Tuesday, April 27, 2021

Sam Cooke - One Night Stand! Live At The Harlem Square Club, 1963

Styles: Vocal, Soul
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:55
Size: 90,0 MB
Art: Front

(1:23) 1. Soul Twist / Introduction
(2:54) 2. Feel It (Don't Fight It)
(3:11) 3. Chain Gang
(2:45) 4. Cupid
(5:11) 5. Medley: It's All Right / For Sentimental Reasons
(5:18) 6. Twistin' The Night Away
(6:18) 7. Somebody Have Mercy
(4:08) 8. Bring It On Home To Me
(2:40) 9. Nothing Can Change This Love
(5:03) 10. Having A Party

Not officially released until 1985, these live recordings from Miami's Harlem Square Club on Jan. 12, 1963, showcase Sam Cooke as a tough, demanding R&B singer, far from the smooth pop stylings of his singles. Playing with his road band and saxophonist King Curtis, Cooke has all-star accompaniment at every turn. But the true star here is Cooke. It's his gritty delivery that reinvigorates the once-mild offerings of "Cupid" and "For Sentimental Reasons" and takes his soul classics like "Chain Gang," "Twistin' the Night Away," "Bring It on Home to Me," and "Having a Party" and turns them into passionate, personal expressions of spiritual power. Cooke brings his gospel best to the material, and his influence on Rod Stewart, Joe Cocker, and an entire generation of rock 'n' roll singers can be traced to his interpretations' phrasings and energy. Even the audience gets involved. With this much excitement, it'd be impossible to not get in the spirit. ~ Editors’ Notes https://music.apple.com/us/album/one-night-stand-live-at-the-harlem-square-club-1963/304822401

One Night Stand! Live At The Harlem Square Club, 1963

Lisa Bassenge - Mothers

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:55
Size: 136,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:42) 1. Joanne
(3:09) 2. Freight Train
(5:44) 3. Some Other Spring
(4:16) 4. Thin Man
(4:54) 5. Why
(4:12) 6. Don't Come Home A-Drinkin'
(5:58) 7. Woodstock
(4:47) 8. All the Good Girls Go to Hell
(4:26) 9. Home Again
(5:59) 10. At Seventeen
(4:31) 11. Dancing on My Own
(7:12) 12. Song to a Seagull - Live

Lisa Bassenge has called her new album "Mothers". It is a tribute to the mothers of popular music. To women who have created something unique in a creative process. "Both now and in the past, there are so many great works by women," says Bassenge. "It was important to me to emphasize that with my album and to shine the light on all these strong women."

At first glance, the composers Bassenge has chosen could hardly be more different - from hippie icon Joni Mitchell to Eurythmics singer Annie Lennox and pop phenomenon Billie Eilish. And yet they have much in common. "Many songs tell of a moment of self-empowerment for these women - and the success that followed. That's something that touched me very much, because women often don't have the confidence to do such things and think they need encouragement from outside," explains Bassenge. "When I started singing as a teenager, I also often heard 'women can't make music'. In general, we have made a lot of progress in recent years, but we still have a long way to go before women get the recognition they deserve."

Lisa Bassenge not only covers the twelve pieces, she makes them her own - with her changeable, soulful voice and the gentle jazz instrumentation. As on her previous album "Borrowed and Blue" she recorded "Mothers" with swedish pianist Jacob Karlzon and danish bass player Andreas Lang. https://herzogrecords.bandcamp.com/album/mothers

Personnel: Lisa Bassenge (vocals); Jacob Karlzon (piano); Andreas Lang (bass)

Mothers

Lambert, Hendricks & Ross - Home Cookin'

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:30
Size: 92,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:26) 1. Home Cookin'
(2:18) 2. Halloween Spooks
(4:47) 3. Popity Pop
(3:52) 4. Blue
(3:17) 5. Mr P.C.
(5:27) 6. Come on Home
(3:05) 7. The New ABC
(2:33) 8. Farmer's Market
(3:06) 9. Cookin' at the Continental
(2:50) 10. With Malice Towards None
(3:45) 11. Hi-Fly

The premier jazz vocal act of all time, Lambert, Hendricks & Ross revolutionized vocal music during the late '50s and early '60s by turning away from the increasingly crossover slant of the pop world to embrace the sheer musicianship inherent in vocal jazz. Applying the concepts of bop harmonies to swinging vocal music, the trio transformed dozens of instrumental jazz classics into their own songs, taking scat solos and trading off licks and riffs in precisely the same fashion as their favorite improvising musicians. Vocal arranger Dave Lambert wrote dense clusters of vocal lines for each voice that, while only distantly related, came together splendidly. Jon Hendricks wrote clever, witty lyrics to jazz standards like "Summertime," "Moanin'," and "Twisted," and Annie Ross proved to be one of the strongest, most dexterous female voices in the history of jazz vocals. Together Lambert, Hendricks & Ross paved the way for vocal groups like Manhattan Transfer while earning respect from vocalists and jazz musicians alike.

The act grew out of apartment jam sessions by Lambert, a pioneering arranger and bop vocalist who had appeared in groups led by Gene Krupa and Buddy Stewart though he had also gained infamy leading a vocal choir on the disastrous "Charlie Parker with Voices" session recorded for Clef in 1953. That same year, Lambert met Jon Hendricks, who had similar vocal specialties that extended to lyrical changes. The pair debuted with a radically reworked version of "Four Brothers," which featured lyrics by Hendricks and note-for-note duplications of the original solos by Al Cohn, Zoot Sims, Stan Getz, and Woody Herman. They recorded a few other sides but were unsuccessful until a chance meeting with solo vocalist Annie Ross hit paydirt.

The first LP by Lambert, Hendricks & Ross was 1957's Sing a Song of Basie. Though the trio originally intended to hire a complete vocal choir to supplement their voices, the general incompetence of the studio voices led them to multitrack their own voices. The results were excellent, incredible vocal re-creations of complete solos from Basie classics like "One O'Clock Jump," "Down for Double," and "Avenue C" with added lyrics by Hendricks. The next year's follow-up, Sing Along with Basie, featured the bandleader himself and his group in a supporting role. Perhaps realizing that multi-tracking was a bit of a gimmick, Lambert, Hendricks & Ross then recruited a straight rhythm trio and began touring and recording that way. The first studio effort, 1959's The Swingers!, represented a leap in quality and musicianship, leading to a contract with Columbia later that year. The trio recorded three albums for the label during the next two years, including a tribute to Duke Ellington.

All three had pursued separate solo projects during the trio's run. After constant touring began to wear her out, Ross left the group in 1962. Lambert and Hendricks replaced her with Yolande Bavan, and continued recording for RCA. However, it was nearly impossible to replace a soloist of Ross' caliber, and the three albums Lambert, Hendricks & Bavan recorded between 1962 and 1964 were decidedly below par. The group broke up in 1964, and Lambert's death in a traffic accident just two years later quashed any hopes of a reunion. Both Hendricks and Ross continued to perform and record, with Ross doing much theater and film work as well.~ John Bush https://www.allmusic.com/artist/lambert-hendricks-ross-mn0000106987/biography

Home Cookin'