Saturday, April 2, 2022

Lisa Lovbrand - Embraceable

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:16
Size: 117,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:01)  1. Light My Fire
(4:58)  2. Embraceable You With Chris Botti
(3:00)  3. Smile
(4:50)  4. The Man I Love
(3:35)  5. When I Fall in Love With David Foster
(5:08)  6. The Nearness of You
(4:05)  7. Over the Rainbow
(3:39)  8. These Foolish Things
(4:32)  9. Seagulls
(4:58) 10. Come Rain or Come Shine  With Paul Buchanan
(5:25) 11. Good Morning Heartache

Lisa Lovbrand, a swedish singer/actress from Dorotea (Sweden) but now spending her days in Los Angeles. The album “Embraceable” was released by Lisa herself on her own label Lovbrand Productions. “Embraceable” is a soft jazz album with some very familiar songs as well as sparkling new music written by Lisa and composer/arranger Jeremy Lubbock. The album was mainly recorded in Stockholm with some of Sweden’s most prominent jazz musicians (see list below), all songs were arranged by Bengt Lindkvist and Kjell Öhman and the album is featured by international artists such as Chris Botti, Paul Buchanan and David Foster! Paul Buchanan from Blue Nile sings on the lovely duet “Come Rain Or Come Shine” and David Foster sings and plays keyboard on “When I Fall In Love”. http://www.westcoast.dk/artists/l/lisa-lovbrand/

Musicians on the Embraceable album: Lisa Lovbrand, David Foster, Chris Botti, Paul Buchanan, Johan Setterlind, Bengt Lindkvist, Per V. Johansson, Jesper Kviberg, Jan Ottesen, Kjell Öhman, Jorgen Smeby, Joakim Ekberg & Klas Lindquist.

Embraceable

Maxine Sullivan & Scott Hamilton Quintet - Uptown

Styles: Vocal And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1985
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:21
Size: 106,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:34) 1. You Were Meant for Me
(5:10) 2. I Thought About You
(3:49) 3. Goody Goody
(5:22) 4. Something to Remember You By
(5:54) 5. Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams
(3:50) 6. You're a Lucky Guy
(3:48) 7. Georgia on My Mind
(4:21) 8. By Myself
(4:47) 9. I Got a Right to Sing the Blues
(5:41) 10. Just One of Those Things

The first of her two Concord CDs, this set features veteran singer Maxine Sullivan performing ten of her favorite songs, all of which originated from the swing era or before. Sullivan sounds quite happy to be joined by tenor saxophonist Scott Hamilton's very complementary quintet (which also includes guitarist Chris Flory and pianist John Bunch). The best among the familiar songs are Maxine's renditions of "I Thought About You," "Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams," "By Myself" and "I Got a Right to Sing the Blues."~Scott Yanowhttps://www.allmusic.com/album/release/uptown-mr0001470229

Personnel: Maxine Sullivan - vocals; Scott Hamilton - tenor saxophone; John Bunch - piano; Phil Flanigan - bass; Chris Flory - guitar; Chuck Riggs - drums

Uptown

Arne Domnerus & Rune Gustafsson - Sketches of Standards

Styles: Bop
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:21
Size: 131,3 MB
Scans: Front

(5:37)  1. Blowing in the wind
(4:11)  2. I'm beginning to see the light
(4:50)  3. Jazz me blues
(6:25)  4. Mean to me
(5:07)  5. Here's that rainy day
(3:49)  6. Autumn leaves
(3:23)  7. Hymn to freedom
(3:23)  8. It don't mean a thing
(5:06)  9. Mood indigo
(3:04) 10. I've got it bad
(3:33) 11. Sweet Lorraine
(4:39) 12. Don't get around much anymore
(4:09) 13. Is God a three letter word for love?

Swedish-born saxophonist Arne Domnérus looms large in the annals of European jazz -- his breakthrough performance at the Paris Jazz Fair of 1949 is widely cited as the tipping point of the Scandinavian bop movement. Born in Stockholm on December 20, 1924, Domnérus studied clarinet as a child and made his professional debut during the early '40s, playing alto sax in popular dance bands led by Lulle Ellboj and Simon Brehm. By 1942 he led his own group and made his recorded debut in 1945, honing an urbane, sophisticated style that nevertheless possessed an urgency often absent from the cool, remote tone often associated with Swedish jazz. American icons Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie were both in attendance for Domnérus 1949 Paris festival gig, a performance which served notice that players of European descent could offer their own authoritative interpretations of music largely considered an African-American phenomenon -- Parker was so impressed that he signed Domnérus for the Scandinavian tour he mounted a year later. Throughout the '50s Domnérus headlined the Stockholm jazz club Nalen, often appearing alongside trumpeter Rolf Ericson and baritone saxophonist Lars Gullin (who both turn up in the 1952 short film Arne Domnérus Spelar). Domnérus also joined Stockholm locals including pianist Bengt Hallberg for a landmark 1953 Swedish tour in support of American trumpeters Clifford Brown and Quincy Jones. From 1956 to 1965 Domnérus served as a member of Harry Arnold's Swedish Radio Big Band, continuing on with its successor Radiojazzgruppen through 1978 -- concurrently he wrote for television and films, most notably scoring 1966's Nattlek, a film produced by Mai Zetterling and based on her own novel. Domnérus' 1977 LP Jazz at the Pawnshop proved an unprecedented hit, selling more than half a million copies upon its original release -- a year later, he returned with Duets for Duke, a collaboration with Hallberg that captures both men at the zenith of their artistry. While remaining true to his bop roots, Domnérus cited traditional Scandinavian folk music as a growing influence throughout the later chapters of his career, and from the '70s on he regularly performed live in churches, inspired by Duke Ellington's own sacred concerts. He also toured the U.S. and Japan, and recorded with American notables including Clark Terry, James Moody and Jimmy Rowles. After several years in poor health, Domnérus died in Stockholm on September 2, 2008 at the age of 83.

Rune Gustafsson - Heavily inspired by generations of blurry-toned jazz guitar maestros such as Jimmy Raney, Jim Hall, and Tal Farlow, this Swedish artist went on to compose critically acclaimed film soundtracks as well as pick and strum. The Swedish music scene in general is where documentation of Rune Gustafsson is most prevalent, his discography on Sonet, Metronome, and other labels even including a tribute to soul genius Stevie Wonder. The guitarist began performing folk music as a young teen, apparently under considerable prodding from an uncle who was already engaged in the same kind of activity. Gustafsson had evolved to playing jazz on stages in the early '50s, his bandleaders including Bert Dahlander, Putte Wickman, Hacke Bjorksten, and Lars Gullin. When profiled in Leonard Feather's Encyclopedia of Jazz in the '70s, Gustafsson talked about his ambitions in composing and arranging concert music, a promise he certainly made good on in the ensuing years. He also expanded his instrumental arsenal for some of these projects, recording on the banjo and the celeste, among other unusual axes. His film credits include the 1992 Ingmar Bergman release with the English title of Sunday's Children.

Buddy Tate Feat. Clark Terry - Tate-A-Tate (Remastered Version)

Styles: Saxophone And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1960/2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:40
Size: 82,7 MB
Art: Front

(8:12)  1. Groun' Hog
(4:10)  2. Tate-a-Tate
(5:38)  3. Snatchin' It Back
(6:21)  4. 20 Ladbroke Square
(4:13)  5. All Too Soon
(7:04)  6. Take the "A" Train

For more than seven decades, Texas-bred George “Buddy” Tate graced the American jazz scene with his hard-blowing tenor saxophone style. A resilient tone with high register inflections in the so-called “Texas tenor” sound distinguished Tate among his swing era colleagues. He was a member of the Count Basie Orchestra during the late 1930s and 1940s and later became a bandleader in his own right. By most accounts, Tate was born George Holmes Tate on February 22, 1913, in Sherman, Texas. He began performing in 1925 while still in his teens when his brother handed him an instrument and asked him to play tenor saxophone with the family quartet called McCloud's Night Owls. Tate and the Night Owls learned to play largely by listening to recordings by Louis Armstrong and mimicking the sound. The band toured professionally for the next four years, after which Tate continued to play the horn, performing with a series of territory bands and with circus bands until the early 1930s when he toured the south-western United States with Nathan Towles' band. During those early years, Tate spent time with Terrence Holder's band from 1930-33 and toured with Andy Kirk's Clouds of Joy in 1934-35. In 1934 Tate filled in briefly with Count Basie's Orchestra as a replacement for Lester Young. Young eventually returned to the band, and Tate joined up with Towles for another four years beginning in 1935. Tate worked with Towles until 1939 when Herschel Evans, who was Basie's tenor saxophone player, died. Basie then brought Tate back into the orchestra as a permanent fixture for nearly a decade. Perhaps nowhere was the contention for attention between saxophone players of that era more pronounced than among Basie's sidemen. Among the notables were Illinois Jacquet also one of the so-called Texas tenors, Lucky Thompson, and Young, all of whom along with Tate transformed moments of the orchestra's performances into full-scale dueling sets between horns. Tate was heard on many recordings by the Basie orchestra during that era, including selected recordings where Tate performed on alto saxophone as well as tenor. He emerged from Basie's band as a seasoned professional. After Tate parted ways with Basie in 1949, Tate appeared with Hot Lips Page, Lucky Millinder, and Jimmy Rushing until 1952. He then assembled his own house band at Harlem's Celebrity Club in 1953, marking the start of a gig that lasted for 21 years, until the early 1970s. Tate's European tours brought him largely to France where, in 1967 and 1968, he performed as bandleader in a trio comprised of Milt Buckner on organ and Wallace Bishop on drums. 

Tate and Buckner recorded a series of tenor saxophone and organ duets in 1967 on the Black and Blue label, including “Buddy Tate with Milt Buckner,” which is revered among Tate's best works. He made two earlier European tours as a sideman for Buck Clayton, in 1959 and 1961 respectively. In 1967 Tate also appeared with John Hammond in a concert program called Spirituals to Swing and toured with the Saints and Sinners. Tate spent time in the 1970s as a sideman in the Benny Goodman Orchestra. Tate's 1973 release, “Buddy Tate and His Buddies”, featured his former Basie cohort, Jacquet, pianist Mary Lou Williams, and trumpeter Roy Eldridge. Also numbered among the buddies were guitarist Stan Jordan, drummer Gus Johnson, and Milt Hinton on bass. The album, one of Tate's more popular recordings, was re-issued in 1994. In the 1980s, Tate toured extensively with Jacquet's group called the Texas Tenors. The Tenors followed a festival circuit that took the players to the Newport Jazz Festival in 1980 and to the festival in Cork in 1983 and again in 1985. His festival tours with Jacquet in the 1980s included annual visits to the Grande Parade du Jazz in Nice, France. Additionally, Tate's North American agenda included both live and taped performances with Jay McShann and Jim Galloway in Canada. In 1978 Tate taped a collection of recordings for Muse Records under the bill of Buddy Tate & the Muse All Stars.” Those albums included “Live at Sandy's,” “Hard Blowin',” and “Muse All Stars.” In 1991 Tate joined fellow tenor saxophone player James Moody and a collection of others among his peers on the live recording, “Lionel Hampton and the Golden Men of Jazz.” The 1996 album “Conversin' with the Elders,” by saxophonist James Carter marked what would become Tate's final appearance on record. He remained active and performed with Lionel Hampton and the Statesmen of Jazz in the late 1990s until a bout with cancer left him incapacitated. In January of 2001 Tate moved to Phoenix, Arizona, to live near his daughter. He died in Arizona soon afterward, in a nursing home in Chandler on February 10, 2001. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/buddytate

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone – Buddy Tate; Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Clark Terry;   Bass – Larry Gales; Drums – Arthur Taylor; Piano – Tommy Flanagan

Tate-A-Tate (Remastered Version)