Tuesday, September 17, 2019

Grant Green - Slick! (Live at Oil Can Harry's)

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:04
Size: 154,0 MB
Art: Front

( 9:03)  1. Now’s The Time - Live
(26:04)  2. How Insensitive (Insensatez) - Live
(31:57)  3. Medley: Vulcan Princess / Skin Tight / Woman’s Gotta Have It / Boogie On Reggae Woman / For the Love of Money - Live

Resonance's Slick! Live at Oil Can Harry's presents recordings made on September 5, 1975 at the Vancouver, British Columbia club Oil Can Harry's. Grant Green spent much of his final years on the road, but after he left Blue Note in 1974 he wasn't recorded much: just two other records, both studio sessions. Slick! represents his latest-known live recording, and it undercuts the conventional wisdom that the guitarist frittered away his final years. Supported by Ronnie Ware on bass, Emmanuel Riggins on electric piano, drummer Greg Williams, and percussionist Gerald Izzard, Green is thoroughly within his jazz-funk groove, as he bends Charlie Parker's "Now's the Time" to fit his new style. "Now's the Time" finds a counterpart in a lovely, relaxed version of Antonio Carlos Jobim's "How Insensitive," which rides its mellow rhythms for upwards of 30 minutes. Still, the centerpiece -- and perhaps the best indication of how Green worked in the latter stages of his career -- is a half-hour medley blending Stanley Clarke's "Vulcan Princess," the Ohio Players' "Skin Tight," Bobby Womack's "Woman's Gotta Have It," Stevie Wonder's "Boogie on Reggae Woman," and the O'Jays' "For the Love of Money." Here, there are no borders between jazz, R&B, bop, and funk, and it not only cooks, but the solos by Green and Riggins are dexterous and surprising, lending Slick! real substance in addition to being a funky good time. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine https://www.allmusic.com/album/slick%21-live-at-oil-can-harrys-mw0003168857

Personnel: Guitar – Grant Green; Bass – Ronnie Ware; Drums – Greg Williams

Slick! (Live at Oil Can Harry's)

Jack Teagarden - Meet Me Where They Play The Blues

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:49
Size: 114,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:18)  1. King Porter Stomp
(3:11)  2. Eccentric
(4:13)  3. Davenport Blues
(3:24)  4. Original Dixieland One-Step
(5:18)  5. Bad Actin' Woman
(4:45)  6. Mis'ry And The Blues
(4:24)  7. High Society
(2:16)  8. Music To Love By
(3:51)  9. Meet Me Where They Play The Blues
(4:59) 10. Riverboat Shuffle
(4:45) 11. Blue Funk
(4:19) 12. Milenberg Joys

Jack Teagarden was a trombone player, singer, and band leader whose career spanned from the 1920’s territory and New York jazz scenes to shortly before his death in 1964. Teagarden was not a successful band leader, which may explain why he is not as widely known as some other jazz trombonists, but his unusual singing style influenced several other important jazz singers, and he is widely regarded as the one of the greatest, and possibly the greatest, trombonist in the history of jazz. Teagarden was born in 1905 in Vernon, Texas. Born Weldon Lee Teagarden or Weldon John Teagarden (more sources say Weldon Lee, but John makes more sense considering his nickname), Jack’s earliest performances were working with his mother Helen, who played ragtime piano, in theaters. His siblings also became professional musicians: his younger sister Norma played piano, his younger brother Charlie, trumpet, and his brother Clois (“Cub”), drums. Jack Teagarden began playing piano at age five, took up baritone at age seven or eight, and had settled on trombone by age ten. Some sources claim his unusual style of trombone playing stemmed from the fact that he began playing before he was big enough to play in the farther positions. He moved to Chappell, Nebraska, with his family in 1918, but by 1921 was back in Texas playing with Peck Kelley’s Bad Boys. Through the early and mid 1920’s, he played with several other territory bands, including Doc Ross’s Jazz Bandits, and the Orginal Southern Trumpeters. My sources disagree concerning which band brought Teagarden to New York, and with whom he made his earliest recording, but there is agreement that he arrived in New York in 1927 and was playing with Ben Pollack’s orchestra by 1928. Although Teagarden enjoyed a long career, it was at this point that he had the greatest effect on the history of jazz. The reaction to his unique style of trombone- playing appears to have been both immediate and widespread. Historians and critics widely agree: “No one disputes Jack Teagarden’s place in the trombone pantheon”(Morgenstern, 2004, p.292). Teagarden “is considered by many critics to be the finest of all jazz trombonists....”(Kernfeld, 1988) Teagarden “single-handedly created a whole new way of playing the trombone “ a parallel to Earl Hines and the piano comes to mind “ and did so as early as the mid-twenties and evidently largely out of his own youthful creative resources.” His unusual approach to trombone playing had both a technical and a stylistic component. His technical approach in particular was quite unorthodox. A short digression into the mechanics of trombone playing will explain why. The trombone slide has seven positions where traditionally notated (chromatic scale) pitches can be played. Each position causes the instrument to be a slightly different length, and the instrument can play a (different) harmonic series at each length.

The notes in any harmonic series are much closer together in the upper part of the series. This has a practical effect on trombone playing: in the lower register of the instrument, there are fewer notes in any given position, and often only one position in which a note can be played. In the upper register, notes in any position are closer together, and many notes can be played in more than one position. New Orleans-style trombonists tended to play in the lower range of the instrument, where it is simply impossible to change notes as quickly as a trumpet or clarinet does; entire arms can’t move as fast as a single finger. So the traditional trombone stylists specialized in playing simpler accompaniment parts featuring cute special effects like glissandos. Jack Teagarden apparently did not like this “tailgate” style of trombone-playing. Instead, he played higher in the instrument’s range, using mostly the first and second positions, and rarely moving beyond fourth position. Using “alternate” positions and an embouchure that was apparently extremely flexible (meaning he could change the pitch of a note using only small changes in his lips, mouth, and face muscles), Teagarden could play in the way that appealed to him. It apparently also greatly appealed to other musicians as soon as they heard it, but it relied so heavily on using unusual slide positions and on his ability to bend notes with his unusually flexible embouchure, that his style is generally considered to be literally “inimitable.” Teagarden’s style is also often described using words such as lyrical, vocal, legato, relaxed, fluent and smooth. The two premier trombonists on the New York scene when Teagarden arrived had also already rejected “tailgate” style playing, and there is disagreement about how much Miff Mole and Jimmy Harrison influenced Teagarden. But Teagarden appears to have arrived in New York with a clear idea of how he wanted to sound, and although the three players do seem to have influenced each other somewhat, they each also retained their distinctive styles. Harrison also played in the upper register of the instrument, so that he could play fast trumpet-style licks, but his playing is still firmly in the jazz brass tradition, with hard, clear articulations. Mole also specialized in technically spectacular playing, with staccato phrasing, big leaps, and surprising note choices. Teagarden’s gently-articulated style gives the trombone a lyrical, almost vocal quality (without having the extremely “sweet” ballad-type sound that, for example, Tommy Dorsey made famous) and has in fact been compared to his own (Teagarden’s) singing style. And although his playing style was also technically brilliant, featuring difficult techniques such as lip trills, his laid-back, vocal style of delivery “ often described even as a “lazy” sound “ effectively disguised his technical proficiency (“lazy and lightning-quick”). One source reports that Tommy Dorsey specialized in sweet ballads specifically because he felt his jazz was “inferior next to Jack Teagarden” and that Glenn Miller “de-emphasized his own trombone playing” after a stint playing beside Teagarden in Pollack’s orchestra.

Although it was not as important an influence as his trombone playing, Jack Teagarden’s approach to singing was also unique and influential. Collier says he “was the leading, and virtually the only, white male singer in jazz.” Yanow lists him with Louis Armstrong and Bing Crosby (who was a friend and was apparently influenced by Teagarden’s style) as “the most important male vocalists of the early 1930’s.” Schuller calls him “a remarkable and wholy unique singer, undoubtedly the best and only true jazz singer next to Billie Holiday, Cab Calloway, and Louis Armstrong (whom he, unlike dozens of others did not imitate).” This may be overstatement, but it does underscore a fact that all sources seem to agree on; like his trombone style, his singing style seems to have been both uniquely his own and authentic bluesy jazz. Both were deeply affected by a knowledge of and ease with the blues that was available to few white players of the time. The Texas town in which Teagarden grew up had a large black population, and he must have heard spirituals, work songs, and blues from a very early age; in fact, revivals were commonly held within earshot of his home. It was this background that was probably the greatest influence on all of Teagarden’s work, both vocal and instrumental, and his use of the blues idiom was so convincing that Fletcher Henderson apparently suspected that Teagarden was “colored”. As mentioned above, by the summer of 1928, Teagarden was playing with Ben Pollack’s orchestra, and he stayed with Pollack, performing and recording, for nearly five years. During this period, he was involved in a large number of recordings, with Pollack’s orchestra, with other groups, and leading his own sessions. Teagarden particularly made some noteworthy contributions while working at this time with Eddie Condon. Teagarden was one of the musicians on the first interracial recording session, organized by Condon. Teagarden’s first vocal recording was made with Condon, and also the first recording featuring his use of a water glass as a mute. Teagarden had a mechanical bent and a life-long interest in tinkering with things, and he invented the water glass mute effect, in which the bell section of the trombone is removed and an empty water glass placed over the end of the instrument tubing (of the mouthpiece section). The effect is a stifled, plaintive sound which makes the instrument sound even more like a blues singer. Another interesting aspect of the recordings of this period is that they show very clearly that, unlikely many other jazz musicians of the time, Teagarden was a true improviser, giving notably different solos on different takes of the same piece “ even when the recordings were made on the same day.

Teagarden left Pollack in 1933, and signed a five-year contract with Paul Whiteman’s orchestra. It was a steady, well-paying job, for which Teagarden was apparently grateful; he seems to have been perpetually unlucky with both women and money, and had already experienced some personal financial problems. But the Whiteman group was not particularly musically inspired.The Teagarden brothers (Jack and trumpeter Charlie) are generally considered the only interesting jazzmen to have been part of it, and yet Jack also felt a little out of the limelight. He did some playing and recording with other groups at this time, most notably with his brother Charlie and saxophonist Frankie Trumbauer as the “Three T’s”. But Whiteman’s group kept him a little too busy doing highly- arranged popular music, and he left when his contract was up. This was the period when everybody who was anybody in jazz had their own band, so Jack Teagarden decided to organize his first band in 1939. Unfortunately, he had neither the dominant personality nor the business smarts to be a good bandleader, and by the end of that year he was already $46,000 in debt. Refusing to give up, he started a second band in early 1940, and this one he managed to keep going until late 1946, in spite of losing far too many good musicians to the draft. Unfortunately, this band also cannot really be considered a success. Desperate to keep afloat, the group played too many gigs at which they were expected to have a sweet, popular sound. Cut off from the developing edge of jazz, it had no real influence and produced few recordings of note. Hit hard by both the war and the competition from bebop, several of the more famous big bands called it quits in 1946, and so did Teagarden. He headed back to New York, and by 1947 was playing with Louis Armstrong’s All Stars, a smaller group that is considered to have been a leader in the anti- bebop traditional jazz “revival” movement. The All Stars did well, but Teagarden left in 1951, in order to once again put together his own band. 

This All Stars group, a sextet along the same lines as Armstrong’s All Stars, with various musicians including at times Earl Hines, Teagarden’s brother Charlie on trumpet and his sister Norma on piano, was also a success, touring both Europe and Asia and playing traditional jazz in a way that made it sound fresh and creative. Armstrong apparently considered Teagarden a friend, not a rival, and they continued to work together from time to time. Known affectionately as “Mr. T”, “Big T” (to brother Charlie’s “Little T”), “Jackson”, “Gate”, and “Big Gate” (again, Charlie was “Little Gate”), Jack Teagarden was by all accounts a big, easy- going, friendly man, well-liked throughout his career by his fellow musicians. At this point, he was also the grand old man of the instrument, well-respected both by traditionalists and (unlike many other traditionalist players) also by the more modern generation of trombonists. The “reunion” at the Monterey Jazz Festival, with his brother Charlie, sister Norma, and even his mother, who played a few ragtime piano solos, is considered to be a celebration of the life of a great jazz musician. He died only a few months later of pneumonia, at the age of fifty eight, in New Orleans. Jack Teagarden’s most important recordings include the recording with Benny Goodman of “Basin Street Blues”, with Teagarden on both trombone and vocals, which included extra lyrics written by himself and Glenn Miller that later became a standard (and usually unattributed) part of the song lyrics. Teagarden’s recorded work as a trombone soloist is considered very consistently high quality, but the following are often mentioned in particular: “Knockin’ a Jug” (1929, with Louis Armstrong), “She’s a Great, Great Girl” (with Roger Wolfe Kahn), “Makin’ Friends” and “That’s a Serious Thing” (1928, with Eddie Condon), “The Sheik of Araby” (1930, with Red Nichols), “Beale Street Blues” (1931, with Joe Venuti and Eddie Lang), “Jack Hits the Road (1940, with Bud Freeman), and “St. James Infirmary” (1947, with Louis Armstrong). His recordings of “I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues”, “Texas Tea Party”, “A Hundred Years from Today”(all 1933), “Stars Fell on Alabama”(1934), “I Hope Gabriel Likes My Music” (1936), and “Nobody Knows the Trouble I’ve Seen” may be considered his best vocal offerings. “I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues” in particular became a signature piece for him. Since much of Teagarden’s best work was as a sideman rather than a leader, many of his best recordings are included in collections of other artists’ work. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/jackteagarden

Personnel: Trombone – Jack Teagarden;  Bass – Kass Malone, Walter Page; Clarinet – Edmond Hall, Kenny Davern; Drums – Jo Jones, Ray Bauduc; Guitar – Carl Kress; Piano – Dick Cary, Leonard Feather, Norma Teagarden; Trumpet – Dick Cary, Fred Greenleaf), Jimmy McPartland 

Meet Me Where They Play The Blues

Art Tatum - God Is In The House

Styles: Vocal, Piano Jazz
Year: 1973
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:42
Size: 108,6 MB
Art: Front

(2:21)  1. Georgia on My Mind
(1:44)  2. Beautiful Love
(1:05)  3. Laughing at Life
(3:07)  4. Sweet Lorraine
(4:10)  5. Fine and Dandy
(3:56)  6. Begin the Beguine
(3:37)  7. Mighty Lak a Rose
(4:05)  8. Knockin' Myself Out
(3:36)  9. Toledo Blues
(3:34) 10. Body and Soul
(3:30) 11. There'll Be Some Changes Made
(4:33) 12. Lady Be Good
(7:18) 13. Sweet Georgia Brown

Originally released in 1973, God Is in the House features live performances from the Jerry Newman collection of acetate discs and are fortunately in better technical quality than most of the music from Newman's archives. The remarkable Art Tatum is heard playing three brief, unaccompanied piano solos in 1940, three other numbers in which he is accompanied by Reuben Harris (beating out some quiet rhythms with whiskbrooms on a suitcase), and four duets with bassist-vocalist Chocolate Williams; Tatum has a brief vocal on "Knockin' Myself Out" and a more extensive one on "Toledo Blues," the only times he ever sang on record. In addition, Tatum and Williams back Ollie Potter (a pretty good if completely unknown singer) on "There'll Be Some Changes Made." Best of all are a pair of exciting trio numbers ("Lady Be Good" and a very memorable "Sweet Georgia Brown") in which Tatum stretches out with bassist Ebenezer Paul and the great, underrated trumpeter Frankie Newton. It is fascinating to hear Newton's playing on "Sweet Georgia Brown," which is fairly simple and calm, while Tatum sounds like a volcano behind him. Highly recommended. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/god-is-in-the-house-mw0000601802

Personnel:  Art Tatum – piano, vocals; Reuben Harris – percussion; Chocolate Williams – bass, vocals; Ollie Potter – vocals; Frankie Newton – trumpet; Ebenezer Paul – bass

God Is In The House

Robert Walter's 20th Congress - Spacesuit

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop 
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:06
Size: 83,7 MB
Art: Front

(0:23)  1. Spacesuit
(5:12)  2. Nerva and Dumbo
(4:53)  3. Posthuman
(4:21)  4. 13th Key
(4:00)  5. Emanate
(1:09)  6. Modifier
(4:27)  7. Chalk Giant
(4:37)  8. Current Futures
(6:03)  9. Most of All of Us
(0:57) 10. Electric Blanket

Keyboardist Robert Walter is like the ultimate sixth man in basketball a super-skilled player who comes off the bench to provide support and symmetry to a starting lineup. As the leader of his own 20th Congress quartet … well, he’s a great sixth man, and Spacesuit is the latest evidence thereof. A concept album of sorts inspired by the NASA program, it’s more an out-of-focus gaze skyward than a telescopic one. “Nerva and Dumbo,” named for experimental rockets, gets Spacesuit off the launch pad decently, with Walter’s Fender Rhodes electric piano echoing Herbie Hancock’s vintage ’70s funk work within bassist Victor Little and drummer Simon Lott’s shell-game rhythms and guitarist Chris Alford’s chords and solos. Yet Walter can’t resist more modern embellishments, which ultimately keep his mission grounded. Synthesizers dot the pop-ish “Posthuman” and frenetic “13th Key,” and they take away from the keyboardist’s otherwise compelling contributions on various pianos, organs, and clavinet. 

Programming also rears its head occasionally, making pieces such as “Chalk Giant” sound like an instrumental Devo tribute act. The most prominent part on “Current Futures” is a programmed white-noise drone that’s prime headache material, and the brief hidden closing track, “Electric Blanket,” is more annoying than entertaining. Walter neither needs nor uses such gimmicks on his best recorded work, like Galactic drummer Stanton Moore’s 2010 release Groove Alchemy, or in his stellar live outings with Phish bassist Mike Gordon’s band. 

The keyboardist’s best efforts, like these, are steeped in funk, a style that builds from the bottom up rather than shooting for the sky like Spacesuit. https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/robert-walters-20th-congress-spacesuit/

Spacesuit

Sugarpie And The Candymen - Sweet Classics

Styles: Vocal, Swing
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:59
Size: 127,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:54)  1. Chattanooga Choo Choo
(4:12)  2. Cheek To Cheek
(4:53)  3. In a Sentimental Mood
(3:18)  4. Anything Goes
(3:54)  5. A-Tisket, A-Tasket
(3:30)  6. Dream A Little Dream Of Me
(3:12)  7. My Heart Belongs To Daddy
(4:07)  8. Gee Baby, Ain't I Good To You
(3:11)  9. Dedicated to You
(2:56) 10. It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
(4:57) 11. Shiny Stocking
(3:22) 12. Stompin' At The Savoy
(7:04) 13. Bewitched
(3:22) 14. How High The Moon

The style of Sugarpie and the Candymen is the "progressive swing": a mixture of original songs and evergreen rearrangements of rock, with different influences but where the common denominator is swing. And it is with a celebration of swing that the band celebrates its eleventh birthday: instead of immersing the songs of today in a mythical sound past, they have plunged into them to retrieve a handful of classics of that unrepeatable period that were the Thirties. They are the songs of Cole Porter and Irving Berlin's Great American Songbook and Duke Ellington's and Benny Goodman's Era of Swing, in the DNA of every American music lover, as well as every self-respecting jazz fan. The first impulse came from the great Renzo Arbore: collaborating with the famous showman on his album Arbore Plus, Sugarpie and the Candymen recorded for the first time two old swing songs and the experience spurred them to continue. "We especially love playing live and the feeling of risk and freshness of improvisation, and we often open the concerts with a handful of these standards," they say. "At one point we realized that these were also part of our sound, yet we had never recorded them!" The love of "Sugarpie" Lara Ferrari for Ella Fitzgerald was another catalyst for the project. A-Tisket, A-Tasket was his first hit, in 1938, and she is linked to practically all the other songs on the record. Listening to the amazing performance of Lara, the lightness and the contagious joy of making music that were typical of Ella can almost be touched. The only way to recreate the energy and immediacy of a concert is to record all together, in a short time, without the usual sophisticated arrangements and the many vocal harmonies. A two-day jam session at the now familiar Elfo Studio, nestled in the Piacenza hills. The recipe is simple: beautiful songs, minimal structures and open to surprise. In fact the swinga band like never before, has fun and allows itself more extended and more daring. On the other hand, it's what he's been doing in concert for ten years now! Cherry on the (sugar) pie, Mauro Negri, an outstanding Mantuan clarinetist and saxophonist already with Enrico Rava, special guest in the studio and more and more often also in their live adventures, which gives a precious touch, both traditional and very modern. Here is Sweet Classics, the sixth album by Sugarpie and the Candymen and their personal tribute to the great classics of jazz and American song, reinterpreted with the usual freshness and irony that have characterized this highly original Italian swing quintet for over ten years. https://www.traxsource.com/title/1175876/sweet-classics

Sweet Classics