Thursday, December 28, 2023

Donald Byrd - Stepping Into Tomorrow

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1975
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:36
Size: 91,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:13) 1. Stepping Into Tomorrow
(4:20) 2. Design a Nation
(4:25) 3. We're Together
(6:12) 4. Think Twice
(3:49) 5. Makin' It
(6:09) 6. Rock and Roll Again
(4:31) 7. You Are the World
(3:54) 8. I Love the Girl

Beginning with a crack of thunder, like it was made to trail Gary Bartz's "Mother Nature" (actually recorded at a slightly later date), Stepping into Tomorrow contains almost all of the Mizell trademarks within its title track's first 30 seconds: a soft and easy (yet still funky) electric-bass-and-drums foundation, silken rhythm guitar, organ and piano gently bouncing off one another, light synthesizer shading, and coed group vocals to ensure true liftoff. It's only one in a line of many magnetic '70s sessions led by Fonce and Larry Mizell, and it differs from their two previous Donald Byrd dates the polarizing and groundbreaking Black Byrd and the deceptively excellent Street Lady by not featuring any of Roger Glenn's flute, and by focusing on heavily melodic and laid-back arrangements.

Even the speedy "You Are the World," by some distance the most energetic song, seems more suited for relaxing in a hammock than shooting down a freeway. Many of the musicians present on the previous Byrd-Mizell meetings are here, including drummer Harvey Mason, bassist Chuck Rainey, keyboardist Jerry Peters, and guitarist David T. Walker. As ever, those who pined for the approach of Byrd's '60s dates would tune out a sublime set of material, but maybe some of those who sniffed at the straightforward nature of some of the rhythms and riffing were won over by the supreme layering of the many components (the way in which "Think Twice" lurches forward, peels back, and gathers steam is nothing short of heavenly), not to mention some deeply evocative playing from Byrd himself.~Andy Kellman https://www.allmusic.com/album/stepping-into-tomorrow-mw0000057832

Personnel: Trumpet [Solo Trumpet], Soloist [Solo Trumpet], Flugelhorn, Vocals [Solo Vocals], Soloist [Solo Vocals] – Donald Byrd; Alto Saxophone, Clarinet – Gary Bartz; Backing Vocals – Fonce Mizell, Fred Perrin, Kay Haith, Larry Mizell, Lorraine Kennar, Margie Evans, Stephanie Spruill; Clavinet, Trumpet – Fonce Mizell; Congas – Mayuto Correa; Drum [Batah Drum], Jew's Harp [Mouth Harp] – Harvey Mason; Drums – Harvey Mason; Electric Bass [Fender Bass] – Chuck Rainey; Guitar – David T. Walker, John Rowin, Rhonghea Southern; Piano [Acoustic Piano], Organ – Jerry Peters; Synthesizer [Arp Synthesizers], Electric Piano [Fender Rhodes] – Larry Mizell

Stepping Into Tomorrow

Marjorie Barnes - Both Sides Now

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:13
Size: 118,1 MB
Art: Front
v
(2:40) 1. Soon
(5:37) 2. I Haven't Got Anything Better
(3:41) 3. Moon River
(4:24) 4. Something To Live For
(5:22) 5. Detour Ahead
(2:46) 6. Never Will I Marry
(5:02) 7. A Sleepin' Bee
(4:11) 8. Smile
(3:44) 9. That's All
(5:37) 10. Both Sides Now
(3:40) 11. I Will Wait For You
(4:23) 12. How Do You Keep The Music Playing?

Marjorie Barnes native New Yorker who has been living in Europe for almost fifty years including several decades in the Netherlands, summons her many years of experience to brighten and embroider Both Sides Now, her impressive debut recording with the world-class Millennium Jazz Orchestra (MJO). Barnes sang in the mid-1970s with the multiple Grammy Award-winning ensemble, The Fifth Dimension, and has worked with such luminaries as Frank Sinatra, Lena Horne, Sammy Davis Jr., Billy Eckstine and many others. She is relaxed and comfortable in a big-band setting, astutely enriching the splendid arrangements by MJO director Joan Reinders.

The program that Barnes and Reinders have chosen is an attractive blend of standards and one original, closing with a trio of classics, Joni Mitchell's spellbinding "Both Sides Now" and Michel Legrand's "I Will Wait for You" and "How Do You Keep the Music Playing?" Barnes is a throwback to an era in which singers let a song tell its story, eschewing any flamboyance or pretension that would subvert the composer's purpose. She simply sings each song the way it was meant to be sung.

Reinders, meanwhile, lends ample support by deftly arranging every number and choosing a single soloist to complement Barnes on most of them. Tenor saxophonist Joao Driessen escorts her on the Gershwin brothers' "Soon," which opens the session, and Henry Mancini's "Moon River," alto saxophonist Gerlo Hesselink on "Never Will I Marry" and the lone original composition, "I Haven't Got Anything Better to Do." Pianist Dirk Balthaus is front and center on "Detour Ahead," flautist Rob Sijben on "A Sleepin' Bee," baritone saxophonist Job Helmers on "That's All," trumpeter Suzan Veneman on "Both Sides Now" and "I Will Wait for You." Needless to say, every solo is exemplary.

That is a word which suits Barnes too, as she skates easily through every number with nary a false note or misstep. Listening to Both Sides Now, it is easy to see how Barnes could have replaced the peerless Marilyn McCoo, as she did for two years in The Fifth Dimension. Even now, nearly half a century onward, Barnes seems to have lost none of the elegance and charm she brought to that gig. She and the MJO make a lovely coup https://www.allaboutjazz.com/both-sides-now-marjorie-barnes-millennium-jazz-orchestra-zennez-records

Both Sides Now

Jeff Bradshaw - Jeff Bradshaw 20

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:09
Size: 109,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:56) 1. Dubai Voices
(4:29) 2. How You Gonna Act Like That (Feat. Mike Burton)
(3:49) 3. Ridin Dirty
(4:02) 4. Make Some Time (Feat. Eric Roberson)
(4:13) 5. Time (Feat. Keith Phelps)
(4:19) 6. Carrie's Bread Puddin'
(3:11) 7. Destiny (Feat. Rebecca Jade)
(3:45) 8. Ay Ay Ay (Feat. Raheem Devaughn & Chill Moody)
(2:47) 9. Young, Broke, & Brave (Feat. Saint Ezekiel)
(1:44) 10. A Lil Love (Interlude)
(3:15) 11. Don't Wanna Wait (Feat. Liz Vaughn)
(4:39) 12. God Says (Feat. Jamie Knight)
(3:57) 13. The Maintenance Man (Feat. B.slade)

Accomplished trombonist Jeff Bradshaw has been making music professionally for almost 30 years. Over that time, he has collaborated with a who's who of jazz and R&B artists including Jill Scott, the Roots, Erykah Badu, Kirk Franklin and many others. Jeff Bradshaw 20 is a celebration of his career with all-new recordings and collaborations with Eric Roberson, Raheem DeVaighn and more.By Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Jeff-Bradshaw-20/dp/B0C3RJWR1T

Jeff Bradshaw 20