Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Archie Shepp Quartet - Lover Man

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:06
Size: 138,5 MB
Art: Front

(6:28)  1. Stars are in Your Eyes
(6:11)  2. Lover Man
(9:23)  3. Brandnew World / Breaking a new day
(5:38)  4. Margy Pargy
(5:21)  5. My Funny Valentine
(6:49)  6. Lush Life
(6:17)  7. Squeeze Me
(5:18)  8. Yesterday's
(8:37)  9. Tribute to Bessy Smith

Shepp has been criticized for his more commercial ventures such as this, but many will enjoy its accessibly light charm. Most of the numbers are standards, including "My Funny Valentine," "Lover Man," and "Lush Life," and are performed by the saxophonist backed by a solid rhythm section. Dave Burrell is wonderfully deft on piano, and he is given ample opportunity to interact with Shepp. Annette Lowman sings on several numbers, and she adds just the right touch and phrasing. Shepp is in somewhat less than perfect form, but he is clearly enjoying himself. There is a touch of a blues and R&B feel that adds to the ambiance. Unlike some of Shepp's other ventures, there are no attempted serious statements made only relaxing, good, swinging jazz that lifts the spirits or touches the soul, if only just a bit. ~ Steve Loewy https://www.allmusic.com/album/lover-man-mw0000542922

Personnel: Archie Shepp – tenor saxophone; Annette Lowman – vocals; Dave Burrell – piano; Herman Wright – bass; Stephen McCraven – drums

Lover Man

Marsha Bartenetti - Feels Like Love

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:36
Size: 122,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:23)  1. Orange Colored Sky
(5:32)  2. You Go to My Head
(3:08)  3. Guess Who I Saw Today
(3:36)  4. Hallelujah
(5:13)  5. Cry Me a River
(2:50)  6. L O V E
(4:21)  7. You've Changed
(4:31)  8. Little Girl Blue
(3:56)  9. Ten Cents a Dance
(5:07) 10. Heaven Down Here
(3:51) 11. Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word
(5:28) 12. The Man That Got Away
(2:40) 13. All Right, Okay, You Win

“I’m sorry, that’s not a valid password. Please try your call again later.” That voice you hear just may be Marsha Bartenetti, who segued from a successful singing career (she won the 1980 Best Vocalist in the American Songwriters Association’s International) to the lucrative voiceover market. She was deemed by the press as “The Voice America Loves to Hate” and “The Voice Mail Queen.” She’s solidly back on track with the release of her latest CD …feels like LOVE, which she featured during her Feinstein’s debut. Bringing along friend and Musical Director Steve Rawlins, Bartenetti’s repertoire includes well-known chestnuts from the Great American Songbook as well as a few modern composers and lyricists. Her arrangements blend in jazz stylings and a pop sensibility that makes for easy listening with her clean, clear phrasing. Examining all facets of love, her set included the hopeful phase with a slow, longing “You Go to My Head” (J. Fred Coots/Haven Gillespie), the betrayal of Elisse Boyd and Murray Grand’s powerful “Guess  Who I Saw Today,” to Arthur Hamilton’s “Cry Me a River.” The complement of locals David Rokeach on drums, Mike Bordelon on bass, and Danny Brown sax, added to the richness of the sound. Bartenetti related emotionally on Elton John and Bernie Taupin’s “Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word,” and Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah,” and these would be her finest vocal deliveries. “Orange Colored Sky,” written by Milton DeLugg and Willie Stein and recorded by Nat King Cole, shows Bartenetti can swing, as does her rendition of Peggy Lee and Dave Cavanaugh’s (with the pen name William Schluger) “I Love Being Here with You.” Hitting all the bases from swing to light jazz, Bartenetti shines when she makes strong connections to a song. She saved the best for last, closing with the lovely Jimmy Van Heusen/Johnny Burke “But Beautiful,” offering it as a love note to her audience. A classy touch from a real pro. ~ Steve Murray https://cabaretscenes.org/2017/05/01/marsha-bartenetti-marsha-bartenetti-feels-like-love/

Feels Like Love

Paolo Birro - Castello Nights

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:57
Size: 109,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:41)  1. On a Misty Night
(3:44)  2. Groovin High
(3:31)  3. Coming on the Hudson
(3:08)  4. Boo Boo's Birthday
(6:00)  5. I Can't Get Started
(5:27)  6. Gnid
(3:26)  7. Good Bait
(4:36)  8. Criss Cross
(5:32)  9. 'Round About Midnight
(4:48) 10. Tin Tin Deo

Paolo Birro was born in Noventa Vicentina, Vicenza, Italy in 1962.  He completed his classical piano studies at the Vicenza Conservatory with a summa cum laude degree in 1987, afterwhich he devoted himself to the jazz language which had fascinated him from his childhood. In 1992, in trio with Sandro Gibellini e Mauro Negri, he won the first prize for the performing group section at the Barga Jazz International Contest.  In 1996, after the releasing of his first trio album “Fair Play”, he was nominated “Best New Talent” by the critics of  the  magazine “Musica Jazz."  His career has offered him the opportunity to perform with jazz legends such as Lee Konitz, Buddy De Franco, Art Farmer, Johnny Griffin and many other internationally-known artists including Scott Hamilton, Gianni Basso, Ruud Brink, Eliot Zigmund, Bobby Watson, Ronnie Cuber, Harry Allen, Tom Kirkpatrick, Charles Davis, Enrico Rava, Erwin Vann, Aldo Romano, Richard Galliano, Robert Bonisolo, Paolo Fresu, Tiziana Ghiglioni, Chuck Israels, Matt Renzi.  As a sideman he has contributed to the recording of over 50 albums by some of the most important jazzmen working in Italy; in particular the artistic relationship with saxophonists Pietro Tonolo, Emanuele Cisi, Claudio Fasoli and the american trumpet player (living in Italy) J Kyle Gregory has been more continuative, as documented in a series of works published by independent labels, including Egea, Splasc(h), Soulnote and Velut Luna. He is a regular member of the Lydian Sound Orchestra directed by Riccardo Brazzale, one of the most critically acclaimed Italian bands in the recent years. As a leader or co-leader  he has released several albums in solo, duo and trio: his last releases include “Sbàndio” (Almar Records), a solo piano performance based on the cultural traditions of his native region in Italy, and “Passion Flower” (Philology) an homage to the music of Billy Strayhorn recorded together with the saxophonist Lee Konitz and “Radiotrio” (Almar Records) with Federico Malaman (el. bass) and Mauro Beggio (drums). As an educator he has taught Jazz piano, improvisation and ensemble at the ”Civici Corsi di Jazz” (Milan), International Jazz Master Classes at Siena, Jazz Department of the Bologna Conservatory, “Il Suono Improvviso” (Venice), Perugia Classico, Summer stages at Loano, and the Jazzinty Workshop in Novomesto (Slovenia).  He is currently Head of the Jazz Department at the Conservatory of Vicenza. http://www.lydiansoundorchestra.com/birro.html

Personnel: Paolo Birro (Piano), Aldo Zunino (Bass) and Alfred Kramer (Drums).

Castello Nights

The Chico Freeman Project - Out of Many Comes the One

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:06
Size: 152,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:06)  1. Guitar
(4:10)  2. Didn't Even Know You
(6:58)  3. Filaraki
(5:34)  4. India Blue
(6:20)  5. Out of Many Comes the One
(6:35)  6. Lift Me Up
(5:34)  7. Twelfth of Never
(5:06)  8. A Teardrop In the Rain
(5:12)  9. Tzivaeri
(5:14) 10. Cartegena
(4:18) 11. Miss You Like Smoking
(6:54) 12. Part of Me - Filaraki - English Version

Chico Freeman's 2004 Arabesque release Out of Many Comes the One brings a bit of chillout jazz and sophisticated funk into the mix along with pretty vocals by Jennifer Hamady, who works up fine ruminations during "Tzivaeri" and "Miss You Like Smoking." The combination of relaxed grooves and elegant vocalizing has plenty in common with the efforts of Detroiters Wendell Harrison and Donald Byrd. 

A seasoned instrumentalist whose artistry is rooted in decades of creative endeavor, Freeman sounds at his best during "Filaraki" and "Part of Me," which feel like salutations from and for Yusef Lateef. ~ arwulf arwulf https://www.allmusic.com/album/out-of-many-comes-the-one-mw0001461211

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Producer – Chico Freeman; Bass – Orlando Marin; Drums – Abe Fogle; Guitar [Guitars] – Bill White; Piano, Electric Piano [Fender Rhodes], Organ, Keyboards – Misha Tsiganov

Out of Many Comes the One

Stan Getz Quartet - Getz At The Gate

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 139:14
Size: 321,0 MB
Art: Front

( 0:25)  1. Announcement By Chip Monck
( 7:49)  2. It's All Right With Me
( 9:20)  3. Wildwood
( 6:27)  4. When The Sun Comes Out
(12:01)  5. Impressions
( 8:35)  6. Airegin
( 9:45)  7. Like Someone In Love
( 8:29)  8. Woody 'N' You
(10:27)  9. Blues
( 5:01) 10. Where Do You Go
( 8:19) 11. Yesterday's Gardenias
( 7:25) 12. Stella By Starlight
( 8:52) 13. It's You Or No One
( 6:57) 14. Spring Can Really HangYou Up The Most
(14:18) 15. 52nd Street Theme
(14:57) 16. Jumpin' With Symphony Sid

Connoisseurs of Stan Getz continue to get lucky with newly discovered live recordings. The last was Moments In Time (Resonance, 2016), a single CD documenting parts of a week-long residency with a quartet including pianist JoAnne Brackeen in San Francisco in 1976. Getz At The Gate, recorded fifteen years earlier, is another substantial addition to Getz's catalogue. Over two CDs, or three LPs if you prefer, it includes all 139 minutes which Getz's band performed at New York's Village Gate on November 26, 1961. Recorded just a month after the completion of Getz's with-strings masterpiece Focus (Verve, 1961), the package captures him at the top of his game. After two and a half years living in Denmark, Getz returned to the US in early 1961 to encounter a jazz world in the throes of change. Ornette Coleman was carrying the torch for free jazz, Miles Davis had brought modal jazz into the mainstream and John Coltrane had put clear water between himself and Sonny Rollins to become the pre-eminent tenor saxophonist on the New York scene. Getz, who had lost none of his competitive edge while in Europe, realised he could not simply pick up where he had left off if he wanted to keep his place at the head table. He was not about to become either a modal or a free player, but he was prepared to recalibrate a little. He put together a new-guard quartet comprising pianist Steve Kuhn, who had briefly been a member of Coltrane's quartet in 1960, bassist Scott LaFaro, who had just left Coleman's band, and drummer Roy Haynes, with whom Getz had first worked in the late 1940s and who was fresh from recording with Eric Dolphy. Getz took the group into the Village Vanguard in March 1961 for his New York comeback. A review in The New York Times reported that Getz was "a much more venturesome musician" than when he last played in the city. The quartet played an acclaimed set at the Newport Jazz Festival in July. Things were looking good. Tragically, four days later, La Faro was killed in an auto accident.

La Faro was replaced by John Neves and the new lineup augmented by valve trombonist Bob Brookmeyer went into the studio in September to make Recorded Fall 1961 (Verve), a relatively little-known treasure in Getz's discography. Two months later, Getz took the quartet (without Brookmeyer) into the Village Gate for the gig preserved on Getz At The Gate. Despite their quality, Recorded Fall 1961, Focus and Getz At The Gate were all overtaken by events. In early 1962, the tapes of Getz's bossa nova debut, Jazz Samba (Verve, 1962), hit Verve's office. They had hit written all over them. Getz's other projects were put on hold. Recorded Fall 1961 and Focus dropped off the promo schedule and Getz At The Gate lay forgotten in the vaults. Only now, in June 2019, is the album getting its first release. The Getz At The Gate set lists are mostly drawn from the Great American Songbook with which Getz had made his name, plus four jazz standards (Gigi Gryce's "Wildwood," Dizzy Gillespie's "Woody "n You," Thelonious Monk's "52nd Street Theme" and Sonny Rollins' "Airegin"). Getz's readings range from the lush and intimate through the fierce and stomping and, as ever, he pulls improvised melodies out of the air which are as beautiful as the tunes they are grounded in. A gorgeous reading of Harold Arlen's "When The Sun Comes Out" is among the highlights. The odd-man-out among the track titles is "Impressions," the tune John Coltrane had remodelled out of Miles Davis' "So What" (from Davis' 1959 CBS album Kind Of Blue). It would be fascinating to hear Getz play Coltrane's piece but, disappointingly, he sits out the number, which is a trio feature for Kuhn, who had performed it while a member of Coltrane's band. On the rarities front, however, Getz At The Gate does include the only known Getz recordings of "52nd Street Theme," Cole Porter's "It's Alright With Me" and Dick Robertson's "Yesterday's Gardenias." Getz At The Gate has borderline longueurs, in the shape of a couple too many bass solos. But such was the small-group gigging paradigm of the time. Getz is in exalted form throughout and you can't get too much of that. ~ Chris May https://www.allaboutjazz.com/getz-at-the-gate-stan-getz-verve-review-by-chris-may.php

Personnel: Stan Getz: tenor saxophone; Steve Kuhn: piano; John Neves: bass; Roy Haynes: drums.

Getz At The Gate