Wednesday, July 21, 2021

Gene Ammons, Sonny Stitt - God Bless Jug And Sonny

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:01
Size: 156,6 MB
Art: Front

(16:32) 1. Blue 'N' Boogie
(14:58) 2. Stringin' The Jug
( 5:48) 3. God Bless The Child
( 5:05) 4. Autumn In New York
( 7:44) 5. Ugetsu
(17:51) 6. Bye Bye Blackbird

Jug and Sonny share a place near the top in the pantheon of tandem tenor teams. Their spirited, hard-charging contests, which always seem to end in amicable draws are the stuff of canonical jazz legend so the news of an previously unreleased recording of the pair is undoubtedly enough to set the countenances of their loyal fans to suffusing with expectant grins. Taped live at the Left Bank Jazz Society during Ammons’ twilight time (he would die a little over a year later) the date makes good on its promise. Three tracks clocking in at over fourteen minutes, one apiece as solo features for the individual tenors and a final track showcasing the rhythm section alone- its easy to see that this is a program custom-built to satisfy even the most demanding bop maven.

Ammon’s robust and throaty horn initiates the Gillespie classic “Blue ‘n’ Boogie” digging in deep around the theme and sounding off with sassy abandon through a ruddy stream of elongated notes. Stitt chimes in on the heels of his confrere’s solo with a lighter, less pugilistic tone, taking his time in cavorting with the rhythm section’s supportive swing. Engaging in a chain of overlapping exchanges the pair trade phrases before a final joint summation takes the tune out. “Stringin’ the Jug” affords Ammons inaugural honors a second time and the heavyweight tenor comes out swinging again. Jabbing and feinting through his series of choruses he again shows himself less light on his feet than Stitt and resorts on occasion to repetitive stock phrases. An uncharacteristic coarseness also invades his tone and its not always clear whether the change is a product of the recording fidelity or his own fading prowess. Stitt again sounds completely in control from the onset of his own protracted declaration, the speed of his unfurling lines matched by Higgins’ scampering drums.

The next two tracks provide opportunities to hear the individual horns in isolation with the rhythm section and the differences between Stitt and Ammons in these undiluted settings are particularly enlightening. Ammons’ gilded exploration of the Billie Holiday staple “God Bless the Child” balances just the right of measure of tenderness with muscular grit. Stitt hoists his alto for “Autumn in New York” working similar magic of the standard’s balladic changes. Walton’s “Ugetsu,” which first gained notoriety as an entry in the Jazz Messengers songbook gives the saxophonist’s a rest and the resulting trio shines on its own terms. Rounding out with a final burner in the form of a seventeen-minute “Bye Bye Blackbird” the tenor warhorses take one final gallop through the trenches.

As two-tenor conclaves go this one earns high marks. All the more so because unlike earlier recorded meetings between Jug and Sonny, track lengths allow for the duo to truly put each other through the paces. Listeners with a keen ear for the work of either man will find their expectations met many times over.~ Derek Taylor https://www.allaboutjazz.com/god-bless-jug-and-sonny-fantasy-jazz-review-by-derek-taylor.php

Personnel: Gene Ammons- tenor saxophone; Sonny Stitt- tenor & alto saxophones; Cedar Walton- piano; Sam Jones- bass; Billy Higgins-drums. Recorded: June 24, 1973, Baltimore, MD.

God Bless Jug And Sonny

Lou Tavano - Meets Alexey Asantcheeff

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:53
Size: 100,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:04)  1. Fascinating Rhythm
(6:50)  2. Little Niles
(5:41)  3. Resolution
(8:29)  4. My Funny Valentine
(4:27)  5. Monk's Dream
(5:36)  6. Afro Blue
(6:43)  7. I Loves You Porgy (Live)

A voice you never heard before, a whisper as well as a burning wind. Priestess of the Sound, she would be, according to the rumors, haunting the outskirts of Paris... Lou Tavano's first album as a leader was recorded November 2011, and arranged by Alexey Asantcheeff. Released October 2012, self-produced, and entitled "Meets Alexey Asantcheeff", it is the result of their collaboration, their story since the day they met. "This record is an invitation to enter Lou's imaginarium. The audacious and modern arrangements bring the classic interpretation of jazz standards to a whole new level. There you are in a surprising strange universe, rarely wandered around by jazz singers... The will to tell the story behind the words is obvious here. Lou leaves us bewitched, bothered and bewildered." https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/loutavano

Personnel:  Lou Tavano - vocal; Alexey Asantcheeff - piano & arrangements; Damien Varaillon - double bass; Tiss Rodriguez - drums

Meets Alexey Asantcheeff

Eric Le Lann & Jean Marie Ecay - Eric Le Lann & Jean Marie Ecay Play Jobim

Styles: Trumpet Jazz, Bossa Nova
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:58
Size: 99,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:45)  1. Olha Maria
(4:49)  2. Inútil Paisagem (If You Never Come To Me)
(2:44)  3. Desafinado
(2:35)  4. Luiza
(2:54)  5. Lígia
(3:12)  6. Águas de Março
(3:47)  7. Retrato Em Branco E Preto (Portrait In Black And White)
(3:37)  8. O Amor Em Paz (Once I Loved)
(2:55)  9. Bras Dessus
(3:24) 10. Arabie
(2:43) 11. Meditação (Meditation)
(3:29) 12. Corcovado
(2:57) 13. Ana Luiza

Eric Le Lann had the idea of an album tribute to Antonio Carlos Jobim following his participation in 2002 in the albumWinter Garden Henri Salvador very influenced by bossa nova. How to play the 2005 Jobim without falling into cliché, déjà vu? How to renew the genre after jazz giants like Stan Getz, Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie  Byrd? Simply playing purer, simpler in. Le Lann has put a damper on his trumpet, Ecay took his acoustic guitar. They agreed to play songs little known, in the most pure way as direct as possible. Likewise, the sound is crisp, direct. As the attacker to the point, they go to the heart.

Ipanema girl is not the appointment. You will recognize from the standard "Corcovado", "Desafinado". The version of "Aguas do Março" now mell into my head to the original and to the French version of Georges Moustaki "Waters of March". Are also included a version of "Portrait in Black and  White" Eric Le Lann played in duo with Martial Solal in 1999. Vannes Jazz Festival Every musician is entitled to his composition. "Arm" to Ecay, "Arabia" for Le Lann, compositions that fit perfectly among the songs of Jobim. The dry sound of the trumpet of Le Lann mingles wet sound of the guitar of Ecay. An acoustic fusion. A music taste drip, note by note, in the early hours of the day and night. We were expecting this album forward. To listen every morning to make sure the day will be sunny. ~ Translate by google  http://www.citizenjazz.com/Eric-Le-Lann-Jean-Marie-Ecay.html

Eric Le Lann & Jean Marie Ecay Play Jobim

The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band - Circlin' Back: Celebrating 50 Years

Styles: Vocal, Country, Big Band
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:27
Size: 181,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:29)  1. You Ain't Going Nowhere
(3:54)  2. Grandpa Was a Carpenter
(3:58)  3. Paradise
(3:35)  4. My Walkin' Shoes
(4:54)  5. Tennessee Stud
(4:03)  6. Nine Pound Hammer
(3:49)  7. Buy for Me the Rain
(6:08)  8. These Days
(3:51)  9. Truthful Parson Brown
(4:17) 10. Keep on the Sunny Side
(4:25) 11. Catfish John
(4:41) 12. An American Dream
(4:36) 13. Long Hard Road (The Sharecropper's Dream)
(4:43) 14. Mr. Bojangles
(3:53) 15. Fishin' in the Dark
(3:48) 16. Bayou Jubilee/Sally Was a Goodun
(3:58) 17. Jambalaya
(5:18) 18. Will the Circle Be Unbroken

Friends always meant something special to the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band  their 1972 breakthrough, Will the Circle Be Unbroken, was filled with them so it only makes sense that the group rounded up a bunch of pals for a 50th anniversary concert held at Nashville's Ryman Auditorium on September 14, 2015. Released a year later, Circlin' Back: Celebrating 50 Years does indeed play like a celebration. Revisiting an equal portion of hits and traditional tunes, the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band sound as deep and wise as the Nashville veterans did when they guested on Will the Circle Be Unbroken, but the nice thing about the Circlin' Back concert is that it takes into account the smoother hits the band had in the '80s: Rodney Crowell and Alison Krauss sit in on "An American Dream" and Jimmy Ibbotson plays on "Fishin' in the Dark." Here, they're presented in stripped-down arrangements that nevertheless echo the soft rock gloss of the hit singles, and when combined with rollicking bluegrass, rustic folk, and straight-ahead country, it results in a full portrait of what the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band is all about. Better still, Circlin' Back is just a good time: as John Prine, Vince Gill, Sam Bush, Jackson Browne, and Jerry Jeff Walker take the stage, the entire thing feels like a party which, of course, is what it was. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine http://www.allmusic.com/album/circlin-back-celebrating-50-years-mw0002973136

Circlin' Back: Celebrating 50 Years