Wednesday, September 11, 2019

Ike Quebec - Easy Living

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1987
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:54
Size: 131,2 MB
Art: Front

(9:01)  1. See See Rider
(6:51)  2. Congo Lament
(5:40)  3. Que's Pills
(6:15)  4. B.G.'s Groove Two
(9:48)  5. I.Q. Shuffle
(6:51)  6. I've Got A Crush On You
(7:24)  7. Nancy (With The Laughing Face)
(5:01)  8. Easy Living

Ike Quebec is one of those funny figures in Blue Note Records' history. By the late fifties, after he'd been out of recording for a number of years, he was too old to really be at the hard-bop vanguard (he was born in 1918) but not old enough to be a senior statesman like Coleman Hawkins or Duke Ellington. Much of his involvement with the record label in those years was as an A&R man, scouting for new talent for the label's owner Alfred Lion. Considered in the context of musical fashion it might be fair to say that, at the dawn of the 1960s, his own musical style was a little dated, even passé. But to hell with fashion; Quebec was a terrific musician and wonderful, big blue tenor saxophone (and occasionally piano) player. His chops might have been rooted in the swing of the late 1930s and '40s but, as the saying goes, good taste never goes out of style. Music Matters has re-mastered Quebec's last outing for Blue Note, Easy Living, on two 45RPM vinyl records. Recorded in 1961 but released posthumously in 1987, the date features classic Rudy Van Gelder recording sound, recaptured from the original master tapes on state of the art equipment. As with all of the Music Matters Blue Note reissues, the goal is to create an all  analog record with the best possible sonics. The first disk adds Stanley Turrentine on a second tenor, and Bennie Green on trombone. These tracks are tight and well-written, with excellent solos from both Quebec and with a more 1960s modern playing style Turrentine. The opening "See See Rider" is a greasy slow chitlin circuit blues that sets the tone for the whole record. It's hard to go wrong with Mr. T on anything, and Sonny Clark's comping and occasional fills are shear perfection. But the real meat of the album is on the last three tunes. Turrentine and Green bow out, leaving Quebec in the sole spotlight. 

His tone is warm, smooth and full, and his balladeering is second to none. "Nancy" possesses the kind of playing that never grows old: tender and emotive, but powerful too. It doesn't hurt that the recording captures the saxophone with exceptional realism, even if the overall recording retains that period Blue Note sound. The title track closes the date with more brilliant slow play, with Quebec showing his period roots. It's clear that he came from the school that began with Coleman Hawkins and later begat Lester Young and, especially, Ben Webster. That's a favorable comparison and Quebec plays as well as any of them.  It's sad to note that within a year of recording Easy Living, both Quebec and Clark would be dead (Quebec from lung cancer and Clark from fast living). But the record is testament to the shear quality of their talent. Some recordings are timeless, and this is one of them. Easy Living is a record always worth hearing and appreciating. ~ Greg Simmons https://www.allaboutjazz.com/easy-living-ike-quebec-blue-note-records-review-by-greg-simmons.php

Personnel: Ike Quebec: tenor saxophone; Stanley Turrentine: tenor saxophone; Bennie Greene: trombone; Sonny Clark: piano; Milt Hinton: bass; Art Blakey: drums.

Easy Living

Catherine Lima - Stories and Lies

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:51
Size: 115,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:51)  1. The Waters of March
(3:29)  2. Lush Life
(4:06)  3. Gatsby
(4:23)  4. Bathsheba's Lament
(4:01)  5. Love Again
(4:59)  6. I Cover the Waterfront
(3:09)  7. Ode to Carolina
(4:35)  8. So Many Stars
(4:32)  9. Stories and Lies
(4:14) 10. I Can't Make You Love Me
(4:27) 11. A Taste of Honey
(4:00) 12. The Lies of Handsome Men

I woke very early this morning with a purpose in mind. I normally get woken most mornings by my pussy cat DeeLee howling for attention but this morning I was up before she could start the howling process. My reason for the early start was to listen to Stories and Lies the new CD from Catherine Lima. I had attended the CD Launch Concert the previous evening and to be perfectly honest I could not believe what I had heard. I needed to hear the CD to confirm I wasn’t all just a dream. I would have put the CD on as soon as I got home from the concert but it was past midnight and the journey home through torrential rain was so tiring. The launch was held at The Arts Cinema, Crouch End in North London the local Arts Centre and highly appreciated by local patrons and those beyond. The venue was fully booked with many celebrities from the music industry in attendance. Most were the devoted fans who follow Catherine from venue to venue. I was invited to review the launch concert but, I have to confess, that I class myself as Catherine's number one fan so there will be some bias to this review. The concert started with one of my favourite songs of all time A Taste of Honey and this was very apt because Catherine has a voice which is like listening to ….. honey. It’s so rich but smooth with a unique texture which is so enticing. I have heard Catherine perform at so many different venues, including outdoor concerts, and her voice can penetrate any environment because it is so very movingly soulful yet in Jazz style. This is the first time that I have heard her as a songwriter. Her efforts show all the signs of a fabulous career ahead. The first set included the songs Stories and Lies and Ode to Carolina - both written by Catherine. These are not so much songs but poetry put to music with such skill beyond any newcomer to song writing that I have ever encountered. The first set also included a song that always brings tears to my eyes. I Can't Make You Love Me was written for Bonny Raitt but made famous by the wonderful George Michael. Catherine exceeds any version I have heard and this song suits her voice perfectly. The Second Set include two more of Catherine's own songs Gatsby and Bathsheba's Lament.  

The inspiration for these songs are the works of literature The Great Gatsby and Far From The Madding Crowd. Once again not so much as songs but poetry put to music and anyone who can write lyrics like these has a very rare talent. Catherine also include a song Love Again written by another exceptionally skillful songwriter Brian Shaw who was in the audience to support Catherine and to hear his song performed. I have extolled the virtues of Catherine Lima but this concert could not have happened without the stellar band behind her which included Paul Higgs on Piano, Graham Pike on Trumpet, Flugelhorn and Chromatic Harmonica and Alex Field on Guitar. The Rhythm Section of Alex Keen on Double Bass and Marek Dorcik completed the band who were exceptional in their support for her. I am sure the reason for this is that they all enjoy working with Catherine. For them, it isn’t “just a job”. This was confirmed after talking with them after the concert. I think by now you must have it firmly in mind just how good Catherine Lima is in my opinion and I am alleged to be an ‘expert’ in the female jazz singer genre. Anyway, she excelled in every way. I am thrilled for her because I know just how much effort has been put in to the compilation of the material on this recording and the songwriting. The concept of Stories and Lies was to tell a story of the experiences of Catherine's life from personal experiences and from her love of literature and music. I have to give credit to Paul Higgs for his contribution to this CD as Musical Director and his skill as recording engineer. The recording quality could not in my view be exceeded even it had been recorded at Abbey Road. The atmosphere captured is like listening to a live performance in an intimate venue. I have a vast collection of Audiophile CD's and this compares with the best such as Cafe Blue by Patricia Barber; yes, it’s that good! My only advice to anyone reading this review is to go an buy Stories and Lies. You’ll be thrilled. I can almost guarantee it. ~ Tony Andrews https://www.hifianswers.com/2019/05/catherine-lima-stories-and-lies-cd-launch/

Stories and Lies

Andy Summers - Retrospective

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:34
Size: 119,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:37)  1. A Piece Of Time
(6:30)  2. World Gone Strange
(5:14)  3. Charming Snakes
(4:54)  4. Mickey Goes To Africa
(5:12)  5. Passion Of The Shadow
(2:46)  6. Innocence Falls Prey
(5:19)  7. Oudu Kanjaira
(4:48)  8. The Blues Prior To Richard
(4:57)  9. Blues For Snake
(5:11) 10. Somewhere In The West

While Andy Summers is best known as the guitarist in the Police, he has since forged a successful and acclaimed solo career with new age-influenced contemporary instrumental music that, like his work with Sting and company, draws on his love for jazz and his fascination with creating instrumental textures. Born Andrew James Somers in Poulton-Fylde, Lancashire, England, on December 31, 1942, the young Somers (who later changed his surname to the more easily spelled Summers) moved to Bournemouth as a child and, upon taking up the guitar at 14, immersed himself in the local jazz scene. By 16, he was playing in local clubs and coffee houses, where he was noticed by Zoot Money. Somers was invited to join Money's Big Roll Band on the live album The All Happening Zoot Money's Big Roll Band at Klook's Kleek. Money eventually changed the band into a psychedelic outfit called Dantalian's Chariot, and when that project dissolved in early 1968, Somers briefly signed on with the Soft Machine before rejoining Money in a revamped Animals lineup for the LP Love Is. When that imploded in 1969, Somers studied classical guitar and composition at UCLA for four years, in the meantime giving guitar lessons, gigging with a local Latin rock band, and acting with various theater troupes. Upon his return to England in 1973, Summers became something of a journeyman, touring in the backing bands of Neil Sedaka, Kevin Coyne, Kevin Ayers, and David Essex. Summers met Sting and Stewart Copeland in 1977 while playing with a band called Strontium 90. The two asked Summers to join their full-time project, the Police; together, the trio gradually developed a style centered around jazz- and reggae-influenced pop/rock, and Sting's strong basslines allowed Summers to supply subtle sonic textures and colors on his guitar, and to experiment with various effects. 

Summers first stepped out on his own in 1982, teaming with King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp on the jazz- and Eastern-tinged I Advance Masked. It was followed in 1984 with Bewitched, another Summers/Fripp collaboration, around the same time the Police officially disbanded. Eager to establish himself in musical realms outside of rock & roll, Summers did a bit of movie soundtrack work (Down and Out in Beverly Hills, 2010, etc.) before returning to recording, this time on his own. His first solo effort, 1987's harmonically intricate yet pop-oriented XYZ, met with poor critical response. Its follow-up, 1988's Mysterious Barricades, was more successful, emphasizing Summers' textural sensibilities on its jazzy, new age-influenced compositions. A string of albums in this style followed through the '90s, notably The Golden Wire (1989), Charming Snakes (1991), World Gone Strange (1991), Invisible Thread (1993), and The Last Dance of Mr. X (1997). For 1998's Strings of Desire, he teamed with South American guitar virtuoso Victor Biglione; 1999's Green Chimneys: Music of Thelonious Monk found Summers working with a larger ensemble than usual for him, as well as his first collaboration with Sting since the Police (on a version of "'Round Midnight"). Following the success of his Monk-themed album, the guitarist put together an album of interpretations of compositions by Charles Mingus called Peggy's Blue Skylight, released in late 2000. Earth + Sky appeared four years later. Summers continued to record, releasing First You Build a Cloud in 2007. He also participated in the Police reunion tour that same year. Following the reunion, Summers formed the band Circa Zero with Rob Giles of the Rescues; they released Circus Hero in 2014 before disbanding. After Circa Zero, Summers returned to his solo career, releasing Metal Dog in 2015 and Triboluminescence in 2017. ~ Steve Huey https://www.allmusic.com/artist/andy-summers-mn0000031173/biography

Retrospective

Michael Civisca - Love Is Like a Breeze

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:56
Size: 119,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:23)  1. Love Is Like a Breeze
(4:36)  2. I Wish You Love
(3:24)  3. Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone
(4:26)  4. Stormy Weather
(4:01)  5. Desafinado
(3:56)  6. You Go to My Head
(3:16)  7. Just in Time
(4:11)  8. I May Love You More
(3:20)  9. I Feel Sorry for You
(4:24) 10. Just One of Those Things
(4:40) 11. The Very Thought of You
(3:23) 12. Wild Is Love
(3:50) 13. If I Ruled the World

Western New York denizen and vocalist, Michael Civisca, went to London, England for his fourth album. To say that this one is a departure from his previous release is an understatement. His last featured him in live performance with just a trio. This time out, he's accompanied by an orchestra of 80 musicians (!), replete with a large bevy of strings This album might be called the Musicians Relief Act of 2002. But there is lots of good news. The strings are not present on all tracks and when the group is unencumbered by violins, violas and celli, it and the singer swing up a storm. The best news is that Civisca is a fine singer with a great sense of timing and pace along with an intuitive, savior-faire feel for the music, making him a welcome addition to the male jazz/pop singers where fresh blood is desperately needed. From a mold similar to those that shaped the styles of Frank Sinatra and Bobby Darin, Civisca manages to have some fun with the lyrics much like Sinatra used to do. On "Please Don't Talk about Me When I'm Gone", he tells his detractor to "shut your mouth" if he/she can't say anything nice. The British musicians present are no slouches. There's a Don Fagerquist like lyrical trumpet noodling underneath on "Love Is Like a Breeze", a pleasant refrain composed by Civisca, as well as a good trombone solo on "I Wish You Love". It's on romantic ballads such as this one and "If I Ruled the World", where the strings come in and they do so tastefully. A nod to Charles Calello who conducted the large assembly, but most of all for his fresh, contemporary arrangements of familiar material. Michael Civisca has a considerable set of chops making Love Is...Like a Breeze a welcome addition to the roster of highly listenable male vocalist albums. Recommended. ~ Dave Nathan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/love-islike-a-breeze-michael-civisca-neptune-music-review-by-dave-nathan.php

Personnel: Michael Civisca - Vocal; Charles Calello - Arranger/Conductor; 80 piece orchestra

Love Is Like a Breeze

Ari Hoenig - Conner's Days

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:25
Size: 126,7 MB
Art: Front

(1:57)  1. Conner's Days
(5:53)  2. All the Things You Are
(6:04)  3. Anymore
(5:02)  4. Prelude to a Kiss
(5:33)  5. For Tracy
(5:10)  6. Figuration
(4:04)  7. Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered
(5:07)  8. All of You
(6:28)  9. Guernsey St. Gooseneck
(4:22) 10. In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning
(2:25) 11. Up
(2:14) 12. Conner's Days Reprise

"As a kid, I used to take trips to the west coast with my parents, visiting family friends and camping at national parks etc… This trio met in 2017, began playing gigs together and soon we had our first “West Coast Tour” at the end of 2017. We repeated the experience in 2018 with fewer mistakes and a deeper musical repertoire. Conner was there from the first trio tour and for the following tour as well. As a kind soul who appreciated the music, he drove us around in Southern California from gig to gig and offered us nice accommodations. He will always be directly associated in my mind with our west coast touring tradition." ~ Ari Hoenig https://www.freshsoundrecords.com/ari-hoenig-albums/46955-conner-s-days-digifile.html

Personnel: Ari Hoenig (drums), Nitai Hershkovits (piano), Or Bareket (bass).

Conner's Days