Wednesday, January 24, 2024

Dexter Gordon - Gettin' Around

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:48
Size: 134.6 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1965/1987
Art: Front

[ 8:25] 1. Manha De Carnaval
[ 5:12] 2. Who Can I Turn To
[ 7:48] 3. Heartaches
[ 6:16] 4. Shiny Stockings
[ 6:43] 5. Everybody's Somebody's Fool
[ 6:58] 6. Le Coiffeur
[ 6:50] 7. Very Saxily Yours
[10:33] 8. Flick Of A Trick

Bass – Bob Cranshaw; Drums – Billy Higgins; Piano – Barry Harris; Tenor Saxophone – Dexter Gordon; Vibraphone [Vibes] – Bobby Hutcherson.

Dexter Gordon's mid-'60s period living in Europe also meant coming back to the U.S. for the occasional recording session. His teaming with Bobby Hutcherson was intriguing in that the vibraphonist was marking his territory as a maverick and challenging improviser. Here the two principals prove compatible in that they have a shared sense of how to create sheer beauty in a post-bop world. Add the brilliant Barry Harris to this mix, and that world is fortunate enough to hear these grand masters at their creative peak, stoked by equally extraordinary sidemen like bassist Bob Cranshaw and drummer Billy Higgins, all on loan from Lee Morgan's hitmaking combo. The subtle manner in which Gordon plays melodies or caresses the most recognizable standard has always superseded his ability to ramble through rough-and-tumble bebop. It's hard to resist how Gordon massages the light and sweet bossa nova "Manha de Carnaval" hand in hand with Hutcherson, the heartfelt way "Who Can I Turn To?" or "Everybody's Somebody's Fool" is turned into a personalized statement, or how the co-leaders take Frank Foster's Count Basie staple, "Shiny Stockings," beyond a classic and into immortal territory. Where Gordon and Hutcherson's true strength lies is in their ability to listen and balance their sound into a unified whole beyond any other tenor sax-vibraphone combination you might care to name, unless it's Hutch's partnership in the ensuing years with Harold Land. Picking up on a Sonny Rollins idea, "Heartaches" is a loping cowboy-type swinger with some lustrous comping from Hutcherson and Harris, while the light, cat-prancing "Le Coiffeur" is the highlight among highlights, a stealth calypso with Gordon's deftly rendered staccato notation. One has to listen closer to the pianist on this date, as he buoys the others without demanding equal space, but he is just as reverberant. While this is not Gordon's ultimate hard bop date, it is reflective of his cooling out in Europe, adopting a tonal emphasis more under the surface than in your face. It's not essential, but quite enjoyable, and does mark a turning point in his illustrious career. [The CD version contains two bonus tracks, including the Onzy Matthews composition "Very Saxily Yours" with a melody very similar to "Shiny Stockings," Hutcherson alone during a second chorus, and a classy quarter-to-eighth note solo by Gordon. Ben Tucker's "Flick of a Trick" is added on, an 11-minute groove blues that lets Harris cut loose, digging in after-hours style.] ~Michael G. Nastos

Gettin' Around

Adi Braun - Moderne Frau

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:56
Size: 121,6 MB
Art: Front

(2:18) 1. Moderne Frau
(5:53) 2. Surabaya Johnny
(3:58) 3. Nannas Lied
(2:10) 4. Buddy on the nightshift
(3:33) 5. Josephine
(5:02) 6. Du sollst es leise sagen
(5:07) 7. Speak Low
(3:55) 8. I'm a stranger here myself
(2:07) 9. Mackie Messer/Mack the knife
(3:36) 10. Gestern
(4:39) 11. Und was bekam des Soldaten Weib?
(6:40) 12. It never was you
(3:52) 13. It's all a swindle

Adi Braun has a long list of cabaret, concert and theatre successes to her credit. She has performed in every major jazz and concert venue in Toronto, has toured Canada, the United States, and Europe. In 2023 Adi released her sixth CD recording “Night and Day Adi Braun sings the Cole Porter Songbook” which follows her previously celebrated recordings “Moderne Frau Modern Woman” (2017), a tribute to the music of Weimar Cabaret, “Canadian Scenes I” (2010), Live at the Metropolitan Room (2007), The Rules of the Game (2006), and Delishious (2003).

Born in Toronto, Adi Braun grew up in Europe surrounded by music and musicians. Her parents were opera singers. Her father, Victor Braun, was one of Canada’s leading baritones. Her first instrument was piano, which she began studying at the age of six. With no formal voice lessons, she made her first pop/jazz recording at age 19.

Following family tradition, Adi trained classically at the Royal Conservatory of Music and the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Music. She began her singing career as a classical recitalist, a soloist with orchestra, and on-stage in operas and operettas alongside her brother, baritone Russell Braun.

Adi started “singing sideways” in the late ‘90's and returned to the music she loved, which she calls “cabarazz”, drawing on aspects from both cabaret and jazz. After winning a local competition in 2001, she was catapulted to centre-stage as one of Canada’s leading jazz vocalists. In 2007, Adi was nominated as “Best Major Jazz Vocalist of the Year” by the Manhattan Association of Cabarets and Clubs (MAC).

Her sophisticated style and subtle delivery evokes such vocal greats as Sarah Vaughan, Lotte Lenya, Judy Garland and Rosemary Clooney. Elizabeth Ahlfors of New York’s Cabaret Scenes describes Adi as "A tad Dinah Washington, a hint of Lena Horne, the enveloping warmth of Doris Day, all gift-wrapped up in a unique sound that is singular Adi Braun!" Adi’s repertoire ranges from the Great American songbook, to European cabaret, to contemporary songs by Canada legend’s Shirley Eikhard and Gordon Lightfoot as well as her own originals. Whether she is singing in English, French, Spanish or German, Adi Braun is “a power-frau who gives jazz standards a unique touch, telling stories that are miniature life moments” (Rheinische Post, Düsseldorf, Germany).

In addition to her performing, Adi is the co-host of “Classical Mornings”, a popular daily program on The New Classical FM. She has taught and coached German Diction at the Glenn Gould School - Royal Conservatory of Music, and for the Canadian Opera Company. Adi frequently speaks on topics related to Weimar Cabaret. https://www.adibraun.com/welcome

Moderne Frau

Sachal Vasandani, Romain Collin - Midnight Shelter

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:24
Size: 97,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:17) 1. Summer No School
(4:41) 2. Before You Go
(3:29) 3. Adore You
(3:31) 4. River Man
(4:07) 5. Great Ocean Road
(4:41) 6. Throw It Away
(3:19) 7. Don't think Twice, It's All Right
(3:08) 8. Love Away
(2:46) 9. Blackbird
(4:55) 10. Dance Cadaverous
(3:25) 11. One Last Try

"I'll leave you to your crowds," Sachal Vasandani murmurs to start off an album that couldn't be less suited to being with a crowd. The touch of irony is apt. The sound of Midnight Shelter is a lonely and thoughtful one (a reflection of the music's origin in a season of isolation), yet as with its title, there's a vital comforting angle too. This duality makes a gorgeous and mostly soothing listen for pandemic times. The players don't shy away from the sadness and uncertainty of their circumstances, which makes the underlying warmth resonate that much more in the end.

Comprising only Vasandani's butterscotch croon and Romain Collin's subtly eloquent piano, the recording is the exact personification of beautiful late-night quiet if anything, midnight almost feels on the early side for this wee-hours mood. The musicians are friends and neighbors who began playing together partly to deal with the Covid-imposed shutdown during the strange summer of 2020, and so the melancholy is always warmed by the fact that it's about connection rather than solitude.

More than anything, the overall effect is therapeutic. Vasandani's baritone hits just the right pitches: slow-flowing for a haunting take on Nick Drake's "River Man," plaintive for soft ballads like "Love Away," humbly understated in the quasi-folky "Adore You" and so on. It's a fascinating left-field decision to pen new words for a Wayne Shorter piece, which he and Collin turn into a wistful meditation without losing the trace of classic bop at the center. Selections from Bob Dylan and the Beatles make the warmest refreshing moments, pitch-perfectly familiar and heartwarming amidst the chilly spots.

The two have a smooth and cozy chemistry that keeps them in step even when playing loose with rubato timing. Selections from all eras feel of a piece in this timelessly simple format, from '60s classics to new originals to 2019's minor indie hit "Before You Go," whose sparse rendition makes it downright sublime. This Shelter is a spare yet reassuring one; Vasandani and Collin prefer to remind us that the loneliest hours of the night still have a little glow somewhere if you know where to look.By Geno Thackara https://www.allaboutjazz.com/midnight-shelter-sachal-vasandani-edition-records

Personnel: Sachal Vasandani: voice / vocals; Romain Collin: piano.

Midnight Shelter

Ella Fitzgerald - The Complete Decca Singles Vol.2 (1939-1941) Disc 1, Disc 2

Album: The Complete Decca Singles Vol 2 (1939-1941) (Disc 1) Styles: Vocal
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:10
Size: 173,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:15) 1. Stairway To The Stars
(2:56) 2. Out Of Nowhere
(3:05) 3. I Want The Waiter (With The Water)
(3:09) 4. That's All, Brother
(3:14) 5. My Last Goodbye
(2:51) 6. Heart Of Mine
(2:37) 7. Billy (I Always Dream Of Billy)
(3:16) 8. Please Tell Me The Truth
(3:05) 9. You're Gonna Lose Your Gal
(3:02) 10. My Wubba Dolly
(2:52) 11. After I Say I'm Sorry
(3:03) 12. Baby, What Else Can I Do
(2:51) 13. Betcha Nickel
(2:57) 14. Moon Ray
(2:32) 15. Is There Somebody Else
(3:08) 16. The Starlit Hour
(3:08) 17. I'm Not Complainin'
(2:57) 18. What's The Matter With Me
(2:44) 19. Sugar Blues
(2:55) 20. Imagination
(2:56) 21. If It Weren't For You
(3:00) 22. Sing Song Swing
(2:31) 23. Baby, Won't You Please Come Home
(2:43) 24. Shake Down The Stars
(3:11) 25. I Fell In Love With A Dream

Album: The Complete Decca Singles Vol 2 (1939-1941) (Disc 2)
Time: 72:49
Size: 170,3 MB

(2:35) 1. Deedle-De-Dum
(2:54) 2. Gulf Coast Blues
(3:07) 3. Five O'clock Whistle
(3:07) 4. So Long
(3:09) 5. Louisville, K-Y
(3:03) 6. Taking A Chance On Love
(2:43) 7. Cabin In The Sky
(2:29) 8. Three Little Words
(3:02) 9. The One I Love Belongs To Somebody Else
(2:30) 10. Hello Ma! I Done It Again
(2:59) 11. Wishful Thinking
(2:41) 12. I'm The Lonesomest Girl In Town
(2:23) 13. The Muffin Man
(2:58) 14. Keep Cool, Fool
(3:07) 15. No Nothing
(2:58) 16. I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)
(2:41) 17. Melinda The Mousie
(3:02) 18. Jim
(2:53) 19. This Love Of Mine
(3:03) 20. I'm Thrilled
(2:45) 21. Make Love To Me
(3:22) 22. You Don't Know What Love is
(3:10) 23. Somebody Nobody Loves
(3:01) 24. My Man
(2:57) 25. Who Are You

Dubbed "The First Lady of Song," Ella Fitzgerald was the most popular female jazz singer in the United States for more than half a century. In her lifetime, she won 13 Grammy awards and sold over 40 million albums. Her voice was flexible, wide-ranging, accurate and ageless. She could sing sultry ballads, sweet jazz and imitate every instrument in an orchestra.

She worked with all the jazz greats, from Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Nat King Cole, to Frank Sinatra, Dizzy Gillespie and Benny Goodman. (Or rather, some might say all the jazz greats had the pleasure of working with Ella.) She performed at top venues all over the world, and packed them to the hilt. Her audiences were as diverse as her vocal range. They were rich and poor, made up of all races, all religions and all nationalities. In fact, many of them had just one binding factor in common they all loved her.

The Complete Decca Singles Vol 2 (1939-1941)(Disc 1) (Disc 2)