Sunday, October 9, 2022

Staci Griesbach - My George Jones Songbook

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:10
Size: 148,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:53) 1. The Grand Tour
(5:04) 2. He Stopped Loving Her Today
(4:41) 3. A Good Year for the Roses
(4:56) 4. He Thinks I Still Care
(4:39) 5. Walk Through This World with Me
(4:57) 6. A Picture of Me Without You
(5:17) 7. Golden Ring
(5:36) 8. Bartender's Blues
(2:55) 9. Why Baby Why
(4:33) 10. Take Me
(3:12) 11. White Lightning
(5:29) 12. You're Still on My Mind
(3:45) 13. Tender Years (Tes Tendres Années)
(4:06) 14. The Race Is On

Some might question why write an All About Jazz review of an album featuring songs made popular by George Jones? Duke Ellington had the answer when he said, "There are simply two kinds of music, good music and the other kind ... the only yardstick by which the result should be judged is simply that of how it sounds. If it sounds good it's successful; if it doesn't it has failed." Staci Griesbach and her colleagues have made good music according to the Duke's criterion.

Growing up on a working farm in Wisconsin, Griesbach heard plenty of country music George Jones, Patsy Cline, Shania Twain, etc. Now living in Santa Monica, she's made jazz vocal recordings featuring the three singers just listed. In 2016 she studied with Celia Vaz in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The range of feelings and genres in her latest recording, My George Jones Songbook, is a testament to her taste and talent in choosing music and musicians for her art.

At first blush the notion of George Jones music as the centerpiece for a jazz recording might provoke discomfort. He is considered the best male country vocalist of his time by many. A self-avowed alcoholic who told mostly melodramatic musical stories, George was damn good at bending the notes and his elbow.

Most importantly, though,, is that this recording is by a vocalist who has taken risks and succeeded. Griesbach's vocal range is exceptional. The first six cuts begin with three of George Jones' melancholy melodramas. She then switches to an upbeat mainstream scat, followed by a Bossa Nova with English and Portuguese lyrics segueing to a Cole Porter preface for Norro Wilson's and George Richey's tune. By the end of the six openers the listener knows the girl can sing.

The lucky #7 cut is reminiscent of Marcus Miller funk and SNL with Kevin Axt on bass, Joe Bagg on organ, Ryan Dragon on trombone, Willie Murillo on trumpet, Brian Clancy on tenor sax and Jake Reed on drums complementing the lyric's sarcasm.

Number 8 in her songbook is James Taylor's "Bartender Blues, a country song penned before country was cool. Taylor once said George Jones could bend notes like a pedal steel guitarist. On Griesbach's "Grand Tour" she bends her voice with the Rich Hinman pedal steel guitar enough to make a grown man or woman cry.

By now you get the idea. My George Jones Songbook is more than a compendium of George Jones' hits. The last six cuts are as varied as the others. "White Lightning" was written by J.P. Richardson, known to most rock'n'rollers as The Big Bopper back in the day. Fiddle player Stuart Duncan is showcased on "Why Baby Why," the closest to pure country music on the recording, understandable since the harmonic obstacles to changing it are, if not insurmountable, unrealistic.

Griesbach's "Take Me" is as close to third stream music as a George Jones song will ever get. She ends the piece with what might be considered a tip of the hat to Judi Silvano and Joe Lovano echoes of smooth jazz in her dialogue with Bob Sheppard on tenor. Griesbach becomes a Francophile by using Johnny Halladay's French lyric for a light and breezy "Tender Years." She finishes that tune via a scat sing-along with pianist Jeremy Siskind.

Mention should be made of the nature of the arrangements. Jeremy Siskind, Tamir Hendelman, Otmaro Ruiz, Willie Murillo, Rahsaan Barber, and Addison Frei show considerable talent in the broad range of styles applied here. An example of their creativity is the use of Artyom Manukyan on cello for "He Stopped Loving Her Today." As an alternative to the pedal steel guitar, the cello adds an artistic element to what country music haters might consider an overwrought tear-jerker.

"He Stopped Loving Her Today" songwriter Bobby Braddock complimented Griesbach on this recording by saying she may have created a new musical genre he called "countryjazz...jazzneck...whatever." No insult intended to Mister Braddock, but as usual, the Duke said it best, speaking about the different kinds of music. "My George Jones Songbook" is good music.
By William H. Snyder https://www.allaboutjazz.com/my-george-jones-songbook-staci-griesbach-staci-griesbach

Personnel: Staci Griesbach: voice / vocals; Tamir Hendelman: piano; Jeremy Siskind: piano; Otmaro Ruiz: piano; Rahsaan Barber: saxophone; Addison Frei: piano; Jake Reed: drums; Kevin Axt: bass; Aaron Serfaty: percussion; Nando Raio: bass, acoustic; Bob Sheppard: saxophone, tenor; Willie Murillo: trumpet; Brian Clancy: saxophone, tenor; Bruce Forman: guitar; Ryan Dragon: trombone; Joe Bagg: piano; Rich Hinman: guitar, steel; Stuart Duncan: violin; Artyom Manukian: cello; John Hatton: bass, acoustic.

My George Jones Songbook

Dave McKenna - Dancing in the Dark

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1985
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:25
Size: 106,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:57)  1. By Myself
(2:45)  2. A Shine On Your Shoes
(4:05)  3. I See Your Face Before Me
(4:47)  4. Alone Together
(3:11)  5. I Guess I'll Have to Change My Plan
(3:27)  6. You and the Night and the Music
(3:46)  7. Dancing in the Dark
(4:25)  8. Something to Remember You By
(3:46)  9. New Sun in the Sky
(3:51) 10. Oh, But I Do
(4:22) 11. A Gal in Calico

The great swing pianist Dave McKenna performs 11 selections written by Arthur Schwartz, one of the lesser-known (but very talented) songwriters of the golden age of American popular music. Among the pieces that McKenna joyfully revives are "By Myself," "A Shine on Your Shoes," "I Guess I'll Have to Change My Plan," and "Dancing in the Dark." Bright, melodic treatments of classic music. 
~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/dancing-in-the-dark-mw0000188381

Jessica Williams Trio - Freedom Trane

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:20
Size: 131,5 MB
Art: Front

(8:50)  1. The Seeker
(6:19)  2. Lonnie's Lament
(6:11)  3. Freedom Trane
(5:20)  4. Paul's Pal
(6:42)  5. Prayer And Meditation
(8:56)  6. Just Words
(8:11)  7. Naima
(6:47)  8. Welcome

It is no coincidence that pianist Jessica Williams draws inspiration and energy from saxophonist John Coltrane, another iconoclast whose dogged pursuit of his individalistic muse stood in defiance of trends, customs, critics, and marketplace concerns. Like Coltrane, Williams prides herself in being relentlessly faithful to her own standards of how to play and how to market her music. While that enables her to be a fiercely independent talent, it has also made her an underrated one. On her solo piano outings, such as The Art of the Piano (Origin Records, 2009), Williams' playing is engaging while remaining serious and cerebral. Augmented on Freedom Trane by bassist Dave Captein and drummer Mel Brown, Williams shows off her ability to swing. Never loosing her impeccable sense of taste, Williams is downright frisky and playful on Coltrane and Sonny Rollins' "Paul's Pal" and, on the title track, she's bopping and grooving hard with Brown's timekeeping, which is right in the pocket. It's the sort of tune that demands another listen just as soon as it's over.

As a soloist in the trio format, Williams is simply incandescent and the musicians synchronize like a well-tuned machine. Freedom Trane is a homage to Coltrane's seminal A Love Supreme (Impulse!, 1965), but Williams' goal is not to emulate what Trane, pianist McCoy Tyner, bassist Jimmy Garrison and drummer Elvin Jones did in 1964, but to expand upon it. "Prayer and Meditation," one of four Williams originals, fits comfortably with a lovingly rendered interpretation of Coltrane's "Naima," where the Steinway 'B' gently caresses like a warm touch. The lush and verdant "Welcome" closes out this super session.

Williams reveals in the liner notes how Coltrane speaks to her as she writes:  John speaks through his horn: "no road is an easy one, but they all go back to God." God, for me, is us, all of us and everything; it's the sea and the sky and the stars. We are star-stuff, we are one vibration in a standing wave, and it doesn't matter if it's called God or Allah or Aum or Chi or Orgone. It's gravity and light-years and galaxies colliding and little kittens kittening and bodily love and that chill you get when you listen to great music or see a great painting or hear the sounds of the forest.

Maybe not everything Williams says scans completely, but it's possible to hear her making her way on a spiritual journey, and Freedom Trane provides that special sort of chill that comes from hearing great music—and this is most definitely great music, made by a great (and sadly underrated artist). This is a high quality and highly recommended performance by Williams, a consummate musician of astonishing grace, passion and skill. ~ Jeff Winbush https://www.allaboutjazz.com/freedom-trane-jessica-williams-origin-records-review-by-jeff-winbush.php
 
Personnel: Jessica Williams: piano; Dave Captein: bass; Mel Brown: drums

Freedom Trane

Enrico Rava & Fred Hersch - The Song Is You

Styles: Trumpet And Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:49
Size: 98,5 MB
Art: Front

(7:54) 1. Retrato em Branco e Preto
(4:17) 2. Improvisation
(5:55) 3. I’m Getting Sentimental Over You
(4:45) 4. The Song Is You
(7:09) 5. Child’s Song
(2:09) 6. The Trial
(6:47) 7. Misterioso
(3:50) 8. Round Midnight

Flashbacks pop up immediately on registering the instrumentation (flugelhorn and piano) and material (jazz standards and Great American Songbook ballads) on Enrico Rava and Fred Hersch's The Song Is You. Among them, Chet Baker and Paul Bley's Diane (Steeplechase, 1985) and Baker and Enrico Pieranunzi's The Heart Of The Ballad (Philology, 1988).

The Baker association is affirmed by The Song Is You's opening track, Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Retrato em Branco e Preto." Rava's intimate, caressing tone and Hersch's gentle accompaniment suggest that the album is not about to frighten the horses. But wait. That is only for starters. On the next track, "Improvisation," Rava and Hersch venture further out and they stay there for the rest of the disc. Chromaticism is off the menu, and lyricism is firmly centrestage, but the individual songs' harmonic structures are explored and stretched. So, too, is the historically received vibe of George Bassman's "I'm Getting Sentimental Over You," which here is so jumpy-jaunty as to border on the comical.

So, far from being simply an enjoyable wallow in nostalgia, The Song Is You travels down unfamiliar paths while, reassuringly, never losing sight of its starting points. Along the way are two originals, Rava's "The Trial" and Hersch's "Child's Song," which sit comfortably among their distinguished fellows.

Engrossing though the entire album is, the best moments are saved until last. Thelonious Monk's "Misterioso" and "Round Midnight," the latter for piano only, are exquisite. Every jazz fan probably knows each of these tunes as well as anything else one could name in the jazz standards canon, but Rava and Hersch's versions are as fresh and full of new promise as a spring morning. A quietly sensational album. By Chris May https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-song-is-you-enrico-rava-ecm-records

Personnel: Enrico Rava: trumpet; Fred Hersch: piano.

The Song Is You