Friday, June 30, 2023

Toots Thielemans - The Brasil Project

Styles: Guitar And Harmonica Jazz
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:51
Size: 128,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:57)  1. Começar de Novo
(4:23)  2. Obi
(3:00)  3. Felicia And Bianca
(4:10)  4. O Cantador
(2:57)  5. Joanna Francesa
(4:26)  6. Coisa Feita
(3:18)  7. Preciso Aprender a Ser Só
(5:41)  8. Fruta Boa
(4:29)  9. Coração Vagabundo
(3:29) 10. Manhã de Carnaval
(3:39) 11. Casa Fortes
(2:35) 12. Moments
(9:41) 13. Blusette

This popular set matches the brilliant harmonica player Toots Thielemans with such top Brazilian performers as Ivan Lins, Djavan, Oscar Castro-Neves, Dori Caymmi, Ricardo Silveira, João Bosco, Gilberto Gil, Milton Nascimento, Caetano Veloso, Luiz Bonfá, Edu Lobo and Eliane Elias, in addition to bassist Brian Bromberg, keyboardist Michael Lang, trumpeter Mark Isham and Dave Grusin. Thielemans is often in a supportive role behind the many soothing Brazilian singers and performers. The atmospheric date surprisingly does not have any Antonio Carlos Jobim songs, instead emphasizing lesser-known tunes (other than Toots' greatest hit "Bluesette"). Easily recommended to fans of Brazilian pop and jazz, this CD was soon followed by a second (and equally rewarding) set featuring many of the same performers. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-brasil-project-mw0000081385

Personnel: Toots Thielemans (harmonica, guitar, whistle); Milton Nascimento, Chico Buarque (vocals); Djavan, Joao Bosco, Dori Cayammi, Gilberto Gil, Caetano Veloso, Edu Lobo, Luis Bonfa (guitar, vocals); Lee Ritenour, Oscar Castro-Neves, Ricardo Silveira (guitar); Mark Isham (trumpet); Dave Grusin, Eliane Elias (piano); Gilson Peranzzetta, Mike Lang (keyboards); Ivan Lins (keyboards, vocals); Brian Bromberg, Jamil Joanes, Nico Assumpcao, Marc Johnson (bass); Teo Lima (drums); Cassio Duarte, Bira Hawai, Jose Roberto, Paulinho Da Costa (percussion).

The Brasil Project

Oscar Castro-Neves - Brazilian Scandals

Styles: Latin
Year: 1987
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:14
Size: 127,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:32)  1. Brazilian Scandals
(4:42)  2. Pensando
(4:04)  3. Romancing Lorry
(3:51)  4. Sugarloaf Skyride
(2:49)  5. Cafe Copacabana
(4:44)  6. Return to Rio
(3:46)  7. Your Eyes
(3:05)  8. Carioca Rap
(4:31)  9. Ocean Drive
(4:32) 10. Tropical Dream
(4:35) 11. Ipanema Afternoon

Oscar Castro-Neves is a fine Brazilian guitarist who is equally talented in organizing projects. Unfortunately this particular set is quite commercial, rather weak in spots, and thoroughly forgettable. The main liability is the material, the arrangements, and the use of five vocalists. Despite a few decent solos (including from Ernie Watts on alto), this set of Brazilian-flavored pop is a misfire. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/brazilian-scandals-mw0000652235

Personnel : Oscar Castro-Neves (synthesizer, acoustic guitar, percussion, background vocals); Gary Herbig (soprano & tenor saxophones); Ernie Watts (alto saxophone); Glen Garret (tenor saxophone, flute, piccolo); Malta (alto saxophone); Jerry Hey, Chuck Findley (trumpet, flugelhorn); Bill Reichenbach (trombone, bass trombone, valve trombone); Phillip Ayling (flute, piccolo, oboe); Gilson Peranzzetta (piano); Mitch Holder (electric guitar); Luizao Maia (electric bass); Teo Lima (drums); Paulinho Da Costa (percussion); Sonia Ferreira, Cyva Leite, Pedro Paulo Castro-Neves, Myriam Peracchi (background vocals).

George Coleman - Live at Smalls Jazz Club

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:02
Size: 163,3 MB
Art: Front

(11:26) 1. Four
( 6:27) 2. At Last
( 9:34) 3. My Funny Valentine
( 8:39) 4. Meditation
( 8:08) 5. Blues for Smalls
(11:17) 6. Nearness of You
( 7:10) 7. New York, New York
( 8:17) 8. When Sunny Gets Blue

If you are an aficionado of tenor saxophonists with a big, bold, biting tone who can run changes in the blink of an eye, then George Coleman is your man. Now in his 88th year, over the course of his long career, he has had a gamut of experiences including B.B. King (1952/1955-56), Max Roach (1958-59), Slide Hampton (1959-61) and Miles Davis (1963-64). His discography both as a leader/co-leader as well as a sideman covers a panoply of well-known jazz names, but recently the archivist label Reel To Real, under the guidance of saxophonist/producer Cory Weeds, uncovered a couple of unreleased 1970s Coleman sessions. Firstly, in 2020, The George Coleman Quintet in Baltimore (recorded in 1971), and in 2023 Shirley Scott Queen Bee: Live at the Left Bank (recorded in 1972) with Coleman on tenor sax.

Live at Smalls Jazz Club is a quartet session in which Coleman is supported by pianist Spike Wilner, bassist Peter Washington and the always swinging drummer Joe Farnsworth. The eight-tune track list consists of well recognized creations that have been associated with Coleman throughout his professional life starting with the Miles Davis composition "Four." Coleman opens the number with a sly introduction, after which he rips into a long solo with his usual energetic dashing style. The rhythm section is all in and full of propellant swing. The other Davis associated tune is Richard Rodgers' "My Funny Valentine." Coleman's interpretation is full of structural logic and artful restraint. Washington's bass is big and clear throughout.

The blues have been part of Coleman's repetoire since his early years with blues bands, and thus it is no surprise that his own composition "Blues For Smalls" is included in this session. And a rollicking blues it is, filled with Coleman's long, looping runs. Wilner fills his lengthy solo with surging energy, Farnsworth's slick drumming thrusts the number forward, while Washington is his usual clever self with his interjections. The final three tracks"The Nearness Of You," "New York, NewYork" and "When Sunny Gets Blue" continue with the stellar performances that Coleman and his cohorts laid down in the previous cuts. There is no diminution in Coleman's big saxophone sound and his improvisations continue to be crafty and expansive. By Pierre Giroux
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/live-at-smalls-jazz-club-george-coleman-george-coleman-cellar-music-group

Personnel: George Coleman: saxophone, tenor; Spike Wilner: piano; Peter Washington: bass; Joe Farnsworth: drums.

Live at Smalls Jazz Club

Sylvie Courvoisier & Cory Smythe - The Rite of Spring

Styles: Piano
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:35
Size: 145,7 MB
Art: Front

(15:45) 1. The Rite of Spring, Pt. 1: The Adoration of the Earth
(18:33) 2. The Rite of Spring, Pt. 2: The Sacrifice
(29:15) 3. The Rite of Spring

Two daring jazz improvisers take on a cherished hundred-year-old classical ballet masterpiece with radical roots on The Rite of Spring: Spectre d'un songe. Igor Stravinsky was fresh off the success of his 1911 "Petrushka," which radiated with the artistic atmosphere of his Russia, when in 1913 he premiered "The Rite of Spring" at the opening of the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées. The audience was divided into the Parisian elite in the boxes and the "bohemian" aesthetes scattered about the theater. Stravinsky's music contradicted every norm of the time; originality equaled shock. Vaslav Nijinsky, already controversial, was the choreographer.

The dancers performed as if robots, in a ritual that concluded with the portrayal of the human sacrifice of a dancer. Urban legend has the audience factions screaming praise, or insults, at the performers, and physically pummeling each other in a near riot. The composition has been elevated considerably, but the music remains complex and sometimes uncomfortable. It is a fitting vehicle for the singular talents of pianists Sylvie Courvoisier and Cory Smythe. The piano duo brings us a fascinating interpretation of Stravinsky's magnum opus followed by a Courvoisier composition.

Courvoisier approached Stravinsky's work as a potential project in the past but the Russian composer's family was not open to an improvised arrangement of his composition. Time has changed that. Smythe is known for his improvised music as a leader, two recordings with Ingrid Laubrock and as a member of Tyshawn Sorey's Trio. His classical associations include work with the International Contemporary Ensemble, and the Lincoln Center's Mostly Mozart festival. Smythe and violin virtuoso Hilary Hahn earned a Grammy award for their duo album In 27 Pieces: the Hilary Hahn Encores (Deutsche Grammophon, 2013).

In the first of two original ballet movements, "Le Sacre du Printemps, Pt.1," Stravinsky's personal notes describe a people divided into two groups in opposition to each other, beginning a "ritual of the rival tribes." Courvoisier and Smythe take a nuanced approach, both to their improvising and their interactions. The tension, while in plain sight, is open to a give-and-take as both pianists shift their positions amid structure and invention. "Le Sacre du Printemps, Pt.2," was considered so difficult for the orchestra to play, that musicians would break out in nervous laughter during Stravinsky's rehearsals. Without sacrificing the spirit of the original or their own resourcefulness, Courvoisier and Smythe deftly navigate the unrelenting rhythms, and episodes of mysteriously verbalized, and vehement intonations. Courvoisier's "Spectre d'un songe" (Ghost of a dream) is a half-hour paean that complements Stravinsky's work seamlessly, feeling like an undiscovered third movement.

Parts of Stravinsky's score for "The Rite of Spring" have been incorporated in the recordings of Ornette Coleman, Charlie Parker, The Bad Plus, and other jazz artists. The best-known interpretation was that of Hubert Laws. Despite an all-star ensemble including Ron Carter, and Jack DeJohnette, that recording lacks any visceral sensation. It is that challenge that Courvoisier and Smythe meet and surpass in every moment of this excellent recording.By Karl Ackermann
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-rite-of-spring-spectre-dun-songe-sylvie-courvoisier-cory-smythe-pyroclastic-records

Personnel: Sylvie Courvoisier: piano; Cory Smythe: piano.

The Rite of Spring

Thursday, June 29, 2023

Oscar Castro-Neves - All One

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:07
Size: 144.5 MB
Styles: Bossa Nova, Brazilian jazz
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[4:51] 1. Double Rainbow
[4:49] 2. All One
[4:10] 3. Kurski Funk
[4:47] 4. Morrer De Amore (I Live To Love You)
[5:18] 5. Holding With An Open Hand
[2:46] 6. Não Me Diga Adeus
[4:41] 7. Naima
[4:42] 8. Historia De Un Amor
[4:53] 9. 'round Midnight
[5:23] 10. The Very Thought Of You
[5:05] 11. More Than Yesterday
[2:47] 12. There Will Never Be Another You
[4:36] 13. Prelude Op. 28, No. 20
[4:16] 14. One Bad Habit

Acoustic Bass – Brian Bromberg; Backing Vocals – Isela Sotelo, Kenny O'Brien, Luis Chaparro, Paulina Aguirre; Drums – Alex Acuña, Mike Shapiro; Flute, Clarinet, Saxophone [Soprano, Tenor], Bass Clarinet – Gary Meek; Percussion – Kevin Richard; Piano, Electric Piano [Fender Rhodes], Clavinet – Don Grusin; Violin, Viola – Charlie Bisharat; Vocals, Guitar, Keyboards, Arranged By – Oscar Castro-Neves.

Oscar Castro-Neves has been one of the most important Brazilian musicians on the jazz scene for some time. His skills as a guitarist, vocalist, composer, and arranger are all on display in this release. Starting with a swinging instrumental setting of Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Double Rainbow," which incorporates Charlie Bisharat's Gypsy-like violin, Gary Meek's multiple reeds, and pianist Don Grusin, Castro-Neves signals that this is not going to be a predictable release. His compositions include the funky, strutting "All One" and the infectious "Holding with an Open Hand." The surprising rendition of "'Round Midnight" begins dramatically, then suddenly turns into a lively upbeat bossa nova. Equally compelling are his arrangements of standards like "The Very Thought of You" and "There Will Never Be Another You," both of which feature his warm, friendly vocals. The only disappointment is the inclusion of smooth jazzer Michael Franks' lightweight, monotonous "One Bad Habit" to close an otherwise flawless CD.By Ken Dryden

All One

Ray Vega & Thomas Marriott - East-West Trumpet Summit

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:53
Size: 136,5 MB
Art: Front

(7:39)  1. It's You or No One
(6:22)  2. Juicy Lucy
(5:27)  3. Pelham Gardens
(6:20)  4. Bishop Island
(6:08)  5. Only of a Season
(4:49)  6. It's A New York Thing
(5:54)  7. Round Midnight / In A Sentimental Mood
(7:12)  8. Big Brother

Working the two coasts of jazz theory together, but using the Northwest as representative of modern West Coast jazz rather than the L.A. area, trumpeters Ray Vega and Thomas Marriott combine their formidable powers for good in a massive set. The two trumpeters have played together over the years, and have become stalwarts of the local scenes in their respective cities (Marriott winning numerous awards and recording numerous exceptional albums in Seattle, Vega in New York). Here, they trade riffs and solos, follow paired melodic lines, and explore both energetic urban forms and more pastoral compositions. The album opens with Sammy Cahn's "It's You or No One," which makes a good first showing of the two styles and also introduces pianist Travis Shook and a hidden propensity to invoke Bud Powell as he courses through a massive solo. Horace Silver's "Juicy Lucy" uses the trumpets in tandem in a relaxed form reminiscent of some of the Dizzy Gillespie/Sonny Stitt sessions.

A couple of compositions from Marriott show off both urban energy (in a musical ode to New York in "Pelham Gardens") and contemplative balladry (in a musical ode to Seattle's Lake Washington in "Bishop Island"). Both provide excellent showcases of the trumpets, and Jeff Johnson's bass solo in "Bishop Island" additionally shows off some excellence. Vega's compositions take the opposite approach, building from a more pensive "Only of a Season" to the nearly hyperactive "It's a New York Thing," showing off some blazing horn techniques along the way. A medley of ballads lets both of the players show off their softer side, and the album finishes on Marriott's tribute to Vega. Musical summits rarely turn out as perfectly as one would hope, given the egos and/or deference of players to one another. This one lets both players respect one another, work together, and show off their own styles all at once. And it's all excellent.By Adam Greenberg
https://www.allmusic.com/album/east-west-trumpet-summit-mw0001991574

Personnel: Ray Vega (trumpet); Thomas Marriott (trumpet); Travis Shook (piano); Matt Jorgensen (drums).

East-West Trumpet Summit

Joe Lovano, Marilyn Crispell, Carmen Castaldi - Our Daily Bread

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:52
Size: 94,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:36) 1. All Twelve
(8:42) 2. Grace Notes
(3:44) 3. Le petit opportun
(6:34) 4. Our Daily Bread
(2:31) 5. One for Charlie
(4:41) 6. The Power of Three
(5:50) 7. Rhythm Spirit
(4:09) 8. Crystal Ball

Joe Lovano's 3rd album Trio Tapestry finds the group extending its spacious and lyrical approach with deep listening and intense focus. Marilyn Crispell is the optimal pianist for this music, orchestrating it as it unfolds with a sensibility attuned to both contemporary chamber music and post-Coltrane improvising. Drummer Carmen Castaldi, a Lovano associate since teenage years, embellishes the music with his own poetic touch on cymbals and, like Joe, draws blossoming resonances from gongs.By Editorial Reviews
https://www.amazon.com/Lovano-Marilyn-Crispell-Carmen-Castaldi/dp/B0BXT2NYPW

Personnel: Drums, Gong, Temple Bells – Carmen Castaldi; Piano – Marilyn Crispell; Tenor Saxophone, Tárogató [Tarogato], Gong [Gongs] – Joe Lovano

Our Daily Bread

Wednesday, June 28, 2023

Caterina Valente, Catherine Michel - Girltalk

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:03
Size: 121,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:05) 1. Chiquilin De Bachin
(3:01) 2. Martina (Les Enfants Qui Pleurent)
(3:35) 3. And So It Goes
(5:00) 4. Gigi
(3:20) 5. Prelude No. 3
(4:27) 6. With a Song in My Heart
(4:40) 7. Andantino (Sonata in C Minor) / The Most Beautiful Sea
(3:53) 8. The Way We Were
(3:47) 9. All of a Sudden My Heart Sings
(2:44) 10. Tout Ça (Count Every Star)
(3:34) 11. Eu Não Existe
(5:22) 12. Bolero
(2:42) 13. Papa N'as Pas Voulu
(2:46) 14. Quién Será

This isn't a jazz album and even though it was released by a top jazz label and Nagel-Heyer doesn't claim that it is. Remember Caterina Valente who more than 45 years ago swept America with such pop hits as "I Love Paris" and one of the most exciting vocal versions of "Maleguena" ever. In the year 2000, she joined a major classical harpist Catherine Michel for a program of Latin and European songs, American standards and classical music.

Fluent in 12 languages, she recites, rather than sings, in English, Italian and French a dramatic "Sonata in C Minor (The Most Beautiful Sea) " with some of the loveliest harp playing on the CD. But not is all serious and somber. Once more in French, there's the cute, perky "Papa N'as Pas Voulu" which seques into a swinging blues. To show that she has lost little of her power and none of her phrasing and still keeps the pitch, Valente does "With a Song in My Heart" A Capella, singing a duet with herself.

Each line of lyrics is followed by the same line done scat. Very effective. On some tracks, Valente's voice becomes another instrument complimenting Michel's harp with her wordless vocalizing, sometimes dubbed in as background vocals. This technique culminates in an exciting interpretation of Maurice Ravel's "Bolero", as the tension builds from the familiar soft beginning culminating at the end in a crescendo of voice and harp that become one at the end of this classical gem.

As stated at the outset, not jazz at all. But for those who appreciate performances by consummate artists, this album will be one of the best you purchase all year. Recommended. By Dave Nathan
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/girltalk-caterina-valente-review-by-dave-nathan

Personnel: Caterina Valente - Vocals/Guitar/Percussion; Catherine Michel - Harp

Girltalk

Sergio Mendes - Pure Bossa Nova

Styles: Bossa Nova
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:05
Size: 101,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:24) 1. Ela é Carioca
(3:10) 2. Só Tinha de Ser Com Você
(3:08) 3. Sò danço samba
(4:07) 4. Corcovado
(3:45) 5. Batida Diferente [Album Version]
(2:21) 6. Nanà
(3:24) 7. Inútil Paisagem
(2:53) 8. O Amor Em Paz
(2:10) 9. Tristeza De Nos Dois
(2:19) 10. Noa... Noa...
(3:17) 11. Consolaçao
(3:18) 12. Desafinado
(2:23) 13. Outra Vez
(5:19) 14. O Morro Não Tem Vez

Yet another compilation to add to the many that already exist, Pure Bossa Nova is a collection of some of pianist, arranger, and composer Sergio Mendes' greatest hits from the mid-'60s, when he was most popular.

Culled from work with his trio, his eponymous group, and full band Bossa Rio, label Planet Rhythm includes 14 songs from Mendes' extensive catalog on the album and manages to, thankfully, leave out what is practically an easy listening anthem, "The Girl from Ipanema." Some arrangements are more inspired by jazz ("Ela é Carioca," "O Amor Em Paz," "Batida Diferente") and others by samba ("Tristeza de Nós Dios," "Só Danço Samba"), but all are pure Mendes and, well, as the title of the album states, pure bossa nova.

And while Mendes is generally classified as light or easy jazz, the songs aren't campy or saccharine like many other things in those categories. It may not be difficult music, but that doesn't mean it's not complex. The drums are always moving, there's a lot of improvisation, and plenty of great musicianship. For already stalwart fans of Mendes, this record doesn't bring anything new to a collection, but for those who want to explore one of the great composers and performers of the genre, Pure Bossa Nova is a perfect place to start. By Marisa Brown
https://www.allmusic.com/album/release/pure-bossa-nova-mr0001437483

Pure Bossa Nova

Various Artists - Groove Jazz: Jazz Vibes That Make You Shake Your Hips and Dance

Styles: Jazz Funk
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 131:41
Size: 303,4 MB
Art: Front

1. Joki Freund Sextett - Killer Joe (5:30)
2. Klaus Göbel Group - Wrappin' It Up (5:53)
3. Reuben Hoch - The Guys Back Home (5:08)
4. United Colors Of Jazz - Get Up! (5:25)
5. Charlie Mariano - Gregor Josephs Quartet - Stachel (4:39)
6. Peter Linhart Group - Hip Hop Otamus (6:17)
7. Super Trio - Brotherhood of Man (4:26)
8. Charly Antolini - Soon (5:03)
9. Archie Shepp - Down Home In New York (7:49)
10. Christoph Spendel Group - Downtown (4:34)
11. Thea Florea Quartett - Colourful Noon (6:49)
12. Max Clouth Clan - Surrender to What Is (3:26)
13. Axel Fischbacher Quartett - Kalsoum (4:48)
14. Maurice Magnoni L'Etat des Sons - The Beat of a Different World (5:13)
15. Emil Mangelsdorff Quartet - Fried Bananas (4:37)
16. J-Sound - Odd Job (5:41)
17. Threeo - Tribal Dance (5:53)
18. West End Avenue 4 - City Jazz (5:31)
19. Klaus Göbel Group - We Need Peace, We Need Love (5:13)
20. Stötter's Nevertheless - Sommerloch (0:52)
21. Ivan Habernal Quartet - The View (6:02)
22. Jutta Hipp Quintet - Don't Worry About Me (3:19)
23. Archie Shepp - Groovin' High (8:09)
24. Karl Ratzer - Sageways (6:45)
25. The Danish-German Slide Combination - Liberty City (4:25)

Groove Jazz: Jazz Vibes That Make You Shake Your Hips and Dance

Terri Lyne Carrington - TLC & Friends

Styles: Straight-Ahead Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1981/2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:36
Size: 86,7 MB
Art: Front

(6:21) 1. What is This Thing Called Love
(5:31) 2. La Bonita
(5:49) 3. Seven Steps to Heaven
(7:17) 4. St. Thomas
(6:59) 5. Just the Way You Are
(5:37) 6. Sonnymoon For Two

Four-time Grammy-winner, NEA Jazz Master, composer, activist, and educator Terri Lyne Carrington’s remarkable debut album, recorded in October 1981 when she was just 16 years old, provides a rare glimpse into the early talents of this extraordinary multi-faceted artist.

Carrington’s very first session, TLC & Friends features an epic and enviable lineup of collaborators, including Kenny Barron on piano, George Coleman on saxophone, and Buster Williams on bass. Her father Sonny Carrington also contributes saxophone to the Sonny Rollins classic “Sonnymoon for Two.”

The album masterfully showcases Carrington's artistry as a drummer and composer, highlighted by the standout original track "La Bonita, a refreshing interpretation of Billy Joel's beloved composition, "Just The Way You Are,” alongside scorching renditions of standards like "Seven Steps To Heaven," and “What Is This Thing Called Love.

The Candid release features original liner notes by Terri Lyne and Sonny Carrington, and a new essay by Dianne Reeves. Though this album captures Carrington at the outset of an auspicious recording career, at the age of 16, she was nearly a veteran. Hailing from a family of musicians - in addition to her father, Carrington’s grandfather and fellow drummer Matt Carrington, performed with Chu Berry and Fats Waller Carrington first shared the stage with Rahsaan Roland Kirk at age five.

By ten she became the youngest musician in Boston ever to receive a union card, and was impressing audiences with Clark Terry and his All-Stars. At age eleven, Carrington was awarded a full scholarship to Berklee College of Music in Boston, when the school’s founders Lawrence and Alma Berk, heard her sit in with the great Oscar Peterson at the suggestion of Ella Fitzgerald (today Carrington teaches at the school and is the founder of the Berklee Institute of Jazz and Gender Justice).

Carrington would go on to perform with dozens of other legends including B.B. King, Dizzy Gillespie, Illinois Jacquet, Nat Adderley, Jon Hendricks, and many more before she was old enough to drive, and drum masters Art Blakey, Roy Haynes, Max Roach, Buddy Rich and Elvin Jones invited her to sit in with their bands.https://candidrecords.com/products/copy-of-new-standards-vol-1

Personnel: Drums, Arranged By, Design [Cover] – Terri Lyne Carrington; Bass – Buster Williams; Piano – Kenny Barron; Tenor Saxophone – George Coleman

TLC & Friends

Monday, June 26, 2023

Michele Calgaro - Progressions

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:23
Size: 113,2 MB
Art: Front

(0:40) 1. Natural Bop Killers
(5:45) 2. Basso Fondo
(5:44) 3. Progression
(7:36) 4. Il Valore Delle Differenze
(7:39) 5. In Pursuit Of The 27th Man
(2:35) 6. Intro Monadi
(8:02) 7. Monadi
(6:59) 8. Mari Land
(4:20) 9. Love Is This Thing Called "What?"

Appreciated teacher he has directed the Thelonious music school in Vicenza since 1991 Michele Calgaro is here in his second round as sole leader, four years after «Round about Monk», also published by our label. In truth, some time before he had shared the authorship of another album with Canadian saxophonist Robert Bonisolo, "The Edge", recorded in quartet with the addition of some songs by Paolo Fresu.

Bonisolo, with whom Calgaro has been playing regularly for almost twenty years, is also present in this «Progressions», an album enriched by the presence of a prestigious guest, Alex Sipiagin, a Russian trumpeter who has moved permanently to the United States since 1992 , soon becoming one of the absolute protagonists of the New York jazz scene.

The quintet from Calgaro, completed by another of its tried and tested partners, the precious drummer Mauro Beggio, instead sees Michele's brother, Lorenzo, and the American Marc Abrams split in the role of double bass player who, like and even more than Bonisolo, can now be considered Italian in all respects. Unlike the previous recording, entirely dedicated to Thelonious Monk, here Michele Calgaro also tests himself as a composer, demonstrating that he has now acquired a decidedly personal style, which knows how to be poetic and reflective (in the sweet ballad Monadi, signed by Lorenzo , as well as in Mari Land, which starts with the trio alone and then sees the addition of Bonisolo's sax and Sipiagin's flugelhorn), but when necessary also rightly stringent and aggressive (in the modal Progression and in the pressing gait of Love is this thing called “What?”).

It is no coincidence that the only standard present on the album arranged in a very original way is a piece by the "master" Horace Silver, the compelling and too little performed In pursuit of the 27th man. But Calgaro's quintet can also be convincing in the two compositions in medium tempo, which are moreover articulated and complex, such as the hypnotic melody of Basso Fondo and the suspended scale of Il Valore delle Difference, capable of paying due tribute to Wayne Shorter without this lose in originality. credits released April 24, 2021 Translate by Google

Personnel: Alex Sipiagin (trumpet, flugelhorn), Robert Bonisolo (tenor sax), Michele Calgaro (guitars), Lorenzo Calgaro (double bass on 1–2–6–7–9), Marc Abrams (double bass on 3–4–5–8), Mauro Beggio (drums).

Progressions

Andre Ceccarelli, Jean-Michel Pilc, Thomas Bramerie - Twenty

Size: 126,9 MB
Time: 55:05
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz: Piano Jazz
Art: Front

01. All Blues (6:06)
02. Cry Baby Cry (6:15)
03. On Green Dolphin Street (5:20)
04. Twenty (4:42)
05. Opus #3 (5:08)
06. Ne Me Quitte Pas (4:33)
07. Old Devil Moon (6:40)
08. Things Are (3:17)
09. Straight No Chaser (3:18)
10. L'auvergnat (4:34)
11. Solar (5:07)

A piano trio that forensically examines some quite familiar modern jazz standards (‘All Blues’, ‘On Green Dolphin Street’, ‘Straight No Chaser’, ‘Solar,’ etc) placing them alongside a sprinkling of originals and a Francophone perennial Jacques Brel's ‘Ne Me Quitte Pas’ recorded in an Antibes studio in August last year. Very simply presented with just basic artwork the music does the talking and does so conversationally perhaps though a little too relentlessly in the more detailed passages. Pianist Pilc, one of the big latterday piano stars of French jazz now a citizen of the US, digs down very deeply here to the innards of what makes a trio tick followed faithfully by the tonally commanding bassist Bramerie and drummer Ceccarelli terrier-like in the chase.The trio achieve great heights even transforming something as dog-eared as ‘Old Devil Moon’ into something fresh and inviting. A virtuoso display that moves beyond technique in its best moments.

Twenty

Bill Evans - Coffee and Cigarettes

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:17
Size: 180,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:00) 1. Some Other Time
(3:40) 2. Lucky to Be Me
(7:36) 3. Night and Day
(4:54) 4. What Is There to Say
(7:36) 5. Detour Ahead
(6:42) 6. Peace Piece
(4:41) 7. I Wish I Knew
(3:28) 8. Haunted Heart
(5:55) 9. Sweet and Lovely
(4:58) 10. My Foolish Heart
(7:12) 11. My Romance
(3:34) 12. Tenderly
(7:00) 13. Waltz for Debby
(5:54) 14. Young and Foolish

" I remember finding that somehow I had reached a new level of expression in my playing. It had come almost automatically, and I was very anxious about it, afraid I might lose it", Evans said.

One of the new pieces was Leonard Bernstein's "Some Other Time". Evans started to play an introduction using an ostinato figure. However the pianist spontaneously started to improvise over that harmonic frame, creating the recording that would be named "Peace Piece“.

According to Evans: "What happened was that I started to play the introduction, and it started to get so much of its own feeling and identity that I just figured, well, I'll keep going."

"Bill had this quiet fire that I loved on piano. The way he approached it, the sound he got was like crystal notes or sparkling water cascading down from some clear waterfall. I had to change the way the band sounded again for Bill's style by playing different tunes, softer ones at first.“~ Miles Davis

Personnel: Bill Evans - piano; Sam Jones - bass; Philly Joe Jones - drums; Paul Motian- drums

Coffee and Cigarettes

Sunday, June 25, 2023

Andrea Beneventano - The Driver

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:30
Size: 109,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:02)  1. Cool River
(4:29)  2. Midget Steps
(5:27)  3. The Driver
(5:08)  4. When Sunny Gets Blue
(5:19)  5. Passing Seasons
(6:35)  6. If I Should Lose You
(3:56)  7. I Got Your Rhythm
(3:53)  8. Donna quee
(6:38)  9. My Gospel

The Driver is the new work as a leader of the pianist Andrea Beneventano  after Trinacria in 2003, which on this occasion completes his trio with the excellent Francesco Puglisi on double bass and Nicola Angelucci on drums.

Therefore, a classical formation that knows how to offer in the nine proposed tracks all signed by the leader except for a couple of standards a jazz vision that does not differ much from the guidelines of the mainstream (in the broadest sense of the term), even if in the way of proposing himself as a Sicilian pianist, various reasons of interest can be traced, which make listening to the entire work pleasant and worthy of attention. Starting from the way in which it expresses a complete and versatility melodic vision to an extreme formal beauty in "Passing Seasons," to the more introspective and shadowy passage of the opener "Cool River," to the fragmented visions of "The Driver," a nervous passage and snappy, in which Puglisi and Angelucci produce themselves in a remarkable accompanying work.

Beneventano intertwines different stylistic roots that range from the "I Got Your Rhythm" bop to the "My Gospel" contemplations, so that his work also characterized by an excellent interplay knows no moments of yielding neither from the formal point of view nor under the expressive profile. Translate By Google
By AAJ Italy Staff https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-driver-nicola-angelucci-alfamusic-review-by-aaji-staff.php

Personnel: Andrea Beneventano: pianoforte; Francesco Puglisi: contrabbasso; Nicola Angelucci: batteria.

The Driver

Modern Jazz Quartet - The Montreux Years

Styles: Jazz, Bop, Cool
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:33
Size: 177,7 MB
Art: Front

( 5:13) 1. Ko-Ko
(15:56) 2. A Day in Dubrovnik
( 4:51) 3. Django
( 7:52) 4. Blues in A Minor
( 4:12) 5. Bags' Groove
( 4:18) 6. The Golden Striker
( 8:27) 7. One Never Knows
( 8:38) 8. Le Cannet
( 5:16) 9. Nature Boy
( 6:53) 10. Rockin' in Rhythm
( 4:50) 11. True Blues

A showcase of some of The Modern Jazz Quartet’s most iconic Montreux Jazz Festival live performances, recorded between 1985 and 1993!

The audio has Expertly restored and remastered in superlative HD audio; The Montreux Years is released on superior audiophile heavy weight vinyl, MQA quality CD and in HD digital. The release includes brand new liner notes and rare photos from his Montreux shows.

The Montreux Years is released as part of a brand new Montreux Jazz Festival and BMG collection series “The Montreux Years”. The collections will uncover legendary performances by the world’s most iconic artists alongside rare and never-before-released recordings from the festival’s rich 57-year history, remastered in superlative audio. Each collection will be accompanied by exclusive liner notes and previously unseen photography.
https://www.amazon.ca/Modern-Jazz-Quartet-Montreux-Years/dp/B0C4Q8YFPJ

Personnel: John Lewis - piano, Milt Jackson - vibraphone, Percy Heath - double bass, Connie Kay - drums

Modern Jazz Quartet: The Montreux Years

Orrin Evans - The Red Door

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:21
Size: 144,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:04) 1. Red Door
(7:11) 2. Weezy
(7:35) 3. Phoebe's Stroll
(9:15) 4. The Good Life
(4:36) 5. Big Small
(3:58) 6. Dexter's Tune
(4:12) 7. Amazing Grace
(5:15) 8. Feed the Fire
(4:25) 9. All the Things You Are
(2:43) 10. Smoke Rings
(5:22) 11. They Won't Go When I Go
(3:39) 12. I Have the Feeling I've Been Here Before

A most generous craftsman, composer and bandleader, pianist Orrin Evans never fails to bring out the best of whoever he chooses to create with. The Red Door is gratefully, and gracefully, no exception to that rule.

Whatever musical setting Evans chooses to practice his sinewy, r'n'b inflected post-bop insideman, big band, trio, quartet, duo, whatever a sweet animation propels his music and buoys the players gathered around him. In this case the two core units feature bass legend Buster Williams, drummer Gene Jackson, the late Wallace Roney on trumpet and fellow Philadelphian, tenor legend Larry McKenna. The other quintet features trumpeter Nicholas Payton, saxophonist/flutist Gary Thomas, bassist Robert Hurst and drummer Marvin "Smitty" Smith.

Just as it was a standout track on his second recording with the The Bad Plus, 2019's canny and expressive Activate Infinity (Edition Records), the lead-off title track carousels into consciousness with a brassy, staccato effervescence and witticism courtesy of Payton and Thomas, that Hurst, Evans and Smith quickly wrest control from, deconstruct, then return sprightly to the dance. As Immanuel Wilkins' saxophone did throughout Evan's previous highlight reel, 2021's The Magic of Now (Smoke Sessions Records) Thomas' flute becomes the voice of the circuitous and bluesy "Weezy."

But it may well be "Phoebe's Stroll" that we remember The Red Door for in the years ahead. A jaunty, trio workout of everything that makes Evans tick his quotable, neo-pop melodicism, his patient way with time, his keen, articulate framing and sense of communal dance all in one seven plus minute slice of perfection. It's a grand gesture and sure to be a setlist perennial.

Geri Allen's antic "Feed the Fire" gets the full-on quintet treatment as Thomas and Payton play cat and mouse around Smith and Hurst's elusive current and Evans' pronounced freneticism. Ditto "Smoke Rings." With Buster Williams providing the smooth, second set of the night groove, McKenna, uncurls an entrancing, deep blue solo that defines "The Good Life." Ever a shaman of the collective, Evans brings onboard Jazzmeia Horn who, as has become custom, delivers a slyly impassioned reading of Bill McHenry's feminine forward lyric for Evans' "Big Small," which originally appeared sans lyrics on Flip the Script (Posi-Tone Records, 2012)

A substantive tribute to those whom Evans claims has gotten him to the pinnacle he inhabits right now and to those who will help him carry it forward, (including Sy Smith and Alita Moses, The Red Door is a masterful high point in a career that continues to climb. By Mike Jurkovic
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-red-door-orrin-evans-smoke-sessions-records__14893

Personnel: Orrin Evans: piano; Robert Hurst: bass; Marvin "Smitty" Smith: drums; Gary Thomas: saxophone; Nicholas Payton: trumpet.

Additional Instrumentation: Nicholas Payton: trumpet (1, 2, 5, 10); Gary Thomas: tenor sax (1, 5, 10) flute (2); Robert Hurst: bass (1-3, 5-8, 10, 12); Marvin “Smitty” Smith: drums (1-3, 5-8, 10, 12); Wallace Roney: trumpet (9); Larry McKenna: tenor sax (4); Buster Williams: bass (4, 9); Jazzmela Horn: vocal (5); Sy Smith: vocal (7); Alita Moses: vocal (11).

The Red Door

Friday, June 23, 2023

Andrea Beneventano Trio - Trinacria

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:15
Size: 107,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:32) 1. I Remember You
(4:41) 2. Lua Branca
(5:20) 3. He Was Great
(7:06) 4. Trinacria
(4:27) 5. Lines For RG
(4:35) 6. Soul Eyes
(2:50) 7. Traversi's Blues
(5:53) 8. Aniram
(1:59) 9. My One And Only Love
(2:48) 10. Gippo's Groove

Andrea Beneventano is a pianist who has collaborations of absolute importance behind him: Sal Nistico, Steve Grossman , Jon Faddis, Red Rodney, Gary Bartz, Donald Harrison, Rick Margitza, Steve Turre, Massimo Urbani, Paolo Fresu, Flavio Boltro, Eddy Palermo, Franco Cerri, Benny Golson, Buster Williams, Ed Thigpen, Arthur Blythe, Nathan Davis, Chico Freeman ... and the list goes on.

One evening I was at Gregory's in Rome known for its jam sessions. There the atmosphere is always very engaging as it recalls that of American clubs and the musicians who alternate recall certain moments by often playing tributes to great artists. That evening Andrea Beneventano was on the pianoand I was struck by his absolute readiness to play continuously on any piece that was started, from Bud Powell to Monk, to Parker, to Ellington to any other composer and all, "obviously", without the aid of any "paper" support. .. Rimasi struck by its ability improvisative always well structured, a soft phrasing, with a great sense of timing , block chords inserted at the right time, targeted opening immediately grasped by the rhythmic base.

In this CD I have pleasantly found many of the characteristics felt that evening. In addition there are valuable non-trivial compositions, extremely pleasant ranging from latin, to bop, to blues to waltz. by Mal Waldron. The pianism of Beneventano owes a lot to the great pianists among whom, perhaps, Bud Powell stands out, but the richness of his phrasing ranges beyond stylistic elements providing the whole CD with an absolutely enjoyable listening level with truly remarkable ideas such as Aniram , beautiful composition, Lua Branca with a Brazilian flavor, Traversi's Blues with a beautiful solo of Iodice on drums, the impeccable performance of I Remeber You or the engaging Lines for RG (unpredictable and intelligent change of tempo of the ending). O ttimo the support Ciancaglini and Iodice , certainly among the best in the Italian jazz scene, which also carves out the space for some very brilliant solos.~Marco LosavioTranslate By Google http://www.jazzitalia.net/recensioni/trinacria.asp#.Ya0WN1BJaUk

Trinacria

Bob Rockwell, Ben Sidran, Billy Peterson, Leo Sidran - Bob's Ben: A Salute to Ben Webster

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:37
Size: 144,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:26) 1. Prelude For Ben
(7:01) 2. Bye Bye Blackbird
(4:27) 3. Time On My Hands
(4:59) 4. Old Folks
(7:17) 5. This Can't Be Love
(4:52) 6. That's All
(3:40) 7. Sunday
(4:44) 8. Time After Time
(3:58) 9. Danny Boy
(4:26) 10. La Rosita
(4:07) 11. Tenderly
(5:13) 12. Bounce Blues
(3:21) 13. In The Wee Small Hours

Ben Webster was one of several giants of the tenor saxophone, though his contributions sometimes have not been as greatly appreciated as those of Coleman Hawkins and Lester Young. Bob Rockwell, an American expatriate who had been living and working in Copenhagen for a couple of decades, was honored with a stipend from the Ben Webster Foundation in the city to make a tribute recording in honor of the late saxophonist. Rockwell is well accompanied by pianist Ben Sidran, bassist Billy Peterson, and drummer Leo Sidran (the pianist's son).

Prior to the session, the leader sought out as many of Webster's original charts as he could find, and he decided to stick with Webster's choice of keys and tempi, also utilizing the same chord substitutions. But this is no mere carbon copy of Ben Webster's recordings. Though Rockwell has a big tone, he is not as breathy and manages to convey his own sound in spite of taking inspiration from Webster's arrangements. He does a beautiful job with the ballads, displaying a lyrical touch that the honoree would have enjoyed, especially in "Danny Boy" and "Old Folks," while overdubbing a harmony line in "La Rosita." All in all, a fine effort. By Ken Dryden
https://www.allmusic.com/album/bobs-ben-a-salute-to-ben-webster-mw0001434524

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone – Bob Rockwell; Piano – Ben Sidran; Bass – Billy Peterson; Drums – Leo Sidran

Bob's Ben: A Salute to Ben Webster

Clifford Jordan - Drink Plenty Water

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:41
Size: 82,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:55) 1. The Highest Mountain
(3:08) 2. The Witch Doctor's Chant (Ee-Bah-Lickey-Doo)
(3:08) 3. Drink Plenty Water and Walk Slow
(3:13) 4. I've Got A Feeling For You
(3:09) 5. My Papa's Coming Home
(9:32) 6. Talking Blues
(9:33) 7. Talking Blues (Instrumental)

This long-lost 1974 recording from the late Chicago tenor sax master is finally available. Originally recorded for the Strata-East label, Drink Plenty Water is Clifford's only primarily vocal recording release, with inventive arrangements courtesy of bassist Bill Lee. Joining Jordan are Dick Griffin on trombone, Bill Hardman on trumpet, Charlie Rouse on bass clarinet, Strata East co-founder Stanley Cowell on piano, Billy Higgins on drums, Bernard Fennell on cello, and Lee and Sam Jones on bass.

Her late husband's passion project, Sandy Jordan spearheaded the effort to release Drink Plenty Water. Jordan’s daughter, Donna Jordan Harris sings lead vocals on several tracks, backed by remaining members of the ensemble. The vocal arrangements bring an unexpected new take to the compositions “Witch Doctor’s Chant (Ee-Bah-Lickey-Doo)” and “I’ve Got a Feeling for You” that first appeared on Clifford Jordan’s 1968 album Soul Fountain. The vocal arrangement for “The Highest Mountain” on Drink Plenty Water makes it the most unique treatment of one of his finest compositions.

Additional tracks include “My Papa’s Coming Home,” a rhythm changes vamp with what trombonist Griffin describes as a “stunning” solo from the leader, and “Drink Plenty Water and Walk Slow,” a short track featuring Fennell and Jordan under a spoken word story from actor David Smyrl. Other highlights of the 35-minute-long recording are the two tracks titled “Talking Blues” a spoken-word story from Smyrl about a hustler living the fast life, followed by the instrumental track that reveals great interplay between Jordan, Hardman, Fennell and Griffin.
https://shop.mapleshadestore.com/Clifford-Jordan-his-Friends-Drink-Plenty-Water-CD_p_1498.html

Personnel: Clifford Jordan (ts,composer), Bill Hardman (tp), Dick Griffin (tb), Charlie Rouse (b-cl), Stanley Cowell (p), Bernard Fennell (cello), Bill Lee (b,arr), Sam Jones (b), Billy Higgins (d), Donna Jordan Harris and David Smyrl (vcl) and Kathy O'Boyle, Denise Williams and Muriel Winston (backing-vcl).

Drink Plenty Water

Pharoah Sanders - Live at Fabrik Hamburg 1980

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:20
Size: 161,4 MB
Art: Front

(18:04) 1. You Gotta Have Freedom
(12:57) 2. It's Easy To Remember
(20:20) 3. Dr Pitt
( 8:35) 4. The Creator Has A Masterplan
(10:22) 5. Greetings To Idris

Stunning live work from the great Pharoah Sanders a set that's right up there with his best for the Teresa label in the 80s, but which also has some of the bite of his later Impulse material too!

Tracks are long and modal that groove that always seems to unlock the most soulful, mystical currents in Sanders' tenor and the group is superb, with this beautiful work on bass from the young Curtis Lundy, plus John Hicks on piano and Idris Muhammad on drums the latter of whom is in that looser mode he reopened in the 80s, and very different than his 70s funk years.

Tracks are all nice and long and titles include "Dr Pitt", "Greetings To Idris", "You Gotta Have Freedom", "It's Easy To Remember", and "The Creator Has A Masterplan". © 1996-2023, Dusty Groove, Inc.https://www.dustygroove.com/item/134602/Pharoah-Sanders:Pharoah-Sanders-Live-At-Fabrik-Hamburg-1980

Personnel: Pharoah Sanders (ts), John Hicks (p), Curtis Lundy (b), and Idris Muhammad (d)

Live at Fabrik Hamburg 1980

Wednesday, June 21, 2023

Chris Standring - Wonderful World

Styles: Guitar Jazz, Jazz Funk
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:05
Size: 117,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:54) 1. How Insensitive
(5:50) 2. Night & Day
(4:49) 3. Autumn in New York
(4:44) 4. Estate
(4:47) 5. What a Wonderful World
(3:54) 6. Green Dolphin Street
(4:16) 7. Alfie
(4:40) 8. Falling in Love with Love
(4:56) 9. Sunrise
(3:40) 10. Maxine
(4:30) 11. My Foolish Heart

Wonderful World, the fourteenth album as leader by British guitarist Chris Standring, was no doubt recorded with the best of intentions. And make no mistake, the music is warm and lovely, furnishing an opulent showcase for Standring's mellow guitar. Aside from that, however, there's not a whole lot to say. Standring's "orchestra" consists of a nineteen-member string section, while Geoff Gascoyne's syrupy arrangements call to mind popular string-laden sessions from the 1950s and '60s, "easy listening" albums for "late-night lovers" designed by Percy Faith, Jackie Gleason, Bobby Hackett and others, except this time there's a guitar leading the way instead of a trumpet, oboe or English horn. It's a step removed from Mantovani or the 101 Strings orchestra.

Besides the strings, Standring is supported on various tracks by bassists Gascoyne, Chuck Berghofer or Darek Oles and drummers Peter Erskine, Harvey Mason or David Karasony, but their primary task is to keep time while the orchestra plays and Standring solos. Berghofer does have one brief solo, on Cole Porter's "Night and Day." Elsewhere, it's basically all Standring all the time, save for a brief guest appearance by flugelhornist Randy Brecker on Standring's slow-breaking "Sunrise." Of the album's eleven tunes, only one "On Green Dolphin Street" pushes forward more rapidly than a ballad.

The others from Jobim's "How Insensitive" to the standards "Autumn in New York," "Falling in Love with Love" and "My Foolish Heart" to "Estate," Burt Bacharach/Hal David's theme from "Alfie" and Donald Fagen's "Maxine" assume the same hushed and reposeful stance, calmly awaiting the entrance of Standring's genteel and melodious manifestos. The atmosphere is so even-tempered that the drummers could have left their sticks at home, as brushes alone even "On Green Dolphin Street" are more than adequate. There is one vocal, by Kathrin Shorr on the title song. As noted, the music is charming, and Standring is a splendid guitarist, but Wonderful World is best suited for those who are happiest living on a diet comprised solely of tender ballads and love songs. By Jack Bowers
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/wonderful-world-chris-standring-ultimate-vibe

Personnel: Chris Standring: guitar; Geoff Gascoyne: bass; Randy Brecker: trumpet; Peter Erskine: drums; Harvey Mason: drums; David Karasony: drums; Chuck Berghofer: bass, acoustic; Darek Oles: bass; Kathrin Shorr: voice / vocals

Wonderful World

Dizzy Gillespie, The Double Six Of Paris - Dizzy Gillespie & The Double Six Of Paris

Styles: Trumpet Jazz,Vocal, Bop
Year: 1963
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:02
Size: 91,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:45)  1. Emanon
(2:46)  2. Anthropology
(4:16)  3. Tin Tin Deo
(3:28)  4. One Bass Hit
(3:31)  5. Two Bass Hit
(2:28)  6. Groovin' High
(3:05)  7. Oo-Shoo-Be-Doo-Be
(3:02)  8. Hot House
(3:36)  9. Con Alma
(3:10) 10. Blue 'N' Boogie
(3:08) 11. The Champ
(2:44) 12. Ow

This odd but successful pairing finds the Double Six of Paris singing vocalese in French to a dozen bebop classics associated with Dizzy Gillespie. Gillespie, with pianist Bud Powell and a rhythm section, take solos that uplift this date; two songs feature his quintet (with James Moody on alto). Not for all tastes, but this is a unique and colorful addition to Gillespie's discography.By Scott Yanow
https://www.allmusic.com/album/dizzy-gillespie-the-double-six-of-paris-mw0000649530

Personnel: Trumpet – Dizzy Gillespie; Bass – Chris White , Pierre Michelot; Drums – Kenny Clark, Rudy Collins;  Ensemble – The Double Six Of Paris; Piano – Bud Powell, Kenny Barron; Tenor Saxophone – James Moody;  Vocals – Christiane Legrand, Claudine Barge, Eddy Louis, Jean-Claude Briodin, Mimi Perrin, Robert Smart, Ward Swingle

Dizzy Gillespie & The Double Six Of Paris

Dara Tucker - All Right Now

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:25
Size: 102,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:30)  1. Come Rain or Come Shine
(3:20)  2. What Is This Thing Called Love
(4:14)  3. That's All
(3:46)  4. Route 66
(3:03)  5. There Will Never Be Another You
(0:27)  6. Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight
(5:26)  7. Lush Life
(2:43)  8. Someday My Prince Will Come
(2:40)  9. Avalon
(3:45) 10. Time After Time
(3:11) 11. On the Street Where You Live
(3:50) 12. Don't Get Around Much Anymore
(0:35) 13. P.S. I Love You
(2:48) 14. Just a Closer Walk With Thee

Dara Tucker was born into a musical family. The product of a music minister father, and a songstress mother, she began singing in her Tulsa, Oklahoma church at age 5. By age 8 she was playing simple melodies on the piano and soon began accompanying her brothers and sisters at performances. Throughout her college years, Tucker continued to hone her skills as a vocalist and musician. After obtaining a degree in International Business and German studies, she worked for a time in the corporate language-training field, eventually relocating to Interlaken, Switzerland to study German. It was there that Tucker began to write the first of her very personal songs. “I found something within myself that I didn’t realize was there music’s ability to ensure my spiritual and emotional survival. No one can ever take that away from me,” says Tucker.

Since moving to Nashville, TN to pursue music fulltime, Tucker has begun to establish herself as a strong presence in Nashville’s burgeoning jazz scene. Displaying a love for standards and swing that belies her years, Tucker’s reverence for the Great American Songbook can be felt in her sensitive delivery of these timeless songs. She performs regularly at Sambuca Restaurant in Nashville, Tennessee and has also been featured at F. Scott’s Restaurant and Jazz Bar in the Green Hills district of Nashville, in addition to The Basement, Bosco’s and The 12th South Taproom along with Nashville’s long-standing Jefferson Street Jazz and Blues Festival. Additionally, Dara has been featured in live performances on WPLN’s (National Public Radio-Nashville affiliate) “Live From Studio C” as well as at the Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame and Snug Harbor Jazz Club in New Orleans. http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/daratucker

All Right Now

Joe Farnsworth - In What Direction Are You Headed?

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:53
Size: 142,5 MB
Art: Front

( 7:13) 1. Terra Nova
( 9:29) 2. Filters
(10:33) 3. In What Direction Are You Headed
( 5:00) 4. Composition 4
( 7:24) 5. Anyone but You
( 6:44) 6. Safe Corners
( 5:31) 7. Bobby No Bags
( 9:55) 8. Someday We'll All Be Free

I have been listening to music accompanied by the esteemed drummer Joe Farnsworth for over 30 years, especially via a favorite ensemble, One For All. I know he is good, but how good wasn’t clear to me until now.

Farnsworth, who will be leading a band at the Jazz Showcase from May 11th through the 14th, has always been “a drummer’s drummer,” capable of providing stalwart support of most any ensemble.

Generally known for his “old school” pocket behind post-bop performers, Farnsworth’s new album In What Direction Are You Headed? Is a wily departure from his usual fare, involving a new generation of players while keeping a veteran rhythm core at the center, creating a plaiting of generations.

On In What Direction are some of the finest contemporary talents: featured guitarist Kurt Rosenwinkel, altoist Immanuel Wilkins (whose appearance at last year’s Jazz Festival was woefully undersold), and keyboardist Julius Rodriguez. At the bass helm is Robert Hurst, who has moved forward from his crucial Marsalis experience to become a respected support player.

The album’s title, and title cut, comes from an attempt to bridge those generations, a way for Farnsworth to indicate to his homies that he is not straying far away from his roots but wants to move forward to involve the top tier of current musicians steeped in multi-genre upbringings. Farnsworth first played the tune with the late, sorely-missed, pianist Harold Mabern at the Vanguard. Joe then asked Mabern’s son Michael (who provides an enjoyable conversation with Farnsworth as the liner notes) if he could use the tune on the new album as a way to establish a musical trope.

Rosenwinkel’s presence invigorates Farnsworth and provides a clear subtext to the proceedings: this is not your dad’s music, but we do remember your dad. The world-recognized guitarist gets three compositions here, and his guitar is definitely not representing another version of Grant Green.

And on Mabern’s “In What Direction Are You Headed?”, the bridge is built. Rodriguez opens with a funky Fender Rhodes riff that leads to a brightly-rendered melody from both Rosenwinkel and Wilkins, an arrangement that occurs frequently. As the two meander through the bars, the playing becomes more elastic, fushionesque. Rodriguez gets the first solo while Farnsworth sounds like Buddy Rich during his “trying to be cool in the 60’s” period (not meant to be pejorative). Wilkins lets loose with a postmodern squall before Rosenwinkel steps on the effect box to render a lovely, angular statement.

Farnsworth also has a solo opportunity (one of three in the selections) that builds on his first one, an eye-opening display during selection two, Rosenwinkel’s “Filters.”

Wilkins’ contribution “Composition 4” (placed, of course, fourth on the listing) is the quietest of the songs, showcasing the album’s juxtaposition of sax and guitar. Wilkins has the melodic lead, as Rosenwinkel adds shimmering comp atop Rodriguez’s folky acoustic fills.

Rodriguez’s “Anyone But You” is the bop tune that demonstrates the youths’ ability to travel quickly, with Rosenwinkel especially impressive with his McLaughlin-like display; Wilkins, likewise. Does Farnsworth keep up? Impressively, yes. And Rodriguez is impressive, too. Any questions about how the “new generation” can deal with the “old” are answered here.

The album opener “Terra Nova” and “Safe Corners,” both Rosenwinkel compositions, are reflective tone poems that suggest geographical influences. Both have slightly Latin touches and comparatively are more austere in arrangement while gorgeous as soundscapes.

On “Bobby Low Bags” Farnsworth gives Hurst a chance to shine, and the bassist relishes the moment in bluesland. Meanwhile, Wilkins displays his bop chops, something I wasn’t sure he could pull off. Rosenwinkel, with guitar effect applied, follows through with his rejoinder, while Rodriguez shares his own piano offering before Farnsworth finishes with a short solo. Here, again, sax and guitar coalesce as Hurst completes the tune.

The closer, Donnie Hathaway’s “Someday We’ll All Be Free,” is clearly symbolic, one more bridge to join sides. The soulful ballad gets an ornate, upper registered greeting from Wilkins while Rodriguez morphs Philly soul as Rosenwinkel carries forth with an effected solo that replaces Hathaway beautifully. You’d think Wilkins picked up a soprano for this one, but it’s just another way for him to demonstrate his facility, while Hurst carries the song with his own lyrical backup.

We’ve been treated with some great music in 2023 so far, but this album blew me away unexpected but welcomed, nonetheless. Joe Farnsworth, in excellent form, not only evinces his wide talent but also his wisdom, casting a vision for our jazz future that doesn’t eschew the genre’s blues roots while still advancing. In What Direction Are You Headed? Is both a good question and an essential album for the 21st Century. By Jeff Cebulski
https://www.chicagojazz.com/post/jazz-review-joe-farnsworth-in-what-direction

Personnel: Joe Farnsworth, drums; Immanuel Wilkins, alto sax; Kurt Rosenwinkel, guitar; Julius Rodriguez, piano and fender Rhodes; Robert Hurst, bass

In What Direction Are You Headed?

Tuesday, June 20, 2023

Billy Peterson And David Hazeltine - Next Door

Styles: Bop,Piano Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:20
Size: 122,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:54) 1. You Make Me Feel So Young
(7:15) 2. The Boy Next Door
(4:16) 3. Show Type Tune
(3:59) 4. Ruby My Dear/Pannonica
(5:12) 5. Tones For Joan's Bones
(7:37) 6. Clockwise
(3:37) 7. Dexterity/C.T.A.
(5:41) 8. Good Bait
(2:31) 9. Thanks Jim
(5:12) 10. Cedars Blues

Billy Peterson is one of the premier, most celebrated bass players in the world. His uncompromising talents as a performer have brought him widespread recognition, as well as his plenty credits as a composer, arranger and producer. So it is no surprise that the world-renowned bassist is quite often also compared with a chameleon, but not only as he can fill many positions, but also as he is at home in several genres of music weather it be rock, pop, R&B, soul, jazz, folk or country. Peterson´s contributions to the music scene are inestimable and his imagination and boundless enthusiasm behind the bass are singular and stunning. During his extensive musical career, the permanently in-demand bassist has worked with many internationally famous, acclaimed artists, among them Carlos Santana, Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Prince, Les Paul or Steve Miller, just to name a few.

Growing up in a household of professional musicians, his talent revealed itself early on while being introduced to a variety of instruments. Already at age 9, he began singing national commercial spots, which was only one of his countless early public musical endeavors. At age 14, Peterson had a live changing event when his mother, the late Jeanne Arland Peterson, taught him how to harmonize the old Irish lullaby, the “danny-boy”, which set Peterson on a quest for a much deeper harmonic understanding and helped him to arrange the orchestration for the 9th grade school band. In the mid-sixties he made his first experiences with the electric bass; this was also the time when Peterson first picked up the upright bass. Taking an interest in any instrument that crossed his path; Peterson studied simultaneously drums (with Elliot Fine of the Minnesota Symphony Orchestra) and keyboards (with Ernie Garvin from CBS radio Minneapolis, MN) while still in junior high school. These early influences were the foundation for what was to follow.

At just 16 years of age, Peterson joined The Righteous Brothers, during their peak period of success, on a summer tour in 1967. He also went on a tour with the prominent Lawrence Welk show All-Stars. Throughout his high school years, Peterson continued to play bass and drums in a variety of local orchestras, combos, R&B bands and big bands including bands of his father Willie Peterson, who was a prominent band-leader and Minnesotan jazz pianist. After graduation, Peterson started playing bass with Billy Wallace, pianist of trumpet-legend Clifford Brown, until 1973. The same year, he co-founded, with saxophonist Bob Rockwell, the acclaimed band Natural Life with which he recorded three albums for Celebration Records and went on several US tours from 1974 to 1978. During this time, Peterson was also among the first musicians to record on 3M's first, revolutionary digital tape machine.

It was in the mid 1970s, when the bassist´s pop career really began to flourish. In 1974, Peterson began to work with Leo Kottke, the great folk guitarist, becoming the bassist on Kottke's three albums for Capitol Records and Chrysalis. And on it went in 1975, when Peterson certainly made it to the top being the electric and upright bassist on Bob Dylan's legendary multi-platinum, Grammy winning album “Blood On The Tracks” for Columbia Records, whose internationally acclaimed single “Tangled up in Blue” topped the pop charts in 1975, and in 2000 it was ranked 49 on the “Top 100 Rock and Roll Songs ever recorded” by the Rolling Stone magazine´s December issue.

One year later, in 1976, he was invited to join the Gibson guitar staff; so Peterson went on to record and perform with guitar legends such as BB King, Johnny Smith, Les Paul, Lenny Breau, and Howard Roberts. In the late 70´s, Peterson first met, introduced by Prince´s producer David Rifkin, Ben Sidran, at the time keyboardist and producer of the Steve Miller Band and keyboardist of The Rolling Stones. This should become the beginning of an inspiring musical partnership that has remained strong till today.

The late 70s and early 80s were consumed with music from all genres and angles. In 1981, Peterson released his first solo album “Threshold of Surrender”. He continued to tour Europe with various artists and was also the in-house bassist for the famous “Sound 80” recording studio in Minneapolis, where Minneapolis´s most successful singers ever were recording at the time: Prince, Bob Dylan and Cynthia Johnson (the famous singer of the #1 hit Funkytown). During that time Peterson recorded many albums plus national radio and TV commercials; his performances ranged from solo bass to playing with a full symphony orchestra.

In 1986, Ben Sidran produced Steve Miller´s album “Born to be Blue” on Capitol Records with Peterson on bass. Shortly after Peterson became a full member of the Steve Miller Band, which he continued to be for the next 23 years. From 1987 to 2011 the Steve Miller Band toured mainly during the spring and summer months and Peterson played bass on the albums “Wide River”, “Steve Miller Band Box Set”, “Bingo!”, “Let Your Hair Down“, amongst others. During those years, he also continued to tour, mainly Europe and Japan, with Ben Sidran in the fall and winter months.

In 1990, Peterson joined the Go Jazz record label as an artist, producer and arranger, working on numerous recordings with artists such as pianist and vocalist Georgie Fame, guitarist Phil Upchurch or saxophonist Lee Konitz. It also was time for a reunion with Leo Kottke; so Peterson wrote a composition for a project called “Mid Air”. Shortly after, Prince, at the time also known as “The Artist”, contacted Peterson to create a string arrangement for his band the New Power Generation with Rosie Gaines as lead vocals. So Peterson came up with a soulful orchestral re-harmonization of Bryan Adams's hit “Everything I Do I Do It For You”. Peterson´s original compositions, arrangements and re-harmonizations have been featured on many major record labels. No wonder that in the mid 2000´s he got the call to compose and arrange for Donny Osmond to perform for the Queen of England in Edinburgh, Scotland.

At the 1993 Earthquake Relief concert in San Francisco he performed with Carlos Santana and Neil Young. He played with folk singer and songwriter Pete Seeger on “Well May the World Go”, a record which he also produced. A long-lasting collaboration with Minnesota jazz legend Irv Williams started in the early ´90s, since then Peterson has been the upright bassist on over 7 albums of the now 94-year-old saxophonist. Peterson's love for jazz encouraged him to help some fellow artists to open a jazz club. In 1996, the famous Artist Quarter opened its doors in St. Paul, Minnesota, becoming Peterson's “home base” while not on tour, where he joined local and visiting musicians until its closing in 2013.

Peterson became the musical director for the international independent production company Megabien Entertainment in 2003, through which he is involved in various events, international artist recordings and TV productions. In 2004, he served as the musical director for the three-part Legends Rock TV show (www.legends-rock.com) with guest artists Billy Preston, Sam Moore and Tony Joe White, produced by Megabien Entertainment in the south of France. His filmography includes also the 2008 video documentary “Steve Miller Band: Live from Chicago”. Further, in 2012 he served as the co-host of the Funkytown TV documentary (www.funkytown.us) along with host Cynthia Johnson, which showcases the Twin Cities´ finest artists and musicians.

Apart from several television appearances, the 21-century has also been consumed with involvements on numerous albums, among them “American Made World Played” of Les Paul (2005), “Let's Stay Here” of Oleta Adams (2009) or the Steve Miller Band albums “Bingo” (2010) and “Let Your Hair Down” (2011). In 2012, Peterson made the album “I´ve Been Ringing You” together with drummer Dave King and pianist Bill Carrothers, which received large national recognition; the trio´s debut album was named “Record of the Year” in the New York City Jazz Record (formerly All About Jazz), got a 4.5 stars (out of 5) review in Downbeat, a review in the New York Times and JazzTimes within “minutes” after its release, amongst other significant reviews and recognitions.

Peterson, as a member of the famous Minneapolis family of musicians “The Peterson Family” (www.thepetersonfamily.info), has been inducted into the Mid-American Music Hall of Fame in 2008.
By Monika Hurka https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/billy-peterson

Next Door

Jon Faddis - Remembrances

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:14
Size: 154,5 MB
Art: Front

(7:06)  1. Sophisticated Lady
(6:06)  2. Laura
(7:23)  3. Speak Like a Child
(5:54)  4. Footprints
(5:58)  5. Naima
(6:35)  6. Johnny Bug
(6:47)  7. La Rosa Y El Sauce
(7:05)  8. In Your Own Sweet Way
(7:38)  9. Riverside Park
(6:38) 10. Goodbye

Jon Faddis speaks for himself on Remembrances. For many years critics thought of him as a Dizzy Gillespie clone. As director of The Carnegie Hall Jazz Orchestra he earned the distinction of being his own man. Carlos Franzetti, who arranged and conducted Portraits of Cuba (a Grammy winner for Paquito D’Rivera) uses his ingenious mastery again with Faddis. This disc is a well a conceived program of standards, both from the Great American Songbook and standards written by world class musicians. Franzetti chose instrumentation that is unique for a jazz group. The sidemen on this album are all excellent musicians in their own right. Here, you have Paquito D’Rivera playing soprano, tenor sax and the clarinet. His soprano solo on "In Your Own Sweet Way" is unmistakable, but still embraces the theme of the disc and enhances the music. Other instrumentation chosen for the group include bassoon, French horn, oboe, English horn, in addition to the sax section, rhythm section, and trombone. "Sophisticated Lady," "Laura," and the closer, "Goodbye," are all presented in a fresh way for a new generation. 

Faddis eschews high harmonics, rather embraces a relaxed manner that celebrates the ballads without disturbing their origins. "Footprints," "Naima," La Rosa Y El Sauce," and Franzetti’s own composition "Riverside Park," are all done with thought and conviction. Remembrances has "classic" potential and is sure to appeal to even the discerning jazz listener. Chesky recorded this CD at St. Peter’s Episcopal Church in New York City and it is yet another example of their commitment to harmonic perfection.
By Arthur C. Bourassa https://www.allaboutjazz.com/remembrances-jon-faddis-chesky-records-review-by-arthur-c-bourassa.php


Personnel: Jon Faddis - Trumpet, Flugelhorn, Paquito D'Rivera - Clarinet, Sax (Soprano), Sax (Tenor), Soprano (Vocal), Bill Easley - Clarinet, Sax (Tenor), George Young - Flute, Sax (Alto), John Clark - French Horn, Lawrence Feldman - Flute, Sax (Alto), Kenneth Hitchcock - Clarinet (Bass), Sax (Baritone), Dale Kleps - Flute, Sax (Alto), Clarence Penn - Drums, Jim Pugh - Euphonium, Trombone (Alto), Trombone (Tenor), Tenor Trombone, Stewart Rose - French Horn, Roger Rosenberg - Bassoon, Clarinet (Bass), Sax (Baritone), Peter Washington - Bass, David Hazeltine - Piano.

Remembrances

The Double Six Of Paris - Les Double Six

Styles: Vocal, Jazz, Bop
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:58
Size: 76,6 MB
Art: Front

(2:25)  1. Tickle Toes
(3:22)  2. Early Autumn
(2:39)  3. Sweets
(4:14)  4. Naima
(2:39)  5. Westwood Walk
(2:59)  6. A Night in Tunisia
(3:01)  7. A Ballad
(2:52)  8. Scrapplefromtheapple
(2:57)  9. Bolplicity
(3:08) 10. Moanin'
(2:40) 11. Fascinating Rhythm

French group formed by Mimi Perrin in 1959. Perrin was leader and main arranger; she added lyrics to jazz selections. The name was derived from practice of superimposing two separate recordings, leaving impression there were 12 singers. The group enjoyed some notoriety with sessions featuring backing from American guest stars like Quincy Jones, Benny Bailey, Dizzy Gillespie and Jerome Richardson. Perrin led second vesion of the group in 1965; when she became ill, Jef Gilson tried to hold band together, but they split in 1966. https://www.allmusic.com/artist/les-double-six-mn0001699710/biography


Personnel: Bass – Michel Gaudry, Pierre Michelot; Bongos – Jean-Pierre Drouet; Drums – Christian Garros, Daniel Humair; Guitar – Paul Piguihem; Piano – Georges Arvanitas, René Urtreger; Vibraphone – Eddy Louiss; Vocals – Christiane Legrand, Claudine Barge, Eddy Louise, Jean-Claude Briodin, Jeannine " Mimi " Perrin, Robert Smart, Ward Swingle

Les Double Six