Thursday, June 24, 2021

John Boutte' & Paul Sanchez - Stew Called New Orleans

Styles: Vocal, Guitar
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:03
Size: 110,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:31) 1. Stew Called New Orleans
(4:23) 2. Two-five-one
(3:23) 3. Hey God
(3:33) 4. I Thought I Heard Buddy Bolden Say
(4:39) 5. Call Me Superstitious
(6:03) 6. An Empty Chair
(4:04) 7. Don't Smoke Around Susie
(5:02) 8. Wakes Me Up to Say Good-bye
(3:15) 9. A Meaning or a Message
(4:00) 10. Be a Threadhead
(4:04) 11. American Tune

Friendship has its privileges, and in the case of singer John Boutte and Paul Sanchez, that means getting together and knocking out a record in a single session. What you hear on this well-played, extremely well-sung yet laid back session of singer-songwritery, blues jazz is not ambition so much as confidence in each other’s abilities and the easy grace that comes from music making in a town and in a “stew” of genres you love and understand. An engaging, one-two meld of Sanchez’ songwriting and Boutte’s reedy, Sam Cooke-like voice, this varied collection waggles back and forth from “Two-Five-One, (a Sanchez send-up of the jazzman’s chords) through a not-done-to-death Jelly Roll Morton cover, “I Thought I Heard Buddy Bolden Say,” to a beautifully realized version of Paul Simon’s “American Tune,” with let’s git legit!“harmonies by J.S. Bach.”

Both players outdo themselves in the singing department with Boutte delightfully wending his way through lyrical tangles like those in the Todd Duke/Paul Sanchez tune, “Don’t Smoke Around Suzie,” easily this set’s strongest number. He kills funny, angular couplets like, “You can huff glue ’til you’re comatose / eat fried chicken and Oreos you can clog your arteries ’til you stop your heart / but smokin’ ’round Suzie will tear you apart.” For support the pair took no chances, booking top shelf trumpeter Leroy Jones, who began music as a teenager with Danny Barker and went on to star with Harry Connick, Jr.’s band. His horn’s dance with Boutte’s vocals on “Call Me Superstitious,” is a highlight. Boutte’s longtime guitar player Todd Duke and bassist Peter Harris complete the quintet.

The missteps here are not fatal. Whether the world, let alone Louisiana needs another stab at an iconic New Orleans song like the title cut, one that piles on the well-worn NOLA clichés while encouraging listeners to “brings your greens” to the town “where the good times roll,” is debatable. And it’s easy to understand how “Be a Threadhead,” an advertisement for the non-profit label putting out the record made the cut, but it’s still a sop. But those quibbles aside, the connection between Boutte and Sanchez is real. The piquant blend of their simpatico philosophies on life and music, so charmingly mixed in these 11 cuts, is the kind of splendid soul that speaks best for itself. By Robert Baird https://www.offbeat.com/music/john-boutte-and-paul-sanchez-stew-called-new-orleans-threadhead/

Line-up/Musicians: John Boutte - vocals, tambourines; Paul Sanchez - vocals, acoustic guitar; Leroy Jones - trumpet; Todd Duke - electric guitar; Peter Harris - bass

Stew Called New Orleans

Tony Williams Lifetime feat John McLaughlin - Live In New York 1969

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:32
Size: 88,5 MB
Art: Front

( 6:56) 1. To Whom It May Concern
(12:24) 2. Emergency
( 7:01) 3. Unknown Title
( 6:43) 4. A Famous Blues
( 5:27) 5. Something Spiritual

Having fearlessly merged rock rhythms with jazz during a close association with Miles Davis, in 1969 the great Tony Williams founded Lifetime, featuring John McLaughlin at his innovative best, and the mighty organist Larry Young. The trio instantly won acclaim for their fiery, uncompromising improvisations, which are typified on this amazing performance. Recorded for radio broadcast in New York at the close of the year, the FM entire broadcast is presented here, digitally remastered, with background notes and images. https://www.directaudio.net/products/tony-williams-lifetime-featuring-john-mclaughlin-live-in-new-york-1969-vinyl-lp

Musicians: Tony Williams, drums; John McLaughlin, guitar; Larry Young, organ

Live In New York 1969

Lisa Kirchner - Charleston for You

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:44
Size: 114,9 MB
Art: Front

(2:17) 1. Dying to Confess
(6:13) 2. The Man I Love - Live
(4:21) 3. Riverside
(3:39) 4. Marie Laveau
(4:10) 5. Blue by the River
(4:08) 6. Jessie
(3:58) 7. L’accordéoniste
(3:41) 8. Charleston for You
(3:23) 9. Lights of L.A.
(4:48) 10. Red Wine and White Lies
(3:49) 11. Phat Hat
(5:11) 12. Coracão Vagabundo / Berimbau

Lisa Kirchner comes from the Toni Tenille / Olivia Newton-John / Paul Williams / Rita Coolidge / Judy Collins segment of the music world, encanting with a studied sonorous voice in Charleston for You, a collection of standard, self-penned, and other tracks cohered through their readings, the most affecting of which is a take on Janis Ian's Jesse. Aiding her is a rather impressive collection of well-known names: Tommy Mandel, Lonnie Plexixo, John Miller, Sue Evans, and quite a few others. Her handling of French, as in L'accordeoniste, may in fact be her strongest card, so much does she cut into a truly perfect reading of the language. Think Piaf.

There are quite a few mainstream tracks here, many of which would go well on radio, Lights of L.A. the strongest candidate either for soft jazz, adult contemporary, or The Wave type dial positions. Interestingly, no production credits are given for this disc, but whoever helmed the effort didn't steer the recording process as well as might have been desired nor quite push Kirchner to her limits (listen to the tail end of Lights if you want an illustration of just where her ace card lies beautiful!). Thus, I suspect Lisa herself produced the CD…and shouldn't have, as musicians aren't often the best judges of their own strengths and weaknesses. That she has all the attributes necessary for a really solid outing is obvious, but that's not met here despite any number of very good passages. While certain parts are great, the sum of the whole is median, requiring either more woodshedding or better discretion on the technical end, probably both. https://www.acousticmusic.com/fame/p08074.htm

Charleston for You

Bob Cooper, Bud Shank - In Germany

Styles: Swing,Jazz, Bop
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:28
Size: 164,7 MB
Art: Front

( 7:57) 1. Boop-Boop-Be-Doop
(14:13) 2. I'll Remember April
( 6:42) 3. Indian Summer
( 4:37) 4. Polka Dots and Moonbeams
( 5:43) 5. Yardbird Suite
( 5:26) 6. Vielaf
( 4:24) 7. For Bud
( 6:33) 8. Mademoiselle Butterfly
( 7:29) 9. A Night in Tunisia
( 8:17) 10. Medley: Stairway to the Stars/ That's All/ Easy Living/ Lover Man

One of the great West Coast tenors, Bob Cooper made even the most complex solos sound swinging and accessible. “Coop” joined Stan Kenton's big band in 1945, and he was a fixture with several of the editions (including the Innovations Orchestra) through 1951; in 1947, he married Kenton's singer, June Christy. After leaving Kenton, Cooper settled in Los Angeles, where he was a busy studio musician for the next four decades. He was a regular member of the Lighthouse All-Stars from 1952-1962, sometimes playing oboe and English horn (being the first strong jazz soloist on both of those instruments).

The cool-toned tenor (whose sound fit into the “Four Brothers” style) was on many records in the 1950s (including those of Shorty Rogers, Pete Rugolo, and June Christy), and continued working steadily in Los Angeles-area clubs up until his death. He appears on records with the big bands of Frank Capp/Nat Pierce, Bob Florence, and the '80s version of the Lighthouse All-Stars; and participated in the 1991 Stan Kenton 50th-anniversary celebration. As a leader, Coop recorded for Capitol in the 1950s, Contemporary, Trend, Discovery, and Fresh Sound. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/bobcooper

Bud Shank began his career pigeonholed as a cool schooler, but those who listened to the altoist progress over the long haul knew that he became one of the hottest, most original players of the immediate post-Parker generation. Lumped in with the limpid-toned West Coast crowd in the '50s, Shank never ceased to evolve; in his later years, he had more in common with Jackie McLean or Phil Woods than with Paul Desmond or Lee Konitz. Shank's keening, blithely melodic, and tonally expressive style was one of the more genuinely distinctive approaches that grew out of the bebop idiom.

Shank attended the University of North Carolina from 1944-1946. Early on, he played a variety of woodwinds, including flute, clarinet, and alto and tenor saxes; he began to concentrate on alto and flute in the late '40s. After college, Shank moved to California, where he studied with trumpeter/composer Shorty Rogers and played in the big bands of Charlie Barnet (1947-1948) and Stan Kenton (1950-1951). Shank made a name for himself in the '50s as a central member of the West Coast jazz scene. In addition to those named above, he played and recorded with bassist Howard Rumsey's Lighthouse All-Stars, tenor saxophonist Bob Cooper, and Brazilian guitarist Laurindo Almeida, among others. Shank made a series of albums as a leader for World Pacific in the late '50s and early '60s.

Shank ensconced himself in the L.A. studios during the '60s, emerging occasionally to record jazz and bossa nova albums with the likes of Chet Baker and Sergio Mendes. Shank's 1966 album with Baker, Michelle, was something of a popular success, reaching number 56 on the charts. Film scores on which Shank can be heard include The Thomas Crown Affair and The Barefoot Adventure. In the '70s, Shank formed the L.A. Four with Almeida, bassist Ray Brown, and, at various times, drummer Chuck Flores, Shelly Manne, or Jeff Hamilton. Shank had been one of the earliest jazz flutists, but in the mid-'80s he dropped the instrument in order to concentrate on alto full-time. During the last two decades of the 20th century, he recorded small-group albums at a modestly steady pace for the Contemporary, Concord, and Candid labels. Shank's 1997 Milestone album, By Request: Bud Shank Meets the Rhythm Section, presented the altoist in top form, burning down the house with a band of relative youngsters who included neo-bopper pianist Cyrus Chestnut. Three years later, Silver Storm was released.

Shank continued performing and recording after the turn of the millennium, undertaking the challenging task of forming the Los Angeles-based Bud Shank Big Band in 2005 and making his recording debut as a big-band leader with Taking the Long Way Home, released the following year by the Jazzed Media label. In 2007 Jazzed Media issued Beyond the Red Door, a duet recording by Shank and pianist Bill Mays. Shank's passion for jazz remained strong to the very last days of his life; he died at his home in Tucson, AZ on April 2, 2009 of a pulmonary embolism shortly after returning from a recording session in San Diego. Shank's doctors had reportedly warned the saxophonist who had moved to Tucson for health reasons that playing the session could be life-threatening. Bud Shank was 82 years old.By Chris Kelsey https://www.allmusic.com/artist/bud-shank-mn0000636382/biography

In Germany