Sunday, September 25, 2022

Hiromi Uehara - Silver Lining Suite

Styles: Piano
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:16
Size: 152,1 MB
Art: Front

( 9:57) 1. Silver Lining Suite: Isolation
( 7:11) 2. Silver Lining Suite: The Unknown
( 9:09) 3. Silver Lining Suite: Drifters
( 7:27) 4. Silver Lining Suite: Fortitude
( 7:57) 5. Uncertainty
( 5:29) 6. Someday
( 5:00) 7. Jumpstart
(10:01) 8. 11:49 PM
( 4:00) 9. Ribera del Duero

Never one to take a safe, familiar route, pianist Hiromi (Uehara) has composed a classical quintet for her superb new album performed by, well, a classical quintet. That’s to say that her keys merge with a standard string quartet (violinists Tatsuo Nishie and Sohei Birmann, violist Meguna Naka, cellist Wataru Mukai) to play a highly melodic four-part suite with complex arrangements, as well as five additional tracks. The “classical” in question is European classical, albeit with large jazz components.

First and foremost, all but one of the album’s nine tracks are intensely percussive and staccato. (The other, “Uncertainty,” is a mellifluous solo recital.) The effect tends to be less of Schumann and Brahms than, say, Penguin Café Orchestra or the theme from Downton Abbey. That said, there are delightful chamber-music moments in play: A third of the way through “The Unknown,” the suite’s second movement, Hiromi plays a series of flowing ascending chords, then allows pizzicato violins to scamper back down the scale as she doodles around them with single-note lines. On “11:49,” the strings come together to mark off a syncopation that ticks like the second hand on a stopwatch, then suddenly stops to let Hiromi imitate a decisive, if discordant, chime.

Each tune (again excepting “Uncertainty”) also leaves plenty of room for jazz-informed improvisations. Though the strings were ostensibly chosen for their facility with jazz language, in practice they merely accompany Hiromi’s jazz language, which is formidable. She plays giddy games with rhythm on “Isolation,” the suite’s opener; offers a thoughtfully energized counterstatement to the melancholia of the theme to “Drifters” (the third movement); and turns the wistfulness in the title of “Someday” into foot-stamping impatience.

Recorded while quarantining in Tokyo, Silver Lining Suite came about due to unique circumstances that make its music unlikely to enter Hiromi’s regular performing repertoire. It should, however, enter your listening one.
https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/hiromi-silver-lining-suite-concord-jazz/

Personnel: Hiromi Uehara – piano; Wataru Mukai – cello; Meguna Naka – viola; Tatsuo Nishie – violin; Sohei Birmann – violin

Silver Lining Suite

Various - The Best Of The 80s

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:31
Size: 106.5 MB
Styles: Pop, Rock, New Wave
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[3:26] 1. The Buggles - Video Killed The Radio Star
[3:30] 2. Blondie - Call Me
[3:58] 3. Squeeze - Tempted
[8:54] 4. Soft Cell - Tainted Love Where Did Our Love Go
[4:10] 5. Dexys Midnight Runners - Come On Eileen
[3:20] 6. Madness - Our House
[3:36] 7. Eurythmics - Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This)
[3:22] 8. The Fixx - One Thing Leads To Another
[3:54] 9. Frankie Goes To Hollywood - Relax
[4:10] 10. Tears For Fears - Everybody Wants To Rule The World
[4:04] 11. Robert Palmer - Addicted To Love

The Best Of The '80s: The Millennium Collection attempts to capture the musical trends of the decade in a dozen songs, including the Fixx's "One Thing Leads to Another," the Buggles' "Video Killed the Radio Star," and Steve Winwood's "Higher Love." Blondie's "Call Me," the Eurhythmics' "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)," and Soft Cell's "Tainted Love/Where Did Our Love Go" are some of the album's other highlights. By concentrating on new wave and pop hits rather than trying to document every sound of the '80s, The Best of the '80s may not quite live up to its name, but it does present a fairly cohesive and entertaining mix of some of the decade's catchiest singles. ~ Heather Phares

Digitally remastered by David Schultz (DigiPrep Mastering, Hollywood, California).

The Best Of The 80s

Martin Speake - Generations

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:36
Size: 125,3 MB
Art: Front

( 3:56)  1. My Melancholy Baby
(10:12)  2. I'm a Fool to Want You
( 7:54)  3. In Love In Vain
( 7:20)  4. I Wish I Knew
( 8:37)  5. Jitterbug Waltz
( 6:07)  6. All The Way
( 6:17)  7. Donna Lee
( 4:10)  8. Just A Gigolo

British altoist Martin Speake isn't as well-known as he ought to be, but he may well be the clearest successor to the unadorned, warm-toned approach of the legendary Lee Konitz. But while Konitz has undeniably led a career defined by diversity, Speake has stretched considerably farther, with albums ranging from the Indo centric The Journey (Black Box, 2004) and uniquely modern, guitar-centric take on Charlie Parker (Jazzizit, 2005), to accessible free improvisation with percussionist Mark Sanders on Spark (Pumpkin, 2007) and original composition with an all-star band on Change of Heart (ECM, 2006). Generations harkens back to his intriguingly minimalist take on standards, Exploring Standards (33 Jazz, 2003), but instead of a saxophone trio turning a variety of well-heeled tunes into concise miniatures, Generations features a quartet that lets the music stretch out further. Generations refers to a quartet of players ranging from youthful pianist Barry Green to middle- aged Speake bassist Dave Green and American drummer Jeff Williams, who still has plenty of years left in him but is now heading into senior citizen territory. It also references Speake's choice of material largely well-known tunes that date as far back as "My Melancholy Baby" (1912) and "Jitterbug Waltz" (1930) to Generation's most recent song, the 1957 Van Heusen/Cahn chestnut, "All the Way."

Speake's relationship with Williams dates back four years to a chance meeting at one of Speake's gigs in the UK. Since then they've worked together occasionally in different contexts, and while this quartet is new there's a comfort level and relaxed ambience that feels as though they've been playing together for years. The group kicks things up on the bebop classic "Donna Lee," but takes its good time getting there, with Speake beginning on his own and implicitly defining the tune's changes through improvised melody alone. He's joined by Barry Green for some in tandem interplay before Dave Green enters, with Williams not completing the picture until well into the tune, signalling the quartet to play the familiar, serpentine melody...then bringing things to a full stop, only to begin the same process again but at a brighter tempo. It's a strong example of how Speake has always managed to find fresh ways to cover familiar terrain. 

But even when the group is playing with great energy as it does on an unexpectedly up-tempo opener, "My Melancholy Baby," which starts with a fiery exchange between Speake and Williams it never seems to break a sweat. A lengthy look at the appropriately triste ballad, "I'm a Fool to Want You," features Speake at his most lyrical, even as he scopes out new corners on an extended solo that's supported with increasing verve by Barry Green, who takes an equally strong solo defined by broad dynamics and nuanced variation. Generations is a decidedly mainstream effort for Speake, but as ever he's still finding subtle ways to push the envelope. The material may be familiar, but the approaches are new, making Generations an appealing disc that's never short on substance.By John Kelman  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/generations-martin-speake-pumpkin-records-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Martin Speake: alto saxophone; Barry Green: piano; Dave Green: double-bass; Jeff Williams: drums.

Generations

Joe Coughlin - Dedicated to You

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:10
Size: 136,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:42) 1. When Your Lover Has Gone
(3:37) 2. On Green Dolphin Street
(6:33) 3. Lush Life
(5:39) 4. It Could Happen to You
(6:07) 5. They Say It's Wonderful
(4:12) 6. Kiss & Run
(3:56) 7. Autumn Serenade
(4:35) 8. My Ship
(5:40) 9. My One and Only Love
(4:34) 10. Who Cares
(4:58) 11. Nature Boy
(6:31) 12. Dedicated to You

Multi-award winning jazz vocalist Joe Coughlin's career has spanned 4 decades. He's one of the rare breed of singers able to inhabit and truly flourish in the land where jazz meets the great American Song Book. Evident from his first eponymously titled release 40 years ago, it continues to this day where he is reunited with pianist Bernie Senen­sky and drummer Terry Clarke, both of whom performed on that first recording.

Joe cites Johnny Hartman as an early influence when, as a teenager he began to develop an interest in and talent for vocal jazz. Joe and Johnny have also shared sidemen, both having recorded with Lorne Lofsky, Chris Connor and Buff Allen. Over the years, Joe has honed his craft and developed his own sound although the nods to Hartman and Sinatra are still evident. Along with Canadian jazz icons Bernie Senensky and Terry Clarke, joining Joe on this recording are Neil Swainson on bass, a true jazz heavyweight and consummate tenor player, Ryan Oliver. Not surprisingly, the result is impressive.

The album opens with an uptempo, swinging rendition of Eino Swan's "When Your Lover Has Gone", a main­stay of the Hartman and Sinatra catalogue and takes us on a voyage through that Great American Song Book with stops along the way including a magnificent (perhaps definitive) version of Billy Strayhorn's "Lush Life". The deep connection and empathy among Joe and the band members is evident throughout this truly splendid journey.

Personnel: Joe Coughlin – voice; Bernie Senensky – piano; Neil Swainson – bass; Terry Clarke – drums; Ryan Oliver – tenor saxophone

Dedicated to You