Tuesday, December 1, 2020

Anita Harris - Swinging On A Star

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:13
Size: 169,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:36) 1. Somewhere Over the Rainbow
(3:01) 2. Sunshine Superman
(2:48) 3. Swinging On a Star
(2:45) 4. The Clapping Song
(2:44) 5. Watermelon Man
(3:17) 6. When You Were a Child
(3:45) 7. Yes We Have No Bananas
(3:45) 8. Lullaby of the Leaves
(2:58) 9. Maxwell's Silver Hammer
(3:14) 10. Messing About On the River
(2:04) 11. Old Queenie Cole
(2:27) 12. Oranges and Lemons
(2:54) 13. Right Said Fred
(3:25) 14. Somebody's in My Orchard
(4:03) 15. A Taste of Honey
(2:33) 16. Bad For Me
(3:45) 17. Butterfly with Coloured Wings
(2:46) 18. Cherry Ripe
(3:12) 19. Do You Know the Way to San Jose
(3:00) 20. Don't Sit Under the Apple Tree
(2:41) 21. Eleanor Rigby
(2:28) 22. Flash Bang Wallop
(3:08) 23. He's a Tramp
(1:41) 24. Honeysuckle Rose

Anita Harris is known as an all-round entertainer, singing, acting, and dancing all part of her repertoire. Sharing musical arranger Kenny Clayton with Petula Clark, her clear vocal quality invited comparisons with Clark and other top female singers from the mid- to late '50s. She was born on June 3, 1942, in Midsomer Norton, Somerset, and began her show business career as soon as she had left school, traveling to Las Vegas to train in choreographed skating. Her first professional engagement, however, was a singer with the easy listening vocal ensemble the Cliff Adams Singers, who enjoyed an extended run on BBC radio with the program Sing Something Simple, a selection of mainly MOR ballads and show tunes that ran from 1959 through to the death of its creator, Cliff Adams, in 2001. She made her debut on record backed by the John Barry Seven, but the single, a double A-side of "I Haven't Got You" and "Mr One And Only," was not a success. Moving into acting, she became famous for very cheeky performances in two of the Carry On films, particularly Carry on Doctor and Follow That Camel, both from 1967. This was her peak year for chart activity too as her friend Dusty Springfield provided her with a hit single written by her brother Tom, "Just Loving You," which peaked at number six. Two further singles were released, both cover versions of the songs "Anniversary Waltz" and "Dream a Little Dream of Me." Her one and only visit to the album charts was with the album also called Just Loving You, which hit number 29 early in 1968. In the 1970s, she appeared on various television programs, including The Morecambe & Wise Show, and she also co-hosted the David Nixon Magic Show and was still appearing as herself on programs up to 2001, notably Boom Boom: The Best of the Original Basil Brush Show, French & Saunders, and Bob Monkhouse: A BAFTA Tribute.~ Sharon Mawer https://www.allmusic.com/artist/anita-harris-mn0000574671/biography

Swinging On A Star

Lee Konitz - At the Half Note Disc 1 And Disc 2

Album: At the Half Note Disc 1
Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1959/2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:52
Size: 112,3 MB
Art: Front

(9:16) 1. Palo Alto
(9:17) 2. How About You?
(6:56) 3. My Melancholy Baby
(7:55) 4. Scrapple from the Apple
(7:41) 5. You Stepped out of a Dream
(7:44) 6. 317 E 32nd

Album: At the Half Note Disc 2
Time: 47:39
Size: 109,5 MB

(8:46) 1. April
(8:11) 2. It’S You or No One
(5:43) 3. Just Friends
(8:33) 4. Baby, Baby All the Time
(8:41) 5. Lennie-Bird
(7:41) 6. Subconscious-Lee

The music on this two-CD set has a strange history. Pianist Lennie Tristano had a rare reunion with altoist Lee Konitz and tenor saxophonist Warne Marsh (his two greatest "students") during an extended stay at the Half Note in 1959. Tristano took Tuesday nights off to teach and Bill Evans was his substitute, but the pianist had a couple of those performances recorded for posterity. While listening to his tapes years later, he was so impressed with Marsh's playing that he sent edited versions (comprised entirely of the tenor man's solos) to Marsh, and somehow they ended up being released in that form by the Revelation label. In 1994, the unedited music was finally issued by Verve; the consistently exciting playing by Konitz, Marsh, and Evans (with backup by bassist Jimmy Garrison and drummer Paul Motian) makes one wonder what took so long. They perform a dozen extended standards (or "originals" based on the chord changes of familiar tunes) with creativity and inspiration. In fact, of all the Konitz-Marsh recordings, this set ranks near the top. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/live-at-the-half-note-mw0000626075

Personnel: Lee Konitz – alto saxophone; Warne Marsh – tenor saxophone; Bill Evans – piano; Jimmy Garrison – bass; Paul Motian – drums

At the Half Note