Monday, October 21, 2019

Lee Konitz Quartet - Tranquility

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:08
Size: 79,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:56)  1. Stephanie
(3:12)  2. Memories of You
(4:57)  3. People Will Say We're In Love
(3:48)  4. When You're Smiling
(3:27)  5. Sunday
(5:26)  6. Lennie Bird
(6:10)  7. The Nearness of You
(3:09)  8. Jonquil

Lee Konitz' Verve label debut remains the purest expression of the sculpted, geometric aesthetic the altoist honed throughout the Eisenhower era crafted with startling precision and economy, Tranquility extols the virtues of mood and shape with Talmudic zeal, towering astride thought and expression. Supported by the bedrock rhythm section of bassist Henry Grimes and drummer Dave Bailey, Konitz and guitarist Billy Bauer weave melodies as intricate and ephemeral as spider webs. Rarely is music so profoundly cerebral also so deeply heartfelt. ~ Jason Ankeny https://www.allmusic.com/album/tranquility-mw0000765548

Personnel: Lee Konitz – alto saxophone; Billy Bauer – guitar; Henry Grimes – bass; Dave Bailey – drums

Tranquility

Chuck Hedges - Chicago Live

Styles: Clarinet Jazz 
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:35
Size: 149,3 MB
Art: Front

(7:57)  1. Blue Skies
(6:08)  2. I Want A Little Girl
(6:17)  3. Get Happy
(7:43)  4. Scuttlebutt
(4:48)  5. In A Sentimental Mood
(5:24)  6. I Hear Music
(4:30)  7. Daydream
(5:56)  8. Avalon
(5:17)  9. Sweet And Lovely
(3:28) 10. I Surrender Dear
(7:03) 11. Undecided

Chuck Hedges explained that he wanted this CD to give full credit and exposure to each member of the band and to give the listener a personal experience of how the music sounds in a live concert, undiluted by the technical guru's best intentions. For this he assembled a group of the best veteran Chicago area musicians, all of whom know each other's playing intuitively, and then personally supervised the sound mixing for the desired result. So hitch up your chair on-stage, look out at the live audience and, listen carefully to what it really sounds like to be in the middle of the band where you can hear everything, all of the time. For the full experience, we recommend you listen with your eyes closed and your ears open. In his early 20's Chuck Hedges remembered that he once played clarinet in high school and, wouldn't it be cool if he got it out again to see if he remembered how to play it. Then, apparently he jumped on-stage with some local Chicago guys like George Brunies, Muggsy Spanier and Danny Alvin and headed out on a half-century career which has taken him all over the world and launched him into the ranks of the best jazz clarinetists on planet Earth. https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/hedges

Personnel: Clarinet: Chuck Hedges; Guitar: Dave Sullivan; Vibes: Duane Thamm; Piano: Steve Behr; Drums: Charlie Braugham; Bass: John Bany

Chicago Live

Philip Catherine - End Of August

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1982
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:02
Size: 88,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:12)  1. Petit Nicolas
(5:09)  2. Grand Nicolas
(9:26)  3. Janet
(6:17)  4. September Start
(4:57)  5. Goodbye
(2:53)  6. Birth Of August
(3:14)  7. End Of August
(0:50)  8. Presque

An immensely gifted Belgian guitarist, Philip Catherine is a highly regarded performer known for his harmonically nuanced, deeply lyrical playing and crisply rounded fretboard touch. Born in London in 1942 to an English mother and Belgian father, Catherine moved to Brussels with his family at a young age. As a teenager, he became interested in the guitar, influenced at the time by French singer/songwriter and poet George Brassens. By age 14 he was taking lessons, and learning the basic elements of jazz improvisation when he discovered Django Reinhardt. He quickly absorbed the jazz legend's distinctive style, and eventually picked up other influences, including Belgian guitarist René Thomas. He also immersed himself in albums by such luminaries as Art Blakey, Clifford Brown, Max Roach, and others. Catherine began playing gigs while in his teens, working in a trio with American Hammond B-3 specialist Lou Bennett and drummer Oliver Jackson. There were also stints with Belgian saxophonist Jack Sels and Philadelphia-born/Brussels-based drummer Edgar Bateman. In 1970, violinist Jean-Luc Ponty asked him to join his band and, inspired by contemporaries like John McLaughlin and Larry Coryell, Catherine stayed with Ponty for a year, dedicating himself to the progressive fusion sound. Also during this period, he attended formal music classes at Berklee College of Music in Boston. 

After returning to Belgium, Catherine found himself in high demand and developed a bevy of connections, including playing with Klaus Weiss, Les McCann, Karin Krog, Dexter Gordon, and others. As a solo artist, he made his debut with 1971's Stream, a funky, inventive mix of acoustic and electric jazz. He followed up in 1975 with Guitars and September Man, both also highly inventive, fusion-influenced albums. Sessions with Herb Geller, Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen, and Charles Mingus followed, as did a duo tour with guitarist Coryell. Also during the '70s, he paired with close associate saxophonist Charlie Mariano for a handful of sessions, and rounded out the decade with his own Nairam, which also featured Mariano, along with trumpeter Palle Mikkelborg and others. During the '80s, Catherine's profile continued to rise as he released several more well-regarded efforts, including Babel, End of August, and Trio with guitarist Christian Escoude and violinist Didier Lockwood. There also were dates with Aldo Romano, Stéphane Grappelli, and Kenny Drew. Also in the '80s, he gained attention for his work with legendary West Coast trumpeter/vocalist Chet Baker, touring and appearing on such albums as 1983's Mr. B and 1985's Strollin'. Although his 1986 album, Transparence, layered keyboards into his atmospheric sound, his work with Baker pointed toward a more acoustic-leaning aesthetic. It was a sound he further embraced on 1990's I Remember You. 

Dedicated to Baker (who died in 1989), the album also featured trumpeter/flügelhornist Tom Harrell. Throughout the '90s, Catherine released a steady stream of albums for smaller jazz labels like Enja, Criss Cross, and Dreyfus, including albums like Moods, Vol. 1, Spanish Nights, and 1999's Guitar Groove. In 2001, he returned with Blue Prince, which found him balancing his love of acoustic jazz and electric fusion. Joining him were trumpeter Bert Joris, bassist Hein van de Geyn, and drummer Hans Van Oosterhout. Joris was also on board for 2002's Summer Night. The orchestral album Meeting Colours followed three years later. The more intimate Guitars Two appeared in 2008. He then joined bassist van de Geyn, pianist Enrico Pieranunzi, and drummer Joe La Barbera for the 2010 live album Concert in Capbreton. A year later, he delivered the trio date Plays Cole Porter, followed by 2013's warmly sophisticated Côté Jardin. The duo album New Folks with bassist Martin Wind followed a year later. He then joined the Orchestre Royal de Chambre de Wallonie for 2015's The String Project: Live in Brussels. ~ Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/artist/philip-catherine-mn0000287463/biography

Featuring: Philip Catherine (guitar), Trilok Gurtu (percussions), Charlie Mariano (saxophone), Toots Thielemans (harmonica), Nicolas Fiszman (bass) & electric

End Of August

Bill Frisell - Gone, Just Like a Train

Styles: Guitar Jazz 
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:56
Size: 161,9 MB
Art: Front

( 5:18)  1. Blues for Los Angeles
( 3:10)  2. Verona
( 4:38)  3. Godson Song
( 3:38)  4. Girl Asks Boy - Pt. 1
( 4:12)  5. Pleased to Meet You
(10:20)  6. Lookout for Hope
( 4:58)  7. Nature's Symphony
( 5:07)  8. Egg Radio
( 3:23)  9. Ballroom
( 2:19) 10. Girl Asks Boy - Pt. 2
( 2:51) 11. Sherlock Jr.
( 5:31) 12. Gone, Just Like a Train
( 5:50) 13. The Wife and Kid
( 3:24) 14. Raccoon Cat
( 4:18) 15. Lonesome
( 0:51) 16. Blues for Los Angeles "reprise"

Drawing from all over the musical spectrum, Frisell selects drummer Jim Keltner (best known for his records with George Harrison, Eric Clapton and other rock stars) and bassist Viktor Krauss (a fixture in Lyle Lovett's country band), and comes up with an immensely likable, easy-grooving CD that defies one to put a label on it. If anything, Frisell leans toward a drawling country twang heavily indebted to Chet Atkins in his guitar work here, but there is a freewheeling jazz sensibility at work on every track. Keltner contributes the heavy rock element with his emphatic strokes, occasionally pushing Frisell in that direction on the title track and the lengthy "Lookout for Hope." Yet Keltner is also capable of surprising subtlety, and Krauss provides firm, unflashy underpinning. Above all, this is thoughtful, free-thinking, ear-friendly jamming that was recorded in bustling Burbank, CA. but sounds as if it was laid down in a relaxed cabin in the hills. ~ Richard S.Ginell https://www.allmusic.com/album/gone-just-like-a-train-mw0000031842

Personnel: Bill Frisell – guitar; Viktor Krauss – bass; Jim Keltner – drums

Gone, Just Like a Train

The Tierney Sutton Band - ScreenPlay

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:51
Size: 157,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:31)  1. The Windmills of Your Mind
(4:40)  2. Moon River / Calling You
(4:05)  3. On a Clear Day (You Can See Forever)
(5:48)  4. What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?
(4:29)  5. I've Got No Strings
(5:59)  6. If I Only Had a Brain
(5:31)  7. The Sound of Silence
(2:27)  8. Goodbye for Now
(3:23)  9. Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend
(4:11) 10. Hopelessly Devoted to You
(5:01) 11. You're the One That I Want
(4:20) 12. How Do You Keep the Music Playing?
(2:59) 13. Ev'ry Now and Then
(6:24) 14. It Might Be You
(2:55) 15. Arrow

Cinema-related "standards" have been fertile territory for musicians to harvest ever since Al Jolson walked miles for smiles. With Screenplay, 8-time Grammy-nominated vocalist Tierney Sutton here as the Tierney Sutton Band takes a fascinating retrospective, delivering fifteen tunes we have often heard  but never this creatively. The result is a showcase that is unique, engaging, and in terms of how Sutton, pianist Christian Jacob, bassists Trey Henry and Kevin Axt and drummer Ray Brinker collectively speak brilliant. "The Windmills of Your Mind" spins slowly with a Brinker cymbal "drone," Jacob's keys sparkling, and Sutton poetic. "Moon River" is paired with the lesser-known "Calling You" in which Sutton's lyric and dynamic delivery is Siren-seductive, drawing us in to both rainbow's end and desert zephyrs. "On a Clear Day" is a swinger with Sutton and Henry whipping up a tempest before a torrid Jacob trip and Brinker burning. Sutton inquires "What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life" fairly straightforwardly in a stunningly beautiful duo with Jacob. The rarely heard "I've Got No Strings," here a ballad, adds those of guitarist Serge Merlaud to Sutton's truth-telling. With "If I Only Had a Brain" Sutton cooks soulful with funkster Kevin Axt's electric bass and Henry's arco working a savvy complement. Simon and Garfunkel's "Sound of Silence" plays like a Medieval chanson with Sutton the trobairitz. 

Stephen Sondheim's "Goodbye for Now" is a dark, deep farewell. "Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend" dazzles with Sutton scat singing over Brinker's Fred Astaire like brushes. "Hopelessly Devoted to You," taken slower than usual, and the rhythmically driving "You're the One That I Want" are interesting no-ham cuts. Alan Bergman makes a cameo appearance with Sutton on "How Do You Keep the Music Playing?" and it is a touching entendre. Sutton and Jacob haunt on "Ev'ry Now and Then" and "It Might Be You." Both those tracks are gems. "Arrow," which Sutton and Jacob wrote for Clint Eastwood's Sully (Warner Bros. 2016) soundtrack closes the session dream like. Sutton's vocal chops and her phrasing are impeccable. Not only is she dead-on pitch, but, her instrument and the way she handles it across the dynamic spectrum enables her to derive new imagery from the vintage material. The effect is so stunningly beautiful and emotionally profound that it seems as if we are hearing these classics come prima. As expected, the support work of Jacob, Henry, Axt and Brinker is superb. 

Additionally, the arrangements are so creative, so colorfully savvy, that the ensemble takes on the dimension of a "vocalized orchestra."  The Tierney Sutton Band does much more than revive memories. Through the creative efforts of these masterful musicians, glorious melodies and their poetic lyrics are elevated and brilliantly honored. It is an aural Oscar. With Screenplay the play is indeed the thing. ~ Nicholas F. Mondello https://www.allaboutjazz.com/screenplay-tierney-sutton-bfm-jazz-review-by-nicholas-f-mondello.php

Personnel: Tierney Sutton: vocals; Christian Jacob: piano; Kevin Axt: bass; Trey Henry: bass; Ray Brinker: drums/percussion; Serge Merlaud: guitar (5, 12, 14); Alan Bergman: vocals (12).

ScreenPlay