends and cascades with inimitable fluidity. A seemingly free middle section allows Cleaver some time in the spotlight while, at the same time, bolstered by contributions from Eckemoff and Rogers, before Gress rejoins and, with Cleaver back to defining a firm yet pliant pulse, leads to a finale where Potter and Rogers are both afforded, once again, brief but even more incendiary solo spots, before Eckemoff once again takes the lead to bring "On the Motorboat" to a close. Furthermore, if there's any suggestion that In the Shadow of a Cloud lacks swing, one listen to the second disc opener, "Picnic in the Oaks," is all that's necessary to lay waste to that claim, as Eckemoff delivers one of her most "in the tradition" tracks ever. Still, it fits perfectly within the pianist's overall complexion and conception, even if her solo possesses, in addition to her extant musical background, just a hint of Thelonious Monk's characteristic idiosyncrasies. Elsewhere, "Vision of a Hunt" suggests how Pat Metheny might sound, were he of Slavic rather than American Midwestern lineage. Potter's bass clarinet is a rare treat, both as the composition's primary melodic instrument and in a solo that fits the composition's fervent vibe and Eastern European character. Throughout the entire album, Potter, Rogers, Gress and Cleaver play as if they've been with Eckemoff for years. And the existing chemistry shared between them drives Eckemoff to heights she has rarely before reached. Fans of her prior recordings will still find plenty to love. Still, at the same time, just as Eckemoff is challenged, with each and every recording, to raise her game and broaden her purview, so, too, will fans of the pianist/composer find themselves opening up to the greater possibilities, the more unequivocal spontaneity and unexpected fire of In the Shadow of a Cloud...Eckemoff's most eminently impressive release to date. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/in-the-shadow-of-a-cloud-yelena-eckemoff-l-and-h-production-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Yelena Eckemoff: piano; Chris Potter: tenor and soprano saxophones, flute, bass clarinet; Adam Rogers: electric guitar; Drew Gress: double bass; Gerald Cleaver: drums.

In the Shadow of a Cloud

Grant Green - Shades Of Green

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1972
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:46
Size: 92,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:55)  1. I Don't Want Nobody To Give Me Nothing (Open Up The Door I'll Get It Myself)/Cold Sweat - Medley
(4:12)  2. Sunrise, Sunset
(4:34)  3. Never My Love
(4:24)  4. Got To Be There
(6:22)  5. California Green
(4:30)  6. If You Really Love Me
(4:50)  7. Cast Your Fate To The Wind
(4:56)  8. In The Middle

A stellar album from Grant Green very different than most of his other work for Blue Note, and a sly electric groover recorded with vibist Billy Wooten! The sound here is a bit more spacious than some of Grant's earlier albums, yet no less funky thanks to a hip undercurrent of soul in the drums, and arrangements from Wade Marcus that keep things fluid throughout. Wooten's vibes are wonderful, a ringing counterpoint to Green's great lines on guitar and even the more familiar tunes on the record turn out to be really unique readings here thanks to the arrangements and overall conception. Mellow moments are dripping with plenty of soul, and the funky ones are pretty great too and titles include a killer medley of James Brown's "I Don't Want Nobody To Give Me Nothing" and "Cold Sweat", a heavy version of his instrumental groover "In The Middle", and a great original called "California Green"plus "Never My Love", "Sunrise Sunset", "Got To Be There", and "If You Really Love Me".  © 1996-2019, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/5369/Grant-Green:Shades-Of-Green

Personnel: Grant Green - guitar; Billy Wooten - vibes; Emmanuel Riggins - electric piano, clavinet; Wilton Felder - electric bass; Nesbert "Stix" Hooper - drums; King Errisson - conga; Harold Caldwell - percussion; Joe Newman, Joe Wilder, Victor Paz, Jimmy Sedlar - trumpet; Harry DiVito - trombone; Dick Hickson - bass trombone; Jim Buffington - french horn; Phil Bodner, Romeo Penque, George Marge, John Leone - woodwinds

Shades Of Green

Cæcilie Norby - Sisters in Jazz

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:54
Size: 128,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:20)  1. Easy Money
(4:48)  2. Willow Weep for Me
(4:33)  3. Droppin' Things
(6:24)  4. Man from Mars
(3:59)  5. Naked in the Dark
(4:57)  6. First Conversation
(3:46)  7. Puzzled
(4:24)  8. Love Has Gone Away
(4:04)  9. Big Yellow Taxi
(5:54) 10. All at Once
(4:52) 11. Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow
(3:47) 12. Do I Move You

Cæcilie has gathered musical forces with her European "Sisters in Jazz", consisting of some of the most exciting, diverse and dynamic female musicians on the European Jazz scene. Together they've created her new album which celebrates women in jazz. http://caecilienorby.com/

Personnel: Cæcilie Norby / vocals & percussion; Rita Marcotulli / piano; Nicole Johänntgen / saxophone; Hildegunn Øiseth / trumpet; Lisa Wulff / bass; Dorota Piotrowska / drums; Marilyn Mazur / percussion (04, 06, 07 & 09)

Sisters in Jazz

Thursday, July 25, 2019

Bob Sheppard - Close Your Eyes

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:06
Size: 115,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:16)  1. Close Your Eyes
(6:29)  2. Surface Tension
(6:15)  3. Goodbye
(6:07)  4. Brain Fog
(4:36)  5. Fast Company
(6:29)  6. Phantoms
(4:43)  7. Lightness
(5:23)  8. Gazelle
(3:41)  9. All in a Row

The distinction between East Coast and West Coast jazz is probably an outdated oversimplification. Yet it is hard not to think of Close Your Eyes as quintessentially Californian. Its airiness and clarity insinuate ocean breezes and sunlight. Bob Sheppard of Los Angeles is one of the most skilled multireed players in jazz. He is a studio musician, professor, clinician and first-call sideman (Freddie Hubbard, Joni Mitchell, Steely Dan, James Taylor). Close Your Eyes is a rare project under his own name, and the most complete document to date of his art. It is polished, sophisticated, intricately organized music. Alan Pasqua or John Beasley play piano and B3. Gabe Noel/Antonio Sánchez/Walter Rodriguez are on bass/drums/percussion. Guitarist Larry Koonse and trumpeter Alex Sipiagen join on two numbers each. But it doesn’t sound like a small-group session because Sheppard, who usually solos on tenor saxophone, overdubs himself on six other woodwind instruments to create layered horn backgrounds. Every tune is arranged into a tight, multifaceted design. People (East Coast people?) who require lots of blood and guts in their jazz might find performances like “Surface Tension” and “Brain Fog” and “Fast Company” too intellectual. But even such charts, with their high degree of difficulty, their tricky meters and clever unisons, get down to business when the solos kick in. Sipiagen and Koonse and Pasqua wait for their moments, then kill. Every Sheppard improvisation is a unique revelation of unpredictable finesse. In a lucid tenor saxophone tone, he dances among ideas like Baryshnikov. Kenny Barron’s “Phantoms” is perfectly quiet and ominous, but the best track is “Goodbye.” Like every piece on this album, it is precisely calibrated, but only to set up Sheppard, whose smeary, floating solo is an elegant, passionate iteration of melancholy. ~ Thomas Conrad https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/bob-sheppard-close-your-eyes/

Personnel: Bob Sheppard - Saxophone; Antonio Sanchez -Drums; Alan Pasqua - Piano & Organ; John Beasley- Piano & Organ; Larry Koonse- Guitar; Alex Sipiagen- Trumpet & Flugelhorn; Gabe Noel - Bass; Walter Rodriguez- Percussion

Close Your Eyes

Nancy Osborne - Hot Swing, Cool Jazz

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:22
Size: 112,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:20)  1. I Love Being Here With You
(3:36)  2. Mister Sandman
(2:57)  3. Ding Dong the Witch Is Dead
(4:08)  4. I've Got You Under My Skin
(2:49)  5. It's De-lovely
(2:12)  6. Something's Gotta Give
(4:41)  7. Only You
(3:13)  8. And the Angels Sing
(3:26)  9. All That Jazz
(2:27) 10. He's a Tramp
(2:19) 11. Pardon My Southern Accent
(2:26) 12. Two Lost Souls
(3:08) 13. Gypsy in My Soul
(4:24) 14. Georgia On My Mind
(2:33) 15. Hallelujah I Just Love Him So
(1:36) 16. As Long As I'm Singing

I'm in a quandary to describe this album of big band jazz vocals from Nancy Osborne as anything more than "pleasant." Through no fault of the singer or the top-flight band of West Coast musicians like Pete Christlieb, Gary Herbig, Charley Loper and Tom Ranier or the arrangements of Bob Florence, Paul McDonald, Lon Norman, Jonathan Barick or Dave Wolpe this album cannot be lifted into a higher category. The best summary I can offer is that the album offers "safe" middlebrow jazz music. Several of the tunes are currently overexposed per the Great American Songbook (eg. "I've Got You Under My Skin," "It's Delovely," "Georgia On My Mind") and deserve at least temporary retirement. Osborne's voice is fine, with a bright quality that emphasizes the lyrics and hits a balance with the orchestrations, so that both are heard to their advantages.  However, this is a big band vocal album, not a jazz-oriented vocal occasion. There are a few false starts. "It's De-Lovely" begins with the opening riff of "Milestones" and "Something's Gotta Give" begins with Osborne's vocalese matching the horn lines, but this is a introductory tease for both songs. Nancy Osborne also provides effective vocalese on the instrumental break of "Gypsy In My Soul." I'd suggest that this is an excellent choice for afficianados of big band music in a contemporary setting. Let's look at a few more positives. 

Osborne opens with a saucy version of Peggy Lee's "I Love Being Here With You" and concludes with Bobby Darin's signature song, "As Long As I'm Singing," which he usually used to close sets. "Pardon My Southern Accent" is an obscure Johnny Mercer tune from 1934 and "Two Lost Souls," borrowed from the Broadway musical Damn Yankees, is a nifty duet with Ned Rifkin. Osborne's take on "He's A Tramp" (from the Disney film Lady and the Tramp) once again emulates the style of writer and performer Peggy Lee. 
~ Michael P.Gladstone https://www.allaboutjazz.com/hot-swing-cool-jazz-nancy-osborne-self-produced-review-by-michael-p-gladstone.php

Personnel: Nancy Osborne: vocals; Charlie Davis, Ron Barrows, Mike NcGuffy, Barbara Laronga: trumpet; Charlie Loper, Paul Young, Linda Small, Bryant Byers: trombone; Pete Christlieb, Gary Herbig, Darryl Winseman, Andrew Martinez, Cindy Bradley, Mike Acosta: reeds; Jim Cox, Tom Ranier: piano; Ron Hershewe: guitar; Geo Valle: bass; Sammy K: drums; Ned Rifken: guest vocalist.

Hot Swing, Cool Jazz

Pete Zimmer Quintet - Common Man

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:00
Size: 140,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:24)  1. Search
(6:37)  2. Road Taken
(6:55)  3. Common Man
(3:51)  4. A Whole New You
(6:45)  5. Time That Once Was
(5:39)  6. 5 A.M. Blues
(5:33)  7. Hustlin
(6:05)  8. Daytona
(6:11)  9. Darn That Dream
(6:57) 10. Common Man (Alt)

Pete Zimmer's quintet swings with a straight-ahead enthusiasm that captures the tradition inspired by a century of jazz. His trumpet/tenor saxophone front line strolls gracefully through this program of originals and standards. Zimmer drives the unit gently from the drum set, encouraging trumpeter Michael Rodriguez, saxophonist Joel Frahm, and both pianists in their search for the perfect solo improvisation."Common Man," the album's title track, exhibits the strength of a cohesive unit that speaks closely together, like peas in a pod. Not preferring to jump and shout, Zimmer stays the course with a magnetic quality. Solos around the room follow with the same mood as the quintet speaks lovingly of its tradition. Critics of modern jazz complain that it moves too fast and that its intensity gives them headaches. With his debut album, Pete Zimmer reaches out to the common man and proves to him that modern, straight-ahead jazz can capture your heart and take you away from the ordinary. The music elevates his audience. Ballads such as "Time That Once Was" and "Darn That Dream" can lift your spirits gently. John Sullivan's bowed bass statements work miracles. 

Up-tempo romps, such as Frahm's "A Whole New You" and Zimmer's "Hustlin,'" provide drama and driving energy, while maintaining a hardy rhythmic spirit. Zimmer's brief drum solos provide the spice. ~ Jim Santella https://www.allaboutjazz.com/common-man-pete-zimmer-tippin-records-review-by-jim-santella.php

Personnel: Pete Zimmer (drums), Michael Rodriguez (trumpet), Joel Frahm (tenor saxophone), Rick Germanson (piano on "Common Man," "5 A.M. Blues," "Daytona"), Toru Dodo (piano on all other tracks), John Sullivan (bass)

Common Man

David Liebman - On the Corner Live! The Music of Miles Davis

Styles: Saxophone, Flute Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:38
Size: 154,0 MB
Art: Front

( 1:02)  1. Lieb Talks About Miles
( 3:50)  2. In a Silent Way
( 8:41)  3. On the Corner
( 9:08)  4. Wili (For Dave)
( 2:19)  5. Bass Interlude
(11:55)  6. Black Satin
( 7:02)  7. Selim
( 1:34)  8. Guitar Interlude
( 5:53)  9. Ife
( 1:56) 10. Drum Interlude
( 7:04) 11. Mojo
( 6:11) 12. Jean Pierre

When the Miles Davis album On the Corner (Columbia, 1972) was released, Davis had already begun to engage in electronic instrumentation and jazz fusion with soon to be revered recordings: In A Silent Way (Columbia, 1969), Bitch's Brew (Columbia, 1970) and Jack Johnson (Columbia, 1971). On the Corner, however, was so experimental and funky that it incurred the wrath of many critics and sales were minimal. Still, in the ensuing decades, it has come to be regarded as a pioneering work that anticipated and influenced not only the subsequent development of jazz but also hip-hop, jungle, post-rock, and other styles that have defined public taste and topped the popular music charts. On the album, Davis played electric organ more than trumpet, used musicians like Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock, Don Alias, and John McLaughlin curiously without mentioning their names, and experimented with tape-splicing and electronic effects he picked up from avant-garde classical composer Karlheinz Stockhausen. What initially appeared to be Davis' downfall proved to possess innovative power. On a larger cultural plane, the album embodied the flowering of the hippie era with its psychedelics and radical lifestyle, and especially in Davis' own thoughts, the freeing of African American youth from entrenched traditions in music and lifestyle. Dave Liebman was the saxophonist on that controversial album. A young upstart at the time, Liebman found his two year tenure in Davis' band to be just the stimulus he needed to jump start his career and, after a stint with Elvin Jones, form his own iconic groups. Forty-plus years later, in 2015, one of Liebman's admirers, fellow saxophonist Jeff Coffin, was inspired to invite him to Nashville to revisit On the Corner with musicians especially capable of capturing the essence of that recording. Liebman had already recorded a version with an ensemble of his own, Back on the Corner (Shrapnel, 2007; Mascot, 2015). Now in a period of his career where he was increasingly interacting with musicians beyond his inner circle, he found the invitation appealing. The result, just now released four years after it was recorded, is a tantalizing combination of the ingredients of the Davis album with Liebman's own well-honed but always expanding musical approach and vocabulary. Liebman provided arrangements of two songs from the Davis album: "On the Corner" and "Black Satin," as well as Weather Report founder Joe Zawinul's "In a Silent Way" and several originals. Coffin recruited the additional musicians: Victor Wooten on electric bass, Chris Walters on keyboards, James DaSilva on guitar, and Chester Thompson on drums, all of whom demonstrate their resilience in adapting to the requirements of the electric funk genre. It was a live gig in a packed house at the sizeable Nashville 3rd and Lindsley Bar. The recording quality is especially good, with the stereo spatial separation that Davis was looking for as well. As far as we know, despite the fact that digital technology makes it easy to splice and modify sounds, there was no use of control room gadgetry to revise the original live recording. The album begins with a short talk by Liebman reflecting casually on Davis' career and providing an overview of the program. (One wishes he said more about the Davis "Corners" recording date.) Then, "In a Silent Way" finds Liebman on wood flute and soprano saxophone accompanied by Coffin's tenor sax. It's a slow paced modal melody almost empty, like silence. Throughout the album you're going to hear carefully articulated modal and chromatic melodic improvising that lends an impressionistic beauty deliberately omitted in Davis' recording. "On the Corner," however, adheres closely to the sound of Davis' "On the Corner" track. It's almost free jazz except for a discernable melody and key, with sounds characteristic of fusion. 

Liebman offers an animalistic "Rite of Spring"-like improvisation on soprano saxophone complemented by Coffin's electronic saxophone. It is sheer funk with a touch of the blues characteristic of acid rock. A repetitive grunge motif on bass guitar is reminiscent of Jaco Pastorius' tenure in Weather Report and builds up to simultaneous improvising by the whole group. Wili (co-written by Davis and Liebman)" harks back to the feeling of "In a Silent Way," with Liebman on wood flute providing sound imagery of ethereal night. There is interesting synthesizer work on keyboards and guitar and a lovely dialogue between wood flute and soprano saxophone. Walters' keyboards and DaSilva's guitar delve into the "night" idea further, giving an impressionist flavor which Liebman likes for ballads. A "Bass Interlude" affords a parody of the Nashville country and western sound, and like the tracks on Davis' album, segues directly without pause into "Black Satin," in a version nothing like Davis' track. It is far less chaotic! The melodic motif predominates and Liebman does one of his magnificent soprano saxophone solos. A subdued postlude takes the melody at a snail's pace out into the night. Davis was called "Prince of Darkness" for a variety of reasons, but his music exemplified at some depth the nightshades that make jazz so haunting, as does this tune. The album moves on to several originals. "Selim," a bluesy meditation begins with what might be the only acoustic piano segment, and the whole piece seems pre-fusion. A "Guitar Interlude" by DaSilva also provides a mainstream solo going back to Herb Ellis, et al. It ends though with a touch of fusion/synthesizer accompaniment leading up to "Ife" which provides a perfect foil for another iconic Liebman soprano saxophone solo. If rappers could be drummers, Chester Thompson's "Drum Interlude" would exemplify their pounding rhythmic rants. It is followed seamlessly by "Mojo,"; which as the name suggests creates an accelerating magic spell. As the pace picks up the effect is that of a train-like version of Ravel's "Bolero." Surprisingly, the "funk" on this album harks back to Charlie Parker, who found much inspiration in Ravel and Stravinsky. A doctoral thesis could be written about the premise, "without bebop, no funk."  The album concludes with "Jean Pierre," a Motown-ish vamp that could have provided a backdrop for Boyz 2 Men. Taken as a whole, this album provides a healthy dose of jazz, rock, fusion, and funk all put together by a group of outstanding musicians who know exactly what they are doing and having great fun "on the corner." ~ Victor L. Scherner https://www.allaboutjazz.com/on-the-corner-live-dave-liebman-ear-up-records-review-by-victor-l-schermer.php

Personnel: Dave Liebman: tenor and soprano saxophone, wood flute; Jeff Coffin: tenor, soprano, and electro saxophone, flute, clarinet; Victor Wooten: electric bass; Chester Thompson: drums; Chris Walters: keyboards; James DaSilva: guitar.

On the Corner Live! The Music of Miles Davis