Monday, October 26, 2020

Bill Coleman - The Complete Philips Recordings (disc 1), (Disc 2)

Album: The Complete Philips Recordings (disc 1)
Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:11
Size: 163,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:36) 1. Jumpin' At The Pleyel
(3:07) 2. Si Jolie
(2:55) 3. The Blues Jumped Up And Got Me
(2:59) 4. I'm Coming Virginia
(3:22) 5. Come On A My House
(3:09) 6. Tenderly
(3:53) 7. Knucklehead
(5:23) 8. Baby Won't You Please Come Home
(5:48) 9. One O'Clock Jump
(3:34) 10. Perdido
(3:02) 11. When The Saints Go Marching In
(5:01) 12. Ghost Of A Chance
(5:39) 13. Basin' Street Blues
(3:15) 14. Lover Man
(2:02) 15. Summertime
(2:16) 16. Jumpin' With Symphony Sid
(1:58) 17. Trombone Blues
(5:20) 18. St. James Infirmary
(3:42) 19. Sheik Of Araby

Album: The Complete Philips Recordings (disc 2)
Time: 77:53
Size: 183,1 MB

(4:31) 1. Red Top
(4:45) 2. Royal Garden Blues
(5:39) 3. Solitude
(3:31) 4. Tea For Two
(2:11) 5. Chinatown
(5:31) 6. Drum Face
(3:45) 7. Muskrat Ramble
(4:09) 8. Black And Blue
(5:16) 9. Idaho
(4:34) 10. Out Of Nowhere
(3:34) 11. Indiana
(9:05) 12. Saint Louis Blues
(2:37) 13. Jumpin' At The Pleyel
(3:13) 14. Si Jolie
(2:51) 15. The Blues Jumped Up And Got Me
(2:51) 16. The Blues Jumped Up And Got Me
(3:20) 17. Come On A My House
(3:17) 18. Come On A My House
(3:05) 19. Tenderly

Trumpeter Bill Coleman (1904-81) played in a host of orchestras (led by Benny Carter, Teddy Wilson, Luis Russell and Don Redman) in the 1930s, with the same vibrato and finesse as his contemporary, Buck Clayton, but not quite the same bravura and vocabulary. To make an analogy using trumpeters from another jazz era, Coleman is to Clayton as Kenny Dorham is to Clifford Brown. Coleman would eventually settle in France, where these recordings were made and recently reissued, and where he would co-found the Marciac Jazz Festival. A geographical serendipity allowed him to entitle his memoirs De Paris (Kentucky) à Paris (France). The Complete Philips Recordings centers around a somewhat rowdy (on and off-stage) October 1952 concert at the Salle Pleyel in Paris, an apparently totemic event for budding French jazz fans of the era. (At least that's the sense conveyed by veteran critic Michel Boujut's dewy-eyed review of this disc in Jazz Magazine.)

In addition to its sentimental value to listeners of a certain generation, however, the concert recording is of real musical interest as well. It's easy to joyfully submit to the crazy juxtaposition of styles in the set list. 1920s chestnuts are played with rollicking gusto, only to be followed by loping 1930s swing numbers, not to mention urbane 1950s vocal R&B. Similarly, the musicians are a temporal and stylistic grab bag. Drummer Zutty Singleton, having wandered out of the Mezz Mezzrow band, pounds raucously through "When the Saints Go Marching In, "Idaho" and "Drum Face," sounding like a voice speaking to us directly from the New Orleans of another century (which, of course, he is). Trombonist Dicky Wells' playing does nothing to dispel the impression that he was, as he himself admitted, "half-high and half-frozen" during his European sojourn. This condition does not prevent credible, big-hearted solos on "Saints" and "Black and Blue." Saxophonist Guy Lafitte is consistently good, offering easygoing solos in the Ben Webster manner. Randy Downes is a bop pianist Singleton is alleged to have approved his membership in a cannabis-induced haze, only to judge him too modern once the smoke had cleared with a nice feature on "Out of Nowhere." He deftly negotiates the swing numbers, even if Singleton is entirely uninterested in meeting him halfway. Coleman weaves in and out of this vaguely chaotic mise en scène, playing his lovely solos ("St James Infirmary," "Red Top," "Royal Garden Blues"), singing blues affably, joking with the audience in good French with an upbeat but cool composure to which a Zen monk could aspire. The two-CD package is complemented by six 1951 studio numbers. These septet tracks, with a far more coherent band and fine arrangements by trombonist Bill Tamper, present Coleman as a quite serious and forward-looking bandleader.~ Jeff Dayton Johnson https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-complete-philips-recordings-bill-coleman-universal-music-france-review-by-jeff-dayton-johnson.php

Personnel: Bill Coleman: trumpet, vocal; Bill Tamper: trombone; Jay Cameron: alto saxophone; William Boucaya: baritone saxophone; Art Simmons: piano; Jean-Pierre Sasson: guitar; Guy de Fatto: bass; Gérard "Dave"

The Complete Philips Recordings (disc 1) (disc 2)

Ernie Watts & Chick Corea - 4Tune

Styles: Saxophone And Piano Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:52
Size: 153,6 MB
Art: Front

(9:27) 1. Swing Dentz Swing
(5:57) 2. My One And Only Love
(2:52) 3. Boom Bap
(7:00) 4. Miyako
(7:19) 5. Night And Day
(6:53) 6. Invitation
(6:39) 7. Blues For John C
(7:38) 8. Bud Powell
(3:57) 9. Sifu
(2:31) 10. Andy Meets Chick
(6:35) 11. Oleo

Originally released on the RealTime label as a double LP, this CD (which contains 11 of the 14 selections) is quite notable for containing some brilliant playing by Ernie Watts (during a period when his own recordings were very commercial). Chick Corea (sticking to acoustic piano) is also in excellent form as are bassist Andy Simpkins and drummer John Dentz (who was the actual leader). Although a few of the shorter numbers have their free moments, the highpoints are "My One and Only Love," "Night and Day," "Invitation," "Blues for John C.," "Bud Powell" and "Oleo," intense straightahead explorations that allow Watts and Corea opportunities to stretch out. ~Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/release/four-tune-mr0000093637

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone, Alto Saxophone – Ernie Watts; Piano – Chick Corea; Acoustic Bass – Andrew Simpkins; Drums – John Dentz

4Tune

Toni Tennille - More Than You Know

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1984
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:00
Size: 85,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:48) 1. More Than You Know
(3:07) 2. Do It Again
(4:01) 3. I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)
(3:23) 4. Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man
(4:48) 5. Our Love Is Here To Stay
(3:43) 6. Let's Do It (Let's Fall In Love)
(3:40) 7. But Not For Me
(4:36) 8. Day Dream
(2:04) 9. Guess Who I Saw Today
(3:45) 10. Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me

With her husband, Daryl Dragon, pop singer Toni Tennille made up the popular '70s duo the Captain & Tennille. Tennille was the vocalist for the group, while Dragon played the keyboard and other instruments. She is known for her pop, rock, jazz and orchestral music and has sold more than a million records with popular hits like "Do That to Me One More Time" and "The Way I Want to Touch You." Toni Tennille was born into a musical family in Montgomery, Alabama. Her father, Frank Tennille, sang and recorded under the pseudonym Clark Randall. He was with Ben Pollack's band and was still performing with the band when Bob Crosby took over. Toni Tennille attended Auburn University in Alabama, paying her way by singing popular tunes of the '30s and '40s. In 1975, she married Daryl Dragon. The two combined their musical talents to produce the Captain & Tennille. During the partnership, the duo earned an impressive five gold albums, six gold singles, two platinum albums and one platinum single. In 1976, the two entered the television scene with their own show on ABC, Captain & Tennille Variety Show, and appeared on several other ABC specials. Captain & Tennille's Greatest Hits, released in 1977, included the duo's 1975 Grammy Award-winning Song of the Year "Love Will Keep Us Together." In 1980, she hosted the syndicated Toni Tennille Variety Talk Show.

Two of Tennille's hit albums, All of Me and More Than You Know, were produced herself and then fine-tuned by the Count Basie Orchestra's musical arranger Sammy Nestico. In 1984, when the couple moved to nevada, Tennille began to work once again on renditions of songs from the '30s and '40s. She is known in the United States and Canada as a frequent symphony guest artists, with eight to ten appearances a year. In 1992, she broadened her career to include the stage, starring in the Los Angeles production of Stardust. She received rave reviews in all the trade magazines for her musical performance. The Captain & Tennille made a 20th anniversary album in 1995, featuring some of the group's hit singles and jazz ballads from the last twenty years. The album, Captain & Tennille 20 Years of Romance, also marked the couple's 20th wedding anniversary. Studying classical piano for ten years has allowed Toni Tennille to broaden her career to include songwriting. Through her participation in the Captain & Tennille, her orchestra tours across the United States and Canada, her jazz and pop albums and her television appearances, Toni Tennille has become known as a complete singer and entertainer. Nevada Governor Bob Miller named Tennille an Ambassador for the Arts for her numerous contributions. Kim Summers https://www.allmusic.com/artist/toni-tennille-mn0000936232/biography

More Than You Know