Thursday, April 29, 2021

Kate Ceberano - True Romantic: The Best of Kate Ceberano

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:27
Size: 160,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:20) 1. True Romantic
(4:22) 2. Pash
(4:31) 3. I Won't Let You Down
(4:09) 4. Calling You
(4:49) 5. Everythings Alright
(4:06) 6. Love and Affection
(4:01) 7. Change
(4:28) 8. Feelin Alright
(5:32) 9. Brave
(3:56) 10. Bedroom Eyes
(4:37) 11. Time to Think
(4:26) 12. I Dont Know How to Love Him
(4:17) 13. Love Is Alive
(3:24) 14. Young Boys Are My Weakness
(4:17) 15. All That I Want Is You
(4:11) 16. See Right Through

True Romantic – The Best of Kate Ceberano is a greatest hits album released by Australian recording artist Kate Ceberano. It was a commercial success, peaking at number 9 on the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) album chart, and was certified platinum in Australia. The album was re-released in 2004, under the title The Definitive Collection. It includes songs from her time with I'm Talking, tracks from Jesus Christ Superstar, her studio albums Brave, Blue Box and Pash as well as two new tracks. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/True_Romantic

True Romantic: The Best of Kate Ceberano

David Binney And Edward Simon - Oceanos

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:57
Size: 130,7 MB
Art: Front

(7:30)  1. We Dream Oceans
(9:13)  2. Impossible Question
(9:57)  3. Amnesia
(7:33)  4. El Parrandero
(5:11)  5. Govinda
(6:23)  6. Twenty Four Miles To Go
(3:37)  7. Impossible Question Reprise
(7:29)  8. Home

Reconvening the same core quartet as on Afinidad (Red, 2001), altoist David Binney and pianist Edward Simon demonstrate how a collaborative effort can bear the distinct imprint of each musician while, at the same time, possessing its own indelible stamp. Binney and Simon have emerged, over the past decade, as leaders in an evolving musical context informed by broader cultural concerns, often complex harmonic and rhythmic foundations, and a fresh thematic approach that's eminently lyrical yet steadfastly avoids the obvious. Both are fine soloists, able to combine a sense of the cerebral with deeper emotional resonance. Teamed with bassist Scott Colley and drummer Brian Blade, Océanos is a compellingly listenable album, despite some considerable challenges hidden underneath the covers. Binney's "We Dream Oceans" opens the disc with simmering intensity. Percussionist Pernell Saturnino augments Blade's delicate touch, while guitarist Adam Rogers and Binney double a theme that first stands alone but is ultimately countered by Luciana Souza's wordless vocals. Simon builds a lithely focused solo that gradually intensifies, leading to a recapitulation of the theme and a solo from Binney that's as much about the sound of the notes as the notes themselves, building to a fever pitch only to fade to a gentler coda. While there's plenty of solo space, Océanos is as much about composition and arrangement, with Binney and Simon making judicious use of the added guests. Binney's polyrhythmic and Latin-esque "El Parrandero" makes full use of the three-piece horn section, creating a sound that's at times sharply pointed, other times richly expansive, contrasting with "We Dream Oceans" where the horns are used only briefly to reinforce the tune's final figure. Simon's 9/4 "Impossible Question" is first heard in expanded form, with Rogers' acoustic guitar solo navigating the pianist's changes with ease and Blade delivering a short but energetic solo. Binney's most powerful improvisation of the set is heard on a later reprise; a shorter but more texturally lush version that's expanded to include the horn section and percussion. 

Binney's closer, "Home," begins with a poignant theme that unfolds gradually but keeps returning to the same four-chord pattern. Colley and Simon both deliver lyrical solos before returning to the theme, leading into a repetition of that same four-chord pattern as a foundation for Binney's final solo which, bolstered by the rest of the group, builds the "Home" to a powerful climax before ending on an etheral note. Continuing to collaborate periodically over the years acts as a yardstick of both individual growth and a shared aesthetic for Binney and Simon. Océanos is their best pairing yet an album that brings together two strong musical minds to create a whole that's truly greater than the sum of its parts. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/oceanos-david-binney-criss-cross-review-by-john-kelman.php?width=1920

Personnel: David Binney: alto saxophone; Edward Simon: piano; Scott Colley: bass; Brian Blade: drums; Luciana Souza: vocals (1, 2, 5, 6); Adam Rogers: guitar (2, 5); Shane Endsley: trumpet (3, 4, 7); Jesse Newman: trumpet (3, 4, 7); Alan Ferber: trombone (3, 4, 7); Pernell Saturnino: percussion (1, 4, 7).

Oceanos

Lara Solnicki - The One And The Other

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:24
Size: 102,7 MB
Art: Front

(8:33) 1. Bit Her Sweet Christopher Street
(4:36) 2. Idée Fixe
(3:46) 3. The Embrace
(6:04) 4. Furling Leaf, Retrocede
(6:19) 5. I Pass a Glass
(7:16) 6. II Awe of the Sea
(7:46) 7. III Hollow the Need

Among feelings are nervousness and anxiety. While synonymous in any thesaurus, the two words differ in the same way that thankfulness and gratitude differ, that is, in focus. Nervousness and thankfulness often have no focus, no definite object creating them. Anxiety and gratitude are those feelings, those reactions to the specific. Something clearly gives rise to them. With regards to anxiety and disquiet, Canadian vocalist and composer Lara Solnicki uses "free jazz" and poetry as the stimulus for generating a mood of anxiety. Not anxiety in a bad way. More like a lack of clarity in an otherwise cohesive narrative. Solnicki presents this unease cinematically in discrete vignettes, or tone poems, each following its own creative arc, resolving or not, in a state still possessing tension, but one better realized than before.

The One And The Other is Scolnicki's third release, after A Meadow In December (Self Produced, 2010) and Whose Shadow (Inner Circle Music, 2014). The singer is hyperliterate, existing at a modern-postmodern interface where her art is informed equally by the other, often at the same time. Solnicki plants her spear in the sand in the cleverly entitled "Bit Her Sweet Christopher Street." The piece begins as if awakening, but not quite making it, falling back into that twilight that can disconcert. Jonathan Goldsmith's angular piano and Peter Lutek's screeching saxophone introduce the first fit of concern buoyed on Scott Peterson's bubbling electric bass. After a moment of respite, guitarist Rob Piltch 's Ben Monder-inspired glorious noise stirs the dream before emerging, not quite settled.

"Furling Leaf, Retrocede" is a spoken poetry narration carried slowly along by fractured and unrecognisable music, gently simmering with the occasional release of tension only to double down into further chaos. "Furling leaf, retrocede, whaft, near view" sets up a scene that develops into "Sheer currents beyond the finestra stir machines in this laundromat..." juxtaposing nature versus the mechanised. This performance could be envisioned performed at some yet unnamed, future Village Vanguard, at whatever a poetry slam is called in that way off time. Solnicki's words are clinical, astringent: "Green-yellow ataxia to the flushing gates -Twenty-one; Sixty Six...precocious tides with its attaches of amnesia...pleading sighs in the undertow / with swells of heaving flesh..." With music these are industrial visions, humid, clanging, insomniac: Hypnotic in the same way as Placidyl or Quaalude.

In this guise, this is no music with which to unwind after a typically hectic, post-COVID-19 day. But Solnicki does provide the tuneful interlude in the descriptively titled "Idée Fixe" (think Berlioz' Symphonie Fantastique deconstructed to a schizophrenic piano-saxophone duet over a wandering bass). Her wordless melodies tie the piece together into the messy stuff of life. "The One And The Other" is a three section suite combining all the stylistic elements that have preceded them. It takes an informed talent to conceive of and then execute music and lyrics of this complexity.

Lara Solnicki is able to present disintegration in an orderly and understandable fashion. While this is not cocktail party music, it is rich food for thought and contemplation.~ C.Michael Bailey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-one-and-the-other-lara-solnicki-outside-in-music

Personnel: Lara Solnicki: voice / vocals; Jonathan Goldsmith: keyboards; Peter Lutek: woodwinds; Hugh Marsh: violin; Rob Piltch : guitar; Scott Peterson: bass; Rich Brown: bass; Davide Di Renzo: drums.

The One And The Other