Thursday, December 29, 2022

Swingle Singers - Swinging The Classics

Styles: Jazz, Bop, Cool
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:20
Size: 135,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:39) 1. Air For G String
(2:07) 2. Zortzico
(1:13) 3. Scherzo
(7:12) 4. Three Windows
(4:20) 5. Adagio
(5:04) 6. When I Am Laid In Earth
(2:14) 7. Tango In D Major
(1:29) 8. Etude Op. 25 No. 2
(3:33) 9. Vendome
(1:25) 10. Limoges, The Market
(4:17) 11. Little David's Fugue
(3:30) 12. Andante
(6:31) 13. Ricercare
(2:37) 14. Romance Espagnole
(4:53) 15. Alexander's Fugue
(2:09) 16. Short Fugue

Originally a French vocal band, founded in 1962 by Ward Swingle, specialized in singing classical songs with a capella/jazz arrangement. They were very popular in the USA, they won 3 Grammy Awards in 1964 and 1965. The French group disbanded in 1973, Ward went to England where he formed Swingle II with an expanded repertoire, he continued actively with the group until 1985. The Swingle Singers have continued, with various new members and with Ward as musical advisor, to this day.

The original double-quartet: Alto: Alice Herald - Anne Germain Soprano: Christiane Legrand - Jeanette Baucomont Tenor: Claude Germain - Ward Swingle (Arranger) Bass: Jean Cussac - José Germain

The current members are: Sopranos: Sara Brimer, Joanna Goldsmith-Eteson Altos: Clare Wheeler, Lucy Bailey Tenors: Christopher Jay, Richard Eteson (- 3/2010) Basses: Tobias Hug, Kevin Fox

They have performd and record under the names The Swingles, The New Swingle Singers and eventually, The Swingle Singers. Since the London group's incarnation, the group has never disbanded. https://www.jazzmusicarchives.com/artist/the-swingle-singers

Swinging The Classics

Malene Mortensen - Agony & Ecstacy

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2009
Time: 53:46
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 123,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:21) 1. Enigma
(5:34) 2. The Light Up Ahead
(5:21) 3. Eternal Three
(4:21) 4. Tidal Wave
(6:00) 5. Black Amy
(4:22) 6. Valentine
(6:02) 7. Into Your Heart
(5:24) 8. Tools And Rules
(4:24) 9. Seeds Of Summer
(4:28) 10. Transparent
(3:25) 11. Good At Goodbyes

Agony & Ecstacy is Malene Mortensen’s fi"h release. Her 2003 debut, Paradise, was produced by Niels Lan Doky, andKasper Villaume produced DATE WITH A DREAM from 2005.She recorded and released MALENE in 2006 with Chris Doky producing, and in the holiday season of 2007, she released TO ALL OF YOU, produced by Søren Siegumfeldt. Each album is the result of a unique collaboration between Malene, the session musicians and the producer, and eachalbum has its own unique atmosphere.

However, at 27, with a lot of studio experience behind her, Malene decided to take control of her new recording. No outside produ-cers, no guest musicians. Instead she took her road band into the recording studio to expand on their inspiring concert work.

Since 2007 the personnel in Malene’s band has consisted of four friends from Copenhagen’s Rhythmic Conservatory: Carl Mörner-Ringström (guitar), Magnus Hjorth (piano), Petter Eldh (bass) and Snorre Kirk (drums). Together they have play-ed over 100 concerts in Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Germany,Britain, France, Poland, and not least in Asia. It has been an intense development and the inspiration for this recording.

Malene’s repertoire has always included her own music and in part her own lyrics, but where her earlier releases also fea-tured well-known jazz standards and jazzed-up rock and pop songs, all tunes on Agony & Ecstacy are originals writtenby Malene herself or in collaboration with Carl or Magnus.Malene’s sound has taken a twist away from acoustic standard jazz towards something more electric an update of the jazz/rock fusion of the early 1980’s.

Fortunately, this cool, enticing, energetic and spellbindingmusic will raise the eyebrows of some jazz puritans, but it will also fascinate the rest of us. Audiences unaccustomed to jazz will love the interplay, the great solos, the guitar riffs and Malene’s virtuosic voice and musicality.

Agony & Ecstacy makes it clear that Malene Mortensen can write, and that she composes melodies that stay in your ears long after the tune is over. Her vocals have the con-viction and courage that give the songs a personal sound and carry emotions from Agony & Ecstacy. These are songs from a hard-working artist, continuously pursuing her own path.
http://www.malenemortensen.dk/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/09.-AE-engelsk-kopi-.pdf

Personnel: Malene Mortensen (voc), Carl Mörner Ringström (g), Magnus Hjorth (p, keys), Petter Eldh (b), Snorre Kirk (d, perc).

Agony & Ecstacy

George Colligan- King's Dream

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:48
Size: 153,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:05) 1. Clearing The Mind
(6:36) 2. Change
(5:47) 3. Daddy Go Bye Bye
(5:33) 4. Doom Sandwich
(7:46) 5. Golden Years
(5:21) 6. Blues For Dwayne Burno
(6:19) 7. King's Dream
(6:19) 8. Weightless, Rising Towards The Sun
(5:00) 9. Liam's Lament
(5:03) 10. Wishing For Things To Happen
(6:53) 11. Finally, A Rainbow

In this challenging era and complex world in which we live, we have to believe that good will and enlightenment will prevail over ignorance and hatred. By George Colligan

George Colligan expresses the complexities and conflicting emotions of our confusing, sometimes chaotic times with the November 11 release of King’s Dream (PJCE). Though not quite a sequel, the album builds on many of the themes presented on his previous solo album, 2018’s Nation Divided.

The 11 original compositions on King’s Dream (Colligan’s 36th album as a leader) are not all new: Some of them go as far back as 2008. But like all the best improvised jazz, the tunes become about the moment in which they’re being played in this case a very fraught moment. “It was and still is such an unusual time,” Colligan says. “Who knows what tomorrow brings? The music is a representation of that uncertainty.”

The variety of moods on the album help underscore that uncertainty. It moves from the wistful, bittersweet “Clearing the Mind” to the glorious funk of “Change”; from the hard-bitten “Blues for Dwayne Burno” to the lyrical balance of hope and trouble in “King’s Dream”; from the plaintive “Wishing for Things to Happen” to the sanguine “Finally a Rainbow.”

The title track of King’s Dream is also its centerpiece. Invoking the famous ideals of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the piece both echoes and questions that optimism, making for a statement both timely and timeless about American life while also serving as a microcosm for the album’s precarious position between glass-half-full and half-empty with glass-half-full perhaps taking the edge.

“In this challenging era and complex world in which we live, we have to believe that good will and enlightenment will prevail over ignorance and hatred,” Colligan writes in the album’s liner notes. “I don’t know whether music can make a difference, but I dedicate my album to those who believe in, as drummer Al Foster would say, ‘Peace, Love, and Jazz.’”

George Colligan was born December 29. 1969 in Summit, New Jersey, but considers his hometown to be Columbia, Maryland, where he grew up since about the age of 3. In the fourth grade he took up trumpet in the elementary school band, then got serious about the instrument in middle school around the time he discovered jazz from a neighbor who gave him a stack of Clifford Brown

Colligan went to Baltimore’s Peabody Institute, earning his degree in classical trumpet. While in Baltimore, though, he started teaching himself to play jazz licks on piano, soon getting gigs on the local scene, and suddenly found himself selling all his trumpets and becoming a professional pianist.

He shuttled back and forth between Baltimore and Washington, DC, mentoring with such musicians as Paul Carr, Gary Thomas, and Reuben Brown for several years before he made the leap to New York City in 1995. These associations meant that he already had some cachet on the New York scene when he arrived, and he was soon working with legendary figures like Eddie Henderson, Gary Bartz, and Lee Konitz, as well as recruiting the revered bassist Dwayne Burno and drummer Ralph Peterson for his own 1996 debut Activism.

His career continued to grow, collaborating fruitfully with other greats of his generation including Ingrid Jensen, Nicholas Payton, and Kurt Rosenwinkel; working under Jack DeJohnette, Buster Williams, Billy Hart, and Al Foster; and recording dozens of albums under his own name. In 2005, he married fellow pianist Kerry Politzer, and a few years later they moved to Winnipeg, Manitoba, where he began a career as a jazz educator.

That career continued on to a job at Oregon’s Portland State University, where Colligan moved in 2011 and remains today. In addition to his academic work, he has become a mainstay of the Portland jazz scene as a drummer as well as a pianist. (He’s the drummer on Kerry Politzer’s latest CD, In a Heartbeat, also on PJCE Records.) Indeed, although King’s Dream is a solo album, it is also a collaboration with a longtime Portland colleague, pianist Randy Porter, who recorded, mixed, and mastered the album at his Heavywood Studio. By Terri Hinte https://www.allaboutjazz.com/news/pianist-composer-george-colligans-kings-dream-his-36th-album-as-a-leader-and-5th-as-a-solo-pianist-due-november-11-on-pjce-records/

King's Dream

Bill Frisell - Four

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:49
Size: 133,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:25) 1. Dear Old Friend (For Alan Woodard)
(5:15) 2. Claude Utley
(5:43) 3. The Pioneers
(3:46) 4. Holiday
(2:47) 5. Waltz For Hal Willner
(5:09) 6. Lookout For Hope
(6:17) 7. Monroe
(3:46) 8. Wise Woman
(3:48) 9. Blues From Before
(4:13) 10. Always
(3:03) 11. Good Dog, Happy Man
(4:49) 12. Invisible
(6:42) 13. Dog On A Roof

Two years after issuing his acclaimed trio album Valentine, Grammy Award-winning guitarist and composer Bill Frisell returns with ‘Four’, a stunning meditation on loss, renewal, and those mysterious inventions of friendship.

Frisell’s third album for Blue Note Records since signing with the label in 2019 proffers new interpretations of previously recorded originals as well as nine new tunes. The session brings together artists of independent spirits and like minds: Blue Note stablemates Gerald Clayton on piano and Johnathan Blake on drums, and longtime collaborator Greg Tardy on saxophone, clarinet, and bass clarinet. ‘This combination of people had been floating around in the back of my mind since before the pandemic,’ says the Brooklyn-based artist.

Guitarist Bill Frisell, on his third recording for Blue Note, expands the quiet, explorative music he delivered on 2020’s Valentine through a much different instrumental configuration. Much of the music is about loss, the deep ties of friendship, and a few that point to renewal. The music leans far more into contemporary jazz than into the kind of folk and Americana we associate with Frisell, but races do remain. There are 13 tracks, all composed by Frisell, nine of which are new and four reinvented from previous recordings.

Longtime collaborator Greg Tardy on tenor saxophone, clarinet, and bass clarinet is a major force along with Blue Note artists Gerald Clayton on piano and Johnathan Blake on drums. Conspicuously absent is a bassist, thus leading to much lighter, spacey sound that developed as Frisell entered the session, not with through-composed pieces, but fragments as he encouraged spontaneous and open interaction. Consider that five of these tracks feature clarinet, electric guitar, piano, and drums not a configuration one often hears. The music is highly textural and melodic, eschewing the conventional head-solo-solo-head but instead collectively building variation off melodies, or in some case, simply off chords.

Frisell developed the concept during the pandemic, during a time when we lost so many talented artists and friends, giving the album an overall melancholy tone. This is somewhat divergent, but it recalls for this writer the pop album from Australians Paul Kelly and Charlie Owen favorite funeral songs, 2017’s Death’s Dateless Night, which is vastly different musically but similar in tone and spirit, balancing the reverent with the celebratory. Suffice it to say that while folks often spend hours on playlists for a wedding, few would do the same for a funeral. Yet, if they did so, Frisell’s music should be at the top of such a list. Melancholy doesn’t necessarily imply maudlin.

There’s sublime, flowing beauty in these tracks, beginning with “Dear Old Friend,” written for Frisell’s childhood friend, Alan Woodard, who Frisell had known since the seventh grade. The title also applies to one of Frisell’s closest friends, the late cornetist and Blue Note artist Ron Miles, with whom Frisell had played frequently and to whom he dedicates the album. Tardy carries the angelic melody on clarinet, with a tone so airy and pure, that sounds flute-like. The melody itself has echoes of “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot” as Frisell and Clayton tenderly and texturally wrap Tardy’s lines. “Claude Utley,” written for Frisell’s painting friend who passed this past year, harnesses the same instrumentation but it is looser in terms of any distinct melody.

Tardy plays tenor on the elegiac “The Pioneers,” one of four where he plays that instrument, using bass clarinet on another, both tenor and bass clarinet on one, while yet another is a Clayton solo piano piece. This one is a great example of how Frisell and Clayton play contrapuntally and in call-and-response patterns to Tardy’s yearning melody. Similarly, Tardy’s long tenor tones in the contemplative “Invisible” leave plenty of space for the others, a tonal departure from Frisell on baritone guitar. “Holiday” moves away from the smooth into a joyous, playful, jagged, syncopated vein, proving to be a strong vehicle for Blake, one of the most versatile drummers in contemporary jazz. Clayton’s intro leads into a simple but memorable melody for Tardy’s tenor on “Waltz for Hal Willner.”

Frisell revisits his classic the noirish, 1988 “Lookout for Hope,” with Tardy on bass clarinet playing contrapuntally to the guitar and piano in a haunting fashion. “Monroe” shows the breadth of Frisell’s writing as the quartet sneakily climbs into blues, with Tardy on both the tenor and bass clarinet, articulating the theme on each. The reedist returns to tenor on the closing “Dog on the Roof,” a languid, mysterious, electronically fueled piece, bordering on free jazz, both gathering a casual funky momentum as it evolves.

“Wise Woman” echoes Ornette Coleman in its harmonic palette while “Blues from Before” is more jagged, syncopated, and searching in an even freer mode, with Tardy on exploring every possible reach of the clarinet between the two. The latter is very complex rhythmically, but Blake expertly navigates the quartet through it. This leads to a minimalist solo piano excursion by Clayton on “Always,” airy, edgy, and seriously contemplative. “Good Dog, Happy Man” gets a makeover from its 1990 version, as Frisell plays both acoustic and electric guitars and Tardy on clarinet trades cascading melodies with both the guitarist and pianist in this gently flowing, uplifting tune. https://jazzbluesnews.com/2022/11/11/cd-review-bill-frisell-four-2022-video-cd-cover/

Personnel: Bill Frisell: Guitar; Greg Tardy: Tenor Saxophone, Clarinet & Bass Clarinet; Gerald Clayton: Piano; Johnathan Blake: Drums
Four