Friday, September 30, 2022

Teresa Luján - Teresa Luján sings Anita O'Day

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:09
Size: 114,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:52) 1. Fine and dandy
(4:16) 2. Honeysuckle rose
(5:45) 3. A nightingale sang in Berkeley square
(3:15) 4. Sing, sing, sing
(2:46) 5. Pick yourself up
(5:36) 6. Somebody's crying
(3:43) 7. Let's face the music and dance
(3:19) 8. Four brothers
(2:26) 9. Drum boogie
(4:04) 10. Tenderly
(3:27) 11. Whisper not
(4:34) 12. Tea for two

"I saw Anita O'Day live in 1987, at Teatro Principal in Valencia. Her and clarinetist Buddy DeFranco were the guest artists in tour with Woody Herman’s Orchestra, which was then led by Frank Tiberi. I barely knewher then; she looked like a nice old grandma, but I wasn’t impressed. Almost 70 then, her best days were behind her. I discovered her little by little, thanks to the wonderful albums that I slowly managed to get my hands on, and to films like Jazz on a Summer’s Day (1960), where a hat with feathers, a pair of white gloves and a black cocktail dress became the iconic get-up that today we associated with her.

In any case, for those of us without ties to her and her times, her independent character, her defiance of apartheid, her addiction problems and her flashes of genius on stage feel very far away. For us, Anita O'Day means mainly a vocal style. A style that share with Billie Holiday the limitations of their tone and timbre as well as the creative solutions to overcome them , with Ella Fitzgerald the passion of rhythm, and with Mel Tormé the overwhelming imagination necessary to recreate well-known songs and turn theminto one surprise after another.

Teresa Luján is also an independent soul among us. A singer who spends her time teaching and investigating she is one of the foremost experts in Tete Montoliu when she decides to face an audience, it is always after careful consideration of the project. She is not particularly keen on experimenting, butwhen she looks back in search of inspiration, there isn’t a hint of nostalgia in her eye. Her interest in Henry Mancini or the Boswell sisters is focused on the more timeless aspects of their work. Now, with her tribute to Anita O'Day she wants to highlight just how modern she was.

This CD also represents a step forward in Teresa Lujan’s career as a singer. For the first time she is confronting an artistwith a similar stylistic frame, range and color to her own. Although Teresa’s voice has a deeper timbre and a more pronounced vibrato, she manages to sidestep the main danger in this endeavor, which was imitation. And she does so using her strongest suit, which she also shares with her admired O’Day: the more jazz-oriented aspects of her craft. And being backed by a trio and an excellent trio at that,withMiano, Ferrer and Pérez, experts inmaking the music walk a fresh, swinging approach is guaranteed. When all is said and done, a feeling of freedom pervades their music, and the end result belongs to all of them, not taxes, no tolls, no buts.

The choice of songs hearkens back to Anita O'Day, but with subtle innovations with respect to her better-known versions. The first three tracks were already on the LP 'Anita' (1956), with orchestrations by Buddy Bregman and some tunes for small group. Teresa Luján’s «Fine and Dandy» still uses the original arrangement, but focusing more on the pure vocal sensuality of the first bars, to later go into a beautiful scat that remindsme of Chet Baker. From the initial walkin’ bass, «Honeysuckle Rose» also sounds like the 1956 arrangement, but Teresa adds a vocal solo, followed by two more by Richi Ferrer and Fabio Miano. «A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square» is the first ballad,which lets Teresa showmore of her personality, her range of colors and phrasing, as she let’s herself be dragged by the beautiful melody, never straying too far from the intimacy that O'Day imparted to her own version.

«Sing, sing, sing», uno of Benny Goodman’s hits,was recreated by O'Day in 'Anita O'Day Sings the Winners' her own homage album, backed by the orchestra of Russ Garcia, and foregoing the famous quote from«Christopher Columbus». Luján’s version iswell adapted to the trio format; it is somewhat contained, but very dynamic. «Pick Yourself Up» is the Jerome Kern original that gave title to an O'Day LP also with Bergman alternating with a small group. The original version sounds almost like a recital, fast and rhythmic which Luján follows closely and makes her own. In less than three minutes there’s time even for a beautiful solo by Fabio, whose good taste is unfailing.

The little known «Somebody’s Crying» comes from a 1952 recording with the orchestra of Larry Russell, a Hollywood arranger and co-writer of the tune. Teresa Luján was drawn to its combination of blues and ballad, which she approaches with a display of vocal colors and her unique brand of sensual accent. Miano’s piano goes on a decidedly blues trip. Irving Berlin’s «Let’s Face the Music and Dance» follows, a song first brought to life by Fred Astaire and which usually feels slow. Anita O'Day’s rendition has a Latin beat with a hard bop tinge. The backing trio feels comfortablewith these stylistic licenses, embracing themwith contagious enthusiasm.

With Jimmy Giuffre’s «Four Brothers» we go back to 'Anita O'Day Sings The Winners.' Teresa Lujan’s rendition includes solos by herself, piano and double bass; let’smake a note for curious collectors, that Teresa quotes «Ain’t She Sweet», from 1927, recorded by The Beatles in 1961 (and by no other than Marujita Díaz in 1959). In the return, she recovers the lyrics written by the great Jon Hendricks for Manhattan Transfer. It is a version full of bebop spunk. Then comes «Drum Boogie», one of Gene Krupa’s greatest hits, with an arrangement that has somemore rhythmic freedom, some harmonic surprises and a shared spotlight.

The next ballad on the CD is «Tenderly», mainly associated to Sarah Vaughan, but which O'Day included in her album 'Anita Sings the Most' A year earlier it had been recorded by Billie Holiday, so it won’t be for lack of heavy-weight referents... Although she playfully recognizes O'Day’s influence, Teresa delivers a personal rendition in a song where she can display her musicality and attention to the lyrics. The soloist this time is Richi Ferrer, with a classical style and flavor. As for «Whisper Not», by Benny Golson, is is one of the melodies most heavily linked to the hard bop era. O'Day and Mel Tormé were the first well-known singers to record Leonard Feather’s lyrics. She did so in 'Anita O'Day and The Three Sounds' (1962). Fabio follows that version closely at first, but then recovers the usual solo structure that O'Day had changed in her version.

«Tea for Two» closes the album, al old-timey standardwhere Anita O'Day let loose all her imagination and sense of humor. Although she recorded it with Krupa, the version she references is the one from 'Anita O'Day at Mister Kelly’s' (1958). Teresa bases her rendition on it, respecting almost every detail of the fast-paced original, although Fabio adds a long intro in ballad time. O'Day's fours exchange with her faithful drummer John Poole is also kept here, giving Julio Pérez a chance to use his winged brushes.

As the last tune ends, I wonder what I would think today of that 1987 concert with Anita O'Day. I would probably enjoy it more, for one. I also realize I have really enjoyed this album with Teresa, Fabio, Richi and Julio. It’s is a homage made for an audience, with sincere admiration and no trace of arrogance or pompousness. With themain tool required when embarking in projects such as this: talent."By Jorge Garcia https://www.freshsoundrecords.com/teresa-lujan-albums/53998-sings-anita-o-day.html

Personnel: Teresa Luján (vocals), Fabio Miano (piano), Richi Ferrer (bass), Julio Pérez (drums).

Teresa Luján sings Anita O'Day

Jimmie Lunceford - The Complete Decca Sessions Disc 1, Disc 2, Disc 3

Album: The Complete Decca Sessions Disc 1
Styles: Big Band, Swing
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:04
Size: 163,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:12) 1. Sophisticated Lady
(2:56) 2. Mood Indigo
(3:04) 3. Rose Room
(2:49) 4. Black And Tan Fantasie
(2:17) 5. Stratosphere
(3:07) 6. Nana
(2:45) 7. Miss Ottis Regrets (She's Unable To Lunch Today)
(3:10) 8. Unsophisticated Sue
(3:07) 9. Star Dust
(3:11) 10. Dream Of You
(3:09) 11. Stomp It Off
(3:11) 12. Call It Anything
(3:16) 13. Because You're You
(3:05) 14. Chillun, Get Up!
(3:07) 15. Solitude
(3:16) 16. Rain
(3:26) 17. Since My Best Gal Turned
(3:04) 18. Jealous
(3:14) 19. Rhythm Is Our Business
(2:56) 20. Mood Indigo (Alt Tk-A)
(3:03) 21. Star Dust (Alt Tk-B)
(3:17) 22. Because You're You (Alt Tk-B)
(3:12) 23. Rhythm Is Our Business (Alt Tk-B)

Album: The Complete Decca Sessions Disc 2
Time: 54:53
Size: 126,5 MB

(2:46) 1. Shake Your Head
(3:15) 2. I'm Walking Through Heaven With You
(3:10) 3. Sleepy Time Gal
(3:15) 4. Bird Of Paradise
(3:21) 5. Rhapsody Jr.
(3:08) 6. Runnin' Wild
(3:09) 7. Four Or Five Times
(3:03) 8. (If I Had Rhythm) In My Nursery Rhymes
(3:08) 9. Babe
(2:45) 10. Swanee River
(3:03) 11. Thunder
(3:08) 12. On Boy
(2:54) 13. Charmaine
(2:38) 14. You Take The East, Take The West, Take The North, I'll Take The South
(3:03) 15. Avalon
(2:51) 16. Charmaine (Matrix 600)
(3:00) 17. Hittin' The Bottle
(3:08) 18. Four Or Five Times

Album: The Complete Decca Sessions Disc 3
Time: 57:39
Size: 132,9 MB

(3:14) 1. My Blue Heaven
(3:01) 2. I'm Nuts About Screwy Music
(3:17) 3. The Best Things in Life Are Free
(3:02) 4. The Melody Man
(2:39) 5. Organ Grinder's Swing
(2:55) 6. On the Beach at Bali-Bali
(2:59) 7. Me and the Moon
(3:05) 8. Living from Day to Day
(3:13) 9. 'Tain't Good
(2:54) 10. Muddy Water
(3:00) 11. I Can't Escape from You
(2:58) 12. Harlem Shout
(2:49) 13. My Last Affair
(3:03) 14. Running a Temperature
(3:01) 15. Honey, Keep your Mind on Me
(3:11) 16. Count Me Out
(2:49) 17. I'll See You in my Dreams
(3:14) 18. My Blue Heaven
(3:07) 19. The Melody Man

When saxophonist Jimmie Lunceford signed to the Decca label in 1934 he was running one of the best orchestras in the US. He had signed a deal to appear at the Cotton Club (where bandleaders Duke Ellington and Cab Calloway had recently launched into stardom) and was frequently beating others in battles of the bands, all the while leading an outfit with an uncanny amount of precision and professionalism. Even Glenn Miller claimed that when Lunceford's band was at its peak, no one could top it. It's a shame, then, that Lunceford isn't more well known in 2011, since the music he recorded for Decca is some of the best that came out of the big band era. Perhaps it's because Lunceford never had an era-defining hit such as Benny Goodman's "Sing, Sing, Sing" or Miller's "In the Mood." Or maybe it's because the bandleader had trouble finding ways to adapt in the mid 1940s when the big band era was over (Lunceford himself died a few years later.) More than likely it's that the fickle nature of popular music, that sometimes rewards the less deserving while others languish in relative obscurity. Because Lunceford recorded for Decca for almost his entire career, the superb seven disc Mosaic set The Complete Jimmie Lunceford Decca Sessions provides as complete a look at an artist as you're likely to find and an essential document of the time when big bands reigned. As is the norm with Mosaic sets, the sound is exceptionally crisp, although more than a few tracks display the tell-tale crackle of age (since Mosiac is known for being fastidious about such matters these will have been the best sources the label could find.) The trumpets are bright, the drums have a propulsive snap, the horn sections are well balanced and, unusually, the rhythm guitar and bass are audible. It'seasy to imagine being one of the eager teens depicted on the cover hearing this band live in its heyday.

The Lunceford band was all about arrangements, not composing; very few of the band's charts were originals. Rather, the bandstand was always stocked with a handful of men who could do double duty as a player or arranger. Trumpeter Sy Oliver was the most accomplished and played the largest role in determining the band's sound, but there was also the Eddies, Durham and Wilcox, and Willie Smith. The Lunceford band proved to be fertile ground for ideas; the individual styles of each began to converge as the years went on and the arranging think tank began to settle on a precise network of contrasts and balances. In many ways they were working as architects of the big band sound, eagerly listening to what others (including themselves) were doing and grabbing the best ideas; many of their charts sound drastically different from what anyone else was doing at the time, but very similar to what would come shortly thereafter. Of course part of the craft of arranging is making sure your "Star Dust" doesn't sound like the other guy's "Star Dust," and Oliver and company in the band were capable of coming up with ways to add new twists to just about anything. The first sides the band recorded for Decca, for instance, were a handful of Ellington tunes, and "Mood Indigo" is markedly different from Ellington's, not as solemn and brisker. The breakout chart was Oliver's "Rhythm Is Our Business," an apt title for a band that was on the verge of perfecting the swing tempo (before Count Basie perfected the way to play it), and filled with little surprises from Oliver, who had an endless supply of ways of writing exciting horn parts (it also helped that Wilcox, one of the best at crafting horn lines, was in the house).

By the mid 1930s, Lunceford was turning out so many jukebox hits that A&R men told him that he should spread out his best material over several records instead of putting them back to back. Part of this was due to strong material put together by men who seemed to have an endless supply of new ideas for old songs "Swanee River" and "Organ Grinder's Swing" are two of many such masterpieces but Lunceford, ever the professional, also treated the novelty tunes that he and everyone else were forced to record with the same standards. Thus goofy junk such as "I'm Nuts About Screwy Music" and "'Tain't Good (Like a Nickel Made of Wood)" and even "The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down" become fairly decent tracks when given the Lunceford treatment there never seemed to be anything that couldn't be arranged properly (well, maybe not "Merry-Go-Round"). Of course, the Lunceford band had its share of outstanding soloists, none of whom enjoyed the renown of any of Ellington's or Basie's guys, but were nonetheless architects of what would become the standard big band sound. Joe Thomas was an important influence on the honking and bar walking saxophones that would come later; both Eddie Tompkins and Tommy Stevenson contribute dexterous trumpet solos. Then there was trombonist Trummy Young, who cut his teeth with the Lunceford band and got a significant spotlight with "Margie," and Eddie Durham, who carved out the role for the guitar in a big band context (especially when he plugged it in later.) Many of these guys contributed vocals as well; for most of his career Lunceford never had a singer that didn't also play an instrument. The vocals are uncommonly good for the time, still with that pre-Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra feel, and the vocal trios are as good as any that were around at the time.

By the latter half of the 1930s, the Lunceford band was able to combine great arrangements and reliable soloists to cut some of the best swing records of the era, most of which are contained on the third and fourth Mosaic discs. A perfect arrangement of "My Blue Heaven" features an Oliver arrangement and a splendid vocal trio; the band's signature hit, "For Dancers Only," features sprightly soloing over a tune pitched at the perfect tempo for young crowds eager to jitterbug. Even a song like "On the Beach of Bali-Bali," which sounds like it might be a dreadful Hawaiian-themed number, is in fact a trickily syncopated jump tune. Sadly, the recording ban was not good to the Lunceford band. Much of his lineup left disgruntled during this time, feeling like they weren't getting a fair shake financially, and many of the arrangers left for more lucrative gigs (Sy Oliver in particular continued to create some of the best arranged records in jazz for the likes of trumpeter Louis Armstrong and singer Ella Fitzgerald). Their replacements had clearly been inspired by the adventures of their predecessors, but their current work had none of the spark that made the previous decade's work so engaging. Only the appearance of arrangers Gerald Wilson and Tadd Dameron, both of whom were beginning to explore new avenues for the big band sound, threatens to make this band a little more special. In truth, what probably led to the foundering of Lunceford's unit was what actually made his records so appealing. He never had aspirations to write suites or appear at Carnegie Hall; he just wanted to entertain. Had Lunceford set his sights a little wider, he might have found a way to ride his popularity and to thrive after most orchestras had to call it quits. But instead he crafted some of the most enjoyable records in the big band era, songs, as one of his tunes put it, "For Dancers Only." One of the endearing qualities of all Mosaic sets is that in their completeness the real warts and all nature of an outfit is revealed, and Lunceford had to record his share of dogs just like any other band of the time. But nobody infused the lighter fair with more of a sense of spirited fun and professionalism as he did, and nobody treated the harder-hitting material with a better sense of how to make it work.~David Rickert https://www.allaboutjazz.com/jimmie-lunceford-the-complete-jimmie-lunceford-decca-sessions-by-david-rickert

Personnel: Jimmie Lunceford: director, alto sax; Eddie Tompkins: trumpet, vocal; Tommy Stevenson: trumpet; Sy Oliver: trumpet, vocal, arranger; Russell Bowles: trombone; Henry Wells: trombone, vocal; Willie Smith: clarinet, alto sax, vocal, arranger; Laforet Dent: clarinet, alto sax; Joe Thomas: clarinet, tenor sax; Earl Carruthers: clarinet, alto sax, baritone sax; Eddie Wilcox: piano, arranger; Al Norris: guitar, violin; Moses Allen: bass; Jimmy Crawford: drums, vibes, tympani, glockenspiel; Paul Webster: trumpet; Elmer Crumbley: trombone; Eddie Durham: trombone, guitar, arranger; Dan Grissom: clarinet, alto sax, vocal; Ed Brown: clarinet, alto sax, tenor sax; Trummy Young: trombone, vocal; Ted Buckner: alto sax; Leon Carr: arranger; Snooky Young: trumpet; Gerald Wilson: trumpet, vocal, arranger; Billy Moore, Roger Segure: arranger; Freddie Webster: trumpet; Harry Jackson: trumpet, arranger; Fernando Arbello: trombone; Benny Waters: tenor sax; Truck Parham: bass; Tadd Dameron: arranger; Bob Mitchell: trombone; Russell Green: trumpet; Melvin Moore: trumpet; William Scott: trumpet; Earl Hardy: trombone; John Ewing: trombone; Omer Simeon: clarinet, alto sax; Kirt Bradford: alto sax; Ernest Purce: tenor sax; Claude Trenier: vocal; Horace Henderson: arranger; Ralph Griffin: trumpet; Bill Darnell: vocals; Lonnie Wilfong: arranger; Rostelle Reece: trumpet; Les Current: trumpet; John Mitchell: guitar; Charles Stewart: trumpet; Bob Mitchell: trumpet, vocal; Nick Brooks: vocal; Delta Rhythm Boys: vocal; Joe Liggins: arranger.

The Complete Decca Sessions Disc 1, Disc 2, Disc 3

Michael Lemmo - Blue Comet

Styles: Smooth Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:01
Size: 117,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:18) 1. La Cienega
(3:40) 2. Blue Comet
(3:51) 3. Island Runner
(4:20) 4. Living Without You
(4:39) 5. Will You Ever Love Me Again
(4:08) 6. Chandler Boulevard
(4:42) 7. Nobody Knows
(4:43) 8. Ready for It
(4:23) 9. Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love
(4:19) 10. Smoove
(3:59) 11. Closin' Time at Norm's
(4:55) 12. Northern Lights

In a genre and format that too often encourages even the most brilliant of artists to play it safe and sacrifice the full expanse of their chops for easy, friendly, infectious listenability, Michael Lemmo is that once in a decade cat who’s ready to blow all those niceties out of the water (while still being wildly melodic) on his genre-stretching, perfectly titled debut smooth jazz single “Blue Comet” also the name of his upcoming debut.

Understanding his unique background, the first clue that you’re in for a more fiery adventure with this multi-faceted singer, songwriter and guitar virtuoso is a list of his chief influences. While Lee Ritenour is up there, the rest are rockers Lindsey Buckingham, John Mayer and late greats Jeff Buckley and Eddie Van Halen. While Lemmo is clearly in a class all his own, for point of comparison, he’s what might happen if we merged the historical power of Eric Clapton’s blues/rock and George Benson’s inventive jazz sensibilities.

The genius of this relentlessly burning, constantly exploding “Blue Comet” is the decision to turn the powerhouse tune into a funky, jamming dance-duet with this generation’s premiere saxophonist, Jeff Ryan. It’s today’s genre equivalent of what might have happened if blues-rock inspired guitarist, the late Jeff Golub, joined forces with Richard Elliot. Once Ryan was added to the mix, the gale force of the track prompted an unprecedented reaction from its producer Paul Brown, who has helmed #1 hits for nearly every genre artist (including himself) for 30 years. Listening back with Lemmo, Brown was literally floored, like “that’s some serious crazy s*** right there.” It’s billed as “Michael Lemmo ft. Jeff Ryan,” but the camaraderie between artists is so much more than main artist/featured artist.

So, prepare yourselves for not just urban jazz business as usual. The jam starts out with some crisp trademark Lemmo licks before Ryan blasts in with his combustible yet cool flow and unlike most tracks like this where the guitar might be featured and the sax plays a harmony and takes a later solo, the two are engaged in buoyant, high-energy conversation from the get go often allowing Lemmo to establish a melodic line solo, then repeat it in tandem with Ryan. The joyful thing for mainstream genre fans is that while their performances are generally higher octane and their individual solos a few minutes in more blistering and intense than traditional radio fare, there are still some incredibly hooky melodic lines to latch onto.

While Ryan’s solos these past few years on his own recordings and those of other artists have become the stuff of legend, the real payoff is hearing Lemmo, on his very first instrumental radio single, take his lengthy solo spotlight as an opportunity to fuse his aggressive, stratospheric rock and jazz sensibilities. It’s breathtaking stuff that will no doubt have listeners capping their astonishment with a moment to catch their breath. Brown’s usual studio crew of Roberto Vally (bass), Gorden Campbell (drums) and Marco Basci (keys) is on hand to make sure things are always poppin’ behind the two lead instruments.

“For folks who like their “smooth jazz” a little less smooth and a lot more adventurous, the success of this song will hopefully lead other artists to cut loose like this more often.” By Jonathan Widran https://smoothjazzlife.wordpress.com/2022/02/17/michael-lemmo-blue-comet/

Blue Comet

Thursday, September 29, 2022

Bud Powell - Bud In Copenhagen

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:31
Size: 97,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:16) 1. Rifftide
(6:01) 2. Bouncing With Baud
(4:59) 3. Move
(6:02) 4. The Best Thing For You
(6:45) 5. Straight, No Chaser
(6:15) 6. I Remember Clifford
(5:49) 7. Hot House
(2:22) 8. 52nd Street Theme

After establishing iconic status as the first great bop pianist in the 1940s, Bud Powell was plagued by both mental illness and a fondness for, to borrow his mentor Charlie Parker's famous phrase, "a little sherry before dinner." As a result his output was vastly uneven. Catch Powell right and he is brimfull of energy and ideas. Catch him wrong and, while the technique is there, his playing falls flat and lacks inspiration it can even be a downright mess. Powell's move to Europe in 1959 gave him a new lease of life. This album, recorded in 1962, features Powell close to his best, scatting and growling happily as he plays with his old, rediscovered fire. Originally titled Bouncing With Bud, it has been released on different labels over the years, before emerging in Storyville's excellent In Copenhagen series. Powell is backed by the phenomenal bassist Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen, astonishingly just 15 at the time, and a self-effacing drummer, William Schiopffe.

The opener, "Rifftide," based on the chords of "Lady Be Good," dates back to 1945 when Powell was in his 20s and had just left Cootie Williams to take his place in the jazz revolution on 52nd Street. Just a year later, by which time he had absorbed Charlie Parker's ideas into his playing, his composition, "Bouncing With Bud" was being recorded by Sonny Stitt (as "Bebop In Pastel") and, more famously, in 1949 (under its correct title) by a quintet that included Sonny Rollins and Fats Navarro. The version here is claimed to be the first ever trio recording of the song.

The main part of the album comprises Powell's takes on tunes by fellow boppers. These include Tadd Dameron's "Hot House," the first time he's played it on record since the famous Massey Hall concert with Parker and Gillespie in 1953. Then there's Denzil Best's "Move" and, most interestingly, Thelonious Monk's "Straight, No Chaser" and "52nd Street Theme."

Powell pays jaunty tribute to such pre-bop influences as Earl Hines on Irving Berlin's "The Best Thing For You," obliterating memories of a disastrous 1955 recording he made of the same song. The only ballad, Benny Golson's magnificent "I Remember Clifford," is given a sensitive, very slow and lyrical treatment, a welcome break from all the up-tempo pyrotechnics. This album documents a troubled genius seeking and finding reconciliation with his past. Grateful thanks to Storyville for putting it back in circulation.By Chris Mosey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/bud-powell-in-copenhagen-bud-powell-storyville-records-review-by-chris-mosey

Personnel: Bud Powell: piano; Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen: bass; William Schiopffe: drums.

Bud In Copenhagen

Rosemary Clooney - The CBS Radio Recordings 1955-61 Disc 1, Disc 2, Disc 3

Album: The CBS Radio Recordings 1955-61 Disc 1
Styles: Vocal, Swing, Ballad
Year: 1955
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:50
Size: 105,5 MB
Art: Front

(1:26) 1. Just You, Just Me
(3:03) 2. Don't Take Your Love From Me
(2:41) 3. I Guess I'll Have To Change
(1:40) 4. Keep It Gay
(1:25) 5. I Can't Believe That You're In
(1:51) 6. From This Moment On
(2:37) 7. But Not For Me
(2:02) 8. Nice Work If You Can Get It
(1:46) 9. 's Wonderful
(2:10) 10. Taking A Chance On Love
(1:50) 11. It's A Most Unusual Day
(3:02) 12. C'est Magnifique
(2:57) 13. Mood Indigo
(1:42) 14. Back In Your Own Backyard
(1:38) 15. You're The Top
(1:42) 16. The Gold Digger's Song (We're in the money)
(1:12) 17. Anything Goes
(2:51) 18. All Through The Night
(3:00) 19. Teach Me Tonight
(2:30) 20. I've Got My Love To Keep Me Wa
(2:36) 21. I Get A Kick Out Of You

Album: The CBS Radio Recordings 1955-61 Disc 2
Time: 46:38
Size: 107,8 MB

(1:25) 1. I Feel A Song Coming On
(3:31) 2. Little Man You've Had A Busy Day
(1:41) 3. Thou Swell
(2:04) 4. You're In Kentucky Sure As You're Born
(2:35) 5. Almost Like Being In Love
(1:49) 6. I'm Gonna Sit Right Down And Write Myself A Letter
(2:18) 7. Hey There
(2:10) 8. Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone
(2:18) 9. Something Wonderful Happens
(2:17) 10. Mountain Greenery
(2:34) 11. Mangoes
(2:15) 12. How About You?
(2:21) 13. No Other Love
(2:38) 14. It's Not For Me To Say
(2:23) 15. So Rare
(2:15) 16. Lover Come Back To Me
(1:34) 17. Oh! Look At Me Now
(2:01) 18. Don'cha Go 'way Mad
(2:04) 19. What Is There To Say?
(2:09) 20. It's All Right With Me
(2:06) 21. Goody Goody

Album: The CBS Radio Recordings 1955 - 1961 Disc 3
Time: 52:24
Size: 121,0 MB

(2:32) 1. Sunday In Savannah
(2:32) 2. I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart
(2:30) 3. It Happened To Happen To Me
(2:42) 4. A Touch Of The Blues
(2:25) 5. The Nearness Of You
(2:23) 6. You'll Never Know
(2:36) 7. On The Street Where You Live
(1:57) 8. New Sun In The Sky
(2:24) 9. Everything Happens To Me
(1:49) 10. 'deed I Do
(3:04) 11. I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues
(2:43) 12. I'm Beginning To See The Light
(2:48) 13. Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me
(2:26) 14. What Is This Thing Called Love
(2:28) 15. You Make Me Feel So Young
(2:43) 16. All The Time
(2:38) 17. Witchcraft
(2:23) 18. You Turned The Tables On Me
(2:50) 19. All The Way
(2:14) 20. Cheek To Cheek
(2:07) 21. It's All In The Game

While no one who has heard her can deny the charm and vocal talents of Rosemary Clooney, the truth is she usually recorded with big orchestras which favored commercial arrangements. Also the songs selected for her sessions frequently included more novelties or hits of the day than what he can consider properly jazz tunes.

This new Mosaic box, on the other hand, showcases her doing a radio show with the only backing of a jazz quartet, formed by Buddy Cole on piano, Vince Terri on guitar, Don Whitaker on bass, and Nick Fatool on drums. Also, for these shows, she was allowed to freely choose her program, and the results are amazing, five full CDs of Clooney doing the standards she loved with no restriction. An unexpected treasure of vocal jazz. https://www.jazzmessengers.com/en/67226/rosemary-clooney/rosemary-clooney-cbs-radio-recordings-1955-61

Personnel: Buddy Cole - piano, organ, celeste, harpsichord; Vince Terri – guitar; Don Whitaker - bass; Nick Fatool – drums, percussion

The CBS Radio Recordings 1955-1961 Disc1,Disc2,Disc3

Sharon Azrieli - Secret places (A Tribute To Michel Legrand)

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:35
Size: 150,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:56) 1. If there were no dreams
(4:21) 2. Secret places
(5:27) 3. Les moulins de mon coeur
(4:03) 4. Little boy lost
(4:52) 5. On my way to you
(4:22) 6. Maybe someone dreamed us
(3:17) 7. What are you doing the rest of your life
(4:20) 8. Retour en java
(6:08) 9. You must believe in spring
(3:46) 10. Paris violon
(4:38) 11. Summer me, winter me
(3:55) 12. Comme elle est longue à mourir
(3:47) 13. Watch what happens
(5:35) 14. I will wait for you

Originally from Montre´al, soprano Sharon Azrieli has enjoyed international success at world-famous venues including Carnegie Hall, the Metropolitan Opera, the Ope´ra Bastille de Paris, and with leading organizations such as the Canadian Opera Company, Orchestre Symphonique de Montre´al, and the New Israel Opera, among others.

In 2019, she was awarded the National Order of Quebec (Chevalie`re du Que´bec) for her remarkable achievements as a performer. Known for her versatility as a singer, Sharon has released several albums, including her latest with Tamir Hendelman Secret Places: A Tribute to Michel LeGrand which she toured North America with including stops at Hermann’s Club (Victoria, BC), Frankie’s Jazz Club (Vancouver, BC), Yardbird Suite (Edmonton, AB), The Royal Room (Seattle, WA), Piedmont Piano Company (Oakland, CA), and Catalina Jazz Club (Los Angeles, CA). Blogcritics praised her previous album, Frankly Sharon with Tony Award-winning composer Frank Wildhorn, saying, “Azrieli’s softly impassioned phrasing is exquisite…

She has, always, a naturalistic freshness in her voice, which makes it easy or sound easy for her to shunt aside opera’s tendency to call forth the mannered and the over-the-top, and sing with balance and grace.” Translations for the album were done in French, Italian, and Hebrew by Sharon herself. Other recordings include Sharon Azrieli Sings Broadway (with arranger Marvin Laird), The Gift of Joy, Rare French Arias of the 19th Century, and Fiddler on the Roof (in Yiddish).

Upcoming recording projects include original songs and jazz standards with the virtuosic pianist & composer Matt Herskowitz, a disc of lullabies, an unusual collection of Canadian Broadway Broadway numbers by Canadian Composers, as well as an album about Jewish Divas of the 19th century which is in the works with renowned conductor Steven Mercurio.

The upcoming season includes performances in Greece and a South American tour with violinist Alexandre da Costa, plus the world premiere of Aharon Harlap’s 2022 Azrieli Music Prize-winning piece with Orchestre Métropolitain. Sharon performed the role of Sister Dolcina in Puccini’s Suor Angelica at the Metropolitan Opera in 2018, was a headliner in a live televised concert at Toronto’s Zoomer Hall for Classical FM, and performed the roles of Marcellina in Le Nozze di Figaro (National Arts Centre) under the baton of Alexander Shelley and Liu in Turandot (Teatro Greco Siracusa) with the late tenor Marcello Giordani in 2019. Of her Laurette in Le Docteur Miracle with L’Opéra Français de New York, Andrew Porter of The New Yorker hailed her as a “mistress of merry inflections, piquant phrasing and pointed words.”

Sharon sang the title song of the Canadian film Stand! and her vocals were also featured in the Hollywood film Stage Mother, starring Lucy Liu, and the film Shepherd: The Story of a Jewish Dog, directed by Lynn Roth. Upcoming films to include her debut acting performances are SHTTL, a drama about a Yiddish village at the border of Poland during WWII, and Irena’s Vow.

Sharon created the advisory council of the Azrieli Music Prizes for the Azrieli Foundation in 2014 and is devoted to arts education and philanthropy. She sits on the boards of several philanthropic organizations including the Azrieli Foundation, National Arts Centre of Canada, Orchestre Classique de Montréal (where she holds the title President Emeritus), McCord Museum, the Canadian Vocal Arts Institute, The Opera Cares Foundation, the America-Israel Cultural Foundation, Sharon Azrieli Foundation for the Arts as well as on the honorary board of Camp Tutti and Camp Kinneret Biluim. https://sharonazrieli.com/about/

Secret places (A Tribute To Michel Legrand)

Wednesday, September 28, 2022

Joe Henderson - The Complete Blue Note Studio Sessions (5-Disc Set)

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2021
Time: 79:01
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 180,9 MB
Art: Front

(15:18) 1. Una Mas (One More Time)
( 8:58) 2. Straight Ahead
( 7:20) 3. Sao Paulo
( 5:08) 4. If Ever I Would Leave You
( 8:01) 5. Blue Bossa
( 9:09) 6. La Mesha
( 4:14) 7. Homestretch
( 6:02) 8. Recorda Me
( 7:23) 9. Jinrikisha
( 7:24) 10. Out of the Night

If an artist stamps his jazz passport with any one of these labels Blue Note, Verve, Milestone it's pretty much a guarantee that you've arrived in style. Tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson has traveled with all three and more. The 2021 reissue from the prestigious Mosaic Records focuses on Henderson's 1960s tenure with Blue Note offers a new opportunity to experience an abundance of rich and creative jazz from the decade.

Big band and bop were duking it out in the late 1940s, bebop gained a foothold in the 1950s and the 1960s saw some amazingly creative artists emerge as they conjured up even more jazz hybrids (straight jazz, Avant-Garde, fusion and more). Henderson began to come of age during the very late 1950s, the tail end of one of the most dynamic and creative decades for jazz. He then moved confidently into the 1960s and beyond. He began to gain momentum in the 1960s (sitting in with saxophone master Dexter Gordon early on), learned from listening to other sax giants including Charlie Parker and Sonny Rollins and soon teamed up with numerous A-list artists including trumpeter Kenny Dorham, a Blue Note co-artist. The spotlight shifted a bit during the seventies and eighties for Henderson but he was amazingly prolific in the 1990s. Verve championed him during that decade with a high profile 'come back' campaign and sessions such as Lush Life (1982) contained everything from the supple and smoky "Isfahan" and "Blood Count" to the soaring and spontaneous "Johnny Come Lately." Touring took him to various venues and in a talk backstage after a mid-1990s concert, Mr. Henderson was dapper and smartly dressed, low key, quiet and reserved. He was a joy to talk to. But his constant companion, a lit cigarette, was absent, probably due to venue restriction (chain smoking eventually took him down in 2001.)

Mosaic collected nearly fifty cuts on five CDs and captured a world of spontaneous creativity. In addition, a modest yet informative booklet is included. A book's worth of praise could follow, so let's look at a few tracks from each compact disc: Everything gets underway with the title cut from trumpeter Kenny Dorham's Una Mas (1963) album in which Henderson joins as a featured sideman. At over fifteen minutes, the opening track is a celebration of the then contemporary sounds of Bossa Nova, with hints of other styles including the blues. He may be the second billed musician on the disc, but Henderson's sax is supple, lush and creatively enticing as a close bond was being forged between the two men. Everyone swings, and they are upbeat on "Straight Ahead," one of the other standout tracks from the Dorham-lead sessions. (full review => https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-complete-joe-henderson-blue-note-studio-sessions-joe-henderson-mosaic-records)

Personnel: Joe Henderson: Saxophone; Kenny Dorham: Trranumpet; Herbie Hancock: Piano; Tony Williams: Drums; McCoy Tyner: Piano; Bob Cranshaw: Bass; Duke Pearson: Piano; Richard Davis: Bass, Acoustic; s: Drums; Tommy Flanagan: Piano; Ron Carter: Elvin Jones: Bass; Cedar Walton: Piano; Lee Morgan: Trumpet; Curtis Fuller: Trombone; Grant Green: Guitar; Bobby Hutcherson: Vibraphone; J.J. Johnson: Trombone; Al Harewood: Drums; Woody Shaw: Trumpet; Andrew Hill: Piano.

The Complete Blue Note Studio Sessions CD1

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2021
Time: 76:41
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 175,6 MB
Art: Front

( 8:17) 1. La Mesha (alternate take)
( 7:38) 2. Homestretch (alternate take)
( 8:33) 3. Teeter Totter
(10:05) 4. Pedro's Time
( 5:38) 5. Our Thing
( 6:20) 6. Back Road
( 8:06) 7. Escapade
( 7:11) 8. Teeter Totter (alternate take)
( 5:31) 9. Our Thing (alternate take)
( 9:18) 10. In 'N Out (alternate take)

The Complete Blue Note Studio Sessions CD2

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2021
Time: 76:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 175,7 MB
Art: Front

(10:25) 1. In 'N Out
( 9:09) 2. Punjab
( 6:17) 3. Serenity
( 7:11) 4. Short Story
( 6:25) 5. Brown's Town
(12:24) 6. Trompeta Toccata
( 5:46) 7. Night Watch
(11:05) 8. Mamacita
( 8:00) 9. The Fox

The Complete Blue Note Studio Sessions CD3

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2021
Time: 78:40
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 180,1 MB
Art: Front

(11:58) 1. Inner Urge
( 9:16) 2. Isotope
( 7:14) 3. El Barrio
( 7:21) 4. You Know I Care
( 7:24) 5. Night and Day
( 8:14) 6. Hobo Joe
( 8:30) 7. Step Lightly
( 6:07) 8. The Kicker
( 5:46) 9. Mo' Joe
( 6:45) 10. If

The Complete Blue Note Studio Sessions CD4

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2021
Time: 59:11
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 135,5 MB
Art: Front

(7:08) 1. A Shade of Jade
(8:03) 2. Mode for Joe
(6:53) 3. Black
(6:43) 4. Caribbean Fire Dance
(7:23) 5. Granted
(6:41) 6. Free Wheelin'
(9:28) 7. Mode for Joe (alternate take)
(6:49) 8. Black (alternate take)

The Complete Blue Note Studio Sessions CD5

Muriel Grossmann - Elevation

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:40
Size: 105,5 MB
Art: Front

( 9:53) 1. Elevation
(12:44) 2. Rising
( 8:24) 3. Chant
( 6:00) 4. Your Pace
( 8:37) 5. Peace For All

In some ways, listening to a Muriel Grossmann album is like stepping back in time. Reflections of Coltrane, Dolphy and Sanders catch the light in my mind’s eye, dancing spirits infused with the power of discovery and inner healing. But it’s so much more than that. Embodying the borderless, fearless, pan-continental energies of contemporary modern jazz, Grossmann’s playing truly embodies the directness and eloquence of the older generation whilst capturing a new, fresh and inspiring virtuosity that leaves me breathless with admiration.

Born in Paris, raised in Vienna, resident in Ibiza, saxophonist and composer Muriel Grossmann has released a dozen albums as leader, going back to the early 2000s. Featuring sounds ranging from hard-swinging modernist jams to free improvisation, expansive spiritual work to rhythm-focussed Afrocentrism, there has always been a distinctive thread of pure and heartfelt spiritual music at the centre of her work. You can’t play this music successfully if you don’t mean it like the music of her contemporary Nat Birchall, Grossmann’s engagement with the Coltrane tradition is sincere and deep. Her music resonates within the tradition, adding her own innovative voice to the story of modal and spiritual jazz in Europe.

“Elevation” is a vinyl only release from Jazzman, and draws on a selection from her 2016 CD album Natural Time (‘Your Pace’, ‘Peace For All’) and from 2017’s CD Momentum (‘Elevation’, ‘Chant’ and ‘Rising’). I discovered Grossman’s music relatively recently, through her two more recent albums, Reverence, and Golden Rule, both released on the RR Gems label. I instantly fell in love with her sound. Featuring her regular quartet of Radomir Milojkovic (guitar) Uros Stamenkovic (drums) and Gina Schwarz (bass), the music chosen for this album has the same feel and vibe to it as her more recent releases, encompassing all that is bold and beautiful about the way she and her band bring together a captivating sense of intimacy, joy and freedom from the glorious music they are performing.

Side A kicks off with a sense of urgency. The retro-feel to Grossmann’s music just adds to the vitality of it all. Crisp, sparkling, melodic invention mixes seamlessly with the deep grooves that arrive quickly, staying present for the tune’s duration, allowing for the gloriously spontaneous soloing to drift in and out of the title track. ‘Rising’ continues in a similar vein, the quartet creating a luxurious atmosphere that floats and slowly spills its gifts of life into the welcoming consciousness. As with all of the tunes here, the solid link between drums and bass, and sax and guitar, leaves a lasting impression, not unlike a late ’60s early ’70s improvisational Jan Garbarek/Terje Rypdal Quartet. Side B has a slightly less raw edge to it, with the sublime ‘Chant’ speaking volumes in a subtle, unhurried way. Alluring and timeless, ‘Your Pace’ is soulful and beguiling, it’s meditative melody enriched by the undoubted connection this group of musicians share. The closing piece ‘Peace For All’ features Grossmann at her best, her sax soulful and contemplative, before reaching out and soaring like a beautiful eagle flying over the most incredibly stunning mountain scenery. Emotive and strikingly innovative, this music is just so inspiring.By Mike Gates https://ukvibe.org/album_reviews/muriel-grossmann-3/

Personnel: Bass – Gina Schwarz; Drums – Uros Stamenkovic; Guitar – Radomir Milojkovic; Tenor Saxophone [Tenor], Alto Saxophone – Muriel Grossmann

Elevation

Bruce Barth - Dedication

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:00
Size: 101,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:00) 1. George’s Dance - for George Perry
(5:27) 2. Courage - for all of us
(3:53) 3. In Memoriam - for George Floyd & so many others
(7:29) 4. Let's Go - for McCoy Tyner
(5:38) 5. Better Days
(5:39) 6. Golden Glow
(6:17) 7. That’s How It Sometimes Goes - for Tommy Flanagan
(5:34) 8. Softly, in a Garden Path

So, what, or who, is the soulful pianist Bruce Barth dedicating this trio album to? In the liner notes, Barth mentions the memory of a dear friend Montez Coleman, but truth be told, with bassist Vincente Archer and drummer Montez Coleman, the sounds and styles are dedicated to a collection of inspirations.

Starting off is an upbeat tilt of the ivories to George Perry in "George's Dance" which has Barth and company tapping into their inner Three Sounds on a gospel strut. McCoy Tyner gets a tribute on the bold and dramatic modal "Let's Go" with Coleman snapping out the sticks, while "That's How It Sometimes Goes" is a classy dedication to the glassy Tommy Flanagan, with Barth glowing through the intro. The team gives a "poinciana" pulse to the spacious and hip "Better Days" and Archer is dreamy during "In Memoria" acknowledging George Floyd among others. Grace and lyricism prevail, with the album being an inspiration to being inspired itself.https://originarts.com/reviews/review.php?ReviewID=3335

Personnel: Bruce Barth - piano; Vicente Archer - bass; Montez Coleman - drums

Dedication

Tuesday, September 27, 2022

Tony Lakatos - I Get Along With You Very Well

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:45
Size: 155,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:30) 1. Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief
(6:14) 2. Skylark (feat. Jimmy Scott (Vocal))
(4:37) 3. I Get Along With You Very Well
(5:34) 4. Georgia On My Mind
(3:03) 5. The Nearness Of You (feat. Jimmy Scott (Vocal))
(5:23) 6. Skylark
(5:52) 7. April In My Heart
(7:49) 8. Stardust (feat. Jimmy Scott (Vocal))
(5:32) 9. Little Break From Hoagy (feat. George Mraz, Adam Nussbaum)
(7:05) 10. The Nearness Of You
(3:10) 11. Heart And Soul
(4:39) 12. Big Breath
(3:11) 13. A Woman Likes To Be Told

Tony Lakatos,the great Hungarian jazz saxophone player was born on 13th November, 1958 in Budapest.His father was a fantastic Hungarian musician, a violinist.His brother, Roby Lakatos is a great violinist living in Brussels.

As for a start, Tony, then Tónika /Antal/ started learning to play the violin, as it was traditional in his family.To my knowledge,their family is one of the most outstanding gypsy musician families of Hungary, his ancestors can be traced back as belonging to the best violinist family, the Bihari family./I'm not quite sure of the name, though./ The little Tony got to like the saxophone,but his parents didn't approve of him changing his musical instrument.

At last, he still started playing, and he appeared at one of Hungary's jazz festivals at the age of 17 as a great talent and surprise for everyone. Eversince then he has played with all the most renowned Hungarian musicians like Szakcsi Lakatos Béla /piano/,Dresch Mihály /saxophone/,Pecek Lakatos Géza /drums/,Balázs Elemér /drums/,Lattmann Béla /bass guitar/ and numerous others.

He moved to Germany in 1985 /or so/ and has been living there since then, in Stuttgart.He has played with numerous American, German and European jazz musicians.He has had concerts all around Europe,USA and even in Japan. Tony Lakatos returns to Hungary quite often, so we are lucky to be able to listen to his inventive music.He does not only play jazz standards but also a great composer in his own right. Tony is married with two daughters, a good hearted, very nice person.
https://www.last.fm/music/Tony+Lakatos/+wiki

Personnel: Tony Lakatos - Tenor & Soprano Saxophones; George Mraz - Bass; Tim Lefebvre - Electric Bass; Adam Nussbaum - Drums; Jimmy Scott - Vocals

I Get Along With You Very Well

Andy Laverne - Severe Clear

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:36
Size: 146,2 MB
Art: Front

(7:23) 1. Severe Clear
(8:39) 2. No Guts, No Glory
(9:10) 3. Plasma Pool
(6:13) 4. Fact or Fiction
(6:31) 5. Rick's Trick
(7:59) 6. Trajectory
(9:16) 7. Three Times Twice
(8:20) 8. Ethereal Spheres

Augmented by trumpeter Tim Hagans, this recording finds Laverne in top gear playing some of the most incredible chord voicings. Rick Margitza (ts) is also prominently featured.
By Paul Kohler https://www.allmusic.com/album/severe-clear-mw0000415916

Personnel: Andy LaVerne – piano; Tim Hagans – trumpet; Rick Margitza – tenor saxophone; Steve LaSpina – bass; Anton Fig – drums

Severe Clear

Rosemary Clooney - The CBS Radio Recordings 1955 - 61 Disc 4, Disc 5

Album: The CBS Radio Recordings 1955 - 61 Disc 4
Styles: Vocal, Swing, Ballad
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:45
Size: 119,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:21) 1. There Goes My Heart
(2:23) 2. These Foolish Things (Remind Me Of You)
(2:25) 3. Love Letters
(2:40) 4. Too Close For Comfort
(2:09) 5. This Can't Be Love
(2:23) 6. We'll Be Together Again
(2:24) 7. You Took Advantage Of Me
(2:35) 8. Moonlight Mississippi (A Whistle Stop Town)
(2:27) 9. Blue Moon
(2:21) 10. There Will Never Be Another You
(2:20) 11. That Old Black Magic
(2:33) 12. Love, Look Away
(2:23) 13. I Wish I Were In Love Again
(2:07) 14. What Did We Do Last Night?
(2:09) 15. You Ol' Son Of A Gun
(2:15) 16. Sing, You Sinners
(2:36) 17. Tenderly
(2:28) 18. I Should Have Told You Long Ago
(2:55) 19. Goodbye Blues
(2:40) 20. You Got
(3:02) 21. Harbor Lights

Album: The CBS Radio Recordings 1955 - 61 Disc 5
Time: 54:02
Size: 124,7 MB

(1:49) 1. Everything's Coming Up Roses
(2:05) 2. I Love You (My Every Thought Is You)
(2:20) 3. Where Or When
(2:09) 4. Danny Boy
(2:48) 5. Give Me The Simple Life
(2:30) 6. Bye Bye Blackbird
(2:21) 7. Anyone For Love
(2:59) 8. How Will I Remember You?
(2:20) 9. Get Me To The Church On Time
(2:39) 10. Love Among The Young
(2:34) 11. The Best Thing For You (Would Be Me)
(3:05) 12. Every Time I See You I'm In Love Again
(2:21) 13. A Lot Of Livin' To Do
(3:18) 14. If I Ever Love Again
(2:46) 15. With A Dream Of Love
(2:31) 16. I'm Losing Control
(3:48) 17. My Old Kentucky Home
(3:16) 18. Don't Blame Me
(2:48) 19. (Why Don't You Give Yourself) Half A Chance
(3:25) 20. Can't Get Out Of This Mood

The CBS Radio Recordings 1955 - 61 Disc 4, Disc 5

Mark Winkler - Late Bloomin' Jazzman

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:20
Size: 117,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:32) 1. It Ain't Necessarily So
(3:25) 2. Don't Be Blue
(4:43) 3. When All the Lights in the Sign Worked
(4:27) 4. Late Bloomin' Jazzman
(3:43) 5. In Another Way
(5:01) 6. Bossa Nova Days
(3:17) 7. Old Devil Moon
(3:44) 8. I Always Had a Thing for You
(4:01) 9. Before You Leave
(4:33) 10. Old Enough
(5:36) 11. Marlena's Memories
(4:13) 12. If Gershwin Had Lived

Anyone who can hold their own on a stage on in a studio with Cheryl Bentyne cannot be all bad, right? Even if one's taste runs more to Harry Connick, Jr than to Mark Murphy, it is difficult not to get seriously into Mark Winkler. Oh, he can sing, for sure, but even if he could not carry a tune, he is a lyricist for the ages. Not all ages, mind you. But for those of a certain age, sensibility, and experience. As people are wont to say of life, "tell me your truth," not tell me the truth. Winkler tells the audience his truth. And more than a few will nod in agreement. Winkler may be a romantic, but he is no fool.

"You're playing better than in your well-regarded youth...the prodigies come and go, don't they?" If there is a mirror image to "September Song," "Late Bloomin' Jazzman" must be it, and Brian Swartz' tart trumpet adds the exclamation point. Yeah, novelty is sometimes confused with talent, or youth with beauty. Is it not, one thinks, the truth of the well-traveled?

"Bossa Nova Days" really drives it home. "I wasn't born for these times, music's not musical, and words don't even rhyme." Winkler remembers being lost in those bossa nova days, "singing of lost romance, sand beneath my feet." You, too, brother? "Take me back," he intones. Well, maybe not to Brazil, but some less exotic shore worked just as well. There were wars in 1967, too, but they had not visited one's doorstep yet. Not better times, but memory convinces otherwise. "Old Enough" explains it all. With ironic good humor. "I'm old enough not to be fooled by the lights and the show." "This time the clever is gone." And one gets it, including, "too many notes and too little feeling." Rueful, but funny. "I'm still young enough to know that I don't know that much." Point taken.

Too sentimental? Maudlin? Then try "Old Devil Moon." Winkler can swing, and he does not try too hard. The musicians are especially well placed here: Rich Eames on piano; Bob Sheppard on tenor sax; Christian Euman on drums; Gabe Davis on bass; and Grant Geissman on guitar, with Brian Swartz playing a solid backup line. Players of this caliber make it easier for a singer to sound good.

"Marlena's Memories" is almost too painful to hear, but a good reminder of how ordinary are the sources of pain. Winkler confesses he once wrote bad songs. Somehow, that seems implausible.

There are twelve tracks here. It really is not possible to write about all of them. And probably not necessary. To paraphrase a Founding Father, "If you have to ask, you will never know." A memorable performance indeed in a most memorable career.
By Richard J Salvucci https://www.allaboutjazz.com/late-bloomin-jazzman-cafe-pacific-records

Personnel: David Benoit: Piano; John Clayton: Drums; Jamieson Trotter: Piano; Bob Sheppard: Saxophone, Tenor; Nolan Shaheen: Flugelhorn; Kevin Winard: Drums; Jon Mayer: Piano; Gabe Davis: Bass, Acoustic; Clayton Cameron: Drums; Brian Swartz: Trumpet; Grant Geissman: Guitar; Christian Euman: Drums; Mark Winkler: Voice / Vocals.

Late Bloomin'Jazzman

Monday, September 26, 2022

Vanessa Rubin - I'm Glad There Is You : A Tribute to Carmen McRae

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:28
Size: 131,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:00) 1. Yardbird Suite
(6:59) 2. I'm Glad There Is You
(5:36) 3. Midnight Sun
(5:32) 4. Inside A Silent Tear
(5:59) 5. No Strings Attached
(6:29) 6. Alfie
(6:43) 7. Speak Low
(6:05) 8. Easy Living
(3:50) 9. A Child Is Born
(6:12) 10. Send In The Clowns

This Vanessa Rubin release is a tribute to Carmen McRae. Although she cites McRae as a major influence, Rubin actually does not sound much like her and leans as much toward middle-of-the-road music as jazz. Also, not all of these songs are really identified with McRae (most notably "Send in the Clowns" which was largely owned by Sarah Vaughan). The ballad-dominated set does have a reasonable amount of variety, Rubin gets off some fine scatting on "Yardbird Suite" and she introduces an excellent original in "No Strings Attached."

A variety of guests (including Grover Washington, Jr., Frank Foster, Antonio Hart, Cecil Bridgewater, Kenny Burrell and Monty Alexander) only appear on one or two songs apiece and do not make that much of an impression. However Vanessa Rubin's attractive voice is strong enough to carry the music and this release is a step forward for her. By Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/im-glad-there-is-you-a-tribute-to-carmen-mcrae-mw0000113171?1664031000028

I'm Glad There Is You: A Tribute to Carmen McRae

Martin Speake, Nikki Iles, Duncan Hopkins, Anthony Michelli - Secret

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:30
Size: 180,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:14) 1. Secret Place
(3:42) 2. Veils
(6:47) 3. The Heron
(6:20) 4. Oncology
(5:09) 5. J.T.'s Symmetrical Scale
(8:15) 6. The Thrill Is Gone
(5:31) 7. Westerly
(5:09) 8. Coventry
(1:53) 9. So To Speake
(5:27) 10. Fly's Dilemma
(5:14) 11. Nikki
(8:05) 12. Secret Wood
(6:53) 13. Willow (For Mick Hutton)
(4:43) 14. Luiza

Secret is a cooperative quartet comprised of British altoist Martin Speake and pianist Nikki Iles, together with Canadian bassist Duncan Hopkins and drummer Anthony Michelli. Their eponymous debut as a unit, recorded in the fall of 2000 in London, is a 79-minute opportunity to hear a new combo. All but two of the compositions are written by Iles (5), Speake (5) and Hopkins (2).

The most immediate reason for celebration is the work of Martin Speake. He has more than a passing resemblance to Jackie McLean and carries the torch of post bop into the new millennium without a glance backwards. His styling is that of a bopper with the fluency of a Charles McPherson in the mid-1960s updated to today's scene. Speake was responsible for the formation of the group and they seem to mesh very well together. In fact, the others record and tour as a working unit as the Nikki Iles Trio.

The album begins in a ballad or mid-tempo fashion, almost leisurely, on the first four tracks. On "J.T.'s Symmetrical Scale" Speake picks it up and interplay with Iles leads into an acerbic solo. Michelli uses brushes throughout on the tune. Speake also plays aggressively on "Fly's Dilemma," followed by a surging piano solo by Iles. B.B. King may have advised all that "The Thrill is Gone," but on Secret's updating of the Brown & Henderson standard, an attractive ballad delivery becomes a funky showcase.

In all, most of the original tunes are fine vehicles for ensemble and solo performance, and the album concludes with Jobim's "Luiza." Since this album, the different group members have recorded on several other Basho albums. Speake has a pending ECM release with Bobo Stenson and Paul Motian and expects to be signed to the label. His duo album My Ideal with Ethan Iverson, pianist for the Bad Plus, was released by Basho in spring of 2004.By Michael P. Gladstone https://www.allaboutjazz.com/secret-martin-speake-basho-records-review-by-michael-p-gladstone

Personnel: Martin Speake, alto sax; Nikkii Iles,piano; Duncan Hopkins,bass; Anthony Michelli,drums.

Secret

Michel Petrucciani / Ron McClure - Cold Blues

Styles: Piano Jazz, Post Bop 
Year: 1985
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:07
Size: 99,9 MB
Art: Front

(8:39)  1. Beautiful But Why?
(5:45)  2. Autumn Leaves
(6:20)  3. Something Like This
(6:58)  4. There Will Never Be Another You
(8:47)  5. I Just Say Hello!
(6:35)  6. Cold Blues

?Michel Petrucciani's last European recording before hooking up with Blue Note, this set of duets matches the tiny but powerful pianist with bassist Ron McClure. They perform post-bop explorations of four originals (including an ad-lib "Cold Blues"), "Autumn Leaves" and "There Will Never Be Another You." The interplay between the two musicians is impressive, but although McClure plays a prominent role, Petrucciani is clearly the dominant force. Worth searching for.
By Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/cold-blues-mw0000651592

Personnel: Michel Petrucciani (piano); Ron McClure (bass guitar).

Cold Blues

NILS - Cool Shades

Styles: Guitar Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:17
Size: 118,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:00) 1. Nine 2 Five
(3:44) 2. Tangie
(3:53) 3. Step Into the Beat
(3:48) 4. Hey Joe
(3:50) 5. Windsurfer
(4:02) 6. Sweet Soul
(3:46) 7. Night in the Algarve
(4:26) 8. Cool Shades
(4:10) 9. Walkin' the Dog
(4:23) 10. Our Last Goodbye
(4:12) 11. Waiting on Hold
(4:04) 12. My Friends
(2:53) 13. The Fade

LA based jazz guitarist Nils has always recorded excellent music on his numerous albums, which I had the privilege to comment with great pleasure. With Cool Shades, he is delivering again this year.

With the exception of one cover Nils has written all tracks, foremost in Munich, where Nils spent his time in 2021 to accompany his father through the last stage of his life. Again many friends of Nils were involved in the making of the album, as the credits show.

The album opens with Nine 2 Five. With routinized elegance Nils' guitar draws us under its spell. Countless years in the service of the audience are reflected in the stylistic confidence.

It means carrying owls to Athens to mention that Nils can rely on a perfectly rehearsed team. Tangie is one of the many examples on which to base this fact. The aptly titled Step Into The Beat is meant in earnest and provides the infectious momentum we so desperately need.

Hey Joe is Nils' reference to the great guitarist Jimi Hendrix, who was so talented and left us so early. With Windsurfer, Nils takes on the sport that is so popular, especially in Nils' new adopted homeland. On Sweet Soul, Nils sets gentle tones.

Every year Christian Bößner from Smooth Jazz Europe invites us to a grandiose festival week in the Algarve. Night In the Algarve evokes the unique atmosphere under Portugal's palm trees. Cool Shades gives itself undercooled and yet remains so close.

Walkin' The Dog is a term that describes the favorite pastime of so many Americans. Nils takes it the funky way. Nils has processed the farewell to his beloved father in the soulful song Our Last Goodbye. If you can't get enough of this mood, Nils delivers with Waiting on Hold a second helping.

My Friends is recognizably influenced by Ed Sheeran's Shape Of You. The album's finale is short and heartfelt with The Fade. The farewell could well have been longer.

With his new album Cool Shades, Nils has once again impressively demonstrated his ability to reach our hearts with just a few guitar riffs.http://www.smooth-jazz.de/firstview/Nils/CoolShades.htm

Personnel: Nils - guitars, synths and programming; Gorden Campbell - drums; Darryl Williams - bass; Oliver C. Brown – percussion; Clydene Jackson - Rhodes; Tracy Carter - piano; Johnny Britt - Trumpets, Flugelhorn; Mike Parlett - saxes

Cool Shades

Sunday, September 25, 2022

Hiromi Uehara - Silver Lining Suite

Styles: Piano
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:16
Size: 152,1 MB
Art: Front

( 9:57) 1. Silver Lining Suite: Isolation
( 7:11) 2. Silver Lining Suite: The Unknown
( 9:09) 3. Silver Lining Suite: Drifters
( 7:27) 4. Silver Lining Suite: Fortitude
( 7:57) 5. Uncertainty
( 5:29) 6. Someday
( 5:00) 7. Jumpstart
(10:01) 8. 11:49 PM
( 4:00) 9. Ribera del Duero

Never one to take a safe, familiar route, pianist Hiromi (Uehara) has composed a classical quintet for her superb new album performed by, well, a classical quintet. That’s to say that her keys merge with a standard string quartet (violinists Tatsuo Nishie and Sohei Birmann, violist Meguna Naka, cellist Wataru Mukai) to play a highly melodic four-part suite with complex arrangements, as well as five additional tracks. The “classical” in question is European classical, albeit with large jazz components.

First and foremost, all but one of the album’s nine tracks are intensely percussive and staccato. (The other, “Uncertainty,” is a mellifluous solo recital.) The effect tends to be less of Schumann and Brahms than, say, Penguin Café Orchestra or the theme from Downton Abbey. That said, there are delightful chamber-music moments in play: A third of the way through “The Unknown,” the suite’s second movement, Hiromi plays a series of flowing ascending chords, then allows pizzicato violins to scamper back down the scale as she doodles around them with single-note lines. On “11:49,” the strings come together to mark off a syncopation that ticks like the second hand on a stopwatch, then suddenly stops to let Hiromi imitate a decisive, if discordant, chime.

Each tune (again excepting “Uncertainty”) also leaves plenty of room for jazz-informed improvisations. Though the strings were ostensibly chosen for their facility with jazz language, in practice they merely accompany Hiromi’s jazz language, which is formidable. She plays giddy games with rhythm on “Isolation,” the suite’s opener; offers a thoughtfully energized counterstatement to the melancholia of the theme to “Drifters” (the third movement); and turns the wistfulness in the title of “Someday” into foot-stamping impatience.

Recorded while quarantining in Tokyo, Silver Lining Suite came about due to unique circumstances that make its music unlikely to enter Hiromi’s regular performing repertoire. It should, however, enter your listening one.
https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/hiromi-silver-lining-suite-concord-jazz/

Personnel: Hiromi Uehara – piano; Wataru Mukai – cello; Meguna Naka – viola; Tatsuo Nishie – violin; Sohei Birmann – violin

Silver Lining Suite

Various - The Best Of The 80s

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:31
Size: 106.5 MB
Styles: Pop, Rock, New Wave
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[3:26] 1. The Buggles - Video Killed The Radio Star
[3:30] 2. Blondie - Call Me
[3:58] 3. Squeeze - Tempted
[8:54] 4. Soft Cell - Tainted Love Where Did Our Love Go
[4:10] 5. Dexys Midnight Runners - Come On Eileen
[3:20] 6. Madness - Our House
[3:36] 7. Eurythmics - Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This)
[3:22] 8. The Fixx - One Thing Leads To Another
[3:54] 9. Frankie Goes To Hollywood - Relax
[4:10] 10. Tears For Fears - Everybody Wants To Rule The World
[4:04] 11. Robert Palmer - Addicted To Love

The Best Of The '80s: The Millennium Collection attempts to capture the musical trends of the decade in a dozen songs, including the Fixx's "One Thing Leads to Another," the Buggles' "Video Killed the Radio Star," and Steve Winwood's "Higher Love." Blondie's "Call Me," the Eurhythmics' "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)," and Soft Cell's "Tainted Love/Where Did Our Love Go" are some of the album's other highlights. By concentrating on new wave and pop hits rather than trying to document every sound of the '80s, The Best of the '80s may not quite live up to its name, but it does present a fairly cohesive and entertaining mix of some of the decade's catchiest singles. ~ Heather Phares

Digitally remastered by David Schultz (DigiPrep Mastering, Hollywood, California).

The Best Of The 80s

Martin Speake - Generations

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:36
Size: 125,3 MB
Art: Front

( 3:56)  1. My Melancholy Baby
(10:12)  2. I'm a Fool to Want You
( 7:54)  3. In Love In Vain
( 7:20)  4. I Wish I Knew
( 8:37)  5. Jitterbug Waltz
( 6:07)  6. All The Way
( 6:17)  7. Donna Lee
( 4:10)  8. Just A Gigolo

British altoist Martin Speake isn't as well-known as he ought to be, but he may well be the clearest successor to the unadorned, warm-toned approach of the legendary Lee Konitz. But while Konitz has undeniably led a career defined by diversity, Speake has stretched considerably farther, with albums ranging from the Indo centric The Journey (Black Box, 2004) and uniquely modern, guitar-centric take on Charlie Parker (Jazzizit, 2005), to accessible free improvisation with percussionist Mark Sanders on Spark (Pumpkin, 2007) and original composition with an all-star band on Change of Heart (ECM, 2006). Generations harkens back to his intriguingly minimalist take on standards, Exploring Standards (33 Jazz, 2003), but instead of a saxophone trio turning a variety of well-heeled tunes into concise miniatures, Generations features a quartet that lets the music stretch out further. Generations refers to a quartet of players ranging from youthful pianist Barry Green to middle- aged Speake bassist Dave Green and American drummer Jeff Williams, who still has plenty of years left in him but is now heading into senior citizen territory. It also references Speake's choice of material largely well-known tunes that date as far back as "My Melancholy Baby" (1912) and "Jitterbug Waltz" (1930) to Generation's most recent song, the 1957 Van Heusen/Cahn chestnut, "All the Way."

Speake's relationship with Williams dates back four years to a chance meeting at one of Speake's gigs in the UK. Since then they've worked together occasionally in different contexts, and while this quartet is new there's a comfort level and relaxed ambience that feels as though they've been playing together for years. The group kicks things up on the bebop classic "Donna Lee," but takes its good time getting there, with Speake beginning on his own and implicitly defining the tune's changes through improvised melody alone. He's joined by Barry Green for some in tandem interplay before Dave Green enters, with Williams not completing the picture until well into the tune, signalling the quartet to play the familiar, serpentine melody...then bringing things to a full stop, only to begin the same process again but at a brighter tempo. It's a strong example of how Speake has always managed to find fresh ways to cover familiar terrain. 

But even when the group is playing with great energy as it does on an unexpectedly up-tempo opener, "My Melancholy Baby," which starts with a fiery exchange between Speake and Williams it never seems to break a sweat. A lengthy look at the appropriately triste ballad, "I'm a Fool to Want You," features Speake at his most lyrical, even as he scopes out new corners on an extended solo that's supported with increasing verve by Barry Green, who takes an equally strong solo defined by broad dynamics and nuanced variation. Generations is a decidedly mainstream effort for Speake, but as ever he's still finding subtle ways to push the envelope. The material may be familiar, but the approaches are new, making Generations an appealing disc that's never short on substance.By John Kelman  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/generations-martin-speake-pumpkin-records-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Martin Speake: alto saxophone; Barry Green: piano; Dave Green: double-bass; Jeff Williams: drums.

Generations

Joe Coughlin - Dedicated to You

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:10
Size: 136,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:42) 1. When Your Lover Has Gone
(3:37) 2. On Green Dolphin Street
(6:33) 3. Lush Life
(5:39) 4. It Could Happen to You
(6:07) 5. They Say It's Wonderful
(4:12) 6. Kiss & Run
(3:56) 7. Autumn Serenade
(4:35) 8. My Ship
(5:40) 9. My One and Only Love
(4:34) 10. Who Cares
(4:58) 11. Nature Boy
(6:31) 12. Dedicated to You

Multi-award winning jazz vocalist Joe Coughlin's career has spanned 4 decades. He's one of the rare breed of singers able to inhabit and truly flourish in the land where jazz meets the great American Song Book. Evident from his first eponymously titled release 40 years ago, it continues to this day where he is reunited with pianist Bernie Senen­sky and drummer Terry Clarke, both of whom performed on that first recording.

Joe cites Johnny Hartman as an early influence when, as a teenager he began to develop an interest in and talent for vocal jazz. Joe and Johnny have also shared sidemen, both having recorded with Lorne Lofsky, Chris Connor and Buff Allen. Over the years, Joe has honed his craft and developed his own sound although the nods to Hartman and Sinatra are still evident. Along with Canadian jazz icons Bernie Senensky and Terry Clarke, joining Joe on this recording are Neil Swainson on bass, a true jazz heavyweight and consummate tenor player, Ryan Oliver. Not surprisingly, the result is impressive.

The album opens with an uptempo, swinging rendition of Eino Swan's "When Your Lover Has Gone", a main­stay of the Hartman and Sinatra catalogue and takes us on a voyage through that Great American Song Book with stops along the way including a magnificent (perhaps definitive) version of Billy Strayhorn's "Lush Life". The deep connection and empathy among Joe and the band members is evident throughout this truly splendid journey.

Personnel: Joe Coughlin – voice; Bernie Senensky – piano; Neil Swainson – bass; Terry Clarke – drums; Ryan Oliver – tenor saxophone

Dedicated to You

Friday, September 23, 2022

Josefine Cronholm, Kirk Knuffke, Thommy Andersson - Near the Pond

Styles: Contemporary Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:34
Size: 90,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:50) 1. Clara Mathilda's Dream
(4:17) 2. I Don't Know
(3:57) 3. White Shoulders
(3:27) 4. Dozen a Day
(3:05) 5. Subway
(3:48) 6. One Wish
(4:45) 7. I Sang
(1:30) 8. Wrong with You
(3:50) 9. One for All
(4:01) 10. Near the Pond

The most notable qualities of this set are the balances finely struck between tentativeness and assertiveness, between reflection and improvisatory fire, both of which effectively serve to place it in a category of its own, one that’s informed by both art song and some of the more rarefied elements of contemporary jazz.

All these points are brought home in the opening Clara Mathilda’s Dream, a piece which has the air of a Tove Jansson short story about it. The lyricism is restrained, yet the lack of contrivance ensures no casual definition will suffice. Comparatively speaking, the following I Don’t Know is marked by an earthiness that’s at odds with what sounds like an uncredited mbira; Knuffke’s cornet solo pays a kind of homage to the setting.

Initially Dozen A Day hints less than coyly at ECM-type atmospherics, but it soon becomes clear that there’s business afoot quite at odds with that idea. Knuffke’s work is that of a musician conscious of the passing moments and leaving a telling stain on them.

Cronholm’s One Wish mines a seam of minimalism but pulls off the not inconsiderable trick of making it compelling. Wollesen’s vibraphone is the principal instrument of colouration, while a brief burst of Cronholm scatting makes for contrast before the reiteration of the two-word title.

The title track, with Cronholm and Knuffke harmonising vocally at first, has the quality of lamentation about it but avoids becoming mired in melancholy principally through the latter’s restrained cornet declamations and a brooding percussion and strings bed. Here, as elsewhere, the restraint is intriguing as opposed to distancing, which makes the prospect of returning to this set in the future an enticing one. By Nic Jones https://jazzjournal.co.uk/2021/09/07/josefine-cronholm-kirk-knuffke-thommy-andersson-near-the-pond/

Personnel: Vocals, Percussion – Josefine Cronholm; Vocals – Kirk Knuffke; Bass, Arranged By [String] – Thommy Andersson; Cello – Melissa Coleman; Cornet, Drums, Vibraphone, Percussion – Kenny Wollesen; Viola – Lena Fankhauser, Marta Potulska

Near the Pond

Ksenia Parkhatskaya - Colours

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:48
Size: 86,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:35) 1. For Saturdays
(4:01) 2. In My Room
(4:35) 3. How Long
(6:00) 4. Close Your Eyes
(3:42) 5. Fear
(3:20) 6. Behind My Eyes
(3:10) 7. Standing in the distance
(4:33) 8. Rose and Blue
(3:47) 9. Green Eyes

Lionel Messi has left Barcelona but excellence hasn't. Barcelona-based Ksenia Parkhatskaya is a performer whose skills are as varied in the creative arts as Senor Messi's are on the football pitch. The breadth of her talent is unique making it difficult to excel in one thing, but blessed as she is, she excels in all she attempts. In this case it's with the help of her husband and a group of international players.

Parkhatskaya's successful debut as a singer-songwriter is Colours. Of the 9 songs on the recording she and her husband wrote 8. "Close your Eyes," the only song not written by them, was written by the "Queen of Tin Pan Alley." Irving Berlin gave Bernice Petkere the moniker for penning that song and some other songs favored by jazz musicians like "Lullaby of the Leaves."

Parkhatskaya has gained notice as a dancer with the Paris Opera Orchestra and Christian McBride. She's also been the modeling face of Italy's largest phone company. The video made for "Fear" has been nominated in several categories at the International Fashion Film Awards. It's a dark song with a positive ending. When talking about her songwriting with her husband and bassist she had this to say..."Some songs paint a deep blue haunting loneliness, red inner turmoil or grey melancholy. Others paint a golden dawn full of hope and youth, a purple milky way where all things intertwine and connect, a green endless ocean of the eyes of a loved one. Play, musicianship, storytelling and individuality are the core ideas of my work."

Having grown up in Russia, English is not her first language but she shows facility in Shakespeare's language; her lyrics do have a poetic quality, maybe derived from her Irish husband, co-producer and co-composer David Duffy. The rich, sometimes sombre vocals, tell stories that are at times both personal and cinematic.

Barcelona's almost legendary (legends per some people's point of view can only be dead) Joan Chamorro, has influenced this international band whose roots spread from Russia, Ireland, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Brazil and Cuba. Barcelona has become a jazz hotbed. Chamorro's impact on this youthful gathering includes pianist Marc Martin who played in the Saint Andreu Big Band founded by Chamorro. Martin intros, solos and dialogues with Parkhatskaya and Duffy in a trio format version of "How Long," a noirish romance from its opening line..."Friday night in a busy bar."

Cuban trumpeter Carlos Sarduy is currently on tour with Richard Bona. His soulful sound fills a smoke- filled room version of "Close Your Eyes." Frank Sinatra pal Alec Wilder said the song had a self-consciousness whose fictional narrator comes off as a "shopgirl Shakespeare." But Wilder also said it was well-written music. Don't worry Bernice Petkere, the jazz world in the persons of Arthur Prysock, Benny Goodman, Stacey Kent, Kurt Elling, and now Parkhatskaya has embraced your song.

So far Shakespeare has come up twice before. Here's a third. The lyrics of "Behind My Eyes," deal with a psychology similar to the Bard's metaphysical treatment of isolation in "Hamlet." The award-winning 2020 video of "Rose and Blue" was released in collaboration with German animators Julie Boehm & Marc Zimmerman. Dedicated to Parkhatskaya's mother, it tells its story in stunning color. Sarduy's trumpet and Parthatskaya's voice blend with heartfelt lyricism.

Duffy's bass intro sets the tone for the dreamscape melody of "Standing in the Distance." Parkhatskaya's vocal is both a haunted and haunting echo of Katie Melua. Besides the bass, Duffy's synthesizer and Martin's piano are the only accompaniment, a hard-to-forget minimalist treatment. The final track is the light-hearted "Green Eyes." A sunny-side-of-the-street vocal, Gabriel Amargant's saxophone and Martin's organ add joy to the palette of colours.

The artwork on the album cover is credited to Evgenia Parhatskaja. Without doubt talent runs in the family. Evgenia is an artistic sister. All the musicians contribute to an outstanding singer-songwriter debut. Next time you're in Barcelona, find a spot to listen to world-class jazz. It is a city filled with music and colours. By William H. Snyder https://www.allaboutjazz.com/colours-ksenia-parkhatskaya-ksenia-parkhatskaya-jazzville-productions

Personnel: Ksenia Parkhatskaya: voice / vocals; David Duffy: bass, acoustic; Anton Jarl: drums; Marc Martin: piano; Gabriel Armagant: saxophone; Gilles Estoppey: keyboards; Carlos Sarduy Dimet: trumpet; Alan Sousa: percussion; Ferran Donatelli: guitar; Keelan Kenny: guitar, steel; Hugh Dillion: guitar.

Colours