Sunday, November 13, 2022

Nathaniel Cross - The Description Is Not The Described

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 27:21
Size: 62,9 MB
Art: Front

(7:13) 1. Goodbye For Now
(4:30) 2. Charge It To The Game
(8:23) 3. Light In The Darkness
(7:14) 4. Who Looks Inside, Awakes

Trombonist Nathaniel Cross is a key presence on London's alternative jazz scene, just like his brother, Theon Cross, who plays tuba in Shabaka Hutchings' Sons of Kemet. Until now, however, Nathaniel has probably been better known among his fellow musicians than with the general public, for he has been most active behind the scenes as a session musician and arranger. Among other major names Cross has worked with are his longtime friend, drummer and producer Moses Boyd, on whose Mercury Prize nominated Dark Matter (Exodus, 2020) Cross played and arranged four of the ten tracks, singers Zara McFarlane and Macy Gray, and grime stars Stormzy and Kano.

The Description Is Not The Described should raise Cross' public profile considerably. A four-track EP coming in at around thirty minutes, it is packed with positive, uplifting jazz which in trademark London style augments its jazz foundation with elements of other musics, including calypso, Afro-Cuban, hip hop and broken beat. As well as Cross, the core band features two other cracking horn players, trumpeter Dylan Jones of Ezra Collective and tenor saxophonist Richie Garrison, another ranking session musician, whose credits include pianist Robert Glasper, trumpeter Roy Hargrove and saxophonist Soweto Kinch. Simon Mitchell is on keyboards and the drummer is Saleem Raman, a regular member of the house band at Ronnie Scott's.

The EP title is inspired by one of philosopher Jiddu Krishnamurti's maxims. Cross chose it because he feels it reflects the state of the world in 2021. "So many of us are caught up in labels and descriptions that we end up looking at people for what they are, rather than embrace them for who they are," he says. "No matter how detailed the description is, it will never capture the essence."

Opening track "Goodbye For Now" is dedicated to Cross' late father, who passed in March 2020 at a tragically young age. Its opening bars make touching references to the signature ostinatos of John Coltrane's "A Love Supreme" and Pharoah Sanders' "The Creator Has A Master Plan." The track includes a short extract from a tape-recorded conversation between Cross, when he was a toddler, and his father, from a cassette which Cross found when he was sorting out his father's belongings after he passed. You can hear the love in both voices. The positive vibe is maintained in brief solos traded by Cross, Garrison and Jones (three from each of them). "Charge It To The Game" and "Light In The Darkness" are similarly vibrant, with more fine solos. The tempo, but not the heat, decreases a little on the closer, "Who Looks Inside, Awakes," a maxim coined by the psychoanalyst Carl Jung. Always good advice, it is newly appropriate in this age of social media, suggesting one looks for validation inside oneself rather than in the number of likes generated by tweets and instagrams. The Description Is Not The Described is a stonking debut, all the more welcome for being overdue.By Chris May https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-description-is-not-the-described-nathaniel-cross-first-word-records

Personnel: Nathaniel Cross: trombone; Dylan Jones: trumpet; Richie Garrison: saxophone, tenor; Saleem Raman: drums; Simon Mitchell: keyboards.

The Description Is Not The Described

Barry Harris - For The Moment

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 77:34
Size: 177.6 MB
Styles: Bop, Piano jazz
Year: 1984/2000
Art: Front

[5:56] 1. I Love Lucy
[6:00] 2. My Heart Stood Still
[4:43] 3. Bean And The Boys
[5:50] 4. To Monk With Love
[2:55] 5. For The Moment
[7:09] 6. Chico The Man
[8:31] 7. Reflections Light Blue Well You Needn't Rhythm-A-Ning
[7:35] 8. Shaw Nuff
[5:02] 9. 7-9-3-4-0
[6:15] 10. Save Some For Later
[6:21] 11. Looking Glass
[5:03] 12. To Monk Wih Love
[6:09] 13. One More Blues

Throughout his career, pianist Barry Harris has kept the spirit of bebop and the music of Bud Powell and Thelonious Monk alive in his joyous and creative playing. For this live concert, Harris is heard in a trio with bassist Rufus Reid and drummer Leroy Williams. There is a four-song Thelonious Monk medley, five originals (including "To Monk With Love" and "For the Moment," which Harris played at Thelonious' funeral), "My Heart Stood Still," and a boppish version of the "I Love Lucy Theme." A delightful and enthusiastic set. ~Scott Yanow

For The Moment

Sheila Jordan - Better Than Anything: Live (Feat. Harvie S & Alan Broadbent)

Size: 150,1 MB
Time: 65:07
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Better Than Anything (Live) (6:37)
02. If I Had You (Live) (9:15)
03. The Best Thing For You (Live) (5:54)
04. I Concentrate On You (Live) (3:59)
05. Medley: You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To/Mourning Song/Japanese Dream/What'll I Do (Live) (13:55)
06. Confirmation (Live) (5:53)
07. Waltz For Debby (Live) (4:24)
08. Falling In Love With Love (Live) (8:38)
09. The Caterpillar Song (Live) (6:27)

One of the most consistently creative of all jazz singers, Sheila Jordan has a relatively small voice, but has done the maximum with her instrument. She is one of the few vocalists who can improvise logical lyrics (which often rhyme), she is a superb scat singer, and is also an emotional interpreter of ballads. Yet despite her talents, Jordan spent much of the 1960s and '70s working at a conventional day job. She studied piano when she was 11 and early on, sang vocalese in a vocal group. Jordan moved to New York in the 1950s, was married to Duke Jordan (1952-62), studied with Lennie Tristano, and worked in New York clubs. George Russell used her on an unusual recording of "You Are My Sunshine" and she became one of the few singers to lead her own Blue Note album (1962). However, it would be a decade before she appeared on records again, working with Carla Bley, Roswell Rudd, and co-leading a group with Steve Kuhn in the late '70s. Jordan recorded a memorable duet album with bassist Arild Andersen for SteepleChase in 1977, and has since teamed up with bassist Harvie Swartz on many occasions. By the 1980s, Sheila Jordan was finally performing jazz on a full-time basis and gaining the recognition she deserved 20 years earlier. She recorded as a leader (in addition to the Blue Note session) for East Wind, Grapevine, SteepleChase, Palo Alto, Blackhawk, and Muse, resurfacing in 1999 with Jazz Child. ~ Scott Yanow

Better Than Anything