Thursday, September 1, 2022

Nellie McKay - La promesse

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:27
Size: 82,7 MB
Art: Front

(2:54) 1. You and me (radio edit)
(3:13) 2. Comment vas tu
(3:15) 3. Je te retrouverai
(2:45) 4. La promesse
(3:28) 5. Ma vie s'écrit comme ça
(3:43) 6. l'Enfant aux pieds nus
(3:21) 7. On rêve parfois
(2:58) 8. Tout ce qu'elle aime
(3:06) 9. Serre-moi (radio edit)
(3:01) 10. Un monde uni
(3:40) 11. You and me (album version)

A sharp and thoughtful artist lurking beneath the surface of a sunny, playful chanteuse, Nellie McKay is a singer and songwriter whose performing style is largely informed by vintage jazz and vocal pop, with occasional dashes of indie rock and hip-hop. McKay's songs are witty and stylish variations on the themes of the Great American Songbook (she's been compared to Cole Porter more than once), but often feature pointed satirical observations on politics and society. (On her website, McKay states, "Nellie is an annoyingly vocal advocate for feminism, civil rights and other deeply felt progressive ideals.") Born in London, England, McKay spent most of her first ten years living in Harlem, New York, and she developed a keen interest in retro fashions and female pop vocalists of the '40s and '50s.

After spending two years studying vocal jazz in New York City, McKay headed out on her own, and developed a following that led to her signing with Columbia Records. McKay's debut, 2004's Get Away from Me, was a critical favorite, but her insistence on doing things her own way led to her being dropped by her record label. Despite this, McKay continued to write and record on her own terms for a variety of imprints, earning praise for her songwriting on 2006's Pretty Little Head and 2007's Obligatory Villagers, while later demonstrating her skills as an interpretive vocalist, paying homage to Doris Day on 2009's Normal as Blueberry Pie and reworking classic rock and pop hits of the '60s on 2015's My Weekly Reader.

Nellie McKay was born in London, England on April 13, 1982. Her father, Malcolm McKay, was a novelist and television director, while her mother, Robin Pappas, was an actress. Nellie's parents divorced in 1984, and she lived a nomadic childhood with her mother, first moving to Harlem, New York, then relocating to Olympia, Washington after ten-year-old Nellie was mugged. She later settled in Mount Pocono, Pennsylvania, where she was something of a misfit, listening to Dinah Shore, Doris Day, and Jo Stafford records while reading up on stars of the '30s and '40s and developing a retro fashion sense. At the age of 16, McKay moved back to New York City to study jazz vocals at the Manhattan School of Music, but quit after two years, eager to launch her career. After dabbling in standup comedy, she began performing her own songs, musically rooted in classic styles but revealing a dry and often dark sense of humor as well as a keen social conscience while accompanying herself on the ukulele.

McKay began appearing at Manhattan night spots like the Sidewalk Cafe and Fez, and word of mouth led to a bidding war among record labels to sign her, with Columbia Records the winner. McKay released her debut album, Get Away from Me, in February 2004; produced by Geoff Emerick (whose résumé included work with the Beatles and Elvis Costello), the album earned rave reviews and was nominated for the 2004 Shortlist Music Prize, but it proved hard to market, especially after McKay butted heads with Columbia over her decision to make the debut a two-disc set. Further skirmishes with Columbia over her follow-up (much of which was financed by McKay herself) led to her parting ways with the label, and her self-produced sophomore effort, Pretty Little Head, was released in October 2006 on her own Hungry Mouse label, distributed by SpinART Records. By this time, McKay had made her Broadway debut, playing Polly Peachum in a production of Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill's The Threepenny Opera, which also featured Alan Cumming and Cyndi Lauper. Her performance earned her the Theater World Award for Outstanding Debut Performance.

After releasing two two-disc sets in a row, McKay made a more concise statement with 2007's Obligatory Villagers, a nine-song set that ran less than 30 minutes. McKay returned to the world of major labels when she signed with the venerable jazz label Verve Records; her first release for the label was Normal as Blueberry Pie: A Tribute to Doris Day, in which she paid homage to a major influence and fellow animal lover. The album was co-produced by McKay's mother, Robin Pappas, who also helped produce 2010's Home Sweet Mobile Home, which featured a guest appearance by David Byrne. (McKay has previously appeared on Byrne's concept album about Imelda Marcos, Here Lies Love, recorded in tandem with Fatboy Slim.) For the next several years, McKay primarily devoted herself to live work; she also wrote and staged musical performance pieces honoring the lives of celebrated felon Barbara Graham (I Want to Live!), environmental activist Rachel Carson (Silent Spring: It's Not Nice to Fool Mother Nature), transgender musician Billy Tipton (A Girl Named Bill: The Life and Times of Billy Tipton), and comedian Joan Rivers (The Big Molinsky Considering Joan Rivers).

She also appeared in the 2013 off-Broadway revue Old Hats with David Miner and Bill Irwin. In 2015, McKay returned with My Weekly Reader, in which she offered new interpretations of rock & roll songs of the '60s, running the gamut from the Kinks' "Sunny Afternoon" to the Mothers of Invention's "Hungry Freaks, Daddy." Released in 2018, Sister Orchid was McKay's third interpretative album, in which she put her own spin on ten classic jazz standards. Another standards set, the EP Bagatelles, arrived the following year and found McKay offering distinctive takes on classic songs like "How About You," "Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah," and "The Best Things in Life.
~Mark Deming https://www.allmusic.com/artist/nellie-mckay-mn0000382298/biography

La promesse

Angelika Niescier & Alexander Hawkins - Soul in Plain Sight

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:30
Size: 132,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:55) 1. Brawls And Squabbles
(4:57) 2. Arhythm Songy
(2:46) 3. Why Didn’t You?
(5:54) 4. Un:Tamed
(3:40) 5. Shipwrecked Words
(3:11) 6. Scops
(0:57) 7. Weft
(6:41) 8. Nexus
(4:30) 9. Metamorphose einer Karelle
(1:33) 10. Loom
(5:03) 11. As Hemispheres at Home
(3:45) 12. Limnetic Zone
(4:36) 13. Tar’ai
(1:56) 14. Scope

Some pairings were just meant to be. Exhibit one, Soul In Plain Sight by the duo of Angelika Niescier and Alexander Hawkins. Niescier, the Polish-born Germany-based saxophonist, met the British pianist Hawkins at the Berlin Jazzfest. Their mutual admiration led to a brief tour and this recording. The music succeeds here because of the musicians' balanced approach and compatible natures. Opening with the cleanse and purge of the improvised "Brawls And Squabbles," the pair spar with push/pull jabs. Hawkins hammers fisted notes while Niescier delivers squawks and overblown notes as this opening salvo announces this new partnership.

Of the fourteen tracks, eight are improvised, three were penned by Niescier and two by Hawkins. The lone cover is "Arhythm Songy" by Muhal Richard Abrams. Recorded in 1977 in a session with saxophonist Anthony Braxton, the composition links Niescier and Hawkins to both the AACM and Braxton. Hawkins would be engaged by Braxton to tour Europe in 2020 playing jazz and pop standards, which can be heard in the massive 13-CD box set Quartet (Standards) 2020 (New Braxton House, 2021) and Niescier draws much of her inspiration (and sound) from Braxton.

That connection can be heard or her Intakt recordings with Tyshawn Sorey and Christopher Tordini. The listener can can favor either musician's compositions or choose their free improvisations. Niescier's "Metamorphose Einerka Karelle" plays out as drunken bebop and Hawkins' "Scops" tinkle trinkles as an alluring ballad. The very brief "Weft," "Loom," and "Scope," which together don't add up to five minutes of music, are classics in miniature asking for an encore, as does this duo. More please.~ Mark Corroto
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/soul-in-plain-sight-angelika-niescier-alexander-hawkins-intakt-records

Personnel: Angelika Niescier: saxophone; Alexander Hawkins: piano.

Soul in Plain Sight

Tyler Mitchell featuring Marshall Allen - Dancing Shadows

Styles: Avant-Garde Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:56
Size: 111,1 MB
Art: Front

(7:24) 1. Interstellar Lowways
(4:22) 2. Spaced Out
(5:19) 3. Angels and Demons at Play
(3:19) 4. Skippy
(3:08) 5. Nico
(3:40) 6. Dancing Shadows
(2:35) 7. Carefree
(3:03) 8. Marshall the Deputy
(3:51) 9. Nico Revisited
(1:49) 10. Space Travelers
(6:13) 11. Enlightenment
(3:07) 12. A Call for All Demons

There's a buzz to Dancing Shadows that is akin to the first time one stumbled upon a late 1950s to late 1960s Blue Note, Riverside, Verve, Impulse! or Prestige recording and time just stopped and the music took you places you were eager to go whether you knew where you were going or not. You stared at the cover, the wall, into the new, opening world. It may well have been your first mind-altering experience without, (or in conjunction with) any of the pharmaceuticals of the time.

A great head with jaunty moves Dancing Shadows certainly is, and for that we owe bassist Tyler Mitchell a good deal of gratitude. Serving as the session's swing-spring anchor, Tyler gives the floor over to elder statesman and Sun Ra alum saxophonist Marshall Allen who, at the very creative age of 97, takes us loosely through a twelve-song set consisting of Tyler and Marshall originals, a couple of prime Sun Ra takes and "Skippy," an inverted bop bounce courtesy of Thelonious Monk that may leave you dancing on clouds.

Sounding like they all convened in a New York studio via Chicago and Hackensack, the remaining sextet Chris Hemingway tenor sax, Nicoletta Manzini alto sax. drummer Wayne Smith, and percussionist Elson Nascimento follow Tyler and Mitchell's lead with a fluid affinity that locks the listener in and moves him or her on. Just try to resist the groove to Sun Ra's 1966 gem "Interstellar Low Ways," a groove that has lost none of its power to sway. The title track is a hard bop free-fall with the horns ripping and declaring, tripping and daring the listener and the rhythm section to keep up. The trippy lure of "Angels and Demons," the brief, casual fire of "Care Free," the burst and blare of "Space Travelers," all add up to that rare rush that seems to get harder and harder to find. Listen to this one at the start of the day what watch how easy the day gets.~ Mike Jurkovic Mike Jurkovichttps://www.allaboutjazz.com/dancing-shadows-tyler-mitchell-mahakala-music

Personnel: Tyler Mitchell: bass; Marshall Allen: saxophone, alto; Chris Hemingway: saxophone, alto; Nicoletta Manzini: saxophone, alto; Wayne Smith: drums; Elson Nascimento: percussion.

Dancing Shadows

Buck Clayton - Back In Town, Still Around: Live In New York

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 94:51
Size: 217.1 MB
Styles: Mainstream jazz
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[8:04] 1. Lulu's Back In Town
[8:02] 2. Basin Street Blues
[4:18] 3. Ballin' The Jack
[7:21] 4. Medley: Misty/I'm Old Fashioned/Old Folks/Don't Take Your Love From Me
[3:55] 5. Big Noise From Winnetka
[5:44] 6. At The Jazz Band Ball
[4:09] 7. Wolverine Blues
[6:51] 8. When The Saints Go Marching In
[8:28] 9. Fidgety Feet
[5:18] 10. Medley: I Guess I'll Have To Change My Plan/Everything Happens To Me/Body And Soul
[7:11] 11. Ja Da
[5:59] 12. Indiana
[5:04] 13. Bye Bye Blackbird
[4:31] 14. All The Jazz Band Ball (Alt Vers)
[5:17] 15. Basin Street Blues (Alt Vers)
[4:34] 16. Original Dixieland One Step

An excellent bandleader and accompanist for many vocalists, including Billie Holiday, Buck Clayton was a valued soloist with Count Basie Orchestra during the '30s and '40s, and later was a celebrated studio and jam session player, writer, and arranger. His tart, striking tone and melodic dexterity were his trademark, and Clayton provided several charts for Basie's orchestra and many other groups. Clayton began his career in California, where he organized a big band that had a residency in China in 1934. When he returned, Clayton led a group and played with other local bands. During a 1936 visit to Kansas City, he was invited to join Basie's orchestra as a replacement for Hot Lips Page. Clayton was also featured on sessions with Lester Young, Teddy Wilson, and Holiday in the late '30s. He remained in the Basie band until 1943, when he left for army service. After leaving the army, Clayton did arrangements for Basie, Benny Goodman, and Harry James before forming a sextet in the late '40s. He toured Europe with this group in 1949 and 1950. Clayton continued heading a combo during the '50s, and worked with Joe Bushkin, Tony Parenti, and Jimmy Rushing, among others. He organized a series of outstanding recordings for Columbia in the mid-'50s under the title Jam Session (compiled and reissued by Mosaic in 1993). There were sessions with Rushing, Ruby Braff, and Nat Pierce. Clayton led a combo with Coleman Hawkins and J.J. Johnson at the 1956 Newport Jazz Festival, then reunited with Goodman in 1957 at the Waldorf Astoria. There was another European tour, this time with Mezz Mezzrow. He appeared in the 1956 film The Benny Goodman Story and played the 1958 Brussels World Fair with Sidney Bechet. Clayton later made another European visit with a Newport Jazz Festival tour. He joined Eddie Condon's band in 1959, a year after appearing in the film Jazz on a Summer's Day. Clayton toured Japan and Australia with Condon's group in 1964, and continued to revisit Europe throughout the '60s, often with Humphrey Lyttelton's band, while playing festivals across the country. But lip and health problems virtually ended his playing career in the late '60s. After a period outside of music, Clayton once again became active in music, this time as a non-playing arranger, touring Africa as part of a State Department series in 1977. He provided arrangements and compositions for a 1974 Lyttleton and Buddy Tate album, and did more jam session albums for Chiaroscuro in 1974 and 1975. He also became an educator, teaching at Hunter College in the early '80s. Clayton led a group of Basie sidemen on a European tour in 1983, then headed his own big band in 1987 that played almost exclusively his compositions and arrangements. That same year Clayton's extensive autobiography Buck Clayton's Jazz World, with Nancy Miller-Elliot, was published. ~bio by Ron Wynn

Back In Town, Still Around: Live In New York