Friday, July 31, 2020

Emil Richards - Emil Richards With The Jazz Knights

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:58
Size: 83,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:46)  1. Well I Didn't
(5:04)  2. Yo Go Jo Po
(3:22)  3. Marduk the 12th Planet
(3:22)  4. The Real Camille
(3:05)  5. Himalaya 5-0
(4:56)  6. Celesta III
(4:12)  7. Turn Up the Audio for Claudio
(5:30)  8. Celesta IV
(2:38)  9. Meet the Flintstones/ Merrily We Roll Along

Vibraphonist and longtime first-call Los Angeles studio musician Emil Richards whose playing graced countless movie and TV soundtracks, albums, and jingles died on December 14, 2019. Born in Hartford, Connecticut in 1932, Emilio Joseph Radocchia began studying xylophone at age six. He was soon attracted to the vibraphone after hearing Lionel Hampton. “My roots are from Hamp," Richards said in a 1994 Percussive Notesarticle. “I got all my early training from copying and playing along with Hamp's records, because he was the only one around at the time.” By the time Richards was in tenth grade, he was playing with the Hartford Symphony. He attended the Hartt School of Music from 1949–52, where he studied with Al Lepak, and after being drafted he played in an Army band in Japan, where he worked with pianist Toshiko Akiyoshi. After getting out of the Army Richards settled in New York and soon became a member of George Shearing's group, with which he stayed for three years. In 1959 he moved to Los Angeles where he worked with Paul Horn and Don Ellis, eventually leading his own group, the Microtonal Blues Band. He also worked with instrument innovator Harry Partch, toured and recorded with former Beatle George Harrison, and recorded with artists including Frank Sinatra, Louie Bellson,  Quincy Jones, Stan Kenton, Peggy Lee, Shadowfax, Nancy Wilson, Sam Cooke, Tom Scott, Marvin Gaye, Carly Simon, Phil Spector, Bette Midler, the Beach Boys, Frank Zappa, and many others.

Meanwhile, Richards became active in the L.A. studio scene, playing on everything from the original Flintstones cartoons to TV series such as Mission Impossible(he played the bongos on the theme song), Falcon Crest, Cagney and Lacey, and Dynasty, to movie soundtracks for such films as Cool Hand Luke, Jaws, Taxi Driver, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Batman Returns, Jurassic Park, Men in Black, Pirates of the Caribbean: the Curse of the Black Pearl, Star Trek, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Ghostbusters, Spider-Man 2, and the various Planet of the Apesfilms. "My ideal situation for a session would be playing the hardest mallet parts conceivable," he once said. "I like to go home exhausted from playing good, hard music. By hard I mean difficult, because it's a challenge. I love a challenge." Richards also prided himself on being able to come up with the proper sound for any situation, and he amassed a collection of over 350 instruments from around the world. Composers came to depend on his knowledge of world percussion when scoring films set in exotic locations. Richards, in turn, especially enjoyed working with composers who used instruments in creative ways. "On the movie soundtrack for The River Wild, Jerry Goldsmith wrote melodic figures for timpani and three RotoTom players," Richards recalled. "Having the timpani and RotoToms playing melodic lines together in octaves was really a good noise."

Richards said that one of the most important things he learned was to be selective about the instruments he used. "When I first started, I was very proud of all of these instruments I had collected," he told writer Robyn Flans in a 1985 Modern Percussionistinterview. "I had a tendency to pull everything out of the bag. I've noticed this happens to a lot of percussionists when they play live: They don't let eight bars of music go by before playing on a different instrument. They don't give one instrument a chance to do something. Naturally, if five instruments do work and they provide the colors and help the music, fine, but in most cases you can't really get going playing in a rhythmical context if you're trying to play congas and then jump to a shaker or hit a cowbell.” A longtime supporter of the Percussive Arts Society, Richards donated 65 of his instruments to the PAS museum in Lawton, Oklahoma when it was built in 1992, including his entire collection of Thai gamelan instruments and a Leedy "octarimba," which is similar in concept to a 12-string guitar in that it has bars mounted in pairs and pitched an octave apart that are played with a double-headed mallet. Richards also helped the PAS museum acquire other instruments, such as one of Shelly Manne's drum sets. (Those instruments are now housed in the Percussive Arts Society’s Rhythm! Discovery Center in Indianapolis.) In 1994, Richards was elected to the PAS Hall of Fame. Even while he was busy in the studios, Richards continued to do gigs on vibes. For many years, he and drummer Joe Porcaro co-led a group that was known both as Calamari and Contraband. Richards also did some composing, and his vibes playing and composing were heard to advantage on his solo album, The Wonderful World of Percussion, on the Interworld Music label. "I overdubbed all the parts, and I have as many as 25 overdubs on some tunes," he explained. "I did a piece I wrote in seven called 'Underdog Rag,' and besides playing the four marimba parts I embellished it with all kinds of kooky sounds. The album has some bebop, some straight-ahead vibes and marimba things, and some real fun stuff. I also used some of my real oddball instruments.” Other albums Richards recorded as a leader included Luntana (1996), Calamari: Live at Rocco’s (2000), Emil Richards with the Jazz Knights (2003), and Maui Jazz Quartet (2006). He authored several books, including Mallet Chord Studies – Chord Voicings and Arpeggio Patterns for Vibraphone and Marimba, Sight Reading for Mallets,Melody & Rhythm Permutations,Exercises for Mallet Instruments (all published by Hal Leonard), andWonderful World of Percussion: My Life Behind Bars,published by BearManor Media. https://www.pas.org/About/pas-news/2019/12/16/remembering-emil-richards

Emil Richards With The Jazz Knights

Joe Lovano - Tenor Legacy

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:34
Size: 154,1 MB
Art: Front

(6:33)  1. Miss Etna
(6:45)  2. Love Is A Many Splendored Thing
(5:36)  3. Blackwell's Message
(4:34)  4. Laura
(9:07)  5. Introspection
(7:01)  6. In The Land Of Ephesus
(9:05)  7. To Her Ladyship
(5:54)  8. Web Of Fire
(8:21)  9. Rounder's Mood
(3:33) 10. Bread And Wine

Joe Lovano welcomes Joshua Redman to his sextet set (which also features pianist Mulgrew Miller, bassist Christian McBride, drummer Lewis Nash and percussionist Don Alias) and, rather than jam on standards, Joe Lovano composed five new originals, revived three obscurities and only chose to perform two familiar pieces. By varying the styles and instrumentation (for example "Bread and Wine" does not have piano or bass), Lovano has created a set with a great deal of variety and some surprising moments. The two tenors (who have distinctive sounds) work together fine and some chances are taken. This matchup works well.~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/tenor-legacy-mw0000109784

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone, Liner Notes – Joe Lovano;  Tenor Saxophone – Joshua Redman;  Bass – Christian McBride ; Drums – Lewis Nash;  Piano – Mulgrew Miller

Tenor Legacy

Thursday, July 30, 2020

Eric Boeren - Coconut

Styles: Cornet Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:56
Size: 136,4 MB
Art: Front

( 5:29)  1. Coconut
(10:26)  2. What Happened At Conway Hall, 1938?
( 4:39)  3. Shake Your Wattle
( 4:42)  4. The Fish In The Pond
( 5:34)  5. Little Symphony
( 1:19)  6. Crunchy Croci
( 4:03)  7. Crunchy Croci (Continued)
( 5:09)  8. Padàm
( 5:29)  9. Joy Of A Toy
( 6:11) 10. Journal
( 5:51) 11. BeeTee's Minor Plea

There are parallels between Ornette Coleman's approach to collective improvisation and that of Dutch avant jazzers from the 1960s onward, so the emergence of a Dutch quartet that pays homage to Coleman's groundbreaking circa-1960 foursome isn't a big surprise. Cornetist Eric Boeren's quartet, whose 2012's recording Coconut is the most recent of several discs finding common ground between Coleman and the Dutch jazz mindset, is not merely a repertory band; indeed, only two tracks out of 11 on Coconut are Coleman compositions. Rather, Boeren who takes on cornetist Don Cherry's instrumental role composed the lion's share of material performed on this intimate live date, finding the meeting point between Coleman's groundbreaking developments in melody, harmony, and group interaction and his own Dutch-schooled, anything-goes improvisational sensibility. Veteran Han Bennink plays only a snare drum here, and he's astounding from the opening moments of the leadoff title track, well named given its ebullient island flair, as he conjures up sounds that suggest timbales, congas yes, maybe even a coconut  while Boeren and saxophonist Michael Moore build riffs into melodies into improvised singing dialogues. As Wilbert de Joode transitions into a walking bassline, Bennink moves effortlessly into hyperswing mode beneath Moore's saxophone, whose beautiful tone is all his own even as he dips into Coleman-esque bluesy phrasing.

At over 15 minutes in length, "What Happened at Conway Hall, 1938?" is epic in scope, with thematic material cropping up here and there across a lengthy, suite-like structure. Boeren and Moore engage in telepathic conversations and Bennink shouts his enthusiasm; after a calypso-flavored passage slides into relaxed swing and Moore steps out on alto, the band moves into exploration of pure sound and space, including extended techniques with mouthpieces maybe nobody in this group actually needs a complete musical instrument. The piece closes with a Boeren-Bennink duet until de Joode kicks in with a vamp seguing into "Shake Your Wattle," with Boeren muted yet jaunty and the band uniting in spirited fashion. "The Fish in the Pond" moves into a freer rhythmic space, the horns' long and bluesy lines over de Joode's twisting arco refracting a bit of Coleman's well-known "Lonely Woman" side. With "Little Symphony" and "Joy of a Toy," the quartet treats listeners to a pair of Coleman "leftovers" recorded in July 1960 but not released on LP until over a decade later on Twins. These relatively concise and accessible tunes are delivered with themes intact and expertly played, characteristically swinging through the improvs and featuring group collective interplay that can only come from four musicians with years of experience collaborating in a place like Amsterdam. And a curve ball greets listeners at the disc's conclusion, as the band delivers a sparse but unique and credible read of Booker Little's "Bee Tee's Minor Plea," also from 1960. Boeren and friends know that 1960 was a hell of a jazz year, and with Coconut they've helped achieve the same for 2012. 
~ Dave Lynch https://www.allmusic.com/album/coconut-mw0002438005

Personnel: Cornet, Leader – Eric Boeren; Bass – Wilbert de Joode; Reeds – Michael Moore ; Snare [Snare Drum] – Han Bennink

Coconut

Jimmy Scott - Holding Back the Years

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:14
Size: 113,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:16)  1. What I Wouldn't Give
(5:06)  2. The Crying Game
(5:23)  3. Jealous Guy
(5:28)  4. Holding Back the Years
(5:13)  5. How Can I Go On Without You
(3:49)  6. Almost Blue
(4:27)  7. Slave to Love
(6:18)  8. Nothing compares 2 U
(4:54)  9. Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word
(3:15) 10. Don't Cry Baby

After venturing into the rock and soul catalog with renditions of Bob Dylan, Curtis Mayfield, and the Talking Heads songs, Little Jimmy Scott really digs here with a program made up almost entirely by pop hits from the last three decades. Due in part to the insight of producers Gerry McCarthy and Dale Ashley, Scott tackles contemporary material that, in its elegance, jazz overtones, and passion, is perfectly suited to his special brand of vocal savvy and knack for the great standards. Of course, he could probably cover almost any song and transform it into something unique, which is what he often does here. 

With his gentle pacing, vulnerable-sounding yet powerful soprano, and unerring sense of dynamics, Scott entirely refashions classics like Bryan Ferry's "Slave to Love," Elton John and Bernie Taupin's "Sorry Seems to be the Hardest Word," and the movie theme "The Crying Game." And while maybe not wrought anew, his versions of John Lennon's "Jealous Guy," Elvis Costello's "Almost Blue," and Prince's "Nothing Compares 2 U" are still stunning. He even gives Simply Red's Mick Hucknell a few needed lessons in vocal phrasing with an in-the-pocket rendition of the title track. Better to showcase Scott's singular voice, the arrangers wisely supply him with an unobtrusive and classy backdrop punctuated with subtle, yet keen solo breaks. An amazing set by one of the best singers around. ~ Stephen Cook https://www.allmusic.com/album/holding-back-the-years-mw0000047014

Personnel: Vocals – Jimmy Scott;  Bass – Hilliard Greene; Drums – Victor Jones;  Guitar – Matt Muniseri;  Harmonica – Gregorie Maret ; Piano   Saxophone – Bruce Kirby; Strings – David Gotay, Hye Kyung Seo, Susan Aquila, Wayne Graham;  Trumpet – Pamela Fleming

Holding Back the Years

Wednesday, July 29, 2020

Dave Douglas - Keystone

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:00
Size: 122,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:55)  1. A Noise from the Deep
(4:51)  2. Just Another Murder
(4:55)  3. Sapphire Sky Blue
(6:14)  4. Butterfly Effect
(2:31)  5. Fatty's Day Off
(4:47)  6. Mabel Normand
(4:31)  7. The Real Roscoe
(6:52)  8. Famous Players
(1:42)  9. Barnyard Flirtations
(4:19) 10. Hollywood
(5:18) 11. Tragicomique

Paradoxically consistent yet somehow unpredictable, trumpeter Dave Douglas is an artistic rarity. Even when he records a followup to an existing project, you know it's going to be an evolution which throws in some surprises. Last year's Strange Liberation may have been a sequel to 2002's The Infinite, but the addition of Bill Frisell inspired new tactics, both compositionally and in performance. Douglas' new disc, Keystone, has some precedence in his electronica-informed 2003 release, Freak In. Like that record, however, it avoids many of the trappings of pure electronica. Despite all manner of electronic treatments at work, the core is a real playing band. But what distinguishes Keystone most is that it's Douglas' most groove-oriented album to date and his most funky. You can also be sure that when Douglas does a groove record, it's not going to pander or water down his music to reach a larger audience. Keystone will appeal to a broader group of listeners than, say, more avant-garde records like 2001's Witness, but it's no less credible or artistically driven. 

Inspired by the life and work of Roscoe "Fatty Arbuckle a comic performer who inspired better-known comedians from the early 20th Century like Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton Keystone makes terrific use of the relatively nascent DualDisc technology. One side of the disc contains the CD release with the full tracks, the other a DVD side with Arbuckle's film Fatty and Mable Adrift accompanied by Douglas' score, as well as a video compilation from the film Fatty's Tin-Type Tangle, for Douglas' "Just Another Murder. The new group features Jamie Saft on Wurlitzer piano, Gene Lake on drums, Marcus Strickland on saxophones, Brad Jones on bass, and DJ Olive on turntables. With these players, Douglas manages to create a contemporary sound that's as appealing as it is adventurous. All eleven tracks may revolve around booty-shaking rhythms, but that doesn't mean the players are restricted in any way. There may be considerable structure, but it's filtered through Douglas' sensibilities, and the playing is also loose and elastic. That means that like Bill Frisell's music for Buster Keaton films in the mid-1990s, the multimedia tour starting in October will straddle the line between video cues and a more open-ended approach to interpretation. 

Co-producer David Torn is the hidden seventh member of Douglas' group. In the same way he has worked with saxophonist Tim Berne to fashion an imaginative aural landscape from the musicians' work, he also sculpts Keystone.  Many artists are paying direct homage to Miles Davis today, and Keystone may tip its hat to the Dark Prince at times. But Douglas' writing is far more detailed than any of Miles' late-'60s to early-'70s work. In fact, if anything, Keystone owes more to Wayne Shorter, with a vibe that suggests how Miles' mid-1960s quintet might have sounded had it access to today's technology.~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/keystone-dave-douglas-greenleaf-music-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Dave Douglas: trumpet; Jamie Saft: Wurlitzer; Gene Lake: drums; Marcus Strickland: saxophones; Brad Jones: bass; DJ Olive: turntables; David Torn: co-producer.

Keystone

Emil Richards - New Time Element (Night Side) And (Day Side)

Album: New Time Element (Night Side)

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 1967
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 16:15
Size: 37,6 MB
Art: Front

(2:41)  1. Georgy Girl
(3:10)  2. Girl Talk
(2:51)  3. Call Me
(2:39)  4. Here
(2:13)  5. Theme From "The Sand Pebbles" (And We Were Lovers)
(2:39)  6. Happy Together


Album: New Time Element (Day Side)

Time: 13:01
Size: 30,2 MB

(2:17)  1. Sunny
(2:32)  2. Hot Fudge Sundae
(1:46)  3. Jimmy
(2:25)  4. Havah Nagilah
(1:49)  5. Take Five
(2:09)  6. Blues For Hari

A well-respected studio musician long based in Los Angeles, Emil Richards has been on a countless number of sessions, contributing his vibes mostly anonymously to recordings in all genres of music. He started playing xylophone when he was six and, while still in tenth grade, Richards played with the Hartford Symphony Orchestra. After graduating from the Hartt School of Music and Hilliard College (1949-52), he played in an Army band in Japan (working with Toshiko Akiyoshi). Richards later worked with Charles Mingus, Willie Ruff, Ed Shaughnessy, Ed Thigpen, George Shearing's Quintet (1956-58), Paul Horn (1960-64), Jimmy Witherspoon, Shorty Rogers and many others. In the early-to-mid 1960's, Richards co-led the Hindustani Jazz Sextet with Don Ellis, mixing together Indian music with jazz. He was also a member of Stan Kenton's Neophonic Orchestra, the Roger Kellaway Cello Quartet and toured with both Frank Sinatra and Frank Zappa in the 1970's. Emil Richards, who recorded as a leader for Impulse (1965-66) and Interworld (two CDs in 1994-95), owns over 350 percussion instruments and has long been interested in ethnic folk music although he considers his main influence to be Lionel Hampton. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/emil-richards-mn0000819595/biography

Personnel: Emil Richards - vibraphone, percussion; Dave Mackay - piano, organ;  Joe Porcaro - drums;  John Morell - guitar; Chuck Domanico - bass;  Chino Valdes - congas, bongos


Tuesday, July 28, 2020

Lambert, Hendricks & Ross - The Hottest New Group In Jazz Disc 1 And Disc 2

Album: The Hottest New Group In Jazz Disc 1

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:22
Size: 140,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:18)  1. Charleston Alley
(2:33)  2. Moanin'
(2:17)  3. Twisted
(3:15)  4. Bijou
(2:15)  5. Cloudburst
(2:26)  6. Centerpiece
(2:57)  7. Gimme That Wine
(3:48)  8. Sermonette
(1:43)  9. Summertime
(4:10) 10. Everybody's Boppin'
(2:55) 11. Cottontail
(3:27) 12. All Too Soon
(1:18) 13. Happy Anatomy
(3:09) 14. Rocks In My Bed
(2:53) 15. Main Stem
(3:29) 16. I Don't Know What Kind Of Blues I've Got
(2:48) 17. Things Ain't What They Used To Be
(2:32) 18. Midnight Indigo
(2:59) 19. What Am I Here For?
(3:28) 20. In A Mellow Tone - Vocal Version
(2:33) 21. Caravan

Album: The Hottest New Group In Jazz Disc 2

Time: 61:18
Size: 142,6 MB

(5:26)  1. Come On Home
(3:05)  2. The New A B C
(2:32)  3. Farmer's Market
(3:07)  4. Cookin' At The Continental
(2:48)  5. With Malice Toward None
(3:44)  6. Hi-Fly
(4:26)  7. Home Cookin'
(2:18)  8. Halloween Spooks
(4:48)  9. Popity Pop
(3:50) 10. Blue
(3:17) 11. Mr. P. C.
(2:14) 12. Walkin'
(4:06) 13. This Here (Dis Hyunh)
(5:19) 14. Swingin' Till The Girls Come Home
(2:22) 15. Twist City
(2:22) 16. Just A little Bit of Twist
(2:43) 17. A Night In Tunisia
(2:43) 18. A Night In Tunisia - Alternate Version

The immortal vocal jazz group Lambert, Hendricks & Ross recorded five albums during its career: one apiece for Impulse! and World Pacific and three for Columbia. This two-CD set has all of the music from LH&R's Columbia dates (The Hottest Group in Jazz, Sing Ellington, and High Flying), plus four previously unissued and three very obscure selections. Dave Lambert, Jon Hendricks, and Annie Ross were all very talented jazz singers as individuals, and were masters of vocalese. Virtually every one of their performances was special and, in the long run, influential. With assistance from the Gildo Mahones Trio, trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison (on the earliest album), and altoist Pony Poindexter (during the seven bonus tracks), the vocal group is heard in memorable form throughout the two-fer. Among the many highlights are "Twisted," "Cloudburst," Hendricks' hilarious "Gimme That Wine," "Everybody's Boppin'," "Cotton Tail," "All Too Soon," "Main Stem," "Farmer's Market," "Cookin' at the Continental," "Halloween Spooks," and "Popity Pop." Essential music for all serious jazz collections. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-hottest-new-group-in-jazz-compilation-mw0000079757


Monday, July 27, 2020

Alicia Crowe - Alicia Crowe Sings Tribute To Alberta Hunter Live!

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:14
Size: 122,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:43)  1. My Castle's Rockin
(5:57)  2. Crazy He Calls Me
(3:59)  3. Handyman
(5:12)  4. Down Hearted Blues
(8:16)  5. If I Were A Bell
(4:30)  6. You Can't Tell The Difference After Dark
(5:04)  7. Look for the Silver Lining
(5:08)  8. I'm Having a Good Time
(3:41)  9. Old Fashioned Love
(3:55) 10. When You're Smiling
(2:45) 11. My Castle's Rockin (Encore)

Join Alicia Crowe as she takes you on a historic journey through the music of legendary vocalist Alberta Hunter and the sounds of the Bright Light District that she made famous. Recorded live at The Triad Theater in New York City on November 14th, 2018, Alicia and her top notch trio of musicians capture the spirit and the vibe of these classic American songs. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Alicia-Crowe-Tribute-Alberta-Hunter/dp/B07YTDFHZR

Alicia Crowe Sings Tribute To Alberta Hunter Live!

Friday, July 24, 2020

Roy Haynes & Kenny Clarke - Transatlantic Meetings

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1954
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:55
Size: 208,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:50)  1. Red Rose
(4:34)  2. A Mountain Sunset
(2:40)  3. Laffin' and Crying
(5:08)  4. Minor Encamp
(3:02)  5. Subscription
(3:34)  6. Dillon
(4:04)  7. Trianon
(5:20)  8. Kenny's Special
(3:17)  9. Illusion
(7:27) 10. Love Me or Leave Me
(4:20) 11. Cinerama
(6:41) 12. Vogue
(6:51) 13. Buyer's Blues

Roy Owen Haynes (born March 13, 1925) is an American jazz drummer. He is among the most recorded drummers in jazz. In a career lasting over 70 years he has played swing, bebop, jazz fusion, avant-garde jazz and is considered the father of modern jazz drumming. "Snap Crackle" was a nickname given to him in the 1950s. He has led bands such as the Hip Ensemble. His albums Fountain of Youth and Whereas were nominated for a Grammy Award. He was inducted into the Modern Drummer Hall of Fame in 1999. His son Graham Haynes is a cornetist; his son Craig Holiday Haynes and grandson Marcus Gilmore are both drummers. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roy_Haynes

Kenny Clarke (born Kenneth Clarke Spearman, later aka, Liaqat Ali Salaam, on January 9, 1914 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-died January 26, 1985 in Paris, France) was a jazz drummer and an early innovator of the bebop style of drumming. As the house drummer at Minton's Playhouse in the early 1940's, he participated in the after hours jams that led to the birth of Be-Bop, which in turn lead to modern jazz. He is credited with creating the modern role of the ride cymbal as the primary timekeeper. Before, drummers kept time on the high-hat and snare drum (”digging coal”, Clarke called it) with heavy support from the bass drum. With Clarke time was played on the cymbal and the bass and snare were used more for punctuation. This led to a much more relaxed style of drumming. From this point more and more rhythms and poly-rhythms are made possible. For this, “every drummer” Ed Thigpen said, “owes him a debt of gratitude.” Clarke was nicknamed “Klook” or “Klook-mop” for the style he innovated. Clarke was a founder member of the Modern Jazz Quartet (as the Milt Jackson Quartet) in 1951 and also participated in many recording sessions as house drummer for Savoy Records. Connie Kay took his place in the MJQ in 1955 and from 1956 Clarke was resident in France where he regularly worked with visiting American musicians in Paris, in particular forming a working trio, known as “The Bosses”, with Bud Powell and Pierre Michelot. Kenny Clarke died in Paris in 1985. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/kennyclarke

Featuring: Kenny Clarke (drums), Roy Haynes (drums), Henri Renaud (piano), Martial Solal (piano), Barney Wilen (saxophone), Joe Benjamin (bass), Billy Byers (trombon), Jay Cameron (saxophone), Jimmy Deuchar (trumpet), Allen Eager (saxophone), Jimmy Gourley (guitar), Benoît Quersin (bass)

Transatlantic Meetings

Jaimee Paul - Jaimee Paul: The Collection

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 205:16
Size: 473,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:08)  1. At Last
(2:39)  2. Too Marvelous For Words
(4:11)  3. Don't Cry Baby
(4:13)  4. Skyfall
(3:25)  5. Days Of Wine And Roses
(5:32)  6. Cry Me A River
(4:26)  7. Ain't No Sunshine
(3:42)  8. Nobody Does It Better
(4:42)  9. Fever
(4:35) 10. Come Rain Or Come Shine
(4:20) 11. Moon River
(3:55) 12. Diamonds Are Forever
(4:46) 13. Crazy
(3:04) 14. I Want A Little Sugar In My Bowl
(3:45) 15. That Old Black Magic
(3:42) 16. Goldeneye
(5:04) 17. Summertime
(4:48) 18. You've Changed
(3:56) 19. Skylark
(4:41) 20. From Russia With Love
(3:19) 21. What A Difference A Day Makes
(3:48) 22. I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For
(3:51) 23. Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive
(5:02) 24. For Your Eyes Only
(5:14) 25. Lover Man
(4:35) 26. Sunday Kind Of Love
(3:27) 27. Autumn Leaves
(4:17) 28. A View To A Kill
(3:53) 29. Sentimental Journey
(3:24) 30. Big Spender
(3:19) 31. Fools Rush In
(3:50) 32. Goldfinger
(5:07) 33. Stormy Weather
(4:47) 34. Don't Explain
(3:38) 35. I Remember You
(3:23) 36. Moonraker
(4:10) 37. Whatever Lola Wants
(3:54) 38. What'll I Do
(3:45) 39. Something's Gotta Give
(4:30) 40. Live And Let Die
(3:29) 41. Love, You Didn't Do Right By Me
(3:39) 42. People Get Ready
(3:30) 43. Laura
(4:26) 44. Tomorrow Never Dies
(4:15) 45. You Belong To Me
(4:34) 46. Smile
(4:08) 47. P.S. I Love You
(3:03) 48. You Only Live Twice
(2:56) 49. Somewhere Over The Rainbow
(5:02) 50. My Melancholy Baby

In a world desperate for peace and sanity, Jaimee and Leif discover their mission...delivering tranquility and hope through  the gift of music.Raised in SouthernIllinois, steeped in the church choir, Ms. Paul was influenced by Gospel and Blues, cultivating a special place in her heart for jazz. She left her home town for Nashville, TN to study music business at highly acclaimed Belmont University. After graduation Jaimee quickly found work at various record labels handling marketing and radio promotion, and simultaneously she began working part time as a studio session singer. Jaimee’s talent was quickly recognized, and soon she began touring as background vocalist with country superstar Wynonna, The Judd’s and most recently, pop sensation, Kelly Clarkson.

In 2008 Green Hill Music signed Jaimee as their first female vocalist, and her debut record, “At Last”, reached #1 on the iTunes Jazz charts. Several albums have followed, placing in the Top 10, including “Bonded”: a tribute record to the 50 years of the James Bond film series, produced by multi-Grammy award winning producer, Michael Omartian .Her devotional hymns record, “Hear My Prayer” garnered a Dove award nomination for Best Inspirational Album in 2013. Leif Shires, a trumpet player from California’s San Joaquin Valley, moved to Nashville in 2004 and his first discovery was a sultry jazz singer who was looking for a trumpet player. From that discovery began a romance that blossomed into marriage. Leif’s career has continued to flourish as he has worked with many different artists spanning a variety of genres, including Kelly Clarkson, Jack White, Eliza and the Bear, Jaci Velasquez, Wanda Jackson, Barry Gibb, TG Sheppard, Kelly Lang and bands such as the Memphis Horns, My Morning Jacket, and Latin jam band Salvador. Green Hill, recognizing the powerful potential of this couple, also signed Leif as their first solo trumpet player in 2008. As a duo, Leif and Jaimee have had the privilege of performing for audiences throughout the US, Canada, Europe, and Japan. Some attendees have included a United States President, Prime Ministers, Congressmen, Military leaders, and Ambassadors. They recently have independently released their first Jaimee Paul Band album, “My Favorite Things”, with new twists and turns on both jazz and pop classics. Music enthusiasts have been touched and inspired by their incredible talent, love for each other, and the music they are honored to create. https://www.jaimeepaul.com/

Jaimee Paul: The Collection

Annie Ross - Handful Of Songs

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1963/ 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:07
Size: 85,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:24)  1. A Handful Of Songs
(2:36)  2. All Of You
(3:04)  3. Fly Me To The Moon
(2:35)  4. Nature Boy
(4:04)  5. What's New
(4:18)  6. Love For Sale
(1:57)  7. A Lot Of Livin' To Do
(2:50)  8. Let Me Love You
(2:57)  9. All The Things You Are
(3:06) 10. I'm Gonna Go Fishin'
(3:26) 11. Like Someone In Love
(2:45) 12. Limehouse Blues

By 1963, Annie Ross had permanently moved back to England and had started working more as an actress than as a singer. This interesting set (reissued by DCC as an audiophile CD) features Ross backed by an orchestra arranged and conducted by Johnnie Spence. The obvious high point is one of the darkest and scariest versions of "Love For Sale" ever recorded; Ross' desperate-sounding rendition is haunting.Otherwise, she performs a variety of standards in lightly swinging fashion, not scatting or using vocalese but instead working on interpreting the lyrics. Other highlights include "All of You," "Nature Boy," "Like Someone in Love" and "Limehouse Blues." This worthy set was also put out on CD by the Fresh Sound label. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/sings-a-handful-of-songs-mw0000020817

R.I.P.
Born: 25 July 1930
Died: 21 July 2020

Handful Of Songs

Simone Kopmajer - My Wonderland

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:12
Size: 128,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:23)  1. My Wonderland
(3:43)  2. Voce E Eu (You and I)
(3:43)  3. Something New
(4:15)  4. A Man and a Woman
(3:30)  5. Why Don't You Do Right
(5:22)  6. Caravan
(4:28)  7. A Tinge of Yellow
(4:07)  8. In a Mellow Tone
(4:31)  9. Europa (Manana)
(3:14) 10. So Danco Samba
(3:25) 11. Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head
(4:38) 12. Batida Diferente
(5:50) 13. A Trembling Moon (Clair De Lune)

"My Wonderland" is Simone Kopmajer´s new solo album containing a 12-song set that presents 4 new originals alongside some of the most beautiful Latin Classics (Voce E Eu, So Danco Samba,...) and covers of songs written by Santana and Burt Bacharach. Simone´s sensual voice accompanied by the leader of the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra jazz saxophonist Terry Myers, pianist Paul Urbanek, guitarist Martin Spitzer, bassist Karl Sayer and drummer Reinhardt Winkler makes this album a “must-have“ for all Latin/Bossa Nova fans. http://www.simonekopmajer.com/concerts

My Wonderland

Thursday, July 23, 2020

Jeff Cosgrove & Scott Robinson - Hunters and Scavengers

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop 
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:25
Size: 103,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:26)  1. Eyes of the Hunter
(3:01)  2. Don't Look (Just Run)
(5:30)  3. Patterned Behavior
(5:43)  4. High, Low
(0:38)  5. Instinct
(2:54)  6. Field Test
(5:10)  7. Rays of Dawn
(6:39)  8. Simple Justification
(6:32)  9. Song of the Cuddle Fish
(5:47) 10. Lonely Woman


In the 1980s, artist Jenny Holzer created short, pithy statements projected by LED lights in museums and onto Times Square. Her now famous "Abuse of Power Comes As No Surprise" text sums up not only the #MeToo movement and the #BlackLivesMatter cry, but also to some extent, the music industry. The vertical construction of many jazz ensembles, like in corporations, gave us a leader with an often interchangeable rhythm section. This trend toward verticality began to be reversed in improvised music, creating a more democratic effort with leadership roles spread across the group. This horizontal approach is at the forefront of Hunters & Scavengers, a trio recording by Jeff Cosgrove, Scott Robinson, and Ken Filiano. It is the embodiment of a cooperative improvisation outfit. Drummer Jeff Cosgrove has turned heads of late with his work with Matthew Shipp, William Parker, Ivo Perelman, and Mat Maneri. His approach is to act more as a colorist, than a pulse generator. That approach suits bassist Filiano just fine. A veteran of nearly 200 recordings with musicians like Tony Malaby, Connie Crothers, and Anthony Braxton, his proficiency equals that of Barry Guy, Drew Gress, and Mark Dresser. Then there's saxophonist Scott Robinson, who might be the most underrated multi-instrumentalist in jazz today. His command of a menagerie of horns is on par with that of Anthony Braxton and Vinny Golia.

What this trio accomplishes in ten tracks, nine improvised and one by Ornette Coleman, is the concept of a republic. This equality amongst its members might have begun in Bill Evans' trios where Scott LaFaro and Paul Motian where freed from keeping time, but it has reached a second zenith here in these pieces. A piece like "Simple Justification" roils with a wintery covering of bowed then plucked bass, cymbals like tiny birds, and the plaintive calls of Robinson's tenor saxophone. Together, as one, the music flows, streams, and fills space with an almost unconcerned naturalness. The same is true of "Song Of The Cuddle Fish." Working to make a soundscape, the trio creates eerie textures and "Field Test," in which the emphasis appears (if this is possible) to be more of feel than sound. If you were to listen to this recording, it might be best to start with Ornette's classic "Lonely Woman" as the key to unlock the remainder of the music. Sans a leader, the melody is played by each musician as if they were charged with holding up all the tent poles of the composition. The music is a common cause here, and the three are in continuous service of the sound.~ Mark Corroto https://www.allaboutjazz.com/hunters-and-scavengers-jeff-cosgrove-scott-robinson-ken-filiano-grizzley-music-review-by-mark-corroto.php

Personnel: Jeff Cosgrove: drums; Scott Robinson: saxophone; Ken Filiano: bass.

Hunters and Scavengers

Johanna Summer - Schumann Kaleidoskop

Styles: Piano Jazz 
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:50
Size: 87,1 MB
Art: Front

( 9:57)  1. Glückes genug - Erster Verlust
(11:57)  2. Mai lieber Mai - Ritter vom Steckenpferd
(12:32)  3. Knecht Ruprecht - Träumerei
( 3:22)  4. Von fremden Ländern und Menschen

Whether with classical pieces, original compositions or jazz standards she always manages to develop a wide, dynamic narrative, sometimes delicate and fragile, sometimes, tension-filled and rhythmically gripping or irresistibly melodious. At the same time, the listener never gets the impression that she is interested in showcasing as many ideas as possible, or presenting herself as a virtuoso. Everything happens in the spirit of musical storytelling, with an extremely mature, far-sighted view of dramaturgy, dynamics, tension and atmosphere.  Süddeutsche Zeitung simply calls the result "a little sensation", Downbeat magazine „a unique debut, praiseworthy in its pursuit of merging genres“ and Jazz thing magazine describes Summer as "a pianist of a very special character, virtuoso, subtle and filigreed". Jazz, classical music and free playing - Johanna Summer creates her very own music out of the moment, and it is a true experience to listen to it.

Rarely a debut album by a young instrumentalist has evoked such enthusiastic reactions as quickly as “Schumann Kaleidoskop” by the Berlin-based, award-winning pianist Johanna Summer. On the album she uses music from Robert Schumann's "Kinderszenen" and "Album für die Jugend" as starting points for completely free improvisations, thus creating completely new music with every run. The fact that Johanna Summer takes on the supreme discipline, solo piano, for her debut shows that she is an artist who never goes the easy way.  "Johanna Summers music is full of imagination and without categories. Coming from European classical music, with a wonderful touch, she has created something perfect and unique. Beautiful music from A - Z. A new star in piano heaven,” writes piano icon Joachim Kühn about his young colleague Johanna Summer. And piano poet Malakoff Kowalski raves: “Scandalously good. I am thrilled and amazed by Johanna Summer. An artist who seems to fearlessly pursue her own music.” http://www.tambourmanagement.com/artists/109

Schumann Kaleidoskop

Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Tricycle - Zoom

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:00
Size: 148,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:16)  1. But Bout bought a boat
(5:47)  2. Cherbourg
(5:20)  3. Craft
(4:35)  4. Oakland
(2:43)  5. Wekka
(3:22)  6. Ugo
(7:07)  7. Zoom
(8:14)  8. Symphony for E.L. (in memory of Eva Leirman)
(3:37)  9. Glüpsül
(3:27) 10. Happy Sam
(4:54) 11. Still
(5:50) 12. Photographer
(3:42) 13. Welgezind

Tuur Florizoone chromatic accordion; Philippe Laloy soprano and alto saxophone, bass flute; Vincent Noiret double bass recorded: June 2019, Studio des Rameurs released: November 11, 2019 label: Aventura Music number of pieces: 13 duration: 64'00 website: aventuramusica.be/tricycle by: Georges Tonla Briquet Tricycle exists twenty years. No remixes, special edition with outtakes or a 'best of' to celebrate this anniversary, but simply thirteen new songs. Accordionist Tuur Florizoone, saxophonist Philippe Laloy and double bassist Vincent Noiret continue to make music in their early twenties and tour extensively through Flanders and the Netherlands with this program. Tricycle has released three CDs so far. The last in line, 'Queskia?', Dates from 2011.

Since then it has been an eventful period for Florizoone. He continued his musical globetrotter life on various fronts, such as in Eric Vloeimans' Oliver's Cinema, Didier Laloy & Tuur Florizoone, and with Claron McFadden, but also became a father twice. All this yielded material for thirteen new compositions. Musically there are no noticeable changes. The combination of chromatic accordion with double bass and alternating bass flute, soprano and alto saxophone still makes for very beautiful listening material. It is no surprise that Florizoone wrote music in the past for the films 'Aanvaart in Moscou' and 'Brasserie Romantiek'. Yet the three continue to surprise by the way in which they harmonize. Each title has a story. During the performances, Florizoone tells about the background with a quip but also with the necessary seriousness. You can also enjoy 'Zoom' unrestrained by using your own imagination and making up your own cursive with titles such as 'Welgezind', 'Happy Sam', 'Cherbourg' or 'Photographer'. We can already say that the latter is a reference to the Belgian Magnum photographer Harry Gruyaert, whose extremely bright street scene decorates the cover. Due to the visual language, 'Zoom' closely matches the work of (film) composers such as Nino Rota, Yann Tiersen and Eleni Karaindrou. Also a special view on the unbearable lightness of the musician's existence. A more than pleasant rebirth with this top Belgian trio, consisting of a Flemish, a Walloon and a Brussels resident. http://www.jazzenzo.nl/?e=4362

Zoom

Callum Au, Claire Martin - Songs and Stories

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:36
Size: 107,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:41)  1. Pure Imagination
(4:14)  2. Let's Get Lost
(4:24)  3. I Get Along Without You Very Well
(3:39)  4. The Folk Who Live on the Hill
(2:34)  5. Hello, Young Lovers!
(6:57)  6. I Concentrate on You
(3:55)  7. I Never Went Away
(4:33)  8. The Night We Called It a Day
(3:37)  9. Stars Fell on Alabama
(3:58) 10. Don't Like Goodbyes
(2:56) 11. You and the Night and the Music

Two leading lights of the British jazz scene: composer, arranger and trombonist, Callum Au, and internationally admired singer, Claire Martin, join forces for a new album, “Songs and Stories” on the Copenhagen-based Stunt label. The album, featuring a total of 82 exceptional musicians, from the UK, Europe and the USA, is a stunningly arranged selection of jazz standards and American Songbook classics, given compelling, sensitive, modern orchestral and big band treatments, whilst drawing extensive style and influence from the definitive peaks of this genre in past eras.This is Claire Martin’s first big band or large orchestral recording and she is thrilled to be working with Callum Au, who she regards as a “major talent”, with many great successes ahead of him. The album features a superb line-up of soloists and lead musicians including Ryan Quigley, Andy Wood, Freddie Gavita, Nadim Teimoori, Sam Mayne, Louis Dowdeswell, Andy Martin, Matt Skelton and John Mills plus conductor Mark Nightingale.The Bricusse-Newley standard “Pure Imagination” opens the album with a warm, stately, brass-led fanfare, blending gently into a lilting rhythm, at perfect tempo, ushering in Claire Martin’s sublime, mellow tones, reflecting all the wonder of the song’s lyrics. Strings help expand the flawless sound, as Claire sensitively builds the song, halting for an immaculate trumpet solo by Freddie Gavita.

The album continues with a punchy, swinging take on the Loesser-McHugh classic “Let’s Get Lost”; then a fabulously romantic reading of Hoagy Carmichael’s happy-sad “I Get Along Without You Very Well” with its flowing, shimmering strings and sumptuous arrangement. Claire Martin has the ability to breathe fresh life and meaning into songs that have perhaps become taken for granted, and her vocal on “The Folks Who Live on the Hill” does just that with the faultless emphasis and control for which she is renowned. “Hello, Young Lovers!” is snappy, pacey and exhilarating spotlighting, as indeed the whole album does, Callum Au’s inspired approach to the arrangement in this case, with a respectful bow to the golden age of jazz big Track six sees Cole Porter’s “I Concentrate on You” receive a remarkable transformation with a delightfully insidious melodic riff, introduced initially on piano before the full band and strings gradually infuse the piece with colour and touch, including a fine tenor sax solo by Nadim Teimoori. This track is a high point on an album of undeniable peaks. Claire’s vocal is, once again, outstanding  revealing her consummate ability to interpret lyrics, apply the ideal emphasis, and judge just when to employ a soft, restrained voice and when to let the controlled power of her singing have free rein.

The thoughtfully-chosen material continues with “I Never Went Away” (Richard Rodney Bennett), “The Night We Called It a Day” (Matt Denis-Tom Adair), “Stars Fell on Alabama” (Parish-Perkins), “Don’t Like Goodbyes” (Harold Arlen & Truman Capote) and “You and the Night and the Music” (Schwartz-Dietz). The whole album is sheer joy – full of invention, talent, virtuosity, passion and an overwhelming feeling that a large collective of musicians were all in absolute unison and enjoying every minute of it… as indeed every listener should, as well. Callum Au has composed and arranged music in numerous genres, but especially for big band and large jazz ensembles. He has worked with some of the world’s leading artists, including Quincy Jones, Jamie Cullum and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra – and on London stage shows including ‘The Rat Pack’, and ‘The Songbook of Judy Garland’; as well as BBC Radio 2’s Friday Night is Music Night and The Proms.  Claire Martin, OBE, needs no introduction to followers of music. One of the very finest jazz singers in UK history, and indeed high on any world list. She has won British Jazz Awards eight times; received an OBE and a BASCA Gold Badge Award for her contributions to jazz; recorded over 20 albums, including 18 for her customary label, Linn Records; and has collaborated with a host of musical celebrities including Kenny Barron, Stephane Grappelli, Richard Rodney Bennett, Martin Taylor, John Martyn and Jim Mullen. https://clairemartinjazz.co.uk/discography/songs-and-stories/

Songs and Stories

Monday, July 20, 2020

Erroll Garner - Verve Jazz Masters 7

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:26
Size: 164,9 MB
Art: Front

(2:33)  1. I've Got To Be A Rugcutter
(2:48)  2. Misty
(4:28)  3. A Smooth One
(5:33)  4. Love In Bloom
(3:22)  5. All Of A Sudden My Heart Sings
(6:26)  6. Don't Be That Way
(7:18)  7. 7-11 Jump
(6:12)  8. St. James Infirmary
(5:03)  9. Don't Worry Bout Me
(4:00) 10. Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby?
(4:33) 11. Part Time Blues
(7:24) 12. Yesterdays
(2:33) 13. Oh Lady Be Good
(5:03) 14. Fandango
(4:01) 15. I've Got The World On A String

Pittsburgh born Jazz pianist, prolific composer, concert hall artist, and recording star. Garner was one of the most well known and influential pianists in the world during his lifetime. Surrounded by a musical family, Garner was by all accounts self-taught, began playing at the age of three and was performing professionally by the age of seven. Throughout his career Garner developed a distinctive and original piano style often compared with Art Tatum, Fats Waller, as well as Claude Debussy. Garner released music on over 40 labels, received multiple Grammy nominations, and recorded one of the greatest selling jazz albums of all time, Concert By The Sea. His published catalog contains nearly 200 compositions including “Misty”, which was named #15 on ASCAP’s list of the top songs of the 20th century. He scored for ballet, film, television, and orchestra. 

One of the most televised Jazz artists of his era, Garner appeared on TV shows all over the world, including: Ed Sullivan, Dick Cavitt, Steve Allen, Johnny Carson, and many others. His prolific career began on Allegheny riverboats and spanned from the clubs of 52nd street to the top concert halls of the world. Erroll Garner’s musical and cultural legacy is perhaps stronger today than at any point since his untimely passing in 1977, when Erroll lost his battle with lung cancer at the age of 55. Thanks to the renewed efforts of Octave Music the successor and namesake of the company Garner formed with his manager Martha Glaser in 1952 and it’s Erroll Garner Jazz Project, his music is once again finding fresh audiences through a series of new record releases, multimedia performances, and creative partnerships. https://www.errollgarner.com/biography

Verve Jazz Masters 7

Jeff Cosgrove - History Gets Ahead of the Story

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:18
Size: 136,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:54)  1. O'neal's Porch
(6:14)  2. Corn Meal Dance
(6:21)  3. Gospel Flowers
(5:30)  4. Little Bird
(6:41)  5. Ghost
(5:58)  6. Moon
(4:28)  7. Things Fall Apart
(4:36)  8. Wood Flute Song
(6:07)  9. Purcell's Lament
(6:24) 10. Harlem

"Over the years, way too much improv has been flung into the realm without a clear grasp of the past. It is not that way with History Gets Ahead Of The Story, which cleverly integrates both mainstream and progressive tradition into a wonderfully refreshing world"

Drummer Jeff Cosgrove’s History Gets Ahead Of The Story is mesmerising on many levels. First of all, arguably a rarity in this day and age, the overall sound is like a warm blanket on a winter’s day and the punch and layered texture of the drums make the record sound even more inviting. Secondly, Cosgrove’s trio of saxophonist Jeff Lederer and organist John Medeski warmed to the challenge of performing the compositions of bassist William Parker and regularly hit bull’s eye. William Parker and Jeff Cosgrove have thread a similar path of improvisational music and released Alternating Current in 2014 and Near Disaster in 2019, which also included pianist Matthew Shipp. Parker’s music, modelled from minimal motives, modality and a lurid sense of tunefulness, merits plenty attention and leaves a lot of room for personal expression.

Both title and content of Things Fall Apart aptly reflect the trio’s vision. Though more precisely it should read in brackets: And We Put Them Back Together Again. Behind the surface of the piece, built from a couple of crunchy figures and scraps of melody, one intuitively senses a balanced pattern of harmony, courtesy of the trio’s responsive interplay and cogent individual statements. Gospel Flowers, a balancing act of semi-waltz and drone, is as winsome as Things Fall Apart. Corn Meal Dance’s sensuality and staccato violence tightens the cords between Cannonball Adderley’s Country Preacher and Pharaoh Sanders’s Karma. O’Neal’s Porch and Harlem employ a blues-based gait as the starting and breaking point for relentless free expression.

Expressionism finds its climax in the stately song Purcell’s Lament. Lederer is a wildly imaginative player of tenor and soprano sax and flute, ecstatic and full of warmth, a mix that is supported by far-reaching technical command of his instruments. Medeski fits right in, fiery and revelling in an effective display of different Hammond organ sounds. The pulse and melodic finesse of Cosgrove firmly directs proceedings. 

Over the years, way too much improv has been flung into the realm without a clear grasp of the past. It is not that way with History Gets Ahead Of The Story, which cleverly integrates both mainstream and progressive tradition into the wonderfully refreshing world that it is unto itself. https://jazzjournal.co.uk/2020/06/29/jeff-cosgrove-history-gets-ahead-of-the-story/

Personnel: Drums – Jeff Cosgrove; Organ – John Medeski; Saxophone, Flute – Jeff Lederer

History Gets Ahead of the Story

Sunday, July 19, 2020

Sonny Stitt - Stitt Plays Bird

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1964
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:39
Size: 104,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:16)  1. Now's the Time
(3:04)  2. My Little Suede Shoes
(4:18)  3. Parker's Mood
(3:15)  4. Constellation
(2:39)  5. Au Privave
(6:23)  6. Hootie Blues
(4:34)  7. Confirmation
(4:52)  8. Ko-Ko
(4:49)  9. Yardbird Suite
(3:46) 10. Scrapple from the Apple
(3:38) 11. Ornithology

Sonny Stitt forged his own approach to playing bebop out of the sound and style of Charlie Parker, so this tribute album was a very logical project. With fine support from guitarist Jim Hall, pianist John Lewis, bassist Richard Davis, and drummer Connie Kay, Stitt performs ten Parker compositions, plus Jay McShann's "Hootie Blues"; these renditions of "Now's the Time" and "Yardbird Suite" were previously unreleased. Stitt, who mastered bebop and could play hot licks in his sleep, is in top form on such numbers as "Constellation," "Confirmation," and "Ko-Ko," making this an essential item for straight-ahead jazz fans (although the prolific altoist would record eight other albums in 1963 alone). ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/stitt-plays-bird-mw0000195617

Personnel: Sonny Stitt – alto saxophone; John Lewis – piano; Jim Hall – guitar; Richard Davis – bass; Connie Kay – drums

Stitt Plays Bird

Jaki Byard - Parisian Solos

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1971
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:10
Size: 140,7 MB
Art: Front

( 3:19)  1. Dedicated to Bob Vatel of the Ten Gallons
( 4:36)  2. When Lights Are Low
( 4:17)  3. Besame Mucho
( 6:08)  4. Willow Weep for Me
( 3:42)  5. Tribute to Jimmy Slide
( 5:19)  6. Love Is Here to Stay
( 6:23)  7. Isle to Isle
( 5:40)  8. Shiny Stockings
( 4:28)  9. Bugle Call Rag
(12:06) 10. Medley: Goin' Out Of My Head / Mind And Soul / Besame Mucho / Sunday
( 5:06) 11. Going Home Blues

The late Jaki Byard was, arguably, the most versatile pianist in jazz, though he also played trombone and was an excellent tenor saxophonist. Born in 1922, he grew up during the golden era, and while younger than Duke Ellington, he embraced, as had his predecessor, all of the changes the music went through, from its origins in New Orleans through the free improvisation era. Byard would, in a single solo concert, reveal his truly awesome mastery of the aforementioned styles, as well as R&B, stride, swing, funk, blues, honky tonk, and the extreme arpeggios of Art Tatum. But Byard's style was completely his own, developed from his early days playing with Earl Bostic in the late '40s and early '50s. After leaving Bostic, he played with Herb Pomeroy and Maynard Ferguson until he won a spot in the legendary Charles Mingus band of 1962-1964 along with Eric Dolphy. He also recorded with Dolphy and Booker Ervin, as well as Charlie Mariano and Rahsaan Roland Kirk. 

One of his notable achievements was as the pianist in the Mingus band that tore apart concert halls all over Europe in 1964. Between 1961 and 1972, he issued a string of his own dates for Prestige (Hi-Fly, Here's Jaki, and Out Front! among them) and other labels; they embody his finest work, with a rhythm section that included Richard Davis and Alan Dawson, though he never made a bad record. Byard became an educator in the early '70s (after another collaboration with Mingus in 1970), teaching at Harvard, the Hartt School of Music, and the New England Conservatory, and he recorded and performed intermittently the world over until his death from a gunshot wound in 1999. 
~ Thom Jurek https://www.allmusic.com/artist/jaki-byard-mn0000112535/biography

Personnel: Jaki Byard - piano

Parisian Solos

Saturday, July 18, 2020

Tricycle - Orange for tea

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:10
Size: 128,4 MB
Art: Front

(1:07)  1. Intro Kater
(4:32)  2. Contamines, mon joie
(7:16)  3. Jouer au parc rouge
(5:07)  4. Moving on
(4:14)  5. Evinha, minha vizinha
(0:49)  6. SILVANA
(4:14)  7. Kater
(0:42)  8. L'homme marche droit
(5:32)  9. Then At Least
(3:44) 10. Tzygane
(1:35) 11. Stilte voor de storm
(3:39) 12. Bangkok ou ailleurs
(5:11) 13. Con Largos
(7:23) 14. Orange for tea

The Belgian trio Tricycle consists of Tuur Florizoone (accordion and piano), Philippe Laloy (sax and flute) and bassist Vincent Noiret, all former students at the Brussels conservatory. Seeing an opening to classify their music as "academic" is a little too easy. It soon becomes clear that the gentlemen are more concerned with musical charm than experimental ambition. With their characteristic line-up, their often nostalgic music floats sweetly between chanson and jazz without becoming curly. Catchy themes, clear structures and the emphasis on melody (sometimes beautifully harmlessly polyphonic) dominate. The arrangements go in so smoothly that subtle changes and carefully polyphonic passages glide effortlessly, with sax and accordion in particular snapping together and following each other.

This effortless, scattering effect is enhanced by an exact, chamber music-like interplay. Not exaggeratedly virtuoso, but all the more stylized, the three move in the tradition of entertainment music without parodying (themselves). The bass riffs are perfectly measured, the sax sound (mainly soprano sax) is wonderfully slightly lyrical and the accordion provides a spirited drive. The beautiful and the innocent are never tested, let alone broken. Because of this very balanced, but also climaxless, the CD can become too clean for some listeners.

Within the musical "modesty", however, the trio succeeds in eating from different, albeit close-together walls. For example, 'Con Largos' is drenched in a fado-like melancholy, as the 'hopla' rhythm of 'Tzygane' refers to the gypsy culture. With the walking bass line in 'Bangkok ou Ailleurs' salon jazz emerges, while the cautious and harmoniously misty piano part of 'Kater' (with a vocal contribution by Jessa Wildemeersch) could easily have escaped from an impressionistic song by Duparc.

With all these accessible references, it is almost inevitable that Tricycle flirts with kitsch here and there. Especially when Laloy switches from sax to flute in 'Evinha, Minha Vizinha', they really push the boundaries. The guys of Tricycle manage to stay on the tasteful side of the line. And that in itself is an achievement for those who get started with a combination of atmosphere and sentiment as loaded as Tricycle. Unpretentious entertainment? Possibly, but at least musical entertainment. Translate By Google http://www.kwadratuur.be/cdbesprekingen/detail/tricycle_-_orange_for_tea/#.XxHZSilKiUk

Personnel: Double Bass – Vincent Noiret; Piano, Accordion – Tuur Florizoone; Soprano Saxophone, Alto Saxophone, Flute – Philippe Laloy

Orange for tea

Friday, July 17, 2020

George Shearing Quintet - Latin Lace

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1958
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:50
Size: 72,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:31)  1. The Story Of Love
(2:45)  2. Serenata
(2:05)  3. Tu, Mi Delirio
(2:50)  4. Cali Mambo
(2:52)  5. Rondo
(2:45)  6. To The Ends Of The Earth
(2:42)  7. The Moon Was Yellow
(2:33)  8. Wonder Struck
(2:09)  9. Sand In My Shoes
(2:59) 10. Mambo Caribe
(1:51) 11. It's Not For Me To Say
(2:42) 12. Mambo #2

The second of pianist George Shearing's full-length Latin albums once again finds his quintet (with vibraphonist Emil Richards, guitarist Toots Thielemans, bassist Al McKibbon and drummer Percy Brice) being joined by the exciting congas of Armando Peraza. Most of the easy-listening melodies are from south of the border, but even the ones that aren't (such as "The Story of Love," "The Moon Was Yellow" and "It's Not for Me to Say") are given a Latinized treatment. This is nice (if rather safe) music but the LP is long out of print.~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/latin-lace-mw0000891823

Personnel:  George Shearing – piano; Toots Thielemans – guitar; Al McKibbon – double bass; Armando Peraza – congas; Emil Richards – vibraphone; Percy Brice – drums; Dave Cavanaugh – producer

Latin Lace

Adrian Raso - Gypsybilly King

Styles: Guitar Jazz, Gypsy Swing
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:57
Size: 117,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:35)  1. Eric the Baker
(3:27)  2. One Last Time
(5:17)  3. Tres Pistoleros
(3:12)  4. Once Upon a November
(4:11)  5. St. James Infirmary
(3:13)  6. Bobolobo
(3:23)  7. The Gypsybilly King
(3:34)  8. Catch the Devil By It's Tale
(4:36)  9. Dark Waltz
(5:17) 10. Playa La Ropa
(3:08) 11. Beelzebaby Swing
(3:25) 12. Emilja's Waltz
(3:33) 13. Allumette

A journey from dusty desert roads, to deep south swamps, from Parisian rooms to bars in Prague. Zegna pinstripe suit, black Biltmore Eleganza fedora and Ted Baker tie: Adrian Raso is a sharply dressed man. The Toronto guitarist cuts a raffish figure, as he plays observers might just imagine him having succumbed to the old blues myth of selling his soul so to become a master musician. Raso defiantly blends a vast musical vocabulary that sees his supple guitar technique reference Django Reinhardt’s Gypsy jazz stylings and Brian Setzer rockabilly licks, whilst his diverse songwriting channels Johnny Cash’s ghost and deep south voodoo - drawing a clear line through these disparate yet similar musical-sociological traditions. Cutting his teeth playing tough Toronto dive bars, Raso came to realise he preferred forging his own path. Having released several solo albums in Canada, Raso’s 2014 collaboration with superstar Romanian brass band Fanfare Ciocarlia “Devil’s Tale’” ( Asphalt Tango Records ) secured his international reputation. Never before had East met West so successfully, the album, one of the first to combine Balkan/ Gypsy style rhythms with Mediterranean music, charted #1 on the World Music Charts and earned wide critical praise and a myriad awards. In 2019 Raso released his follow up and 10th studio album aptly titled “Gypsybilly King”. Blending furious Rockabilly guitar with influences ranging from Country Western, Romanian Hora, deep south Blues and Italian Tarantella. Raso seamlessly moves us from a smoky room in Paris to an after-hours bar in Prague, before quietly taking us down a dusty road in Texas, until finally settling in the dark streets of New Orleans. Mixed and mastered by Grammy Award-winning engineer Bob St. John, the album also features collaborations with the likes of Prince’s drummer Michael Bland, The Stray Cats bassist Lee Rocker, along with multiple members of Del Bel. https://theadrianraso.bandcamp.com/releases

Gypsybilly King

Thursday, July 16, 2020

Archie Shepp, Chet Baker Quintet - In Memory Of: First and Last Meeting in Frankfurt and Paris 1988

Styles: Saxophone, Trumpet And Piano Jazz 
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:47
Size: 160,5 MB
Art: Front

(11:58)  1. Dedication to Bessie Smiths Blues
( 9:14)  2. My Foolish Heart
(11:06)  3. Confirmation
( 9:28)  4. When Lights Are Low
( 9:44)  5. How Deep Is the Ocean
(10:54)  6. Old Devil Moon
( 7:19)  7. My Ideal

This is one of the odder releases of the 1980s. For the first and only times, trumpeter Chet Baker and tenor saxophonist Archie Shepp teamed up for a pair of concerts in a quintet which also included pianist Horace Parlan, bassist Herman Wright and drummer Clifford Jarvis. The fact that Shepp is an emotional avant-gardist and Baker a cool-toned lyrical trumpeter and that both have radically different singing styles (they take a vocal apiece) results in the obvious: these two individualists do not blend together very well. Other than Shepp's "Dedication to Bessie Smith's Blues," the repertoire is all standards. Baker plays pretty, while Shepp sounds sloppy and heavy. This CD is definitely a historical curiosity, but does not need to be listened to more than once.~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/in-memory-of-mw0000654787

Personnel: Trumpet, Vocals – Chet Baker; Saxophone [Tenor], Vocals – Archie Shepp; Piano – Horace Parlan; Bass – Herman Wright; Drums – Clifford Jarvis

In Memory Of: First and Last Meeting in Frankfurt and Paris 1988

Peter & Will Anderson - Peter and Will Anderson: Featuring Jimmy Cobb

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:44
Size: 149,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:43)  1. Two For One
(5:17)  2. Hot and Cold
(7:37)  3. Blues for You
(7:10)  4. Rhythm in F
(7:08)  5. Autumn in New York
(5:13)  6. Pick Your Spot
(8:08)  7. Someday My Prince Will Come
(6:09)  8. Jeannine
(7:28)  9. Polka Dots and Moonbeams
(4:45) 10. I'll Tell You Later

Grammy Award-winning saxophonists and identical twins, Peter and Will Anderson document another burner of a recording on their Featuring Jimmy Cobb album, released within days of the passing of the legendary drummer in May 2020. The last surviving member of the Miles Davis band that recorded the ground-breaking jazz album Kind of Blue (Columbia, 1959), Jimmy Cobb passed away at age 91. While not originally designed as a tribute project, this album may well be one of the last recordings featuring Cobb, as his last album as leader, This I Dig of You (Smoke Sessions Records, 2019), was released in 2019. The Anderson brothers craft an exciting session of music, mixing six new originals and four standards in which each piece is a keeper. Accompanying Will, on alto saxophone, and brother Peter, on tenor sax, are Jeb Patton on the piano, David Wong on bass and, of course, Jimmy Cobb. The band opens in blistering fashion, cooking through the first four originals: "Two for One," "Hot and Cold," "Blues for You," and "Rhythm In F," where the bebop and hard bop sounds paint this canvas red hot.

There are two relative soft spots on this album with the first belonging to the Anderson treatment of the Vernon Duke classic "Autumn In New York." On "Someday My Prince Will Come," and the time-honored standard from Duke Pearson, "Jeanine," the boys are wild with phenomenal call and response performances. The Jimmy Van Heusen standard "Polka Dots & Moonbeams," occupies the other mellow piece of the set with Will teeing off on the alto, marking this rendition of the piece as one of the finest. The brothers play in unison on the final track, "I'll Tell You Later," capping off an incredible session of hard-core bebop the way it was intended to be performed. The rhythm section, and especially Cobb, provide an amazing performance. As for the twins, we've heard the phrase "brothers in arms." Well, in this case it's "brothers in bebop," for Will and Peter Anderson Featuring Jimmy Cobb is one outstanding recording and remembrance of a legend.~ Edward Blanco https://www.allaboutjazz.com/featuring-jimmy-cobb-peter-and-will-anderson-outside-in-music

Personnel: Peter Anderson: saxophone, tenor; Will Anderson: saxophone, alto; Jimmy Cobb: drums; Jeb Patton: piano; David Wong: bass.

Peter and Will Anderson: Featuring Jimmy Cobb

Wednesday, July 15, 2020

Bola Sete - Live At Grace Cathedral

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1976
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:16
Size: 134,2 MB
Art: Front

( 2:23)  1. Jongo
( 5:52)  2. Gaucho / Meu Ogum
( 4:01)  3. Carnival Nights
(15:37)  4. Flamenco Fantasy
( 7:11)  5. Ocean Waves (O Mar)
( 5:33)  6. Jongada
( 2:52)  7. O Astronauto
( 5:23)  8. Vira Mundo Penba
( 4:32)  9. Guitar Lamento
( 4:47) 10. Tio George

This live solo guitar concert took place on May 21, 1976 in the acoustically lush Grace Cathedral in San Francisco. It is an enhanced CD which includes sheet music, photos and the original concert program of this memorable evening of music performed by. Samba Moon.2005 ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Live-Grace-Cathedral-1976-Francisco/dp/B0007VF1R4

Live At Grace Cathedral

Tricycle - King Size

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:29
Size: 134,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:40)  1. 4 & 3 + 4
(3:31)  2. Belly Button
(5:07)  3. Silvana's Dream
(5:32)  4. Epilogue
(5:30)  5. 3 Pinguins on a Sunday Afternoon
(3:44)  6. Tupyzinho
(6:13)  7. Tribute to Vissotsky
(4:52)  8. Pas Ce Soir, Je Suis Crevé
(5:35)  9. Le Mystère du Petit Sac Noir
(6:25) 10. Ode à Lydie
(6:15) 11. Rustic

The cat which illustrates the cover of the disc is probably not there by chance. Tricycle takes us on a journey with the agility and finesse of a feline. With this group, we travel through different countries, different atmospheres of jazz tinged with Slavic, Latin or imaginary folklore music. Throughout this journey, while fragile and sometimes unspoken, the breath of the accordion by Tuur Florizoone is rightly mixed with that of the viola or soprano by Philippe Laloy . And as if to stay the course, the warm and enveloping bass from Vincent Noiret is the third essential wheel of this tricycle. For this second album, the trio this time took on a few traveling companions (hence the title King Size ) who are not one to slow down the cart: Laurent Blondiau (Mäâk's Spirit, Octurn, Rackham…) at the trumpet and flugelhorn, Stephan Pougin (Phinc, Rêve d'Eléphant Orchestra…) with volatile percussion and Brazilian-born guitarist Victor Da Costa . We pass from light and joyful moments, which promise a carefree perspective ("4 & 3 + 4"), to clearly darker moments. "Epilogue" for example, with a heavy and desolate atmosphere, suggests the delicate marriage of the sax and the trumpet in a song of extreme restraint. 

From this meditation escape piano notes which fall like tears that cannot be held back. Between nonchalance and lively slowness, Tricycle has a sense of simple happiness and flexible rhythm. The slow and melancholic waltz of "Belly Button", which evokes a tired fun fair inspired by an Italian neo-realistic film, echoes the malicious "Not tonight, I'm exhausted" ... Here, it is the double bass that has the hangover. The theme hesitates between going dancing or resigning itself to staying in bed. Da Costa's guitar, with slightly South American accents, and the accordion are trying to get this little world out of a soft torpor. 

Our little band then pays a beautiful tribute to Trovesi and Coscia by taking "Tribute To Vissotsky" where the twirling soprano by Laloy exchanges winks with an accordion with a deep voice. Detour also on the side of Central America with "Tupyzinho" who races like a sarabande, this time taken by a flute and Pougin's percussions. Of course, dreaming is part of the journey with "3 Pinguins On A Sunday Afternoon" and especially "Sylvana's Dream" where a light, sensual and lunar saxophone resounds. All these melodies advance in hushed steps, between perpetual folklore and jazz which does not say its name. Tricycle is not cluttered with labels and only takes emotion with it as luggage. And it's already a lot. https://www.citizenjazz.com/Tricycle.html

Personnel: Yuur Florizoone (acc, p), Philippe Laloy (ss, as, fl), Vincent Noiret (b), Laurent Blondiau (tp, bugle), Victor Da Costa (g), Stephan Pougin (perc, dm)

King Size