Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Thelonious Monk - Thelonious Alone in San Francisco

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:10
Size: 104,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:47)  1. Blue Monk
(4:00)  2. Ruby, My Dear
(3:40)  3. Round Lights
(5:40)  4. Everything Happens to Me
(4:05)  5. You Took the Words Right Out of My Heart
(3:40)  6. Bluehawk
(3:54)  7. Pannonica
(2:45)  8. Remember
(4:22)  9. There's Danger in Your Eyes, Cherie (take 2)
(5:09) 10. Reflections
(4:03) 11. There's Danger in Your Eyes, Cherie (take 1)

Thelonious Monk's solo recordings offer fascinating insight into the compositional and improvisational talents of one of music's true oddballs, and Alone In San Francisco is widely considered to be his best in this format.Unencumbered by bass and drums, Monk is at his most introspective, taking advantage of the liquid tempo to patiently work though a series of originals and a few pop songs from his childhood, all of which, of course, are rendered in his inimitable style. 

Monk's method of creation is like a sculptor working with a hammer and chisel: very methodical and precise, yet leaving a lot of dust on the floor. It's a wonder that Monk can create such beauty out of disjointed rhythms and seemingly errant notes, but there's no denying that songs like "Pannonica and "Ruby My Dear are elegant gems in their own right. There are also two new tunes, "Bluehawk and "Round Lights. While classics like Brilliant Corners will always be the first albums that come to mind with Monk, solo recordings like Alone In San Francisco display a different side of the pianist and are worth exploring. ~ David Rickert https://www.allaboutjazz.com/thelonious-alone-in-san-francisco-thelonious-monk-fantasy-jazz-review-by-david-rickert.php

Personnel: Thelonious Monk: solo piano.

Thelonious Alone in San Francisco

Catherine Russell - Cat

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:59
Size: 102,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:51)  1. Sad Lover Blues
(2:43)  2. Can't We Be Friends
(2:17)  3. The Late, Late Show
(3:46)  4. Where Can I Go Without You
(2:35)  5. Put Me Down Easy
(2:48)  6. My Man's An Undertaker
(2:42)  7. Blue Memories
(2:26)  8. Juneteenth Jamboree - Royal Garden Blues
(3:00)  9. Back O Town Blues
(3:13) 10. Someday You'll Want Me To Want You
(2:46) 11. The Poker
(2:23) 12. You Were Made For Me
(2:37) 13. Darn That Dream
(2:56) 14. Deep In a Dream
(3:49) 15. New Speedway Boogie

The world is never short of new jazz/blues singers, but with Cat, Catherine Russell stands out from the crowd. The child of very musical parents, she's inherited their genes, but added her individuality, which can move from the pop-blues of Sam Cooke's "You Were Made for Me" (one of two Cooke songs here, both with real identity) to the New Orleans style of "Juneteenth Jamboree." Interesting touches in the arrangements help the album, too, such as the mandolin on "Sad Lover Blues" (it features elsewhere, too) or the pedal steel that colors "The Late, Late Show." Russell isn't a belter. She prefers to shade her material and does it well. There are a few surprising choices, the most obvious being "New Speedway Boogie," the cover of a Grateful Dead song that more or less works (they were so idiosyncratic that anything written specifically for them seems a little misplaced done by anyone else), but it's a joy to hear someone singing outside the usual box of standards. Whether she'll become a major star remains in the lap of the gods. But she's definitely one of the more adventurous and friendly singers mining the seam of jazz-blues. ~ Chris Nickson https://www.allmusic.com/album/cat-mw0000408202

Cat

Curtis Fuller - Images of Curtis Fuller

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:58
Size: 71,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:14)  1. Accident
(5:36)  2. Darryl's Minor
(7:08)  3. Be Back Ta-Reckla
(9:01)  4. Judyful
(4:58)  5. New Date

Curtis Fuller was born in Detroit, Michigan in 1934. He came to music late, playing the baritone horn in high school and switching to the trombone at age 16. Detroit, at the time, was the breeding ground for an astonishing pool of fresh, highly individual talent. Milt Jackson and Hank Jones had already gone to New York and made their names. But coming of age in Detroit in the early fifties were Fuller, Donald Byrd, Elvin and Thad Jones, Paul Chambers, Louis Hayes, Kenny Burrell, Barry Harris, Pepper Adams, Yusef Lateef, Sonny Red, Hugh Lawson, Doug Watkins, Tommy Flanagan and many others who would make the mid- decade migration to New York and eventually international recognition. In 1953, Curtis left the local scene to serve his two-year stint in the army, where he met and played with Cannonball Adderley and Junior Mance among others. When he returned home, he began working with Yusef Lateef's quintet. The Lateef quintet came to New York in April 1957 to record two albums for Savoy and a third produced by Dizzy Gillespie for Verve. Word of Curtis's talent spread rapidly around New York. Although he initially came under the spell of J.J. Johnson and listed Jimmy Cleveland, Bob Brookmeyer and Urbie Green among his favorites, Fuller came to New York at the age of 22 with a unique style and sound. In May, after being in town for about a month, he recorded with Paul Quinchette and made his first albums as a leader: two quintet albums for Prestige with Sonny Red featured on alto. Like the Blue Note debuts by Kenny Burrell and Thad Jones the prior year, he used mostly transplanted Detroit players. Blue Note's Alfred Lion had also heard about Fuller and went to see him at the Cafe bohemia with Miles Davis's sextet. Curtis joined the Blue Note family, appearing on a Clifford Jordan date on June 2 and making his own, The Opener, with Hank Mobley, on June 16. That summer Curtis was everywhere. “Alfred brought me into dates with Jimmy Smith and Bud Powell. And then we did Blue Train with John Coltrane. And I became the only trombone soloist to record with those three artists.” 

So after eight months in New York, Curtis Fuller had made six albums as a leader and appeared on 15 others. Even in those prolific times, that's pretty impressive for a newly-arrived trombonist. At the end of '58, Benny Golson asked Curtis to share the front line for a Riverside blowing date entitled “The Other Side Of Benny Golson,” which put the emphasis on Benny's tenor playing rather than his composing and arranging. The chemistry between these two hornmen clicked, and they would record an album under Curtis's name for Savoy [Blues-ette] and three under Benny's name for Prestige in 1959 with various rhythm sections. They also made two Fuller albums for Savoy with trumpet added to the front line, which laid the groundwork for the creation of the Jazztet. In February 1960, the Jazztet, a sextet under the leadership of Benny Golson and Art Farmer, made their first album. Curtis Fuller was the trombonist and McCoy Tyner made his recording debut as the pianist. The Jazztet became a very successful unit from the start, but Fuller and Tyner left a few months into the life of the band. They were headed in other directions. In the summer of '61, Curtis made Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers a sextet for the first time. The combined writing and playing talents of Fuller, Freddie Hubbard, Wayne Shorter and Cedar Walton, driven by Blakey and Jymie Meritt (later Reggie Workman), created one of the most exciting and distinctive bands in the history of hard bop. Curtis stayed with the Jazz Messengers until February 1965. He spent the rest of that decade freelancing around New York, adding his beautiful sound to a number of Blue Note dates such as Lee Morgan's Tom Cat, Hank Mobley's A Caddy For Daddy, Joe Henderson's Mode For Joe and Wayne Shorter's Schizophrenia. After some health problems, Curtis is active again. What is as remarkable about Curtis Fuller as his lyrical improvising and ingenious writing, is his personality. On the road, on stage, or in the studio, Curtis is a relaxed professional who lifts every situation with his inredible sense of humor and his natural sparkle. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/curtisfuller

Personnel:  Trombone – Curtis Fuller; Bass – Jimmy Garrison (tracks: 1, 5), Milt Hinton (tracks: 2 to 4;  Drums – Bobby Donaldson (tracks: 2 to 4), Clifford Jarvis (tracks: 1, 5); Piano – McCoy Tyner; Tenor Saxophone, Flute – Yusef Lateef;  Trumpet – Lee Morgan (tracks: 2 to 4), Wilbur Harden (tracks: 1, 5)

Images of Curtis Fuller

V.A.- The Big Band Legends: Go Harlem Swing! Vol.1

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:55
Size: 127,6 MB
Art: Front

(2:43)  1. Comin' Home
(3:13)  2. Love Jumped Out
(3:06)  3. Playboy
(2:54)  4. Just You, Just Me
(3:03)  5. One O' Clock Jump
(3:11)  6. Flying Home
(2:47)  7. Main Stem
(3:06)  8. It's Sand Man
(2:38)  9. Forever Blue
(2:45) 10. Number 19
(3:01) 11. A-Tisket, a-Tasket
(2:44) 12. Slide, Hamp, Slide
(2:59) 13. Harlem Air Shaft
(2:36) 14. Daydreaming
(2:37) 15. Seventh Avenue Express
(3:04) 16. Father Steps In
(6:00) 17. Air Mail Special
(2:20) 18. Xyz

Go Harlem Swing, Vol. 1