Tuesday, June 25, 2019

Mary Louise Knutson - Call Me When You Get There

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:39
Size: 131,1 MB
Art: Front

(7:23)  1. Tangerine
(5:28)  2. On Green Dolphin Street
(5:56)  3. How Will I Know?
(3:54)  4. Meridian
(6:06)  5. Gone With the Wind
(4:57)  6. Merle the Pearl
(7:44)  7. I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face
(5:56)  8. Things Ain't What They Used to Be
(3:43)  9. If You Please
(5:26) 10. Call Me When You Get There

High-quality jazz is practically everywhere. For proof of that statement, this CD from a Minnesota-based pianist can serve as evidence. Mary Louis Knutson is an excellent jazz player whose voicings sometimes recall Bill Evans but who has developed a lyrical style of her own. Joined by bassist Gordon Johnson and either Marc Rio, Phil Hey, or Craig Hara on drums, the pianist plays five mostly relaxed versions of familiar standards (including "Tangerine," "On Green Dolphin Street," and "I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face"). However, it is her five originals that are of greatest interest, for she has a talent for coming up with fresh melodies. "Merle the Pearl," "Meridian," and "Call Me When You Get There" each sticks in one's mind and, if this local CD received some national attention, it is possible that a couple of the originals would catch on. Well-worth searching for. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/call-me-when-you-get-there-mw0000039423

Call Me When You Get There

The Chordettes - Harmony Encores, Sing Your Requests Disc 1 And Disc 2

Album: Harmony Encores /Disc 1

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1952
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 27:35
Size: 64,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:15)  1. Carolina Moon
(1:56)  2. Basin Street Blues
(1:55)  3. Floatin' Down to Cotton Town
(1:37)  4. Drifting and Dreaming
(1:43)  5. Garden In the Rain
(1:46)  6. S'Posin'
(2:22)  7. The Sweetheart of Sigma Chi
(2:12)  8. Kentucky Babe
(1:42)  9. In The Sweet Long Ago
(2:12) 10. I'm Drifting Back to Dreamland
(1:40) 11. Angry
(2:13) 12. A Little Street Where Old Friends Meet
(1:52) 13. The Anniversary Waltz
(2:05) 14. Sentimental Journey


Album: Sing Your Requests  Disc 2

Year: 1954
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 20:52
Size: 48,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:35)  1. Wait 'Till the Sun Shines, Nellie
(2:22)  2. They Say It's Wonderful
(2:51)  3. I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now
(2:25)  4. For Me and My Gal
(2:16)  5. I Believe
(1:38)  6. Down Among the Sheltering Palms
(1:42)  7. Hello! Ma Baby
(2:27)  8. Wonderful One
(2:34)  9. (When It's) Darkness On the Delta

Originally released by Columbia Records in the '50s, these recordings of the Chordettes are strictly female barbershop quartet. There is nothing here with the crossover appeal of their biggest hit, "Mr. Sandman." Harmony Encores and Your Requests remained out of print for many years until they were reissued on CD by Collectables in 2003. The vocal arrangements on these 23 tracks are first-rate especially on "Carolina Moon," "Sweetheart of Sigma Chi," "Anniversary Waltz," and "For Me and My Gal," but rather tedious if taken in large doses. Recommended for die-hard fans and barbershop harmony enthusiasts. ~ Al Campbell https://www.allmusic.com/album/harmony-encores-your-requests-mw0000214336


Chet Atkins and Les Paul - Chester and Lester Guitar Monsters

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1978
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:17
Size: 80,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:50)  1. Limehouse Blues
(3:42)  2. I Want to Be Happy
(2:41)  3. Over the Rainbow
(2:34)  4. Meditation
(3:00)  5. Lazy River
(3:48)  6. I'm You Greatest Fan
(2:59)  7. It Don't Mean A Thing (If it Ain't Got That Swing)
(4:04)  8. I Surrender Dear
(2:41)  9. Brazil
(2:52) 10. Give My Love to Nell
(3:01) 11. Hot Toddy

The seventies were bountiful years for guitar fans. Looking now at Guitar Player magazines of the period, it's almost dizzying to see how many veteran guitarists were doing some of their most interesting and liberated work. Bop stalwarts, blues greats (often obscure), and notable country pickers were all well-represented on vinyl throughout the decade, on a variety of labels. Chet Atkins, whose easy listening country guitar records (all on RCA) were too often tasteful to a fault, came out of his shell a little more than usual in that decade, cutting great duet records each with thumbpicking idol Merle Travis and the brilliantly pyrotechnical Jerry Reed. But his most commercially successful pairing was with Les Paul, the Thomas Edison of electric guitar, whose fifties hits were landmark masterpieces both of recording technique and guitar arrangement. Their 1976 Chester & Lester (RCA Nashville/Legacy) was a sloppy, rambling tiptoe through a set of standards replete with studio chatter. It got by on its considerable charm, and won a Grammy (Best Country Instrumental Performance), despite there not being anything on it that was country music. Its success warranted a followup, and Guitar Monsters was it. Fortunately, it includes less chatter, and the performances are more focussed. Atkins and Paul are quite a study in opposites. Atkins' neat, orderly thumbpicking collides happily with Paul's gregarious, even joyously vulgar soloing. Where Paul is not afraid to be sloppy, Atkins is pristine at every turn, even as he takes a few single note soloing turns that for him are unusually extroverted, even showy. From the first note, it's evident that these two men love each others' playing and take real joy in the back-and-forth. The tunes are, as on their first recording together, all standards, save for two needless comedy numbers. Opening with "Limehouse Blues" (with Atkins doing some of his finest playing), we immediately are clued into Monsters' intent: a bunch of standards as lighthearted blowing vehicles for two complementary but highly contrasting guitar icons. Things stay mostly mid-tempo, although there's a straight ballad reading of "Over The Rainbow" that spotlights some gorgeous chordal work from Atkins. Special mention should be made of bassist Joe Osborne, whose playing throughout is understated and deep in the pocket. (Chris Morris' liner notes are breezy and very smart, perfect to the music they describe.) This isn't adventurous the way Coltrane At Birdland is adventurous, but it's such an enjoyable disc, one whose best moments are hard to resist. For guitar mavens, it's a joyous truffle. ~ Skip Heller https://www.allaboutjazz.com/guitar-monsters-chet-atkins-and-les-paul-real-music-review-by-skip-heller.php

Personnel: Chet Atkins: guitars; Les Paul: guitars; Joe Osborne: bass; Buddy Harman, Larrie Londin, Randy Hauser: drums

Chester and Lester Guitar Monsters

Mike Neer - Steelonious

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:54
Size: 103,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:10)  1. Epistrophy
(3:15)  2. Bemsha Swing
(4:31)  3. 'Round Midnight
(3:35)  4. In Walked Bud
(3:13)  5. Bye-Ya
(2:57)  6. I Mean You
(3:06)  7. Off Minor
(4:36)  8. Ugly Beauty
(3:53)  9. Ask Me Now
(3:14) 10. Straight, No Chaser
(4:36) 11. Reflections
(4:42) 12. Blue Monk

Early in his musical career, pianist and composer Thelonious Monk was ordained the "Hight Priest of Bebop." This sounds more like a disingenuous pronouncement by an overeager period critic than any credible music reportage. Monk's essential musical approach owed more to stride, blues, and swing than to Charlie Parker's and Dizzy Gillespie's bebop. Monk's technical brilliance, if one could call it that, was not geared toward the "technique" of rapid and complexly rendered chord changes. Monk's brilliance lay somewhere much more fundamental. I think of Monk as a musical mutation. Genetically, a mutation is defined as, ..."the changing of the structure of a gene, resulting in a variant form that may be transmitted to subsequent generations..." If that does not describe Monk's influence on both jazz composition and the jazz standard songbook, then nothing does. Monk created a new musical language, vocabulary, and grammar. And he did all this serious stuff with a beautifully honed disregard for the musical status quo and a biting sense of humor that seems still lost on much of the listening media. Monk was an enigmatic iconoclast (that is two fifty cent words adding up to a dollar). He remains misunderstood, because understanding him was never the point. This music is a relativistic variant that should have never entered our dimension, but did...and here we are. 

Monk has had many admirers and imitators, many creatively so. But none of Monk's interpreters has yet to "think beyond" to the degree that steel guitarist Mike Neer has. Seemingly out of nowhere, Mike Neer appears, playing Monk like some radioactive Herbert Von Karajan addressing his cosmic Beethoven. And Neer does all of this with the wry and knowing smile of a man content just to be heard. How fortunate he has spoken loud enough, because projects like Steelonious happen so damn infrequently now that when they do arise, they are missed for all of the noise surrounding them. What Neer effectively does is take an instrument associated with, in order, Hawaiian luau, Santo and Johnny's 1959 "Sleepwalk," and every Jackson Browne song David Lindley play on, and use it to transform the Monk book in a most wonderful and delightful way. Neer creates American vignettes with each composition. He begins his festivities with a Dick Dale Surf take on "Epistrophy," drummer Diego Voglino laying down a carpet bomb backbeat. Pianist Matt King issues a two-fisted cat-house upright solo, leading into Neer's interstellar vision of the slide guitar, sounding like a frantic '50s LA traffic jam. And, this is merely the beginning. "Bemsha Swing" is hippy trippy while "'Round Midnight" is performed like a Caribbean pipe dream, again with deft support by Voglino. "In Walked Bud," typically played as an upbeat cooker, in Neer's hands it becomes a Mad Men's first heroin sniff with Sgt. Joe Friday looking in through the window. "I Mean You" is vintage Western Swing, replete with stoned ghost of Bob Wills heehawing in the background. "Off Minor," "Ugly Beauty," and "Ask Me Now" as they have never been presented. Neer's technique is so sharp and precise it is often hard to tell what instrument he his playing. That is an accomplishment. The perfect closer, "Blue Monk" rolls the disc to its coda with the entire history of the blues and jazz behind it.
 ~ C. Michael Bailey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/steelonious-mike-neer-self-produced-review-by-c-michael-bailey.php

Personnel: Mike Neer: lap steel guitar; Matt King: piano and organ; Andrew Hall: Bass; Diego Voglino: drums, percussion; Tom Beckham: vibraphone (4,9).

Steelonious

Benedikt Jahnel Trio - Equilibrium

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:47
Size: 123,5 MB
Art: Front

( 5:01)  1. Gently Understood
( 7:11)  2. Sacred Silence
(13:52)  3. Moorland & Hill Land
( 9:01)  4. Wrangel
( 4:41)  5. Augmented
( 4:19)  6. Hidden Beauty
( 9:39)  7. Equilibrium

He may be better known internationally to ECM fans for his participation in the pan-cultural Cyminology, but German pianist Benedikt Jahnel has been devoting just as much attention to his multinational trio featuring Spanish bassist Antonio Miguel and American drummer Owen Howard. Releasing the trio's debut in 2008 on Viennese guitarist Wolfgang Muthspiel's Material Records imprint, Jahnel's work with Max.Bab has rendered superficial comparisons to Esbjorn Svensson, but if the world is looking for someone to pick up the mantle left by the late Swedish pianist, it'll have to keep on looking. Beyond being relatively young and leading a piano trio with a strong penchant for lyricism, there's little else with which to compare Jahnel's trio and e.s.t. A truth already apparent on Modular Concepts (Material, 2008), but even clearer with Equilibrium, the trio's long overdue follow-up and ECM debut. If anything, there are some similarities in Jahnel's approach to fellow label mate, pianist Nik Bärtsch and Ronin, most recently heard on Live (ECM, 2012). But if Bärtsch and Jahnel share a certain rigor when it comes to rhythmic constructs and, more importantly, rhythmic placement, Jahnel is more intrinsically driven by song form even, as is the case with the opening "Gently Understood," if he takes a long time getting there. Through the first three of its five minutes, Jahnel's trio collectively explores a modal, pedal toned vamp, building to an extemporaneous climax only to fade to a near-whisper and the introduction of the pianist's chordal theme albeit one where Howard both holds down the form and explores further, a tasteful meshing of delicate cymbals and reverb-drenched, rim shot-driven drums. What gives Jahnel's trio some of its personality is the way that it plays with conventional roles. Howard whose 20-year career has included collaborations with everyone from saxophonist Chris Potter to guitarist Ben Monder is, himself, a deeply melodic player; one who can, at times, leave more rhythmic concerns to Jahnel. 

In the opening minutes of Equilibrium's longest track, "Moorland & Hill Land," Jahnel's pulsating exploration of the lower register of his piano almost blends into a single voice with Miguel's resonant arco. Ultimately unfolding into a spare, Erik Satie-like passage, Jahnel gradually shifts to an arpeggio-driven piano a cappella that finally, eight minutes in, leads to a full trio treatment. Filled with unrelenting forward motion, Jahnel shifts that very propulsion between left and right hands, while Miguel's spare anchor supports Howard's strong thematic foil for Jahnel. If Jahnel's trio often operates in keyboardist Joe Zawinul's long-held "nobody solos/everybody solos" ethos, that doesn't mean there aren't shining moments for its members. The gently majestic "Sacred Silence" is defined largely by Miguel, and the bassist's strong allegiance to motivic development also features near the end of "Moorland," while Howard is the clear melodist alongside Jahnel in the latter half of "Augmented." It's all about embedding the piano trio tradition into a new context where things aren't always as they seem. With Equilibrium, Jahnel has carved his own evocative space on a label that may seem loaded down with piano trios, but for whom, in the case of Jahnel, there's clearly room for one more. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/equilibrium-benedikt-jahnel-ecm-records-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Benedikt Jahnel: piano; Antonio Miguel: double bass; Owen Howard: drums.

Equilibrium