Thursday, July 11, 2019

Ellis Larkins - A Smooth One [The Definitive Black & Blue Sessions]

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1977
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:19
Size: 118,9 MB
Art: Front

(9:08)  1. Rose Room
(7:31)  2. Saint Louis Blues
(4:18)  3. Blues In My Heart
(7:25)  4. A Smooth One
(3:45)  5. C.E.B.
(7:44)  6. Between The Devil And The Deep Blue Sea
(6:13)  7. I Want A Little Girl
(5:12)  8. Day Dream

Famed as a subtle accompanist who played harmonically complex chords in a lightly swinging style, pianist Ellis Larkins did not have any opportunities to record a full album as a leader after 1959 until this effort for the French Black & Blue label; it was last available domestically as a Classic Jazz LP. With fine support from bassist George Duvivier and drummer J.C. Heard, Larkins performs five swing-era standards, plus his own "C.E.B." The increasingly rare session gives listeners a good example of Ellis Larkins' tasteful playing. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/a-smooth-one-mw0000690076

A Smooth One [The Definitive Black & Blue Sessions]

Dave Liebman, John Stowell - Petite Fleur: The Music of Sidney Bechet

Styles: Saxophone, Flute And Guitar Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:40
Size: 138,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:35)  1. Petite Fleur
(5:10)  2. Daniel
(5:25)  3. When the Sun Sets Down South
(5:48)  4. Premier Bal
(4:11)  5. What a Dream
(3:55)  6. Petite Fleur (John Solo)
(5:58)  7. Passport
(5:51)  8. Creole Blues
(5:20)  9. Nous Deux
(6:00) 10. Si Tu Vois Ma Mere
(6:47) 11. Summertime
(2:35) 12. Petite Fleur (Dave Solo)

Saxophonist Dave Liebman leans "outside" for the most part. He came to a measure of fame in the bands of Miles Davis, during one of the influential trumpeter's decidedly outside periods the 1970s, when Liebman participated in Davis' On The Corner (Columbia Records, 1972), Dark Magus (CBS-Sony, 1975), and Get Up With It (Columbia, 1977). Post-Davis, the always prolific and adventurous Liebman offered up scores of recordings under his own name. Moving to the new millennium, these include Turnaround: The Music of Ornette Coleman (Jazzwerkstatt, 2009), Lieb Plays The Blues a La Trane (Daybreak, 2010), and Lineage: Rock and Pop Classics Revisited (Whaling City sounds, 2013). Petite Fleur: The Music of Sidney Bechet, features a teaming of Liebman with guitarist John Stowell, a reunion of sorts the duo released a terrific set in 2013: Blue Rose (Origin Records), that showcased the duo's adeptness jazz standards and The Great American Songbook. Petite Fleur is the pair's intimate and unfailingly gorgeous exploration of the music of soprano saxophone pioneer Sidney Bechet, the man who brought the "straight horn" into legitimacy as a jazz vehicle. The New Orleans-born Bechet began his recording career in the early 1920's, well before the advent of alto saxophonist Charlie Parker and the bebop revolution. That era before Parker before the complex harmonizations of bop isn't revisited as much as late 1950s thought late 1960s hard bop, mid-twentieth century cool jazz, or Miles Davis mid-sixties modal approach. Petit Feur says that's a shame. The tune that gives this disc it's title is one of Bechet's most famous offerings is visited three times once as a solo by Lowell; once as a solo by Liebman (on piano); and once as a duo. Direct and beautiful sounds. 

A major shaper of the New Orleans tradition, Becht usually played in ensembles that included more horns a trumpet, a trombone to go along with his soprano saxophone. If Bechet had the melody, the other guys either laid a foundation behind him or they snaked counter melodies around his main theme. This was jazz from New Orleans exuberant and bursting with life. Liebman and Stowell take his tunes and reveal their essence, and make them gentle, often understated ruminations. Bechet wrote straightforward, singable melodies that are accentuated in the one horn, one guitar renderings. As for tone on the soprano sax Bechet's was big. It has been described as emotional and reckless, intense and passionate. Liebman doesn't go that way here though he is more than capable. He instead rolls with a surprising (for him and Bechet) gentleness and deftness for the intricacies of the melodies. His tone here is more often than not clean, pure and sweet. Stowell an adept modern player with a fine discography on Origin Records lays back in a pre-bop mode himself, with shimmering rhythms and sustain and elastic single note forays. And sometimes he brings a Django Reinhardt mode into the picture. Liebman and Stowell's Petite Fleur uncovers a different side of Bechet's seminal, now-traditional sound, one that's been glowing under the shining surface all this time. ~ Dan McClenaghan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/petite-fleur-the-music-of-sidney-bechet-dave-liebman-origin-records-review-by-dan-mcclenaghan.php

Personnel: Dave Liebman: soprano saxophone, wood flute, piano; John Stowell: guitar, nylon-string guitar, fretless baritone guitar.

Petite Fleur: The Music of Sidney Bechet

Kai Winding - More! Theme From Mondo Cane

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 28:53
Size: 67,6 MB
Art: Front

(2:01)  1. More
(2:21)  2. Hero
(1:38)  3. Gravy Waltz
(1:52)  4. China Nights
(2:24)  5. Surf Bird
(2:23)  6. Pipeline
(2:28)  7. Sukiyaki
(3:54)  8. Soul Surfin'
(2:54)  9. Tube Wail
(2:09) 10. Spinner
(2:26) 11. Hearse Ride
(2:16) 12. Comin' Home Baby

A strict surf album this is not, despite the packaging and a few titles. More is really the classic, best-selling album launching Kai Winding's mod sound. Actually, it is Claus Ogerman and Winding's sound, helped out in no small part by Kenny Burrell on guitar. Except when obviously imitating standard surf guitar, Burrell provides texture, specifically the "water sound" popularized by Vinnie Bell. Within this warm bath, as it were, the piercing electronic ondioline shimmers icily. The rhythm is basic "big beat" rock, and melody never really has a chance to escape blues figures, which is just as well. "Soul Surfin'" (also the reissue title of the album) is the longest track at 3:50, and with the others at around the two minute mark, the whole thing splashes by like a breaker. But just as a quick dip in the Pacific elicits an appetite, More leaves you hungry for, well, Mondo Cane #2. ~ Tony Wilds https://www.allmusic.com/album/more%21%21%21-the-theme-from-mondo-cane-mw0001882462

More!