Friday, April 12, 2019

Dick Sisto - End of Time

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:58
Size: 124,8 MB
Art: Front

( 8:08)  1. End of Time
( 5:52)  2. Rhythm Thing
( 6:33)  3. You Must Believe in Spring
( 7:57)  4. Two Five City
(10:25)  5. Nature Boy
( 6:00)  6. Nobody Else but Me
( 5:42)  7. Insider
( 3:18)  8. Back to Nature

Vibraphonist Dick Sisto's follow up to his earlier independently produced CD, American Love Song, is worth seeking. He's backed by a strong rhythm section, including pianist Kenny Werner, bassist Drew Gress, and either Steve Davis or Barry Ries on drums. His "End of Time" was written for the funeral of a good friend, but there's nothing maudlin about the tune; it is a driving yet reflective number. "Rhythm Thing" is another fine original by the leader, an uptempo bop chart that features Barry Ries on flügelhorn; Sisto also composed "Two Five City," a strutting hard bop vehicle. 

His interpretations of standards are also inspired. "You Must Believe in Spring" is played with a samba feeling, "Nature Boy" has a more exotic air than usual due to Sisto's use of a talking drum in addition to vibes. Ries also plays talking drum on several selections, including his composition "Insider," which has a captivating theme that is hard to predict. The closer, "Back to Nature," is a group improvisation by Sisto, Werner, and Ries that moves easily into free jazz. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/end-of-time-mw0000006131

Personnel:  Dick Sisto - Vibraphone; Barry Ries - Trumpet/Flugelhorn; Kenny Werner - Piano; Drew Gress - Bass; Steve Davis - Drums

End of Time

Sandy Cressman - Entre Amigos

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:53
Size: 124,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:00) 1. Como Eu Quero Cantar (I Just Want to Sing..)
(5:09)  2. Here in Your Arms
(4:40)  3. Não Me Acorde Não (Don't Wake Me)
(5:04)  4. Ela É (She is)
(5:25)  5. Eu Mais Você (Me Plus You)
(6:32)  6. Para Hermeto (For Hermeto)
(5:29)  7. Nossa História (Our Story)
(5:45)  8. Deixa O Amor Florescer (Let Love Flourish)
(4:34)  9. Menina Vai (Go Girl!)
(4:10) 10. Eu Vou Lembrar (I Will Remember)

While many an American jazz singer flirts with the Brazilian Songbook, San Francisco vocalist Sandy Cressman made a name for herself as a true devotee of Brazil s greatest contemporary composers, interpreting songs by post-bossa masters like Milton Nascimento, Hermeto Pascoal, Gilberto Gil, and Filó Machado in Rio-accented Portuguese. The friendships forged with Brazilian and Brazilophile musicians during her musical travels course through her captivating new album Entre Amigos, a project that marks a major new chapter for Cressman as a tunesmith. Entre Amigos features a gorgeous array of new songs created with an impressive cast of collaborators, including the celebrated Pernambuco frevo composer/bandleader Spok, pianist/composer Jovino Santos Neto, and pianist Antonio Adolfo, rising Brazilian-American guitarist Ian Faquini, a Brazilian jazz master who got his start at the center of Rio s early 1960s bossa nova scene. The CD features such notable musicians as drummers Dennis Chambers and Celso Alberti, guitarist Ray Obiedo, and horn players Harvey Wainapel, Jeff Cressman, Natalie Cressman and Eduardo Neves.

A Brazilian experience that is sure to touch the heart and soul of all jazz fans. Sandy Cressman delivers vocals that are filled with story telling passion laced with a personal touch. Sandy performs this wondrous ballad filled CD in the poetic language of Portuguese. One need not understand the words to appreciate these emotion inspired songs. Sandy's voice is crisp, sultry and expressive, with a tone similar to the great Latin vocalist, Gloria Estefan. Sandy's star stunning vocals are also supported by an all-star cast of jazz musicians. Each song composed with a lively Brazilian flare that will wake up the tired soul of jazz fans all over the world looking for something special to add to their collection. Sandy Cressman has become one of my favorite female vocalist and I'm sure she will impress you as well. Enjoy this one for years to come! ~Jazz Review

Cressman pours out her love, sometimes to excess, for the delightfully sensuous and melodious Brazilian lyrics in all her renditions. ~ San Francisco Examiner, Phillip Elwood

...Here, then, is a nest of true chirps (bop term for female singer), ladies who aver, it would seem, that without a song the day wouldn't even begin, let alone never end. ~ Downbeat, Zan Stewart https://www.amazon.com/Entre-Amigos-Sandy-Cressman/dp/B01MYBC4MA

Entre Amigos

Darren Barrett - Deelings

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:54
Size: 134,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:47)  1. Creative Locomotion
(6:25)  2. Her Gentle Way
(6:45)  3. Eirlav
(4:06)  4. There Will Never Be Anouther You
(9:49)  5. C Minor Joint
(8:32)  6. Middle East
(7:27)  7. I'm Glad There Is You
(6:37)  8. I Sent the Fax
(2:23)  9. Dee's Theme

You don't have to be signed to Blue Note to embrace a Blue Note type of sound. Take Darren Barrett, for example. Deelings, the trumpeter's second album as a leader, was recorded for the Cincinnati-based J Curve label, not Blue Note. But it is impossible to listen to this post-bop/hard bop CD without thinking of the Blue Note sound of the late '50s and '60s. The writing has a strong Jazz Messengers influence, and Barrett's brassy, big-toned trumpet playing recalls such Clifford Brown-influenced Blue Note trumpeters as Freddie Hubbard and Lee Morgan. The strong Blue Note influence isn't all that surprising when you consider that Deelings was produced by Donald Byrd, who also recorded for Blue Note and was, like Hubbard and Morgan, a Jazz Messenger with a Brown-minded sound. Deelings is hardly groundbreaking, but while Barrett isn't the most original player in the world, the "Young Lion" deserves credit for playing as soulfully as he does. Obviously, the recordings of Brown, Hubbard, and Morgan have made him realize that feeling should be as important to an improviser as technique. Barrett also deserves credit for doing most of the writing himself; the only overdone standards that he embraces on this CD are "I'm Glad There Is You" and "There Will Never Be Another You." The latter has been heard countless times as a high-speed barnburner, but Barrett approaches it as a ballad. Deelings isn't a masterpiece, but it's an enjoyable, if derivative, example of how influential the classic Blue Note sound continues to be. 
~ Alex Henderson https://www.allmusic.com/album/deelings-mw0000587156

Personnel: Darren Barrett- trumpet; Jimmy Greene- tenor saxophone; Aaron Goldberg- piano; Reuben Rogers- bass; John Lankin- drums.


Dave Holland - Drum-a-Bye Baby

Styles: Vocal, Post Bop
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:27
Size: 153,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:00)  1. Rhythm of the Night
(6:02)  2. Slumbertown
(5:34)  3. A' Noite
(5:00)  4. Bein' a Kid
(5:00)  5. In You an Angel (feat. David LaMotte)
(5:27)  6. Kalimba Bimba
(4:43)  7. Kojo Rockabye
(6:06)  8. Waltzin' in the Milky Way
(3:13)  9. Soft Stone
(5:26) 10. Dreamin' Switch (feat. Elise Witt)
(5:30) 11. La La Lullaby
(4:38) 12. When Carpets Fly
(5:41) 13. Counting Drums (Better Than Counting Sheep)

Created with all drums/percussion and vocals, Drum-A-Bye Baby features world music style instrumentals and new, original songs inspired by Dave’s own personal experiences with his daughter. Each track is inspired by a different world music genre and over 100 instruments from around the world are featured on the project. While Dave's gentle vocals are featured on many of the tracks, he also calls on a couple of folk singer-songwriter notables, Elise Witt & David LaMotte, to lend their talents to the mix. With the addition of lush background vocals ( by Megan Weatherford & Jonathan Payne) skillful producing (by Jonathan Payne) and Dave's creative compositions, Drum-A-Bye Baby promises to be a collection of songs your family will enjoy, time and time again. https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/drumabyebaby

Drum-a-Bye Baby

Billy Vaughn - Blue Hawaii

Styles: Easy Listening 
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:43
Size: 76,7 MB
Art: Front

(2:02)  1. Blue Hawaii
(2:22)  2. Hawaiian Paradise
(2:05)  3. Little Brown Gal
(2:43)  4. My Isle Of Golden Dreams
(2:41)  5. Hawaiian Wedding Song
(2:34)  6. Sweet Leilani
(2:38)  7. Cocoanut Grove
(2:22)  8. Trade Winds
(3:01)  9. Beyond The Reef
(2:10) 10. My Little Grass Shack
(2:11) 11. Song Of The Islands
(1:49) 12. Hawaiian War Chant
(1:52) 13. Hawaiian Sunset
(2:07) 14. Aloha Oe

Ukulele player, arranger and conductor Billy Vaughn (1919–1991) wanted to deliver an Exotica album in 1959 on Dot Records without neglecting his beloved Country style, that's the basic premise which, naturally, is poeticized and transfigured in the liner notes. The result is called Blue Hawaii and delivers the schmaltziest horn sections you can possibly find on any Exotica-related vintage LP of the 50's or 60's. There are good reasons to link this work to the Exotica canon, and at the same time, there are strong counter-arguments which repudiate just that. I am willed to put it near the genre for reasons you're going to find out during the review. Let's just say for now that Billy Vaughn failed miserably in virtually all regards. Of course, the liner notes try to lure the listener with colorful sentences, but they taste all the more sour and bitter once he or she accomplished to wade through the whole album. Without any further quibble of mine, I'll dive deeper into the whopping amount of fourteen compositions below, but close this opening paragraph with a section off the liner notes and ask you to keep it in mind: "How enchanting to mainlanders is the vision of Hawaii, where caressing tradewinds flow gently across palm-shaded lawns, sunbathers bask dreamily on the sands of Waikiki, and the surf murmurs softly and rhythmically!" 

The album launches with the titular Blue Hawaii, the composition of Leo Robin and Ralph Rainger that was made world-famous by Bing Crosby in 1937. Vaughn's interpretation sounds like it was delivered by Werner Müller, as it has the typical German feel to it: silky polyphonous horns, accompanying bass tubas, further brazen big band sections and the occasional complemental piano chords. And this very formula is maintained throughout the album, with only a few alterations. Harry Owens' Hawaiian Paradise adds a crunchy guitar and a sun-soaked ukulele to its double bass-backed brass extravaganza, bringing the prototypical Hawaiian feeling to the table for the first time, and Don McDiarmid's and Lee Wood's Little Brown Girl enhances the formula with a Dixieland-like setup and a humming mixed choir; the best things are the cool guitar backings and the intermixed piano, but that's about it. The Hawaiian feeling is nil. Walter Blaufuss' My Isle Of Golden Dreams is so disgusting that it is actually great. Rarely do I use such harsh words in my reviews – here's a reminder of My 5 Golden Rules but Vaughn's try is nothing short of a joke: piles of horns paint a German alpine vista, and even if Billy Vaughn plucks along with his ukulele to the aah-aahing choir, there is not even a glimpse of a successful synergy perceptible. It's getting better, though! Charles E. King's Hawaiian Wedding Song is presented flawlessly here, with lots of dreamy steel guitar twangs, ukulele licks and a cornily humming choir that actually augments the clichéd reverie. The trumpets and muted trombones are still on here, but much reduced and less important. The only great song out of seven on side A, for Harry Owens’ second featured song, Sweet Leilani of 1934, boosts the saccharine levels of the horns to hazardous proportions and makes things worse due to the mellow cymbals and piercing horns, with only the final vibraphone-esque note leaving a good impression. And don't get me started on the final piece of side A, John Sebastian's auspicious Cocoanut Grove which hides its wonderful guitar base frame and ukulele skeleton under one too many brass instruments and a spectral choir. Only the middle section puts the guitars to the forefront. 

Side B offers more of the same, I'm afraid: Trade Winds is germanized with too much trumpets, but beneath their surface glint wonderful vibraphone droplets which are then coupled with a cool steel guitar. Listening to both of them in adjacency to the choir and the trumpets makes me all the more sad, as the potential of Trade Winds is completely gone. Billy Vaughn's take on Jack Pitman's Beyond The Reef, however, is actually quite good! The dreaminess is expanded with the wondrously warped twangs of steel guitars, the plasticity of the ukuleles, mild double bass lines and the humming choir. The horns are surprisingly fitting this time, making this the best track of side B. Tommy Harrison's and Johnny Noble's My Little Grass Shack is yet another good outing due to its iridescent vibraphones, Honky Tonk pianos and the theremin-like steel guitar goodness, expanding the instrumental pool to great success. The humming choir is brought back, and its inclusion isn't embarrassing at all, but somehow fits into the scenery in a weirdly twisted way. Good work, I say! The second featured tune by Charles E. King is next, Song Of The Islands written in 1930. It's a highly ephemeral brass song with a syrupy Schlager euphony that is still so totally out of place that it remains astonishing to me even after 11 tracks, with three more to follow: the traditional Hawaiian War Chant meshes lackluster, pale drums with the well-known bad joke of swinging Folk music. The woeful blueprint is wearing cumbersome on this point, but thank the tiki gods for the looming end of this LP, as the penultimate Hawaiian Sunset ends the brass panopticon with gleaming vibraphones, the melting schmaltz of the choir and the despised horns. The final piece is… well…? Aloha Oe, of course. The main melody is played on two trumpets, with added tremolo ornaments that make things worse. The choir is breathing the last aahs, as Billy Vaughn says good-bye with the help of spiraling piano sprinkles and an actually great steel guitar dreaminess. It's over! Seriously, if there is one record that destroys and trashes the characteristic traits of brass instruments, it's Billy Vaughn's Blue Hawaii. And don't you tell me that this isn't a proper Exotica record! 

I mean, you're right, but the promises, release date, cover artwork, delivered material and used instruments evoke anything but an Exotica outing. But no, Vaughn destroys the good mood, phantasmagoria and mirage of each and every track on there. Even the briefly mentioned Werner Müller doesn't inject such an overly gargantuan dose of German mannerisms and Folk styles. The vibraphones, ukuleles, steel guitars and pianos don't have a single chance to fight or actually declare victory over the horn heaviness. The humming choir is an audacity, as are the poorly revved up drums on Hawaiian War Chant which sound just the least bit more powerful than on all the other included tracks. Translation: yawn! If there are people out there who are fond of this work and actually shake their head in disdain because of the harshness in this review, please take my sincere apologies, but I do believe that Billy Vaughn tried to cash in on the Exotica craze by aiming at certain audio-visual triggers and then negating them once the record is spinning. The liner notes are a frivolity: "a swaying couple can suddenly imagine themselves beneath a starry sky, with moonlight silhouetting Diamond Head and touching the restless sea with silver." Come on, not with Billy Vaughn's Blue Hawaii, that is not possible. Well, that is all I have to say about this bad Exotica/Folk/Country concoction. The best song of side A is the Hawaiian Wedding Song, and side B delivers a trace of greatness due to the dreaminess of Beyond The Reef, with My Little Grass Shack reaching a close second place. Avoid the album, even if you already own it. I inherited it, but yeah, I admit that this is a lame excuse. http://www.ambientexotica.com/exorev123_billyvaughn_bh/

Credits: Orchestra – Billy Vaughn And His Orchestra

Blue Hawaii