Friday, July 29, 2022

Frank Kimbrough Trio - Lonely Woman

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:58
Size: 139,9 MB
Art: Front

( 7:28)  1. Northwest
( 4:54)  2. Lonely Woman
( 7:44)  3. House Party Starting
( 8:27)  4. 727
( 4:13)  5. Falling Waltz
(10:36)  6. The Peacocks
( 5:34)  7. Pete & Repete
( 6:39)  8. 20 Bars
( 5:21)  9. Lonely in London

One of Frank Kimbrough's strong points has been his flexibility. The acoustic pianist can play with the crystalline elegance of Bill Evans and Keith Jarrett, but he's also quite capable of taking it "outside" and acknowledging the avant-garde contributions of Cecil Taylor and Marilyn Crispell. Kimbrough generally favors "inside" post-bop playing on Lonely Woman, an impressive trio date featuring bassist Ben Wolfe and drummer Jeff Williams. This threesome played around New York's Greenwich Village regularly in the late 1980s, and their strong rapport was a definite advantage when they entered the studio in 1988 to record this album. 

Kimbrough is at his most poetic and Evans-minded on Jimmy Rowles' "The Peacocks" and Wolfe's melancholy "Lonely In London," but things become very angular and abstract on Herbie Nichols' "House Party Startin'" and Wolfe's "Pete And Repeat." Also quite impressive is Kimbrough's haunting, introspective take on Ornette Coleman's "Lonely Woman." This CD is clearly among the pianist's finest achievements.~Alex Henderson http://www.allmusic.com/album/lonely-woman-mw0000177601

Personnel:  Piano – Frank Kimbrough;  Bass – Ben Wolfe;  Drums – Jeff Williams

Lonely Woman

The Frank Kohl Quartet - Reform

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1981
File: MP3@128K/s
Time: 39:27
Size: 37,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:43) 1. All in Time
(5:49) 2. I Know I'll See You Again
(6:02) 3. Fall Again
(4:10) 4. Seagate
(5:46) 5. Reform
(4:22) 6. Folk Song
(5:31) 7. Island Song
(3:00) 8. Until We Meet Again

Jazz Guitarist, Frank Kohl was born and raised in the NYC metro area. He began playing guitar at age 7. He started his journey into jazz by joining his award winning high school jazz band. Musicians such as: Wes Montgomery, George Benson, Pat Martino and Jim Hall were milestones along the way of his musical development. One of his greatest influences was at a jazz club in NY called Rapsins. Here he could listen to uncompromised, cutting edge jazz of the highest level with musicians like: Linc Chamberlin- guitar, Lyn Christie- bass, Dave Liebman- sax. Later Frank became A student of Linc and soon he was performing with Lyn Christie.

"I remember around this time going to see Tony Williams Lifetime with John McLaughlin and organist Larry Young. My idea of what jazz was forever changed. I knew then that anything was possible in jazz"

In 1972 Frank attended Berklee College of Music and graduated in 1976 with honors. Students and teachers at that time in Berklee were: John Scofield, Pat Metheny, Steve Swallow and Gary Burton. After Berklee, Frank moved back to NY and performed professionally. In 1981, he released first LP "Reform" The Frank Kohl Quartet featuring Bassist Michael Moore. Around 1983 Frank moved to the San Francisco Bay area and performed his music for years And became a member of Don McCaslin Sr's band Warmth.

In 1990 Frank moved to Seattle where he lives today performing at NW jazz clubs such as: Tula's, Boxley's, Egan's, The Jazz Station.Frank also spends time in NY recording and performing at clubs like Small's, The Metropolitan Room, The Bean Runner.

In 2008 Frank recorded his second CD, "Coast to Coast" The Frank Kohl Quartet in NY with brother and pianist, Tom Kohl. It received rave reviews from Cadence Magazine, All About Jazz, Mike Stern, to name a few. In 2013 Frank recorded his 3rd CD, "Invisible Man" The Frank Kohl Quartet on Pony Boy Records featuring NY bassist Steve LaSpina.

Members of Frank's quartet vary, in Seattle you can hear him with: Bill Anchell, John Hansen, Jeff Johnson, Steve Luceno, Matt Jorgenson, Greg Williamson and others. In NY: Steve LaSpina, Tom Kohl, Steve Roane, Jon Doty And others.https://frankkohl.com/bio

Reform

Charles Mingus - The Lost Album From Ronnie Scott's

Styles: Bop, Post Bop
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 145:32
Size: 334,2 MB
Art: Front

( 1:01) 1. Introduction
(30:44) 2. Orange Was The Color Of Her Dress (Then Silk Blues)
(19:52) 3. Noddin' Ya Head Blues
(29:57) 4. Mind-Reader's Convention In Milano (Aka Number 29)
( 0:44) 5. Ko Ko (Theme)
(35:00) 6. Fables Of Faubus
( 7:35) 7. Pops (When The Saints Go Marching In)
(18:33) 8. The Man Who Never Sleeps
( 2:02) 9. Air Mail Special

After the emotional and economic bankruptcies of the late 1960s that nearly took him out of the picture entirely, 1972 broke well for Charles Mingus. He had re-signed with Columbia and delivered the revered Let My Children Hear Music. (He would, a year later, be part of the great Clive Davis jazz purge of 1973 which included Keith Jarrett, Bill Evans, and, some argue Ornette Coleman.) Grants and commissions were coming in and his music, in all its bold, gnarly, swooning vehemence, was being performed far and wide. His irascible, erotic, and essential autobiography, Beneath the Underdog, had finally been published. More and more, Sue Mingus was becoming the edifying force in his life, a beacon for his health, his creativity, his business. Most importantly, as first evidenced by Charles Mingus And Friends In Concert (Columbia, 1972) it was all coming together for him onstage.

Even though his multiple demons (all the usual human foibles but magnified by genius) were never too far from the forefront of his garrulous self, history, while it often casts shade on even our most beloved icons, has been kind to Mingus. He's recognized in the same breath as Duke Ellington, Charles Ives, and Claude Debussy. Now, just in time for a loud and rowdy celebration of his 2022 centennial (April 22) and Record Store Day (April 23) another very sweet slice of history is heard gloriously on The Lost Album from Ronnie Scott's.

Why it takes fifty years for music of this muscle and magnitude to be released is just one of the great eternal questions, but here it is so let's rejoice. Fully authorized by Jazz Workshop, Inc., and given the full Resonance Records grand treatment: interviews with Charles McPherson, Eddie Gomez, Christian McBride; anecdotes from Mary Scott, Sue Mingus, and Fran Lebowitz, as well as archival and production liner notes. But it's the music that spins the head, spikes the pulse, and whips the carpet out from under one. It's what Mingus would want.

So it's the two nights in August at the end of a successful European run and the players are in flux but wasn't flux at the crux of Mingus' most inspired moments? Nineteen year old trumpeter Jon Faddis was not only trying to hone his young brilliance, he was trying to do so through the Mingus maze. Little known pianist John Foster succeeds Jaki Byard and drummer Roy Brooks has taken over for Mingus stalwart Dannie Richmond, who left to soak in some short lived pop rock with Mark Almond Band. It begins as most great jazz moments do. Immediately. Ronnie Scott intros the sextet. Mingus rumbles a happy birthday, thanks the audience for letting their claps be recorded, and it's off to the races with the unapologetic zest and swagger of "Orange Was the Color of Her Dress, Then Silk Blues," a full half hour of stunning, multi-part alchemy. Foster proves he's up to the task, keeping up with the turns and tides precipitated by alto saxophonist Charles McPherson and his tenor counterpart, Bobby Jones.

Variation upon variation. Creation on the fly. "Ysabel's Table Dance" (one of the many glories from Tijuana Moods (RCA, 1962) knits in and out of the general creative mayhem. There's some church, some New Orleans, some breakdowns and fanfares. Faddis and Foster, with Jones on soprano sax, hold court, hand off. Mingus guides and goads. It's an unstoppable momentum that moves into a burly bass solo intro "Noddin' Ya Head Blues" a slow, low down blues that brings Foster to the vocal forefront telling his woman "I need it every morning, I need it every night" as the horns slink and slur. So expansive is the setting that Brooks gets a musical saw solo, as well he should.

Spoiler alert: From here The Lost Album from Ronnie Scott's just gets better and better. Cascading for another riotous half hour, the recently minted Mingus twister "Mind-Readers' Convention in Milan" puts one and all to the test and just can't be described with any real justice. It needs to be heard. It needs to be experienced.

Though by its very nature any jazz moment can be considered one of kind, the barely contained madcappery that ensues in this truly one-for-the-ages performance of the seismic "Fables of Faubus" is the stuff of legend. It noodles, it sprawls, it quarrels. It reaches for the London skies and returns to the stage with ether to burn. Mingus roils as Faddis blows beyond his years, the saxophones cut and weave, Foster veers from stride to barroom to bop and Brooks drives headlong into the hijinks. In a word, remarkable. Ditto The Lost Album from Ronnie Scott's.~Mike Jurkovic https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-lost-album-from-ronnie-scotts-charles-mingus-resonance-records__7280

Personnel: Charles Mingus: bass, acoustic; Charles McPherson: saxophone, alto; Bobby Jones: saxophone, tenor; Jon Faddis: trumpet; John Foster: piano; Roy Brooks: drums.

The Lost Album From Ronnie Scott's

Deanne Matley - The Alberta Lounge (Hommage Oscar Peterson)

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:09
Size: 94,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:34) 1. The Alberta Lounge
(4:08) 2. Mas que Nada
(5:10) 3. I Cant Give You Anything But Love
(3:54) 4. Gee Baby Ain I Good To You
(3:46) 5. Merci Pour Ça (Je Ne Sais Pas)
(5:06) 6. The Land Was White (When Summer Comes)
(3:02) 7. How Come You Do Me Like You Do
(3:53) 8. If You Were Here Today
(3:25) 9. Tristeza
(5:05) 10. Hymn To Freedom

Welcome to The Alberta Lounge, where National treasure Oscar Peterson was discovered in Montreal. Alberta, the province where Deanne grew up and started her full-time music career ten years ago!

Inspired by the great Canadian jazz legend, The Alberta Lounge features two new tunes of Deanne's ("The Alberta Lounge" and "If You Were Here Today"). She also made sure to include two of Oscar's originals, the haunting ("Hymn To Freedom") and tender ballad ("When Summer Comes"). The rest were chosen from his vast repertoire, such as Lionel Hampton and Jeri Jones's tune ("Je ne Sais Pas,") for which Deanne had the utmost honour of writing original French lyrics. The album also has a remarkable jazz-funk cover of Jorge Ben Jor's ("Mas Que Nada" ), which Deanne sings in Portuguese and adds vocal harmonies for extra fun.

Deanne recruited some of Montreal's premier jazz talent for the project, including pianist Taurey Butler, bassist Morgan Moore, and drummer Richard Irwin. Also guesting on the album are long-time Canadian pals pianist Paul Shrofel and guitarist Steve Raegele.

Throughout, Deanne shines as a first-rate vocal stylist. Her contemporary style is still deeply rooted in the jazz tradition but is unafraid of pushing the envelope. This anniversary album is a dedication to all Canadians. To quote Oscar, "People are Canada's greatest resource."https://deannematley.bandcamp.com/album/the-alberta-lounge-lp

Personnel: Deanne Matley - Vocals; Taurey Butler - Piano; Morgan Moore - Bass; Richard Irwin - Drums; Paul Shrofel - Piano; Steve Raegele - Guitar

The Alberta Lounge (Hommage Oscar Peterson)