Friday, October 30, 2020
Carmen McRae - The Very Thought Of You: The Definitive Singles Collection Disc 1, Disc 2
Styles: Vocal
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:51
Size: 184,1 MB
Art: Front
(2:34) 1. The Very Thought Of You
(2:18) 2. Oh! Look At Me Now
(2:30) 3. The More I See You
(2:39) 4. Show Me The Wat
(2:53) 5. The Party's Over
(3:00) 6. The Next Time it Happens
(3:13) 7. You Don't Have To tell Me
(2:14) 8. Never Loved Him Anyhow
(2:38) 9. Talk to Me
(2:32) 10. What Has She Got
(3:03) 11. Am I The One to Blame
(2:28) 12. Come Down to Earth Mr, Smith
(2:41) 13. Love is Here To Say
(2:17) 14. Take Five
(3:04) 15. As I Love You
(2:46) 16. The Eagle and Be Wrong
(3:02) 17. So Nice to Be Wrong
(2:57) 18. Skyliner
(2:54) 19. Invitation
(3:22) 20. His Eye is on the Sparrow
(2:44) 21. I'll See You Again
(2:17) 22. I Love The Ground You Walk On
(3:04) 23. If I'm Luck(I'iiBe The One)
(2:24) 24. I'm Putting All My Eggs in One Basket
(2:56) 25. Don't Cry, Joe (Let Her Go! Let Her Go)
(2:36) 26. Play for Keeps
(3:01) 27. Rich Man, Poor Man
(3:06) 28. Keep Me In Mind
(2:25) 29. Moon Ray
Album: The Very Thought Of You: The Definitive Singles Collection Disc 2
Time: 79:59
Size: 185,3 MB
(3:00) 1. Whatever Lola Wants
(3:07) 2. Star Eyes
(2:42) 3. You Don't Know Me
(2:26) 4. It's Like Getting a Donkey to Gallup
(2:51) 5. If You Should Leave Me
(2:47) 6. Georgia Rose
(2:34) 7. Which Way Is Love
(2:51) 8. Big Town
(2:44) 9. Namely You
(3:01) 10. I'll Love You (Till I Die)
(2:18) 11. Ooh (What'cha Doin' to Me)
(3:22) 12. This Will Make You Laugh
(1:51) 13. I Cried for You
(2:57) 14. Lo and Behold
(2:28) 15. Passing Fancy
(2:45) 16. Nightlife
(2:20) 17. How Does the Wine Taste
(2:52) 18. Get Set
(2:41) 19. I Guess I'll Dress Up for the Blues
(2:57) 20. Coax Me
(3:46) 21. Midnight Sun
(2:48) 22. I'm a Dreamer, Aren't We All
(2:52) 23. How Many Stars Have to Shine
(2:15) 24. Come On, Come In
(2:30) 25. Miss Brown to You
(2:58) 26. Tonight He's Out To Break Another Heart
(2:43) 27. A Room with a View
(3:09) 28. My One and Only Love
(2:11) 29. They All Laughed
Carmen McRae always had a nice voice (if not on the impossible level of an Ella Fitzgerald or Sarah Vaughan) but it was her behind-the-beat phrasing and ironic interpretations of lyrics that made her most memorable. She studied piano early on and had her first important job singing with Benny Carter's big band (1944), but it would be another decade before her career had really gained much momentum. McRae married and divorced Kenny Clarke in the '40s, worked with Count Basie (briefly) and Mercer Ellington (1946-1947), and became the intermission singer and pianist at several New York clubs. In 1954 she began to record as a leader' and by then she had absorbed the influences of Billie Holiday and bebop into her own style. McRae would record pretty steadily up to 1989 and, although her voice was higher in the '50s and her phrasing would be even more laid-back in later years, her general style and approach did not change much through the decades. Championed in the '50s by Ralph Gleason, McRae was fairly popular throughout her career. Among her most interesting recording projects were participating in Dave Brubeck's the Real Ambassadors with Louis Armstrong, cutting an album of live duets with Betty Carter, being accompanied by Dave Brubeck and George Shearing, and closing her career with brilliant tributes to Thelonious Monk and Sarah Vaughan. Carmen McRae, who refused to quit smoking, was forced to retire in 1991 due to emphysema. She recorded for many labels including Bethlehem, Decca (1954-1958), Kapp, Columbia, Mainstream, Focus, Atlantic (1967-1970), Black Lion, Groove Merchant, Catalyst, Blue Note, Buddah, Concord, and Novus.~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/carmen-mcrae-mn0000185948/biography
The Very Thought Of You: The Definitive Singles Collection Disc 1, Disc 2
The Very Thought Of You: The Definitive Singles Collection Disc 1, Disc 2
Marcel Loeffler - Source manouche
Styles: Gypsy Jazz, Swing
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:01
Size: 133,4 MB
Art: Front
(3:23) 1. Swing suspens
(3:36) 2. Ma référence
(4:10) 3. Fiso Place
(4:40) 4. Douce ambiance
(3:11) 5. Them There Eyes
(5:07) 6. All the Things You Are
(3:36) 7. Passion
(3:36) 8. Pont de Venise
(5:33) 9. Ruby
(2:30) 10. Joshua Fit the Battle of Jericho
(4:53) 11. Double scotch
(3:06) 12. H.C.Q. STRUT
(5:25) 13. Où es-tu mon amour ?
(5:07) 14. La ballade irlandaise
Source manouche
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:01
Size: 133,4 MB
Art: Front
(3:23) 1. Swing suspens
(3:36) 2. Ma référence
(4:10) 3. Fiso Place
(4:40) 4. Douce ambiance
(3:11) 5. Them There Eyes
(5:07) 6. All the Things You Are
(3:36) 7. Passion
(3:36) 8. Pont de Venise
(5:33) 9. Ruby
(2:30) 10. Joshua Fit the Battle of Jericho
(4:53) 11. Double scotch
(3:06) 12. H.C.Q. STRUT
(5:25) 13. Où es-tu mon amour ?
(5:07) 14. La ballade irlandaise
As he rubs many accordionists, he wants to see his son play. Although having lost his sight at the age of 5 (genetic problem), the little Marcel is left with an accordion in his hands when he is only 6 years old. Four years later he begins to accompany his father in country balls with one of his brothers on drums; Marcel is of course brought up in the love of music; Because if his father likes Django, the idol of the community, he is also a lover of American jazz; with him, Marcel discovers Sinatra, Nat king Cole, Ellington … but playing the accordion in the 70s, when the instrument is relegated to the commercial register, you immediately rank in the category of nerds, even if you like Art Van Damme, Gus Viseur or Marcel Azzola, working hard to decipher their pieces. At the end of adolescence, Marcel abandons a time accordion in favor of an electric bass. Engaged in the Jacky Coulé Variety Orchestra, he performed at Niederbronn Casino; for four years he discovers and learns at the same time all the jazz standards within this orchestra. In the 80s he is interested in synthesizers, playing in various rock bands or varieties. These fifteen years of bells were still a solid school, allowing Marcel to be comfortable in all styles and everywhere at home in music; not to mention family reunions and parties where music is a daily sharing.
If Marcel started composing in the mid-80s, without ever having learned the theory, it was not until 1996 that he recorded « Vago » his first record as a leader, on which he signed most of the compositions and let his explosions multiply. talents. Having inherited from his father the faculty of not being content to stay in a single genre of music, Marcel announces here what will be a constant of his approach: his ability to propose different musical universes while keeping a real homogeneity. Sideman highly sought after, Marcel multiplies meetings and experiences. The essential for him being to play in public, he will share the stage with partners who are mostly his friends: guitarists Wawau Adler (participates in albums « Roots » in 2006 and 2007), Tchavolo, Dorado, Engé and Railo Helmstetter, accordionists Jean-Louis Matinier, Frédéric Schlick (Marcel will be one of his guests on « Jazz nuances » in 96), René Sopa (who will be inviting him on « Carinhos tango », recorded in 2008), Raul Barboza (Schiltigheim’s White Horse in 2000), Azzola the following year in the same place, saxophonist Franck Wolf and James Carter, violinist Costel Nitescu and bassist Gilles Coquard who will invite him on « Reïsa », a disc on which he meets Mino Cinélu and Bireli Lagrène … the list is long and not exhaustive.
An open and curious musician, Marcel likes Django and Viseur, of course, but also Art Van Damme, Piazzolla, Bach, the great American jazzmen with a predilection for Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea or Joe Zawinul. He also likes music from Central Europe, Africa and French songs; he always takes one on his records (wax doll, sound doll on « Vago », say when will you come back from Barbara, the song of the old lovers of Brel or the Irish ballad immortalized by Bourvil on the following ones). Marcel is always ready for new musical adventures, as for the Spring straps which gives him carte blanche every year; In 2013, he set up a Quincy Jones big band with Pascal Beck, the trombonist and arranger of Strasbourg, choosing the best French musicians to take back standards and original compositions; if Marcel records regularly (see all his albums in the discography page), he likes to play in public because it is there that he perceives intimately what his music brings or not to others. This does not prevent him from transmitting, since 2016, he teaches Jazz at the conservatory of music in Strasbourg. Marcel Loeffler, an exceptional stylist. First of all, a clear, airy phrasing that combines light swing, elegance and lyricism, a constant focus on punctuations and contrechnts and a keen sense of improvisation; he can linger around the melody with an unfailing inspiration or punctuate his speech with some virtuoso accelerations never gratuitous; for Marcel has long since passed the stage of virtuosity; what interests him is to play in a thoughtful, more elaborate way, to build something coherent, to play on the nuances, to keep the note; for him, music is above all emotional. https://marcel-loeffler.fr/en/
If Marcel started composing in the mid-80s, without ever having learned the theory, it was not until 1996 that he recorded « Vago » his first record as a leader, on which he signed most of the compositions and let his explosions multiply. talents. Having inherited from his father the faculty of not being content to stay in a single genre of music, Marcel announces here what will be a constant of his approach: his ability to propose different musical universes while keeping a real homogeneity. Sideman highly sought after, Marcel multiplies meetings and experiences. The essential for him being to play in public, he will share the stage with partners who are mostly his friends: guitarists Wawau Adler (participates in albums « Roots » in 2006 and 2007), Tchavolo, Dorado, Engé and Railo Helmstetter, accordionists Jean-Louis Matinier, Frédéric Schlick (Marcel will be one of his guests on « Jazz nuances » in 96), René Sopa (who will be inviting him on « Carinhos tango », recorded in 2008), Raul Barboza (Schiltigheim’s White Horse in 2000), Azzola the following year in the same place, saxophonist Franck Wolf and James Carter, violinist Costel Nitescu and bassist Gilles Coquard who will invite him on « Reïsa », a disc on which he meets Mino Cinélu and Bireli Lagrène … the list is long and not exhaustive.
An open and curious musician, Marcel likes Django and Viseur, of course, but also Art Van Damme, Piazzolla, Bach, the great American jazzmen with a predilection for Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea or Joe Zawinul. He also likes music from Central Europe, Africa and French songs; he always takes one on his records (wax doll, sound doll on « Vago », say when will you come back from Barbara, the song of the old lovers of Brel or the Irish ballad immortalized by Bourvil on the following ones). Marcel is always ready for new musical adventures, as for the Spring straps which gives him carte blanche every year; In 2013, he set up a Quincy Jones big band with Pascal Beck, the trombonist and arranger of Strasbourg, choosing the best French musicians to take back standards and original compositions; if Marcel records regularly (see all his albums in the discography page), he likes to play in public because it is there that he perceives intimately what his music brings or not to others. This does not prevent him from transmitting, since 2016, he teaches Jazz at the conservatory of music in Strasbourg. Marcel Loeffler, an exceptional stylist. First of all, a clear, airy phrasing that combines light swing, elegance and lyricism, a constant focus on punctuations and contrechnts and a keen sense of improvisation; he can linger around the melody with an unfailing inspiration or punctuate his speech with some virtuoso accelerations never gratuitous; for Marcel has long since passed the stage of virtuosity; what interests him is to play in a thoughtful, more elaborate way, to build something coherent, to play on the nuances, to keep the note; for him, music is above all emotional. https://marcel-loeffler.fr/en/
Source manouche
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