Thursday, September 19, 2019

Charlie Shavers - The Most Intimate

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1955
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:13
Size: 77,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:53)  1. Stella By Starlight
(2:54)  2. Ill Wind
(3:42)  3. Stormy Weather
(3:49)  4. Out Of Nowhere
(2:51)  5. Easy To Remember
(3:28)  6. Stardust
(3:13)  7. I Cover The Waterfront
(3:22)  8. Memories Of You
(3:15)  9. You're Mine You
(3:43) 10. Let's Fall In Love

Considering his stature, it is surprising that the exciting trumpeter Charlie Shavers did not lead more sessions throughout his career. This set, only his second LP as a leader, is purely mood music with concise and very melodic versions of ten familiar ballads. Shavers, who is backed by a large string orchestra, shows off the prettier side of his tone, but nothing all that stirring occurs. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-most-intimate-charlie-shavers-mw0000872848

Personnel: Trumpet – Charlie Shavers

The Most Intimate

Johanne Blouin - Lui

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:24
Size: 100,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:52)  1. Lui
(3:23)  2. J'ai besoin d'air
(2:14)  3. D'ailleurs et d'ici
(4:49)  4. Mon ange
(2:50)  5. Il était une fois des gens heureux
(4:42)  6. Les marins
(3:35)  7. Une autre fois
(2:42)  8. Notre sentier
(2:02)  9. Les enfants qui pleurent
(4:00) 10. Elle
(4:29) 11. Dors,Caroline
(4:41) 12. Pour un ami condamné

Canadian vocalist Johanne Blouin is a gifted and multi-dimensional performer who has found herself moving back and forth from jazz and pop to musical theater. Born to musician parents in Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec, in 1955, Blouin was interested in performing from a young age. Subsequently, she studied dance at the Royal Academy of Dance in Montreal, earned a B.A. in music from the Université de Montréal, and studied musical theater at the Banff School of Fine Arts. She first gained performance experience in the '70s singing cabaret in various clubs around Quebec as well as with the fusion ensemble Tasman. Later she joined the cast of the musical Starmania, which led to solo and commercial session work for television. In 1988, she released her debut album, Merci Félix, a tribute to French-Canadian folksinger and political activist Félix Leclerc, and a year later she released her sophomore self-titled album. Both albums garnered various ADISQ awards essentially Quebec's Grammy Awards and helped further her public persona. Since that time Blouin has released numerous recordings, including Everything Must Change in 2000 and Elle le Dira in 2007. ~ Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/artist/johanne-blouin-mn0000213249/biography

Lui

Bob James Trio - Espresso

Styles: Piano Jazz 
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:39
Size: 135,7 MB
Art: Front

(6:04)  1. Bulgogi
(7:04)  2. Shadow Dance
(5:31)  3. Ain't Misbehavin'
(3:31)  4. One Afternoon
(6:17)  5. Mister Magic
(5:07)  6. Topside
(4:00)  7. II Boccalone
(7:38)  8. Mojito Ride
(4:14)  9. Promenade
(4:43) 10. Boss Lady
(4:26) 11. Submarine

Bob James wrote "Angela," the theme song to the popular late-1970s/early 1980s television show, Taxi, a feather in the cap that introduced his sound to millions of listeners who might not ever slip a jazz CD into the stereo. For those with an ear and a love of jazz, he is probably most familiar for his work with the group Fourplay and saxophonist David Sanborn, along with a three record, mid-1970s stint with Creed Taylor's CTI Recordings, and three Grammy Awards. And throw in an innovative and overlooked jewel of an album, Grand Piano Canyon (Warner Brothers, 1990), into the resume. The pianist/composer/arranger lays claim to ongoing relevance with Expresso, his first studio recording as a leader since 2006's Urban Flamingo (Koch Records). And it's a piano trio affair, perhaps the purest and most challenging of instrumental formats, into which he adds his characteristically James-esque spicings. As always, James' sound displays a refinement, a polished sophistication and crisp production values. He embellishes, beautifully, the "trio sound" at times with sweet, keyboard orchestrated, post-recording backdrops, much in the mode of the 1970s CTI recording style. And like all of James' offerings, the sonic concept maintains a first-to-last-cut cohesion. The disc opens with the James original, "Bulgogi," a straight ahead piano trio offering with a catchy, fast-stepping groove, light-hearted and lovely, leading into the dark-hued "Shadow Dance," a beautiful, inward-looking tune enhanced by subtle and deftly applied orchestration. "Fats Wallers' "Ain't Misbehavin,'" one of two covers on an otherwise all Bob James set of originals, gets a surprisingly modern-esque reshaping; and "One Afternoon" brings a solemn, pastoral mood to the set, and features the diaphanous gorgeousness of a whispering keyboard string section seeping into the trio sound. James closes the show with "Submarine," a close younger sibling to his 1974 composition "Nautilus," a tune that has sampled its way into the hip-hop world on recordings by Jay Z, Tupac, and Wu Tang Clan and more. "Submarine" finds James sampling himself and recording over his rhythms and unrelenting grooves, staying, in his seventh decade as a professional musician, as relevant as ever. ~ Dan McClenaghan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/expresso-bob-james-evosound-review-by-dan-mcclenaghan.php

Personnel: Bob James: piano; piano, rhodes; synths; Billy Kilson: drums; Michael Palazollo: acoustic bass; Luisito Quintero: percussion overdubs; Angela Seates: featured oboe soloist; Hugh Char: additional; drum programming; Dave Stewart: additional keyboards; Mark Falchook: additional keyboards

Espresso

Bill Frisell - Good Dog, Happy Man

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:21
Size: 143,7 MB
Art: Front

(2:45)  1. Rain, Rain
(3:44)  2. Roscoe
(3:50)  3. Big Shoe
(8:52)  4. My Buffalo Girl
(6:10)  5. Shenandoah
(6:26)  6. Cadillac 1959
(5:17)  7. The Pioneers
(9:04)  8. Cold, Cold Ground
(5:31)  9. That Was Then
(4:21) 10. Monroe
(2:34) 11. Good Dog, Happy Man
(3:42) 12. Poem for Eva

Every note Bill Frisell plays or suggests offers an impressionistic soundtrack of the American vernacular. It is jazz only in the way improvisation is a reflection of sensibilities. But Frisell's music is really not just jazz. It swings over a wide swath of American musical forms: jazz, rock, grunge, blues, country, folk, bluegrass, even commercial orchestration. Call it a sort of 'sound Americana': peculiar, individual and unusually compelling. Good Dog Happy Man ideally documents another set of Frisell's colorful, commanding tone poems. It's something of a story in progress, one that took root in 1994's This Land and became clearer on 1997's Nashville and 1998's exquisite Gone, Just Like A Train (bassist Marc Johnson's outstanding Sounds of Summer Running probably counts too). Frisell, early in his two-decades career, offered a wholly individual sound, buffering a certain dissonance with a poetic melodicism. But, here he shows how he's evolved into one of the most melodic and memorable of stylists etching out something that is often pastoral, elegiac and, at times, oddly patriotic. These are the moods filmmakers co-opt for onscreen archetypes reaching pivotal moments and branded in all those TV ads for investment firms and prescription medicines. But Frisell keeps it honest. He sets the mood and offers the soundtrack. The listener is free to conceive his or her own impressions. 

Here, bassist Viktor Kruass (Allison's brother) and drummer/studio legend Jim Keltner return from last year's Gone trio aided by studio guitarist Greg Leisz on pedal steel, Dobro, steel guitar and mandolin and, in a welcome return, fellow Seattle resident Wayne Horvitz on organ. Frisell sticks mostly to electric or acoustic guitar and his 'meditations' are often buoyed by intriguing counterpoint: Horvitz's spikey organ comments on "My Buffalo Girl" and "Cadillac 1959," the brief primal utterances of "Roscoe" and the dream-team coupling with Ry Cooder on the lovely "Shenandoah." Frisell's melodies are quite often little more than sustained riffs, at once simple and perfectly structured and at other times, remotely familiar (for example, the Pretenders's "Back on the Chain Gang" is vaguely at the heart of "That Was Then"). Frisell is the only real notable soloist. As if in a Steve Reich construction, Frisell rarely strays far from the melody, or outside of the prevailing mood the unit conspires to create together. The point is the story reflections on feelings and meditations on moods. Darkness and light. A sense of honor with a sense of humor. It's hardly America as sketched by Louis L'Amour, Jim Thompson or a score of other American writers. Frisell isn't coming out of irony, bleakness, sarcasm or slight. Good Dog, Happy Man comes out of Frisell's evident love for things American and an encyclopedic grasp on expressing the ways Americans sense things. A triumph indeed. ~ Douglas Payne https://www.allaboutjazz.com/good-dog-happy-man-bill-frisell-nonesuch-records-review-by-douglas-payne.php?width=1920

Players: Bill Frisell: electric and acoustic guitars, loops and music boxes; Greg Leisz: pedal steel, Dobro, lap steel, Weissenborn, National steel guitar and mandolin; Wayne Horvitz: organ, piano, samples; Viktor Krauss: bass; Jim Keltner: drums and percussion; Ry Cooder: electric guitar, Ripley guitar on "Senandoah".

Good Dog, Happy Man

Charlie Apicella & Iron City - Groove Machine

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:13
Size: 107,1 MB
Art: Front

(6:28)  1. Three Sided
(6:36)  2. Space Madness
(6:26)  3. Hot Dog
(6:05)  4. Lemon Rind
(6:44)  5. Along the Southern Coast
(4:49)  6. Claypso Blue
(4:58)  7. Ironicity
(4:02)  8. Brother Elijah

On Groove Machine, Charlie Apicalla & Iron City serves up a gumbo of styles that run from New Orleans blues and Chicago funk to Motown and New York bop. The combination makes for a "groovy" listening experience road music that will keep the head nodding and the mind trucking. Apicella penned five of the eight numbers on the album. The other three writing credits go to Lou Donaldson, organist Radam Schwartz, and Willis "Gator" Jackson.

Apicella's standout guitar work glides through the various pieces with a joyful and easy twang. But the spotlight on this album shines on Schwartz's deft organ work. He too glides, both in his solos and in his accompaniment. But there's energy in his playing, subtle and laid back as it may be, and it gives each piece a special boost. Beyond the hands, Schwartz also gives the organ pedals a workout, walking the bass lines as easily as he creates the chordal background to many of his band mate's solos. The other members of Iron City add their own rollicking efforts as well, but never in a slap-happy manner. Instead, the playing on Groove Machine is crisp and dynamic, and although relaxed, there's a professional tightness to the playing that serves to enhance the various moods created. Take the cool rendering of "Three Sided," the boppish "Space Madness" (which ends with a scorching solo by Freddie Hendrix), or the rolling Donaldson song "Hot Dog," where Hendrix again blows hot followed by Schwartz's slide and glide solo. Each of these pieces demonstrate the ensemble's comfort with a mix of styles. The mix continues with the sexy and sensual "Lemon Rind," pushed along by the fluid work of saxophonist Gene Ghee and Hendrix, and funked up by Mayra Casales conga work, and it is followed by the peaceful "Along the Southern Coast," where violinist Amy Bateman joins Apicella in a warm duet before she gets her chance to solo. The number echos the beauty of most coastlines, with their rolling dunes, gentle breezes, and that special saltwater fragrance. 

Schwartz contributes the lively dance composition "Calypso Blue," which features a raucous duet between Casales and drummer Alan Korzin. Apicella's cool "Ironcity" pushes along like a speedy nighttime freeway drive and features Korzin on several breakaway solos. The album closes with Willis Jackson's "Brother Elijah," an up-tempo gospel number that bounces along like a beach ball in the stands at a baseball game. The music on Groove Machine will certainly brighten the day, and it goes well whether cruising down the highway or strolling down a sidewalk sipping on that special cup of joe. It's bright and sunny disposition is guaranteed to remind one that there is indeed a groovy somewhere over the rainbow. ~ Don Phipps https://www.allaboutjazz.com/groove-machine-charlie-apicella-oa2-records-review-by-don-phipps.php?width=1920

Personnel: Charlie Apicella: Guitar; Gene Ghee: Tenor Sax; Freddie Hendrix; Trumpet; Amy Bateman: violin; Radam Schwartz: Hammond Organ; Alan Korzin: Drums; Mayra Casales: Congas.

Groove Machine