Tuesday, December 5, 2023

Lisa Hilton - Getaway

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2013
Time: 61:10
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 140,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:53) 1. Getaway
(3:58) 2. Just for Fun
(3:56) 3. Stormy Monday Blues
(4:11) 4. Stepping into Paradise
(7:58) 5. Evening Song
(6:04) 6. City Streets
(3:55) 7. Lost & Found
(5:13) 8. Emergency
(4:42) 9. Turning Tables
(2:55) 10. Unforgotten
(1:51) 11. Stop & Go
(5:59) 12. Slow Down
(5:30) 13. Huckleberry Moon

Pianist Lisa Hilton has made an art out of balancing the simple and complex. Her work speaks with extreme clarity and serves as a benchmark for a less-is-more style of piano playing that appeals to a wide swath of listeners, but it isn't plain-Jane jazz. Hilton has a way of taking a basic idea and stretching its conceptual fabric to the breaking point. Singsong ideals are twisted, contorted and distorted, and rhythmic ideas are pulled out of focus, blurring the firm-time realities that actually exist underneath it all. This form of musical cunning helped to make Underground (Ruby Slippers Productions, 2011) and American Impressions (Ruby Slippers Productions, 2012) so intriguing, and it serves Getaway just as well. Getaway is both a return to standard form and a departure from the norm for Hilton. 

She's working with musicians who've appeared by her side before, but she's left the quartet comfort zone and ventured into trio territory, where transparency and trickery both seem to thrive. Hilton's most frequent on-record collaborator bassist Larry Grenadier and the man who helped her shake things up and put a darker spin on things drummer Nasheet Waits join up again. They both assist Hilton in painting a bluesy picture, where shadows and light share space and the brooding and bright coexist in equal measures. The album takes flight with a dark, cycling pattern that underlines a song that's both diaphanous and direct ("Getaway"). Things progress with jaunty notions, as playful melodic snippets come and go ("Just For Fun"). Both of these formulas, with certain twists, serve Hilton well in other places, but they don't define the album. The music falls into a state of cinematic reverie at other times ("Evening Song"), but excitement and the unexpected are always lurking around the corner ("City Streets" and "Lost & Found"). 

The majority of the program is given up to Hilton originals, but two covers "Stormy Monday Blues" and Adele's "Turning Tables" give the trio an opportunity to try their hand at music of the past and present. The rarely-encountered marriage between stasis and surprise is central to the success of Getaway. Hilton's left hand often acts as a constant, serving as a steady presence and eye in the storm, and Grenadier often grounds the group, allowing Hilton and Waits to color around his bass. Waits remains the wonderful wildcard, as on Hilton's two previous albums, but he tempers his explosive side. Both Grenadier and Waits are far more technically adept than Hilton and 99% of the playing population but they don't flaunt their musical muscle in this setting. 

They both play in service of the music and all three musicians prove complementary to one another. Getaway, more than any other release thus far, provides a clear picture of Lisa Hilton as artist, conceptualist builder, and sculptor of sounds. It also confirms what was already known: Hilton is a conjurer of musical spells, moods and magic who defies easy categorization.~Dan Bilawsky
(http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=44247#.UhaxtX-Ac1I).

Personnel: Lisa Hilton: piano; Larry Grenadier: bass; Nasheet Waits: drums.

Getaway

Wynton Marsalis - Louis Armstrong's Hot Fives and Hot Sevens

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:43
Size: 169,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:48) 1. Potato Head Blues
(4:01) 2. Twelfth Street Rag
(5:48) 3. Skid-dat-de-dat
(4:00) 4. Jazz Lips
(6:31) 5. St. James Infirmary
(3:56) 6. Weary Blues
(4:07) 7. Melancholy Blues
(5:52) 8. Heebie Jeebies
(6:11) 9. Once In A While
(4:05) 10. Ory's Creole Trombone
(7:58) 11. Basin Street Blues
(6:33) 12. Savoy Blues
(3:59) 13. Cornet Chop Suey
(5:46) 14. Fireworks

Recorded in the 1920s, Louis Armstrong’s Hot Fives and Hot Sevens sides are still hailed as some of the greatest and most influential jazz sessions ever captured; musicians obsess over their warmth, wit, and joy to this day. A new live recording by Wynton Marsalis another acclaimed New Orleans trumpeter reimagines classics from those sessions like “Basin Street Blues,” “St. James Infirmary,” and “Heebie Jeebies” for a whole new generation of audiences.

Performed in 2006, Wynton Marsalis Plays Louis Armstrong’s Hot Fives and Sevens assembles an all-star band of Marsalis collaborators (like trombonist Wycliffe Gordon and pianist Jon Batiste) who, together, recreate the magic of Armstrong’s seminal ensembles. There are perhaps no better interpreters of Armstrong’s legacy than Marsalis and his fellow musicians; and, through transposing the timeless music of the 1920s to the 21st century, these expert players deliver technically flawless performances and prove Marsalis’ assertion that all eras of jazz are integrated. https://wyntonmarsalis.org/discography/title/wynton-marsalis-plays-louis-armstrongs-hot-fives-and-hot-sevens

Louis Armstrong's Hot Fives and Hot Sevens