Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Chris Connor - This Is Chris

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1955
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 29:31
Size: 68,6 MB
Art: Front

(2:39) 1. Blame It On My Youth
(2:28) 2. It's All Right With Me
(3:11) 3. Someone To Watch Over Me
(2:52) 4. Trouble Is A Man
(3:29) 5. All This And Heaven Too
(2:47) 6. The Thrill Is Gone
(3:29) 7. I Concentrate On You
(1:50) 8. All Dressed Up With A Broken Heart
(2:29) 9. From This Moment On
(4:13) 10. Ridin' High

During 1953-1955, singer Chris Connor recorded regularly for Bethlehem. This reissue LP has her final recordings for the label (before moving up to Atlantic) with such fine sidemen as Herbie Mann (doubling on flute and tenor), pianist Ralph Sharon, guitarist Joe Puma, bassist Milt Hinton, and drummer Osie Johnson.

The two-trombone team of J.J. Johnson and Kai Winding (which had recently become very popular) is prominent on four of the ten selections. Connor's cool tone, subtle, emotional delivery and haunting voice were perfect for the music of the 1950s. Highlights of this superior set include "The Thrill Is Gone," "Blame It on My Youth," and "I Concentrate on You," but all ten numbers are rewarding. By Scott Yanow
https://www.allmusic.com/album/this-is-chris-mw0000196885

This Is Chris

Russ Johnson - Still Out to Lunch

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:36
Size: 130,0 MB
Art: Front

( 9:22) 1. Hat and Beard
( 7:39) 2. Something Sweet, Something Tender
(10:21) 3. Out to Lunch
( 5:01) 4. Intake
( 4:31) 5. Gazzeloni
( 7:58) 6. Little Blue Devil
( 7:09) 7. Straight Up and Down
( 4:30) 8. Song for the Ram's Horn

The 50th anniversary of Eric Dolphy's chef d'oeuvre, Out To Lunch and more to the point, one of the great entries in the Blue Note catalogue is marked in rewarding style here. Johnson's excellent group reprises the five songs on the original album and extends the programme with a composition based on the work of one of Dolphy's main champions, Gunther Schuller, whose son is also in the band.


This wider framework is not without merit but the handling of the far from easy source material impresses for its many astute confirmations and wily extrapolations, none more so than on the title track which eventually breaks down to a ballad with the kind of eerie romanticism that runs through much of Dolphy's other work.

Replacing the vibraphone of Bobby Hutcherson with the piano of Myra Melford gives the group sound a very different backbone and rootedness, and the way that some of her fuller, sturdy chords fill out the tightly entwined unison lines of the horns is excellent. It picks up on and cements the immense orchestral implications of Dolphy's work, something that is perhaps overshadowed by the verve of his playing.

Essentially, he bequeathed to modern music mercurial lines, shapes and patterns to be remodeled as well as solos to be admired, and the brilliance of his mind took him above borders between mainstream and avant-garde. This work makes that clear.
https://www.jazzwise.com/review/russ-johnson-still-out-to-lunch

Personnel: Trumpet – Russ Johnson; Alto Saxophone – Roy Nathanson; Bass – Brad Jones; Drums – George Schuller; Piano – Myra Melford; Soprano Saxophone – Roy Nathanson (tracks: 5, 8);

Still Out to Lunch

Sophia Tomelleri - These Things You Left Me

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:56
Size: 114,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:56) 1. Swallows
(5:56) 2. Fuori da novara
(6:08) 3. Drei viertel 5
(3:56) 4. Ballad for G
(4:00) 5. Jojo
(5:35) 6. Takeaways
(7:41) 7. These Things You Left Me
(6:33) 8. Sound Sleeper
(5:06) 9. Ginetta

An album that reconciles the traditional sonority of African-American music with modern and contemporary jazz. If you present these Things You Left Me, album d'esordio della sassophonista Sophia Tomelleri, winner of the prestigious Massimo Urbani Prize in 2020, which is released on June 16, 2021 for the label Emme Record label.

A high-energy project featuring some notable Italian jazz musicians such as Simone Daclon on piano, Alex Orciari on contrabass and Pasquale Fiore on drums. In this work I do perceive a strong interplay and a great cohesion between all the musicians who with enthusiasm have taken part in this new adventure. I find a tradition that comes from Bebop and Hard Bop and acquires a new line thanks to a brilliant language that moves through the past and present with great disinvolvement.Il quartetto, infatti, si muove tra brani caratterizzati gives a decisive groove, a ballad più rilassate, with the phrases of the sassofono always at the service of the group.

Not in case Sophia Tomelleri, leader and principal author of the new branch of this album, is part of some years in diverse musical programs that have allowed her to perform an intense concert activity in Italy and all the countries. The album begins with Swallows, the opening piece of this work that synthesizes the perfection of the band's language.

The sinuous solo of the sax is embedded with the decisive groove of the drums so that the piano can be played bright and energetic. From Novara is a carico branch of swing where the cohesion of the musicists emerges, among Drei Viertel is a cadenzata composition, vivace in which the sax diventa più dolce e il suono della band si ammorbidisce. Ballad For G e This Thing You Left Me sono invece due “ballad” lens, malinconiche that show us the most intimate part of a versatile and determinate formation. Jojo is another energetic piece, with a serrato drum rhythm characterized by brilliant sax phrases, dynamic and all this essential tempo.

Takeaways, forse one of the most interesting parts of the quartet, associates an essential and malign melodic line with an energetic, original and decisive battery. Sound Sleeper raps once again at the perfect point of union between tradition and modernity, with a decisive groove, an essential and granite phrase. The album if you join Ginetta can give you a swing in which you can feel the cohesion of a band that has shared diverse languages, expressing a strong personality. Translate By Google
https://www.emmerecordlabel.it/release/these-things-you-left-me/

These Things You Left Me

Ramsey Lewis - Hang On Ramsey!/ Wade In The Water 1965/1966

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1965/ 1966
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:00
Size: 177,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:01)  1. A Hard Day's Night
(4:17)  2. All My Love Belongs To You
(2:30)  3. He's A Real Gone Guy
(5:40)  4. And I Love Her
(3:15)  5. Movin' Easy
(9:13)  6. Billy Boy / Hi-Heel Sneakers
(5:17)  7. The More I See You
(6:09)  8. Satin Doll
(3:09)  9. Hang On Sloopy
(3:51) 10. Wade In The Water
(2:58) 11. Ain't That Peculiar
(4:33) 12. Tobacco Road
(2:44) 13. Money In The Pocket
(3:10) 14. Message To Michael
(3:16) 15. Uptight (Everything's Alright)
(2:27) 16. Hold It Right There
(3:11) 17. Day Tripper
(3:05) 18. Mi Compasion
(3:05) 19. Hurt So Bad

In 2002, BGO released Hang on Ramsey/Wade in the Water, which contained two albums by jazz pianist Ramsey Lewis on one compact disc: Hang on Ramsey (1965) and Wade in the Water (1966), both originally issued by Cadet. ~ John Bush  http://www.allmusic.com/album/hang-on-ramsey-wade-in-the-water-mw0000467953

Personnel: Ramsey Lewis (piano); Maurice White, Redd Holt (drums).

Hang On Ramsey!Wade In The Water

Patricia Barber - Clique

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:20
Size: 104,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:37) 1. This Town
(3:53) 2. Trouble is a Man
(8:04) 3. Mashup
(4:28) 4. Samba de Uma Nota Só (One Note Samba)
(4:56) 5. I Could Have Danced All Night
(4:28) 6. The In Crowd
(4:19) 7. Shall We Dance?
(6:09) 8. Straight No Chaser
(4:23) 9. All in Love is Fair

These time-honored songs, lovingly curated, arranged, and performed by pianist/vocalist Patricia Barber and her band, are at last seeing the light of day when the world needs them more than ever. Pristinely recorded, Clique assembles what began as encores to live performances into an experience all its own. The album comes out of the same sessions that gave us Higher (see review for All About Jazz here), which immersed the fortunate listener in a world shaped by art song and poetry, only now shed of its shadows and reveling in the city lights. "This music is fun, like Patricia Barber without the dark side," is how she describes her project in a recent phone interview. "We'd been booked for four days in the studio but finished Higher in two. Since the band was already there and tight from having been on the road, it was easy for me to pull these out."

There is indeed an ease that characterizes her vocal delivery of Jobim's "Samba de Uma Nota Só / One Note Samba" and the Rodgers and Hammerstein bon mot "Shall We Dance?" Appearances by Neal Alger (acoustic guitar) on the former and Jim Gailloreto (tenor saxophone) add to the nostalgia of these familiar grounds, though it's her core trio, led by the bandleader's keystrokes, that does much of the heavy lifting. Linked arm in arm with bassist Patrick Mulcahy and drummer Jon Deitemyer, she first croons her way onto the rain-slicked streets of "This Town" as if it were the most natural thing in the world.

"In some ways, I'm a control freak," Barber admits of her sound. "These are arrangements. This particular group is one I cherish, so everyone gets time to play. So, while it's stylized, they definitely have an input." Said input is front and center in "The In Crowd," which tracks its nerve impulses outwardly from a spinal bass line. In this and "Trouble Is A Man," Barber shows that her greatest powers as a singer tend to reside in her quietest inflections. From a near whisper, she is able to elicit deep lyrical and emotional conflicts. Chalk this as another victory for Jim Anderson, whose engineering ensures both fine separation and artful blend. "He just gets better," says Barber of the producer with whom she has worked for the better part of three decades. "In my music in general, I value silence as much as I value presence, and he's able to capture that perfectly."

Even when her voice hangs its hat for an instrumental interlude, Barber ensures that the audience, however virtual, is never forgotten. Whether turning the kaleidoscope of her original "Mashup" or navigating the burnished corridors of Monk's "Straight No Chaser," she allows freer energies to occupy the foreground. Notes Barber, "This is a very good representation of what you will hear when you come to see us live. It was true to what this band was playing at the time. We worked very hard on pulling melody away from the rhythm as we know it. It takes a very quiet space and musicians who are listening closely to do that."

Their synergy is especially apparent on "I Could Have Danced All Night," in which the drum kit seems to spread its wings around us as Barber takes a half-lit stage with poise. The sonic whetstone along which she sharpens such tunes is indicative of their somewhat unusual choosing. "When people hear 'standards album,' they're expecting the classic American Songbook of the 30s, but these are from the 50s and 60s, one of my favorite eras. I would call it a covers album." In that spirit, Barber takes the metaphorical connotations of the concept to their fullest, dressing melodies and harmonizing with freshly tailored clothing.

In that respect, one can't help but hear Clique and Higher as complementary. Whereas the earlier release broke new harmonic ground for vocal jazz music and was the result of six years of writing, here we are treated to a set of comforts we know and love. Barber is acutely aware of the timing as well: "This is a pleasant album to throw on right now, though I am disoriented by having a record come out that I can't perform with." How fortuitous, then, that she should end with Stevie Wonder's "All In Love Is Fair." Its sincerity speaks to the heart of the matter and unpacks for us the album's multivalent title, which Barber picked from among a handful of choices because, in her words, "it sounded like the kind of jazz club you'd want to be a part of." Thankfully, not even a pandemic can keep us from walking through its doors, taking a seat, and opening our ears to the hope of a brighter future.~Tyran Grillo https://www.allaboutjazz.com/clique-patricia-barber-impex-records

Personnel: Patricia Barber: piano; Patrick Mulcahy: bass; Jon Deitemyer: drums; Neal Alger: guitar, acoustic; Jim Gailloreto: saxophone, tenor.

Clique