Monday, January 16, 2023

Alice Ricciardi & Pietro Lussu - Catch a Falling Star

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:40
Size: 119,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:57) 1. Let's Face The Music And Dance
(3:57) 2. Catch A Falling Star
(3:32) 3. Boys And Girls Like You And Me
(5:11) 4. Clues Blues
(3:58) 5. Good Vibrations
(3:04) 6. Liza
(5:58) 7. Sunday, Monday Or Always
(4:36) 8. Y-am
(3:36) 9. To One I Love
(3:24) 10. What Is This Thing Called Love
(4:23) 11. Utah
(2:58) 12. I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart
(2:59) 13. And Pink, And Gold, And Blue

The sources of inspiration are clear (primarily the masterful The Newest Sound Around by Jeanne Lee and Ran Blake) but the expressive choices and personal talents of Alice Ricciardi and Pietro Lussu make the album original and compelling. The Milanese singer was a pupil of Blake at the New England Conservatory and absorbed her rarefied and alienating aesthetic; Pietro Lussu is a highly sensitive pianist, one of the best in Italy, and relates to it in a natural way.

Refinement and interpretative subtleties are the hallmarks of this piano/voice album, aspects that extend to the editing of the cover. The two protagonists are photographed on an athletics track at dusk: an unusual place for artists who are not preparing to compete like athletes but turn around to catch the lights of the first star. That's what the neon sign above them says, which is the title of a 1957 hit by Perry Como.

That simple nursery rhyme becomes the emblem of the disc and takes on an intense, almost metaphysical connotation in the version by Ricciardi and Lussu, in the contrast between the allusive vocal exposition of the singer and the disjointed accompaniment of the piano. The thirteen pieces of the repertoire have been carefully chosen, ranging across the board.

Classic US songbook tunes like "Liza" and "What Is This Thing Called Love"; little-used songs like "Sunday, Monday or Always" or "Boys and Girls Like You and Me"; the Beach Boys classic "Good Vibrations"; three of their originals and a composition by Steve Lacy with lyrics added by Giulia Niccolai (which on Lacy's album Momentum was sung by Irene Aebi). Each of these pieces is transfigured with the refinement and emotional intensity we were talking about. That of the couple is an essential lyricism that respects the melodic significance of the themes without distorting it.

While alternating the piano with the Rhodes, Lussu varies the accents, introduces harmonic asymmetries (Monk and Tristano would be pleased), plays on the contrasts of register and volume with reflexive depth. Ricciardi's singing expresses its value in the chromatic variety, in the clearness of exposition, in the colloquial game with which she varies the accents and reverberations of the voice. While consistent with the poetics of introspection and whisper assimilated by Ran Blake, different climates and situations characterize the musical journey, alternating subtlety and pathos. To remember as brilliant gems the imaginative rewriting of "Good Vibration," the sensuality and lyricism of "Sunday, Monday or Always," the slow and dilated "Clues Blues."By Angelo Leonardi https://www.allaboutjazz.com/catch-a-falling-star-alice-ricciardi-pietro-lussu

Catch a Falling Star

Houston Person - The Art and Soul, Vol.1, Vol.2, Vol.3.

Album: The Art and Soul, Vol. 1
Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:52
Size: 121,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:51) 1. You Do Something To Me
(6:53) 2. I Don't Stand A Ghost Of A Chance
(3:54) 3. You're A Sweetheart
(6:49) 4. Maybe You'll Be There
(4:56) 5. All The Things You Are
(5:28) 6. You're My Everything
(5:39) 7. Skylark
(4:36) 8. I Only Have Eyes For You
(5:35) 9. Everything I Have Is Yours
(4:05) 10. Wonder Why

Album: The Art and Soul, Vol. 2
Time: 54:34
Size: 125,4 MB

(5:50) 1. Do Nothing Till You Hear from Me
(5:05) 2. Here's That Rainy Day
(4:15) 3. Isn't It Romantic?
(5:48) 4. Fools Rush In
(6:36) 5. It Had to Be You
(6:13) 6. But Beautiful
(5:59) 7. For All We Know
(5:48) 8. Blue Moon
(4:42) 9. Bewitched
(4:13) 10. Don't Get Around Much Anymore

Album: The Art and Soul, Vol. 3
Time: 55:20
Size: 127,2 MB

(6:07) 1. Sentimental Journey
(5:09) 2. Where Are You?
(4:32) 3. There's A Small Hotel
(6:43) 4. Tenderly
(6:06) 5. Be My Love
(6:08) 6. It Might As Well Be Spring
(5:05) 7. My Funny Valentine
(6:27) 8. Gentle Rain
(4:04) 9. Mack The Knife
(4:56) 10. The Very Thought Of You

The Art and Soul of Houston Person is an irresistible combination of the celebrated tenor saxophonist and the Great American Songbook. The 30 songs on this generous three-CD set were culled by Person from ten of his HighNote CDs, with the addition of four new songs recorded in spring, 2008. The songs feature an array of talented sidemen, including pianist Bill Charlap, bassists Ron Carter and Ray Drummond and drummer Grady Tate. If that isn't compelling enough, all the tracks were mixed, edited and mastered by the eminent Rudy Van Gelder in his legendary Englewood Cliffs studio.

The collection is full of high points, with several songs particularly worth noting. The upbeat opener, "You Do Something to Me," showcases Person's golden warmth and impeccable swing. The song also features John di Martino's exquisite touch on piano and John Burr's fluid bass. The same group shines on "I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance," elegantly capturing the song's quiet longing. Person exhibits a poignant tenderness and drummer Jerome Jennings adds just the right backup with incredibly spacious brushwork. "Sentimental Journey" is a joyful toe-tapper; "Here's That Rainy Day" explores the rich undertones of melancholy and "Blue Moon" is surprisingly upbeat, with Person's tenor fat and happy. And don't miss "Mack the Knife," a duet with Ron Carter where the two musicians turn the song inside out and trade lines with fluent ease.

In a 2004 interview, Person defined jazz as, "something that, when the end of the day comes, after a hard and frustrating day out in the world, relieves you. Relaxes you and makes you feel good." The Art and Soul of Houston Person is exactly that kind of music, a treasure chest of luscious, soothing sound. By Florence Wetzel https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-art-and-soul-of-houston-person-highnote-records-review-by-florence-wetzel

Personnel: John di Martino: piano; Jon Burr: bass; Jerome Jennings: drums; Richard Wyands: piano; Ray Drummond: bass; Kenny Washington: drums; Russell Malone: guitar; Grady Tate: drums; Stan Hope: piano; George Kaye: bass; Chip White: drums; Ron Carter: bass; Peter Washington: bass; Paul Bollenback: guitar; Per-ola Gadd: bass; Bill Charlap: piano.

The Art and Soul,Vol.1,Vol.2, Vol.3

Ben Allison - Think Free (Remastered)

Styles: Jazz, Bop
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:08
Size: 115,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:26) 1. Fred
(7:16) 2. Platypus
(6:00) 3. Broke
(6:21) 4. Kramer Vs. Kramer Vs. Godzilla
(5:38) 5. Sleeping Giant
(3:03) 6. The City At Night
(7:16) 7. Peace Pipe
(5:12) 8. Green Al
(2:50) 9. Steve Austin

Think Free (Remastered) is Ben’s 7th studio album and the third release in The Ben Allison Remastered Series 2004-2011, on Sonic Camera Records. It features Shane Endsley (trumpet), Jenny Scheinman (violin), Steve Cardenas (guitar), Ben Allison (bass & acoustic guitar), and Rudy Royston (drums). Originally released in 2009, this version contains two previously unreleased tracks: Steve Austin and The City at Night, both of which were completely improvised. https://benallison.com/#think-free-remastered-section

Personnel: Ben Allison – Bass; Jenny Scheinman – Violin; Shane Endsley – Trumpet; Steve Cardenas – Guitar; Rudy Royston – Drums

Think Free