Saturday, August 27, 2022

Kenny Garrett - Sounds from the Ancestors

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Sounds from the Ancestors

Etta Jones - Doin' What She Does Best

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

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

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

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

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

Doin' What She Does Best

Gato Barbieri - Che Corazon

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

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

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

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

Che Corazon

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

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

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

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

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

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

Live at Yoshi's, Vol. 1

Joey DeFrancesco - Trip Mode

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

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

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

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

R.I.P.

Born: April 10, 1971

Died: August 25, 2022

Trip Mode

Etta Jones - Easy Living

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

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

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

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

Easy Living

Michela Lombardi - Small Day Tomorrow

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Small Day Tomorrow

Gato Barbieri - The Impulse Story

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The Impulse Story