Monday, February 14, 2022

Sadao Watanabe - Jazz & Bossa: Live At Suntory Hall

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:10
Size: 154,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:38) 1. Laura
(4:24) 2. Beautiful Love
(5:19) 3. In The We Snall of the Morning
(5:55) 4. Stallon Moments
(5:19) 5. Echo
(5:02) 6. Carnaval Morning
(5:42) 7. Prelude Samba
(4:59) 8. Butterfly
(4:46) 9. Talk To The Moon
(4:31) 10. I Love To Say Your Name
(5:35) 11. Water Colors
(5:09) 12. Manhattan Paulista
(2:40) 13. Flowers Blom
(3:04) 14. Carinhozo

One of the most well-known Japanese jazz musicians of his generation, Sadao Watanabe is an adept, bop-influenced saxophonist with a deep love of Brazilian bossa nova. Watanabe initially gained global fame in the 1960s with Bossa Nova Concert and Sadao Meets Brazilian Friends, showcasing his warm tone and lyrical, swinging sound. His subsequent recordings, highlighted by 1974's Round Trip, 1984's Rendezvous, and 1999's Remembrance, found him traversing such varied styles as funk, fusion, and crossover pop. Since the 2000s, Watanabe has focused largely on acoustic post-bop, Brazilian traditions, and straight-ahead jazz, as on the 2017 orchestral concert album Encore!

Born in 1933 in Utsunomiya, Japan, he grew up in a musical family and initially played clarinet in high school, a choice purportedly inspired by seeing Bing Crosby play the instrument in 1941's Birth of the Blues. However, Watanabe soon picked up the alto saxophone after discovering the bebop recordings of Charlie Parker. Upon graduating high school, he relocated to Tokyo, where he gained his first professional experience playing with dance bands. In 1953, he joined pianist Toshiko Akiyoshi's group, ultimately taking over the ensemble after Akiyoshi moved to the United States. Watanabe eventually followed suit, attending Berklee College of Music in Boston from 1962-1965. While at Berklee, he broadened his stylistic scope, investigating Brazilian music and performing with luminaries like Chico Hamilton, Gary McFarland, and others. It was also during this period that he made his recorded debut, appearing on a handful of albums including a 1961 self-titled album and 1965 follow-up, Sadao Watanabe Plays.

Moving back to Japan in 1965, Watanabe split his time between teaching and performing, appearing on 1966's Going Home: A Modern Jazz Album and joining fellow saxophonist Charlie Mariano on 1967's Iberian Waltz. He also displayed his love of Brazilian traditions on a steady stream of bossa nova-steeped albums, including 1967's Bossa Nova Concert and 1968's Sadao Meets Brazilian Friends. He also began appearing more regularly around the world, including a high-profile appearance at the 1970 Newport Jazz Festival, and developed into a highly regarded, world-renowned jazz performer. Watanabe's albums during these years reflected his eclectic musical taste and found him moving from straight-ahead dates like 1976's I'm Old Fashioned to expansive Brazilian fusion sessions such as 1977's Autumn Blow, and even breezy crossover pop affairs like 1979's Morning Island.

The '80s were also a fruitful time for Watanabe, who toured heavily, making numerous festival appearances. As a recording artist, he continued to embrace a crossover, funk, and R&B-influenced sound on albums like 1981's Orange Express, 1984's Rendezvous, and 1985's Maisha. That said, he never gave up his love of Brazilian music, as evidenced by his 1990 collaboration with singer/songwriter Toquinho, Made in Coracao. More successful pop-influenced albums followed with 1991's Sweet Deal and 1994's Earth Step. While the saxophonist certainly enjoyed mainstream appeal, he always remained indebted to his bebop roots, and peppered his discography with acoustic jazz dates like 1997's Go Straight Ahead 'n Make a Left and 1999's Remembrance, both on Verve.

As Watanabe entered his fifth decade as a recording artist, he continued to balance his time between exploring his love of bossa nova and his longstanding dedication to acoustic bop-influenced jazz on such albums as 2003's Wheel of Life. In 2006, he reunited with saxophonist Charlie Mariano for Sadao & Charlie, followed by 2007's Basie's at Night. Two years later, he joined pianist Gerald Clayton for Into Tomorrow and once again returned to gorgeously rendered Brazilian jazz for both 2011's Come Today and 2013's Outra Vez. The intimate and urbane Naturally appeared in 2015. In 2017, he delivered the orchestral-tinged live album Encore! Recorded at Tokyo's Bunkamura Orchard Hall, the album featured appearances by Dave Grusin, Robben Ford, and others. Also that year, Watanabe released the studio album Re-Bop, which he revisited in 2018 with the companion live album, Re-Bop the Night. Another concert album, Sadao 2019: Live at Blue Note Tokyo, arrived in 2019 and showcased his group with bassist John Patitucci, pianist Russell Ferrante, and drummer Steve Gadd.~Matt Collarhttps://www.allmusic.com/artist/sadao-watanabe-mn0000282544/biography

Personnel: Sadao Watanabe(as), Masaki Hayashi(p), Kiichiro Komobuchi(b), Ittetsu Takemura(ds), Marcelo Kimura(g), Takayuki Oshikane Strings (strings section)

Jazz & Bossa Live At Suntory Hall

Pyeng Threadgill - Sweet Home: The Music of Robert Johnson

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:36
Size: 116,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:36) 1. Love in Vain Blues
(3:34) 2. Phonograph Blues
(3:55) 3. Last Fair Deal Gone Down
(4:06) 4. Milk Cow's Calf Blues
(3:23) 5. When You Got a Good Friend
(3:10) 6. I Believe I'll Dust My Broom
(6:08) 7. Dead Shrimp
(3:09) 8. They're Red Hot
(3:47) 9. Sweet Home Chicago
(9:10) 10. Come On In My Kitchen
(5:33) 11. Ramblin' On My Mind

Singer and arranger Pyeng Threadgill is the daughter of composer, bandleader, and multi-instrumentalist Henry Threadgill and choreographer/dancer Christina Jones, a founding member of the celebrated Urban Bushwomen. Sweet Home offers 11 Robert Johnson tunes in 11 different settings. While more cynical punters and blues purists (ugh) may sigh or wring their hands at such a notion, everyone else can take delight in Threadgill's considerable accomplishment. Unlike mere revivalists like Eric Clapton or Peter Green, Threadgill hears and interprets Johnson's blues as music not of, but for the ages.

Certainly she has models here, most notably Cassandra Wilson and Olu Dara, but Threadgill's take on these tunes doesn't attempt to remake them in her image, so much their own. Sweet Home's selections are radical. They take Johnson's songs and strips them of the interpetive, anachronistic baggage that has all but killed the spooky and hedonistic majesty of the originals at the hands of well-meaning but woefully rigid performers.

First there's the edgy, swinging jazz read of "Love in Vain," followed by the lean, ragged funk of "Phonograph Blues." The swampy acoustic guitar-and-brass blues of "Milk Cow Calf's Blues" is a nod to earlier times, but feels more like it's being performed in busker style on the lawn of Thompkins Square Park. The lone cello accompaniment (played elegantly by Dana Leong) on "If You've Got a Good Friend" evokes the dignified spirit, if not the timbre, of Nina Simone's ghost, and the jazzed-out, near scatted take on "Dust My Broom," where Threadgill is accompanied only by a double bass and a trap kit, offers the startling--and sometimes hair-raisin-- originality of her approach.

Likewise the tension between second-line New Orleans rhythms at the heart of "Sweet Home Chicago," where jagged jazz-rock guitar fills are held expertly in the tense grain of Threadgill's voice is jarring, perhaps, but far from unwelcome. She croons, swoons, shouts, growls, whoops, and moans to get these blues across proving in the process that in the current era, these tunes that are enduring to be sure, but they continue to hold a cryptic mystique; they are still alluring because they can be articulated in so many different contexts and retain their seductive power and jagged grace. Threadgill's recorded debut is an auspicious one. She paints her blues shiny black and pushes them headlong into a future where tradition and history are processes of evolution, not quaint curiosities.~Thom Jurek https://www.allmusic.com/album/sweet-home-pyeng-threadgill-sings-robert-johnson-mw0000330351

Personnel: Vocals – Pyeng Threadgill; Bass Guitar – Dana Leong; Clarinet – Dimitri Moderbacher; Drums – Qasim Natvi; Guitar – Ryan Scott ; Piano – Davey Pierce; Trumpet – Kevin Louis

Sweet Home: The Music of Robert Johnson

Kazumasa Akiyama - Beyond The Door

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:59
Size: 102,4 MB
Art: Front

(0:42) 1. Mi's Song
(7:44) 2. Central Park
(4:41) 3. Too Far Away
(4:37) 4. Paradise in Mirage
(5:23) 5. Dear Father Of My Sweet Memories
(5:55) 6. Jealous Nephew
(3:55) 7. Nova
(6:58) 8. Capricorn Knight

Kazumasa Akiyama (Born 1955 in Tokyo Prefecture ) is a Japanese fusion and jazz musician (guitar).

Kazumasa Akiyama played in the Tokyo jazz scene from the 1970s, e.g. with the Isao Suzuki sextet, with whom the first recordings were made; he was also involved in recordings by Mikio Masuda , Noriko Miyamoto and Yasuaki Shimzu . In 1978 he recorded his debut album Dig My Style (Flying Dog) with Yasuaki Shimizu , Mikio Masuda, Masanori Sasaji , Kazuya Sugimoto , Hideo Yamaki and Tatsuji Yokoyama ; This was followed in 1979 by the fusion production Beyond the Door , which starred Masanori Sasaji, Motohiko Hamase , Akira Doi, Noriko Miyamoto and singer Jimmy Satoshi Murakawa .

In the 1980s and 1990s, Akiyama worked e.g. still with Yasuko Agawa , Tatsuya Nakamura , Tsuyoshi Yamamoto , Chin Suzuki , Mari Nakamoto , Chie Ayado and the Kosuke Mine Quintet. The discographer Tom Lord lists him in the field of jazz/fusion between 1976 and 1998 with 21 recording sessions. [1] He also worked as a studio musician on a number of recordings, such as Noriko Miyamoto and Lisa Ono . In later years he played a.o. in quartet with Hikari Ichihara , Koichi Inoue andNori Shiota and in Hironori Suzuki's sextet (including Shota Watanabe ); he also published the albums Quiet Storm (2005) and Dr.Rain(2008)before.https://de-m-wikipedia-org.translate.goog/wiki/Kazumasa_Akiyama?_x_tr_sl=de&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en&_x_tr_pto=sc

Beyond The Door

Jesse Davis - As We Speak

Styles: Saxophone Jazz 
Year: 1992
Time: 65:47
Size: 105,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:40)  1. Wake-Up Call
(6:55)  2. You are Too Beautiful
(6:50)  3. As We Speak
(4:44)  4. Quasimodo
(8:17)  5. Dear Druann
(7:59)  6. 'Tudes
(7:25)  7. Hipnotism
(6:14)  8. Lush Life
(6:04)  9. Recession Blues
(5:33) 10. I know that You Know

This is a good straight-ahead session that comprises the second album by alto saxophonist Jesse Davis, who hasn't gotten as much ink as many other young lion players. The menu features pre-rock and bop anthems, plus hard bop originals keyed by Davis' aggressive, often soothing solos and fine assistance from trombonist Robin Trowers, pianist Jacky Terrasson, guitarist Peter Bernstein, bassist Dwayne Burno, and drummer Leon Parker. ~ Ron Wynn https://www.allmusic.com/album/as-we-speak-mw0000614344

Personnel: Alto Saxophone – Jesse Davis;  Bass – Dwayne Burno; Drums – Leon Parker; Guitar – Peter Bernstein; Piano – Jacky Terrasson; Trombone – Robert Trowers

As We Speak