Sunday, January 29, 2023

Matt Dusk - Sinatra

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:52
Size: 71,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:26) 1. Fly Me To The Moon
(3:29) 2. I've Got You Under My Skin
(1:56) 3. Too Marvelous For Words
(3:01) 4. I Only Have Eyes For You
(2:41) 5. Summer Wind
(4:21) 6. Luck Be A Lady
(2:53) 7. Come Fly With Me
(2:36) 8. Lady Is A Tramp
(2:56) 9. You Make Me Feel So Young
(4:29) 10. My Way

Go big or go home. That might’ve been Matt Dusk’s mantra as he contemplated the making of his second album, Back in Town.. With impeccable taste to match his formidable talent, Dusk knows that style and sophistication•in everything from song selections and studio choices•are important factors that contribute to successful recordings.

The Toronto-born Matt Dusk will join Patrizio Buanne on his North American AEG Live tour this spring, which coincides with the Decca release of Dusk’s Back in Town on April 3rd. The 27-year-old crooner already had a sensational major-label debut under his belt with 2004’s Two Shots, which was partially recorded at London’s famous Abbey Road Studios with a 42-piece string section from the prestigious Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.

With Back in Town Dusk pulled out all the stops. He recorded much of the album in Los Angeles, at the fabled Capitol Studio in Studio A•where the walls have resonated with the voices of singers such as Frank Sinatra, Bobby Darin and Ella Fitzgerald. Then, as if that magical setting wasn’t enough, several renowned arrangers including Patrick Williams and Sammy Nestico were brought in to provide original arrangements for classic numbers like “More” and “As Time Goes By.” On top of that, the legendary Al Schmitt, winner of this year’s Lifetime Achievement Award at the Grammy Awards, recorded and mixed all of the album’s big band tracks.

“I wanted this album to have the best of everything,” explains Dusk, who produced Back in Town with Terry Sawchuk. “We approached it like it’s our last big record, with the best arrangers, best musicians and best studios. We didn’t want there to be any regrets or excuses in the future!”

Indeed, Back in Town has all the ingredients to catapult the Juno Award nominated singer well into the pop stratosphere: timeless songs, stylish arrangements, cutting-edge production and powerhouse vocals. Quite simply, Dusk has never sounded better, and it’s the album’s combination of classic and original songs that has clearly brought out the best in him. Along with big-band material, drawn from the American Songbook, Back in Town features such contemporary pop numbers as the inspirational “All About Me” and the forceful title track. Both were given the chart-topping treatment from Chris Lord-Alge; one of the world’s best mixing engineers with credits ranging from Madonna to Green Day.

“Chris has a way of finding these frequencies that make your speakers blow up,” says Dusk. “But his mother was a jazz singer, so he understands that genre too. After I heard Chris’ first mix I was like, ‘Oh my God, this is huge.’ I knew immediately that he’d found the sound both Terry and I were looking for that was radio compatible.”

Several tracks on Back in Town, including “Learnin’ The Blues,” “As Time Goes By” and “The Best is Yet to Come,” are songs associated with Frank Sinatra, but Dusk was adamant about putting a fresh spin on that material. “I didn’t want to perform stock arrangements of those songs,” he says, “…like the classic Nelson Riddle and Billy May charts used for Sinatra. Been there, done that… so why not try something new? I won’t deny that I’m a fan of Sinatra and that I definitely learned from him, but I want to put my own stamp on this genre.”

Working with a full big-band orchestra and strings, plus arrangements from Williams, Nestico and Vince Mendoza, Dusk and Sawchuk took those songs in new directions, from the Latin tinge of “More” to the playful phrasing of “As Time Goes By.” Similarly, “Who’s Got the Action,” once popularized by Dean Martin, gets the big, brassy treatment, while “Get Me to the Church On Time” and “On the Street Where You Live,” two of Dusk’s favorites from My Fair Lady, are nicely updated. Dusk says Nestico’s arrangement for “Get Me to the Church On Time,” in particular, blew him away. “Sammy, who’s best known for his work with Count Basie, sent over his chart with a big yellow post-it note on it saying, ‘This is one of my best charts•please don’t change a thing,’” recalls Dusk. “I was like ‘you’ve got to be kidding•I wouldn’t touch it.’ It was that good.”

Meanwhile, Dusk was able to bring some first-hand experience to “Get Me to the Church On Time”•not that he’s married. “I used to sing at a ton of weddings,” says Dusk, who studied at Toronto’s famed St. Michael’s Choir School before attending the city’s York University taking master classes with Oscar Peterson in the jazz program. “I’d get invited to all the stags and see how the grooms were hell bent on sowing their wild oats and having their last hurrah. So I can totally relate to that scene.”

Although he refrains from divulging many details, Dusk’s personal life has helped to shape both Back in Town and its predecessor. “The songs on Two Shots were more on the sad side because I was going through a rough time at that point in my life,” he explains. “Most of the songs were about lost love and self discovery. On this album, it’s the exact opposite. The majority of these songs are more about finding love, being happy and laughing, because the pendulum’s definitely swingin’ the other way.”

Swinging is one way to describe Back in Town, which puts Dusk firmly back in the pack of young crooners like Michael Bublé and Dusk’s label mate Jamie Cullum. “We’ve all got our own approaches to this genre,” says Dusk, about his colleagues. “Me? I’m not here to change the world. You could say my goal is to bring jazz a little more into the mainstream. But basically, at the end of the day, all I really want to do is entertain people.” With the big, bold and defiantly upbeat Back in Town, Dusk is doing just that. https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/matt-dusk

Sinatra

Benny Golson - One Day, Forever

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:35
Size: 144,1 MB
Art: Front

( 5:08) 1. One Day, Forever
( 6:18) 2. Blue Walk
( 7:54) 3. Killer Joe
( 6:59) 4. Are You Real?
( 4:46) 5. Sad To Say
( 9:18) 6. Out Of The Past
( 4:13) 7. Blues Alley
( 7:36) 8. Along Came Betty
(10:20) 9. On Gossamer Wings

Benny Golson’s latest Arkadia release, One Day, Forever, arose from a taping of some of Golson’s previous band members from the Jazztet: Art Farmer and Curtis Fuller. At the end of a European tour, they were so rushed they that they didn’t record long enough to fill an entire CD. Arkadia owner Bob Karcy kept the tape in the can, and he and Golson kept that recording in mind, in the intervening five years, during which Farmer passed. After Golson wrote some new original music, it was agreed that the tapes from the “Whisper Not 40 Years Of Benny Golson” European tour would finally be heard by the public.

The result is a CD in three mentalities, all of which are contained by Golson’s imagination: the famous sextet sound that produced numbers like “Killer Joe,” a string orchestra backing Shirley Horn as she sings the words to Golson’s new music, and a piano piece introducing Golson’s first classical composition. While not consistent in theme, One Day, Forever does reveal in startling contrast the creative curiosity of Benny Golson.

Joined by Geoff Keezer, Dwayne Burno and Joe Farnsworth, the Jazzteters recall the longevity of Golson’s contributions to the jazz vocabulary. Not confined just to the famous Jazztet works, the group entertained European audiences with some of Golson’s compositions for Art Blakey, like “Along Came Betty” and “Are You Real?”

Golson and Farmer never worked together again, although they remained close friends, so much so that Golson wrote “One Day, Forever” as a reminiscence of Farmer’s wife, who passed a few years before he did. As Horn sings it, sadly and tentatively with lots of space as always, “One Day, Forever” could allude to the abstract concept of loss of intimacy which, of course, it does. By broadening the idea, Golson has expanded the sense of aloneness to apply to anyone who experiences loss. “Sad To Say,” again, is, well, sad, and the cellos reinforce the sense of guardedness and hurt. The melancholy of Golson’s new music has found a perfect outlet in the delicacy and woundedness of Shirley Horn’s style.

The surprise, even for those who expect it, is Lara Downes’ ten-minute premier of Golson’s piano étude, which would be expected in a recital hall rather than on a jazz CD. Certainly, one could say that One Day, Forever contains something for everyone.

The interesting aspect of the CD, though, is the darkening of Golson’s musical interests, with their melancholy themes and their veering away from the brightness, bustling energy and optimism that marked his work in the fifties.By AAJ Staff https://www.allaboutjazz.com/one-day-forever-benny-golson-arkadia-jazz-review-by-aaj-staff

Personnel: Benny Golson, tenor sax; Shirley Horn, vocals; Art Farmer, trumpet; Curtis Fuller, trombone; Mulgrew Miller, Geoff Keezer, Lara Downes, piano; Ron Carter, Dwayne Burno, bass; Carl Allen, Joe Farnsworth, drums.

One Day, Forever

Dick Haymes - No More Little White Lies

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 28:27
Size: 65,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:13) 1. Little White Lies
(2:32) 2. It's A Grand Night For Singing
(2:45) 3. You'll Never Know
(2:45) 4. Love Letters
(3:05) 5. How Blue The Night
(2:32) 6. It's Magic
(2:41) 7. I'll Get By
(2:41) 8. Put Your Arms Around Me, Honey
(3:03) 9. The More I See You
(3:05) 10. 'Till The End Of Time

There was a time when no one would have left Dick Haymes (1918-1980) out of the top class of his contemporaries such as Frank Sinatra and Perry Como. But now the Argentine-born baritone is known only to those ardent fans and music historians who still claim him as one of the most talented popular singers of the twentieth century.

He worked with several great bandleaders, including Benny Goodman and Tommy Dorsey, before beginning a solo career that vaulted him to Hollywood stardom. In 1944, he worked with Twentieth Century-Fox, headlining such hit musicals as Billy Rose's Diamond Horseshoe and State Fair. Popular recordings such as "Little White Lies," "The More I See You," "How Blue the Night," "For You, For Me, For Evermore," "Speak Low," and "Another Night Like This," made him a top draw at the box office.

In the 1950s, when television took over the media landscape and the appeal of musicals declined, Haymes's career suffered. Despite efforts in the 1970s, he never re-established success. In The Life of Dick Haymes: No More Little White Lies, Ruth Prigozy uses over forty personal interviews with singers, musicians, composers, arrangers, and Haymes's family members. She searches archival recordings of The Dick Haymes Show, films, recordings, music studies, and histories to present a full portrait of this complicated man.

Prigozy chronicles Haymes's childhood, his rise in the 1940s, his decline into alcoholism, his multiple marriages among them to such leading stars as Rita Hayworth and Joanne Dru and divorces, and the minor resurgence of his career in Europe during the last years of his life. By Ruth Prigozy https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/326018

No More Little White Lies

Claude Diallo & Bruno Spoerri - Situation: Live

Styles: Piano And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:42
Size: 164,7 MB
Art: Front

(7:34) 1. Goodbye Blanche Neige
(8:52) 2. All The Things You Are
(5:52) 3. I Remember Jsl
(7:39) 4. Two Deaf Lice
(9:44) 5. One Last Prayer For You
(7:33) 6. When Will The Blues Leave
(7:26) 7. Body And Soul
(7:46) 8. Next Life
(9:14) 9. Generations Blues

Internationally acclaimed jazz pianist Claude Diallo travels around the globe to play his music which entices a cosmopolitan audience. With his trio Claude Diallo Situation he released several albums, won various awards and performed at different jazz festivals and venues in Europe, America and Asia.

His early love to Jazz happened through the music of Oscar Peterson and after intense studies at Berklee College of Music in Boston and the Aaron Copland School of Music in New York, Claude Diallo launched his career in the city that never sleeps and stayed there for 11 years, collaborating with the best musicians in his field.

With his motto: Traveling with Music, he started touring outside of his native Switzerland at the age of 20 and through his curiosity, admiration and passion towards other cultures, he built a worldwide network, which is still growing.

Claude Diallo demonstrates a thorough understanding of the jazz piano tradition, but is also strikingly original clearly, someone with a unique voice and sensibility. His compositions are very involved and take the listener on an incredible imaginative journey. ~ David Berkman (pianist and composer) https://claudediallo.com/biography/

Personnel: Claude Diallo - piano; Bruno Spoerri - saxophones; Luques Curtis - bass; Tupac Mantilla - percussion and drums

Situation: Live