Tuesday, April 2, 2019

Eddie 'Lockjaw' Davis - Lockjaw's Jazz-A-Samba

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:54
Size: 90,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:53)  1. Wild Rice
(5:20)  2. Guanco Lament
(5:06)  3. Tin Tin Deo
(4:14)  4. Jazz-A-Samba
(5:21)  5. Alma Alegre
(6:21)  6. Star Eyes
(7:36)  7. Afro-Jaws

Eddie Lockjaw Davis was one musician who provided a link from the big band era through to the soul jazz phenomenon of the late 1950s and early 1960s. Davis developed one of the most unmistakable tenor sax sounds in post war jazz. With a full bodied yet reedy tone that was equally at home in rhythm & blues settings as more modern contexts, his playing always had a direct, singing quality that was a huge influence on the next generation of sax men. Davis began to make his mark on the jazz scene in New York when he worked at Clark Monroe's Uptown House in the late 30s. Despite this establishment's close ties with the emergence of bebop a few years later, Davis' tenor saxophone playing was rooted in swing and the blues, and early in his career he displayed a marked affinity with the tough school of Texas tenors. In the early 40s he worked with a number of big bands, including those of Cootie Williams, Lucky Millinder and Andy Kirk. He also led his own small group for club and record sessions. Eddie “Lockjaw” Davis was a pioneer of the tenor-and-organ combo, between 1955-60, he toured and recorded with a unit featuring Shirley Scott on the Hammond B3. In this long-running group, Davis realized his vision of what an organ/tenor combo could achieve. Miss Scott’s taste and light touch on the organ made it possible for Davis to avoid the battering-ram approach and produce music of restraint and taste without sacrificing drive and excitement. After Scott left the band, Davis never really returned to the organ/tenor sound, despite his success with it. 

In 1952 Davis made the first of several appearances with the Count Basie band, which extended through the 60s and into the 70s. He was a mainstay at Prestige, and released a long list of fine sessions for that label and for their subsidiary Moodsville. It was with Basie that he made his greatest impact, although in between these stints he continued to lead his own small groups, notably Tough Tenors with Johnny Griffin in the early 60s. As the 1960s came into focus, Chicago tenor saxophonist Johnny Griffin and his New York counterpart, Eddie “Lockjaw” Davis, hooked up for a series of tenor battle albums that were easily a cut above most such recordings. For one thing, both saxophonists were rock solid bop players who were at the peak of their powers. For another, the two tenor men were very compatible in their playing styles and had a lot of mutual respect. “Tough Tenors” is a November, 1960, date. This record delivers an unbeatable program of music delivered by two of the greatest jazz tenors in top form. After temporarily withdrawing from active music in 1963 to work as a booking agent, he returned as a soloist and road manager for the Count Basie band in 1964. He played in Europe with Mr. Basie, and participated in European tours as part of the Norman Granz troupe with Ella Fitzgerald. He also joined up with Sweets Edison in the 70’s, with which he did sessions and tours. Davis' playing style showed him to be at ease on both gutsy, hard-driving swingers and slow, tender ballads. The former are most evident in his partnership with Griffin and his showstoppers with Basie, while the softer facet of his musical character came to the fore on a fine album of ballads he made with Paul Gonsalves. Davis always confounded critics. Because he was an acknowledged star to the soul-jazz idiom, they expected him to create in a somewhat formulaic setting, taking few chances. Jaws always took chances, and he always did things his way. Eddie Lockjaw Davis was a hard hitting tenor player from the old school, and his legacy survives in his vast and prestigious recordings and memorable live performances when he would dominate the stage. He passed in Nov. 1986, at age of 65. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/eddielockjawdavis

Lockjaw's Jazz-A-Samba

Chris Connor - Lilac Wine

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 100:35
Size: 231,3 MB
Art: Front

( 3:36)  1. These Foolish Things
( 3:16)  2. Bargain Day
( 3:52)  3. The End of a Love Affair
( 3:35)  4. Glad to Be Happy
( 5:09)  5. Ballad of the Sad Café
( 4:26)  6. Good Morning Heartache
(66:43)  7. Something I Dreamed of Last Night
( 4:57)  8. Lilac Wine
( 5:00)  9. One for My Baby

Along with June Christy, Helen O'Connell, and Julie London, Chris Connor epitomized cool jazz singing in the 1950s. Influenced by Anita O'Day, the torchy, smoky singer wasn't one for aggression. Like Chet Baker on the trumpet or Paul Desmond and Lee Konitz on alto sax, she used subtlety and restraint to their maximum advantage. At the University of Missouri, Connor (who had studied clarinet at an early age) sang with a Stan Kentonish big band led by trombonist Bob Brookmeyer before leaving her native Kansas City for New York in 1947. Quite appropriately, she was featured in the lyrical pianist Claude Thornhill's orchestra in the early '50s. After leaving Thornhill, Connor was hired by Kenton at Christy's recommendation, and her ten-month association with him in 1952-1953 resulted in the hit "All About Ronnie." Connor debuted as a solo artist in 1953, recording three albums for Bethlehem before moving to Atlantic in 1955 and recording 12. Connor reached the height of her popularity in the 1950s, when she delivered her celebrated versions of Billy Strayhorn's "Lush Life" and George Shearing's "Lullaby of Broadway," and recorded such excellent albums as The Rich Sound of Chris Connor and Lullabies of Birdland for Bethlehem and Chris Craft and Ballads of the Sad Cafe for Atlantic. Connor made a poor career move in 1962, the year she left Atlantic and signed with a label her manager was starting, FM Records Connor had recorded only two albums for FM when they folded. Connor's recording career was rejuvenated in the 1970s, and she went on to record for Progressive, Stash, and Contemporary in the '70s and '80s. Connor maintained a devoted following in the 1990s and continued to tour internationally. ~ Alex Henderson https://www.allmusic.com/artist/chris-connor-mn0000776337/biography

Lilac Wine

Ramsey Lewis - Keys To The City

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1987
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:00
Size: 97,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:58)  1. Keys To The City
(5:20)  2. You're Falling In Love
(4:15)  3. 7-11
(4:49)  4. Strangers
(6:16)  5. My Love Will Lead You Home
(6:09)  6. Melody Of Life
(4:12)  7. Shamballa
(4:57)  8. Love And Understanding

Keys to the City is a studio album by Ramsey Lewis released in 1987 on Columbia Records. The album peaked at No. 11 on the Cashbox Jazz Albums chart. The track "7-11" reached No. 67 on the Billboard Hot R&B Singles chart. The album was Lewis' penultimate release on Columbia Records. 

He would leave his longtime label the following year after releasing another album. Keys to the City was co-produced by Maurice White and Larry Dunn of Earth, Wind and Fire, their fourth collaboration, and the first since 1977's Tequila Mockingbird. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keys_to_the_City_(Ramsey_Lewis_album)

Personnel:  Ramsey Lewis: DX-7, Piano, Primary Artist; Roland Bautista: Guitar; Tony Brown: Guitar (Bass); Chris Brunt: Composer, Drums, Percussion; Chris Cameron: Synthesizer; Larry Dunn: Bass, Drums, Keyboards, Percussion; Steven Dunn: Drums, Percussion; Byron Gregory: Guitar (Electric); Luisa Justiz: Vocals; Brenda Mitchell-Stewart: Vocals (Background); Don Myrick: Saxophone; Joe Pusteri: Percussion; Bill Ruppert: Guitar (Electric); Robyn Smith: Drum Programming, Percussion, Synthesizer; Morris Stewart: Synthesizer, Vocals (Background); Wayne Stewart: Drums; Maurice White: Percussion

Keys To The City

Charlie Palmieri - A Giant Step


Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1984
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:10
Size: 113,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:12)  1. Fiesta A La King
(5:01)  2. Be Careful, It's My Heart
(7:54)  3. Start The World, I Want To Get On
(5:28)  4. Adios
(5:53)  5. Mis Amigos E.G.C.
(3:53)  6. Bajo Las Sombras De Un Pino
(5:49)  7. Muneca
(8:57)  8. Rhumba Rhapsody

The older brother of Eddie Palmieri, Charlie Palmieri was every bit as gifted a pianist as his sibling, very percussive and responsive to rhythm while also flashing florid passages that were clearly the product of a classical education. His piano studies began at seven and he attended the Juilliard School of Music, turning pro at 16. He started the group El Conjunto Pin Pin in 1948, and then played in a series of ensembles including those of Tito Puente, Tito Rodriguez, and Pupi Campo before forming his own Charanga Duboney group in 1958. As music director of the Alegre All Stars while recording for the Alegre label in the 1960s, Palmieri stimulated competition among Latin labels like Tico and Fania, which formed their own all-star bands in response. Like many Latin jazz artists of the time, Palmieri flirted with the popular Latin boogaloo style in the 1960s and made some records for major labels like RCA Victor and Atlantic. He endured a near mental breakdown in 1969, but rebounded to work again for Puente on his El Mambo de Tito Puente television program, and he also found a second career as a historian and teacher of Latin music and history at various New York colleges in the 1970s. Palmieri moved briefly to Puerto Rico from 1980 to 1983, and after suffering a severe heart attack and stroke upon his return to New York, he recovered to lead various Latin combos, including Combo Gigante. One of his last recordings was a galvanizing cameo appearance on Mongo Santamaria's "Mayeya" in 1987 (now on Mongo's Afro Blue: The Picante Collection for Concord Picante), and he appeared in England for the first time in 1988 shortly before his death. Almost all of Palmieri's work is hard to find through domestic channels, but Messidor's A Giant Step is available on CD. ~ Richard S.Ginell https://www.allmusic.com/artist/charlie-palmieri-mn0000212129/biography

Personnel:  Piano [Uncredited] – Charlie Palmieri ; Bass – Bobby Rodriguez; Bongos – Johnny "Dandy" Rodriguez; Congas – Frank Malabe; Timbales – Mike Collazo

A Giant Step

George Russell - Stratusphunk

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:24
Size: 99,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:08)  1. Stratusphunk
(8:25)  2. New Donna
(6:16)  3. Bent Eagle
(8:25)  4. Kentucky Oysters
(7:13)  5. Lambskins
(6:55)  6. Things New

Stratusphunk is an album by George Russell originally released on Riverside in 1960. The album contains performances by Russell with Al Kiger, David Baker, Dave Young, Chuck Israels and Joe Hunt. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stratusphunk

Personnel:  George Russell: piano, arranger, conductor; Al Kiger: trumpet; David Baker: trombone; Dave Young: tenor saxophone; Chuck Israels: bass; Joe Hunt: drums

Stratusphunk