Saturday, April 3, 2021

Lori Mechem - Return To Ipanema

Styles: Brazilian Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:29
Size: 126,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:07) 1. Wave
(4:17) 2. The Girl From Ipanema - Return To Ipanema Album Version
(4:59) 3. Corcovado - Instrumental Version
(4:02) 4. Agua De Beber - Return To Ipanema Album Version
(3:59) 5. How Insensitive
(4:58) 6. Zingaro
(4:21) 7. One Note Samba - Return To Ipanema Album Version
(4:29) 8. Meditation
(4:50) 9. Desafinado - Return To Ipanema Album Version
(4:11) 10. So Danco Samba - Return To Ipanema Album Version
(5:14) 11. Once I Loved
(4:57) 12. Dindi

Lori Mechem is one of the active leaders of the Nashville Jazz Workshop, which is a jazz education program consisting of live performances and classes featuring local musicians and, occasionally, nationally known musicians. Return to Ipanema is the pianist's salute to the music of Antonio Carlos Jobim, with contributions by Denis Solee (tenor and soprano saxes plus flute), guitarist Pete Huttlinger, bassist Roger Spencer, drummer Chris Brown, and percussionist Dann Sherrill, playing the arrangements of Jeff Steinberg. The performances are enjoyable background music, though they are a little too conservative as Solee is the only musician who is improvising most of the time, while the strings provide more of a background feel. An example is "The Girl from Ipanema," where Solee's tenor takes a few chances (though not nearly enough), while Mechem sticks very close to the melody during her single chorus. Mechem does loosen up in "One Note Samba" and Solee's adventurous soprano seems to stimulate the leader a bit in the breezy "So Danco Samba." But because these compositions have been recorded so frequently in a jazz setting, they deserve to be played a little looser than many of them are on this session.~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/return-to-ipanema-mw0000820786

Return To Ipanema

Greg Abate - Magic Dance: The Music of Kenny Barron Disc 1, Disc 2

Album: Magic Dance: The Music of Kenny Barron Disc 1

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:06
Size: 109,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:17) 1. Sunshower
(6:09) 2. Cook's Bay
(7:54) 3. Golden Lotus
(7:19) 4. Innocence
(8:59) 5. Water Lily
(7:38) 6. Sonia Braga
(3:47) 7. Bud Like

Album: Magic Dance: The Music of Kenny Barron Disc 2

Time: 40:44
Size: 94,9 MB

(6:14) 1. Lemuria
(4:52) 2. Concentric Circles
(8:28) 3. Rain
(5:25) 4. Voyage
(5:35) 5. Magic Dance
(4:32) 6. Song for Abdullah
(5:35) 7. And Then Again

Woonsocket native saxophonist Greg Abate is releasing a new album “Magic Dance: The Music of Kenny Barron” on April 2, a tribute to the keyboard legend Barron. An inductee in the RI Music Hall of Fame, Abate has played and recorded with artists as diverse as Phil Woods, Richie Cole, Jerome Richardson, as well Kenny Barron. Abate was recently ranked #4 in the world on alto sax in the annual Downbeat Magazine Reader’s Poll. There’s a beautiful marriage happening with Greg Abate’s “Magic Dance: The Music of Kenny Barron.” It’s the union between Abate’s multi-instrumental gift of bebop and Kenny Barron’s varied and sublime compositions. Abate and Barron, who, in addition to lending Abate his material, handles keys on this recording session, are soul mates occupying the same lovely musical space.

With Barron’s material and Abate’s fresh vision, the two-disc set, recorded over three days at Rudy Van Gelder Studio in New Jersey, is a revelation. Says Abate: “Kenny was kind enough to provide me with music for a range of his tunes, some more well-known than others. The only difficult part was choosing which ones to record.” Abate researched and reworked Barron’s music, inserting his own ideas when appropriate, enhancing his arrangements with multiple sax overdubs, and, when the original was so good, it made sense to leave well enough alone. The project was challenging, multi-dimensional, and immensely gratifying. “I even scored a big band sax section (two altos, two tenors and bari) on ‘Innocence’ and ‘Voyage.’ The other 12 tracks have either one horn, or two horns in harmony.”More...Ken Abrams https://whatsupnewp.com/2021/02/ri-jazz-great-greg-abate-to-release-magic-dance-the-music-of-kenny-barron-in-april/

Magic Dance: The Music of Kenny Barron Disc 1, Disc 2

Theo Hill - Promethean

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:29
Size: 127,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:09)  1. This Here
(3:40)  2. Hey, It's Me You're Talking To
(5:00)  3. Finger Painting
(4:07)  4. I Love Music
(5:25)  5. Pee Wee
(4:59)  6. The Phoenix
(5:16)  7. Blasphemy
(5:26)  8. Is That So
(6:24)  9. Litha
(4:15) 10. Chance
(5:43) 11. Citadel

Promethean captures Theo Hill at a significant juncture in his development. The record is ample evidence that the thirty-something New York City-based artist is rapidly securing a place in the crowded field of noteworthy contemporary jazz pianists. On the one hand particularly during medium and up-tempo cuts such as "This Here," "Hey, It's Me You're Talking To," "Litha," "Is That So," and "Citadel"youthful exuberance and a cocky certainty imbue everything he plays. On the other, his improvisations are resourceful, well ordered, and hang together as a whole. Hyperliterate, thrill ride choruses are the norm. Throughout the eleven tracks the present state of his art speaks for itself and points to the future. Hill's efforts practically shout out: "This is what I can do now; but stick around, because in a matter of months or a year or so, my music will be in an even better place." With the exception of one original composition, the program is comprised of material by Bobby Timmons, Herbie Hancock, Kenny Kirkland, Duke Pearson, Tony Williams, Victor Lewis, Chick Corea and Hale Smith. Though these names may be used as a general stylistic compass, they're not an invitation to label Promethean as some sort of tribute record. Hill is way past any sort of fealty to his influences, and so the compositions serve as templates for an impressive skill set. A precisely calibrated relationship between his left and right hands is a hallmark of Hill's pianism. Generally speaking, the right hand does most of the talking, while the left enacts hurdles to leap over, swerve around, or surmount. Even at his most active, the deep-seated connection between his two hands is apparent and his touch never falters or sounds strained. On the head of Hill's original, "The Phoenix," the chords are as weighty as blocks of granite. Throughout the solo his left hand slices, dices, and chops, while the right feverishly moves forward. In contrast, during portions of Hancock's "Finger Painting," Hill's left hand takes on the character of subtle brush strokes. Though Mark Whitfield, Jr's rambunctious drumming and Yasushi Nakamura's solid bass lines make significant contributions throughout, Hill's solo on Kirkland's "Chance" shows that he's more than capable of sustaining momentum on his own. In the end, Hill's interpretations of a wide range of material and his exhilarating improvisations make Promethean an impressive recording. ~ David A. Orthmann https://www.allaboutjazz.com/promethean-theo-hill-posi-tone-records-review-by-david-a-orthmann.php

Personnel: Theo Hill: piano; Yasushi Nakamura: bass; Mark Whitfield, Jr: drums.

Promethean