Sunday, March 31, 2024

Matt Carter Octet - Read Between The Lines

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2023
Time: 62:05
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 142,4 MB
Art: Front

(0:57) 1. Sunny Side
(7:06) 2. Abode
(5:33) 3. They Can't Take That Away From Me
(7:17) 4. Fighting Talk
(8:10) 5. High Germany
(5:51) 6. Girl Talk
(5:57) 7. Hope Song
(6:30) 8. Duke's Mood
(7:24) 9. Like It Or Not
(7:16) 10. Read Between The Lines

For those who like their jazz upbeat and straight-ahead comes this entertaining first studio album from a young British pianist and composer. Matt Carter was still studying at the Royal Academy of Music in London when he began putting together its band members and music, while also backing singers such as Joss Stone and Mica Paris. Though he’s no purist, Carter’s heart clearly lies with purring big bands. His octet (all young) comes with a five-strong brass section, augmented by the guest flute of relative veteran Gareth Lockrane on three cuts.

Among the cover versions is the luscious Girl Talk by Neal Hefti, Count Basie’s arranger, who also composed the Batman theme, while a couple of originals here, Abode and Fighting Talk, sound like theme tunes in search of an action TV series. Another great band leader, Duke Ellington, gets a more ruminative tribute on Carter’s Duke’s Mood, with a blousy trombone solo from Harry Maund.

They Can’t Take That Away from Me is arguably an over-covered item from the Great American Songbook, but Carter’s solo swings delightfully, as does the brass arrangement. More unlikely is a version of the folk tune High Germany, here hauled unceremoniously into the clattering modern age. An auspicious debut. https://www.theguardian.com/music/2023/jul/22/matt-carter-octet-read-between-the-lines-review-an-auspicious-debut

Personnel: Piano – Matt Carter; Bass – Joe Lee; Drums – Luke Tomlinson; Trumpet – Geroge Jefford; Tenor sax – Tom Smith; Baritone sax – Harry Greene; Alto sax – Jonny Ford; Trombone – Harry Maund; Flute – Gareth Lockrane

Read Between The Lines

Joel Harrison - Anthem of Unity

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2023
Time: 50:22
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 116,3 MB
Art: Front

(8:16) 1. Anthem Of Unity
(4:35) 2. Survival Instinct
(5:30) 3. The Times They Are A-changin'
(5:08) 4. Today Is Tomorrow's Yesterday
(7:55) 5. Doxy
(4:21) 6. Migratory Birds
(8:31) 7. Parvati
(6:03) 8. Mohawk Valley Peace Dance

American guitarist/composer Joel Harrison showcases the pragmatic eclecticism that characterizes his music on Anthem of Unity, his 25th album as a leader. The disc features phenomenal rhythmic pulsations engendered by legendary drummer Jack DeJohnette, the adventurous melodicism of saxophonist Greg Tardy, and the extra harmonic color of organist Gary Versace, who, together with Harrison, creates colorful groove-centered tapestries.

Inspired by the influential late guitarist Mick Goodrick, the title track opens the album as an enjoyable concoction of funk, rock and Americana. The anthemic theme reveals a mild temperament but the solos by Tardy and Harrison are pure fire. In a similar tone but with a more incisive post-bop attack, “Survival Instinct” features another otherworldly tenor statement and the excellent underpinning of DeJohnette, who assures that his drum fills shine with a special energy.

Only two of the eight tracks that compose this work weren’t penned by Harrison, namely, “The Times Are A-Changin’” and “Doxy”, by Bob Dylan and Sonny Rollins, respectively. The former, a protest folk tune, waltzes smoothly with jazzy colors; the latter, served with jazz and funk ingredients at the base, boasts its heavenly melody with transparency and a laid-back groovy feel.

“Migratory Birds” develops in five and at some point places a heart-reaching flute at the center in unison with guitar, whereas “Today is Tomorrow’s Yesterday” swings energetically with casual post-bop fling. Before bringing the album to a close with “Mohawk Valley Peace Dance”, a blues rock incursion with a saucy wah-wah guitar solo on top of a dub substratum, Harrison offers “Parvati”, a rousing fusion with a great melodic theme, chromatic shifts, and a drum intro that’s quite interesting to hear.

Versatility abounds in a record that, not reaching the levels of America at War (Sunnyside, 2020), consistently satisfies. https://jazztrail.net/blog/joel-harrison-anthem-of-unity-album-review

Personnel: Joel Harrison: guitar; Greg Tardy: tenor saxophone, flute; Gary Versace: Hammond B-3 organ, piano; Jack DeJohnette: drums.

Anthem of Unity

Johnny Hartman - Complete Regent Recordings (Bonus Version)

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:12
Size: 167.6 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz, Standards
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[2:36] 1. I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart
[2:34] 2. Why Was I Born
[2:32] 3. Just You, Just Me
[2:39] 4. A Woman Always Understands
[2:37] 5. Sometime Remind Me To Tell You
[3:02] 6. There Goes My Heart
[2:40] 7. Just A Wearyin' For You
[2:49] 8. I'll Never Smile Again
[2:55] 9. Tormented (Why Must I Be)
[3:04] 10. What's To Become Of Me
[2:57] 11. I Should Care
[2:39] 12. That Old Black Magic
[3:43] 13. If Love Is Trouble
[2:29] 14. Close Your Eyes
[2:39] 15. S'posin'
[2:25] 16. Goodbye
[3:10] 17. September In The Rain
[2:43] 18. Remember
[2:57] 19. Out Of The Night
[2:37] 20. Worry Bird
[2:27] 21. Wheel Of Fortune
[2:35] 22. Wild
[2:59] 23. Black Shadows
[2:57] 24. I Feel Like Crying
[3:50] 25. Stella By Starlight
[2:29] 26. Somebody Loves Me

The release of this retrospective of songs recorded for Regent by jazz vocalist Johnny Hartman probably owes a lot to Clint Eastwood's film The Bridges of Madison County. Hartman's smooth voice is heard throughout the soundtrack, and many listeners became latter-day fans of this popular singer from the 1950s and '60s. Hartman is best known for his work with jazz giant John Coltrane on their classic CD on Impulse: John Coltrane & Johnny Hartman, recorded in 1963. But Hartman recorded with many other great jazz luminaries of his day, and much of that work appears on this compilation. The CD features Hartman crooning with an astonishing array of musicians: Dizzie Gillespie, Prez Prado, Budd Johnson, Errol Garner,Cozy Cole, Jimmy Nottingham, Tony Farina, and Bobby Tucker, to name a few. The CD includes material recorded in 1947 through 1954, plus some bonus tracks recorded live in 1961 with the Andrew Hill Trio. Hartman, a master at interpreting the inner life of a ballad, comes through soft and clear on standards such as "That Old Black Magic," "I Let a Song Go out of My Heart," "I'll Never Smile Again," "Just You, Just Me," "September in the Rain," "Stella by Starlight," and "Somebody Loves Me." The amorous and sophisticated tone of the entire set is polished off with the final selection, "Misty," which expresses how the listener might feel after hearing so many songs of romance and seduction. ~Sharon Witmer

Complete Regent Recordings  

Saturday, March 30, 2024

Eliane Elias - Light My Fire

Styles: Brazilian Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:35
Size: 125,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:18)  1. Rosa Morena
(4:03)  2. Stay Cool
(5:19)  3. Aquele Abraço
(5:38)  4. Light My Fire
(4:00)  5. Isto Aqui O Que é
(4:31)  6. My Cherie Amour
(4:24)  7. Toda Menina Baiana
(3:28)  8. Bananeira
(5:12)  9. Made In Moonlight
(3:39) 10. Turn To Me (Samba Maracatu)
(5:13) 11. Take Five
(4:46) 12. What About The Heart (Bate Bate)

In a career that spans around 30 years and over 20 albums, singer and pianist Eliane Elias has come to epitomize a cool, sophisticated jazz sensibility, especially on the bossa nova songs of her native Brazil. On Light My Fire, she set out to extend the range of styles and grooves in her music and, in so doing, mixes Brazilian music with a couple of jazz standards and one or two famous pop and rock songs. 


The Brazilian songs, which comprise the majority of the album, are splendidly cool and generate a real sense of positivity and optimism. Gilberto Gil's "Aquele Abraço" and "Toda Menina Baiana" are especially effective; Gil and Elias forming a beautiful vocal partnership on both, while Elias' daughter, Amanda Brecker, adds backing vocals to "Toda Menina Baiana." Elias' own "What About The Heart (Bate Bate)" is romantic and upbeat, the pianist's sparkling solo carrying the tune through to the fadeout. Two jazz classics also get a makeover. Kenny Dorham's "Stay Cool," with Elias' own lyrics, also works beautifully; it's a slinky, seductive rendition, with Lawrence Feldman's flute adding to the sense of laidback, casual sensuality. Elias' rework of Paul Desmond's iconic "Take Five" is an atmospherically relaxed contrast to the original another success, despite a rather repetitive section replacing Joe Morello's famed drum solo and features the pianist's vocalese and Randy Brecker's muted, sparse, trumpet.

The Doors' classic "Light My Fire" also gets the slinky, laidback treatment, but works less well. Jim Morrison's original vocal was a yell of desperation, as if the act of "lighting his fire" was the most vital thing in the world; here, Elias sounds far less concerned. This apparent lack of connection is also present on two versions of Stevie Wonder's "My Cherie Amour," one sung in English, the other in French. The musicianship on Light My Fire is superb, with every player slipping effortlessly into the required groove. Even if a couple of numbers don't quite come off, it's still good to see established artists taking a few chances, and there's still plenty of music that does exactly what it should.~Bruce Lindsay(http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=40237#.UhaimX-Ac1I).

Personnel: Eliane Elias: vocals, piano; Gilberto Gil: vocals, guitar; Randy Brecker: trumpet; Oscar Castro-Neves: guitar; Romero Lubambo: guitar; Ross Traut: guitar; Lawrence Feldman: flute; Marc Johnson: bass; Marivalso dos Santos: percussion; Paulo Braga: drums; Rafael Barata: drums; Amanda Brecker: vocals (7).

Diego Figueiredo - My World

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2023
Time: 67:58
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 157,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:09) 1. Malandrinho
(6:08) 2. Regards From Bahia
(4:46) 3. Por Las Calles De New York
(8:37) 4. Mar Aberto
(5:29) 5. Lnfancia
(5:05) 6. Tiramissu
(5:36) 7. Areia Branca
(4:12) 8. Caixote
(4:21) 9. Brain Storm
(7:52) 10. Back To Copacabana
(4:34) 11. My Friend Ken
(9:06) 12. Railroad

GRAMMY nominated guitarist Diego Figueiredo is a virtuoso with an infectious, joyful feeling that will leave you amazed and happy. Don't miss this opportunity to discover this incredible artist.

Diego Figueiredo is an extraordinary star among the world's greatest jazz guitarists. His superb technique, timing and imagination have made him one of the hottest international names right now. He has a very unique skills and his concert have been a great success in more than 60 countries around the world.

He has nowreleased 30 CDS, 3 DVDs and a book and he has received awards twice at the “MONTREUX JAZZ FESTIVAL” as one of the greatest guitarists in the world. Diego Figueiredo performs one amazing concert uniting technique and emotion in a fusion of Brazilian music and jazz.

Diego Figueiredo is a brilliant musician who keeps the tradition of the true essence of Brazilian music and at the same time can be extremely virtuous , modern and innovative.
https://www.amazon.com/My-World-Diego-Figueiredo/dp/B0C4Q5GLQZ

My World

One for All - Big George

Styles: Straight-ahead/Mainstream
Year: 2024
Time: 59:17
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 136,7 MB
Art: Front

(6:59) 1. Chainsaw
(6:20) 2. In the Lead
(5:32) 3. Edgerly
(8:41) 4. Oscar Winner (feat. George Coleman)
(7:02) 5. My Foolish Heart (feat. George Coleman)
(6:39) 6. This I Dig of You (feat. George Coleman)
(6:08) 7. Cove Island Breeze (bonus track)
(5:53) 8. The Nearness of You (bonus track)
(5:59) 9. Leemo (bonus track)

The NYC-based ensemble One For All has carried the post bop mantle for over 25 years, featuring some of the most consistently solid musicians in recent memory: tenor saxophonist Eric Alexander, trumpeter Jim Rotondi, trombonist Steve Davis, pianist David Hazeltine, and drummer Joe Farnsworth, usually including bassist John Webber. A new album is always an event for the group’s longtime fans (like me), and I am happy to report that Smoke Sessions’ Big George, including the sax great George Coleman, finds them, and their guest, in good form.

Big George is meant as an homage to Coleman, who is often cited as a significant influence on a generation of players. Beloved among the NYC jazz clientele, the veteran saxophonist dominates the center portion of the new collection, including a terrific improvisation on the classic “My Foolish Heart,” which should be an early candidate for solo performance of the year.

As for the others, Rotondi’s appearance in the midst of a two-year recording splurge finds him as sharp as ever; Alexander, coming off an under-noticed alto excursion, holds tenor sway while respectfully stepping aside as Coleman demonstrates his lasting excellence; Davis continues his growth both in playing and composing; Hazeltine comps with the best and delivers tasteful solos that always mesh with the groove; and Farnsworth, especially, is energized and in his glory as a masterful support for people he clearly cherishes. Webber, as he has done in the past (notably during the band’s Criss Cross era) provides his own solid supportnothing fancy, but just right.

The album seems to be organized like a live event: the first three songs feature the classic ensemble; Coleman joins for three more; then the band closes out, nine selections in all lasting just under an hour.

Alexander’s “Chainsaw,” with a funky ambiance, sounds like a Lee Morgan outtake. Rotondi wastes little time reestablishing himself as a stalwart trumpet lead. Alexander and Davis follow with their own statements while Farnsworth embellishes the beat with Higgins-like precision.

Hazeltine’s “In the Lead” carries a soft Bossa cadence into a swinging post bop display led by Alexander. Again the remaining soloists add commentary while the energetic Farnsworth pounds away.

“Edgerly” is Davis’s composition and first lead solo, a lyrical statement matched by Rotondi’s response, Alexander’s relay run, and Hazeltine’s brief solo before Farnsworth bridges the proceedings.

Coleman is then called to the ‘stage’ for “Oscar Winner,” which became more appealing to me as a metaphoric representation of an actual award ceremony. The ensemble pronounces the theme music, and then Big George gives an acceptance speech when I imagined him being that winner, his solo took on a Clark Terry sheen as a colloquially grateful achiever. Davis then appears, perhaps, as the film producer, and the others as supporting cast.

But “My Foolish Heart” is the show stopper, even if the tune has been recorded over and over again. Coleman here channels another Coleman, Mr. Hawkins, starting low and soulfully advancing the melody before a solo lovingly supported by a well-recorded and mixed Hazeltine, Webber, and Farnsworth. The drummer’s affinity for tasteful support is noted as Coleman glides through his extended soliloquy.

Then, almost as an encore, Coleman pushes the proceedings on Hank Mobley’s “This I Dig of You,” leading with hard bop verve as the other horns provide a chorus. The 89-year-old’s inventive approach is impressive, as he punctuates his runs with high and low notes, seemingly challenging his partners to match him. Hazeltine takes the hint first, and an itchy Farnsworth follows before Coleman and Davis can’t help but join in.

The final three items are listed as “Bonus Tracks” on the Bandcamp site. Davis’s “Cave Island Breeze” swings as the title implies. Perhaps inspired by Coleman’s performance, Alexander soulfully leads a rendition of “The Nearness of You.” The finale “Leemo” is a blues treat composed by Rotondi that sounds like a twist on “Dat Dere.” Webber gets the lead before the ensemble settles into a pleasurable groove, and this reviewer thinks the producers faded the recording too early.

One For All has been together long enough to have its own ‘eras’. My favorite is the Criss Cross era, when the band, in my estimation, swung harder and dug a bit deeper. This new release on Smoke Sessions would fit into that zone; with Big George along for the ride, Big George the album is a welcome return to form by one of America’s finest music collaborations.
https://www.chicagojazz.com/post/jazz-review-big-george-one-for-all-by-jeff-cebulski

Personnel: Jim Rotondi, trumpet; Eric Alexander, tenor saxophone; Steve Davis, trombone; David Hazeltine, piano; John Webber, bass; Joe Farnsworth, drums; George Coleman, guest tenor saxophone

Big George

Kathrine Windfeld Sextet - Aldebaran

Styles: Contemporary Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 45:06
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 103,6 MB
Art: Front

(7:18) 1. First Speech
(5:40) 2. Aldebaran
(4:47) 3. Burnout
(6:24) 4. Jupiter
(6:48) 5. Sea Widow
(2:53) 6. Holding On To Gas Balloons
(5:52) 7. Offroad Excursions
(5:21) 8. Letter to Lviv

Kathrine Windfeld is considered one of the most exciting and refreshing new Scandinavian jazz composers and arrangers in many years.Her breathtaking compositions thrive on a rare combination of delicacy and strength: A colorful meeting of sophisticated harmonic passages, driving grooves and poetic ballads in explosive arrangements.

Kathrine Windfeld has been leading her big band and sextet for more than 10 years and has been touring in more than 15 countries. In 2022 she went on two tours in Brazil, performing her music with a Brazilian orchestra in sold out concert halls in Sao Paulo and Savassi.

With her four multiple awarded 4 big band releases AIRCRAFT (2014), LATENCY (2017), ORCA (2020) and DETERMINATION (2021) Kathrine Windfeld’s name quickly exceeded the borders of her Scandinavian home, leading to raving reviews in countless international publications like Le Monde (F), Jazzwise (UK) and Downbeat (USA).

Her 5th studio album is released in March 2024: Kathrine Windfeld Sextet - "Aldebaran" Her big band has shared stage with international greats like Mike Stern, Seamus Blake Immanuel Wilkins and Gilad Hekselman.

As the only European musician, she won the prestigious “Rising Stars Jazz Award” in London 2020, followed by a tour on seven top festivals. In 2022 she received the honorable “Ben Webster Prize” for her unique revitalisation of the big band genre.

Besides touring with her own big band and sextet, Kathrine Windfeld is an in-demand guest composer. Her ambitious work has led to highly acclaimed collaborations with international top-class orchestras like Frankfurt Radio Big Band (DE) Bohuslän Big Band (SE) and UMO Helsinki Jazz Orchestra (FI).
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/kathrine-windfeld/

Aldebaran

Friday, March 29, 2024

Dee Daniels - State of the Art

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:32
Size: 136,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:37) 1. Almost Like Being in Love
(5:13) 2. Cherokee
(5:50) 3. I Wonder Where Our Love Has Gone
(5:23) 4. He Was Too Good to Me
(4:03) 5. I've Got You Under My Skin
(4:32) 6. Night and Day
(3:21) 7. I Let a Song Go out of My Heart
(6:21) 8. Willow Weep for Me
(4:42) 9. Why Did I Choose You
(4:34) 10. Summer Wind
(7:19) 11. Loverman
(4:31) 12. How High the Moon

Dee Daniels should need no introduction. Unfortunately, she too often does. In a music climate clouded by jazz-singing sound-alikes, a vocalist brave enough to let her affinity for hard bop remain undiluted by easy-listening production values; a vocalist who wields her instrument brashly like a player, exploring extended techniques comparable to the most intrepid trumpeters’ and saxophonists’; such a vocalist is bound to appeal foremost to the hard-core jazz aficionado. But given the heights and depths of feeling that Ms. Daniels accesses through her phenomenal vocal range, and the insistent sense of swing that she and her band transmit, her appeal should be obvious to any pair of ears.

Like Jeri Brown and Ranee Lee, two other singers with unashamed virtuoso leanings, Dee Daniels is an American who relocated long-term to Canada. In her case, this move came on the heels of a five-year musical pilgrimage to Holland and Belgium, where she built upon her gospel, r&b and rock roots to hone a career in straightahead jazz. For over two decades afterwards, she based that career in Vancouver, BC, releasing seven albums and a DVD. Just three years ago, to be closer to the action, Daniels moved south of the border to the Big Apple.

There in 2013 she recorded State of the Art, the Criss Cross Jazz label’s first-ever vocalist-led date after some 360 releases. That number symbolizes the completion of a full circle, for Dee Daniels apparently became aware of Criss Cross while living in Amsterdam in 1982, when the Dutch label’s catalogue consisted of a single album. The Criss Cross Jazz release schedule is modest, at this point encompassing about a dozen new albums yearly, but chances are that Daniels will reappear on the label before long: it has a proven track record of loyalty to its musicians, many of whom appear as both leaders and sidemen on numerous releases across the Criss Cross catalogue.

In common with labels like HighNote, Capri, Sharp Nine, Posi-Tone and Cellar Live, Criss Cross stands as a stronghold of straightahead jazz, a haven for players who prize the values of bebop and hard bop. For the first couple of years, label founder and producer Gerry Teekens employed the services of recording engineer Rudy Van Gelder in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey. Since then the majority of albums have been engineered by another former optometrist of Dutch descent, Max Bolleman, who would accompany Teekens yearly from Holland to record Criss Cross artists in NYC. Latterly, sound engineering duties have devolved on other shoulders—in this case, on Max Ross’s. Ross also mastered the recording, which was mixed by Michael Marciano.

Recording quality is impeccably clear and full, keeping Ms. Daniels’ voice front and centre but giving her instrumentalists enough presence to confirm that they worked with her dynamically as a band, not passively as backup. On the earlier sessions with which I’m most familiar, Love Story (1999) and Feels SO Good! (2002), the singer is cited as co-producer. The sound on the first disc, recorded in Vancouver, is gorgeous: warm and transparent, enshrining a sense of intimacy among the players. The next album, recorded in New York, sounds comparatively rough, with a strident edge and tinny piano. The new Teekens production does not sound so delicately suspended beyond time and place as the Vancouver session; State of the Art conveys a more clinical atmosphere in which detail is sharply preserved with a brightness suiting the down-to-business hurly-burly of her new hometown.

The opening track asserts this sense of immediacy when Daniels explodes out of the starting gate: the pent-up energy that propels “Almost Like Being in Love” makes it sound almost like she and the band began the tune in medias res. This is one of two up-tempo standards briskly dispatched on State of the Art; the other ten tracks reside on the slow side. Daniels flaunts her chops early in the tune, scatting atop the buoyant accompaniment of pianist Cyrus Chestnut. The scatting gives way to an economical tenor solo by Eric Alexander, who cut his first album as a leader for Criss Cross in 1992 and has been contributing prolifically to the label as a sideman ever since. On the other fast number, “I Let a Song Go Out of My Heart,” Alexander’s sax trades quips with Alvester Garnett’s kit until the drummer breaks out in a solo display of varied rhythmic resource.

A major revelation on the new album is “Cherokee,” which Dee Daniels delivers more slowly than pretty much anyone. The tune has been recorded only occasionally by vocalists, including one of Dee’s major influences, Sarah Vaughan. Usually it serves as a showpiece for instrumentalists bent on exercising maximum technique at breakneck speed. Tribal tom-toms and dark piano notes open the piece with an air of exoticism befitting the fanciful lyrics. Like other female singers who’ve tackled the tune, Daniels addresses her words to a “sweet Indian warrior,” as opposed to the “sweet Indian maiden” originally specified. As always, on “Cherokee” her low notes are beautifully formed, ruminatively casting an autumnal spell with the help of Garnett’s brushwork and delicate cymbal washes, not to mention a piano solo where Chestnut calmly loiters along the keys.

The other notably languid display here is Daniels’ astonishing take on the warhorse “Willow Weep for Me.” Hers has already earned a place alongside my favourite renditions: Billy Bang (violin); Stanley Turrentine (tenor sax); and Tin Hat Trio (vocals by Willie Nelson). Abetted by Chestnut’s sparse accompaniment, Daniels’ soulfully haunted delivery brings the broken-hearted narrator to life, finding sympathetic desolation in the willow tree’s elaborate weeping. Her artful elongation of syllables and final imploring repetitions of “weep” infuse Ann Ronell’s audacious word-assemblage with keen feeling. In the sax solo, Alexander’s glistening tone supplies objective commentary, an entirely different sound from Houston Person’s on Love Story and Feels SO Good!, where the elder tenorist’s warm soulfulness closely complements Daniels’ dusky timbre.

In “Lover Man,” performed just as slowly as “Willow Weep for Me” and at even greater length, Daniels again hauntingly animates a lovelorn soul. She takes a ruminative approach, phrasing deliberately and ominously to impart an unexpected complexity: this lonely woman wants love but equally dreads its implications. Hear how Daniels drops her voice to draw out the word “strange” at 2:58, underlining this ambivalence. A quietly hair-raising moment. And listen to the final iteration of “Hugging and a-kissing/Oh, [look] what I’ve been missing,” where she lingers thoughtfully over her words, adding “look” with an air of irony as though doubting the value of desire.

Further highlights are too many to mention at length. There’s the brace of Sinatra-associated tunes: “Summer Wind,” with a masterfully undemonstrative piano solo from Chestnut; and Cole Porter’s “I’ve Got You Under My Skin,” sporting a dapper turn from Alexander. Trombonist Wycliffe Gordon, whose disc The Intimate Ellington (2013) boasted Daniels’ first Criss Cross appearance, lends a playful arrangement of another Porter number, “Night and Day.” Here, to stress the ineluctable recurrence of romantic longing, the singer matches wits with introductory drum embellishments that conjure beating tom-toms, ticking clocks and dripping raindrops. “Almost Like Being in Love” likewise wears a Gordon arrangement. The repertoire on Daniels’ disc was influenced too by Houston Person, who reportedly recommended a couple of numbers: “I Wonder Where Our Love Has Gone” and a comparative obscurity, “Why Did I Choose You.” The latter affords bassist Paul Beaudry his one spotlit moment, when he solos forthrightly against a distant trickle of piano keys.

In fact, like her other two albums that I’ve mentioned, Dee’s State of the Art is all highlights nothing added merely to inch the CD towards a one-hour running time. If this disc is a statement definitive of Daniels’ present intent, it seems she’s concerned these days with finding greater subtlety within vocal constraints. Sure, the expressive means remain markedly more varied than most vocalists’, but just compare them to the extreme thrills and spills she delivered on Feels SO Good! where, for example, Daniels’ original tune “Love Ain’t Love Without You” offered the most passionately charged proof of stratospheric vocal reach that you’re likely to hear. State of the Art installs the master more introspectively in her workshop, still choosing from all the tools available, but only as appropriate to the task at hand. The tasks are assigned by the Great American Songbook: no originals this time, and no David/Bacharach songs (like “The Look of Love” on FSG!); just standards and near-standards whose lyrics Daniels inhabits so fully that you feel her coming to terms with whatever process they document. The songs emerge lived-in, lived-through, and with the Dee Daniels “wow” factor intact. What more can I say? Wow! https://wallofsound.ca/musicreviews/definitive-statement-dee-daniels-state-of-the-art-criss-cross-jazz-2013/

Personnel: Dee Daniels, vocal; Cyrus Chestnut, piano; Eric Alexander, tenor saxophone; Alvester Garnett, drums; and Paul Beaudry, bass.

State of the Art

Joe Locascio - Evidence

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2023
Time: 47:10
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 108,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:32) 1. Bye-ya
(4:06) 2. Let's Cool One
(6:28) 3. Monk's Mood
(3:24) 4. Off Minor
(3:41) 5. Pannonica
(3:58) 6. Evidence
(3:51) 7. Wee See
(3:36) 8. Trinkle, Tinkle
(5:25) 9. Reflections
(4:59) 10. Monk's Dream
(5:04) 11. Nutty

Joe LoCascio, a native New Yorker, has resided in Houston since 1977. A prolific performer/composer, he has twelve recordings to his credit, many of them having attained prominent radio airplay nationally and abroad.

He has performed and/or recorded with jazz luminaries such as Chet Baker, Freddie Hubbard, Dave Liebman, Randy Brecker, Ernie Watts, Tim Hagans, Conrad Herwig, Marvin Stamm, George Coleman, and George Mraz among others. Jazz critics nationwide have acclaimed him as one of the finest artists on the contemporary scene.

He is currently Assistant Chairman of Jazz Studies at Houston Community College where he teaches Piano, Jazz History, Jazz Ensemble and Improvisation Theory (follow this link to view syllabi).

LoCascio performs and records with his trio. He also performs and records with saxophonists Woody Witt and Warren Sneed.https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/joe-locascio/

Evidence

Harmonious Wail - Gypsy Swing

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:36
Size: 173.1 MB
Styles: Gypsy jazz
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[3:38] 1. Moscow Nights
[3:33] 2. Two Guitars Gypsy Campfire
[3:57] 3. I'm Always Chasing Rainbows
[2:38] 4. Valse Samois
[3:36] 5. Some Of These Days
[4:06] 6. Czardas
[5:56] 7. St. Louis Blues
[4:06] 8. The Basso
[4:06] 9. Rose Room
[5:30] 10. Dark Eyes
[2:33] 11. Limehouse Blues
[4:40] 12. Swing Gitan
[4:50] 13. Chanson Pour Henri
[2:27] 14. The Sheik Of Araby
[8:17] 15. Bossa Dorado
[3:34] 16. After You've Gone
[5:29] 17. Minor Swing
[2:31] 18. Ballgame

Sims Delaney-Potthoff - Mandolin, Vocals; Maggie Delaney-Potthoff - Vocals, Percussion; Jeffo Weiss - Bass.

Smoldering vocals laced among the jazzy mandolin and guitar; an infectious blend of continental jazz, swing, gypsy music and melodic vocals …how DOES one describe the sound of Harmonious Wail? The Wail has caught numerous listeners by total surprise during its more than 20-year history. Of all the venues and stages that these ‘NPR regulars’ have graced, it’s the PAC’s, festivals and showcase clubs that bring the most enthusiastic audience response!

Gypsy Swing

Ann Hampton Callaway - Bring Back Romance

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:20
Size: 130,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:28) 1. Music
(4:46) 2. How long has this been going on
(5:10) 3. This might be forever
(5:09) 4. My one and only love
(3:38) 5. An affair to remember
(4:42) 6. Bring back romance
(3:23) 7. You can't rush spring
(3:59) 8. Out of this world
(3:25) 9. A quiet thing
(2:59) 10. There will never be another you
(4:43) 11. Where does love go
(4:39) 12. You go to my head
(1:49) 13. It could happen to yo
(3:23) 14. My shining hour - I'll be seeing you

If, as they say, "variety is the spice of life," Ann Hampton Callaway's second album forDRG is especially piquant. On a program of 14 numbers, including five she composed, Callaway brings a flock of people into the studio. There are three arrangers, including the eminent composer Richard Rodney Bennett, four different piano players, and at least three rhythm-section players along with an assortment of reeds, horns, and strings. The result is an interesting potpourri of more than 55 minutes of swirling but assured and confident singing. Although there's an assortment of arrangers, to their credit their charts complement and reinforce Callaway's vocal strengths. She has a way at least on some cuts of creating an almost eerie atmosphere with her voice, bringing to mind hazy afternoons and hushed foggy evenings with her voice floating overhead. Aiding and abetting in creating this atmosphere are not only the arrangers, but the musicians.

Lou Marini's delicate flute and carefree alto sax are prominent on a slower than usual "How Long Has This Been Going On?" There's a jungle music-like introduction to the Callaway-penned title tune, "Bring Back Romance," then seguing into a soft rock tempo. Some of the arrangements on this CD are complex, but there are less ornate tracks like a jumping "There Will Never Be Another You," with Lee Musiker's piano providing the bulk of the support. Callaway's straight-ahead way with lyrics comes through loud (figuratively speaking) and clear on a jazzy "You Go to My Head," again with Marini's flute fluttering in the background before he takes out his sultry tenor. This track is one of the album's highlights, along with an upbeat and bouncy "It Could Happen to You." The result of all this is something for everybody, from heavily embellished arrangements through very emotional renditions like "My Shining Hour" to comparatively simple and basic jazz singing. Each track is like the weather. If you don't like it now, wait a few minutes and it will change.~Dave Nathanhttps://www.allmusic.com/album/bring-back-romance-mw0000627051

Bring Back Romance

Thursday, March 28, 2024

Chuck Owen & The WDR Big Band - Renderings

Styles: Big Band, Jazz
Year: 2023
Time: 73:15
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 168,6 MB
Art: Front

( 6:05) 1. Knife's Edge
( 8:50) 2. ...and Your Point Is
(10:56) 3. Of Mystery & Beauty
(10:24) 4. This Love Of Mine
( 9:38) 5. Fall Calls
(11:44) 6. Arabian Nights
( 8:58) 7. A Ridge Away
( 6:36) 8. Canoe

Anyone who uses YouTube to search for contemporary jazz must surely be familiar with Germany's blue-ribbon WDR Big Band, as it is abundantly represented at the site. Bearing that in mind, it may come as no surprise to those seekers (and others) that the WDR's latest recording, on which it is paired with the esteemed Florida-based composer and arranger Chuck Owen, offers another master class in big-band artistry, or how to make even the most arduous charts seem deceptively simple.

Owen, who leads his own Grammy-nominated ensemble, the Jazz Surge, arranged every number including three of his engaging compositions ("Knife's Edge," ..."And Your Point Is?" and "A Ridge Away") and three more by members of the band (saxophonist Karolina Strassmayer's even-tempered "Of Mystery and Beauty," bassist John Goldsby's hibernal "Fall Calls," saxophonist Johan Horlen's smooth-riding "Canoe"). Completing the seductive program are Chick Corea's esoteric "Arabian Nights" and the durable standard "This Love of Mine," made popular in the 1940s by a young Frank Sinatra. If there is a downside, it lies in the fact that most numbers are generally more easygoing than aggressive.

"Knife's Edge," the only song written especially for the album, is an exception, sprinting eagerly forward while testing the band's mettle via several of Owen's typically sharp and challenging ensemble passages. The WDR has no trouble braving the gauntlet, nor do the able soloists: tenor saxophonist Paul Heller, trumpeter Andy Haderer and drummer Hans Dekker who (with Goldsby) provides rhythmic stability on every number. The pace slows to a brisk fox trot on... "And Your Point Is?" originally written for Owen's sextet. Nice work here by Dekker, whose robust snares and tom-toms underline earnest solos by trombonist Andy Hunter, tenor saxophonist Gabor Bolla, organist Billy Test and tuba-ist Mattis Cederberg.

Strassmayer's ethereal theme, on which she solos with Goldsby and guest violinist Sara Caswell, is equal parts mystery and beauty, while "This Love of Mine," which follows, is a classic ballad whose soloists are Test (on piano), Heller and trumpeter Ruud Breuls. Once again, a gorgeous arrangement by Owen who does the same for "Fall Calls," an inherently slow-paced tone poem whose colors are radiant and whose solos (by Strassmayer, Hunter and guitarist Philipp Brämswig) embrace the casual ambiance. Caswell returns with Bramswig and Horlen (alto) on the enigmatic "Arabian Nights," which leads to another slow-cooker, "A Ridge Away" (Breuls, trumpet; Test, piano) and the tasteful finale, "Canoe," on which Horlen solos on alto alongside trombonist Ludwig Nuss.

As always, Owen's arrangements are exemplary, the WDR impeccable. In sum, an excellent showcase for the author and orchestra that could have been even more impressive given an extra shot or two of adrenaline.By Jack Bowers https://www.allaboutjazz.com/renderings-chuck-owen-and-the-wdr-big-band-mama-records

WDR Big Band: Chuck Owen - conductor, arrangement; Wim Both, Andy Haderer, Rob Bruynen, Ruud Breuls: trumpet; Johan Horlen, Karolina Strassmayer, Gabor Bolla, Olivier Peters, Paul Heller, Jens Neufang: woodwinds; Ludwig Nuss, Raphael Klemm, y Andy Hunter: trombone; Cederberg: bass trombone; Billy Test: piano, organ; Philipp Bramswig: guitar;
John Goldsby: bass; Hans Dekker: drums

Special guest—Sara Caswell: violin

Renderings

Clare Teal With the Syd Lawrence Orchestra - A Tribute To Ella Fitzgerald

Styles: Vocal Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 28:35
Size: 66,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:57); 1. I've Got You Under My Skin
(3:56)  2. Begin The Beguine
(3:55)  3. I Get A Kick Out Of You
(3:31)  4. Ding Dong The Witch Is Dead
(2:46)  5. Night And Day
(3:18)  6. Anything Goes
(4:23)  7. That Old Black Magic
(3:45)  8. Too Darn Hot

Recording direct-to-disk is difficult enough. The entire side has to be cut in one long take. Consider a big band vocal album like this, which has four songs per side. The orchestra and singer have to be ready as soon as the cutting stylus hits the lacquer and then they have to perform flawlessly on each track, pausing but a few seconds between songs. Often these records sound stilted and mannered as no one wants to produce a "clam" and ruin the whole thing but here everything works perfectly, with the mellifluous Clare Teal backed by The Syd Lawrence Orchestra a brash and brassy ensemble. Incredibly, it was ll rehearsed, mixed and cut to lacquer at Air Studios in one day!, under the supervision of producer Mike Valentine and co-producer Francoise Valentine. So first, who is Clare Teal? She's well-known in the U.K.

In 2004, the then thirty one year old singer was signed to Sony Jazz, in a deal that at the time was the biggest recording deal in U.K. jazz history. She grew up listening to her father's 78rpm record collection and fell in love with big band vocal music, particularly the records of Ella Fitzgerald. Teal, for all intents and purposes, sounds like a 1940's era singer transported to 2016, not just in her phrasing but particularly her vocal timbre. I can think of no other female vocalist today who hits this particular nostalgic mark and does so without it sounding forced or archaic. Instead it sounds refreshing and generous. The repertoire is of course familiar: "I've Got You Under My Skin", " Begin the Beguine", "I Get a Kick Out of You", "Ding Dong The Witch Is Dead", "Night and Day", "Anything Goes", "That Old Black Magic" and "Too Darned Hot". Everyone's ears perked up when I played this at RMAF. The playing is crisp (under the direction of Chris Dean), the arrangements are dynamic with nicely placed hard-driving kick drum accents, and Clare sounds, for all intents and purposes, like the fourth Andrews Sister. We should be grateful that someone is taking the time and spending the money to produce a direct to disk record but more grateful that the music lives up to the sonic promise. But next time, get the writing on the jacket's spine going in the right direction! http://www.analogplanet.com/content/tribute-ella-fitzgerald-performed-clare-teal-recorded-direct-disc#DWhvoPyzxrpSm29R.97

A Tribute To Ella Fitzgerald

Harmonious Wail - Vintage Jazz

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:45
Size: 102.5 MB
Styles: Gypsy jazz
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[4:12] 1. Sam The Vegetable Man
[2:49] 2. Slipped Disc
[5:46] 3. Exactly Like You
[4:46] 4. Tico Tico
[3:42] 5. Basin Street Blues
[3:32] 6. It Ain't Right
[3:45] 7. You've Got To Believe
[3:21] 8. Jitterbug Waltz
[3:59] 9. Is You Is (Or Is You Ain't My Baby)
[4:33] 10. Georgia On My Mind
[4:17] 11. Saturday Night Fish Fry

These purveyors of Americana infused Gypsy Jazz just celebrated their 30th Anniversary and are continuing to take their listeners on a ride ranging from the music of the Hot Club sounds of Paris to the deepest blues of the Memphis Delta to the folk scenes across “every town” America into their 4th decade of existence. The Wail are sublime entertainers, great educators and they’ve mastered the art of lifting spirits.

Harmonious Wail is Sims Delaney-Potthoff, a mandolin virtuoso, bandleader, vocalist and master of all things behind the curtain, Maggie Delaney-Potthoff, vocalist extraordinaire whose percussive instrument of choice is a cardboard box, but who also has a knack for exploring the musicality of almost any household object, and Jeffo Weiss, master bassist who dazzles and mesmerizes on both upright and electric bass. Every performance is played from the heart and infused with the perfect balance of ingredients that firmly proves that music truly does make the world a better place. Recognized as the “Dr. Feelgood” of Gypsy Jazz, Harmonious Wail has an knack for lifting the spirits of listeners of all ages. The Wail celebrates 10 recordings to date, the three most recent having been submitted for Grammy nomination consideration. Their upcoming project, currently in the works, finds them teamed up with a group of Gypsy Jazz all-stars.

Their gracious approach to music translates beautifully in any outreach program. They have honed their skills to provide excellent educational programs tailored to fit groups of varying skill and age. Popular topics have included; ”the instrumentation of Gypsy Jazz”, “how to succeed in the music biz”, and Maggie’s Method™ “If You Can Speak You Can Sing”. Not only a touring band the ever-reaching Harmonious Wail has enriched their lives working with National Public Radio. They are honored to be recognized as “favorite house band” for the program “Says You” where they’ve matched their wits with the panelists. Their songs have graced the program “All Things Considered” and they have gifted their composition “The Money Song” to NPR stations across the country for annual fundraising programs. Their songs, “People Stuff and “ I Like to Feel My Bones” both received International Songwriters Award, and four of their Gypsy Jazz compositions were cleverly woven into the film score of the internationally acclaimed independent film, ”I Really Hate My Job”.

True warriors for musicians worldwide, they are founding members of the highly respected International Folk Alliance, have created their own foundation, the Henry Mac Fund, supporting the arts in their hometown of Madison, Wisconsin and are recipients of the 2017 Musicnotes Outstanding Musical Career Achievement Award.

Vintage Jazz

Wednesday, March 27, 2024

Cecil Payne & Duke Jordan - Brooklyn Brothers

Styles: Saxophone And Flute Jazz
Year: 1973
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:55
Size: 90,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:16)  1. Egg Head
(5:31)  2. I Should Care
(5:26)  3. Jordu
(4:29)  4. Jazz Vendor
(6:05)  5. Cu-Ba
(3:45)  6. I Want To Talk About You
(5:12)  7. Cerupa
(4:08)  8. No Problem

'Brooklyn Brothers is truly a meeting of kindred spirits in perfect harmony. Cecil Payne and Duke Jordan are self-effacing people, but their music is strong and it takes on an extra richness when they are together. This is perhaps the most wholly satisfying session they have put down in an association which spans four decades.' Mark Gardner, from the original LP liner notes. This 1973 recording was Payne and Jordan s seventh together, and was the first in the previous 11 years. Deluxe CD includes 16-page book with original liner notes essay by Mark Gardner and new essay by jazz journalist Ted Panken, plus extra photos and session notes. Original session Produced & Directed by Don Schlitten. Album design & cover photo by Don Schlitten.~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Brooklyn-Brothers-Cecil-Payne-Jordan/dp/B01D3LC2O4

Personnel:  Cecil Payne - Baritone Saxophone & Flute;  Duke Jordan - Piano;  Sam Jones - Bass;  Al Foster - Drums

Brooklyn Brothers

Nina Simone - An Intimate Variety of Vocal Charm

Styles: Vocal And Piano
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:35
Size: 89,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:09) 1. He's Got the Whole World in His Hands
(2:34) 2. Cottage for Sale
(2:36) 3. Old Devil Moon
(4:08) 4. I Loves You, Porgy
(3:01) 5. Try a Little Tenderness
(2:08) 6. You Made Me Care
(3:59) 7. For All We Know
(2:51) 8. What Is There to Say
(2:19) 9. Too Much in Love to Care
(3:08) 10. African Mailman
(2:33) 11. Good Bye
(3:03) 12. Last Time for Love

Nina Simone and Her Friends is an album released by the Bethlehem Records label that compiled songs by jazz singers Nina Simone, Carmen McRae and Chris Connor. All three artists had left the label and signed with other companies by the time Bethlehem released this album. The numbers by Simone were previously unissued "left overs" from the recording sessions for her debut album Little Girl Blue (1958) and released without her knowledge.

The tracks by Chris Connor and Carmen McRae were already issued together this way as Bethlehem's Girlfriends in 1956 accompanied by the debut recording session of Julie London. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nina_Simone_and_Her_Friends

Personnel: Nina Simone - vocals, piano; Jimmy Bond - bass; Al "Tootie" Heath - drums

An Intimate Variety of Vocal Charm

Sunday, March 24, 2024

Oscar Peterson - Dimensions: A Compendium Of The Pablo Years (4-Disc Set)

Oscar Peterson, Count Basie, Louis Bellson, Ray brown, Benny Carter, Martin Drew, Harry "Sweets" Edison, Roy Eldridge, Duke Ellington, Jon Faddis, Dizzy Gillespie, Stephane Grappelli, Coleman Hawkins, Louis Hayes, Johnny Hodges, Barney Kessel, Neils-Henning Orsted Pedersen, Joe Pass, Mickey Roker, Clark Terry, Toots Thieleman, Ed Thigpen, David Young, and more.

Oscar Peterson's recordings on the Pablo label span the years from the '50s to the '70s and have long needed this type of lavish anthology. Over the course of four discs, you get to hear five tunes by the classic trio matching the peerless pianist with guitarist Herb Ellis and bassist Ray Brown. But the best of that particular band – arguably Peterson's finest – resides largely on the Verve label, so the Pablo years find Peterson interacting with a number of stars with whom he shared studio or concert stage time on an occasional, sometimes casual basis. The supporting cast on the Pablo years is dazzling, and the results are rarely less than deeply satisfying. Peterson sounds delightfully restrained during a charming piano duet with Count Basie, deliciously witty with growling trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison, and nearly intimidated by the virtuosity of Stephane Grappelli, but then again, "Nuages" is the tune this box showcases, and the violinist had a few decades after Django's death to stake his claim to that number.

Half of the 46 tracks here are live, and live recordings always bring out the flashy entertainer in Peterson. Yet even for those critics like myself who find Peterson more focused and inspired in the studio, there are ecstatic rewards in the live offerings here. A 1967 concert with the Ellington band finds Peterson navigating a strangely compelling blues line through a show-stopping "Take the A Train" that succeeds in spite of obvious showboating. Another live bit of Ellingtonia that succeeds, a medley of Perdido and Caravan at dizzying speed, comes from a 1986 Los Angeles concert where Peterson's telepathic empathy with guitarist Joe Pass equals in sheer majesty his interaction of the '50s with Herb Ellis.

There are a handful of regrettable clinkers: a misguided vocal that sounds like Nat King Cole recorded at the ocean floor, a quizzical number on clavichord, surely not Peterson's ideal instrument (as he was quick to recognize), and an overripe orchestrated tribute to the late Princess Di that resembles in sap content Ellington's tribute to the Queen. These gaffes aside, this is a sterling, well-programmed set certain to please fans of our forever-young, and arguably, greatest living pianist. ~Norman Weinstein

Album: Dimensions: A Compendium Of The Pablo Years (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:13
Size: 169.9 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2003

[4:48] 1. That Old Black Magic
[5:00] 2. Tenderly
[3:22] 3. How High The Moon
[4:40] 4. The Way You Look Tonight
[3:40] 5. You Are Too Beautiful
[4:47] 6. Smedley
[5:08] 7. Someday My Prince Will Come
[6:03] 8. Daytrain
[3:33] 9. Moonglow
[4:36] 10. Sweet Georgia Brown
[6:23] 11. C Jam Blues
[6:37] 12. Wes' Tune
[8:42] 13. Okie Blues
[6:50] 14. You Can Depend On Me

Album:Dimensions: A Compendium Of The Pablo Years (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:59
Size: 169.4 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2003

[8:40] 1. You Are My Sunshine
[6:58] 2. Caravan
[7:09] 3. Stella By Starlight
[4:43] 4. Little Jazz
[5:28] 5. Soft Winds
[6:30] 6. Mean To Me
[7:52] 7. Oh, Lady Be Good
[4:20] 8. On A Slow Boat To China
[4:26] 9. Summertime
[7:18] 10. Blues For Birks
[4:54] 11. How Long Has This Been Going On
[5:34] 12. Hogtown Blues

Dimensions: A Compendium Of The Pablo Years (Disc 1) (Disc 2)

Album: Dimensions: A Compendium Of The Pablo Years (Disc 3)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:01
Size: 174.0 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2003

[ 5:22] 1. Blues Etude
[ 3:37] 2. Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans
[ 7:18] 3. I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
[ 6:44] 4. Just In Time
[ 4:46] 5. I'm Confessin' (That I Love You)
[ 6:23] 6. Goodbye
[ 6:25] 7. Falling In Love With Love
[ 7:13] 8. Nigerian Marketplace
[ 6:28] 9. Sometimes I'm Happy
[13:14] 10. Perdido
[ 8:27] 11. Cool Walk


Album: Dimensions: A Compendium Of The Pablo Years (Disc 4)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:47
Size: 166.6 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[ 5:27] 1. Take The 'a' Train
[12:57] 2. Ballad Medley 5400 North
[ 6:14] 3. Exactly Like You
[11:17] 4. Au Privave
[10:50] 5. If I Were A Bell
[ 8:05] 6. Nuages
[ 3:46] 7. Some Of These Days
[ 4:58] 8. Lady Di's Waltz
[ 9:09] 9. Stuffy

Dimensions: A Compendium Of The Pablo Years (Disc 3)(Disc 4)

Ruby Braff - I Hear Music

Styles: Cornet Jazz
Year: 2001
Time: 60:58
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 140,1 MB
Art: Front

(11:12) 1. I Hear Music
(13:44) 2. Medley Chicago/My Kind of Town (Chicago Is)
( 7:45) 3. Baby Won't You Please Come Home
( 8:42) 4. Wouldn't It Be Loverly?
( 8:37) 5. Yesterdays
( 6:48) 6. (I Would Do) Anything For You
( 4:07) 7. We're All Through

Ruby Braff has compiled an album of sheer pleasure in quintet work. His well shaped cornet sound, and the interplay of the instruments through each cut is a shining example of mastery of pacing and a sense of timing. Within each of the cuts is a conversation between the instruments where each one says their version of the melody in turn. Cut 2, a medley of “Chicago” and “My Kind of Town” also has hints of Loesser’s “Baby, It’s Cold Outside.” Other fascinating takes on classic tunes include “Baby, Won’t You Please Come Home,” “Wouldn’t it be Loverly” and “I Hear Music.”

Through.” Guest Soloist Daryl Sherman makes the song with a vocal that conveys the message that is laced through this beautiful piece. Braff says in a quote from the liner notes that the lyrics were written the way you hear them because the song had the feel of the final piece for a club band. The result is a lyrically simple, yet elegant piece of work... an album that is well worth th time, particularly for those who favor smooth cornet work.By AAJ Staff

Personnel: Cornet – Ruby Braff; Bass – John Beal; Drums – Tony Denicola; Guitar – Bucky Pizzarelli; Piano – Bill Charlap; Vocals – Daryl Sherman (tracks: 7)
Recorded July 28, 2000.

I Hear Music

Harmonious Wail - Airborne

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:42
Size: 88.6 MB
Styles: Gypsy swing
Year: 1993
Art: Front

[2:57] 1. People Stuff
[3:30] 2. Why Don't You Do Right
[3:07] 3. After You've Gone
[4:04] 4. Airborne
[3:12] 5. Last Days Of Pompeii
[3:08] 6. Dat Dere
[4:07] 7. Posh De Wash
[2:17] 8. 5 Guys Named Moe
[2:26] 9. I Knew It Was Love
[3:13] 10. Melodie Du Crouton
[2:32] 11. Emmett's Tune
[4:03] 12. It's A Sin To Tell A Lie

Harmoniously Wail seamlessly blends an eclectic array of styles – Django Reinhardt inspired jazz, Eastern European gypsy swing, American jazz standards, and contemporary folk – to create their own distinctive sound.

“It’s Jethro Burns’ fault”, says Harmonious Wail founder and leader Sims Delaney-Potthoff of the band’s unique, enticing style of mandolin-heavy gypsy-jazz. For seven years Sims studied with Burns, the legendary jazz mandolinist, laying the foundation for Harmonious Wail’s acoustic string sound. He furthered his studies at Boston’s Berklee College of Music, honing his skills while immersing himself in the “gypsy” music of Django Reinhardt and Stephan Grappelli (Sam Bush, Dan Hicks, Lester Young, David Grisman, and Louis Armstrong are also on his list of musical heroes). He founded Harmonious Wail in 1987.

Vocalist Maggie Delaney-Potthoff is a captivating performer. Equally at home scatting over a bebop tune, soaring on a solo, or blending with the Wail’s tight vocal harmonies, she delivers both powerhouse tunes and ballads with confidence and ease. Her sensual, sinuous movements (a product of her background in dance and theatre) and her use of a cardboard box as a “drum” (played with brushes) add to the charm she exudes onstage.

Supplying style and proficiency on guitar and lending vocal support with his marvelous harmonies, Tom Waselchuk contributes a contagious passion for music to Harmonious Wail. He also brings with him 23 years of professional musical experience…much of it spent in the company of mandolinist Sims Delaney-Potthoff. Their friendship and musical collaborations date back to 1979 when they “co-led” the Stone Oak Bluegrass Band. In 1986, the two founded the Full Count Jazz Band, a sextet that performed regularly in Madison’s premier jazz clubs as well as showcases such as the Isthmus Jazz Festival. And in 2001, Tom once again teams with Sims to lend their longtime camaraderie to Harmonious Wail.

John Mesoloras' powerful, rock steady and energetic stand-up bass playing lays the foundation for the Wail's groove. The Chicago native, who sites Ray Brown, Dave Holland, Charlie Haden, Edgar Meyer as musical influences, moved to Wisconsin in 1993. A versatile bassist who performs on both the electric and double bass, John has played in a variety of settings including the Madison Jazz Orchestra, The Beloit-Janesville Symphony, The Ray Rideout Quartet (Hard Bop Jazz), and Lisa G. and Montage (R&B Soul). John has also performed abroad, including the Montreaux Jazz Festival in Switzerland and the North Sea Jazz Festival in The Netherlands.

Airborne

Norah Jones - Visions

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2024
Time: 45:39
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 104,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:15) 1. All This Time
(4:31) 2. Staring at the Wall
(3:25) 3. Paradise
(4:46) 4. Queen of the Sea
(2:42) 5. Visions
(3:28) 6. Running
(3:07) 7. I Just Wanna Dance
(4:18) 8. I’m Awake
(3:34) 9. Swept Up in the Night
(3:52) 10. On My Way
(4:14) 11. Alone With My Thoughts
(4:22) 12. That’s Life

Norah Jones named her eighth proper studio set Visions because many of the musical ideas occurred to her in the middle of the night, right when her consciousness was hazy: they weren't fully realized so much as an apparition. That sense of dreaminess carries through to the finished product but not in ways that are commonly associated with such a description.

Far from being an album constructed for twilight hours a dimly lit excursion into mood music Visions is clear and light, its textures vividly articulated and its rhythms mellow and fluid. It's music that feels alive, inhaling and exhaling with a gentle insistence; it's never rushed, never clipped. Despite the record's inherent relaxation, Visions never quite proceeds in a linear path. Chalk this up to Jones' choice of collaborator.

Working again with Leon Michels, a veteran of the seminal retro-soul outfit Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings who previously produced Norah's 2021 seasonal set I Dream of Christmas, Jones embraces the possibilities of psychedelic-tinged soul without succumbing to its trappings. Visions pulsates softly and sweetly, like a lava lamp slowly shifting colors in the background.

The hues aren't hyper-saturated; they're pleasing pastels radiating warmth. The emphasis on atmosphere isn't unusual for a Norah Jones album after all, she has worked with hip-hop collage artist Danger Mouse but Visions feels bright and open. It glides between modulated soul jams, languid ballads, and hopeful pop tunes, each enlivened by flair that's felt more than heard: horns start to sigh in the background, Jones' voice gets an off-kilter filter, guitars take an elliptical journey to a resolving chord.

The results aren't startling so much as they're fresh, avoiding musical and lyrical clichés. Witness "That's Life," a closing number that offers its inspirational advice not only with a knowing shrug but a song that rushes into a chorus and backs away on its bridge; the sentiment is familiar, but the execution isn't. It's a fitting farewell on a record that offers boundless imagination underneath its cool surface.by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Visions - Norah Jones | Album | AllMusic

Visions

Saturday, March 23, 2024

Warren Wolf - Chano Pozo: Origins

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 2023
Time: 40:53
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 94,2 MB
Art: Front

(1:28) 1. Intro
(6:08) 2. Sunday Morning
(2:55) 3. Havoc
(6:41) 4. Another Side
(2:28) 5. Thelma E.
(4:29) 6. Lady
(6:15) 7. Wishing I Were With You
(9:31) 8. The Struggle Continues
(0:53) 9. Outro

Warren Wolf is a multi-instrumentalist from Baltimore, MD. From the young age of three years old, Warren has been trained on the Vibraphone/Marimba, Drums and Piano. Under the guidance of his father Warren Wolf Sr., Warren has a deep background in all genres of music. Vibraphonist Warren Wolf is one of the hardest swinging virtuosos in all of modern music.

“Chano Pozo: ORIGINS” is Warren’s 10th record as a recording artist, and is set to release July 7th, 2023. It features himself playing all instruments, except for the horns. All songs are original except for “LADY” by D’Angelo and Raphael Saadiq.

Personnel: Warren Wolf [vibes]; Alex Brown [piano]; Blake Meister [bass]; Brent Birckhead [saxophone]; Charles Wilson [drums]; Imani-Grace Cooper [vocals]

Chano Pozo: Origins

Nina Simone - You'll Never Walk Alone

Styles: Vocal and Piano Jazz
Year: 2023
Time: 54:29
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 125,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:22) 1. Blue Prelude
(4:02) 2. Mood Indigo
(3:14) 3. Exactly Like You
(5:27) 4. Good Bait
(3:47) 5. You'll Never Walk Alone
(3:06) 6. Central Park
(3:09) 7. African Mailman
(2:33) 8. Can't Get Out Of This Mood
(3:01) 9. Other Woman
(5:49) 10. I Don't Want Him Anymore
(2:53) 11. Cotton Eyed Joe
(3:29) 12. Wild Is The Wind
(3:56) 13. It Might As Well Be Spring
(3:11) 14. Don't Smoke In Bed
(3:22) 15. Love Me Or Leave Me

“The High Priestess of Soul,” Nina Simone was a singer, pianist, songwriter, and civil rights activist. Mostly known as a jazz singer, her music blended gospel, blues, folk, pop, and classical styles. No popular singer was more closely associated with the Civil Rights Movement than Simone.

Nina Simone was born Eunice Kathleen Waymon on February 21, 1933, in Tryon, North Carolina. Her mother, Mary Kate Irvin, was a Methodist preacher and housekeeper, and her father, John Divine Waymon, worked as an entertainer, barber, and dry-cleaner. The family’s home was filled with music and Simone’s mother encouraged her musical pursuits but did not approve of nonreligious music like blues and jazz. Simone took up the piano before her feet could reach the pedals, and by the age of six, she was playing during church services.

Simone soon began formal training, her lessons paid for by benefactors who saw her promise as a pianist. She learned classical repertory and specialized in playing the works of Johann Sebastian Bach. Funds donated by a pair of white patrons in Tryon allowed Simone to attend the Allen High School for Girls, a private, integrated high school in Asheville, North Carolina. In 1950, Simone graduated from Allen as the valedictorian.

She earned a scholarship for a one-year program at the Juilliard School in New York City and used the time there to prepare for the entrance exam to the prestigious (and tuition-free) Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. She worked as an accompanist and piano teacher to support herself but left Juilliard after she ran out of money. Simone applied to Curtis but was denied entry. She always felt that her rejection was based solely on her race and the injustice had a profound impact on her. Simone continued to work as an accompanist and music teacher as she took private lessons and pursued her dream of becoming a concert pianist.

In 1954, Simone began playing piano and singing at the Midtown Bar and Grill in Atlantic City, New Jersey. She feared that her mother would disapprove of her work in a bar, so she adopted a stage name, Nina (a nickname from a former boyfriend) and Simone (after the French actress Simone Signoret).

While performing in the Atlantic City and Philadelphia areas, Simone signed with Bethlehem Records and released her debut album, Little Girl Blue, in 1958. Simone still sought to become a concert pianist and used her proceeds from her album to fund her classical training. Simone’s version of “I Loves You, Porgy” from the musical Porgy and Bess became a Top 20 hit in 1959. She decided to move to New York to capitalize on her success.

Simone had married Don Ross, a salesman, in 1958, but they separated the following year. Simone then married Andrew Stroud, a New York City detective, in 1961, and gave birth to a daughter, Lisa Celeste, in 1962. Stroud left the police force to manage Simone’s career. She had become popular on the cabaret and festival circuits around New York City and continued to release albums throughout the decade.

Simone was billed as a jazz vocalist, but she often rejected the label, viewing it as a reflection of her race more than her musical style and training. She self-identified as a folk singer, with a style that also incorporated blues, gospel, and pop, among others. She was able to cross genres as both a singer and pianist, and her classical background remained an important part of her musical identity.

In the early 1960s, Simone often performed in New York City’s Greenwich Village, where she mixed with artists and intellectuals like James Baldwin and Langston Hughes. Along with other African Americans looking to connect with their African heritage, Simone took part in a 1961 American Society of African Culture conference in Lagos, Nigeria. These experiences prompted Simone to get involved with the Civil Rights Movement. Simone performed benefit concerts for groups like the Congress of Racial Equality and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.

She released the iconic protest song “Mississippi Goddam” in 1964, in reaction to the bombing of the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama and the assassination of civil rights leader Medgar Evers, both in 1963. The song expressed her frustration with the slow pace of change in response to the efforts of the Civil Rights Movement. She famously performed "Mississippi Goddam” at a concert on April 7, 1968, three days after the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.
Simone continued to speak out forcefully about the African American freedom struggle and became associated with the Black Nationalism and Black Power movements. Her albums covered a wide range of styles and included both politically motivated songs and reimaginations of popular songs. “To Be Young, Gifted, and Black” (1969) aimed to make African American children feel good about themselves and “Four Women” (1966) expressed the suffering and resilience of African American women. At the same time, her covers of songs by Leonard Cohen, George Harrison, and the Bee Gees earned acclaim.

In the 1970s, as public attention toward the Civil Rights Movement declined, Simone’s music faded in popularity. She and Stroud divorced and Simone left the United States, eventually settling in France. Simone attributed her move abroad to what she saw as the worsening racial situation in the U.S. She continued to release new albums and draw fans to her concert tours, but she performed less as the years went on.

In 1991, Simone published her autobiography, I Put a Spell on You (taking the title from her famous 1965 song). The Curtis Institute of Music, which had rejected Simone back in 1950, named her an honorary doctor in music and humanities in 2003. Two days later, she died from cancer at her home in Carry-le-Rouet, France.

Scholars have often overlooked Simone’s legacy because her music crossed genres and could not easily be categorized, but she left a profound mark on American music. Singers such as Aretha Franklin, Rufus Wainright, and Roberta Flack cite her as an important influence. In 2008, Rolling Stone named Simone to its list of the 100 Greatest Singers of All Time, and, in 2018, Simone was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.Nina Simone | National Women's History Museum (womenshistory.org)

You'll Never Walk Alone

Edward Simon, Scott Colley, Brian Blade - Steel House

Styles: Contemporary Jazz
Year: 2017
Time: 39:01
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 90,6 MB
Art: Front

(2:51) 1. Glad You`re Here
(7:17) 2. What if
(8:37) 3. Kingpin
(6:00) 4. 87.5% of You
(6:45) 5. Way of No Return
(7:29) 6. Country

There’s something compelling about a combo made up of sidemen, the guys whose job it is to set musical foundations rather than soak up the limelight. It isn’t just the fact that we enjoy seeing the journeymen take center stage. When the rhythm section takes over, and the foundation becomes an end in itself, we’re treated to a whole other side of jazz. That other side of jazz will be on full display when Steel House plays Pletscheeff Auditorium at the Seattle Art Museum on June 7.

Edward Simon, Scott Colley, and Brian Blade, the three men who make up Steel House, have all established themselves as gifted musicians in their own right. Simon, in particular, has experience as a soloist and bandleader. All three, however, are best known for the important work they’ve done backing other musicians. Simon has worked as a pianist with artists such as Bobby Hutcherson and Terence Blanchard. Bassist Scott Colley made a name for himself, playing with luminaries such as Herbie Hancock and Michael Brecker. Brian Blade has an equally impressive resume drumming for, among others, Wayne Shorter.

Their work together, though, isn’t quite like any of the work they’ve done for other artists. Steel House songs (and they seem most aptly described as songs) are melodic and lyrical. Some, like “What If” and “Country” from the band’s eponymous 2017 album, actually have lyrics (in both of those cases sung by the ethereal Genevieve Artadi). But the real root of that lyricism has to do with structure.

Steel House songs are organized around extended riffs musical phrases the sort of thing that might normally serve as the underpinnings of other kinds of jazz. Think about the openings to “Take Five” or “Watermelon Man.” Where a Dave Brubeck or a Herbie Hancock might run through those riffs a couple of times before letting soloists pick them apart and deconstruct them, Steel House transitions smoothly from one phrase to the next. Each one is fully formed, but the real charm has to do with the way they are strung together. It’s as though while exploring one groove, the trio finds its way magically into another. Phrases work as sentences. Sentences become paragraphs. Paragraphs link together to create whole musical essays.

That isn’t to say that those traditional jazz elements aren’t present. The close listener is rewarded with brilliant improvisational solos by all three instrumentalists. It’s just that the phrases themselves tend to shine through. Solos don’t dominate over the background but tend to reinforce the phrases themselves.

The result is a unique opportunity to examine the guts of a jazz tune, the way the rhythm section moves a song along from point to point. Beyond the uniqueness of the approach, the results are imminently listenable. Those musical phrases get into your head. They’re hummable. In the end, listening to Steel House is an exercise in learning, or re-learning, jazz itself. But it’s one of the more palatable learning experiences you’ll ever have.
BY MATTHEW ADKINS Steel House | Earshot Jazz

Personnel: Bass – Scott Colley; Drums – Brian Blade; Piano – Edward Simon; Vocals – Genevieve Artadi (tracks: 2)

Steel House

Roseanna Vitro - Live At The Kennedy Center

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:19
Size: 150,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:46)1. Like Someone in Love
(6:09)2. Like a Lover
(5:40)3. Please Do Something
(0:32)4. Introduction to Commitment
(7:07)5. Commitment
(5:16)6. Worried over You
(6:22)7. I Think It's Going to Rain Today
(4:58)8. Tryin' Times
(5:02)9. Serrado
(0:24)10. Introduction to Twelve Tone Tune
(4:13)11. Twelve Tone Tune
(5:36)12. Epilogue
(9:09)13. Black Coffee

Roseanna Vitro is on tour throughout the U.S. these days, promoting her new CD, Live At The Kennedy Center. She gave two performances in New York recently, the CD's launch at The Blue Note on May 29 and an all-Porter tribute show at The Jolly Madison Hotel's Whaler Bar on the composer's birthday June 9. Porter didn't show, but one wonders what he would make of the metamorphosis in jazz singing that has occurred since his heyday as a jazz composer in the 1930s. It's hard to imagine that Porter would have any complaints: Vitro is the quintessence of modern vocal jazz interpretation. Vitro demonstrates an impressive command of jazz technique and invests each moment of her performance with a visceral understanding of the material.

Vitro admitted that she had to learn several new tunes in a short period of time for the Jolly Madison gig; if she hadn't mentioned it no one would have known, so exceptional is her improv ability. But don't take my word for it. Vitro's audiences are often filled with other singers and musicians.

You know a singer is good when other singers and the musicians come out to hear her.Vitro is careful to select some of the best instrumentalists around for her band. David Budway (piano), Dean Johnson (bass) and Tim Horner (drums) backed her at the Jolly Madison. Budway is a demon player equally at home with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra as with the likes of jazz violinist Regina Carter and drummer Jeff 'Tain' Watts. On the CD and at The Blue Note Vitro appeared with her long-standing collaborator Kenny Werner on piano, along with Johnson and Horner, her ever-faithful rhythmic anchors. Besides artful playing, Werner contributed musical direction and arrangements to the Kennedy Center live recording. Werner recently signed with Blue Note Records; his playing and Vitro's vocals give a rare and valuable lesson in abandonment to artistic impulse.

Among the recording's many inspirational moments: "Commitment, a ballad with music by Werner and lyrics by Vitro's husband, saxophonist Paul Wickliffe; and a free improv piece called "Twelve Tone Tune (or "T.T.T. ), with music by Bill Evans and lyrics by Wickliffe. The disc also shows off Vitro's strong ;B chops on the blues tunes "Black Coffee and "Tryin' Times. Vitro represents the U.S. internationally as one of the State Department's Jazz Ambassadors. ~ Suzanne Lorge http://www.allaboutjazz.com/live-at-the-kennedy-center-roseanna-vitro-challenge-records-review-by-suzanne-lorge.php

Personnel: Roseanna Vitro: vocals; Kenny Werner: piano; Dean Johnson: bass; Tim Horner: drums.

Live At The Kennedy Center