Monday, April 3, 2023

The Verve Jazz Ensemble - The VJE: Very Live!

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:32
Size: 141,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:19) 1. Big Swing Face
(3:43) 2. This I Dig of You
(8:06) 3. Softly as in a Morning
(6:11) 4. Sister Sadie
(5:37) 5. Autumn Left
(6:09) 6. Alone Together
(7:00) 7. My Shining Hour
(6:32) 8. Tin Tin Deo
(5:53) 9. Mothlight
(5:59) 10. Groovin' Hard

It takes a bold, knowledgeable, and inventive group to call itself The Verve Jazz Ensemble. The moniker Verve conjures the legendary jazz label Verve Records: once home to the greatest pioneering names in the artform from Duke Ellington, Stan Getz and Ella Fitzgerald to Bill Evans, Count Basie, and Buddy Rich. It is in the spirit of the Verve label’s 1950s - ‘60s hard bop heyday that The Verve Jazz Ensemble composes, arranges, and performs jazz of a timeless quality. Across eight albums and counting the latest entitled All In the “VJE” has been satisfying the cravings of critics and audiences alike, consistently placing near or at the very top of the JazzWeek radio chart for the past decade. No less than Ellis Marsalis, the late, revered patriarch of the highly distinguished Marsalis Family that gave us Wynton, Branford, Jason and Delfeayo Marsalis, observed, “The VJE is the new MJQ,” referring to the fabled Modern Jazz Quartet.

Drummer Josh Feldstein founded The Verve Jazz Ensemble in 2006 as a band that paid homage to the past while vehemently establishing newer, younger audiences for the now vintage sound. “Part of the band’s mission,” said Feldstein, “is to expand the audience of classic instrumental jazz, to identify melodies that pop audiences can easily relate and groove to but not need a degree in music to dig.”

The Verve Jazz Ensemble is a band that “chooses to move in a musical direction that’s appealing to radio as well as our broad base of US and international listeners,” Josh added. “Our mission is to bring forward the acoustic jazz artform in a way that both veteran listeners and newcomers to Jazz easily appreciate.”

Feldstein’s passion for acoustic jazz stems back to when he was 11 years old and living with his family in Queens, New York. He was taking drum lessons at the time from a teacher who turned him onto the volcanic Gene Krupa. “One day my teacher told me I sounded like Krupa,” Josh recalled. “Well, I don’t think that was remotely true, but I dug Gene’s drumming intensely and couldn’t stop listening.” The LP he pointed Josh to was “Verve’s Choice: The Best of Gene Krupa.” Josh was hooked.

“I spent the next 10 years grabbing up all of the jazz albums recorded for Verve Records that I could,” he states. “I hung out listening to Papa Jo Jones and the Countsmen at the West End Café on Broadway and 113th street in Manhattan. I’d catch the incredible Buddy Rich and his big band, and legends like Max Roach, Art Blakey, and Count Basie. Any given month would bring into town the best of the best like (saxophonist) Stan Getz, (pianist) Monty Alexander, and on and on.

“I put music on the backburner once I entered college, however, because I didn’t think I could make money as a jazz musician,” Josh said. “While I kept practicing and did play from time to time I even toured for a while with a big band in the mid-Atlantic area it was part-time stuff by and large.

“Some years later, when I was living in Connecticut, I came across the playing of a young saxophonist / keyboardist named Jon Blanck. He really impressed me as a young cat who could really play in the authentic hardbop idiom, which is my foundation. I approached him to play locally just for fun. We ended up booking restaurants and country clubs and becoming close friends. The band developed a strong reputation and a faithful following. Once the VJE started playing clubs throughout Connecticut and eventually in New York proper, things started happening.”

The VJE was a quintet when it first ventured into the studio to record its debut album, It’s About Time (2012), followed by East End Sojourn (2014) which featured guest Peter Bernstein on guitar. Both charted Top 10 on the JazzWeek radio charts. Those albums were followed by top 25 Perimeter (2016) and yet another top 10 album, Swing-A-Nova (2017), recorded by the rhythm section as a trio album. For 2018, Feldstein expanded the tenor sax, trumpet, piano, bass and drums quintet into a septet with alto / flute and trombone for the VJE’s fifth album, Connect The Dots, a change that shot the band to the #1 position atop the JazzWeek chart for two weeks. Next came Night Mode (2019) another top 10-charter followed during the Covid lockdown by The VJE: Very Live! (2021) recorded at a pre-pandemic benefit concert in Hadley, MA - which kept the VJE brand alive and well.

For VJE’s eighth and latest album, All In, the septet joyfully explores the theme of “Mid-20th century Americana” via two original compositions and eight arrangements of some classic and other little-heard material. The band consists of Tatum Greenblatt on trumpet, Willie Applewhite on trombone, Alexa Tarantino on alto sax / flute, Jon Blanck on tenor sax, Matt Oestreicher on piano and guitar, Elias Bailey on bass, and VJE leader Josh Feldstein on drums.

Highlights of the album include the Tatum Greenblatt original title track, “All In;” an Afro Cuban approach to Neal Hefti’s beloved “The Odd Couple Theme;” another Greenblatt original entitled “What I Meant to Say Was,” set up as a musical conversation between trumpet and alto sax; and a piano trio whirl through Jean “Toots” Thielemans “Bluesette.”

All this music, along with the rest of “All In,” is in passionate keeping of The Verve Jazz Ensemble’s sworn mission to expand the audience of instrumental jazz in the United States and worldwide. “This is very important to all of us,” Feldstein shares. “My daughter is in high school, and she and her friends like our music. There are listeners everywhere of all ages who don’t know any jazz history. But when they hear our approach to jazz, they soak it in. Identifying and performing jazz melodies that pop audiences can relate to catchy yet legitimate music, with a pulse that’s our target.”
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/the-verve-jazz-ensemble

Very Live!

Jeremy Pelt - Profile

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:12
Size: 139,0 MB
Art: Front

( 8:41) 1. Aesop's Fables
( 4:01) 2. The Trivium
( 6:03) 3. Mystique
( 6:26) 4. Pieces Of a Dream
( 8:30) 5. A Song For You (Lovebird)
(10:37) 6. Jigsaw
( 6:07) 7. We Share a Moon
( 8:42) 8. You won't Forget Me

His original compositions flow from jazz's straight-ahead tradition. His sextet is keeping the flame alive through solid teamwork and gentle exploration. Their blend treats each instrumental voice equally, but highlights the drummer just a little more than the others. And why not? Ralph Peterson does a superb job of knitting them into one well-composed unit.

Trumpeter Jeremy Pelt hails from Los Angeles. After graduating from Boston's Berklee College of Music in 1988, he moved to New York and has paid his dues with several mainstream organizations. Now, his recording debut offers a larger audience the opportunity to hear this rising star. With his clarion tone and persuasive technique, Pelt rides a creative wave of straight-ahead dreams. Ballads and up-tempo romps take on his personal attitude. Passion and energy build his performance. Undoubtedly, Miles and Freddie and Chet and Booker and Lee came from the same roots as young Jeremy Pelt. It's all from the heart. On top of that, he's surrounded himself with a winning team. This year's top ten list wouldn't be complete without Profile. Tune in as soon as you can.By Jim Santella https://www.allaboutjazz.com/profile-jeremy-pelt-blue-moon-review-by-jim-santella

Personnel: Jeremy Pelt: trumpet; Jimmy Greene: tenor saxophone; Robert Glasper: piano; Gerald Cannon: bass; Ralph Peterson: drums; Jaleel Shaw: alto saxophone on "Pieces of a Dream"; Mike Moreno: guitar on "Aesop's Fables"

Profile

Alyse Korn & Robert Kyle - Tuesday's Child

Styles: Cool Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:58
Size: 118,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:05) 1. Gratitude
(6:36) 2. What If
(4:55) 3. Your Light
(5:22) 4. Distance Between Us
(5:41) 5. Tuesday’s Child
(6:07) 6. Winter
(4:59) 7. Blue Jack
(4:36) 8. Vivian’s Danzón
(6:33) 9. Ruby’s Dream

Tuesday’s Child is a collection of peaceful and meditational jazz, featuring songs that softly build on its melodies and motifs. By employing a combination of European melodies with subtly and sparingly used Afro-Caribbean rhythms, Tuesday’s Child gives it introspective mood an occasional energetic boost that magnifies paired piano and woodwinds as they softly move across the songs on this album.

The albums’ songs are all effectively duets. Even when decorated with subdued rhythms. Tuesday’s Child focuses on the interplay between Kyle’s flute/saxophone and Korn’s piano/vocalese. Kyle and Korn wrote each song on the album with a specific memory in mind, but the songs transcend their inspirations. As the old nursery rhyme says, Tuesday’s Child is full of grace, and this is such an apt title for the album.

Gratitude is simultaneously peaceful and playful. Korn’s vocalese lays over the piano and spare saxophone and percussion and percussion, stirring it all together. On What if, Kyle’s graceful and reaching flute carries the listener into the clouds, especially when contrasted against Korn’s dynamic, Afro-Caribbean rhythm piano rhythm. The song glides between slower and faster tempos as if to suggest a mind contemplating two distinct aspects of the question what if?

Your Light is a lilting duo between tenor saxophone and piano. Kyle wrote this song about his relationships with Korn. Distance Between Us starts with a soprano saxophone that sounds melancholy suggesting that perhaps the distance of the title is farther than we think it might be. The piano and percussion again employing subtle Afro-Caribbean splashes, especially in Korn’s rhythmic piano suggest it may be closer.

Winter sounds like a winter morning where the air is cold, and the sky is bright blue and offers a playfulness to its delicate proceedings. Korn’s vocalese line at the end of the song is so subtle it a listener could miss it, but it’s to lovely not to miss! Blue Jack, which Kyle wrote in tribute to an Uncle, is the most swinging and blues-tinged song on the album.

The percussion on Vivian’s Danzo´n and the Kyle’s rolling, Brazilian piano chordal rhythms makes this song jump, especially compared to the more sedate songs on this album. Korn wrote Ruby’s Dream on a piano that Ruby Kyle dreamt she gifted to Robert Korn. It’s a fitting end to the album that shows how closely intertwined these musicians are. Robert Korn says, “There’s a lot of turmoil in the world today, and we hope that when people listen to our music, they will feel the peace that we feel when we play it.”

The music on “Tuesday’s Child” is indeed a musical island of peace and introspection. The instruments on each track softly sing to each other and sing to both the present moment and to the individual moments that each song.By Ben Miller
https://jazzviews.net/alyse-korn-robert-kyle-tuesdays-child/

Robert Kyle (saxophone and flute); Alyse Korn (piano and vocalese); Kevin Winard (drums and percussion); Hussain Jiffry and Ahmet Turkmenoglu (bass); Leonice Shinneman (tabla)

Thank You Maineime!

Tuesday's Child

Eddie 'Cleanhead' Vinson With The Cannonball Adderley Quintet - Back Door Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:40
Size: 141.2 MB
Styles: Blues/Jazz/R&B, West Coast Blues
Year: 1962/2013
Art: Front

[2:12] 1. Bright Lights, Big City
[2:33] 2. This Time
[4:17] 3. Hold It
[6:30] 4. Arriving Soon
[4:17] 5. Kidney Stew
[2:19] 6. Back Door Blues
[2:46] 7. Person To Person
[3:02] 8. Just A Dream
[4:48] 9. Audrey
[4:03] 10. Vinsonology
[6:30] 11. Cannonizing
[6:20] 12. Bernice's Bounce
[4:16] 13. Kidney Stew (Alt Take)
[3:35] 14. Back Door Blues (Alt Take)
[4:04] 15. Vinsonology (Alt Take)

Alto Saxophone – Julian "Cannonball" Adderley* (tracks: 1 to 9, 11), Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson (tracks: 3, 4, 6, 9, 11); Bass – Sam Jones; Cornet – Nat Adderley; Drums – Louis Hayes; Piano – Joe Zawinul; Vocals – Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson (tracks: 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 8, 10).

A plethora of "lost" recording dates have popped up since the dawn of the compact disc, especially in the jazz world. Unfortunately, most of them haven't been worth the wait and, indeed, as underwhelming as some of them have been, it might at least aesthetically speaking have been better had they not been unearthed. Happily, this isn't one of these occasions. The two sessions here were recorded in 1961 and 1962 in Chicago and New York, and feature Cannonball Adderley's quintet that included pianist Joe Zawinul, bassist Sam Jones, drummer Louis Hayes, and brother Nat on cornet. Cleanhead sings his ass off and plays some alto with Cannonball. These dates reveal an anomaly in jazz at the time: The recordings are the place on the map where jazz and R&B meet head on, bringing the full force of their respective traditions and neither giving an inch. And it works so well from the wild bluesy shout of Vinson in call and response with Adderley on "Bright Lights, Big City" and "Hold It!" to the shimmering dual jazz saxophones on "Arriving Soon" that it begs the question as to why it didn't happen more often.

The soloing is top-flight, with some especially knotty work by Nat on "Person to Person" and "This Time." Cannonball is excellent throughout; the R&B and blues idioms are all meat and potatoes for him, and he feels confident settling inside the groove without the need to push the boundary. Ironically, it's Vinson who compensates in that way. And the anchor in all of this is Zawinul, leading the rhythm section, condensing both musics to their most essential harmonics and tonalities, and building them out with a swinging style and cadence that are nothing short of remarkable. These two sets may be comprised of songs and standards from the repertoire, but make no mistake, they are blowing sessions. The digital transfer by Joe Tarantino is flawless and so lifelike it's startling. Highly recommended. ~Thom Jurek

Back Door Blues