Friday, September 2, 2022

Ernie Andrews - Girl Talk

Styles: Vocal And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:38
Size: 112,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:07) 1. Girl Talk
(5:17) 2. Don't Touch Me
(4:47) 3. Old Man River
(4:45) 4. I Want to Be Loved
(4:14) 5. I Only Have Eyes for You
(5:10) 6. Everybody's Somebody Fool
(4:03) 7. Once in a Lifetime
(5:54) 8. A Cottage for Sale
(3:51) 9. That's What I Thought You Said
(6:24) 10. It Might as Well Be Spring

There were so few male jazz singers active at the beginning of the 21st century that it was a good time to appreciate the singing of veteran Ernie Andrews. For this set, he is joined by a four-piece rhythm section that includes pianist Aaron Graves and guitarist Dom Minasi, plus either Teddy Edwards or Houston Person on tenor. Andrews is quite expressive and bluesy throughout the set, and in particularly fine form on Edwards' "Don't Touch Me," "Everybody's Somebody's Fool," "That's What I Thought You Said" (which is humorous, if repetitive), and "A Cottage for Sale," even if the words for "Girl Talk" are long overdue to be retired. Recommended.~Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/girl-talk-mw0000006645

Girl Talk

Dave Brubeck - On Time

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:24
Size: 111,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:23) 1. Take Five
(6:42) 2. Blue Rondo à la Turk (Album Version)
(1:59) 3. Unsquare Dance
(6:59) 4. Out Of Nowhere
(4:13) 5. Somewhere
(1:57) 6. There'll Be Some Changes Made
(5:50) 7. You Go to My Head
(5:54) 8. Besame Mucho (Album Version)
(4:45) 9. Win A Few, Lose a Few
(4:38) 10. Forty Days

In the 1950s and '60s, few American jazz artists were as influential, and fewer still were as popular, as Dave Brubeck. At a time when the cooler sounds of West Coast jazz began to dominate the public face of the music, Brubeck proved there was an audience for the style far beyond the confines of the in-crowd, and with his emphasis on unusual time signatures and adventurous tonalities, Brubeck showed that ambitious and challenging music could still be accessible. And as rock & roll began to dominate the landscape of popular music at the dawn of the '60s, Brubeck enjoyed some of his greatest commercial and critical success, expanding the audience for jazz and making it hip with young adults and college students.

David Warren Brubeck was born in Concord, California on December 6, 1920. Brubeck grew up surrounded by music his mother was a classically trained pianist and his two older brothers would become professional musicians and he began receiving piano lessons when he was four years old. Brubeck showed an initial reluctance to learn to read music, but his natural facility for the keyboard and his ability to pick up melodies by ear allowed him to keep this a secret for several years. His father worked as a cattle rancher, and in 1932, his family moved from Concord to a 45,000-acre spread near the foothills of the Sierras. As a teenager, Brubeck was passionate about music and performed with a local dance band in his spare time, but he planned to follow a more practical career path and study veterinary medicine. However, after enrolling in the College of the Pacific in Stockton, California, Brubeck played piano in local night spots to help pay his way, and his enthusiasm for performing was such that one of his professors suggested he would be better off studying music. Brubeck followed this advice and graduated in 1942, though several of his instructors were shocked to learn that he still couldn't read music.

Brubeck left college as World War II was in full swing, and he was soon drafted into the Army; he served under Gen. George S. Patton, and would have fought in the Battle of the Bulge had he not been asked to play piano in a Red Cross show for the troops. Brubeck was requested to put together a jazz band with his fellow soldiers, and he formed a combo called "the Wolfpack," a multi-racial ensemble at a time when the military was still largely segregated. Brubeck was honorably discharged in 1946, and enrolled at Mills College in Oakland, California, where he studied under the French composer Darius Milhaud. Unlike many composers in art music, Milhaud had a keen appreciation for jazz, and Brubeck began incorporating many of Milhaud's ideas about unusual time signatures and polytonality into his jazz pieces. In 1947, Brubeck formed a band with several other Mills College students, the Dave Brubeck Octet. However, the Octet's music was a bit too adventurous for the average jazz fan at the time, and Brubeck moved on to a more streamlined trio with Cal Tjader on vibes and percussion and Ron Crotty on bass. Brubeck made his first commercial recordings with this trio for California's Fantasy Records, and while he developed a following in the San Francisco Bay Area, a back injury Brubeck received during a swimming accident prevented him from performing for several months and led him to restructure his group.

In 1951, the Dave Brubeck Quartet made their debut, with the pianist joined by Paul Desmond on alto sax; Desmond's easygoing but adventurous approach was an ideal match for Brubeck. While the Quartet's rhythm section would shift repeatedly over the next several years, in 1956 Joe Morello became their permanent drummer, and in 1958, Eugene Wright took over as bassist. By this time, Brubeck's fame had spread far beyond Northern California; Brubeck's recordings for Fantasy had racked up strong reviews and impressive sales, and along with regular performances at jazz clubs, the Quartet began playing frequent concerts at college campuses across the country, exposing their music to a new and enthusiastic audience that embraced their innovative approach. Brubeck and the Quartet had become popular enough to be the subject of a November 8, 1954 cover story in Time Magazine, only the second time that accolade had been bestowed on a jazz musician (Louis Armstrong made the cover in 1949). In 1955, Brubeck signed with Columbia Records, then America's most prestigious record company, and his first album for the label, Brubeck Time, appeared several months later.
(cont.) https://www.allmusic.com/artist/dave-brubeck-mn0000958533/biography

On Time

Kent Jordan - Essence

Styles: Flute Jazz
Year: 1988
File: MP3@160K/s
Time: 40:21
Size: 47,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:26) 1. Curtain Call
(5:01) 2. Essence
(5:27) 3. Rio
(4:33) 4. Well You Needn't
(4:51) 5. Moments Notice
(6:39) 6. Stella by Starlight
(6:21) 7. Stablemates

Flutist Kent Jordan's third Columbia set is far superior to his first two rather commercial efforts (No Question About It and Night Aire). Jordan is well-featured on four standards (including "Well You Needn't," which finds him switching effectively to piccolo, and "Moment's Notice"), two tunes by bassist Elton Heron, and Wayne Shorter's "Rio" in a variety of instrumental settings.

With such sidemen as pianists Kenny Barron and Billy Childs, guitarist Kevin Eubanks, bassists Dave Holland and Ron Carter, drummers Jack DeJohnette and Al Foster, and (on the opening "Curtain Call") trumpeter/brother Marlon Jordan and tenor saxophonist Branford Marsalis, among others, Jordan interacts with an all-star cast. Most of the music is fairly straight-ahead, and throughout, the flutist realizes some of the potential that was wasted on his first two recordings.~Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/essence-mw000019508

Personnel: Flute – Kent Jordan; Bass – Dave Holland, Elton Heron; Drums – Al Foster, Tommy Campbell; Piano – Billy Childs, Kenny Barron; Tenor Saxophone – Branford Marsalis; Trumpet – Marlon Jordan

Essence

Pete Malinverni - On The Town, Pete Malinverni Plays Leonard Bernstein

Styles: Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:52
gwo Size: 135,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:04) 1. New York New York
(5:36) 2. Lucky to Be Me
(5:18) 3. Somewhere
(5:33) 4. Cool
(6:05) 5. Simple Song
(6:00) 6. I Feel Pretty
(5:56) 7. Lonely Town
(5:04) 8. Some Other Time
(8:04) 9. It’s Love
(6:08) 10. A Night on the Town

Pianist Pete Malinverni's album, On the Town, is subtitled "Plays Leonard Bernstein," and it's an homage he has wanted to put on record for many years ever since he met Bernstein in person while performing at an opening-night party for a production of the opera Tosca at the Met in NYC. Bernstein, he recalls, spent much of the evening hanging around the piano, not with his more celebrated dinner companions. ("Real musicians want to hang out with the band," Malinverni says).

And Bernstein was a real musician, one who loved jazz as well as classical music, as Stan Kenton learned one evening when Bernstein was in the audience for a performance by the Kenton Orchestra of the composer's score for West Side Story. Afterward, Bernstein approached Kenton and said simply, "My music has never sounded better."

Bernstein's music sounds pretty good here too, thanks to Malinverni's discerning piano and unerring support from his blue-chip rhythm section: bassist Ugonna Okegwo and drummer Jeff Hamilton. The music with two exceptions is from Bernstein's Broadway oeuvre (On the Town, West Side Story, Wonderful Town). The outliers are the endearing "Simple Tune" from Bernstein's "Mass" and "(A Night) on the Town," Malinverni's clever harmonic synthesis of several Bernstein tunes, which rings down the curtain.

Bernstein's uncanny ear for a lovely melody is everywhere present, as on "Lucky to Be Me," "Somewhere," "I Feel Pretty," "Lonely Town," "Some Other Time" and "It's Love," each one given its due with a masterful treatment by the trio. The opener, "New York New York," isn't the familiar paean to the Big Apple by John Kander and Fred Ebb but the ebullient anthem sung by a trio of sailors on one-day leave in On the Town.

Malinverni and his mates give each song their tender love and care, refreshing a series of masterworks in a way that surely would have brought a smile to Bernstein's lips and perhaps a tear or two to his eyes. Malinverni is a superb pianist, and there is simply no rhythm section that could lend more earnest and agreeable support than Okegwo and Hamilton. Blend in music by the incomparable Leonard Bernstein, and what's not to like?~Jack Bowers https://www.allaboutjazz.com/on-the-town-pete-malinverni-plays-leonard-bernstein-pete-malinverni-planet-arts-records

Personnel: Pete Malinverni: piano; Ugonna Okegwo: bass; Jeff Hamilton: drums.

On The Town, Pete Malinverni Plays Leonard Bernstein