Sunday, May 19, 2019

Fred Hersch - Alone at the Vanguard

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:20
Size: 163,9 MB
Art: Front

(7:25)  1. In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning
(7:35)  2. Down Home (Dedicated to Bill Frisell)
(8:27)  3. Echoes
(7:06)  4. Lee's Dream (Dedicated to Lee Konitz)
(7:05)  5. Pastorale (Dedicated to Robert Schumann)
(8:09)  6. Doce De Coco
(8:39)  7. Memories of You
(8:47)  8. Work
(8:04)  9. Encore: Doxy

Pianist Fred Hersch almost cashed out back in 2008, when he fell ill with AIDs-related complications and spent seven weeks in a coma. The recovery was arduous, the resumption of his wide-ranging and top-level musical artistry uncertain an uncertainty erased without a trace by Whirl (Palmetto Records, 2010), a trio set so assured, vibrant and beautiful that it would surely show up in any knowing top ten list of the best piano trio sets of the new millennium's first decade. There was a subtle change in Hersch's sound, post illness. It's what Hersch's fellow pianist, Jessica Williams (who has suffered her own health problems), calls "illness as a teacher," a focusing of intent and approach from the washing away of the peripheral and unimportant. Alone at the Vanguard is Hersch's solo piano offering, recorded on the last night of a six-night stand at the hallowed New York club where innumerable jazz greats have held court and recorded performances, resulting in classic albums. Hersch opens his set on a shimmering introduction to "In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning," an old American Songbook jewel that gets buffed up often. Hersch has what it takes to ignore the "never open with a ballad" advice: a supple and exquisitely-refined touch; a sharp focus on the melody; a deep sense of classical harmony; and a magical ability to get inside the tune and make it his own. Hersch's sound here has a uncommon fragility/strength dynamic, and it is serious and cerebral, with an opposing simplicity buoyed by a rich complexity, born of a lifetime's immersion in the music. On this nine-tune set, Hersch offers up four masterful originals: "Down Home," dedicated to guitarist Bill Frisell, has a jaunty, fun, light-stepping feel; "Echos" is an inward journey, hopeful and lushly harmonic; "Lee's Dream," for alto saxophone legend Lee Konitz, has a sunny, sparkling, playful vibe; and "Pastorale," dedicated to Robert Schumann, draws on Hersch's classical background. Hersch gives Jacob de Bandolim's "Doce de Coco" a sense of frisky, devil-may-care grace, and he slows down the standard "Memories of You" and turns it into a ruminative prayer. Almost all jazz pianists like to get lost inside the idiosyncratic tunes of Thelonious Monk, and Fred Hersch is no exception, but few do it as well. His study of Monk's "Work" sounds like joyous play, full of very erudite Hersch-ian turns, fun and at the same time stately, a closer that demanded an encore: Sonny Rollins' "Doxy." Hersch delivers that tune at a measured pace, drawing the sound into a timeless and bluesy wee hours mood, a majestic wrap-up of an exceptional night of music at the Village Vanguard. ~ Dan McClenaghan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/alone-at-the-village-vanguard-fred-hersch-palmetto-records-review-by-dan-mcclenaghan.php

Personnel: Fred Hersch: piano.

Alone at the Vanguard

Sarah Vaughan - My Kinda Love

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1955/2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:11
Size: 81,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:05)  1. Tenderly
(2:51)  2. If You Could See Me Now
(3:13)  3. Don't Blame Me
(2:51)  4. I'm Thru With Love
(2:56)  5. Body And Soul
(3:00)  6. I've Got A Crush On You
(3:08)  7. Once In A While
(2:52)  8. I Cover The Waterfront
(2:46)  9. The Man I Love
(2:56) 10. Don't Worry 'Bout Me
(2:40) 11. My Kinda Love
(2:47) 12. I Don't Stand A Ghost Of A Chance

Possessor of one of the most wondrous voices of the 20th century, Sarah Vaughan ranked with Ella Fitzgerald and Billie Holiday in the very top echelon of female jazz singers. She often gave the impression that with her wide range, perfectly controlled vibrato, and wide expressive abilities, she could do anything she wanted with her voice. Although not all of her many recordings are essential (give Vaughan a weak song and she might strangle it to death), Sarah Vaughan's legacy as a performer and a recording artist will be very difficult to match in the future. Vaughan sang in church as a child and had extensive piano lessons from 1931-39; she developed into a capable keyboardist. After she won an amateur contest at the Apollo Theater, she was hired for the Earl Hines big band as a singer and second vocalist. Unfortunately, the musicians' recording strike kept her off record during this period (1943-44). When lifelong friend Billy Eckstine broke away to form his own orchestra, Vaughan joined him, making her recording debut. She loved being with Eckstine's orchestra, where she became influenced by a couple of his sidemen, Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, both of whom had also been with Hines during her stint. Vaughan was one of the first singers to fully incorporate bop phrasing in her singing, and to have the vocal chops to pull it off on the level of a Parker and Gillespie. Other than a few months with John Kirby from 1945-46, Sarah Vaughan spent the remainder of her career as a solo star. Although she looked a bit awkward in 1945 (her first husband George Treadwell would greatly assist her with her appearance), there was no denying her incredible voice. She made several early sessions for Continental: a December 31, 1944 date highlighted by her vocal version of "A Night in Tunisia," which was called "Interlude," and a May 25, 1945 session for that label that had Gillespie and Parker as sidemen. However, it was her 1946-48 selections for Musicraft (which included "If You Could See Me Now," "Tenderly" and "It's Magic") that found her rapidly gaining maturity and adding bop-oriented phrasing to popular songs. Signed to Columbia where she recorded during 1949-53, "Sassy" continued to build on her popularity. Although some of those sessions were quite commercial, eight classic selections cut with Jimmy Jones' band during May 18-19, 1950 (an octet including Miles Davis) showed that she could sing jazz with the best. During the 1950s, Vaughan recorded middle-of-the-road pop material with orchestras for Mercury, and jazz dates (including Sarah Vaughan, a memorable collaboration with Clifford Brown) for the label's subsidiary, EmArcy. Later record label associations included Roulette (1960-64), back with Mercury (1963-67), and after a surprising four years off records, Mainstream (1971-74). Through the years, Vaughan's voice deepened a bit, but never lost its power, flexibility or range. She was a masterful scat singer and was able to out-swing nearly everyone (except for Ella). Vaughan was with Norman Granz's Pablo label from 1977-82, and only during her last few years did her recording career falter a bit, with only two forgettable efforts after 1982. However, up until near the end, Vaughan remained a world traveler, singing and partying into all hours of the night with her miraculous voice staying in prime form. The majority of her recordings are currently available, including complete sets of the Mercury/Emarcy years, and Sarah Vaughan is as famous today as she was during her most active years. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/sarah-vaughan-mn0000204901/biography

My Kinda Love

Brad Mehldau - Highway Rider Disc 1 And Disc 2

Album: Highway Rider Disc 1

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:17
Size: 95,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:15)  1. John Boy
(8:40)  2. Don't Be Sad
(1:07)  3. At the Tollbooth
(7:45)  4. Highway Rider
(8:21)  5. The Falcon Will Fly Again
(4:05)  6. Now You Must Climb Alone
(8:00)  7. Walking the Peak


Album: Highway Rider Disc 2

Time: 62:52
Size: 144,5 MB

(12:28)  1. We'll Cross the River Together
( 5:20)  2. Capriccio
( 6:24)  3. Sky Turning Grey (For Elliott Smith)
( 7:36)  4. Into the City
( 8:28)  5. Old West
( 6:19)  6. Come with Me
( 6:20)  7. Always Departing
( 9:52)  8. Always Returning

For a pianist who not only demonstrated remarkable promise, but actually began delivering on it at a very early stage in his career with what would ultimately become his five-part Art of the Trio (Warner Bros.) series, Brad Mehldau's side projects have with the exception of the solo Live in Tokyo (Nonesuch, 2004) met with mixed reactions. Perhaps it's because of his emergence as one of modern jazz's most distinctive and popular interpreters of both contemporary song and standard material in a trio setting, that placed unfair expectations on seemingly tangential projects like the concept-based Places (Warner Bros, 2000). The unexpected diversion of Largo (Warner Bros., 2002), in particular, was met with some curiosity as, for the first time, Mehldau expanded into larger musical environs electrified territories, even with acclaimed producer/multi-instrumentalist Jon Brion (Kanye West, Robyn Hitchcock, Aimee Mann). Highway Rider reunites Mehldau with Brion for an album that's even more ambitious than Largo and, despite their first collaboration's many strong points, a far more successful one. Mehldau's recent work writing for orchestra The Brady Bunch Variations for Orchestre Natonal D'Îsle-de-France, and the song-cycle Love Sublime (Nonesuch, 2006), with soprano René Fleming, amongst others has clearly given Mehldau the confidence to find, with Highway Rider, a nexus point where form-based improvisation and through-composition meet. Based around the preexisting chemistry of his regular trio with bassist FLY and drummer Jeff Ballard, but expanding to a quintet with longtime friend Joshua Redman on saxophones and, back from Largo, drummer Matt Chamberlain, Highway Rider is a double-disc suite that's as much a soundtrack to an imaginary film as anything Mehldau's ever done. It's also the most fully realized original music the pianist has written to date, as unequivocally American as Aaron Copland, Bill Frisell and Pat Metheny, despite citing the influence of European Romantics like Strauss, Brahms and Tchaikovsky, in addition to more eclectic sources. Mehldau's voice as a composer has been gradually emerging with original music contributed to trio recordings like Live (Nonesuch, 2008) and House on Hill (Nonesuch, 2006), but with Highway Rider, Mehldau the composer has clearly arrived. What distances Highway Rider from stereotypical (and often saccharine) "jazz with strings" projects with Dan Coleman leading a chamber orchestra on much of the disc is the sense of immediacy that Brion has achieved by recording the orchestra and jazz quintet together one of Mehldau's original goals for the project. This isn't a jazz quintet blowing and an orchestra then layered over top; this is fully integrated music, where the soloing is as spontaneous as it needs to be, even when the orchestra creates a firm and fixed foundation. Mehldau's solo on the first half of "We'll Cross the River Together" builds to an idiosyncratic, block chord-driven climax, but it's his orchestration which turns this relatively simple, repeating set of eight chords into a masterful tour de force that's not only one of Highway Rider's most dramatic moments, but one that then resolves into one of its most tender interludes. A second half, with gradually building tension from the strings and the turbulent double-drumming of Ballard and Chamberlain, leads to a second climax of equal strength, this time courtesy of Redman.

As lush as Mehldau's orchestration is throughout Highway Rider, he knows how to create a narrative arc through dynamics and breaking the ensemble down. "Capriccio" starts with nothing more than piano though, as ever, Mehldau's virtuosity leads to the belief that it's being played by two hands until an emergent melody makes it clear he's playing it with only one. Hand percussion quite literally, with clapping driving much of the tune and Redman's soprano develop the theme until Mehldau takes over for a brief but quirky solo, sounding not unlike Oregon in instrumentation, but absolutely unlike it in Mehldau's voicings, which turn another deceptively simple, descending four-chord structure into something else entirely. Similarly, "The Falcon Will Fly Again," a longer piece but, again, with drastically reduced instrumentation, leads from lengthy piano and saxophone solos to a theme sung by members of the group and The Fleurettes, and an ending that dissolves into some relaxed banter amongst the group that makes it clear that as serious as much of this music sounds, it's being made by a group of people who are having fun. Sonically, Highway Rider bears some resemblance to Largo, in particular Mehldau's use of pump organ, synth and orchestral bells on certain tracks, but it feels somehow more natural and better integrated this time around. Perhaps the more focused compositional approach of the album makes its expanded use of texture work more naturally. Despite breaks between songs, the music flows and feels like a continuous suite, and is certainly best experienced as such. The folkloric piano solo, "At the Tollbooth," acts as a brief interlude between the slower-tempo of "Don't Be Sad," with hints of gospel driving its form, and the title track, a more propulsive trio tune with subtle aural enhancements creating a soft cushion beneath Mehldau's extended solo. "Into the City" also narrows the focus down to Mehldau's trio, with Grenadier doubling, alternately, the pianist's left and right hands on a knotty, riff-based tune that may reduce the album's broader textural expanse, but demonstrates just how vibrant and progressive this working trio is, with Ballard almost literally on fire. As Mehldau combines in-the-moment playing with carefully structured form, and repeated chordal and melodic motifs that continue to resurface throughout Highway Rider's 100 minutes, the album builds to a climax on "Always Returning," before ending on a softer, tone-poem note that incorporates Mehldau's inherent classicism and somehow, on repeated listens, brings Highway Rider full circle. The music may bear no real resemblance to it, but in scope Highway Rider is Mehldau's Secret Story (Nonesuch, 1992), a fan favorite for Pat Metheny and a milestone in terms of ambition and scope until the guitarist reached a new level with The Way Up (Nonesuch, 2005) and, most recently, Orchestrion (Nonesuch, 2010). It's no coincidence, then, that Mehldau and his trio collaborated with Metheny on Metheny Mehldau (Nonesuch, 2006) and Quartet (Nonesuch, 2007). That the pianist's overall career choice focusing largely as he has on solo and trio works has been almost diametrically opposed to Metheny's greater compositional ambitions and orchestrations seems somehow less so now, with the release of Highway Rider. In its almost perfect mix of form and freedom, Highway Rider manages to be both Mehldau's most personal and most broad-scoped album to date, and surely one that will remain a classic amongst his discography, no matter what's to come. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/brad-mehldau-highway-rider-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Brad Mehldau (piano); Joshua Redman (tenor saxophone); Jeff Ballard , Matt Chamberlain (drums).


George Shearing & Don Thompson - George Shearing at Home

Styles: Piano Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:59
Size: 132,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:35)  1. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
(2:50)  2. A Time for Love
(5:51)  3. Ghoti
(3:01)  4. The Things We Did Last Summer
(4:50)  5. Laura
(4:13)  6. The Skye Boat Song
(5:42)  7. Confirmation
(2:50)  8. The Girl Next Door
(2:24)  9. Can't We Be Friends?
(5:07) 10. I Cover the Waterfront
(3:18) 11. Out of Nowhere
(3:06) 12. That Old Devil Called Love
(5:09) 13. Subconsciouslee
(3:56) 14. Beautiful Love

Pianist Sir George Shearing (1919—2011) was himself an integral part of the be bop jazz movement in the late 1940s. His quintet that featured vibraphone and guitar with the standard piano trio was sonically ground breaking. His precise and measured piano style influenced a generation of pianists and several of his compositions ("Lullaby of Birdland" and "Conception") have become jazz standards. He was not flashy, but a solid, well-considered player whose playing could always be counted on to be elegant and durable. These fourteen tracks were recorded in Shearing's home during a six-week residency at a New York City jazz club in 1983. Bassist Don Thompson, with whom Shearing made these recordings, found them shortly after Shearing's 2011 death at 91. More than aurally acceptable, these recordings reveal a relaxed and swinging Shearing, playing as effortlessly as if it were the easiest thing in the world. Thompson provides expert timekeeping and some piquant soloing of his own on this diverse collection of 20th Century music. David Raksin's "Laura" shimmers while the Styne/Cahn classic "The Things We Did Last Summer" bounces with a restful and quaint stride. The be bop of Charlie Parker's "Confirmation" is fresh and the abstract and angular "SubconsciousLee" bares all the edges, sharp and smooth. George Shearing at home is a treat in the same way, (Vladimir) Horowitz at Home (Deutsche Grammophon, 1989) was both men were relaxed and at the top of their game. ~ C.Michael Bailey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/george-shearing-at-home-george-shearing-proper-records-review-by-c-michael-bailey.php

Personnel: George Shearing: piano; Don Thompson: bass.

George Shearing at Home

Claude Tissendier Septet - Carrots for Hodges

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:45
Size: 131,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:06)  1. Sweetie Frog
(6:23)  2. Patte de lapin
(4:39)  3. Super Carl
(5:10)  4. Slow and Relax
(4:39)  5. Jump, Rabbit, Jump
(5:04)  6. Johnny Saxo
(4:55)  7. Carrots for Hodges
(3:16)  8. Green Eyes
(4:24)  9. Jumpin' in Etretat
(8:27) 10. Evening Blues
(4:38) 11. Gehod

CARROTS (the familiar name given by the musicians to the soprano saxophone) FOR HODGES (one of the greatest servants of the saxophone and alto saxophonist of Duke Ellington). Claude Tissendier (viola sax) pays tribute to Johnny Hodges' repertoire by composing 11 swing songs. 

The other members of the Septet: Claude Braud (tenor sax), Jean Etève (baritone sax), Michel Camicas (trombone), Stan Laferrière (piano), Pierre-Yves Sorin (bass), Vincent Cordelette (drums). Translate By Google https://www.placedeslibraires.fr/music/3322420071628-carrots-for-hodges-claude-tissendier-septet/

Carrots for Hodges