Saturday, September 30, 2023

Bill Gati & The Roaring 20's Band - 8 By 8

Styles: Swing
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 29:48
Size: 68,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:08) 1. 'Tain't Nobody's Biz-Ness If I Do
(4:31) 2. Ja Da
(3:22) 3. Baby Won't You Please Come Home
(5:37) 4. Indiana
(3:44) 5. You Made Me Love You
(2:22) 6. Margie
(3:56) 7. I Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate
(3:04) 8. There'll Be Some Changes Made

These are “mood setting” originals that intend to create emotional reactions in the listeners. The idea is to express emotions and feelings inspired by architecture and space. Since I am also an architect, I view music as an extension of space and form. I perform weekly at the Water’s Edge Restaurant in Long Island City, NY. I experiment with different styles, tempo and volume to see how people react to the music.

My conclusion is that music does more to set the mood and change people’s emotions than anything else. Music is the ultimate conveyor of emotion. The best music is able to express.http://www.apianoman.com/store/

Personnel: William Gati - sax; Adrian Cunningham - tenor sax, clarinet; Vinny Raniolo - guitar; Charlie Caranicas - trumpet; Harvey Tibbs - trombone; Chris Pistorino - bass; Rob Garcia - drums; Martina DaSilva - vocals (1, 3, 5, 7)

8 By 8

Lake Street Dive - Bad Self Portraits

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:11
Size: 89.7 MB
Styles: Pop-Soul
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[3:22] 1. Bad Self Portraits
[3:32] 2. Stop Your Crying
[3:35] 3. Better Than
[2:12] 4. Rabid Animal
[3:27] 5. You Go Down Smooth
[3:57] 6. Use Me Up
[3:29] 7. Bobby Tanqueray
[5:02] 8. Just Ask
[3:39] 9. Seventeen
[4:14] 10. What About Me
[2:37] 11. Rental Love

Lake Street Dive is powered by the voice of Rachael Price; it's what hits you first when you listen to this quartet. It's a ringingly clear, strong voice, a sound that's at once beseeching and in control. Price regularly harmonizes with the other members of Lake Street Dive bassist Bridget Kearney, drummer Mike Calabrese and Mike Olson, who also plays guitar and trumpet.

When Lake Street Dive performed "You Go Down Smooth" amidst all the big stars T-Bone Burnett had gathered for his Inside Llewyn Davis tribute concert, it provoked cheers. The song, like much of Lake Street Dive's material, looks to the past in this case, a driving pop-soul '60s sound. One thing that raised Lake Street Dive's profile was a YouTube video of the group performing the Jackson 5's "I Want You Back" on a Boston street. It's racked up more than a million views, popular for the way it not only displays the group's talent, but also frames it as something both spontaneous and studied, a throwback to doo-wop groups crooning on street corners. This is the kind of thing that plays to the least interesting thing about Lake Street Dive: the privileging of technique over originality, the domestication of music that was once more unruly. You can sometimes hear this on Lake Street Dive's original material, in a song such as "Rabid Animal," which is catchy but hardly embodies the fervid intensity implied by rabidness.

Price also has a career as a jazz vocalist, performing with musicians such as Joshua Redman and T.S. Monk. And she's released solo albums that include interpretations of standards like "Skylark" and "Serenade in Blue." There's a mood to this music that Lake Street Dive occasionally captures in a song such as Bridget Kearney's composition "Better Than." When you look at YouTube videos of Lake Street Dive performing covers such as The Mamas and the Papas' version of "Dedicated to the One I Love," what you get is not a fresh interpretation of a song initially made famous by the 5 Royales and the Shirelles, but rather a very nice Mamas and the Papas impersonation. But enough times on this album to make it worth your while, Lake Street Dive powers past nicety to connect with the passion that brings blood and sweat to the tears that heartache songs need in order to thrive. ~Ken Tucker

Bad Self Portraits

The Australian Jazz Quintet - In Free Style

Styles: Jazz, Swing
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:26
Size: 97,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:33)  1. Swingin' Goatsherd Blues
(5:53)  2. Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered
(4:29)3. Takin' a Chance on Love
(4:36) 4. The Way You Look Tonight
(4:32)  5. I'll Remember April
(4:05)  6. Detour Ahead
(3:35)  7. Too Marvelous for Words
(9:41) 8. Take Three Parts Jazz: Rout 4

The group was formed in 1953 by three Australians and one American. The group was unusual in that it featured bassoon, flute, and vibraphone along with the more conventional jazz instruments, saxophone, piano, bass, and drums. Australians Errol Buddle (bassoon and tenor saxophone), Bryce Rohde (piano), and Jack Brokensha (vibraphone and percussion) arrived in Windsor, Canada during 1952-1953. These three planned to form a group and tour the U.S., but visa difficulties initially prevented this, so they settled down to local work in Windsor. Then, Phil McKellar, a Jazz DJ at CBE Windsor, arranged for them to record radio programs and for Brokensha and Rohde to play at the Killaney Castle in downtown Windsor. This led to Brokensha appearing across the border in Detroit on a local WXYZ-TV show and for him to obtain employment visas enabling the three musicians to play in the U.S.

They soon met American (b. 1929, Youngstown, OH) Richard J. (Dick) Healey (alto sax, clarinet, flute, bass) at recording sessions in Detroit, and together the four musicians began playing as a quartet on weekly TV shows and performances at the Kleins Jazz Club.

Early 1954 appearances on the Detroit WXYZ-TV show "Soupy's On" led comedian Soupy Sales to recommend the group to a Detroit suburb club owner Ed Sarkesian to accompany jazz vocalist Chris Connor for two weeks at the club (Rouge Lounge in River Rouge, a Detroit suburb)  and to have the group perform between each of her sets. Since Buddle had been playing bassoon regularly with the Windsor Symphony, Healey and Rohde quickly decided to make arrangements for the flute-bassoon-vibes combination, giving the group a distinctive sound. This unusual instrumentation created much interest in the quartet, not only from jazz enthusiasts, but also from classical music aficionados. During the two week engagement with Connor, Sarkesian contacted Joe Glaser of Associated Booking Corporation in New York. Sarkesian named the group The Australian Jazz Quartet/Quintet, and based on a quickly recorded 78 disk, he garnered a five-year contract with ABC and Bethlehem Records for the group. Sarkesian then became the group's personal manager, which worked out very well because he also soon became a major promoter of jazz concerts and festivals.

Under the new arrangement with ABC the AJQ performed at the Blue Note in Chicago; and on a concert in Washington DC. with the Dave Brubeck Quartet, the Modern Jazz Quartet, and Carmen McRae. Soon they began playing at clubs like The Hickory House, Birdland (jazz club), Basin Street, and the Roundtable in New York; the Blue Note, Modern Jazz Room, and Robert's Show Room in Chicago; Storyville in Boston; Jazz City in Los Angeles; Macumba in San Francisco; Sonny's Lounge in Denver; Peacock Alley in St. Louis; Rouge Lounge in Detroit; Peps and Blue Note in Philadelphia; Midway Lounge in Pittsburgh; Colonial in Toronto, Ball & Chain in Miami and many others. At many of these clubs the AJQ shared the band stand with well-known groups such as the Dave Brubeck Quartet, Les Brown Orchestra, Johnny Smith Quartet, Bud Shank Quartet, Miles Davis, Pete Jolly Trio, J. J. Johnson, Max Roach-Clifford Brown Quintet, Art Blakey Quintet, Teddy and Marty Napoleon Quartet, Bud Powell Trio, Thelonious Monk, Conte Candoli/Al Cohn Quintet, Ahmad Jamal Trio, Don Shirley Trio, Lee Konitz Quartet, Woody Herman, Billie Holiday and others.

National concert tours took place in 1955-57. In 1955 there was the "Modern Jazz Show" with the Dave Brubeck Quartet, Gerry Mulligan, and Carmen McRae. In 1956 there was "Music For Moderns" with Count Basie, Erroll Garner, the Kai Winding Septet, the Chico Hamilton Quintet, and the Gerry Mulligan Quartet. In 1957, there was again "Music For Moderns" with the George Shearing Quintet, the Gerry Mulligan Quintet, Chico Hamilton, Helen Merrill, Cannonball Adderley, and Miles Davis.

These tours included performances at major concert halls, including Carnegie Hall in New York. The AJQ appeared on several national television shows, the most notable being the Steve Allen Tonight Show, The Dave Garroway Today Show, The Arthur Godfrey Show, In Town Tonight Chicago, and the Ed Mackenzie and Soupy Sales Shows from ABC in Detroit. On the Radio they were heard on CBS's "Woolworth Hour", NBC's "Monitor", and ABC's "Parade of the Bands".

During 1955 to 1958 the AJQ recorded seven albums under the Bethlehem label. The first album, distinguished by its cover illustrated by four side-by-side kangaroos, was a 10" LP recorded in February, 1955 and featured arrangements of eight standard songs. A 12" version of this album, released in 1956, added three standards and one original song by bassist Jimmy Gannon, who also assisted on the recording. Meanwhile, another album, this one with scores of kangaroos on its cover, was released with 10 songs including two originals, one by Gannon and the other by Healey.

In 1958 the group travelled to Australia for The Australian Concert Tour for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). Also, there were TV and Radio Broadcasts, and, in Melbourne and Sydney, there were concerts with Sammy Davis Jr. These performances were broadcast nationally by the ABC. After the 1958 tour the group members decided to terminate the AJQ and become independent performing and recording artists. However, reunion concerts occurred in Adelaide in 1986 and 1993, and a recording of the 1993 concert was distributed. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Australian_Jazz_Quartet


Personnel: Alto Saxophone – Dick Healey;  Bass – Jerry Segal;  Drums – Osie Johnson;  Piano – Bryce Rohde;  Tenor Saxophone – Errol Buddle;  Vibraphone – Jack Brokensha

In Free Style

Michael Dease - Swing Low

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:45
Size: 151,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:16) 1. Dancing In The Dark
(5:30) 2. Don't Look Back
(5:58) 3. Appreciation
(5:20) 4. Phibes' Revenge
(7:06) 5. Just Waiting
(6:00) 6. Melancholia
(7:13) 7. Galapagos
(6:11) 8. New Blues
(7:00) 9. Up High, Down Low
(4:11) 10. Julian's Tune
(5:56) 11. Embraceable You

Really rich sounds from reedman Michael Dease a baritone player, and one who handles the large horn with effortless ease taking us back to some of our favorite bari players of the 50s who could carve out a line as if they were swinging an alto or a tenor!

The rest of the group have an equally compact sort of vibe tight, yet always thoughtful, as they pack plenty into each of their solo spaces, while also coming across with that sharp sound as a whole that can make the best Posi-Tone sessions so great! Ingrid Jensen plays trumpet, Art Hirihara plays piano, Boris Kozlov handles bass, and Rudy Royston is on drums and on three tracks, Altin Senclar also joins the group on trumpet.

Titles include "New Blues", "Galapagos", "Appreciation", "Don't Look Back", "Melancholia", and "Just Waiting". © 1996-2023, Dusty Groove, Inc.

Musicians: Michael Dease - baritone saxophone; Ingrid Jensen - trumpet, flugelhorn; Altin Sencalar - trombone on #7,8,10; Art Hirahara - piano; Boris Kozlov - bass ; Rudy Royston - drums

Swing Low