Thursday, August 31, 2023

Chris Connor - Chris

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1956/2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:53
Size: 79,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:01) 1. All About Ronnie
(2:47) 2. Miser's Serenade
(2:19) 3. Everything I Love
(2:58) 4. Indian Summer
(2:21) 5. I Hear Music
(2:47) 6. Come Back To Sorrento
(2:57) 7. Out Of This World
(2:56) 8. Lush Life
(2:31) 9. From This Moment On
(3:26) 10. A Good Man Is A Seldom Thing
(2:36) 11. Don't Wait Up For Me
(3:11) 12. In Other Words

Chris Connor has won every conceivable critical and popular accolade in her half century reign as one of the most gifted and distinctive vocalists in jazz history. Born in 1927 in Kansas City, Missouri, Connor studied clarinet, but her career direction was clear at an early age. “I always knew I wanted to be a singer,” she said, “I never wanted to be anything else.” After completing her schooling, she took a secretarial job while commuting on weekends to the University of Missouri to perform with a Stan Kenton-influenced college jazz band. An admirer of Kenton singers Anita O’Day and June Christy, Connor recalls, “I had my sights set on singing with Kenton.”

Frustrated by the lack of vocal musical opportunities in her hometown, Connor pulled up stakes and headed east in 1949. She was hired by Claude Thornhill and spent the next five years touring with his orchestra. Then, while appearing with Jerry Wald’s band, she received the phone call she had been dreaming of. June Christy, Stan Kenton’s current vocalist, had heard Connor on a radio broadcast and recommended her to the orchestra leader, who chose her from dozens of other vocalists eager for the job. “My voice seemed to fit the band,” Connor said, “with that low register like Anita’s and June’s.

Connor’s ten-month stint with Kenton during 1952-53 won her national recognition. Her haunting recording of Joe Greene’s ballad “All About Ronnie” announced the arrival of a fresh new artist. But the years of one-night stands, fast food and interminable bus rides soured Connor’s enthusiasm for life on the road. “By that time, I’d endured about six years of one-nighters and I’d just about had it.” To this day she values the musical training she received with Kenton, especially the skills relating to time, phrasing and “how to come in on exactly the right note while 18 or 20 musicians are playing their parts.”

Determined to forge a career as a solo artist, Connor returned to New York and signed with Bethlehem Records in 1953. Her three albums for that independent label, featuring Ellis Larkins, Herbie Mann, Kai Winding and J.J.Johnson, established her as a major jazz voice. In 1956, she began a six-year association with Atlantic Records that produced a string of chart-topping recordings arranged by Ralph Burns, Al Cohn, Jimmy Jones and Ralph Sharon, showcasing a host of jazz legends - John Lewis, Oscar Pettiford, Lucky Thompson, Phil Woods, Kenny Burrell, Milt Hinton, Clark Terry, Oliver Nelson and, in a particularly memorable pairing, Maynard Ferguson’s big band.

The rock youthquake of the late ’60s and ’70s derailed the careers of many jazz artists, but Connor persisted, performing in clubs, touring Japan and recording for a variety of labels. The early ’80s resurgence of interest in jazz singing revitalized her career, leading to a brace of highly-acclaimed Contemporary CDs. In the ’90s she began to record for the Japanese label Alfa. Connor recorded two CDs with jazz pianist Hank Jones and his trio, “Angel Eyes” and “As Time Goes By.” She then recorded two additional CDs with her own quintet, “My Funny Valentine,” arranged by Richard Rodney Bennett, and “Blue Moon,” a collection of movie songs, arranged by Michael Abene.

The new Millennium brought the timeless singer into yet another recording agreement, signing with the New York based High Note Records in 2000. Her first release, “Haunted Heart,” also arranged by Michael Abene, was released September 2001, and a second CD "I Walk With Music," was released in 2002, also with Michael Abene arranging and producing.

Chris then returned to another Japanese label and recorded "Lullaby Of Birdland" for King Record Co.Ltd, with pianist/arranger David Matthews. It was released in September 2003.

Of her current singing, Connor said, “I haven’t changed my approach, although my voice has become deeper and softer, and I don’t experiment as much. When you’re young, you overplay as a musician and you over-sing as a singer because you’re trying all these ideas, and I was throwing in everything but the kitchen sink. I’ve eliminated a lot of things I used to do. The simpler it is, the better it works for me.” She remains, as critic Larry Kart proclaimed in the Chicago Tribune, “a dominating vocal presence whose music is full of hard-earned wisdom and truth".
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/chris-connor/

Chris

Martina DaSilva, Dan Chmielinski - Constellations

Styles: Vocal, Bop
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:32
Size: 100,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:25) 1. I Want to Be Happy
(3:43) 2. As Praias Desertas
(4:09) 3. Deep Night
(4:24) 4. Smile
(2:44) 5. Nice Work If You Can Get It
(1:35) 6. Twin Flame
(4:25) 7. I'll Never Be the Same
(4:20) 8. It's All in Your Mind
(2:28) 9. Cold Cold Heart
(4:35) 10. My Universe
(3:52) 11. Trouble in Mind
(4:47) 12. Lush Life

ChimyTina first captured international attention in 2014 with the release of eye-catching duo performance videos, racking up thousands of views on social media. In 2019, the duo released their critically acclaimed debut A Very ChimyTina Christmas, which was praised by Rolling Stone and the New York Times for their “flexible chops and a gut-level creative connection”. Now, ChimyTina returns with Constellations, their second full length venture due out for release on all digital platforms on June 17, 2022. On June 14th, the duo will present the album at Joe's Pub in New York City.

Constellations aims to expand ChimyTina’s already far-reaching musical sphere with notes of introspection and solitude paired with hopeful optimism. The duo introduces audiences to evocative arrangements of deeply swinging, soulful songs that span the decades of the jazz songbook to a pair of original compositions by DaSilva. Alongside the two charismatic bandleaders, Constellations features performances by a handful of very special guests including vibraphonist Joel Ross, trumpeter Marquis Hill, saxophonist Grace Kelly, guitarist Andrew Renfroe, saxophonist Lucas Pino, and cellist Ken Kubota.

Advertisement:“A good word for this album is trust,” reflects Chmielinski, thinking back to their recording sessions in April 2021. “We’re trusting that the world will return, that we’ll be able to do what we love again. It was a very visceral, raw reaction to what was happening to us.” Constellations is an LP that looks inward while also, befitting of its name, draws on an almost cosmic perspective of the human experience.

A jovial start to the record, Chmielinski and DaSilva both strongly identified with the optimism and upbeat nature of the familiar jazz standard “I Want To Be Happy”. Marquis Hill, with his buttery tone and phrasing perfection was an obvious choice for the track. The call and response section introduces the interplay and lyrical fun both DaSilva and Chmielinski enjoy including in their singular arrangements. Also featuring Hill is Chmielinski and Martina’s take on the Chaplin-penned classic “Smile”. A half time 6/8 feel is introduced by the bassline in this piece, which remains consistent throughout, followed by a double-time second half of each section, as if to state that the happier times always seem to move faster. Remembering to smile and be grateful for all that one has during times of strife is something that resonated with both musicians, and the sensitive stylings of Marquis Hill was yet again an obvious choice for the poignant song.

A common thread throughout the ChimyTina discography is the nod to Martina’s Brazilian heritage. Here, this is realized on “As Praias Desertas,” a lesser known Antônio Carlos Jobim composition. Augmenting this entrancingly beautiful arrangement is Ken Kubota whose versatility as both a classical cellist and accompanist, with his guitar-like strumming mastery, shaped the arrangement into a full-fledged spectacle that paints a vivid image of “deserted beaches”.

DaSilva’s original compositions “Twin Flame” and “My Universe” present an ethereal theme to the release, and demonstrate her stunning acuity for composition. “Twin Flame” has a classic sound and a fullness that comes from DaSilva’s warm vocals and the support of multi-tracked bass. DaSilva’s lyric reflect’s life’s search for answers, looking to the spirits, questioning the stars and searching for facts, stating that “science is her guiding light”; a principle she wished more people would have adopted throughout the pandemic. “My Universe” features renowned vibraphonist Joel Ross, and is a dark, emotional reflection of the New York experience. The piece, written many years ago by the vocalist, felt apropos in light of recent events. The magical stylings of Ross help solidify an emotional ballad that carries both the gravity and awe felt by both bandleaders during their time in the Big Apple.

“Deep Night” and “It’s All In Your Mind”, both featuring guitarist Andrew Renfroe, are reimagined jazz compositions from yesteryear that seem to delve into the inner world of the composer while “Deep Night” makes allusions to the night sky, fitting for the theme of this release. Renfroe fits into the duo’s sound with ease, supporting DaSilva’s soaring vocals and giving the pieces new life with the addition of his unique and melodic sound. Classic jazz standards “I’ll Never Be The Same” and “Nice Work If You Can Get It” are interpreted here with the addition of saxophonist Lucas Pino who offers shimmering countermelodies and virtuosic improvisation. Another highlight is the classic “Trouble in Mind”, delivered with saxophonist Grace Kelly. “Inspired by the Nina Simone rendition, this take is a reminder that music is one of the most cathartic expressions of joy in the face of strife. It is clear throughout that the joy and improvisatory nature of the song exudes an attitude of rolling with the punches and continuing to be grateful for the lives we live,” shares DaSilva.

The album finale features a triple-bass arrangement of a song near and dear to both Chmielinski and DaSilva: Billy Strayhorn’s “Lush Life”. Here, Chmielinski aims to invoke awe, reflection and elegance in a fresh take on a classic recorded so many times. Inspired by his bringing around bass ensembles, the bassist demonstrates both accompaniment, lyrical bowing and a virtuosic solo aiming for nothing short of an authentic relationship that he has to this song.

Constellations is a welcomed return to ChimyTina’s musical ethos,with thoughtful arrangements and original compositions that, threaded with cosmic themes of the outer world,offer audiences a soulful journey through the inner world of this innovative, of-the-moment musical duo. https://bassmagazine.com/artists/bassist-dan-chmielinski-and-vocalist-martina-dasilva-announce-new-album-constellations

Constellations

Michael Blake - Fulfillment

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:49
Size: 126,7 MB
Art: Front

(7:21) 1. Sea Shanty
(6:35) 2. Perimeters
(7:05) 3. The Ballad of Gurdit Singh
(4:44) 4. Arrivals
(5:49) 5. Departures
(7:34) 6. Battle at Baj Baj
(9:28) 7. Exaltation
(6:09) 8. The Soldier and the Saint

Saxophonist Michael Blake's previous concept album Kingdom of Champra (Intuition, 1997) is based on his experiences living with his family in Vietnam. On Fulfillment, the artist centers his focus on India, namely an incident that occurred when a Japanese freighter, transporting hundreds of East Indian immigrants was denied entry into the port of Vancouver, Canada in 1914. Another source of interest is that Blake's great grand uncle H.H. Stevens was instrumental in engaging the Canadian Parliament to take action.

Blake's manifold tactics are structured on contrasting modal processes and clever arrangements amid heartwarming, melodic choruses; straight-four jazz rock cadenzas, several reengineering exercises and shades of East India. Each piece encompasses a standalone storyline. And this positive attribute offers a sense of intrigue as Blake diversifies these arrangements with great depth, marked by his deeply personalized vision and so forth. For example, "Departures" poses a combination of glee and solace, commencing with Chris Gestin's brisk piano solo, and a linear horns and cello arrangement, amped by perky accents. The musicians bounce between free-jazz and modern mainstream, gelled with catchy phrasings and spunky soloing jaunts.

"Battle at Baj Baj," features a somber current, launched by drummer Dylan van der Schyff's rolling mallets and cymbals extrapolations, while Blake's dusky tonal range and commanding presence initiates the expansive movements with a touch of angst towards closeout. Other works are designed with climactic passages and guitarist Ron Samworth's distortion- streaked solos, but several regions of sound are softened with gentle overtones. Indeed, Blake's creative and imaginative sparks are in full force and he's undoubtedly at the top of his game here. By Glenn Astarita
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/fulfillment-michael-blake-songlines-recordings-review-by-glenn-astarita

Personnel: Michael Blake: tenor & soprano saxophone, compositions; J.P. Carter, trumpet, electronics; Peggy Lee, cello; Chris Gestrin, piano, MicroMoog; Ron Samworth: electric guitar, banjo; André Lachance: bass; Dylan van der Schyff: drums, percussion. Special guests -Aram Bajakian: acoustic & electric guitar (1, 6, 7); Emma Postl, voice (1, 3); Neelamjit Dhillon, tabla (7).

Fulfillment

Mark Colby - Tenor Reference

Styles: Saxophone Jazz br /> Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:14
Size: 150,2 MB
Art: Frontbr

( 9:56) 1. Beautiful Love
( 7:22) 2. Blues of a Kind
(10:35) 3. My One and Only Love
( 9:50) 4. Softly As in a Morning Sunrise
( 8:11) 5. Riley's Thang
( 6:45) 6. Bloom's Room
( 4:51) 7. Bar Room Ballad
( 7:42) 8. Sabra

Mark Colby, saxophone, is a popular jazz artist in Chicago. He was music director and featured soloist with Maynard Ferguson for several years and has appeared and recorded with Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, Bob James, Jaco Pastorius, Arturo Sandoval, and Ramsey Lewis, to name a few. He can be heard on the 1999 release "Reunion" with pianist, Vince Maggio and on his album "Tenor Reference" both on Hallway Records. He has performed as a soloist with the Milwaukee Symphony and the Miami Philharmonic. Under the sponsorship of Selmer and Sugal Mouthpieces he gives high school and college concerts and clinics throughout the U.S.
https://www.amazon.com/Tenor-Reference-Mark-Colby/dp/B00005RRG0

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone – Mark Colby; Bass – Eric Hochberg; Drums – Bob Rummage; Piano – Vince Maggio; Trumpet – Rob Parton (tracks: 5 and 6 only)

Tenor Reference

Houston Person - The Lion and His Pride

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:34
Size: 139,3 MB
Art: Front

( 9:32) 1. Dig
( 7:32) 2. I Remember Clifford
( 8:06) 3. Dear Heart
( 6:26) 4. Sweet Love (Theme From Black Orpheus)
( 6:52) 5. You Are Too Beautiful
( 7:11) 6. Like Someone In Love
( 4:45) 7. Our Day Will Come
(10:06) 8. Captain Hook

With his robust sound and swinging style, tenor saxophonist Houston Person has kept the hard bop and organ-soaked soul-jazz traditions alive. Emerging from organist Johnny "Hammond" Smith's group, Person established his reputation as one of the Big Boss tenors in the Gene Ammons style with albums like 1968's Blue Odyssey, 1969's Goodness!, and 1970's Person to Person! He further embraced a funky, soulful vibe in the '70s with albums like 1972's Broken Windows, Empty Hallways and 1976's Stolen Sweets. From the '80s onward, he balanced his love of groove-based R&B with more hard-swinging acoustic sessions, joining contemporaries like Ron Carter and Teddy Edwards, as well as younger players like Joey DeFrancesco and Christian McBride. He recorded extensively with singer Etta Jones and has remained a torchbearer for the big tenor sound, releasing warmly attenuated standards and soul-jazz dates like 2015's Something Personal and 2021's Live in Paris.

Born in 1934 in South Carolina, Person started out on piano before picking up the tenor sax in his youth. After high school, he studied at South Carolina State College and then enlisted in the Air Force. Stationed in West Germany, he played in a service band that also included such jazz luminaries as Eddie Harris, Lanny Morgan, Leo Wright, and Cedar Walton. Following his discharge, he finished his studies at Connecticut's Hartt College of Music. In the early '60s, Person was a member of organist Johnny "Hammond" Smith's group, appearing on albums like 1963's A Little Taste, 1965's The Stinger, and 1968's Nasty! It was also during his time with Smith that he first met vocalist and longtime musical companion Etta Jones.

As a leader, Person made his solo debut with 1966's Underground Soul on the Prestige label, featuring organist Charles Boston. More vibrantly earthy albums followed for the label, including 1967's Chocomotive, 1967's Trust in Me, and 1968's Blue Odyssey, all of which found him working with pianist Cedar Walton. Throughout the late '60s and early '70s, he released a handful of albums that all featured exclamation-point titles, starting with 1968's Soul Dance! and ending with 1970's Person to Person! Marked by the inclusion of organist Sonny Phillips, each record grew increasingly funky as Person dipped further into soul and R&B sounds. There were also gritty sessions with Charles Earland and Don Patterson.

Throughout the '70s, Person continued to pursue a soul-oriented crossover sound, as on 1971's large-ensemble Houston Express and 1972's Sweet Buns & Barbecue. Following his time with Prestige, he recorded for a bevy of independent labels, releasing 1973's The Real Thing and 1975's Get Out'a My Way! on the Detroit-based Eastbound and Westbound labels, respectively. He then moved to Mercury for two mid-'70s dates, 1976's Pure Pleasure and 1977's Harmony. He also recorded with equally funk-centric players like Grant Green, Richard "Groove" Holmes, Bernard Purdie, and others. In addition, there were numerous sessions with vocalist Jones, a partnership that would continue for much of Person's career. Toward the end of the decade, he found a home at Muse, releasing a handful of equally earthy soul-, blues-, and hard bop-inflected dates, including Stolen Sweets, Wild Flower, and The Nearness of You. More albums followed for Muse with 1980's Suspicions, 1982's Heavy Juice, and 1985's Always on My Mind.

While funk and soul would remain an integral part of his sound, Person began to incorporate more straight-ahead acoustic jazz back into his work by the late '80s. He released a warm standards date with 1987's Basics and paired with bassist Ron Carter for both 1989's Something in Common and 1990's Now's the Time. He also recorded several albums featuring then up-and-coming young lions, including organist Joey DeFrancesco and a pair of siblings, trumpeter Philip Harper and drummer Winard Harper, as on 1990's Why Not! A year later, he released The Lion and His Pride, which again featured the Harper Brothers, along with pianist Benny Green and bassist Christian McBride.

In 2015, Person delivered the rootsy and soulful Something Personal. The saxophonist then again paired with Carter for the 2016 duo album Chemistry. The following year saw Person issue the soulful Rain or Shine, which marked his 50th year as a combo leader. After 2018's Remember Love, his sixth album of duets with Carter, he returned with the full-band set I'm Just a Lucky So and So. The concert album Live in Paris arrived in 2021 and featured his group with guitarist Peter Bernstein, organist Ben Paterson, and drummer Willie Jones III.
By Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/artist/houston-person-mn0000827320/biography

Personnel: Houston Person - tenor saxophone; Philip Harper - trumpet; Benny Green - piano; Christian McBride - bass; Winard Harper - drums; Sammy Figueroa - percussion (except #1); Special Studio Guest: Etta Jones

The Lion and His Pride

Wilma Baan - Look At Me Now!

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:11
Size: 112,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:32) 1. Oh! Look At Me Now
(4:12) 2. The Windmills Of Your Mind
(3:52) 3. Somewhere In The Hills (Favela)
(3:52) 4. The Great City
(4:09) 5. Waltz for Debby
(3:55) 6. the Day It Rained (Chuva)
(3:45) 7. Old Devil Moon
(5:06) 8. Bein' Green
(4:44) 9. Born To Be Blue
(3:29) 10. When In Rome
(4:29) 11. Never Let Me Go
(3:04) 12. A Beautiful Friendship

Originally from The Netherlands and now settled in the UK, vocalist Wilma Baan's story is one of perseverance. Mid-way through her singing career in the '80s, she was diagnosed with a condition that meant gradually worsening hearing loss. Although she could still hear high tones, she had little choice but to pause her career. Fortunately, in the late '90s, technological breakthroughs in digital hearing aids and Bluetooth enabled her to re-capture enough of the sound that had been lost so she could start singing again.

Baan finds inspiration in classic jazz songs and has made some interesting selections for Look At Me Now! Her musicians on this album include pianist and arranger Graham Harvey, bassist Jeremy Brown and drummer Sebastiaan de Krom. There are also guest appearances from guitarist Nigel Price, vibraphonist Nat Steele, trumpeter James McMillan and percussionist Tristan Banks. This is her second album, following on from her debut So Nice (Self Release, 2019), both albums having been produced by Claire Martin.

Baan's crystal clear diction is immediately apparent in the opening track, "Oh! Look At Me Now." She sings with a smile in her voice over nicely judged piano, with a bass break from Brown and de Krom picking up the beat at exactly the right time. "The Windmills Of Your Mind," originally written for the film, The Thomas Crown Affair, won an Oscar in 1969 for Best Original Song. Baan introduces small changes in timing and intonation to create interest and deviate cleverly from the original. "Somewhere In The Hills" is a highlight, with a pulsing piano and trumpet introduction, a Latin tempo and Baan's fast phrasing showing impeccable diction and timing. Flowing piano and trumpet breaks together with lyrical bass add further interest.

Bill Evans' "Waltz for Debby," was first recorded as a short piano instrumental on his album New Jazz Conceptions (Riverside, 1957), and then in trio format on his live recording, Waltz for Debby, (Riverside, 1961). Evans' friend, Gene Lees, added lyrics with versions by and Tony Bennett proving popular. Here, Baan's mellow tone is well suited to the song, and Steele's vibraphone lifts it into new territory. "Old Devil Moon," from the 1947 musical Finian's Rainbow, finds Baan in fine form with Brown adding a neat bass break.

"Bein' Green," perhaps best known as the signature song of Kermit the Frog, is half sung, half spoken, over de Krom's brushwork, with Steele's vibraphone adding colour. Harvey's arrangement, together with nicely judged guitar from Price, add to the Brazilian flavour of "The Day It Rained." Other highlights include Baan's charming delivery of the upbeat and swinging, "A Beautiful Friendship" and the smoky "Born To Be Blue."

The musicianship is top quality throughout and provides the perfect foil to Baan's homage to the American Songbook. Baan uses inflection, warmth and timing as the tools which allow her to own the songs. Immaculate arrangements, interesting song choices, elegant vocals, there is a lot to like here. By Neil Duggan
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/look-at-me-now-wilma-baan-self-produced

Personnel: Wilma Baan: voice / vocals; Graham Harvey: piano; Jeremy Brown: bass; Sebastiaan de Krom: drums.

Look At Me Now!