Sunday, October 17, 2021

The Ruby Moon - Vicarious Pleasures

Styles: New Orleans Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:23
Size: 114,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:25)  1. I Want a Little Sugar in My Bowl
(3:27)  2. It Doesn't Matter
(4:26)  3. I'm On to You
(3:49)  4. A Good Man Is Hard to Find
(3:37)  5. Kiss of Fire
(3:18)  6. It's Best You Met Somebody Else
(4:34)  7. Spanish Wine and Black Coffee
(4:02)  8. Can't Help Loving That Man of Mine
(3:53)  9. House of the Rising Sun
(2:48) 10. The Clowns Are Taking Over
(3:41) 11. Softly, As in a Morning Sunrise
(4:50) 12. St. James Infirmary
(3:27) 13. Redemption Is the Long Way Around

An album by a master New Orleans jazz singer with modern sensibilities, an adventurous spirit, a soulful delivery, and a heart as big as a house. Billie Holiday meets Tom Waits meets Bart Ramsey (the latter a composer of a half dozen of these songs). The musicians on the record are all virtuosos and the spirit of the music is high, taking New Orleans music to a fresh place. http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/rubymoon

Karen Marguth - A Way With Words Disc1 And Disc 2

Born in Minneapolis, raised in the San Francisco East Bay, Karen has been active as a performer throughout her life. Her professional background includes choreographing, directing, and performing in regional theatres and touring shows, singing in rock, blues, and jazz bands, doing voice-overs and studio work, and teaching dance and theatre with children and adults. She enjoys performing a wide variety of styles of music, being drawn primarily by lyrics, she says. “Any song that has unexpected, interesting, or simply profound lyrics draws my attention. It is the storytelling part of singing that I love best.” Karen has also worked as an educator since 1986, working as a classroom teacher in public elementary and middle schools, as an instructor for pre-service teachers at CSU Hayward, as a private consultant in school districts throughout California and for the UC Berkeley Writing Project. Her classroom methods have been the subject of two national research studies, and she received San Joaquin County’s CTA Outstanding New Educator Award in 1990. Currently, she is serving Central Unified Schools as an Instructional Support Coach for the Arts and Writing.

“Music, theatre and education merge quite logically for me,” Karen says. “Teaching and singing are both performance arts, the goal being to convey to the audience what’s important in the lesson or the song.”

In 1999, when she moved to Central California, Karen began to seek out opportunities to meet and work with local musicians. Happily, with jazz stations like KFSR and organizations like Jazz Fresno, she found it easy to find out about local musical events. By 2001, the Blue Street Jazz Band had started using her as a substitute vocalist, and that’s when her work in jazz performance began to blossom. Blue Street performs around the country at Jazz Festivals, and Karen soaked in all she could by listening to and talking with musicians and audience members at the festivals. People would recommend vocalists for her to study, and study she did. Though she still considers herself to be “low on the learning curve” about jazz, she has embraced jazz’s call to free oneself from the goal of creating “perfect” performances. Rather, jazz demands that an artist who is grounded in the structures of music theory let go and play with the music to create something new.

In 2008, Karen suggested to KFSR’s station manager, Joe Moore, that it might be fun to create a show focused on female vocalists. He agreed, and KFSR’s Vocal Hour was born, which airs every Friday at 2pm Pacific Time. In 2010, she released her eponymous album which received critical acclaim from European and American jazz writers, and she began performing more often, including at festivals in France and at southern California venues such as Dizzy's San Diego, Catalina's, and Charlie O's. Her 2013 release, "A Way With Words," is a two-disk set which is a tribute to the songs of Carroll Coates, and features Richie Cole and Gilbert Castellanos. Her goals are to continue to grow as a vocalist, to travel and perform as much as her day-job will allow, and start working on her next recording project. http://jazztimes.com/guides/artists/14504-karen-marguth

"Great big talent, much too small a pond. Her name is Karen Marguth, one of the finest American jazz vocalists you've likely yet to discover." ~ Christopher Loudon, Jazz Times

"Just You, Just Me is Karen's newest and perhaps most courageous work...to go into the world with just an acoustic bass man - the redoubtable Kevin Hill - at her side." ~ John McDonough, NPR

Disc 1

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:58
Size: 99,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:25)  1. You'll See
(6:02)  2. No One Ever Tells You
(3:39)  3. A Miracle
(5:15)  4. Afterglow
(3:19)  5. A Way With Words
(4:53)  6. Rainy Afternoon
(3:36)  7. Swing Song
(3:21)  8. I Have a Feeling / Hay Sentimientos
(4:12)  9. London By Night
(6:11) 10. Better to Have Loved


Disc 2

Time: 40:36
Size: 93,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:11)  1. G Is One Sharp Key
(5:16)  2. So I Love You
(4:03)  3. Later for Love
(2:41)  4. Love Comes and Goes
(5:18)  5. It's Time, High Time
(3:55)  6. Hay Sentimientos (Alternate Version)
(3:59)  7. Someone Else's Sweetheart
(4:25)  8. Spring Has Sprung
(4:21)  9. Madness
(2:24) 10. Alone By the Sea

A Way With Words  Disc 1, Disc 2

Dave Young - Two By Two

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:28
Size: 152,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:44)  1. OP & D
(5:44)  2. Younger Than Springtime
(6:04)  3. NPS
(6:00)  4. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
(6:36)  5. Milestones
(8:49)  6. In a Sentimental Mood
(6:45)  7. Stablesmates
(6:10)  8. Passion Flower
(8:08)  9. One By One
(6:24) 10. Hot House

It is easy to understand why Dave Young is the one of the most in-demand bassists in Canada. With a fat tone and a gift for melodic solos similar to Ray Brown and Niels Pedersen, Young is joined for a pair of tunes by five different pianists. Oscar Peterson, with whom Young first recorded as a sideman in 1980, contributed a bluesy original ("OP & D") for the date, while he is also more than willing to take a backseat to Young. The bassist plays arco with Cedar Walton in a warm rendition of the venerable standard "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes"; this session marked their first recording together. Tommy Flanagan provides an elegant backdrop for Young during "In a Sentimental Mood." The sparks fly in his duet with John Hicks of Benny Golson's "Stablemates." 

The masterful duet with Mulgrew Miller of the classic bop tune "Hot House" uncovers new facets within this decades-old jewel. Anyone who enjoys these duo sessions will find an additional duo track by each of the pianists with Young (from the same studio dates) on the CD Side by Side, Vol. 3.~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/two-by-two-mw0000030533

Two By Two

Dakota Staton - An Invitation

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 28:57
Size: 67,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:50) 1. Broadway
(2:44) 2. Trust in Me
(2:40) 3. Moonray
(2:40) 4. Ain't No Use
(2:34) 5. The Late, Late Show
(2:10) 6. Summertime
(2:35) 7. Misty
(3:09) 8. Invitation
(2:16) 9. Give Me the Simple Life
(2:48) 10. You Showed Me the Way
(2:25) 11. The Party's Over

Described by influential critic Leonard Feather as "a dynamic song stylist recalling at times elements of Dinah Washington and Sarah Vaughan," Dakota Staton never enjoyed the widespread acclaim or commercial success of her reference points, but she remains one of the most soulful and commanding jazz singers of the postwar era. Born outside of Pittsburgh on June 3, 1930, Staton began singing and dancing as a child, later attending the Filion School of Music. At 16, she starred in the stage show Fantastic Rhythm and two years later joined local bandleader Joe Wespray. From there, Staton headlined a lengthy residency at Detroit's landmark Flame Show Bar, followed by years traveling the Midwest club circuit. Eventually she settled in New York City, and while performing at Harlem's Baby Grand she captured the attention of Capitol Records producer Dave Cavanaugh, who extended a contract offer. Staton's debut single, "What Do You Know About Love?," appeared in 1954, and a year later she claimed jazz magazine DownBeat's Most Promising Newcomer award.

By no means strictly a jazz act, however, Staton was also a bold, brassy R&B singer and performed alongside Big Joe Turner and Fats Domino at legendary disc jockey Alan Freed's first Rock 'n' Roll Party showcases. Freed regularly played Staton's "My Heart's Delight" on his daily WINS show, and when her long-awaited full-length debut, The Late, Late Show, finally hit retail in 1957, it proved an enormous crossover hit, peaking at number four on the Billboard pop charts. Its 1958 follow-up, The Dynamic Dakota Staton!, reached the number 22 spot and more importantly heralded the beginning of her long collaboration with arranger and conductor Sid Feller.

After marrying trumpeter Talib Ahmad Dawud in 1958, Staton converted to Islam and for a time performed under the name Aliyah Rabia. She was also an active member of Dawud's advocacy group the Muslim Brotherhood, which existed in large part to combat the radical politics of Black supremacist Elijah Muhammad. The Muslim Brotherhood found itself the center of controversy when Muhammad claimed, "they should be ashamed of trying to make fun of me and my followers while serving the devil in the theatrical world." The resulting media attention undermined Staton's commercial momentum, and while 1959's Crazy He Calls Me still charted, she never again enjoyed the crossover success that greeted her previous records. After ten Capitol dates, culminating in 1961's live Dakota at Storyville, she jumped to United Artists for 1963's From Dakota with Love. After two more UA sessions, Live and Swinging and Dakota Staton with Strings, she exited the label and did not cut another record for eight years. Upon relocating to Britain in 1965, Staton worked hotels and cruise ships, and was largely forgotten by the time she returned to the U.S. in the early '70s, signing to Groove Merchant and cutting the 1972 comeback attempt Madame Foo Foo with soul-jazz great Richard "Groove" Holmes. Sessions for Muse and Simitar followed, and in 1999 she signed with High Note for her final studio date, A Packet of Love Letters. Staton's health declined slowly but steadily in the years to follow, and she died on April 10, 2007, at the age of 76.~Jason Ankeny https://www.allmusic.com/artist/dakota-staton-mn0000668932/biography

An Invitation