Sunday, October 22, 2023

Hot Club of Cowtown - Swingin' Stampede

Styles: Swing
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:33
Size: 100,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:54) 1. I Had Someone Else
(3:17) 2. You Can't Break My Heart
(1:42) 3. Red Bird
(3:02) 4. Chinatown, My Chinatown
(3:24) 5. Just Friends
(3:06) 6. Ida Red
(3:06) 7. Silver Dew On the Blue Grass Tonight
(2:12) 8. Somebody Loves Me
(3:02) 9. My Confession
(2:03) 10. Snowflake Reel
(2:55) 11. End of the Line
(2:55) 12. T and J Waltz
(2:34) 13. Sweet Jenny Lee (2:15) 14. Mission To Moscow

On this, their debut, the Hot Club of Cowtown jump out of the gate like a fired-up, pared down version of the Texas Playboys. A trio, their playing is light and assured, full of grins. What guitarist Whit Smith and fiddler Elana Fremerman lack in vocal prowess they make up for with honest chops and spirit. Swingin' Stampede captures the ambience of old-timey swing nearly to perfection. By Jim Smith
https://www.allmusic.com/album/swingin-stampede-mw0000042562

Personnel: Whit Smith - Vocals, Guitar, Producer; Elana Fremerman - Vocals, Fiddle, Producer, Billy Horton - Backup Vocals, Upright Bass, Producer; Johnny Gimble - Fiddle (Tracks 1, 4, 8, 14); T Jarrod Bonta - Piano (Tracks 8, 10); Jeremy Wakefield - Steel Guitar (Tracks 8, 10); Mike Maddux - Accordion (Track 7).

Swingin' Stampede

The Diva Jazz Orchestra - The Diva Jazz Orchestra Swings Broadway

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:32
Size: 143,1 MB
Art: Front

(7:48) 1. Heart
(6:38) 2. Pure Imagination
(5:44) 3. The Man I Love
(7:12) 4. With Every Breath I Take
(6:06) 5. The Sound of Music
(6:29) 6. Oh, What a Beautiful Morning
(5:17) 7. Seventy-Six Trombones
(7:18) 8. Love Who You Love
(8:55) 9. Get Me to the Church On Time

At the ripe old age of thirty (closer to a hundred in big-band years), the superlative New York-based, all-female DIVA Jazz Orchestra remains as frisky as a newborn colt, swinging up, down and around Broadway with abandon on its thirteenth album, a brisk and colorful tribute to the Great White Way that shines brightly from start to finish.

The album opens and closes in a mid-1950s vein, raising the curtain with Steven Feifke's breezy, well-grooved arrangement of "Heart" from Damn Yankees (1955) and ringing it down with a spirited battle of alto saxophones (Mercedes Beckman, Alexa Tarantino) on Scott Whitfield's full-throttle treatment of Get Me to the Church on Time from Lerner and Loewe's classic My Fair Lady (1956). Drummer and music director Sherrie Maricle has the last word on that flag-waver, taking her only extended solo before brass and reeds append a boisterous exclamation point.

Whitfield, a trombonist himself, deftly arranged "Seventy-Six Trombones" from Meredith Willson's The Music Man as a showcase for DIVA's admirable 'bone section (Jennifer Krupa, Sara Jacovino, bass Leslie Havens), squeezing in a quick "trad" section that summons forth clarinetist Roxy Coss and trumpeter Barbara Laronga before adding a brief line from the venerable "Lassus Trombone" as a coda. Coss delivers a forceful tenor solo on "Heart," as do Krupa and trumpeter Jami Dauber. Bassist Noriko Ueda takes a solo bow on the Gershwin brothers' "The Man I Love," as does Jacovino (who also arranged) on Cy Coleman's seductive ballad, "With Every Breath I Take," from City of Angels.

Coss, Dauber and Maricle share blowing space on baritone saxophonist Leigh Pilzer's buoyant samba version of "Pure Imagination" from Leslie Bricusse/Anthony Newley's delightful score for Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, the first of two splendid charts by Pilzer who spreads a Basie-style canopy over Rodgers and Hammerstein's "The Sound of Music," on which she solos with Ueda and pianist Tomoko Ohno. Ueda arranged a second R&H masterpiece, "Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin,'" from Oklahoma! (sturdy solos courtesy of Ohno, flugel Rachel Therrien and tenor Laura Dreyer), while Scott Silbert uses his impressive orchestral talents to score the enchanting "Love Who You Love" from A Man of No Importance (spotlighting Ohno, Laronga on flugelhorn and Tarantino on soprano sax).

DIVA has a proud history of swinging, on Broadway and everywhere else, and this latest example of its mastery warrants a gold star, blue ribbon, laurel wreath, feather in the cap, or any other commendation a superlative ensemble deserves. To put it another way, Swings Broadway is emphatically recommended.

Personnel: Sherrie Maricle: Music Director, drum set; Tomoko Ohno: piano; Noriko Ueda: bass; Alexa Tarantino: soprano/alto saxophones, flute; Mercedes Beckman: soprano/alto saxophones, flute; Roxy Coss: tenor saxophone, clarinet; Laura Dreyer: soprano/tenor saxophones, clarinet; Leigh Pilzer: baritone saxophone, bass clarinet, clarinet, flute; Liesl Whitaker: lead trumpet, flugelhorn; Jami Dauber: trumpet, flugelhorn; Rachel Therrien: trumpet, flugelhorn; Barbara Laronga: trumpet, flugelhorn; Jennifer Krupa: trombone; Sara Jacovino: trombone; Leslie Havens: bass trombone; Annette Aguilar: guest percussionist on tracks 2 & 6

The Diva Jazz Orchestra Swings Broadway

Nancy Sinatra - Keep Walkin': Singles, Demos & Rarities 1965-1978

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:17
Size: 179,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:52) 1. The City Never Sleeps At Night
(2:51) 2. The Last Of The Secret Agents
(3:04) 3. My Baby Cried All Night Long
(2:17) 4. Shades
(2:38) 5. In Our Time
(2:36) 6. Love Eyes
(2:48) 7. Rockin' Rock and Roll
(3:02) 8. This Town
(2:26) 9. Tony Rome
(2:32) 10. 100 Years
(3:04) 11. See The Little Children
(2:17) 12. Something Pretty
(2:55) 13. Do I Hear A Waltz
(3:20) 14. Drummer Man
(3:12) 15. Zodiac Blues
(3:28) 16. Highway Song
(3:41) 17. Are You Growing Tired Of My Love
(2:22) 18. Flowers In The Rain
(3:57) 19. Glory Road
(2:48) 20. Ain't No Sunshine
(3:43) 21. Easy Evil
(3:24) 22. Sugar Me
(2:35) 23. Kinky Love
(4:29) 24. Dolly and Hawkeye
(2:44) 25. I Just Can't Help Believing

*Light in the Attic* continues to celebrate the influential career of singer, actress, activist, and icon *Nancy Sinatra* with a captivating new collection, *Keep Walkin': Singles, Demos & Rarities 1965-1978*.

Exploring the lesser-known gems from Sinatra's rich catalog through *25 B-sides, rare singles, covers, demos, and previously-unreleased recordings*, *Keep Walkin'* was remastered by the *GRAMMY®-nominated engineer John Baldwin* and available in a variety of formats, including *vinyl, CD, 8-track, and digital*.By Editorial Reviews
www.amazon.com/Keep-Walkin-Singles-Rarities-1965-1978/dp/B0CGMQ3FWH

Keep Walkin': Singles, Demos & Rarities 1965-1978

Gonzalo Rubalcaba - Borrowed Roses

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:01
Size: 140,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:42) 1. Chelsea Bridge
(4:36) 2. Summertime
(4:22) 3. Someone To Watch Over Me
(5:04) 4. Take Five
(6:20) 5. Here There And Everywhere
(4:11) 6. Windows
(6:41) 7. Lush Life
(5:09) 8. Night And Day
(6:19) 9. In A Sentimental Mood
(4:25) 10. Very Early
(2:37) 11. Do It Again
(6:30) 12. Shape Of My Heart

While many men and women approach their sixtieth birthday with visions of retirement, pianist and iconoclast Gonzalo Rubalcaba, with his perceptive ear for folk dance and dense improvisation, moves as far as possible from the idea of retirement and attains another peak of perfection on Borrowed Roses.

Unlike his previous head-turning, stylistic solo recordings the Latin Grammy-winning Solo (Blue Note, 2005) and the spirit cleansing Fe Faith (5Passion, 2019) Borrowed Roses contemplates popular song and standards.

Coming off yet another Grammy win for Skyline (5Passion, 2022), a highly distinguished trio outing with Ron Carter and Jack DeJohnette, Rubalcaba, avowed that music, like imagination and creativity, is never a static thing. He focuses his formidable interpretative prowess on two melodic Billy Strayhorn gems, "Chelsea Bridge" and "Lush Life," centering the melodies within themselves, choosing not to buoy them with the rich harmonic accents which made the originals memorable. That is not to imply in any way that Rubalcaba's approach and playing is anything less than memorable.

Taken back to back, and guided by the lyrical flow, two George Gershwin classics, "Summertime" and "Someone To Watch Over Me," become of one piece, each glorying in the external (the season of the sun) and the internal (the season of longing). Perhaps not an original pairing (given the many times each has been performed down the decades) but certainly an inspiring one, and one which spotlights Rubalcaba's intricate delicacy and determination.

If it were not for the instant familiarity of Paul Desmond's game-changing "Take Five," this performance could be taken as one of the pianist's own time-defying compositions, his coordination and solo improvs holding court. More and more jazz players are recognizing the depth and durability of the John Lennon-Paul McCartney songbook, guaranteeing future years of great music; the pianist takes his place among the true interpreters, translating the emotional core of "Here, There, and Everywhere" with a clarity which a surviving Beatle might marvel at. Rubalcaba muses and expands on Chick Corea "Windows;" conjures and calls onBill Evans with "Very Early," and closes the regal Borrowed Roses with the hushed elegance of Sting's understated ballad "The Shape of My Heart."By Mike Jurkovic
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/borrowed-roses-gonzalo-rubalcaba-top-side-music

Personnel: Gonzalo Rubalcaba: Piano

Borrowed Roses