Friday, September 20, 2019

Kenny Drew Jr. - Portraits of Charles Mingus & Thelonious Monk

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:43
Size: 139,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:17)  1. Work
(6:41)  2. Ruby My Dear
(9:05)  3. Peggy's Blue Skylight
(3:50)  4. Light Blue
(5:36)  5. Trinkle-Tinkle
(4:19)  6. Nobody Knows (The Bradley I Know)
(7:41)  7. Farewell Farwell
(7:29)  8. Eclipse
(7:04)  9. Weird Nightmare
(3:36) 10. Skippy

This is one of Kenny Drew, Jr.'s finest recordings. Teamed in a trio with bassist Lynn Seaton (whose bowed solos are a constant highlight) and drummer Marvin "Smitty" Smith, Drew performs five Thelonious Monk songs and five from Charles Mingus. Other than "Ruby, My Dear," none of the tunes are played all that often, so it is a particular pleasure hearing Drew dig into such songs as "Work," "Trinkle-Tinkle," "Skippy," "Nobody Knows," and "Farewell Farwell." The Mingus tunes, in particular, sound fresh, new, and transformed in the piano trio setting. Drew Jr. displays both the technique and the imagination to make this often-difficult music sound effortless and logical. Highly recommended. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/portraits-of-mingus-monk-mw0000173799

Personnel:  Piano – Kenny Drew Jr.; Double Bass – Lynn Seaton; Drums – Marvin "Smitty" Smith

Portraits of Charles Mingus & Thelonious Monk

Katie Thiroux - Off Beat

Styles: Vocal, Post Bop
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:36
Size: 114,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:15)  1. Off Beat
(5:23)  2. When Lights Are Low
(5:08)  3. Why Did I Choose You?
(5:59)  4. Slow Dance with Me
(5:40)  5. Brotherhood of Man
(3:59)  6. Ray's Idea
(5:54)  7. Some Cats Know
(4:53)  8. When the Wind Was Green
(4:57)  9. Happy Reunion
(4:24) 10. Willow Weep for Me

Katie Thiroux has studied with jazz vocalist Tierney Sutton and bassist John Clayton, and the bassist/vocalist was awarded a scholarship to the Berklee, later teaching at the esteemed College of Music. Her resume is as impressive as it gets, but this is not a woman who rests on her laurels. Her instruments are her calling cards. Off Beat is her sophomore album and is quite impressive. The core lineup of pianist Justin Kauflin and drummer Matt Witek is augmented by the brilliant clarinetist/tenor saxophonist Ken Peplowski, as well as saxophonist Roger Neumann. The ten-song program is filled with familiar and not-so-familiar songs, and mixes vocal tunes with instrumentals. The results are glorious. The title cut opens the program and sets the stage; the old June Christy tune is given a finger-snapping reading that sees Peplowski, Kauflin and Witek backing Thiroux as she sings, "just 'cause I'm different doesn't mean I'm wrong." On Benny Carter's "When Lights Are Low," Thiroux owns the song. Her phrasing has just the right amount of simultaneous tenderness and swing, while Kauflin's solo is a perfect foil. "Why Did I Choose You?," from the 1946 film The Yearling, is a tender ballad. The Thiroux-penned "Slow Dance With Me" is a medium-tempo instrumental, with the band invited to stretch out; everyone shines. An instrumental take on Frank Loesser's "Brotherhood Of Man" is followed by Thiroux scatting on "Ray's Idea," also featuring a delicious clarinet solo. On Leiber and Stoller's "Some Cats Know," Peplowski blows a smoky tenor behind Thiroux's snazzy, lazy vocal ("some cats know how to make the honey flow but if a cat don't know a cat don't know"). "When the Wind Was Green," a Frank Sinatra vehicle with the lyrics "When the wind was red like a summer wine, when the wind was red like your lips on mine, it caressed my face and it tossed my hair, you were there," is given a hip reading that does the original proud. Again, Peplowski's clarinet is prominent. Roger Neumann trades tenor lines with Peplowski on Duke Ellington's classic and classy "Happy Reunion," under which Thiroux and Witek are joined by Kauflin's perfect accompaniment. Closing with "Willow Weep For Me," Thiroux plays bass and sings, unaccompanied. Her bass work, in particular, is impressive. A highly recommended disc by a rising star in the jazz firmament. ~ Mark E.Gallo https://www.allaboutjazz.com/off-beat-katie-thiroux-capri-records-review-by-mark-e-gallo.php

Personnel: Katie Thiroux: bass, voice; Ken Peplowski: tenor saxophone, clarinet; Roger Neumann: tenor and soprano saxophones; Justin Kauflin; piano; Matt Witek: drums.

Off Beat

George Wallington - Variations

Styles: Piano Jazz 
Year: 1954/2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:08
Size: 108,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:28)  1. Before Dawn
(2:50)  2. If I Love Again
(3:04)  3. Your Laughter
(3:20)  4. Morning Dew
(2:37)  5. Busman's Holiday
(4:36)  6. My Funny Valentine
(4:20)  7. Ever Loving Blues
(5:23)  8. Variations
(3:45)  9. Autumn In New York
(4:25) 10. Marcel The Furrier
(3:19) 11. Invitation
(3:24) 12. Moonlight In Vermont
(2:31) 13. Alone Together

George Wallington was one of the first and best bop pianists, ranking up there with Al Haig, just below Bud Powell. He was also the composer of two bop standards that caught on for a time: "Lemon Drop" and "Godchild." Born in Sicily, Wallington and his family moved to the U.S. in 1925. He arrived in New York in the early '40s and was a member of the first bop group to play on 52nd Street, Dizzy Gillespie's combo of 1943-1944. After spending a year with Joe Marsala's band, Wallington played with the who's who of bop during 1946-1952, including Charlie Parker, Serge Chaloff, Allan Eager, Kai Winding, Terry Gibbs, Brew Moore, Al Cohn, Gerry Mulligan, Zoot Sims, and Red Rodney. He toured Europe with Lionel Hampton's ill-fated big band of 1953, and during 1954-1960 he led groups in New York that included among its up-and-coming sidemen Donald Byrd and Jackie McLean (the latter succeeded by Phil Woods). Then, in 1960, Wallington gave up on the music business altogether and retired to work in his family's air-conditioning company. 24 years later he re-emerged, recording three albums of original material before time ran out. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/george-wallington-mn0000645514/biography

Personnel: George Wallington (piano); Curly Russell (bass); Art Taylor (drums); Joseph Livoisi (violin);  David Uchitel (viola);  William Eder (cello);  Clyde Lombardi (bass)

Variations

Thomas Hutchings, Camden Hughes - Introspective

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:26
Size: 130,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:50)  1. Blackbird
(6:52)  2. Groove City
(5:47)  3. Going Home
(5:22)  4. Make You Feel My Love
(7:16)  5. Wimpzilla 2015
(7:00)  6. Cat Time Blues
(5:50)  7. #49 with Black Beans
(5:57)  8. Broomsticks
(6:28)  9. Introspective

Some really beautiful & fun music to listen to influenced by Gene Harris & Grover Washington, Jr.with very high level of production quality. It’s a very raw, rich, full sounding jazzy & funky album. https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/thomashutchingscamdenhug

Personnel: Camden Hughes-Piano, Wurlitzer, Rhodes; Thomas Hutchings-Tenor & Soprano saxophone; Dylan Sundstrom-Upright & Electric Bass; David Gluck-Drums; Micah Stevens-Guitar; Emily Braden Vocals on Cat Time Blues

Introspective

Avery Sharpe - 400: an African American Musical Portrait

Styles: Vocal, Hard Bop
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:35
Size: 133,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:03)  1. Arrival
(4:51)  2. Is There A Way Home
(5:36)  3. Colonial Life
(3:02)  4. Fiddler
(5:14)  5. Antebellum
(7:15)  6. A New Music
(5:35)  7. Harlem And The War To End All Wars
(6:54)  8. Blues and World War II
(6:34)  9. Aint Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around
(6:25) 10. 500

In 1619 the White Lion, a British privateer which had just successfully raided a Spanish slave ship, arrived in the Jamestown colony with its contraband cargo of twenty-some African slaves. Thus began the tumultuous legacy of the African American experience in North America a four-hundred-year saga that bassist Avery Sharpe traces skilfully and poignantly on 400: An African American Musical Portrait. Sharpe has never been reluctant to acknowledge the forces that have shaped him musically and culturally. His Legends and Mentors (JKNM Records, 2008) paid tribute to three of his longtime musical colleagues and teachers, McCoy Tyner, Archie Shepp and Yusef Lateef. But consider also his multiple efforts to draw deeply from the well of the black experience in America; projects like Extended Family II: Thoughts of My Ancestors (JKNM Records, 1995) and Epic Ebony Journey (JKNM Records, 2001) sought out the enduring traits of African Americans' resilience and fortitude, locating them within the profound resources of African culture and seeing their evolution through black Americans' various struggles and triumphs. However, those earlier albums seem a mere prelude to 400. This is truly Sharpe's statement record, with a sweeping historical vision conveyed through a well-defined series of ten musical vignettes that encompass four centuries of African American life. It is an ambitious undertaking, to be sure. 

The album has a "family" feel, not only due to the presence of veteran associates like saxophonist Don Braden, drummer Ronnie Burrage, and pianist Zaccai Curtis, all of whom have collaborated previously with Sharpe. Just as important is the "Extended Family Choir," consisting largely of Sharpe's family members, who offer valuable emotional strength and musical heft on four of the cuts. His brother, Kevin Sharpe, directs the ensemble, while his niece, Sofia Rivera, has a particularly stirring turn on an emphatic spoken-word part on "Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around," Sharpe's take on the traditional civil rights anthem, which invokes the substantial history of African American protest from the Jim Crow period to Black Lives Matter. The choir's presence on the first two tracks, "Arrival" and "Is There a Way Home," is just as effective, offering a visceral articulation of the fear and foreboding that accompanied slaves' early lives in the colonies along with the burgeoning sustenance for resistance they began to find by looking homeward to the African continent. Sharpe's songwriting strategies are smart ones, utilizing a wide stylistic range to embrace as much of the African American musical tradition as possible. African rhythms and instrumentation (notably, Tendai Muparutsa on the djembe) enliven "Arrival" and "Is There a Way Home," while later historical moments see other idioms emerge. "Fiddler" has both classical and folkish elements, as violinists Kevin Zhou and Sophia Jeongyoon Han give a glimpse of slaves' nascent musical expressions, whereas "A New Music" signals the presence of early jazz through a stately rag from Curtis that segues into jaunty New Orleans swing. Through it all, a spirit of strength and endurance is undeniable, with moments of brightness which continually lighten the music. Guitarist Kevin Eubanks is an essential presence in this regard; even on "Arrival," a track that could easily succumb to despair, Eubanks' nimble acoustic flourishes suggest the possibilities of hope and potential, as they do on several of the cuts. Braden, too, has some energizing moments, soloing fervently on "Arrival" and undertaking a bop-based strut on "Blues and World War II." Fittingly, the album's last track, "500," features strong modern jazz fueled by a post-bop sensibility. It points beyond the album's historical trajectory, both musically and politically, and makes clear that the African American story, like that of jazz itself, is a narrative that is very much still unfolding. ~ Troy Dostert https://www.allaboutjazz.com/400-an-african-american-musical-portrait-avery-sharpe-jknm-records-review-by-troy-dostert.php

Personnel: Avery Sharpe: double bass, vocals; Kevin Eubanks: acoustic and electric guitar; Don Braden: tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, flute; Ronnie Burrage: drums and percussion; Tendai Muparutsa: djembe; Duane Eubanks: trumpet, flugelhorn; Zaccai Curtis: piano; Davis Whitfield: piano (8); Kevin Zhou: violin; Sophia Jeongyoon Han: violin; Kevin Sharpe, Shaina Paris, Sofia Rivera, Wanda Rivera, Heshima Moja, Robert Rivera: vocals (1, 2, 5, 9).

400: an African American Musical Portrait