Monday, June 3, 2019

Eddie Henderson - Phantoms

Styles: Trumpet Jazz 
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:34
Size: 137,1 MB
Art: Front

( 7:21)  1. Beauty in the bambles
( 5:59)  2. Little girl blue
(10:57)  3. Phantoms
( 8:27)  4. In walked Lila
( 8:01)  5. Jitterbug waltz
( 8:10)  6. Naima
( 5:40)  7. Dolphin dance
( 4:54)  8. Milestones

The master trumpeter from Herbie Hancock’s first band made his first recording for SteepleChase after several years’ absence from the scene. Evolving from the Miles Davis sound of the late 60s Henderson’s playing has developed into a very intriguing personal style.  “ This must be among his best recordings ….” (Jazz Journal)

Personnel: Trumpet – Eddie Henderson; Bass – Wayne Dockery; Drums – Victor Lewis; Piano – Kenny Barron; Vibraphone – Joe Locke 

Phantoms

Pauline London - Quiet Skies

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:16
Size: 153,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:29)  1. Love Can Sing
(5:17)  2. Stay By My Side
(5:59)  3. Out Of The Winter
(4:02)  4. Sing A Lullaby
(5:52)  5. Fly In The Sky
(5:08)  6. Vibração
(4:45)  7. Bubbles
(5:05)  8. Dance The Life
(5:37)  9. Maybe Yesterday
(4:05) 10. Talkin' To The Moon
(4:39) 11. In Your Eyes
(5:39) 12. Fly In The Sky - Barrio Jazz Gang Remix
(5:34) 13. Maybe Yesterday - Barrio Jazz Gang Remix

Here is the new soloist project of Pauline London, singer, composer and lyricist, whose music is crossed by suggestions jazz, lounge, NuJazz, combined together from an incisive and rarefied vocal style at the same time. Been born as jazz-singer Pauline moves with boldness toward the new electronic scene, succeeding to mix with effectiveness tunes from the taste jazzy to the new bossa sonorities. She participates in the last years in various record projects among which Barrio Jazz Gang as vocalist and author.This is the debut album that reveales a mix of refined and evocative sound, following the succes obtained for the vocal perfomance on the famous LINDA CANCAO track. She is able to capture the listener with its hypnotic taste, both reflexive and sunny, supported by excellent arrangements that now conducts toward a sort of cool-jazz now toward the warm territories of the bossa-nova. She spended a long time singing and studying all the great singers such as Billie Holiday, Dinah Washington, Carmen Mc Rae, Shirley Bassey on the jazz blues side. Also she a great interpreter of Elis Regina and Astrud Gilberto tracks. The cd is opened with the wonderful deep and intense soulful track “Love can sing“ where she really give us true emotions. “Stay by my side” starts with a quality broken beat programming on pad of orchestra’s s strings while the sweet melody grown in a magic fields. Listen here to her scat jazz vocals and solo. On the third track “ Out on winter “ she is with Paul Innarella that plays the soprano-sax and together they give us a little jewel for that winter days where we all whispering the sunny times………..as a free seagull ! An intimate jazz-guitar break before Pauline closing the track with her tipycal vocalizing, give us a moment of pure visionary pleasure. “Sing a lullaby” is a latin–dancefloor track with a great hook and superb electronic treatments. Her vocals are floating in an atmosphere of a very happy party mood, can be in Rio, Havana, L.A. or in a beach club in the warmth of a tropical summer. The guitar is making a very strong riff that for sure will remain in your mind for long. In the well know track “ Fly in the sky “ Pauline sings in her own inimitable way and remind us the days of Shirley Bassey in English ‘60’ spy movies. Huge heart, great inspiration and expertly crafted.

“Vibraçao “ with his bubbling bass line and acoustic guitars played by Steve take us in an intense brazilian landscape atmosphere, where the exciting flute patterns floats……strong sense of a greater wider vision. Don’t be fooled by the title this 7 track ” Bubbles” is an inspiring glimpse of dark jazz on a sexy voice in the setting of lush. Vibraphone and brass characterized the sound and the mood giving that special jazzy feeling. “Dance the life” is an irresistible down tempo soul track with hammond, acoustic guitar and percussion and again the soprano-sax that duet wih Pauline in the warmest moment of the all cd. “My be yesterday” starts with with a rimshot solid-groove where the eletric guitar riff gives to the rhythm that special ’70’s funky sound. The bassline is circular and also very fat, her voice as usual goes from soul to pop melodies to fantastic scat–beats. Her multi-recording vocals will for sure amaze you. Also featuring Paul on a flute. “Talking to the moon “ is a night ballad with a sad feeling but big hope a love. She said: “…Quiet vision of the night you break the dark of this long long night……….I’m returning to the dreamland………..” These few words exactly catch the meaning of her creative expression of love and feeling to the music that reflects her lifestyle. “In your eyes” is a rhythmic chill-out song that sudddenly slides in a pop-mood sound and create new way to make modern music with a new approach but still maintaining a foot in the tradition. The percussion grooves and the rhythms of the guitars sweep away together with the flute and the strings arrangements. ………Rain or shine I don’t mind ‘cause I’ve got you into my life………………….The first “Barrio Jazz Gang” remix of the “ Fly in the sky “ track start with one of their best jazz broken beat, that is the trademark of their sound. The bassline is very solid and fat while the electric piano chords harmonizes soflty on her beautiful vocals. The bongoes rhythms running fast under the groove and the brass and guitar shots construct a cinematic atmosphere. In the break the snare-drill and the electronic filtering are exalting her magic singing. “My be yesterday” is another “Barrio Jazz Gang” remix exquisitely designed for club jazz dancefloor. The initial Pauline scat and the hammond shots are taking us as usual into a retro-modern atmosphere where she brings the warmth of her voice, filtered and treated with deep knowledge of the electronic machines use. She says : “ Night was made just for us, now it’s easy to believe it………..close your eyes and let you see…………………. “https://www.funkyjuice.com/en/products/pauline-london-quiet-skies/

Quiet Skies

Charles Lloyd - Lift Every Voice Disc 1 And Disc 2

Album: Lift Every Voice Disc 1

Styles: Saxophone And Flute Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:19
Size: 141,8 MB
Art: Front

(15:00)  1. Hymn To The Mother
( 4:05)  2. You Are So Beautiful
( 4:42)  3. Amazing Grace
( 9:40)  4. East Virginia, West Memphis
( 5:07)  5. What's Going On
( 3:33)  6. Angel Oak
( 6:47)  7. Te Amaré
( 7:38)  8. I'm Afraid
( 4:43)  9. Hafez, Shattered Heart


Album: Lift Every Voice Disc 2

Time: 69:07
Size: 159,6 MB

( 7:05)  1. Rabo De Nube
( 5:06)  2. Blood Count
(10:37)  3. Go Down Moses
( 7:51)  4. Beyond Darkness
( 6:12)  5. Nocturne
( 8:35)  6. Wayfaring Stranger
( 6:25)  7. Deep River
( 3:08)  8. Lift Every Voice And Sing
(14:03)  9. Prayer, The Crossing

The initial response of most Americans to the tragedy of September 11th was shock, quickly followed by anger. While many maintain that anger, others have moved on to mourning, contemplation, and hope. Such is the mood for Charles Lloyd’s recording, over two hours of introspection and spiritual resurrection. This recording of two sessions from the winter of 2002 follows two of the most beautiful records Lloyd has ever made. Both The Water Is Wide (2000) and Hyperion With Higgins (2001) showcase Lloyd’s spiritual side and, as these were some of the last recordings made by drummer Billy Higgins, they have an supernatural deliberation about them. In the wake of the events of 9-11, Lloyd reassembled Larry Grenadier and John Abercrombie from the Higgins’ dates and added Geri Allen, and long time companions Billy Hart and Marc Johnson. Lloyd worked these sessions as a quartet with Allen, Grenadier and Hart, then a quintet adding Abercrombie and switching bassists to Johnson. Perusing the titles Lloyd’s purpose becomes apparent. His response to the tragedy is one of lament, longing, and faith. His creed is interdenominational, and multi-racial. He covers music of spirituals, “Deep River,” “Go Down Moses,” and “Amazing Grace,” alongside of the Negro National Anthem as the albums title piece and Islamic poet’s “Hafez, Shattered Heart.” Lloyd’s “Moses” has a certain sense of anger before settling into a comforting blues. His solo taragato on “Hafez” applies a patient yet unresolved inquiry into the Eastern experience of world events. Along with traditional music he plies his own craft, that is jazz, to these statements. Recalling a peaceful response he takes up Marvin Gaye’s “What’s Going On” and Billy Preston’s “You Are So Beautiful.” No grandstanding is allowed here or on any of these tracks. The melodies are touched on with a minimum of soloing as if to focus on the message and not the musician. It’s not that these talented musicians are held back. This disc reminds one of John Coltrane’s ballads recording where less was more. Bringing forth Allen and Abercrombie’s spiritual/folk side is a valued gift. Lloyd’s largess here is his sincerity. The distinctness of this music is a break from the artificiality of many responses to 9-11. Lloyd’s belief in humanity and reliance on the healing and redemptive qualities of music propels this compassionate recording. ~ Mark Corroto https://www.allaboutjazz.com/lift-every-voice-charles-lloyd-ecm-records-review-by-mark-corroto.php

Personnel:  Charles Lloyd - tenor saxophone, flute, tarogato; Geri Allen - piano; John Abercrombie - guitar; Marc Johnson - double bass; Larry Grenadier - double bass; Billy Hart - drums


Harry Allen - Rhode Island Is Famous for You

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:33
Size: 151,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:48)  1. Rhode Island Is Famous for You
(5:33)  2. Ev'rything I Love
(6:11)  3. Swingin' Down the Lane
(3:16)  4. The Last Dance
(4:37)  5. Walk It Like You Talk It
(5:18)  6. Who Can I Turn To
(5:01)  7. The Last Best Year
(5:32)  8. I Know Your Heart (Like the Back of My Hand)
(4:16)  9. Poor Little Rhode Island
(5:46) 10. Happy You Happened to Me
(7:07) 11. There's a Rainbow 'round My Shoulder
(4:22) 12. Out of Rangoon
(3:40) 13. Where Do You Start?

There was a moment a few years ago, when the late Jim Czak, recording engineer supreme and, quite literally, the best friend of everybody who ever played or even listened to  jazz in New York, passed along to me some interesting news regarding The Children’s Television Workshop and Sesame Street.  The long-running children’s series had, for most of its run, employed a regular staff of studio musicians who were also outstanding jazz players.  Chief among these was Mike Renzi, one of the most prodigiously gifted pianists anyone has ever heard, and an outstanding jazz improviser, in spite of how throughout his considerable career, he has played comparatively little instrumental jazz.  Famously, he accompanied nearly all of the top singers of all time, and when he wasn’t accompanying Mel Torme, he was playing, arranging, and composing for Big Bird. But the word was that PBS, after many decades, was, as is often put rather euphemistically, “going in a different direction,” music-wise.  In other words, the staff of all-star jazz musicians, led by Mr. Renzi, essentially lost their leases on Sesame Street and were importuned to pack up and move to other pastures. But the Cookie Monster’s loss was bound to be a major gain for the rest of us who love good music.  It was regrettable that Mike was losing his “day job,” but we knew that we could look forward to seeing his bearded face (unlike myself, he doesn’t seem to have aged a day since I first started hearing him in the 1970s) and hear his remarkable, distinctive keyboard touch in the jazz clubs and cabaret rooms of Manhattan again.  We were right. Mike then spent several years on the road with Tony Bennett (that’s him on the mega-platinum team up with Lady Gaga), recalling the period when he seemed to be working with Torme, Lena Horne, and Peggy Lee all virtually simultaneously, and has also been heard with some of the newer classier singers, such as Lisa Remick and his protegee, Nicolas King. Still, there are barely a handful of purely instrumental jazz albums that spotlight Mike Renzi, like the 1986 Soft Lights & Sweet Music : Gerry Mulligan Meets Scott Hamilton and his own A Beautiful Friendship (1987) both of which feature the great rhythm section of their age: Mr. Renzi, bassist Jay Leonhart, and drummer Grady Tate.  Kudos then, to Harry Allen, the tenor saxophone savant, who exhibits as much taste in his musical collaborators as he does in selecting songs, for teaming up with Mr. Renzi on a recording that at once re-establishes Mr. Renzi’s bonafides as a swing player, and, at the same time, gives us some of the best playing ever documented by Mr. Allen, whose recorded output is long and filled with treasures. 

The net result of Harry Allen’s decision to work with Mike Renzi is that Mr. Allen sounds better than ever; I wouldn’t have thought it was possible for him to rise any higher in my estimation, but somehow he has.  Too often when we talk about Mr. Allen’s playing, we tend to pigeonhole him as a “swing tenor,” and while that is, admittedly, a rather cozy pigeonhole to be stuck in, he’s actually so much more than that. Among other things, Mr. Allen has developed an entire side career in working with Brazilian groups, and when he gets anywhere near a samba beat (as in here in Cole Porter’s “Everything I Love”), the foundations are much more rooted in the 1960s than the 1940s, more Stan Getz than Ben Webster, though it should be stressed that both of those jazz icons are primarily points of comparison rather than imitation. Here, more than ever, Mr. Allen’s sound is too timeless and too universal to be hitched to any one particular style or musical point-of-departure.  That feeling is underscored by the presence of five new and original songs, more than usual for one of his albums, including two of his own, “The Last Best Year” and “Happy You Happened To Me.”  The former is a slow ballad, and though I haven’t heard the words (by singer Hilary Gardner, she of the Duchess vocal trio), but Allen plays it so expressively, and with such a great sense of narrative, that you feel like you’ve absorbed the entire story even without them.  The other new numbers, by Bruce Brown and Roger Frankham (both individually and as a team) include a jazz waltz (“Out of Rangoon”) and a funk number (“Walk It Like You Talk It”) both of which, I hasten to add, are well outside of the realm of 1940s-style 4/4 swing. The remaining tunes, are, in Mr. Allen’s best tradition, a thoughtful mix of jazz standards and show tunes, including two songs about Rhode Island, one (“Rhode Island is Famous for You” by Schwartz & Dietz, from the revue Inside U.S.A.) rarely heard in an instrumental jazz context and the other (“Poor Little Rhode Island” by Cahn & Styne, from the 1945 film Carolina Blues) rare in any context.  (This is, in fact, only the second recording of the song that I have, the other being by Guy Lombardo.  This one is better.) The two Rhode Island songs, one of which gives the album its title, and the recording location (at Stable Sound, located in the Vanderbilt Stables in Portsmouth, RI, a short drive from Newport) are included in honor of Mr. Renzi’s background in that state. 

Mr.  Allen also “sings” two classic melodies in the shadow of his predecessors, not saxophonists this time, but outstanding popular singers, Al Jolson (who introduced “There’s a Rainbow ‘Round My Shoulder,” and got his name on it) and Frank Sinatra (who commissioned and published “The Last Dance”), which is a slow and romantic dance indeed.   “Who Can I Turn To” is also associated with male singers, including Anthony Newley (who composed and introduced it), Sammy Davis, Jr., and most of all, Tony Bennett; Mr. Allen’s treatment is exuberant, as well as probingly emotional.  Even as Mr. Allen surprises us by moving forward into whole new areas for him, he continues to confirm his place as one of the great interpreters of the classic songbook - and his place as a singer, in the purest sense of the word, is underscored by the presence of the same brilliant collaborator who did so much for Mel, Lena, and Peggy not to mention Mr. Bennett and even Sinatra himself.  The set ends with “Where Do You Start,” simply because nothing could follow it; this may be the most perfect, moving performance of the Mandel-Bergman song - a contemporary classic if ever there was one - that I’ve ever heard. Done strictly as a tenor-and-piano duet, the song almost works better without actually hearing the words again, especially since we already all know them so well. Of all the times I’ve heard this song, I never noticed the central irony of the title before, that one of the best-known statements ever about the end of a relationship uses the word “start” in the title, reminding us that, in its own way, an ending is also a beginning.  Here’s hoping that the “beautiful friendship,” to quote the title of virtually the only album so far under Mr. Renzi’s name, of Harry Allen and Mike Renzi is just beginning. ~  Will Friedwald Will Friedwald writes about music and popular culture for THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, VANITY FAIR & PLAYBOY magazine, and is the author of nine books including the award-winning A BIOGRAPHICAL GUIDE TO THE GREAT JAZZ AND POP SINGERS, SINATRA: THE SONG IS YOU, STARDUST MELODIES, TONY BENNETT: THE GOOD LIFE, LOONEY TUNES & MERRIE MELODIES, and JAZZ SINGING.  He has written over 600 liner notes for compact discs and received ten Grammy nominations.

Personnel: Harry Hallen - Saxophone; Paul Del Nero - Bass; Rodney Green - Drums

Rhode Island Is Famous for You