Saturday, March 23, 2019

Herbie Mann - A Man And A Woman

Styles: Flute Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 27:36
Size: 64,7 MB
Art: Front

(2:25)  1. A Man and a Woman
(2:34)  2. Day Tripper
(2:43)  3. Come Back to Me
(2:32)  4. Little Boat
(2:10)  5. It's Time That You Settled Down
(2:13)  6. A Good Thing (Is Hard to Come By)
(2:15)  7. 1-2-3
(2:33)  8. Only Yesterday
(2:24)  9. Sunny
(2:38) 10. How Insensitive
(3:04) 11. The Sidewinder

A Mann & A Woman is an album by American jazz flautist Herbie Mann and vocalist Tamiko Jones released on the Atlantic label in 1967. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Mann_%26_A_Woman

Personnel:  Herbie Mann - flute; Tamiko Jones - vocals - with various ensembles including: Roy Ayers, Gary Burton - vibraphone; Joe Zawinul - piano; Victor Gaskin, Reggie Workman - bass; Everett Barksdale - electric bass; Bruno Carr, Roy McCurdy - drums; Carlos "Patato" Valdes - congas, percussion; Tamiko Jones - vocals; Melba Liston, Jimmy Wisner, Joe Zawinul - arranger

A Man And A Woman

Julienne Taylor - The Sessions

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:00
Size: 106,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:24)  1. A Time for Love
(2:11)  2. Hear Come the Bears (Female Ambient Mix)
(3:32)  3. Just Let Me Be (Remix)
(6:38)  4. Like a Rolling Stone (Female Vocal Full Length Version)
(4:00)  5. Like a Rolling Stone (Female Vocal Mix)
(3:16)  6. Parisian Cafe (Female Chillout Mix)
(3:53)  7. Say to Me (Female Ambient Mix)
(4:36)  8. Tears In Heaven (Female Celtic Mix)
(3:56)  9. What Am I Gonna Do (Alternative Mix)
(2:52) 10. When Love Dies (Female Celtic Mix)
(3:55) 11. Why Did You Do It
(3:42) 12. Why Did You Do It (Alternative Mix)

Julienne Taylor’s enchanting and captivating voice raised comparisons with both Norah Jones and Eva Cassidy, but Julienne has her own unique and distinctive style influenced from her Scottish ancestry.The musical journey of Julienne Taylor has been a long and winding road. Having played in various bands in her High School years and studied dance and expressive mime in Edinburgh with Kinny Gardner (Lindsay Kemp Company), Julienne was convinced by musician friends who had previously made the transition, that a move to London was the only way to seriously pursue a career in music. So at 17 years old she did just that.‘Home’, somewhat strangely, for the first few months of her arrival in the capital was living out of a suitcase in student nurse accommodation in Guys Hospital, being signed in as a guest by nursing staff friends and ‘changing’ her name every other day to avoid detection.A flat in an insalubrious part of S. E. London, which she shared with former band members from Scotland was to become a more permanent base with Julienne working by day and writing songs by night soon discovering that success does not come suddenly. A  spell of homelessness on London’s streets was only to compound this further.Subsequent years saw Julienne working at Shepperton Film Studios learning the craft of sound engineering whilst regularly singing six nights a week with blues and soul bands and lending her voice as a backing vocalist for established acts. Later, a serious car crash would lead Julienne to pursue a studio engineering career whilst still persevering with her own musical ambitionsIn 2001, whilst working with an Edinburgh based independent label, and following a series of successful live performances at the Edinburgh Festival, Julienne was signed to Virgin Records. A delay in the release of her first album however, meant the momentum was lost and in a world of priorities, the album and Julienne slowly became misplaced in the shuffle.Since 2010 Julienne has been happily signed to Hong Kong based record label ‘Evolution’.On a personal note, Julienne was diagnosed with thyroid cancer in November 2015. A full thyroidectomy followed in December, and she was given the “all clear” in January 2016. http://juliennetaylor.com/biography/

The Sessions

Stanley Turrentine, Milt Jackson - Cherry

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1972
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:50
Size: 87,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:38)  1. Speedball
(5:10)  2. I Remember You
(7:46)  3. The Revs
(6:04)  4. Sister Sanctified
(5:10)  5. Cherry
(7:00)  6. Introspective

One of the best CTI albums from the early 70s and one of Stanley Turrentine's funkiest records as well! The album's got a sharper edge than most other Turrentine albums of the time a quality that goes beyond Stan's already soulful approach to the tenor, and which brings in some tight changes and more pronounced rhythms that really give the best cuts a great groove! The group's a sextet with Bob James on electric piano, Milt Jackson on vibes, Cornell Dupree on guitar, Ron Carter on bass, and Billy Cobham on drums and titles include a monster version of Weldon Irvine's "Sister Sanctified" a great funk tune that's probably best known as the sample for "My Philosophy" by BDP! Other tracks include "Speedball", "Cherry", and "The Revs".  © 1996-2019, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/1522/Stanley-Turrentine:Cherry

Personnel:  Stanley Turrentine - Tenor Sax; Milt Jackson - Vibes; Bob James - Electric Piano, Piano; Cornell Dupree - Guitar; Ron Carter - Bass; Billy Cobham - Drums

Cherry

George Russell - Ezz-thetics

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1961
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:02
Size: 98,7 MB
Art: Front

(8:59)  1. Ezz-thetic
(4:41)  2. Nardis
(8:07)  3. Lydiot
(5:36)  4. Thoughts
(9:04)  5. Honesty
(6:33)  6. 'Round Midnight

A post-war masterpiece, Ezz-Thetics is pianist/arranger George Russell's definitive 1961 sextet recording from the earliest phase of his multi-decade career. On par with such iconic albums as Oliver Nelson's Blues and the Abstract Truth (Impulse!, 1961), Mal Waldron's The Quest (Riverside, 1961) and Andrew Hill's Point of Departure (Blue Note, 1964), Ezz-Thetics traffics in the same advanced but accessible strain of avant-garde-influenced post-bop. Author of The Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization (pub. 1953), Russell's seminal concepts of improvisation, based on scales rather than chords, became the driving force behind the early modal explorations of Miles Davis and John Coltrane. This pioneering session offers a singular and visionary view of classic post-bop that is ageless in its perfection. Starring a phenomenal group of talent, Russell's sextet features multi-instrumentalist Eric Dolphy, trumpeter Don Ellis, trombonist Dave Baker, a young Steve Swallow on acoustic bass and drummer Joe Hunt. Undaunted by Russell's unorthodox arrangements and tricky, pan-tonal harmonic sensibility, these young firebrands tackle these knotty compositions with flawless technique and unbounded creativity. "Ezz-Thetic" opens the album with a bustling, circuitous theme that ripples with spiraling angularity. Inspiring a round of exhilarating statements from the horns, the tune breaks down into a sequence of recurrent call and response between the rhythm section and brass that eschews typical conventions of pattern and form. Supported by subtle counterpoint and an elegant arrangement, Miles Davis' exotic "Nardis" is given a haunting reading. The sly and unassuming "Lydiot" reveals Russell's minimalist angularity behind the piano, while Dolphy displays a keening, expressive aspect in contrast to Ellis' dulcet trumpet. Using the blues as a basic framework, Baker's contribution, "Thoughts," incorporates free-form sections at regular intervals, exposing the fine line between tradition and innovation. "Honesty" is a celebratory ode; a vibrant hybrid of classic swing and edgy futurism that contrasts bluesy lyricism with suspenseful, stop-time segments. 

A prescient rendition of Thelonious Monk's "'Round Midnight" acts as a showpiece for Dolphy. Opening with a free-form section of tiny instrumental sounds and highly vocalized brass effects, it pre-dates the work of the AACM (Association for the Advancement of Creative Music) by almost a decade. A brilliant study in dynamics and virtuosity, Dolphy's alto solo is legendary. Incorporating intervallic leaps and register changes with a highly vocalized tone and mellifluous phrasing, he offers a definitive statement on a hallowed theme. Two takes of the previously unissued "Kige's Tune" appear as bonus tracks. A driving bop-ish vehicle, it is a worthwhile addition, providing the perfect coda to a brilliant session. Cerebral and innovative, yet firmly grounded in tradition, Ezz-Thetics is essential listening and an absolute requirement for any comprehensive jazz collection. Russell's masterwork is beautiful, enthralling and adventurous, a perfect summation of all the innovations post-war jazz has to offer. ~ Troy Collins https://www.allaboutjazz.com/ezz-thetics-george-russell-riverside-review-by-troy-collins.php

Personnel: George Russell: piano, arranger; Don Ellis: trumpet; Dave Baker: trombone; Eric Dolphy: alto saxophone, bass clarinet (2, 4); Stephen Swallow: bass; Joe Hunt: drums.

Ezz-thetics

Roy Ayers - Feeling Good

Styles: Jazz Funk 
Year: 1982
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:13
Size: 93,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:19)  1. Fire Up The Funk
(5:20)  2. Let's Stay Together
(4:18)  3. Ooh
(5:32)  4. Our Time Is Coming
(5:39)  5. Turn Me Loose
(4:40)  6. Knock, Knock
(5:00)  7. Stairway To The Stars
(4:21)  8. Feeling Good

Stellar sounds from the great Roy Ayers an early 80s album for Polydor, but a set that's still got the wonderfully tight, wonderfully groovy feel of his late 70s albums for the label! Roy's really perfected his sense of balance by this time and does a great job of balancing groovers with sweet mellow steppers the kind of cool, compressed, jazzy numbers that we love so much! Ayers heads for the clubs one minute, the bedroom the next and draws us in beautifully whichever direction he takes thanks to some sublime vibes and electric piano and great lead vocals from Roy, and other singers who include Terri Wells, Vivian Prince, John King, and Ricky Williams. Titles include "Ooh", "Let's Stay Together", "Feeling Good""Knock Knock", "Turn Me Loose", "Stairway To The Stars", and "Our Time Is Coming".  © 1996-2019, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/34880/Roy-Ayers:Feeling-Good

Feeling Good