Monday, July 29, 2019

Johnny Hodges & His Orchestra - In a Tender Mood (Remastered)

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:13
Size: 86,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:06)  1. Who's Excited
(3:22)  2. Sweepin' the Blues Away
(2:50)  3. Standing Room Only
(3:07)  4. Below the Azores
(6:04)  5. Sweet Georgia Brown
(6:08)  6. Duke's Blues
(3:21)  7. Tenderly
(3:03)  8. Tea for Two
(3:26)  9. What's I'm Gotchere
(2:43) 10. Nothin' Yet

Johnny certainly is in a tender mood here playing soulful ballads and mellow tunes with a small combo that includes Flip Phillips on tenor, Lawrence Brown on trombone, Leroy Lovett on piano, and Ray Brown on bass. The sound is laidback and easily swinging with a real focus on Johnny's warm and fluid alto work and the set features some nice original tunes that include "Who's Excited", "Sweepin The Blues Away", "Standing Room Only", "Below The Azores", and "Duke's Blues" plus "Tenderly" and "Nothin Yet".  © 1996-2019, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/366492

Personnel:   Johnny Hodges - alto saxophone; Emmett Berry - trumpet;  Lawrence Brown - trombone;  Leroy Lovett - piano

In a Tender Mood

YolanDa Brown - Love Politics War

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:47
Size: 183,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:12)  1. Million Billion Love
(6:16)  2. Time and Tide
(5:14)  3. Dream Dream Repeat
(4:27)  4. This Kind of Love
(4:55)  5. Heritage
(5:34)  6. Feel No Pain
(3:54)  7. No More War
(6:28)  8. Neutral Ground
(3:56)  9. Roll With It
(5:28) 10. Crocodile Tears
(6:20) 11. General PoliTricks
(5:04) 12. Prosper
(7:08) 13. Never Too Late
(4:25) 14. Sugarcane
(6:18) 15. Love At War

When YolanDa Brown plays live, she covers the stage, energetic and totally into her groove. On categorization of her music, YolanDa is keen not to be driven into any box, and jokes her music could best be described as “posh reggae yes, let’s go with that.” Whatever it’s called, Love, Politics, War features 15 eclectic, very enjoyable tracks. “Crocodile Tears” opens and is funky and starts with a salutation of sax from YolanDa Brown, before the theme reveals itself and follows through the track. There is a beautiful middle section with double saxes and a bounciness to the track which is totally in keeping with her irrepressible spirit. The final section is freer, which is glorious in itself.  “Dream Dream Repeat,” featuring Casey Benjamin of the Robert Glasper band, is a sashaying, reggae-steeped, rhythmic escapade with the saxophones bouncing off each other over the driving rhythms, while “Feel No Pain” (featuring three-time Grammy Award-winning Dame Evelyn Glennie) is, as you would expect, a deeply rhythmic and soul-drenched number which develops both in complexity and textures as the track progresses. The tenor solo is wonderfully rich, though I’m not sure about the playground sounds at the end. “General PoliTricks,” featuring Rick Leon James on bass, is gorgeous, rich and delivers a bounce throughout. That is until a break in rhythm for the sax solo, which is impressively register-crossing and verging on free as it soars and wails. Beautiful. “Heritage” is like a journey, as the sax sings over an ever subtly changing musical arrangement held together by a steady beat. That cadence changes only for a short section around the two-thirds mark, where keys and sax play over what sounds like a stuck record needle that acts as a metronome. “Love at War” is a poem set over music, worded beautifully by the poetess and vocalist Floacist. The stark words, backed by light, contrasting sax, somehow make the dialogue between spoken and sung vocals more interesting. “Million Billion Love” is reggae-infused and an enjoyable number before the arrival of “Neutral Ground.” Trumpeter Keyon Harrold and pianist Jon Cleary bring a NOLA vibe to the music, and the layers are peeled back to reveal sharper, deeper textures and a lovely change of tempo before the crystal clear trumpet solo in the middle section. Cleary’s deceptively laid back, yet intricate style of playing blends well with the sax style of YolanDa Brown on this track, and the minor key interlude just before the final flourish is ear catching. “Never Too Late” is slow, and opens with sax and bass in just off tandem, which is intriguing and clever, before it smooths out into a well-rounded thematic number. “No More War” features Phebe Edwards (Liam Gallagher, Adele, Rita Ora, Lemar, Primal Scream, Donna Summer, Gabrielle and others), and the emotive, gospel/soul-steeped style she uses works well with the exceptional sax. 

“Prosper” is a rhythmic, driving song/prayer about the search for freedom from discrimination and forgiveness, with lovely male vocals over the funky beat. “Roll With It” opens with quiet, rhythmic bass before brassy blares smother the gentleness. This is then replaced with a dance rhythm and funky vibes, under which the sax enters, rhythmic and seemingly settled into the groove before lifting up and over after the half way mark to lead. “Sugarcane” is easy, hanging behind the beat and laid back in style while never complacent. “This Kind Of Love,” featuring Raheem Devaughn on vocals, is gentle, strolling and packed with powerful words which belie the gentleness of the backing music and vocals. “Time and Tide” has a spiritual, moving cadence which the sax introduces and the gentle backing re-iterates. There is a sense of movement, a constant building and reflection. A super track to finish. Every track on YolanDa Brown’s Love, Politics, War has a certain eclecticism to it, with rhythm changes, tempo trips and gentle offset sections where a musician takes the central role, always on a changing basis. The sax is central, however, and key to the driving behind each track. There is a warmth running through this music, that opinion possibly being influenced by the very warm YolanDa I met and was greeted by with a huge bear hug a month or so back when I saw her play live. YolanDa Brown is coming of age. There is a confidence and quality to her playing, and she is more than willing to extend her range and try a different take on her music. She may joke about her genre being a new one but any way you name it, it is certainly in a class of its own. http://somethingelsereviews.com/2019/04/15/yolanda-brown-love-politics-war/

Love Politics War

Kirk Lightsey - Estate

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:41
Size: 146,4 MB
Art: Front

(8:35)  1. Estate
(7:23)  2. You and the Night
(9:32)  3. Heaven Dance
(8:32)  4. Infant Eyes
(4:29)  5. One Finger Snap
(8:57)  6. Goodbye Mr.Evans
(8:15)  7. Kutala
(7:54)  8. Vapallia

Three great, different, musical personalities sign this beautiful album, interacting freely on two main grounds of choice: the fervent inventiveness and an extremely mimetic approach, which leads the three musicians to regain possession of the sensibility as well as the formal principles most dear to fellow travelers. Here is Don Moye sinuously bending to the persuasive, soft harmonies of "Estate" with a subtle and refined drumming, full of precious found on the metric and beat plane. His soloism is always full of sudden and multidirectional solutions, in varying the post-baptism trend of the themes signed by the pianist.

All supported by incisive and broken plots, in the name of an equal dialogical comparison. Eccentric wheelies; free forms; elegant and refined atmospheres; rich and varied sounds. These are some of the trump cards of this trio, which thanks to the class of individual musicians succeeds in the difficult intent of making the most diverse improvisational and compositional traditions interact: Africa; cultured citations of academic language; the practice of the mainstream. On excellent levels the test of the chameleon-like Lightsey, in the continuous search for abstract and suspended notes, to better support the oblique and cultured solutions of the magnificent double-bass player Tibor Elekes. His is once again one of the most superb pianisms of the entire contemporary jazz scene, to incorporate two distinct trends in a wise harmonic thought: soft and cantabile sounds, reinvigorated by the angular and fragmented lines of the African-American piano heritage. But all three musicians are equally responsible for this extremely successful and composite journey, which the Italian label Itinera did well to promote and document.~ AAJ Italy Staff https://www.allaboutjazz.com/estate-kirk-lightsey-balance-point-acoustics-review-by-aaji-staff.php

Personnel: Kirk Lightsey (piano); Famodou Don Moye (battery); Tibor Elekes (double bass).

Estate

Larry Coryell - Traffic

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:55
Size: 145,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:12)  1. Judith Loves Jazz
(3:58)  2. Manic Depression
(7:35)  3. Door #3
(7:09)  4. Joyce's Favorite
(7:56)  5. Misterioso
(5:37)  6. Dedication
(7:18)  7. Drums & Bass
(3:43)  8. Jake's Lullaby
(5:14)  9. Overruled
(9:11) 10. Electric Jam

CBW are guitarist Larry Coryell, former Weather Report bassist Victor Bailey and drummer Lenny White a trio capable of ear-blasting blues and funk. What distinguishes this fierce but patchy jazz-rock set from its CBW predecessor, Electric, is an unplugged delicacy on a couple of slow tracks, and good reworkings of imports like Hendrix's Manic Depression and Monk's Misterioso. Coryell, who was a 1970s jazz-rock guitar pioneer, mixes raw fluency and an R&B player's boogieing drive on Door £3. A one-take exercise, the set has its insecurities (Bailey sounds initially uncertain of the famous ascending hook of Misterioso, and Coryell's time can waver), but a what-the-hell boldness usually wins out - like the guitarist's ghostly use of the slide on Misterioso, or Bailey's chord-playing and tapping effects on Drums & Bass. Lots of raw blues and power-playing - though perhaps everybody from Scofield to D'Angelo has reworked these surefire ingredients in more subtle ways. … we have a small favour to ask. More people are reading and supporting The Guardian’s independent, investigative journalism than ever before. And unlike many news organisations, we have chosen an approach that allows us to keep our journalism accessible to all, regardless of where they live or what they can afford. But we need your ongoing support to keep working as we do. ~ John Fordham More... https://www.theguardian.com/music/2007/jan/12/jazz.shopping1

Personnel: Acoustic Guitar – Larry Coryell; Drums – Lenny White; Electric Bass – Victor Bailey; Electric Guitar.

Traffic

Lorez Alexandria - Only Happy

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:58
Size: 173,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:27)  1. Trav'lin' Light
(2:10)  2. No Moon at All
(3:39)  3. Detour Ahead
(2:35)  4. Softly as in a Morning Sunrise
(3:13)  5. Don't Explain
(3:02)  6. I'm Just a Lucky So-And-So
(2:58)  7. Early in the Morning
(2:58)  8. Baltimore Oriole
(3:02)  9. Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year
(2:16) 10. Baby, Don't You Cry
(2:49) 11. Nature Boy
(3:23) 12. I Was a Fool
(3:28) 13. So Long
(2:50) 14. The End of a Love Affair
(3:45) 15. Traveling Down a Lonely Road (Love Theme from "La Strada")
(3:19) 16. Good Morning Heartache
(2:22) 17. Almost Like Being in Love
(3:49) 18. Love Look Away
(2:23) 19. I Ain't Got Nothin' but the Blues
(2:44) 20. Trouble Is a Man
(2:45) 21. It Could Happen to You
(2:53) 22. I Want to Talk About You
(3:04) 23. I Almost Lost My Mind
(3:11) 24. Baltimore Oriole II
(2:42) 25. Rocks in My Bed

A solid singer who is superior at interpreting lyrics, gives a soulful feeling to each song, and improvises with subtlety, Lorez Alexandria was a popular attraction for several decades. She sang gospel music with her family at churches starting in the mid-'40s and worked in Chicago nightclubs in the 1950s. With the release of several albums for King during 1957-1959, Alexandria became popular beyond her hometown, and by the early '60s she was living and working in Los Angeles. In addition to the King label, her earlier recording sessions were for Argo and Impulse, while her later albums were for Discovery and Muse. Despite a long period off records (only a few private recordings during the 1965-1976 period), Alexandria survived through the many changes in musical styles and could be heard in excellent form up until she retired in the mid-'90s. Not long after retiring, Alexandria suffered a stroke, and her health declined until her death in May 2001. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/lorez-alexandria-mn0000282731/biography

Only Happy