Friday, July 19, 2019

Anna-Lotta Larsson - I Dina Drömmar

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:32
Size: 96,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:38)  1. Fragancia
(3:21)  2. Min Älskling
(3:46)  3. Byssan Lull
(4:35)  4. Dansen På Sunnanö
(2:20)  5. I Dina Drömmar
(3:07)  6. Minnet Och Tystnaden
(4:15)  7. Sjösalavår
(3:44)  8. Ronsard Och Herdinnan
(1:30)  9. Kosterflickornas Visa
(3:41) 10. Nocturne
(4:25) 11. Madame Läboms Visa Om Den Förunderliga Kärleken
(3:04) 12. Ellinor Dansar

Ingeborg Ann-Charlotte (Anna-Lotta) Larsson, (born 5 April 1954) is a Swedish singer and actress. She educated to be a voice coach at Framås folkhögskola and then was accepted into the Operahögskolan in Gothenburg. She is also an actess, known for her roles in the film Värmlänningarna in 1980 and the series Nya tider. She also presented the show Har du hört den förut? which was broadcast on SVT. Anna-Lotta Karlsson also works with dubbing of animated children's films. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna-Lotta_Larsson

I Dina Drömmar

Peter Ecklund - Gigs Reminiscing In Music

Styles: Cornet Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:06
Size: 144,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:55)  1. Say It With A Kiss
(4:40)  2. Winter Waltz
(4:41)  3. Django And Bix
(5:38)  4. Blues My Naughty Sweetie Gives To Me
(3:34)  5. Blue Bix
(3:42)  6. When You're Smiling
(2:47)  7. Russian Lillaby
(5:23)  8. Tailfins
(4:16)  9. My Blue Heaven
(4:02) 10. Fuddy Duddy
(3:27) 11. When You And I Were Young, Maggie
(5:12) 12. At The Track
(4:12) 13. At The Fair
(3:51) 14. Midnight Hour Blues
(3:38) 15. Blackey's Song

A veteran sit-in cornetist with various Dixieland bands and the backup groups of Leon Redbone, David Bromberg, and more recently Madeleine Peyroux, Ecklund's folk-derived swing is expressed through a variety of different combos on these 15 cuts, eight written by the leader. Some feature dual acoustic guitarists Peyroux and Steve Cardenas, others mandolinist David Grisman and guitarist Frank Vignola, with Marty Grosz (guitar), Dan Block (woodwinds) and Keith Ingham (celeste), or Jay Ungar (violin) and Molly Mason (guitar). Cameos come from clarinetists Ken Peplowski and Bobby Gordon, Howard Johnson (tuba), and Warren Bernhardt (Fender Rhodes). The most focused, centralized group is the Grisman-Vignola band with bassist Murray Wall. They do the delicate, swaying "Winter Waltz," the more intense, off-the-cuff, cornet-driven "Blues My Naughty Sweetie Gives (Gave) to Me" (trading riffs at the coda), the Bix Beiderbecke-derived easy swing of "Blue Bix," and the hardest swinger "Russian Lullaby," where Grisman steps up and hits a triple. Cardenas and Peyroux softly strum while Peplowski leads in midtempo during "Django & Bix," and evoke strains of "My Old Kentucky Home" during "When You & I Were Young, Maggie." The celeste adds a quaint sound to Block's clarinet and Ecklund's old-timey horn on "Say It With a Kiss"; meanwhile, Block's big baritone sax bolsters "When You're Smiling," as does his alto during "Fuddy Duddy," with Grosz's ever-present swing nailing it down. Ungar and Gordon's strings tiptoe through tulips on Leroy Carr's "Midnight Hour Blues," go serene and plaintive for "At the Fair," and swing much harder on "Blackey's Song," replete with whistling and Guy Fischetti's pedal steel. Gordon's daunting and darting feature is "My Blue Heaven," the best individual solo on the date, while the best overall number is the quickly paced "At the Track," holding the Dixie pulse at fever pitch courtesy of Cynthia Sayer's hot banjo and Johnson's bawdy tuba oompahs. Ecklund has a thinnish sound, not bold and brash a la Louis Armstrong or Bix, but reserved and refined, and sublimates his role for an overall group sound. This CD represents a good concept and execution of bringing '20s & '30s jazz into the '90s with players who know how. ~ Michael G.Nastos https://www.allmusic.com/album/gigs-reminiscing-in-music-mw0000054279

Personnel: Peter Ecklund (cornet, bugle); Dan Block (alto & baritone saxophones, clarinet); Howard Johnson (tuba); Ken Peplowski (clarinet); Jay Ungar (violin); Warren Bernhardt (Fender Rhodes piano); Steve Cardenas (acoustic & electric guitars); Madeleine Peyroux (acoustic guitar); Peter Davis (electric guitar, banjo); Molly Mason, Frank Vignola (guitar); David Grisman (mandolin); Greg Cohen, Pete Toigo (bass); Gary Burke (drums).

Gigs Reminiscing In Music

Martial Solal - Four Keys

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:15
Size: 90,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:42)  1. Brain Stream
(7:28)  2. Not Scheduled
(6:24)  3. Grapes
(6:05)  4. Retro Active
(4:42)  5. Energy
(4:34)  6. Satar
(3:17)  7. Four Keys

An all-star quartet (pianist Martial Solal, altoist Lee Konitz, guitarist John Scofield and bassist Niels Pedersen) explores seven diverse Solal originals that range from chamberlike pieces to fairly free group improvising. The results are often exciting if cool in both tone and volume. Thoughtful yet unpredictable music. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/four-keys-mw0000902050

Personnel:  Martial Solal – piano; Lee Konitz – alto saxophone; John Scofield – guitar; Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen – bass

Four Keys

Pete Zimmer - Judgment

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:01
Size: 136,0 MB
Art: Front

( 7:24)  1. The Mingus That I Knew
( 5:08)  2. Down or Up
( 6:56)  3. To My Papa
( 3:56)  4. 8 A.M. Wednesday Spirit
(10:01)  5. Judgment
( 6:55)  6. Dot Dot
( 6:19)  7. Bye Bye Blackbird
( 7:03)  8. Tutti Italiani
( 5:13)  9. Cut Off

Drummer and bandleader Pete Zimmer hasn't lost a step in getting his product to the people. Arriving in New York around the time of 9/11, he understandably found it difficult to get a record deal. So he created his own label, Tippin', on which Judgment is Zimmer's third release. He essentially keeps the same personnel from his last album (Burnin' Live At The Jazz Standard, Tippin' 2005), with the addition of his former employer, saxophonist George Garzone. On paper, this combo is the same one that has provided quality bebop on two prior albums in what can only be interpreted as an homage to groups like Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers and the Horace Silver Quintet. George Garzone remains the wild card, inasmuch as he is a free blower. Thus it is quite a revelation to announce that Garzone provides several positive turning points on this album Garzone plays on six of the nine compositions (he wrote four of these tunes). He does get the opportunity to take the music out in a limited fashion on "8 A.M. Wednesday Spirit," in a duet with Zimmer's drums, but also builds to a point at which he invokes the spirit of John Coltrane live at the Vanguard circa 1961. Also, for another duet with Zimmer on the standard "Bye Bye Blackbird," Garzone again plays in a post-Coltrane style. In contrast, his solo work on the opening "The Mingus That I Knew" and especially on the title tune is lyrical and appropriately surging. On the latter, Garzone outduels Joel Frahm in back-to-back solos. On his ballad "To My Papa," Garzone shows how to deliver a superior ballad treatment. The opening track, "The Mingus That I Knew," features the shifting rhythm of "Peggy's Blue Skylight" and, what else, a bass solo by David Wong, who emulates Mingus' idiosyncratic playing. Trumpeter Michael Rodriguez presents the melody line on Toru Dodo's "Dot Dot" and then launches into a beautifully stated solo. Zimmer has a few solo opportunities here, and on his previous albums, he didn't take space for himself. But on Judgment, in addition to the two drum/sax duets with Garzone, Pete Zimmer steps forward and rightly so announces his presence. ~ Michael P.Gladstone https://www.allaboutjazz.com/judgment-pete-zimmer-tippin-records-review-by-michael-p-gladstone.php

Personnel: Pete Zimmer: drums; George Garzone: tenor saxophone; Michael Rodriguez: trumpet; Joel Frahm: tenor saxophone; Toru Dodo: piano; John Sullivan: bass; David Wong: bass.

Judgment