Friday, September 23, 2022

Josefine Cronholm, Kirk Knuffke, Thommy Andersson - Near the Pond

Styles: Contemporary Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:34
Size: 90,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:50) 1. Clara Mathilda's Dream
(4:17) 2. I Don't Know
(3:57) 3. White Shoulders
(3:27) 4. Dozen a Day
(3:05) 5. Subway
(3:48) 6. One Wish
(4:45) 7. I Sang
(1:30) 8. Wrong with You
(3:50) 9. One for All
(4:01) 10. Near the Pond

The most notable qualities of this set are the balances finely struck between tentativeness and assertiveness, between reflection and improvisatory fire, both of which effectively serve to place it in a category of its own, one that’s informed by both art song and some of the more rarefied elements of contemporary jazz.

All these points are brought home in the opening Clara Mathilda’s Dream, a piece which has the air of a Tove Jansson short story about it. The lyricism is restrained, yet the lack of contrivance ensures no casual definition will suffice. Comparatively speaking, the following I Don’t Know is marked by an earthiness that’s at odds with what sounds like an uncredited mbira; Knuffke’s cornet solo pays a kind of homage to the setting.

Initially Dozen A Day hints less than coyly at ECM-type atmospherics, but it soon becomes clear that there’s business afoot quite at odds with that idea. Knuffke’s work is that of a musician conscious of the passing moments and leaving a telling stain on them.

Cronholm’s One Wish mines a seam of minimalism but pulls off the not inconsiderable trick of making it compelling. Wollesen’s vibraphone is the principal instrument of colouration, while a brief burst of Cronholm scatting makes for contrast before the reiteration of the two-word title.

The title track, with Cronholm and Knuffke harmonising vocally at first, has the quality of lamentation about it but avoids becoming mired in melancholy principally through the latter’s restrained cornet declamations and a brooding percussion and strings bed. Here, as elsewhere, the restraint is intriguing as opposed to distancing, which makes the prospect of returning to this set in the future an enticing one. By Nic Jones https://jazzjournal.co.uk/2021/09/07/josefine-cronholm-kirk-knuffke-thommy-andersson-near-the-pond/

Personnel: Vocals, Percussion – Josefine Cronholm; Vocals – Kirk Knuffke; Bass, Arranged By [String] – Thommy Andersson; Cello – Melissa Coleman; Cornet, Drums, Vibraphone, Percussion – Kenny Wollesen; Viola – Lena Fankhauser, Marta Potulska

Near the Pond

Ksenia Parkhatskaya - Colours

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:48
Size: 86,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:35) 1. For Saturdays
(4:01) 2. In My Room
(4:35) 3. How Long
(6:00) 4. Close Your Eyes
(3:42) 5. Fear
(3:20) 6. Behind My Eyes
(3:10) 7. Standing in the distance
(4:33) 8. Rose and Blue
(3:47) 9. Green Eyes

Lionel Messi has left Barcelona but excellence hasn't. Barcelona-based Ksenia Parkhatskaya is a performer whose skills are as varied in the creative arts as Senor Messi's are on the football pitch. The breadth of her talent is unique making it difficult to excel in one thing, but blessed as she is, she excels in all she attempts. In this case it's with the help of her husband and a group of international players.

Parkhatskaya's successful debut as a singer-songwriter is Colours. Of the 9 songs on the recording she and her husband wrote 8. "Close your Eyes," the only song not written by them, was written by the "Queen of Tin Pan Alley." Irving Berlin gave Bernice Petkere the moniker for penning that song and some other songs favored by jazz musicians like "Lullaby of the Leaves."

Parkhatskaya has gained notice as a dancer with the Paris Opera Orchestra and Christian McBride. She's also been the modeling face of Italy's largest phone company. The video made for "Fear" has been nominated in several categories at the International Fashion Film Awards. It's a dark song with a positive ending. When talking about her songwriting with her husband and bassist she had this to say..."Some songs paint a deep blue haunting loneliness, red inner turmoil or grey melancholy. Others paint a golden dawn full of hope and youth, a purple milky way where all things intertwine and connect, a green endless ocean of the eyes of a loved one. Play, musicianship, storytelling and individuality are the core ideas of my work."

Having grown up in Russia, English is not her first language but she shows facility in Shakespeare's language; her lyrics do have a poetic quality, maybe derived from her Irish husband, co-producer and co-composer David Duffy. The rich, sometimes sombre vocals, tell stories that are at times both personal and cinematic.

Barcelona's almost legendary (legends per some people's point of view can only be dead) Joan Chamorro, has influenced this international band whose roots spread from Russia, Ireland, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Brazil and Cuba. Barcelona has become a jazz hotbed. Chamorro's impact on this youthful gathering includes pianist Marc Martin who played in the Saint Andreu Big Band founded by Chamorro. Martin intros, solos and dialogues with Parkhatskaya and Duffy in a trio format version of "How Long," a noirish romance from its opening line..."Friday night in a busy bar."

Cuban trumpeter Carlos Sarduy is currently on tour with Richard Bona. His soulful sound fills a smoke- filled room version of "Close Your Eyes." Frank Sinatra pal Alec Wilder said the song had a self-consciousness whose fictional narrator comes off as a "shopgirl Shakespeare." But Wilder also said it was well-written music. Don't worry Bernice Petkere, the jazz world in the persons of Arthur Prysock, Benny Goodman, Stacey Kent, Kurt Elling, and now Parkhatskaya has embraced your song.

So far Shakespeare has come up twice before. Here's a third. The lyrics of "Behind My Eyes," deal with a psychology similar to the Bard's metaphysical treatment of isolation in "Hamlet." The award-winning 2020 video of "Rose and Blue" was released in collaboration with German animators Julie Boehm & Marc Zimmerman. Dedicated to Parkhatskaya's mother, it tells its story in stunning color. Sarduy's trumpet and Parthatskaya's voice blend with heartfelt lyricism.

Duffy's bass intro sets the tone for the dreamscape melody of "Standing in the Distance." Parkhatskaya's vocal is both a haunted and haunting echo of Katie Melua. Besides the bass, Duffy's synthesizer and Martin's piano are the only accompaniment, a hard-to-forget minimalist treatment. The final track is the light-hearted "Green Eyes." A sunny-side-of-the-street vocal, Gabriel Amargant's saxophone and Martin's organ add joy to the palette of colours.

The artwork on the album cover is credited to Evgenia Parhatskaja. Without doubt talent runs in the family. Evgenia is an artistic sister. All the musicians contribute to an outstanding singer-songwriter debut. Next time you're in Barcelona, find a spot to listen to world-class jazz. It is a city filled with music and colours. By William H. Snyder https://www.allaboutjazz.com/colours-ksenia-parkhatskaya-ksenia-parkhatskaya-jazzville-productions

Personnel: Ksenia Parkhatskaya: voice / vocals; David Duffy: bass, acoustic; Anton Jarl: drums; Marc Martin: piano; Gabriel Armagant: saxophone; Gilles Estoppey: keyboards; Carlos Sarduy Dimet: trumpet; Alan Sousa: percussion; Ferran Donatelli: guitar; Keelan Kenny: guitar, steel; Hugh Dillion: guitar.

Colours

Martin Speake - My Ideal

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 40:12
Size: 92.0 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[5:53] 1. Everything Happens To Me
[4:13] 2. My Ideal
[4:06] 3. What Is This Thing Called Love
[4:39] 4. So In Love
[5:40] 5. Loverman
[3:05] 6. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
[3:34] 7. Stardust
[5:36] 8. How Insensitive
[3:22] 9. You Must Believe In Spring

British alto saxophonist Speake duets with a regular Transatlantic associate, the composer and pianist Ethan Iverson - better known as one-third of the lively and now fashionable genre-breakout band the Bad Plus. Although that full-on trio's robust irony, percussion-driven ferocity and raucous reworking of old pop hits is on another, noisier planet to these stripped-down duets exploring standards and ballads, including Michel Legrand's You Must Believe in Spring and a variety of Cole Porters, Jerome Kerns and a Jobim. But Speake's soft tone and undemonstrative audacity found an excellent counterpoise in Iverson, who is as likely to veer off into streams of classical arpeggios as he is to play swing or stride, though he does plenty of those too.

This music was recorded in December 2002 (and produced by Iain Ballamy, no stranger to saxophone understatement) when the pair were touring the UK, and their absorbing live show is recalled by Iverson's technically-sweeping free-classical upsurge after Speake's smoke-rings on Everything Happens to Me, the duo's limping, Monkish arrangement of Smoke Gets in Your Eyes, and the almost sinister idling saunter of Jobim's How Insensitive. Iverson's powers are probably better revealed in these bare surroundings than they are in the Bad Plus. ~John Fordham

My Ideal

Bob Baldwin - B Positive

Styles: Smooth Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:32
Size: 134,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:40) 1. Strength
(5:37) 2. Take the High Road (Just Crush It)
(5:49) 3. Summertime 3000 (Don't You Cry)
(4:02) 4. B Positive
(6:25) 5. A Woman Like You
(4:48) 6. Let's Rewind
(5:20) 7. Keep Your Spirit
(5:33) 8. You Got This
(4:54) 9. All My Life
(4:57) 10. Believe
(5:23) 11. Rejuvenate

Bob Baldwin’s 34th studio offering is a continual stay-at-home event. The 33rd offering was a live record recorded in Elmsford, NY (The live ‘Stay-at-Home Series’). The latest offering, “B Positive” is a musical road map on how to keep your chin up high. More information here.

“Having faced near-death family illness, I’m glad I can take away some things that I can share with my listener,” says the native New Yorker Pianist. “Chances are, if I’ve gone through it, so has a lot more people”, says Baldwin. “If you just look at the titles, you’ll clearly see what my intent is…simply don’t lose control of the ship, no matter what goes down”.

Here’s Baldwin’s further takes on some of the project below: This record feels more like a rejuvenation of his old projects like “Cool Breeze”, hearkening back to fun and bouncy melodies, with just enough harmonic tension to make the hair on the back of your neck tingle and tickle.
https://smoothjazzdaily.wordpress.com/2022/08/16/bob-baldwin-b-positive/

B Positive