Thursday, June 10, 2021

Thimo Niesterok's Cologne Clambake - First Clambake

Styles: Dixieland, Swing, Mainstream Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:20
Size: 156,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:26) 1. Krahnenbäume In The Spring Sun
(7:20) 2. When The Train Goes Slow
(4:34) 3. April In Paris
(3:21) 4. Number Four
(6:20) 5. All My Tomorrows
(5:20) 6. I Love Paris
(4:03) 7. Steamboat On Lake Garda
(7:45) 8. Onion Tears
(4:40) 9. A Song
(5:56) 10. Wenn Menschen auf die Straße geh'n
(6:32) 11. OP's Ride
(5:59) 12. Kalk Nocturne

Thimo Niesterok (*1996) grew up at Lake Constance in Southern Germany and has been living in Cologne since 2015. He studied jazz trumpet at ‘Hochschule für Musik und Tanz’ in Cologne with Andy Haderer and Matthias Bergmann and now works as a freelance musician. He has been on tour and played in concerts in several towns and cities in Germany and e.g. in Sweden, India and South Korea (during the Winter Olympics in PyeongChang 2018). As winner of the Kobe Jazz Street Award he was invited as soloist to Kobe Jazz Street Festival in Japan. Niesterok’s main focus is on traditional jazz and swing music. In 2017 his first album “First Clambake” was published. In 2019 it was followed by the album “Two Talkin’ Horns”, which he recorded together with trombone legend Dan Barrett (USA). https://thimo-niesterok.de/en/bio-in-eng/

First Clambake

Ken Peplowski - Easy to Remember (Extended)

Styles: Clarinet And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 100:27
Size: 232,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:31) 1. It's Easy to Remember
(5:51) 2. Restless
(7:58) 3. Copi
(3:42) 4. With Every Breath I Take
(3:22) 5. Louisa
(8:02) 6. Everything I Love
(4:41) 7. I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face
(1:55) 8. Single Petal of a Rose
(3:52) 9. Love Came
(7:07) 10. Good Old Days
(2:36) 11. Junk
(5:37) 12. Smoke Rings
(7:16) 13. High on You
(3:51) 14. Love Came 1 - New York Mix
(3:50) 15. Love Came 2 - New York Mix
(4:30) 16. It's Easy to Remember 1 - New York Mix
(4:32) 17. It's Easy to Remember 2 - New York Mix
(4:42) 18. I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face - New York Mix
(5:51) 19. Restless - New York Mix
(6:31) 20. High on You - New York Mix

Clarinetist Ken Peplowski can be counted on for about one new record a year; it apparently takes him most of that year to decide on material to include on the next album. Peps has been a staple in the jazz world for quite some time, having debuted at age 10 in 1969 in his home town of Cleveland, OH, and toured with Tommy Dorsey's ghost band (led by Buddy Morrow) in the late '70s, before settling in New York. The rap on him is that he is the epitome of jazz traditionalism, but, as this CD demonstrates, that judgment fails adequately to recognize his adventurousness.

Here, supported by a superlative rhythm section, Peplowski has compiled a collection that ranges from Bobby Short's Caf' Carlyle rendition of the title tune to pianist Rosenthal's original "Good Old Days"; "Restless" (from Benny Goodman's book) on tenor sax to Paul McCartney's "Junk"; a revisitation of "Copi" and "Everything I Love" to Joe Cohn's father Al's "High on You"; and Cy Coleman's beautiful "With Every Breath I Take" to the serendipitous "Smoke Rings," with standards from Jobim, Lerner and Loewe, Strayhorn and Ellington to round out the program. Throughout its more than 66 minutes, the threads that hold it all together are Peplowski's innate musicality and impeccable good taste.

To my ear, the album's trajectory soars after Short's contribution; the old cabaret singer's spirit is willing, but his raspy voice is weak. Peps' tenor is breathy and Cohn's and Leonhart's solos, laid-back on a gently swinging "Restless." "Copi" is a lovely, slow jazz waltz for tenor, while Peps' introspective clarinet drips clover honey on "Every Breath." Jobim's "Louisa," suggested by Peps' frequent duo partner Howard Alden, is as delicate as a blossom, featuring delicious interplay between Peplowski's clarinet and Rosenthal's piano. A long, elegant, out-of-rhythm clarinet cadenza opens Cole Porter's "Everything I Love," clearly one of the high points of the album; the eventual addition of other instruments interrupts the reverie with almost abrupt suddenness, although the comfortable swing of the rendition, the beauty of the tune, and, in eight minutes, its thoroughness of exploration make the intrusion easy to forgive.

Peps' brief, unaccompanied solo on Ellington's "Single Petal of a Rose" seems to capture perfectly the Duke's intent; this to me is the album's emotional center. Nothing could follow it more appropriately than a Strayhorn ballad. Rosenthal's brisk original, remotely reminiscent of "Savoy," injects a nice change of pace, while Paul McCartney's pleasantly simple "Junk," wistfully sung by Kim Liggett, with Cohn's accompaniment and Peplowski's clarinet obbligato, provides some unexpected variety.

The album concludes with a solidly swinging "Smoke Rings" and an up-tempo "High on You," taken with a samba beat; Peps switches to tenor for both of these.~ J.Robert Bragonier https://www.allaboutjazz.com/easy-to-remember-ken-peplowski-nagel-heyer-records-review-by-j-robert-bragonier.php?width=1920

Personnel: Ken Peplowski - clarinet, tenor sax; Joe Cohn- guitar; Ted Rosenthal - pianist; Joe Fitzgerald - bassist; Jeff Brillinger - drummer; Bobby Short - vocals (track 1); Kim Liggett- vocals(track 11)

Easy to Remember (Extended)

Connie Jones, Dick Sudhalter - Get out and Get Under the Moon (Live at the Vineyard)

Styles: Ragtime, Dixieland, Swing
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:28
Size: 128,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:05) 1. Changes
(4:27) 2. I'd Climb the Highest Mountain
(4:18) 3. If a Had a Million Dollars
(3:47) 4. Ol' Pigeon-Toed Joad
(2:55) 5. Futuristic Rhythm
(4:52) 6. Singin' the Blues
(4:03) 7. Rosalie
(3:48) 8. Persian Rug
(2:57) 9. Get out and Get Under the Moon
(5:18) 10. Davenport Blues
(2:43) 11. Why Couldn't It Be Poor Little Me?
(3:18) 12. I Must Have That Man
(4:58) 13. Jeannine, I Dream of Lilac Time
(4:51) 14. I'm a Dreamer-Aren't We All?

These bright Dixie-to-swing sessions were initially issued on the Stomp Off label, with two additional, previously unissued sessions tacked on. Jones and Sudhalter are staunch interpreters of these songs of the 1920s and '30s, evoking clear echoes of Bix Beiderbecke, Bobby Hackett, Louis Armstrong, and others. Performers include Jones on cornet and Sudhalter on trumpet, with pianist Keith Ingham, bassist Greg Cohen, guitarists Marty Grosz and James Chirillo, drummer Arnie Kinsella, and frontline help from alto saxophonist and clarinetist Joe Muranyi and trombonist Bobby Pring. The most familiar numbers are Beiderbecke's sweet "Davenport Blues," Cole Porter's upbeat, Jones-led "Rosalie," and Pring and Muranyi on the Frankie Trumbauer hit "Singin' the Blues." Another standout is the wonderful show tune "Futuristic Rhythm," with its myriad rhythmic changes and Latin, click clack, hard swinging beats. Some smaller combinations arise as Sudhalter and Ingham gently stride through "I'd Climb the Highest Mountain" and the stark and bluesy "Persian Rug," and perform spirited jamming on "Why Couldn't It Be Poor Little Me?" Jones alone states the theme on the easy paced "Ol' Pigeon Toed Joad" and gives the rougher-hewn ballad "Jeannine" a neat contrast. The two brassmen are at their best when dueling away on "If I Had a Million Dollars," "Changes," and the title cut, where their sound meshes and brings the sunny side out. Though the subtitle of this session is "Live at the Vineyard" (the Vineyard Theater in New York City) there is no crowd noise, so it's not an in-concert performance. It is a date that early period jazz mavens will want to own.~ Michael G.Nastos https://www.allmusic.com/album/get-out-get-under-moon-live-at-the-vineyard-mw0000601886

Get out and Get Under the Moon (Live at the Vineyard)