Wednesday, September 25, 2019

Eddie 'Lockjaw' Davis, Harry 'Sweets' Edison - Jawbreakers

Styles: Saxophone And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:29
Size: 96,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:13)  1. OO-EE!
(5:18)  2. Broadway
(6:34)  3. Jawbreakers
(3:33)  4. Four
(4:38)  5. Moolah
(4:42)  6. A Gal In Calico
(5:54)  7. I've Got A Crush On You
(5:34)  8. Close Your Eyes

Harry "Sweets" Edison and Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis always made for a logical combination for both had immediately recognizable sounds and could say an awful lot with one note. This early collaboration (reissued on CD), their first joint recording, finds the pair joined by pianist Hugh Lawson, bassist Ike Isaacs and drummer Clarence Johnston. 

The repertoire (three basic Edison originals plus five jazz standards) serves as strong vehicles for swinging solos with highlights including "Broadway," "Four" and "A Gal in Calico." Easily recommended to straightahead jazz fans as are the later Sweets-Lockjaw recordings. 
~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/jawbreakers-mw0000312066

Personnel:  Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis - tenor saxophone; Harry "Sweets" Edison - trumpet; Hugh Lawson - piano; Ike Isaacs - bass; Clarence Johnston - drums

Jawbreakers

Zee Avi - Ghostbird

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:36
Size: 82,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:52)  1. Swell Window
(3:23)  2. Anchor
(3:53)  3. 31 Days
(3:40)  4. Milestone Moon
(2:20)  5. Siboh Kitak Nangis
(3:15)  6. The Book Of Morris Johnson
(2:28)  7. Madness
(2:39)  8. Bag Of Gold
(3:35)  9. Concrete Wall
(2:55) 10. Roll Your Head In The Sun
(3:32) 11. Stay In The Clouds

Frequently, debut albums are interesting but simply do not fulfill their artistic potential. This is the case with Zee Avi’s self-titled 2009 debut. While interesting and flush with Avi’s lovely voice the songs ventured at times into a cloying cuteness. The listener was tempted to wish for a more mature, jazzier version of Avi. Luckily, 2011 gives us Ghostbird, an 11-song meditation that only gets better upon replay. One part island breeze and one part classic jazz, Ghostbird sounds like a record you would find in your grandmother’s attic, the work of some jazz age ingénue. But, no, you’re listening to Avi, a twentysomething native of Malaysia in possession of an old-soul voice. It would be easy to dismiss this music as easy listening, one more Jack Johnson-style veg-out disc, but the sheer beauty of her floaty alto voice and shimmering arrangements help it stand out and stand up to repeat listens.Opener “Swell Window” captures attention from the start, with its chime-like lyrical repetition. “31 Days” pops up a few tracks later, a meditation on growing up: “At the ripe age of 17/I moved into that big, bad city,” she croons. Later she learns “I’m half crazy/you’re too sane.” This has been done before, of course, but the earnestness in Avi’s delivery sells it.“Siboh Kitak Nangis” best exemplifies Avi’s smoky jazz skills. All the while, its foreign lyrics hypnotize in the way that Sigur Rós’s Icelandic wanderings do. A few tracks are, yes, cute (particularly “The Book of Morris Johnson”), but “Concrete Wall” pays back your patience in spades, Avi giving one side of a lovers’ quarrel with a darkness that has eluded her before. Its smoldering passive aggression has a mature tone that suits her. Jaw-dropping closer “Stay in the Clouds” features strong, clear strings and a throaty rasp of a jazz-throwback vocal. Singing softer in her higher register, Avi intones, “Can I please stay in the clouds forever/‘cause I really like it here,” an almost cruel irony when the song must, inevitably,end. Fortunately, you can hit repeat, and you will. ~ Megan Ritt https://consequenceofsound.net/2011/09/album-review-zee-avi-ghostbird/

Ghostbird

Harold Mabern - The Leading Man

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:01
Size: 126,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:24)  1. Yes or No
(4:40)  2. Save the Best for Last
(6:48)  3. Full House
(6:27)  4. She/Mr.Lucky
(7:36)  5. Alone Together
(6:11)  6. The Man from Hyde Park
(6:17)  7. B & B
(7:17)  8. T-Bone Steak
(4:17)  9. Mercury Retro

Since his emergence onto the New York scene in 1959, pianist Harold Mabern has become one of the few true living jazz stylists on the piano. Having played with everyone from Lionel Hampton to Miles Davis, Sonny Rollins, Wes Montgomery, and Lee Morgan, Mabern has the experience and the depth of knowledge sufficient to be called a master. There is no one on the scene who sounds like him, and his sense of lyricism, rhythm, time, and the entire range of dynamics in his playing attract other players as well as listeners. The Leading Man, issued in 1993, is considered a classic, both for its selection of material and the performances of the various ensembles Mabern assembled for the date. But there is something else, too nowhere in Mabern's recorded catalog is there a performance like this from him. His playing, while always inspired, is revelatory in its sense of full orchestration and the shifting timbres of his solos against the bassline (played by Ron Carter). Also on this set are drummer Jack DeJohnette, alto man Bill Easley, fellow Memphian and trumpeter Bill Mobley, guitarist Kevin Eubanks, and vocalist Pamela Baskin-Watson. With the exception of DeJohnette and Carter, all the other players rotate on this stunning collection. The standout track is Montgomery's "Full House," which features Eubanks and Mabern trading eights, then fours, then slipping into solo breaks at the same time, in close harmony and gliding through the arpeggios like a skater on ice. The medley of "She" and "Mr. Lucky," by George Shearing and Henry Mancini, respectively, is a chance for Mabern to show both his lyrical and dynamic abilities by tracing the melodies of each tune through the other, then harmonically combining them in rhythmic patterns of graceful elegance. Easley gets the chance to reveal the depth of his modal style on Wayne Shorter's "Yes or No." Mabern slips phrases from McCoy Tyner's comp book into the body of the tune, but the harmonic architecture and the interval changes in and out of mode are all his. Easley sets the bar high and delivers by blowing through those harmonies, not inside them. There is a bit of everything here, from the aforementioned exercises to the greasy funk of Jimmy Smith's "T-Bone Steak" to Mabern's compositions such as "B&B," where Mobley plays with the emotion of Chet Baker and the melodic chops of Fats Navarro. The last tune, "Mercury Retro," is one of Mabern's too. A piano solo, it begins as an exercise in dissonant counterpoint, transforming itself inside of five minutes into a jazz ballad that becomes a boogie-woogie blues to a classical rondo and even a prelude and fugue; it's just amazing. You never get the feeling the guy is showing off, either. The Leading Man proves beyond the shadow of a doubt that Mabern is just that. ~ Thom Jurek https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-leading-man-mw0000121742

Personnel: Harold Mabern – piano; Ron Carter – bass; Jack DeJohnette – drums;  Bill Mobley – trumpet, flugelhorn; Bill Easley – alto sax; Kevin Eubanks – guitar; Pamela Baskin-Watson – vocals

R.I.P.
Born: March 20, 1936, Memphis,Tennessee,United States
Died: September 19, 2019

The Leading Man

Sam Harris - Interludes

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:27
Size: 110,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:28)  1. Prelude: Drone
(3:50)  2. Incantation
(3:20)  3. Ataraxia
(2:47)  4. Calls
(3:28)  5. Louis Wain
(1:21)  6. Interlude: Incidental Music
(2:25)  7. Manul at Rest
(3:47)  8. Spells
(1:51)  9. Manul at Sea
(4:12) 10. Chthonos
(5:15) 11. The Hermit Darger
(2:24) 12. No Hay Banda
(1:39) 13. Manul in Space
(6:33) 14. Postlude

2014 is shaping up to be a big year for pianist Sam Harris: first off, he has already played on two of the year’s most critically-acclaimed new releases, Rudy Royston’s 303 (Greenleaf) and Ambrose Akinmusire’s the imagined savior is far easier to paint (Blue Note). Harris is more than just a sideman on these records; his harmonies give each one their distinctive color and feel, and he has been duly recognized for these contributions. In his review of 303, Nate Chinen of The New York Times singled out Harris as a “… strong voice in ascendence.” Meanwhile, while listening to Akinmusire’s new album, Steve Smith of the Times and Time Out New York tweeted this: Mmm. Becca Stevens, Ambrose Akinmusire, Sam Harris and strings. Yes, yes, yes. Steve Smith (@nightafternight) March 6, 2014. Secondly, Harris has just released his debut album as a leader, Interludes (Fresh Sound). The style and personality that shines through on 303 and imagined savior comes out in full force here. All of the tracks on this album are Harris originals, and he demonstrates a sense of form that is unique among his peer group. Rather than constructing tunes that stretch into vehicles for instrumental solos, Harris creates concise and intimate vignettes: tone poems for a chamber ensemble of jazz instruments. He expands typical post-bop piano harmony into new territory, with curious dissonances and asymmetrical spacings one part Herbie Hancock, one part Paul Bley. He plays with texture in interesting ways, using vintage keyboards like the mellotron and Fender Rhodes to create a near-symphonic palette. He builds up intricate rhythmic grids and breaks them down again with equal aplomb. Interludes is thus a perfect descriptor of Harris’s music: a connector between the mainstream and the avant-garde, between the formal and the fanciful. As fans of The Jazz Gallery know, Harris has been honing this unique sound on the Gallery’s stage for several years now as both a leader and sideman. On Thursday, Harris will perform two sets as a belated celebration for the release of Interludes. While the album features contributions from saxophonists Roman Filiu and Ben van Gelder, Harris will present the music on Thursday with his trio featuring Martin Nevin on bass and Craig Weinrib on drums. Come out to hear Harris’s memorable and atmospheric themes stripped down to an elemental form. http://www.jazzspeaks.org/sam-harris-interludes/

Personnel: Sam Harris (piano, synthesizer), Ben Van Gelder (alto sax, bass clarinet), Roman Filiu (alto sax, flute), Martin Nevin (bass in all tracks except #8,7,12), Ross Gallagher (bass on #2,4,6,8,9,10,13), and Craig Weinrib (drums).

Interludes

Eric Alexander - Leap Of Faith

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:16
Size: 132,3 MB
Art: Front

( 8:06)  1. Luquitas
(11:08)  2. Mars
( 3:43)  3. Corazon Perdido
( 3:32)  4. Hard Blues
( 6:46)  5. Frenzy
( 8:14)  6. Big Richard
( 2:16)  7. Magyar
(13:28)  8. Second Impression

Renowned tenor saxophonist Eric Alexander's Leap of Faith stems in part from the decision (hesitantly made) to perform in a trio setting without piano hardly an uncommon arrangement these days but one that Alexander, a shining light on the New York music scene for more than two decades, has rarely explored, either in live gigs or on more than forty-plus albums as leader of his own groups. Also, Leap of Faith was recorded live (no safety net) at New York City's Jazz Gallery by Alexander, bassist Doug Weiss and drummer Johnathan Blake. As if that weren't enough to induce uncertainty, Alexander expanded the "leap" even further by performing only his own compositions and doing so in a free-wheeling mode that more or less moves him from his customary post-bop comfort zone into realms that are more closely associated with John Coltrane, Wayne Shorter or Pharoah Sanders, to name a few. Unlike many exponents of "free jazz," Alexander never loses touch with the harmonic framework that lends such music its aesthetic as well as cerebral appeal. Even when hanging on a discordant limb, he remains at heart an unapologetic straight-from-the-shoulder swinger, even on the cacophonous finale, "Second Impression," on which he sounds as unlike the "usual" Eric Alexander as on anything he has ever recorded. The same holds true on most other numbers, from the fleet and staccato opener, "Luquitas," to the equally propulsive "Second Impression." The tempo (but not the passion) slows to some degree on "Mars," whose harmonic progression, Alexander writes, is based on Bruno Mars' pop hit, "Finesse." A piano is used to good effect on "Corazon Perdido," as Alexander accompanies himself on the moody change-of-pace that leads to another wailer, the gritty "Hard Blues," followed by the mercurial and well-named "Frenzy." Alexander is bold and unrestrained on each of them, as he is on the more moderately paced "Big Richard" and "Magyar," the last based on themes from Bela Bartok's "Music for Strings, Percussion and Celeste." While Blake solos brightly on "Luquitas," and Weiss on "Big Richard," it is Alexander's robust and (unusually) strident voice that animates every number. Leap of Faith traverses new and unexplored territory, for Alexander and his fans, and it is they who must decide whether that leap has thrust him forward or backward. No definitive conclusion will be drawn here. The stars are for Alexander who even in this atypical framework is never less than very good. ~ Jack Bowers https://www.allaboutjazz.com/leap-of-faith-eric-alexander-giant-step-arts-review-by-jack-bowers.php

Personnel: Eric Alexander: tenor saxophone; Doug Weiss: bass; Johnathan Blake: drums.

Leap Of Faith