Monday, August 9, 2021

The Ronnie Scott's All-Stars - Jazz Classics

Styles: Straight-ahead/Mainstream
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:47
Size: 142,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:45) 1. Great Day
(6:31) 2. On the Street Where You Live
(4:06) 3. More
(5:25) 4. Lazy Afternoon
(6:36) 5. Bye Bye Blackbird
(5:27) 6. Wonderful World
(5:32) 7. Dat Dere
(2:30) 8. People Are Strange
(5:36) 9. For All We Know
(6:21) 10. Love for Sale
(8:54) 11. One Day I'll Fly Away

The CD Jazz Classics has catalogue number RSR001. I know what’s coming. Some are going to argue that it isn’t REALLY No 1…. that Ronnie Scotts has a whole history of previous recordings. While we’re at it, the pedant might also question whether all the songs are in fact “Jazz Classics.” Whatevs. The CD, recorded partly in front of an audience, and partly in the same acoustic of the club without one, works well as a showcase for the house trio of Ronnie Scotts music director, James Pearson - piano/arranger, Sam Burgess – bass, and Pedro Segundo – drums, who regularly play the early evening slot at Ronnie’s. They often have to work their socks off to distract the Ronnie’s punters from their workaday conversations and to concentrate on the music. Which they do brilliantly. Night after night. Segundo’s charm and theatricality have, in a very short time, become a fixture. The sleeve notes have a touching reminder of the tragic death of Ronnie’s house drummer Chris Dagley, which is still sorely felt at the club.

But the thought of this being the 1 stayed in the mind. The reason that the front line of this quintet, vocalist Natalie Williams and saxophonist Alex Garnett work so well as sparring partners is what they do with the 1, the first beat. Williams asserts it, lands hard on it, possesses it, reinforces it, often decorates it with an inverted mordent. Her work here is an affirmation. That originally Italian song “More than the Greatest Love” has probably never been performed with quite this level of conviction, of complete persuasiveness. She has a German heritage, and brings something personal and different to this music. There is a German word “betonen” untranslatable which just seems to me to describe well how Natalie Williams has a way of living on, at, with every first beat.

As a result Williams produces her best singing on record yet. RSR001 is Natalie on peak form. The words get the treatment. Rickie Lee Jones’ Dat Dere is characterful, teasing, hilarious, with some magic on the side-drum rim from Segundo, and Johnny Griffin-ish tenor swagger from Garnett. But there’s more: check out inimitable, ecstatic Natalie lion-house noises at 2' 16” and 5' 16” of Bye Bye Blackbird. We’ll offer a prize for the best transcription.As for Garnett, in the legacy of Hank Mobley, the saxophonist responds to the first beat, uses it as a springboard, hides behind it teasingly (as in “I can see you but you can’t see me” ), suggests it, tricks it, avoids it, finds surreptitious ways to lose it. What the hell, it’s something you can always pick up from lost property in the morning, because with a rhythm section of this class, it’s going to be there anyway.

As on his debut CD Serpent (Whirlwind Records, 2011), Garnett stakes his claim to be among the most inventive and subtle saxophonists we have. The CD is cheery, life-affirming, and will work superbly as what the Japanese call “Omiyage”, a present from a specific place check the references to Frith Street in Lionel Bart’s “On the Street Where you Live.” RSR001 contains good music, well played and recorded, and is an ideal means to remember, and keep in the memory, our No 1 Jazz club, Ronnie Scott’s. https://londonjazznews.com/2012/02/11/cd-review-the-ronnie-scotts-all-stars-jazz-classics/

Personnel: Bass – Sam Burgess; Drums – Pedro Segundo; Piano – James Pearson; Saxophone – Alex Garnett; Vocals – Natalie Williams

Jazz Classics

Gerry Gibbs Thrasher Dream Trio - We're Back

Size: 174,7 MB
Time: 74:43
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz: Piano Jazz, Hard Bop
Art: Front

01. Too High (4:26)
02. What's Going On (6:24)
03. Where Is The Love (5:15)
04. Reasons (5:00)
05. Mighty Mighty (5:42)
06. Betcha By Golly, Wow (6:35)
07. My Cherie Amour (7:50)
08. Creepin (4:51)
09. Fantasy (4:36)
10. Living For The City - Overjoyed (6:31)
11. Brazilian Rhyme (1:03)
12. Runnin (5:48)
13. I Say A Little Prayer (4:56)
14. Pickin' Up The Pieces (4:57)
15. The Theme (0:42)

Drummer Gerry Gibbs must be in a "strike while the iron is hot" mode. Less than a year after his very successful Gerry Gibbs Thrasher Dream Trio (Whaling City Sound, 2013), featuring Ron Carter on bass and Kenny Barron on piano, he has reconvened with those jazz legends for a second go around. This time, with We're Back, the trio moves away from the jazz standard format and goes after some of the classic R& B hits from the 60s and 70s.

If that sounds like a good time, it is. Jazz can take itself too seriously, but with the likes of Stevie Wonder's "Too High," Marvin Gaye's "What's Goin' On ," Earth, Wind and Fire's "Mighty Mighty," and The Average White Band's "Pick Up the Pieces," a good time—from these guys—is guaranteed. The tunes are familiar to anyone who came up listening to Top 40 radio in those days, and they have the staying power of classics, appealing to a younger generation with an ear for classic sounds, making We're Back a "kick back and relax and soak your ears in great melodies and cool grooves" type of experience. The fact that they're laid down with an inspired, top level jazz feeling and skill level is the bonus.

Another big difference here is the inclusion of some top flight guests: Vibraphonist Warren Wolf, organist Larry Goldings and saxophonist Steve Wilson. Goldings adds a cool funk to the group's up-tempo take on "What's Goin' On," working alongside the buoyant pop of Warren Wolf's bright vibraphone. The pair also team up on strutting take on Stevie Wonder's "My Cherie Amour." Steve Wilson's alto sax—tart and tight—gets chased around the studio by Barron's exquisite piano on Earth, Wind and Fire's "Might Mighty," while Carter and Gibbs lay down a deep groove, and they do it again on the same group's "Fantasy."

The CD, which starts out on a high note with Stevie Wonder's "To High," keeps getting better as it rolls along. Hal David and Burt Bacharach's "I Say a Little Prayer," a smooth pop hit for Dionne Warwick, and a deep soul anthem from Aretha Franklin, a gets a taste of elegance here from the trio, especially from the ever-inventive Barron; and "Pick Up the Pieces," a huge radio hit for the Average White Band, features, again, the trio showing how to rip it up at a white hot pace.

They close it with the sole non-R & B tune, a forty-four second "beatbox" version of Miles Davis "Theme."

Excellent! ~by Dan McClenaghan

Personnel: Gerry Gibbs: drums; Ron Carter: bass; Kenny Barron: piano; Warren Wolf: vibraphone (2, 6, 7, 11, 12); Larry Goldings: Hammond B-3 organ (2, 7); Steve Wilson: alto saxophyone (5, 9).

We're Back

Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah - The Emancipation Procrastination

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:52
Size: 146,4 MB
Art: Front

( 6:25)  1. The Emancipation Procrastination
( 5:02)  2. AvengHer
( 5:53)  3. Ruler Rebel - X. aTunde Adjuah Remix
( 4:07)  4. Ashes of Our Forever
( 2:24)  5. In The Beginning
( 3:11)  6. Michele with one L
( 4:45)  7. The Cypher
( 4:39)  8. Videotape
( 2:02)  9. Gerrymandering Game
( 5:00) 10. Unrigging November
( 9:34) 11. Cages
(10:45) 12. New Heroes

Jazz has been around a while 100 years, if we're marking its recorded history (the Dixie Jass Band's "Livery Staple Blues" so long ago they didn't even know how to spell "jazz!") Although there's plenty of tradition to look back on now, jazz has traditionally been forward-thinking. Trumpeter Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah embraces this dichotomy on The Emancipation Procrastination, the third and final entry of his Centennial Trilogy. Despite paying homage to a century of jazz, Adjuah prefers to call his work "stretch music." Like young contemporaries Robert Glasper and Kamasi Washington, Adjuah rejects narrow musical definitions, questing for sounds that are "out there" at least according to stodgy jazz purists. "AvengHer" booms with the 808 bass of trap music, as skittering snares and double-tracked trumpets float over the rumbling foundation. Washed-out guitar lends "Ashes of Our Forever" something of a postrock vibe, while "Cages" melds jazz with a classical influence. The standout here, though, is "The Cypher," a beautifully noir ballad where Adjuah and fellow soloists Elena Pinderhughes (flute) and Braxton Cook (saxophone) turn loose over lovely piano arpeggios and a solid beat. https://www.eriereader.com/article/christian-scott-atunde-adjuah--the-emancipation-procrastination

Personnel:  Trumpet, Siren [Sirenette], Siren, Flugelhorn [Reverse Flugelhorn], MIDI Controller [SPD-SX] – Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah;  Alto Saxophone – Braxton Cook; Bass – Kris Funn, Luques Curtis; Djembe, Bata, Congas – Weedie Braimah; Drums [Pan-African], MIDI Controller [SPD-SX] – Joe Dyson Jr.; Drums, MIDI Controller [SPD-SX] – Corey Fonville , Marcus Gillmore; Flute – Elena Pinderhughes; Guitar – Cliff Hines ; Dominic Minix, Matthew Stevens; Piano, Electric Piano [Fender Rhodes] – Lawrence Fields; Tenor Saxophone – Stephen J. Gladney;

The Emancipation Procrastination


Nicolas Folmer Meets Bob Mintzer - Off The Beaten Tracks Vol 1

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:26
Size: 152,5 MB
Art: Front

( 9:15)  1. Off the Beaten Tracks
( 8:22)  2. Fun Blues
( 7:04)  3. Soothing Spirit
( 9:24)  4. Bop Boy
( 7:44)  5. Absinthe Minded
( 7:53)  6. Let's Rendez-Vous!
( 6:39)  7. Le Chateau De Guillaumes
(10:00)  8. Black Inside

At the risk of inconveniencing the author of the title of the album, let's say it bluntly: we are clearly not here "off" the beaten track, but securely installed inside of them, the developed aesthetic with enthusiasm and passion during these sessions recorded live at Duc des Lombards is unquestionably that of a hard-bop via binary and soul-funk as it has been practiced since the second half of the 60 years up 70-80 (Lee Morgan, Woody Shaw and Bob Mintzer, and many others). Nicolas Folmer and has the art of writing compositions sounding like standard, simple and catchy. The guest, Mintzer already invited as a soloist in the Paris Jazz Big Band Folmer and Pierre Bertrand, the directory provides a "hit" staff Bop Boy, but above all a game, and a spirited, youthful. While Mintzer, American figure of the tenor saxophone and writing for big band, does not reach here the accuracy and excellence that was his in the 80, it is indisputable that collaborations with Nicolas Folmer give him the desire to "set fire" and perhaps try more things than usual. Also be noted the ability of Antonio Farao instill a bit of strangeness in a context altogether very conventional. In the end, a sort of "jam session organized" mess, to say the least and extremely ... tonic. Translate by google ~ Eric Quenot  http://www.musiquefrancaise.net/echo/voir_sujet.php?ID=114

Off The Beaten Tracks Vol 1