Wednesday, August 31, 2022

George Shearing - The Outlaw

Styles: Piano Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:19
Size: 171,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:09) 1. The Outlaw
(3:50) 2. The Be-bop Irishman
(3:12) 3. I'll Be Around
(3:55) 4. Jumpin' With Symphony Sid
(6:13) 5. This Nearly Was Mine
(4:04) 6. My New Mambo
(2:29) 7. When April Comes Again
(3:17) 8. Monophraseology
(2:39) 9. Cocktails For Two
(4:13) 10. Jordu
(3:01) 11. As I Love You
(4:44) 12. Confirmation
(3:57) 13. The Nearness Of You
(3:25) 14. Mambo Inn
(3:34) 15. Bernie's Tune
(4:10) 16. Some Other Spring
(4:30) 17. Joy Spring
(5:57) 18. Drume Negrita
(4:50) 19. Lullaby Of Birdland

For a long stretch of time in the 1950s and early '60s, George Shearing had one of the most popular jazz combos on the planet so much so that, in the usual jazz tradition of distrusting popular success, he tended to be underappreciated. Shearing's main claim to fame was the invention of a unique quintet sound, derived from a combination of piano, vibraphone, electric guitar, bass, and drums. Within this context, Shearing would play in a style he called "locked hands," which he picked up and refined from Milt Buckner's early '40s work with the Lionel Hampton band, as well as from Glenn Miller's sax section and the King Cole Trio. Stating the melody on the piano with closely knit, harmonized block chords, with the vibes and guitar tripling the melody in unison, Shearing sold millions of records for MGM and Capitol in his heyday.

The wild success of this urbane sound obscured Shearing's other great contribution during this time, for he was also a pioneer of exciting, small-combo Afro-Cuban jazz in the '50s. Cal Tjader first caught the Latin jazz bug while playing with Shearing, and the English bandleader also employed such esteemed congueros as Mongo Santamaria, Willie Bobo, and Armando Peraza. As a composer, Shearing was best known for the uniquely constructed bop standard "Lullaby of Birdland," as well as "Conception" and "Consternation." His solo style, though all his own, reflected the influences of the great boogie-woogie pianists and classical players as well as those of Fats Waller, Earl Hines, Teddy Wilson, Erroll Garner, Art Tatum, and Bud Powell and fellow pianists long admired his light, refined touch. He was also known to play accordion and sing on occasion.

Shearing, who was born blind, began playing the piano at the age of three, receiving some music training at the Linden Lodge School for the Blind in London as a teenager but picking up the jazz influence from Teddy Wilson and Fats Waller 78s. In the late '30s, he started playing professionally with the Ambrose dance band and made his first recordings in 1937 under the aegis of fellow Brit Leonard Feather. He became a star in Britain, performing for the BBC, playing a key role in the self-exiled Stéphane Grappelli's London-based groups of the early '40s, and winning seven consecutive Melody Maker polls before emigrating in New York City in 1947 at the prompting of Feather. Once there, Shearing quickly absorbed bebop, replacing Garner in the Oscar Pettiford Trio and leading a quartet in tandem with Buddy DeFranco. In 1949, he formed the first and most famous of his quintets, which included Marjorie Hyams on vibes, Chuck Wayne on guitar, John Levy on bass, and Denzil Best on drums. Recording briefly first for Discovery, then Savoy, Shearing settled into lucrative associations with MGM (1950-1955) and Capitol (1955-1969), the latter for which he made albums with Nancy Wilson, Peggy Lee, and Nat King Cole. He also made a lone album for Jazzland with the Montgomery Brothers (including Wes Montgomery) in 1961, and began playing concert dates with symphony orchestras.

After leaving Capitol, Shearing began to phase out his by-then-predictable quintet, finally breaking it up in 1978. He started his own label, Sheba, which lasted for a few years into the early '70s, and made some trio recordings for MPS later in the decade. In the '70s, his profile had been lowered considerably, but upon signing with Concord in 1979, Shearing found himself enjoying a renaissance. He made a number of acclaimed albums with Mel Tormé, raising the singer's profile in the process, and recorded with the likes of Ernestine Anderson, Jim Hall, Marian McPartland, Hank Jones, and classical French horn player Barry Tuckwell. He also recorded a number of solo piano albums where his full palette of influences came into play. He signed with Telarc in 1992 and, from that point through the early 2000s, continued to perform and record, most often appearing in a duo or trio setting. Shearing, who had remained largely inactive since 2004 after a fall in his New York City apartment, died of congestive heart failure at New York's Lenox Hill Hospital on February 14, 2011. He was 91.By Richard S. Ginell https://www.allmusic.com/artist/george-shearing-mn0000642664/biography

The Outlaw

The Tubby Hayes Quartet - A Little Workout: Live At The Little Theatre

Styles: Saxophone And Flute Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:20
Size: 150,8 MB
Art: Front

( 8:30) 1. A Change Of Setting
( 7:59) 2. Seven Steps To Heaven
(11:19) 3. For Members Only
( 5:58) 4. Here's That Rainy Day
(17:06) 5. Dear Johnny B.
(14:26) 6. Walkin'

William Blake wrote that ‘energy is eternal delight’. That thought prefigures the work here: the intensity, the tumbling ideas, the burning passion, the unrelenting drive. The opening of ‘A Change of Setting’ injects the spiralling dynamism that frequently underpins Hayes’ work. At times on ‘For Members Only’ the intensity is almost too much, it veers close to creative ecstasy. It is all part of a profound artistic vision based on intense impassioned energy that somehow is rooted in a technique that is at the complete service of Hayes’ ideas. ‘Here’s That Rainy Day’ is an interlude partially devoted to Mick Pyne. Hayes’ flute playing is almost an afterthought. Ron Mathewson is not favoured by the recording and the sound of Levin’s drums is at times reduced to a clatter. However, the recording as a whole, is more than acceptable and the sound of the tenor is rendered beautifully. I just can’t help wondering what this marvellous quartet would have sounded like with modern recording techniques. Hayes’ ‘Dear Johnny B’ is almost unrestrained. Hayes, at this time, obviously felt the need to cut free but he never loses the theme. Hayes aspired to be free but he was the most grounded of free players and all the more interesting for that. ‘Walkin’’ is the key track of the album. Hayes unfurls fifty choruses as he roars and races through: investigating, selecting, critiquing, assaying, all at turbo speed, music that is unrelenting, not for the faint-hearted. Hayes has been criticised for playing too many notes. If that was all he did, that criticism would be valid. There is more, over and over, Hayes tells an intense, fervent tale.

In the substantial notes, Simon Spillett angrily quotes a critic who wrote a disparaging review of Tubby Hayes claiming that Hayes lacked an artistic vision. Spillett strongly disputes that assessment. His passion for his subject permeates his writing. I always read Spillett’s writing, before listening to the music. He illuminates. As he often does, he puts the music into the historical context, setting the scene and whetting the appetite. Here, accompanying this album, there are 30 pages. Spillett mentions two other albums that were recorded at the same venue ‘Addictive Tendencies’ 4/12/66 and ‘Lament’ 2/4/67 both with Mathewson, Pyne and Levin. Obviously, the venue suited the quartet because the intensity on all three albums is similar. There is no doubt in Spillett’s mind that this album contains remarkable music.

Even now, there is nothing quite like Tubby Hayes in UK jazz: the energy, passion and drive still startles. This is a superlative example of his work from the mid-sixties as he moves forward. At the moment, we are living in an age of restraint in jazz; there are lessons to be learnt from this tumultuous music. Energy is eternal delight. ~ Jack Kenny http://www.jazzviews.net/tubby-hayes-quartet---a-little-workout.html

Personnel: Tubby Hayes(tenor saxophone and flute); Mike Pyne (piano); Ron Mathewson (bass); Tony Levin (drums)


Jessica Williams - Dedicated To You

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:03
Size: 138,5 MB
Art: Front

(7:04) 1. Dedicated To You
(4:20) 2. That Old Feeling
(4:10) 3. Sue's Blues
(4:53) 4. El Salvador
(6:54) 5. Dirty Dog Blues
(3:53) 6. If And When
(5:28) 7. Getting Sentimental
(7:06) 8. My One And Only Love
(5:00) 9. Newk's Fluke
(5:11) 10. Sometimes, Silence
(5:59) 11. Where Or When

Jessica Williams is a well-known and highly respected American pianist and composer.

She advocates for feedom, justice, and equality among all peoples of the Earth, and has always made it clear that she believes in good over evil, love over hate, and peace over war. She defiantly opposes the present regime in the US and abroad, and is a staunch supporter of GLBT rights, particularly focusing on an end to the hate and violence endured by transgendered, and transsexual people everywhere. She was born with A.I.S., and had gender corrective surgery in 1976. Jessica has fought her entire life against inequality and hate. At 70, she continues to make new music and fight for freedom.

Dedicated To You

Ran Blake & Jaki Byard - Improvisations

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1981
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:05
Size: 103,6 MB
Art: Front

( 6:09) 1. On Green Dolphin Street
( 4:11) 2. Prelude
( 8:31) 3. Chromatics
( 3:47) 4. Wende
( 7:00) 5. Tea for Two
( 4:45) 6. Victoria
(10:38) 7. Sonata for Two Pianos

This very interesting release matches together Ran Blake and Jaki Byard in a set of piano duets. Because Byard (who can play credibly in virtually every jazz style) is highly flexible, he was able to meet Blake on his own terms and inspire him to play more extrovertedly than usual. Their seven collaborations (a pair of standards, one recent obscurity, Blake's "Wende" and three songs co-written by the pianists) have their playful moments, are quite exploratory, and always hold one's interest. In other words, this matchup works. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/improvisations-mw0000193412

Personnel: Ran Blake, Jaki Byard (piano)

Improvisations

Boris Kozlov - First Things First

Styles: Crossover Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:30
Size: 158,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:18) 1. Page One
(4:01) 2. Flow
(5:35) 3. The More Things Change
(6:51) 4. I.S. Adventure
(7:53) 5. Aftermath
(5:49) 6. Second Line Sally
(5:45) 7. Viscous
(7:13) 8. Mind Palace
(6:49) 9. Warm Sand
(7:39) 10. Once A Fog In Babylon
(2:32) 11. Eclipse

During the early days of pandemic-induced isolation, old folkways and techniques suddenly became new again (remember the shortages of baking yeast and canning supplies?). The old ways are nothing new at Posi-Tone records, which has maintained an unflagging allegiance to swing, juicy melodies and fiery playing. Those qualities, all present on bassist Boris Kozlov's First Things First, situate this recording firmly within Posi-Tone's house style, one that calls back to the glory days of Blue Note Records. So, it's no surprise that this session was made in the manner of classic Blue Note sessions.

Like those sessions, First Things First begins with a great rhythm section: pianist Art Hirahara and drummer Rudy Royston. Posi-Tone founder and producer Marc Free used them on trumpeter Alex Sipiagin's Upstream (2021) and on Maximum Enjoyment (2018) by the collective Something Blue. Joined by vibraphonist and occasional A&R guy Behn Gillece, they gathered for four days in August, 2020 to record sessions that would eventually be issued as Hirahara's Open Sky (2021) and Gillece's Still Doing Our Thing. (2021) According to Kozlov's notes to the recording, Free was so pleased with the results that the four became a house rhythm section for a number of Posi-Tone sessions recorded later that fall.

Like a college basketball team that starts five highly recruited seniors, this rhythm section plays with a balance of freedom and discipline that's rare in today's contingent, project-oriented bandscape. And when Free called Donny McCaslin to turn one of their sessions into Kozlov's Posi-Tone debut as a leader, the team was complete.

Despite their workload, there's no evidence of complaisance or routine on First Things First. Instead, the band's chemistry fuels joyous music making that explodes out of your speakers. It's as though they couldn't wait to get this music out. And given the isolation and grimness of the year, who can blame them?

Of the eleven tunes, six are by the leader, two by McCaslin and one each by Gillece and Hirahara, with Charles Mingus's "Eclipse" the lone non original. They cover a vast stylistic range. McCaslin's "Page One" is a modern update on the title cut Joe Henderson's iconic 1963 Blue Note album of the same name never had. Henderson is also evoked in Kozlov's "I.S. Adventure," but mainly in McCaslin's tumbling, cascading solo; the "I.S." of the title is Igor Stravinsky. The Moscow-born bassist looks back to his homeland again on "Once A Fog In Babylon," a suite of ancient Russian folk tunes that culminates in a thunderous, tornadic Royston solo.

Yet there are quieter moments, too, starting with "Flow," a serene showcase for flute, vibes, hand percussion and the composer's expressive electric bass. "Warm Sand" shows how group interplay can chart a throughline at a relaxed tempo, one that's just a few beats per minute easier than the flowing, Basie-esque stroll of Hirahara's sparkling "The More Things Change."

It seems almost obligatory these days to program a tune set to a New Orleans party beat, but McCaslin's "Second Line Sally" ups the ante on Hirahara's tootling B-3 and Kozlov's strutting bass with a swagger and energy that's pure Manhattan. It's musical shrimp po' boy served from a Times Square dirty water hotdog cart, and it's delicious as is the entire record.Can we please have another?~John Chacona https://www.allaboutjazz.com/first-things-first-boris-kozlov-posi-tone-records

Personnel: Boris Kozlov: bass; Donny McCaslin: saxophone, tenor; Art Hirahara: piano; Behn Gillece: vibraphone; Rudy Royston: drums.

First Things First

Tuesday, August 30, 2022

Stephanie Nakasian - If I Ruled The World

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:07
Size: 148,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:55) 1. Almost in Your Arms
(6:09) 2. Too Many Tears
(4:56) 3. Im All Smiles
(3:59) 4. When Your Lover Has Gone
(4:06) 5. By Myself
(5:08) 6. You Aint Had the Blues
(4:55) 7. A Second Chance
(3:54) 8. Blizzard of Lies- Little White Lies
(3:53) 9. If I Ruled the World
(4:33) 10. The Moth and the Flame
(5:50) 11. (You May Not Be An Angel But) I'll String Along With You
(3:06) 12. Love Is Just Around the Corner
(3:36) 13. Who Cares'

Stephanie Nakasian is listed in the Biographical Encyclopedia of Jazz as one of the world’s leading jazz singers. She first came to international attention in the mid-80s when she sang and toured with the vocal jazz master Jon Hendricks and Company her “vocal jazz apprenticeship.” Since then, she has toured and recorded as a leader and with her partner and internationally acclaimed jazz pianist Hod O’Brien. Together with their daughter Veronica (who also sings and records under the name Veronica Swift) they make their home in Charlottesville,Virginia. Since 1980 Ms. Nakasian has been actively recording. Her debut CD “Comin’Alive” (V.S.O.P.) features legendary saxophonist Phil Woods and received four stars from critic Leonard Feather.
~
“French Cookin’” (V.S.O.P.) spotlights the beautiful combination of Ms. Nakasian’s voice with virtuoso French hornist Bobby Routch. Her “Bitter Sweet” CD (JazzMania) was also very well received. Her “Escapade” takes the audience on a fantasy swing voyage and her “Lullaby in Rhythm” is in tribute to Kenton singer June Christy and features tenor saxophonist Harry Allen. In 2006 two CDs were released: “Thrush Hour” (VSOP), a tribute to 20 great jazz singers featuring a 20 page booklet co-authored by Scott Yanow with pictures, bios and educational tips as to how to listen to each singer to hear the nuances of style and phrasing. “I Love You” (Spice of Life) was released in Japan to rave reviews and a full article in “Swing Journal” in which they called Stephanie “the perfect jazz singer.”

There are many jazz singers on the scene now. Jon Hendricks chose her because of her hip, swinging rhythm. The Jim Cullum Jazz Band features her frequently on their internationally syndicated show Riverwalk portraying Lee Wiley, Peggy Lee, Helen Ward, Helen Humes, 20s singers and blues singers. Their reason swing and authenticity. She portrayed herself on the show with Dick Hyman on tributes to composers Hoagy Carmichael and Walter Donaldson. The Richmond Times Dispatch “compared her to Ella…and (she) deserves it.” In Europe they have heard similarities to Sarah Vaughan. In New York, they heard early Margaret Whiting. Her clean, clear lovely tone is another reason for her popularity.

Her original concert revues such as “The Great Ladies of American Song” and various composer and singer tributes have been favorites with schools and universities and concert goers. Her “Great Ladies” revue tracing the development of jazz singing has also been offered as an academic course at the University of Virginia where Ms. Nakasian teaches private voice. She teaches jazz voice and vocal jazz improvisation at The College of William and Mary in Williamsburg. She has directed and coached vocal jazz ensembles and gives numerous workshops each year to schools and conferences. Ms. Nakasian authored the vocal jazz book “It’s Not on the Page! How to Integrate Jazz and Jazz Rhythm into Choral and Solo Repertoire” which she has presented in workshops to over 25 state and national music education conferences in the U.S., including MENC, IAJE and MTNA. She also adjudicated at the McKnight Fellowship Competition in Minneapolis in 2005.

Ms. Nakasian has appeared on television and radio in the U.S., Europe, Japan and the Caribbean. National Public Radio featured her on a one-hour concert on “Jazz Set” hosted by Branford Marsalis. Her many festival appearances include the Northsea Jazz Festival (Holland), the Kool Jazz Festival (NYC), S.C. Jazz Festival, N.C. Jazz Festival, Main Street (Columbia, SC) Jazz Festival, the Big Gig (Richmond, VA), the Bethlehem Musikfest (PA), numerous appearances at the Delaware Water Gap Jazz Festival (PA) and a Public Television special featuring duets with trumpet legend Clark Terry.

She was featured on tributes to June Christy with the Pete Rugolo Orchestra at the West Coast Jazz Festival in Newport Beach, CA, and at the Beverly Hills Hotel, and also with the Columbus Jazz Orchestra (OH) and Kansas City Jazz Orchestra, the Fargo Arts Group (ND), and at the NJ Jazz Festival. Since then, appearances include the Kennedy Center Jazz Club (DC), The Jazz Standard (NYC), Pensacola Jazz Festival, three cruises including James Moody’s 80th Birthday Cruise, Great Waters Festival (NH), Gulf Coast Festival (Panama City, FL), a week’s stint at Joe Segal’s Jazz Showcase in Chicago, and the Telluride Jazz Celebration. She also headlined with her daughter Veronica Swift at the Women in Jazz Festival at Lincoln Center in NYC.

Concert appearances as a featured performer include performances with Urbie Green, Pat Metheny, Bobby McFerrin, Milt Hinton, Clark Terry, J.R. Monterose, Joe Temperly, Scott Hamilton, Harry Allen, Sheila Jordan, Bob Dorough, Valery Ponomarev and (with Jon Hendricks) Red Mitchell, Hank Jones, Philly Joe Jones, Roy Haynes, and Annie Ross to name a few.
https://www.last.fm/music/Stephanie+Nakasian/+wiki

If I Ruled The World

Dave Brubeck - The 1965 Canadian Concert

Styles: Piano
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:38
Size: 180,9 MB
Art: Front

(11:19) 1. St. Louis Blues
( 8:23) 2. Take The 'A' Train
( 6:54) 3. Cultural Exchange
( 6:46) 4. Tangerine
( 5:11) 5. Someday My Prince Will Come
(10:55) 6. These Foolish Things
( 5:01) 7. Koto Song
( 1:50) 8. Take Five (incomplete)
( 5:41) 9. St. Louis Blues
( 6:13) 10. Nomad
( 5:51) 11. Thank You (Dziekuje)
( 4:30) 12. Brandenburg Gate

This release contains a splendid 1965 concert by the Dave Brubeck Quartet with Paul Desmond recorded in Ontario, Canada & presented here for the first time ever on CD. As a bonus, all of the music from an extremely rare 1962 TV broadcast featuring the same group has been added.
https://www.jazzmessengers.com/en/5325/dave-brubeck/the-1965-canadian-concert

Personnel: Paul Desmond - alto sax; Dave Brubeck - piano; Eugene Wright - bass; Joe Morello - drums

The 1965 Canadian Concert

Bob James Trio - Feel Like Making LIVE !

Styles: Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:34
Size: 176,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:57) 1. Angela
(4:50) 2. Rocket Man
(4:42) 3. Maputo
(5:48) 4. Topside
(4:51) 5. Misty
(6:02) 6. Avalabop
(2:47) 7. Nautilus
(6:28) 8. Downtown
(4:47) 9. Niles A Head
(9:16) 10. Feel Like Making Love / Night Crawler
(5:40) 11. Submarine
(8:31) 12. Mister Magic
(5:48) 13. Westchester Lady

Bob James keyboardist, pianist, composer and arranger opens Feel Like Making Live! with his original tune, "Angela (Theme From 'Taxi')." Everyone has heard it that is what exposure from a popular television show can do. That series ran from 1978 to 1983. Taxi music, along with his albums on Creed Taylor's CTI Records during this time, in addition to his taking on arranging chores for the label, for the likes of saxophonist Stanley Turrentine, vibraphonist Milt Jackson, saxophonist Grover Washington, Jr. and more, made a name for James. So, a short history of a sixty year career: his first album, Bold Conceptions (Mercury Records) released in 1963, fifty or so more albums followed, a dozen with his group Fourplay; his contribution to hip hop via sampling of his recordings, and finally coming around now to a trio offering a mode of making music he calls ..."a perfect way that I can express myself" with Feel Like making Live!, an audio/visual experience that includes, along with the CD, a Blue Ray disc of James and his trio performing in the studio.

After "Angela" leaves, James and the trio take on Elton John, with "Rocket Man." Laying aside the goofy lyrics of the tune, and hearing it in a purer form, reveals the accessible loveliness of the melody. And that is a trademark of James' approach finding the beauty of a tune, then putting his stamp on it, via embellishment with lush and polished arrangements, or using subtle adjustments and "just" a trio to make his mark.

Also included are "Misty," written and made famous by Erroll Garner, and a Clint Eastwood movie; "Feel Like Makin' Love,'' written by Eugene McDaniels and covered by Roberta Flack and then Bob James in 1974 again, a pop tune turned into an engaging jazz listening experience. Marcus Miller's "Maputo" is here, and "Downtown," made famous by Petula Clark; Miles Davis' "Nardi" and a couple of handfuls of James more popular originals: "Westchester Lady," "Topside," "Angela" (of course), "Avilabop..."

For an artist who made a good part of his name with lush, broad-stroke arrangements and polished production that earned him a "smooth jazzer" tag (sometimes employed derisively, by people who don't know their hindquarters from a hole in the ground in regards to James' sound), a lot of late career trio work from Bob James is showing up. 2018 saw the release of Expresso (Evosound Records); and in 2021 Once Upon A Time: The Lost 1965 New York Studio Sessions (Resonance Records) was released, looking back at James' early days. He started his jazz journey with a trio, and with Feel Like Making Live! he returns to it. Put in the strings and intricate horns, charts and keyboards, and Bob James makes beautiful music. Pare it down to the trio, and he does the same thing.

And the Blue-Ray: This captures James and company in a spacious studio in warm lighting, the leader's electric and acoustic keyboards set at right angles so he can play them simultaneously, offering an intimate "in the room with them" listening experience.
~Dan McClenaghanhttps://www.allaboutjazz.com/feel-like-makin-live-bob-james-trio-evolution-music-group

Personnel: Bob James: piano; Michael Palazzollo: bass; Billy Kilson: drums.

Feel Like Making LIVE !

Monday, August 29, 2022

Jimmy McGriff - Greatest Hits

Styles: Soul Jazz, Hard Bop
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:18
Size: 154,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:56) 1. All About My Girl
(4:34) 2. I've Got a Woman, Pts. 1 & 2
(3:24) 3. Discotheque U.S.A.
(2:44) 4. Kiko
(4:23) 5. See See Rider
(3:42) 6. Cash Box
(5:37) 7. Gospel Time
(4:45) 8. Where It's At
(4:17) 9. The Last Minute
(5:00) 10. Blue Juice
(3:36) 11. Step One
(3:45) 12. Chris Cross
(3:35) 13. South Wes
(3:35) 14. Black Pearl
(3:20) 15. The Worm
(3:39) 16. Ain't It Funky Now
(3:19) 17. Fat Cakes

Blue Note's Greatest Hits doesn't limit itself to the recordings Jimmy McGriff made for the label during the late '60s and early '70s. Instead, it culls from his Sue, Veep, and Solid State recordings as well, making it a definitive overview of his career as a gritty, funky singles artist. And, as Greatest Hits demonstrates, McGriff could create a monster groove, making his singles intoxicating slices of funky jazz. All of his R&B hits "I've Got a Woman," "All About My Girl," "Kiko," "The Worm" are here, as are lesser-known singles and terrific album tracks, resulting in a compilation that isn't just a terrific introduction for neophytes, but also a useful retrospective for collectors.
~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine https://www.allmusic.com/album/greatest-hits-mw0000594445

Greatest Hits

Brian Lynch - Unsung Heroes, Vol. 2

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:16
Size: 164,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:39)  1. It Could Be
(8:14)  2. Heleen
(7:42)  3. Sandy
(6:55)  4. Short Steps
(6:09)  5. Marissa's Mood
(8:05)  6. Out / Dancing Shoes
(5:38)  7. Gone but Not Forgotten
(5:19)  8. 'Nother Never
(7:34)  9. Orange Blossoms
(7:57) 10. I'm so Excited by You

An aurea classicism substantiates the high artistic level of a superb trumpet player, able to absorb and reshape the tradition of his instrument. The latest Bryan Lynch CD is a fascinating excursion into the repertoire of the musicians' musicians of the '50s and' 60s, including Tommy Turrentine , Idrees Sulieman , and Joe Gordon of whom Lynch offers unpublished scores. The ten tracks proposed revive a brilliant technique, which starts from a full knowledge of the past to outline a path of strong emotional impact. The intent is to bring to the general attention some unrecognized pearls of jazz trumpet literature, in the belief that the strength of this music does not reside only in the most celebrated protagonists. Above all the ballads enhance the poetic and emotional voice of the leader when he is engaged in the flugelhorn. As added value, a vibrant expressiveness that seems to summarize the essence of jazz: communication, swing, ability to convey deep emotions, enclosed in the unrepeatable moment of bewitching improvisational games. And this is precisely the legacy handed down by the great trumpeters honored by Lynch, who gives us an engaging and palpating CD like few others listened to in recent years. It follows a highly recommended listening, thanks to a group of rare expertise and compactness. ~ Maurizio Zerbo https://www.allaboutjazz.com/unsung-heroes-vol-2-brian-lynch-hollistic-musicworks-review-by-maurizio-zerbo.php

Personnel: Brian Lynch: trumpet, flugelhorn; Vincent Herring; Alex Hoffman: tenor saxophone; Rob Schneiderman: piano; David Wong: double bass; Pete Van Nostrand: battery.

Unsung Heroes, Vol. 2

Sunday, August 28, 2022

Jessica Williams - Live at Yoshi's, Vol. 2

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:21
Size: 159,4 MB
Art: Front

(8:52)  1. Flamenco Sketches (Live)
(8:56)  2. Why Do I Love You (Live)
(6:49)  3. Spoken Softly (Live)
(8:06)  4. Elbow Room (Live)
(5:16)  5. Soldaji (Live)
(8:16)  6. Paul's Pal (Live)
(7:46)  7. Dear Gaylord (Live)
(6:46)  8. Lulu's Back in Town (Live)
(8:29)  9. Summertime (Live)

Like pianist Mulgrew Miller, who recently released a second volume of trio performances from his run at Yoshi's, pianist Jessica Williams is also putting out her own sequel, another 70 minutes of music culled from her July, 2003 stint at the Oakland club, which has become as renowned on the west coast as New York's Village Vanguard is on the east. And it's interesting to hear how different the two pianists are, despite the fact that both fit comfortably within the broader mainstream. For one thing, Williams owes a clear debt to Thelonious Monk. She often includes a Monk tune or two in her sets, and this disc is notable for the absence of material by the idiosyncratic pianist/composer. Still, his influence presents itself in Williams' sometimes quirky approach, although she's a far more dextrous player than Monk ever was. But like Monk, Williams sometimes demonstrates an ironic sense of humour, grabbing onto a note, say, and milking it for all it's worth. It's like a good comedian who knows just how long to use repetition: enough to be effective, but not so much as to overstay her welcome. Her own brightly swinging "Elbow Room uses a little clever dissonance in its wry theme, with clever references to Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue during Williams' extended solo. Her solo lead-in to the Oscar Hammerstein/Jerome Kern standard "Why Do I Love You, with its oddly disjointed left hand/right hand action, is the perfect introduction to the trio's more straightforward entrance. Williams' solo is filled with curious shifts between hard-swinging lines and injected little turns of phrase that seem at first like non sequiturs, but ultimately make perfect sense.

But that's only one aspect of Williams' playing. The disc opens with a version of "Flamenco Sketches, from Miles Davis' classic Kind of Blue, but rather than maintaining a peaceful ambience throughout, Williams and her trio carefully build the piece from elegant gentility to a greater sense of power over the course of nine minutes, making it dramatic but never melodramatic. Bassist Ray Drummond and drummer Victor Lewis seem empathic in their ability to ebb and flow while Williams layers dense chords that alternate with more playful single-note phrases. In fact, playful may be the best word to describe this pianist. She's capable of a more tender lyricism best demonstrated on her own ballad, "Spoken Softly, and a darkly evocative version of Gershwin's "Summertime that shows there's still plenty to say with even the most familiar of material. But the sparkle of "Lulu's Back in Town, with Williams' debt to Errol Garner in full view, is light and just plain fun. Williams may not be the most adventurous player, but with her combination of whimsy and more deeply-felt romanticism, she succeeds at being both entertaining and emotionally compelling. Live at Yoshi's Volume Two is a strong companion piece to Volume One, and proof that the mainstream is alive and well.~John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/live-at-yoshis-volume-two-jessica-williams-maxjazz-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel:  Jessica Williams: piano; Ray Drummond: bass; Victor Lewis: drums.

Live at Yoshi's, Vol. 2

Saturday, August 27, 2022

Kenny Garrett - Sounds from the Ancestors

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:40
Size: 155,5 MB
Art: Front

( 9:49) 1. It's Time to Come Home
( 5:13) 2. Hargrove
( 8:08) 3. When the Days Were Different
( 8:05) 4. For Art's Sake
( 8:31) 5. What Was That?
(10:55) 6. Soldiers of the Fields/Soldats des Champs
( 7:10) 7. Sounds from the Ancestors
( 9:47) 8. It's Time to Come Home (Original)

On Sounds from the Ancestors, Kenny Garrett's fifth album for Mack Avenue and his first since Do You Dance! (Mack Avenue 2016), the former saxophonist for both Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers and Miles Davis, turns to the past for inspiration. From the Motown and gospel music he was weaned on as a youth growing up in Detroit, to the the hard bop of Blakey and post-bop of John Coltrane , Garrett wears his influences proudly on his sleeve on this energetic set. But the ancestors of the title refers more to Garrett's African forbearers and the deepest roots of all. It is pan-African rhythms, above all else, that permeate this music.

The album begins and ends with ten-minute versions of "It's Time to Come Home," where loping rhythms and a piano motif that never gives up provide the canvas for Garret's languid, melodious improvisation. In the home stretches of these mirror-image, Afro-Cuban bookends, Garrett riffs and chirps rhythmically to the accompaniment of percussion, piano and African vocals. These are opening and closing statements that see Garrett plant his standard in African soil. Everything that comes in between, on the remaining six originals, is a tributary of this main source.

The infectious melody and groove of "Hargrove" pays sunny tribute to trumpeter Roy Hargrove. Here, Maurice Brown blows an upbeat solo over a chanted refrain of "A Love Supreme," a throwback to Garrett's Pursuance: The Music of John Coltrane (Warner Bros. Records, 1996). Coltrane's abiding influence on Garrett is evoked in more personal terms on the epic "Soldiers of the Fields/Soldats des Champs," where the leader's outstanding playing bridges Coltrane's tender melodicism and his searing intensity. Pianist Vernell Brown Jr. also burns on this polyrhythmically vibrant track where martial beats and Afro-Caribbean flavors fuse to potent effect.

Though Garrett cites Aretha Franklin and Marvin Gaye as touchstones, there is more than a hint of Stevie Wonder's shadow on the cheery "When the Days Were Different," where saxophone and wordless vocals mesh over a repetitive piano motif. "For Art's Sake," a nominal salute to Blakey, also tips a wink to the Afrobeat of Tony Allen, with some Joe Zawinul-esque keyboard textures lending a modern slant. African percussion ripples throughout "What Was That?," another impassioned slice of Coltrane-ish post-bop which stokes Garrett and Brown Jr.'s fires.

After all the bustle and intensity of the preceding fifty minutes, the delicate piano intro to "Sounds from The Ancestors" provides a brief and welcome change of tone. The exquisite reverie is soon replaced, almost inevitably, by rhythmic lift-off. Powerful Yoruban vocals and wailing, Screamin' Jay Hawkins-like interjections vie with Garrett's keening, Gospel-fired exclamations in a heady stew.

Garrett's embrace of the musical highways and byways that have informed his evolution sounds respectful but never overly reverential, rooted yet free of constraints. Greater variation in mood might have made for a deeper emotional offering, but that is a minor quibble. A highly enjoyable ride from start to finish.~Ian Patterson https://www.allaboutjazz.com/songs-from-the-ancestors-kenny-garrett-mack-avenue-records

Personnel: Kenny Garrett: saxophone, alto; Vernell Brown Jr.: piano; Corcoran Holt: bass; Ronald Bruner: drums; Rudy Bird: percussion.

Sounds from the Ancestors

Etta Jones - Doin' What She Does Best

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:54
Size: 145,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:53) 1. Laughing At Life
(3:56) 2. Orange Colored Sky
(4:56) 3. Crazy He Calls Me
(3:33) 4. It Could Happen To You
(4:25) 5. I Saw Stars
(5:47) 6. I'm In The Mood For Love
(3:12) 7. I'm Gonna Lock My Heart And Throw Away The Key
(4:34) 8. I'll Be Seeing You
(5:14) 9. My Romance
(4:14) 10. I Laughed At Love
(3:31) 11. East Of The Sun
(5:50) 12. The Man That Got Away
(4:00) 13. What A Little Moonlight Can Do
(5:43) 14. Gone Again

Singer Etta Jones made a comeback while with Muse in the 1970s and '80s, recording more than a dozen albums and teaming up with tenor saxophonist Houston Person (who also produced her sessions). This superior sampler has 14 of her very best recordings from that era.

Person's tenor both complements and contrasts with Jones' voice, and the frameworks/arrangements along with the singer's distinctive phrasing uplift these standards. Her renditions of songs like "Crazy He Calls Me," "I Saw Stars," "I'm Gonna Lock My Heart (And Throw Away the Key)," "My Romance," "East of the Sun (And West of the Moon)," and "The Man That Got Away" are quite definitive. In fact, these are among the very best (and most enjoyable) recordings of Jones' long career.
~Scott Yanowhttps://www.allmusic.com/album/doin-what-she-does-best-mw0000040165

Personnel: Vocals – Etta Jones; Bass – Buster Williams, George Duvivier, Milt Hinton, Sam Jones; Congas, Percussion – Lawrence Killian; Drums – Cecil Brooks III, Frankie Jones, Grady Tate, Idris Muhammad, Jimmy Cobb, Walter Davis Jr.; Guitar – Jimmy Ponder, Melvin Sparks; Keyboards – Sonny Phillips; Percussion – Ralph Dorsey; Piano – Cedar Walton, Stan Hope; Tenor Saxophone – Cedar Walton; Tenor Saxophone – Houston Person; Vibraphone – George Devens

Doin' What She Does Best

Gato Barbieri - Che Corazon

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:06
Size: 132,1 MB
Art: Front

(0:37)  1. Introduction
(5:01)  2. Cristiano
(5:05)  3. I Want You
(4:02)  4. Seven Servants
(5:24)  5. Blue Eyes
(5:34)  6. Eclipse
(4:31)  7. 1812
(4:41)  8. The Woman On The Lake
(5:49)  9. Rosa
(3:50) 10. Sweet Glenda
(5:00) 11. Encounter
(4:15) 12. Auld Lang Syne
(3:12) 13. Finale

When Gato Barbieri re-emerged on Columbia in 1997 after a long hiatus from recording, long-time followers wondered whether he would record straight-ahead jazz or embrace the type of lush pop-jazz he had recorded for A&M in the late 1970's. The distinctive tenor saxman opted to go the commercial route, but he kept his dignity intact. 1997's Que Pasa picked up where Barbieri's A&M output left off, and he has a very similar CD in Che Corazon. With guitarist Chuck Loeb producing, he delivers another album of sleek, romantic mood music. To be sure, pop-jazz instrumentals like "Blue Eyes," "Sweet Glenda" and "The Woman on the Lake" aren¹t in a class with Barbieri's challenging, often brilliant post-bop and avant-garde jazz of the 1960s and early 1970s. But they're tastefully done, and they demonstrate that commercial mood music doesn't have to be elevator music. You can think of Che Corazon as "smooth jazz with a brain."~ AAJ Staff https://www.allaboutjazz.com/che-corazon-gato-barbieri-columbia-records-review-by-aaj-staff.php

Personnel: Gato Barbieri (tenor saxophone); Chuck Loeb (conductor, guitar); Frank McComb (vocals); Mitchel Forman, Bill O'Connell (piano); Mike Ricchiuti (keyboards); Will Lee, Ron Jenkins, Mark Egan, Mario Rodriguez, John Beale (bass); Lionel Cordew, Wolfgang Haffner, Robbie Gonzalez, Dave Rataczek (drums); David Charles, Sam Figueroa, Richie Flores (percussion); Carmen Cuesta, Peter Valentine (background vocals).

Che Corazon

Jessica Williams - Live at Yoshi's, Vol. 1

Styles: Piano Jazz 
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:02
Size: 163,2 MB
Art: Front

( 7:21)  1. I'm Confessin' That I Love You (Live)
( 6:20)  2. Say It over and over Again (Live)
( 7:01)  3. You Say You Care (Live)
( 9:30)  4. Tutu's Promise (Live)
( 6:29)  5. Heather (Live)
(11:26)  6. Alone Together (Live)
( 8:33)  7. Poem in G Minor (Live)
( 6:11)  8. I Want to Talk About You (Live)
( 8:05)  9. Mysterioso (Live)

Pianist Jessica Williams may not be as well known, say, as Mulgrew Miller or Kenny Barron, but she's a powerful and talented pianist more than a little influenced by Thelonious Monk. Still, with an immediately recognizable playing style all her own, Williams clearly belongs in the upper ranks of mainstream pianists, and her latest disc, Live at Yoshi's Volume One , recorded in July of 2003, continues to affirm her position. In a programme composed primarily of well-heeled standards, with two originals and an unusual Billy Cobham song thrown in for good measure, Williams and her trio, featuring bassist Ray Drummond and drummer Victor Lewis, play with energy and complete commitment. Williams' style is defined by a percussive approach that seems quick to spit out ideas; she often jots out rapid phrases peppered with brief octaves. If an artist's playing reflects their personality, then Williams must be energetic and quick-witted, as evidenced by her solos in "I'm Confessin' That I Love You" and "You Say You Care." There is clear joy in her playing and more than a little bit of tongue-in-cheek at times.

But that doesn't mean Williams isn't capable of tenderness as well. Her reading of Billy Cobham's simple ballad "Heather," over Lewis' lightly funky backdrop, is graceful and lyrical. Still, while there is poignancy to her playing, there is a certain power, albeit slightly restrained, that defines her attack. On "Alone Together," the most extended piece of the set, she plays the kind of left hand/right hand counterpoint that is so characteristic of Brad Mehldau, creating hypnotic patterns that raise the tension level until she finally releases, to an almost audible sigh of relief from the audience. Williams' own "Tutu's Promise" comes from Keith Jarrett's space, not unlike "The Cure," being nothing more than a simple four-bar pattern that is used as a simple jumping off point for group interplay. Her "Poem in G Minor" is another simple piece, this time a quiet ballad with Williams' staccato runs alternating with more gingerly built chord passages.  Drummond and Lewis are, as always, the definition of sensitive support, gently provoking Williams on "Mysterioso," while elegantly embracing her delicately swinging work on "You Say You Care." Williams may not break new ground, but as a mainstream pianist she demonstrates a solid sense of solo composition, capable of starting with an idea and developing it over the course of seven or eight minutes. Her focus and wry sense of humour are amongst her most distinctive characteristics, and they make Live at Yoshi's Volume One an engaging, albeit safe, listen. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/live-at-yoshis-volume-one-jessica-williams-maxjazz-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel:  Jessica Williams (piano), Ray Drummond (bass), Victor Lewis (drums)

Live at Yoshi's, Vol. 1

Joey DeFrancesco - Trip Mode

Styles: Contemporary Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:23
Size: 182,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:31) 1. Trip Mode
(7:59) 2. Who Shot John
(4:36) 3. Arizona Sunrise
(6:39) 4. In That Order
(7:16) 5. Cuz U No
(7:02) 6. On Georgian Bay
(5:50) 7. The Touch Of Your Lips
(7:14) 8. Traffic Jam
(7:13) 9. What's Your Organ Player's Nam

Joey the Aggressor has emerged with this album. With new guitarist Dan Wilson and new drummer Jason Brown, the organist’s trio harkens back to-as liner-note writer Mark Ruffin points out-the Larry Young-Grant Green-Elvin Jones triumvirate of the late ’60s. This trio isn’t just burning, it’s hammering, thumping, thundering and laying down a profound hardcore groove. The title tune, which opens the album, sets the pace in terms of blitzing organ runs, volcanic drum eruptions and fiery guitar spurts that develop into fleet, organized lines. This kind of tough, jam-session sensibility also infuses Wilson’s “Who Shot John” and DeFrancesco’s “In That Order” and “Traffic Jam” (somewhat reminiscent of Eddie Harris’ “Freedom Jazz Dance”). But with the organist’s “Cuz U No,” the pace changes to a slow, swaying blues, evoking the emotional momentum inherent in gospel-fueled church services. Amen!

Additional performances feature DeFrancesco on piano and trumpet and as a vocalist. On all of these-his “Arizona Sunrise,” “On Georgian Bay,” “What’s Your Organ Player’s Name” and Ray Noble’s “The Touch of Your Lips”-bassist Mike Boone is added. DeFrancesco’s Miles Davis-influenced brass work has improved to the point that you might be fooled into thinking the trumpet is his primary instrument-as on “What’s Your Organ Player’s Name,” reminiscent of Davis’ electric period, with its backbeat, muted trumpet runs and organ funk. On “The Touch of Your Lips,” DeFrancesco’s singing has style, class and feeling. His piano playing is strong too, and considering his prowess on the organ there’s no reason to think otherwise. This is a fine album throughout, but the biggest impression comes from the aggression and soul of the new trio.https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/joey-defrancesco-trip-mode/

R.I.P.

Born: April 10, 1971

Died: August 25, 2022

Trip Mode

Etta Jones - Easy Living

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:21
Size: 132,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:52) 1. Did I Remember
(5:03) 2. Easy Living
(4:53) 3. After You've Gone
(5:23) 4. Something to Remember You By
(4:01) 5. They Say It's Wonderful
(5:18) 6. Time After Time
(4:06) 7. Who Can I Turn To
(4:59) 8. Our Very Own
(5:03) 9. I Thought You Ought to Know
(4:44) 10. Slow Boat to China
(8:55) 11. I'm Afraid the Masquerade Is Over

For one of her last recordings, Etta Jones sings a wide variety of standards, many of which she had not recorded previously. One does not think of such songs as "Did I Remember," "After You've Gone" (definitely an offbeat choice), "They Say It's Wonderful" and "Slow Boat to China" as blues, but Jones gives each tune such a bluesy approach that she transforms them into new soulful pieces. As always, Houston Person's tenor is a perfect match for Jones' voice. The rhythm section with pianist Richard Wyands is swinging and supportive. Recommended.
~Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/easy-living-mw0000098456

Personnel: Etta Jones – vocals; Houston Person – tenor saxophone; Richard Wyands – piano; Ray Drummond – bass; Chip White – drums

Easy Living

Michela Lombardi - Small Day Tomorrow

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:50
Size: 100,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:22) 1. Comes Love
(2:19) 2. It isn't so Good
(4:56) 3. Some Other Time
(4:38) 4. Small Day Tomorrow
(2:19) 5. Guess I'll hang my tears out to dry
(5:37) 6. The Meaning of the Blues
(4:07) 7. You Are There
(5:20) 8. Everything Must Change
(3:01) 9. That's All
(4:35) 10. Lunatic Lullaby
(2:32) 11. You Are There(Al Take)

Elegant, delicate, intense. The Tuscan Michela Lombardi is among the top ten Best Italian Jazz Vocalists according to the "Jazzit Award 2011", she has often been mentioned in the "Best Voice" section in the Top Jazz polls of the "Musica Jazz" magazine and the Jazz Magazine Italia has dedicated her the cover of February 2008 with Tierney Sutton and Anne Ducros.

He has recorded two discs with Phil Woods also composing some lyrics, he has signed a song with Burt Bacharach, he teaches jazz singing in three Italian conservatories, in his last two discs - "Solitary Moon" with the Piero Frassi trio together with Gabriele Evangelista and Andrea Melani , and “Live To Tell” with the Riccardo Fassi trio together with Luca Pirozzi and Alessandro Marzi - Steven Bernstein, Emanuele Cisi and Don Byron play as special guests.

He presented "Live To Tell" at the "jazzahead!" 2017 in Bremen (Germany) with the Riccardo Fassi trio and Alex Sipiagin special guest obtaining a final standing ovation, won the Ciampi 2010 prize and obtained the Special Mention at the 2007 Crest Jazz Vocal Concours, sang in duo with Danilo Rea, inaugurated the 2009 jazz season at the Tel Aviv Opera House with Nicola Stilo 5tet, she sang at the Duc des Lombards in Paris with her 4tet guest Nico Gori, she won the audience award as composer at the Piacenza Jazz Note di Donna 2009, she composed lyrics for a song by Kenny Wheeler who wanted her to sing it with him on stage (Bargajazz 2007), was conducted in bigband by Massimo Nunzi with the Operaia Orchestra (Arezzo, December 2014) and performed with the Barga Jazz Big Band,

He has sung / collaborated, among others, with: Kelvin Sholar, Byron Landham, Philip Harper, Matt Garrison, Michael Baker, Alex Sipiagin, Tom Kirkpatrick, Gabriele Evangelista, Bernardo Guerra, Andrea Tofanelli, Fabio Morgera, Riccardo Arrighini, Aldo Zunino, Massimo Faraò, Francesco Ponticelli, Giovanni Ceccarelli, Stefano Nunzi, Andrea Nunzi, Carlo Battisti, Alberto Marsico, Alessandro Minetto, Francesco Puglisi, Pietro Tonolo, Mattia Barbieri, Petra Magoni, Stefano Bollani, Marco Tamburini, Danilo Rea and many others. https://www-michelalombardi-it.translate.goog/singer/biography

Personnel: Vocals – Michela Lombardi; Baritone Saxophone – Alessandro Riccucci; Drums, Percussion – Riccardo Jenna; Guitar – Luca Giovacchini; Harmonica – Federico Bertelli; Piano, Vocals – Piero Frassi

Small Day Tomorrow

Gato Barbieri - The Impulse Story

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:10
Size: 144,6 MB
Art: Front

( 7:35) 1. Nunca Mas
( 8:53) 2. India
(12:14) 3. Encontros, Pt. 1
( 5:26) 4. Latino America
( 3:06) 5. Gato Gato
( 5:27) 6. Cuando Vuelva A Tu Lado (What A Difference A Day Makes)
( 6:05) 7. Viva Emiliano Zapata
( 5:51) 8. El Sublime
( 6:03) 9. Milonga Triste
( 2:26) 10. To Be Continued

Gato Barbieri may be one of those saxophonists whose sound is so closely associated with smooth jazz and has been since the late '70s that it's hard to imagine he was once the progenitor of a singular kind of jazz fusion: and that's world fusion, not jazz-rock fusion. Barbieri recorded four albums for Impulse! between 1973 and 1975 that should have changed jazz forever, in that he provided an entirely new direction when it was desperately needed.

That it didn't catch certainly isn't his fault, but spoke more to the dearth of new ideas that followed after the discoveries of John Coltrane, Ornette Coleman, and Miles Davis. Barbieri, a Coltrane disciple, hailed from Argentina and sought to bring the music of Latin America, most specifically its folk forms, into the jazz arena. He was wildly successful aesthetically and critically if not commercially though the first album, Chapter One: Latin America, sold well enough (it is currently available as half of a two-disc set called Latino America [IMPD 236-2], which includes Chapter Two: Hasta Siempre, restores all cuts to their original lengths, and adds bonus material). But there's more to it than his adding folk musicians not studio pros to the mix.

Barbieri's volume of The Impulse Story is one of a ten-disc series by individual artists that fleshes out the four CD box called The House That Trane Built, supporting Ashley Kahn's book of the same name the author chose all the selections on these volumes and wrote biographical notes to each package. Barbieri appears here with small and large folk groups which include fellow Argentine bandoneonist Dino Saluzzi to name just one recorded in both Rio and Los Angeles. The disc's first five cuts come from Chapter One and Chapter Two, and the complete versions of both "Nunca Mas" and "Econtros," as well as the stomping "Gato Gato," come from those sessions.

The next phase of the Impulse!/Gato saga took place in 1974 on Chapter Three: Viva Emiliano Zapata which remains out of print and the next three cuts, "Cuando Vuelva a Tu Lado (What a Difference a Day Makes)," the title tune, and Barbieri's own "El Sublime," are included. These tracks feature the saxophonist fronting Cuban bandleader and arranger Chico O'Farrill's big band, and were recorded in New York. Barbieri's amazing jazz tango "Milonga Triste" comes from Chapter Four: Alive in New York. The set turns in on itself by going back to Chapter One in the brief and beautiful cut called "To Be Continued." This is a fine introduction to Gato Barbieri for those who are interested in what he sounded like before he became a star and began playing more middle-of-the-road material much if which is excellent as well. Barbieri is worthy of serious rediscovery by a new generation, and this tight little set goes a long way toward making that case. ~ Thom Jurek

Gato Barbieri (spoken vocals, saxophone); Dino Saluzzi (bandoneon); Howard Johnson (bass clarinet, saxophone, flugelhorn, tuba); Randy Brecker (trumpet, flugelhorn); Ron Carter (bass guitar); Grady Tate (drums).

The Impulse Story

Friday, August 26, 2022

Barcelona Clarinet Players - One for All

Styles: Jazz, Bop
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:22
Size: 170,9 MB
Art: Front

(16:26) 1. The Musketeers
(10:10) 2. Kelarnit
(14:06) 3. Pas de quatre
(17:05) 4. Clarinet Quartet Concertino, Op. 145
(16:33) 5. Blueprints

Innovation, fusion, interdisciplinary nature, and pedagogy are some of the concepts that best describe the creative line of the Barcelona Clarinet Players (BCP). The group, formed in 2010, has performed at the main music halls in Spain such as Palau de la Musica de Valencia, Auditori de Barcelona, and in such countries as Austria, Belgium, France, Mexico, and the United States. This collaboration with Eugene Corporon and the North Texas Wind Symphony, featuring repertoire from primarily Spanish composers, is remarkable and refreshing!
https://omegamusicdayton.com/UPC/785147007623

One for All

Laila Biali - Out of Dust

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:25
Size: 118,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:58) 1. Revival
(5:13) 2. The monolith
(4:56) 3. Glass house
(4:39) 4. Wendy's song
(4:13) 5. Sugar
(4:08) 6. Alpha waves
(4:12) 7. Au pays de Cocagne
(5:23) 8. Take me to the alley
(5:24) 9. The baker's daughter
(5:34) 10. Broken vessels
(3:40) 11. Take the day off

There's no boxing Laila Biali in. A sharp-minded songwriter, respected pianist and celebrated vocalist who straddles jazz and pop with unusual ease and strength of vision, Biali is truly beyond category. Possessing clear eyes, a perceptive mien and a sharpshooters's gifts in regard to emotional aim, she often expresses more in a single breath than others do in an entire album. Capable of making you laugh and cry all at once, her delivery out of dust is divine.

Riding highs and lows, touching on the personal and political, and drawing meaning from all that supports and subverts, Biali creates a tapestry in song that speaks to pain, hope, humor, loss and a broad desire to find what's right in a world filled with wrongs. Opening on "Revival," a charged tale of modern life, politics and rousing responses in the age of Donald Trump, Biali is quick to speak her mind and drive through the turmoil. But she's just as likely to embrace the everyman in need, demonstrated during an absorbing trip through Gregory Porter's "Take Me To The Alley," or speak to rescue and rejoice, as on "Broken Vessels." Calling out calamities and questioning a false prophet just happens to be the starting point.

What ties together all of those pieces and other standouts, like the moving "Wendy's Song" and the fun(ky) "Sugar" is an ability to simply tell it like it is. Yes, the poetic writing is incredibly expressive, the arrangements are well-wrought works of art, the A-list cast does a fine job fleshing out the charts, and the production values, courtesy of Biali and drummer/co-producer Ben Wittman's unerring ears, add tremendous depth to the music. But in the end, it's really about an artist's ability to connect.

Everything Laila Biali sings is believable and relatable, and when you surround that type of communicative purpose with sympathetic sounds a supportive rhythmic base, Godwin Louis' gorgeous soprano filigree, a horn section made up of top-notch talent like trombonist/arranger Alan Ferber and multi-reedists John Ellis and Remy Le Boeuf, A-list backing vocals from the like of Lisa Fischer and Jo Lawry, among others everything just gels. Exploring an emotional spectrum that covers an entire 360 degrees of experience, Out Of Dust is as real as they come.
~Dan Bilawsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/out-of-dust-laila-biali-act-music

Personnel: Laila Biali: voice / vocals.

Out of dust

David S. Ware - Shakti

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320Ks/
Time: 68:16
Size: 157,5 MB
Art: Front

( 9:43) 1. Crossing Samsara
(18:14) 2. Nataraj
(12:43) 3. Reflection
( 8:31) 4. Namah
( 9:30) 5. Antidromic
( 9:33) 6. Shakti : Durga, Devi, Kali

Shakti is the triumphant return of tenor saxophonist David S. Ware. His first studio recording since 2003's Threads (Thirsty Ear), this album marks the recorded debut of his first working group since he disbanded his famously prolific quartet of 1989-2006. An acknowledged master of the tenor saxophone, Ware's influence spans his seminal days in the seventies loft-era to the early Downtown scene, where his exuberant performances encouraged a new generation to investigate the expressive potential of free jazz. His 23rd release as a leader, Shakti reveals Ware's deepening interest in Eastern philosophy and religion, exemplified by the exotic kalimba introduction to "Namah." Other than a reworking of "Antidromic" from his first AUM Fidelity album, 1997's Wisdom of Uncertainty, this session consists of all new pieces. Conceived around folk-like themes and lyrical fragments, these expansive tunes showcase a darkly poetic side of Ware's strident expressionism. With a mixture of sublime restraint and impassioned yearning, Ware channels his renowned volcanic intensity, concentrating his ecstatic detours and excessive pyrotechnics into a more nuanced approach. Although his circuitous cadences still brim with unfettered altissimo cries, braying multiphonics and coruscating lower register drones, they are tempered by an architectural sensibility that provides incisive focus.

Joined by assiduous bassist William Parker, Ware finds accord in two new ensemble mates, iconic guitarist Joe Morris and legendary drummer Warren Smith. Morris is one of today's most innovative and distinctive guitar stylists, a singular artist with an unparalleled approach and technique. Smith's career dates back to his seminal loft-era collaborations with such visionary avant gardists as Sam Rivers and Muhal Richard Abrams. Morris's first recording session with Ware reveals him to be a brilliant front-line foil for the master saxophonist. Morris's spiky, percolating phrases and bright, round tone create a brilliant contrast to Ware's vociferous linearity and dark, burnished timbre. Ware's effusive commentary dominates the proceedings, but Morris's unique contributions, such as his meticulously metered motifs on "Nataraj" or his spitfire needling on "Antidromic," are equally impressive. While no contemporary rhythm pairing can compare to Parker's clairvoyant work with drummer Hamid Drake, Parker's conversational interplay with Smith yields a malleable pan-African sensibility perfectly attuned to Ware's aesthetic. Their pliant dialogue provides a fluid undercurrent of forward momentum that gracefully modulates tempos and meters. Their sensitive rapport on "Reflection" is supple, while "Nataraj" demonstrates their ability to maintain a hypnotic groove even in the throes of deep abstraction. Ware presents another aspect of his artistry here, one whose seeds were planted early on with the archival 1999 studio recording BalladWare (Thirsty Ear, 2006). A refreshingly lyrical and emotionally committed performance by masterful improvisers, Shakti ebbs with soulful intensity and inspired interplay, making this one of the most compelling, yet accessible, recordings of Ware's career.
~Troy Collins https://www.allaboutjazz.com/shakti-david-s-ware-aum-fidelity-review-by-troy-collins.php

Personnel: David S. Ware: tenor saxophone and kalimba (4); Joe Morris: guitar and percussion (4); William Parker: bass; Warren Smith: drums and percussion.

Shakti

Walt Weiskopf - European Quartet: Diamonds and Other Jewels

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:12
Size: 108,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:30) 1. Spartacus
(7:50) 2. Black Diamond
(5:47) 3. Other Jewels
(5:03) 4. Incantation
(6:11) 5. Thad Nation
(6:18) 6. My Old Flame
(6:52) 7. Blood Diamond
(3:38) 8. Everybody

Two distinct types of jazz album have emerged in the difficult Covid pandemic times: the do-it-yourself statements, usually recorded in a home studio, often with internet sound swapping; and the pent-up energy, post-pandemic energy bursts, musicians getting together again after a year or more of minimal in-person collaboration. Diamonds And Other Jewels, from the Walt Weiskopf European Quartet, is of the latter type. Saxophonist Weiskopf, pianist Carl Winther, bassist Andreas Lang and drummer Anders Mogensen jump out of the speakers from the start with "Spatacus," one of the seven dynamic originals offered up here.

The quartet began its life under Weskopf's leadership in 2017. Diamonds And Other Jewels is its sixth release, and after mostly lying dormant as a group during the pandemic they reconvene with a special expressive gusto, and a palpable sense of joy and adventure.

"Black Diamond," less ferocious than 'Spartacus," rolls with a smooth flow. Weiskopf's solo is freewheeling and muscular, bringing sax man Joe Henderson to mind with an on-edge adventurousness. "Thad Nation" nods to trumpeter & bandleader Thad Jones, with a colorful and upbeat mood, and "Blond Diamond" broods beautifully.

"My Old Flame," the disc's only non-original, was recorded in 1944 by Billie Holiday. It adds a welcome bit of soothing familiarity to the set. Overall the sound seems to owe a debt to saxophonist John Coltrane's quartet with pianist McCoy Tyner, drummer Elvin Jones and bassist Jimmy Garrison, before things went into interstellar space a fine era for Coltrane, and a fine one for the Walt Weiskopf European Quartet,too.
~Dan McClenaghan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/diamonds-and-other-jewels-walt-weiskopf-european-quartet-amm-records

Personnel: Walt Weiskopf: saxophone; Carl Winther: piano; Andreas Lang: bass, acoustic; Anders Mogensen: drums.

European Quartet: Diamonds and Other Jewels

Thursday, August 25, 2022

Nellie McKay - Bagatelles

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 17:31
Size: 42,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:07) 1. How About You
(1:32) 2. Up a Lazy River
(1:51) 3. The Best Things in Life Are Free
(2:00) 4. Rockabye Your Baby
(2:34) 5. I Concentrate on You
(2:10) 6. Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah
(1:59) 7. Accentuate the Positive
(3:15) 8. One for My Baby (And One More for the Road)

On the heels of her atmospheric 2018 standards album Sister Orchid, singer/pianist Nellie McKay offers an equally lowkey and misty follow-up EP with 2019's Bagatelles. As with Sister Orchid, here McKay performs a handful of beloved classic songs in a distinctly spare style. Along with singing, she also plays all the instruments here, accompanying herself at various times on piano, ukulele, bass, Fender Rhodes, and even Theremin.

There's a laid-back, bedroom cabaret quality to these performances, as if McKay is flipping through one of her favorite song books and giving off-the-cuff takes on songs that catch her fancy. In particular, her swaying take on "Up a Lazy River" evokes the feel of relaxed summer's day as she sings while strumming a ukulele. Even when she goes for a more robust arrangement, playing bass and ukulele on "Accentuate the Positive," the result sounds pleasingly spontaneous.

That said, the minimalist vibe belies McKay's knack for conceptual, almost cinematic presentation. One could almost take her whistling intro "How About You" for granted until she brings it back, whistling along with her vocals at the end. She takes this deft conceptualism even further on Cole Porter's "I Concentrate on You," framing her delicate a cappella vocals with nature sounds, including a seagull's call and waves softly hitting a beach. Perhaps most affecting, McKay juxtaposes her arty conceits with her sweetly earnest delivery, a choice that helps make the album both intriguing and surprisingly moving.~Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/album/bagatelles-mw0003320558

Bagatelles

Nicole Zuraitis - Pariah Anthem

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:37
Size: 93,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:44) 1. Stinger
(5:04) 2. Watercolors
(4:50) 3. Try, Love
(3:54) 4. Staring Into the Sun
(5:03) 5. To the Hive
(3:41) 6. Dagger
(4:33) 7. The Bridge
(4:32) 8. If Only for Today
(5:13) 9. Pariah Anthem

In my younger days, I used to frequent what we called “Wine and Cheese Cafés”, where you could usually find some very good and reasonably priced wines, a diverse assortment of cheeses and more often than not, an eclectic assortment of some of the best music around, setting the atmosphere. It was generally a mix of soft rock, mellow but funky R&B and tasty contemporary jazz of the type that was popularized by CTI Records. Often, I would hate to leave because the music mix was more intoxicating than any alcoholic beverage being served. Invariably, there would be an artist that captured that perfect mix of the genres and I would ask the waiter “Who is that playing now?” If now was then, I would have certainly asked about the music of Nicole Zuraitis.

Nicole Zuraitis is a young New York based singer/songwriter/keyboardist. The NYU graduate has performed or recorded with Winard Harper, Jane Monheit and Don Braden. Her own music as evidenced on Pariah Anthem, which is her second album, is a well crafted hybrid of rock, jazz and R&B, which fits very well around her impressive voice. And that voice is hard to ignore. On most selections, Ms. Zuraitis hangs out in that corner of the alto range that was once so well occupied by the great Angela Bofill. Then just as soon as you’ve gotten comfortable there, Ms. Zuraitis will suddenly sweep into a glissando through several octaves that places her close to Minnie Riperton territory. I couldn’t help but stop and take notice.

The songs on Pariah Anthem were all written by Zuraitis and many of them are quite good. “Secret” is sweetly soulful, with a swirl of jazz chords and a dreamy rhodes backdrop by Julian Shore. It sounds like a lost track from Ms. Bofill’s Angel of the Night album. “Staring Into the Sun” is a lovely duet between Ms. Zuraitis and Victor Gould’s piano. It gives her a chance to show off her remarkable range to great effect. “To The Hive” starts as an insistent jazz-rock tune that takes an unexpected turn with the addition of a Hindi verse by Indian singer Nandini Srikar. When Srikar and Zuraitis rush toward the coda in an English/ Hindi counterpoint, it is exhilarating. On “Dagger”, Ms. Zuraitis and company drop a nice neo-soul groove, led again by Julian Shore’s rhodes. This cat knows how to pull an atmosphere out of his keyboard. “If Only for Today” is a torchy ballad, performed again as a duet between Ms. Zuraitis and Mr. Gould. They are so good together that I would gladly listen to an evening of them playing duets.

Nicole Zuraitis is a gifted performer and Pariah Anthem is an album that will grow on you with repeated listening as the nuances reveal themselves. It’s music that doesn’t easily categorize itself. And you know what? That’s not a necessarily a bad thing. Keep an eye on Ms. Zuraitis, for I think that she has a bright future ahead of her.~By Curtis Davenport http://curtjazz.com/2014/02/11/album-review-nicole-zuraitis-pariah-anthem/

Personnel: Nicole Zuraitis, vocals, piano; Dan Pugach, drums; Scott Colberg, double bass; Julian Shore, rhodes, organ; Victor Gould, piano; Ilan Bar-Lavi, guitar; Billy Buss trumpet, flugelhorn; Jon Paul, acoustic guitar; Nandini Srikar, vocals

Pariah Anthem

Monty Alexander - Love Notes

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:17
Size: 111,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:59) 1. Day in Day Out
(4:54) 2. These Love Notes
(6:02) 3. The Nearness of You (feat. Roy Hargrove)
(4:56) 4. As Time Goes By
(4:45) 5. Faith Can Move Mountains
(4:07) 6. Island in the Sun
(4:58) 7. To the Ends of the Earth
(4:30) 8. Moon River
(2:55) 9. Too Marvelous for Words (Live)
(2:32) 10. Straighten up and Fly Right (Live)
(4:33) 11. For Sentimental Reasons

Pianist Monty Alexander is set to release Love Notes this year, fulfilling a decades-long desire to record his first vocal album.

The iconic jazz musician has released 75 recordings as a bandleader over the course of his illustrious career spanning more than 60 years. Alexander’s recording career also includes work as a session musician with Ray Brown, Tony Bennett, Quincy Jones, Dizzy Gillespie, Benny Golson, Clark Terry, Milt Jackson and many more. Now, he’s finally making his debut as a vocalist.

“My desire was emboldened ever since one of our great jazz vocalists, Carmen McRae, heard me sing a tune at the end of a concert and told me, ‘Don’t stop singing!,’ admonishing me like a loving aunt would,” Alexander recalls. “That was back in the 1970s, so it took me 50 years … but I am glad to finally introduce Monty the vocalist and this collection of love songs.”

The 11 tracks on Love Notes are new arrangements of some of Alexander’s favourite songs ever since he was a child in Jamaica; the exception is one original composition, These Love Notes, a previously instrumental fan favourite that’s been newly re-recorded here with lyrics by Brian Jobson. Among the album’s track listing are romantic standards famously recorded by the likes of Henry Mancini, Nat King Cole, Harry Belafonte, Sam Cooke, Frank Sinatra and more.

“These songs harken back to innocent times, the 1950s, when I would hear calypsos and mentos in the streets,” Alexander says, “before I came to America, before the rise of Bob Marley, and certainly before I knew I would have this incredible career as a jazz pianist with over 75 albums recorded to date. Seventy-five albums as a pianist and one as a singer!”

Love Notes features an impressive cast of musicians that includes George Benson, Ramsey Lewis, Joe Sample, Courtney Panton, Karl Wright, Rubens de la Corte, Arturo Sandoval, Paul Berner, Steve Williams, Bobby Thomas Jr., Hassan Shakur and Quentin Baxter. The late Roy Hargrove also makes a posthumous appearance on two of the tracks.The album’s release will be accompanied by tour dates worldwide.

There’s also a biographical documentary in the works called The Monty Alexander Movie. Directed by Academy Award-winning filmmaker Arthur Gordon, the project is currently in production in Jamaica, the U.S. and Europe.~Adam Feibel https://jazz.fm/monty-alexander-love-notes-first-vocal-album/

Love Notes