Friday, May 10, 2019

Andrew Hill Trio - Shades

Styles: Piano Jazz 
Year: 1987
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:49
Size: 101,4 MB
Art: Front

( 4:42)  1. Monk's Glimpse
( 6:36)  2. Tripping
( 5:33)  3. Chilly Mac
( 5:37)  4. Ball Square
( 7:35)  5. Domani
(13:44)  6. La Verne

Pianist Andrew Hill's first recording as a leader in six years was particularly notable for co-starring (and challenging) the underrated tenor Clifford Jordan. The quartet set (with bassist Rufus Reid and drummer Ben Riley) has six of Hill's typically challenging and complex inside/outside originals, a perfect outlet for Jordan and the pianist to interact. Stimulating and unusual music that is difficult to classify as anything but "modern jazz." ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/shades-mw0000193340

Personnel: Andrew Hill - piano; Clifford Jordan - tenor saxophone (tracks 1, 3, 5 & 6); Rufus Reid - bass; Ben Riley - drums

Shades

Adrienne West - The View

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:01
Size: 145,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:19)  1. I'm Alright Now
(6:50)  2. Make Me Rainbows
(3:41)  3. It Could Happen To You
(5:15)  4. Here's That Rainy Day
(4:31)  5. That's All
(7:10)  6. Inside A Silent Tear
(7:23)  7. Broadway
(4:17)  8. The View
(4:50)  9. What Is This Thing Called Love
(8:15) 10. Darn That Dream
(6:24) 11. Deep In The Night

Adrienne West, was born in Brooklyn, NY, and at age 9 began studing classical voice and piano. During her teenage years, she felt the need to combine some of the jazz variations she had loved listening to on records with her classical background. As a member of the Alvin Queen Sextet, Adrienne travelled widely throughout Africa performing both in concerts and directing masterclass workshops in voice. Adrienne has performed with some of the world’s most prominent musicians including: Johnny Griffin, Buddy Tate, Scott Hamilton, Al Cohn, Clark Terry, Harry “Sweets” Edison, Billy Cobham and Leonardo Amuedo to name just a few. She has also performed and recorded with the WDR Radio Big Band Koln, the Hessischer Rundfunk Big Band Frankfurt, the NDR Radio Big Band Hamburg, among others. After five years of appearing on Broadway and in European and World touring companies of the Tony Award winning “Ain’t Misbehavin'”, Adrienne decided to make Amsterdam her home where she lives with her husband. She completed a two year European musical theatre tour entitled “George Gershwin: The Musical Gala” as a featured soloist. She also performed the role of Bessie Smith in “Mahalia” (a musical theatre tribute to Mahalia Jackson). She was a member for many years of the “Four Ladies Of Swing”, a concert jazz program. In October 2000, she was invited to perform at the first “Davidoff International Vocal Jazz Festival” in Cape Town, South Africa. Adrienne presently lives in Amsterdam the Netherlands with her husband American born David Cameron, singer/actor and choreographer/director in musical theater. https://www.dottimerecords.com/artists/adrienne-west/

The View

Cindy Blackman - Music For The New Millenium Disc 1 And Disc 2

Album: Music For The New Millenium Disc 1

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop 
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:16
Size: 111,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:25)  1. Abracadabra
(5:26)  2. Seven
(4:52)  3. Insight (Past Wisdom)
(6:27)  4. Letter to Theo
(8:29)  5. Black Town (For Harlem)
(2:50)  6. Insight (Right Now)
(6:36)  7. For Wayne (Shorter That Is)
(4:12)  8. The Infinite (For My Grandmother)
(4:55)  9. The ONE (for God)


Album: Music For The New Millenium Disc 2

Time: 44:55
Size: 104,1 MB

(4:27)  1. Sam Pei
(2:00)  2. The Drums and Me
(7:57)  3. Stars in Eyes
(2:32)  4. Insight (From My Father)
(8:44)  5. Theme To Ginger's Rise
(4:45)  6. All I Want
(5:47)  7. Insight (From My Mother)
(7:23)  8. Insight (The Future)
(1:16)  9. I Come To The Garden Alone (As played by Martha Blackman-Higby)

Drummer Cindy Blackman's solo output has been sporadic since touring and recording with retro-rocker Lenny Kravitz for the past fifteen years. Recorded in 2005 with her regular working quartet, Music For The New Millennium is a double disc collection of inspired post-bop that heralds her return as a session leader. A persuasive reminder of her technical prowess, it reveals a stylistic allegiance to past masters while keeping an eye to the future. Blackman is heavily influenced by the enigmatic writing of saxophonist Wayne Shorter, which fueled Miles Davis' classic second quintet. Like Davis, she shares an affinity for Shorter's dark, impressionistic streak. Embodying the key instrumental elements of Davis' classic electro-acoustic line-up, keyboardist Carlton Holmes plays percolating Fender Rhodes and tastefully subtle synth alongside stalwart bassist George Mitchell. Tenor saxophonist J.D. Allen delivers soulful phrases with a leisurely cadence and dark timbre, reminiscent of Shorter's esoteric approach. Propelling harmonically sophisticated melodic patterns worthy of Art Blakey and Max Roach with a kinetic momentum equal to Tony Williams' legendary fusillades, Blackman launches an endless salvo of tuneful volleys. Like her forefathers, she keeps rhythm, tempo, dynamics and color in constant flux, never merely playing straight time. The album encapsulates a wide variety of moods, from the dreamily understated "Stars In Eyes" and "Sam Pei" to the simmering boil of the brooding "Black Town." Five assorted variations of "Insight" are scattered across the two discs, serving as recurrent thematic motifs, veering from the brisk, hard-boppish "(From My Father)" to the unassuming, meditative "(From My Mother)." The thunderous "Abracadabra," offers a dynamic, incisive performance, updating a roiling M-Base styled groove with a shadowy Milesian chiaroscuro. "Seven" delves further into metrically intricate rhythms, shifting through fractured tempos with a funky, cubist sensibility Transcending typical notions of accompaniment, "All I Want", finds Blackman furiously modulating rhythmic combinations on the theme while Holmes unfurls waves of shimmering Fender Rhodes arpeggios over an ominous synth-bass ostinato. The brief, punchy "The Drums and Me" is Blackman's only unaccompanied solo feature; she magnanimously offers the final word to Holmes, who closes the album with a touching solo piano rendition of the hymn "Come To The Garden Alone."  welcome return to her jazz roots, Music For The New Millennium is a powerful and passionate effort from one of the finest drummers on the scene. It's good to have her back. ~ Troy Collins https://www.allaboutjazz.com/music-for-the-new-millennium-cindy-blackman-sacred-sound-records-review-by-troy-collins.php

Personnel: Cindy Blackman: drums; J.D. Allen: tenor saxophone; Carlton Holmes: Fender Rhodes, synthesizers; George Mitchell: bass.


Lou Rawls - Black and Blue,Tobacco Road (Digital Remastered)

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:43
Size: 176,6 MB
Art: Front

(1:52)  1. Roll 'Em Pete
(3:35)  2. I'd Rather Drink Muddy Water
(4:22)  3. How Long, How Long Blues
(2:32)  4. Every Day, I Have The Blues
(4:42)  5. St. James Infirmary
(3:30)  6. (What Did I Do To Be So) Black And Blue
(3:07)  7. Gloomy Sunday
(2:12)  8. Kansas City
(2:53)  9. Goin' To Chicago Blues
(3:52) 10. Trouble In Mind
(3:11) 11. World Of Trouble
(3:02) 12. Six Cold Feet Of Ground
(3:28) 13. Strange Fruit
(4:01) 14. Tobacco Road
(2:10) 15. Cotton Fields (The Cotton Song)
(1:57) 16. Rockin' Chair
(3:02) 17. Stormy Weather (Keeps Rainin' All The Time)
(3:50) 18. Old Man River
(3:30) 19. Blues For A Four String Guitar
(2:28) 20. St. Louis Blues
(3:19) 21. Georgia On My Mind
(3:20) 22. Sentimental Journey
(3:34) 23. Summertime
(3:05) 24. When It's Sleepy Time Down South

Black and Blue and Tobacco Road were Lou Rawls' third and fourth records for Capitol cut in 1962 and 1963, respectively. The powers that be at the label made the decision to send Rawls into the studio with a swinging big band under the direction of Onzy Matthews and featuring some real heavyweights like saxophonists Curtis Amy, Teddy Edwards, and Sonny Criss; organist Groove Holmes; and bassist Curtis Counce. The choice didn't pan out commercially, but artistically it is a triumph. The band is perfect, the arrangements are tight and interesting, and Rawls sounds completely in his element as he belts out jazz standards like "Summertime" and "Gloomy Sunday." Most of the records are devoted to blues standards like "Trouble in Mind," "Stormy Weather," "St. James Infirmary," and "I'd Rather Drink Muddy Water," and while on paper they may look like the same old songs everyone does, Rawls brings them to life and even sets a few ablaze with his rich, rough, and powerful vocals. The best moment is his sparse and exhilarating version of "Tobacco Road," a tune that has come to be associated with him, mostly due to his live version cut a couple of years later on Lou Rawls Live! This version is a touch less exciting but just as impressive, and it is a treat to hear. In fact, both albums are a treat. Rawls may just be starting his long career, but he sounds fully formed, relaxed, and at home with the big band behind him. It makes for some of the most enjoyable Lou Rawls you'll hear, and fans of Rawls and great jazz and blues vocals should rejoice that Capitol has finally made the records available on CD. ~ Tim Sendra https://www.allmusic.com/album/black-and-blue-tobacco-road-mw0000442588

Personnel:  Lou Rawls, vocal, accompanied by: Bud Brisbois, Bob Rolfe, James Dalton Smith, Freddie Hill (tp); Horace Tapscott, Lou Blackburn, Dick "Slyde" Hyde, Ron Smith (tb); Joe Maini (as) Curtis Amy (sop,ts) Clifford Solomon (ts); Clifford Scott, Jay Migliori (ts,fl) Sidney Miller (bar); Onzy Matthews (p,arr,ldr) Richard "Groove" Holmes (org) ; Gene Edwards (g) Leroy Johnson (d)

Black and Blue,Tobacco Road