Monday, February 26, 2024

Ella Fitzgerald - Ella In Japan:'S Wonderful Disc1 And Disc 2

Album: Ella In Japan: 'S Wonderful  Disc 1

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:37
Size: 148,9 MB
Art: Front + Back

( 3:47)  1. Cheek To Cheek
( 3:59)  2. Deep Purple
( 2:20)  3. Too Close For Comfort
( 3:21)  4. I Love Being Here With You
( 3:00)  5. Fly Me To The Moon
( 2:34)  6. 'S Wonderful
( 2:59)  7. I've Got You Under My Skin
( 2:39)  8. Hallelujah I Love Him So
( 3:09)  9. Misty
( 2:48) 10. Whatever Lola Wants
( 3:43) 11. Bill Bailey
( 4:38) 12. The Blues (Ella's Blues)
( 3:20) 13. 'Round Midnight
( 4:39) 14. I Can't Get Started
( 6:43) 15. Undecided
(10:53) 16. Jam Session

Ella Fitzgerald had recorded live albums in venues ranging from Newport to Berlin to Hollywood when she and a quartet led by Roy Eldridge traveled to Japan in early 1964 for a series of concerts. Norman Granz, the former Verve head and current Fitzgerald manager who accompanied the musicians on their trip, recorded the concerts for release, but the tapes sat unissued in the Verve vaults a victim of the surplus of Ella material already recorded but not released for nearly 50 years, until the 2011 two-disc reissue Ella in Japan: 'S Wonderful. In the early '60s, Japan was thick with jazz fans, and crowds swarmed the Hibiya Kokaido Public Hall in Tokyo for the January 19 show that is included on the first disc. (The second disc includes a far more exclusive affair, recorded at a hotel a few days later.) Although another live album was recorded and released just a few short months after these shows (Ella at Juan-Les-Pins), the material has few overlaps. Ella is in fine form as usual, she turned up the candlepower in front of an audience  personalizing Peggy Lee's "I Love Being Here with You" early in the program, and even singing in Japanese, to the delight of the crowd, during a stirring "'S Wonderful." The quartet, including Eldrige on trumpet plus pianist Tommy Flanagan, bassist Bill Yancey, and drummer Gus Johnson, are quite adept at sounding bigger than a four-piece, especially on Ella's saucy "Whatever Lola Wants." (Also, an instrumental mini-set of four tracks concludes the first disc.) Raiding the vaults can be a risky proposition, but here, as with the massive four-disc Twelve Nights in Hollywood compilation, fans of Fitzgerald specifically, or great jazz singing in general, will find a wealth of great material. ~ John Bush https://www.allmusic.com/album/ella-in-japan-s-wonderful-mw0002125314

Personnel:  Ella Fitzgerald - Vocals;  Roy Eldridge - trumpet;  Tommy Flanagan - piano;  Bill Yancy - bass;  Gus Johnson - drums

Album: Ella In Japan: 'S Wonderful  Disc 2

Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:27
Size: 84,0 MB

(3:32)  1. Cheek To Cheek
(3:29)  2. Shiny Stockings
(4:31)  3. Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man
(3:45)  4. Bill Bailey
(5:02)  5. Take The 'A' Train
(0:38)  6. Closing / A-Tisket, A-Tasket
(3:42)  7. Ain't Misbehavin
(3:56)  8. My Last Affair
(6:59)  9. Perdido
(0:49) 10. Closing / A-Tisket, A-Tasket


Jim Rotondi Quintet - Over Here

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:23
Size: 120,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:35) 1. I'll Be Seeing You
(5:00) 2. Pete's 32
(7:43) 3. I Concentrate on You
(5:20) 4. Jim's Blues
(5:25) 5. Moclieda
(3:35) 6. Voice
(6:58) 7. Leemo
(7:09) 8. Father John
(5:34) 9. Happy Feet

By titling his eighth Criss Cross album Over Here!, trumpeter Jim Rotondi picks up on the sentiments he signified with The Move, his seventh for the label. “It doesn’t necessarily mean moving somewhere else, but rather returning home, playing tunes with a lot of straight-ahead swing and interesting chord sequences with guys I’m comfortable with,” Rotondi stated in the liner notes I wrote for that kinetic 2009 recital.

That’s an effective description of what transpires on Rotondi’s latest swinging affair. But although he wasn’t misdirecting, he wasn’t telling the whole story. As it turned out, The Move indeed foreshadowed Rotondi’s decision in 2010 to leave New York for Austria for a position as Professor of Trumpet at the University of Graz. As indicated by the current title (which references George M. Cohan’s 1917 flagwaver “Over There” and Rotondi’s father’s service in Europe during World War 2), Rotondi is ensconced on the Continent thirteen years later, augmenting pedagogical responsibilities with several trips a year to New York and other U.S. waystations, and also touring the jazz clubs of central Europe, Italy, France, Spain and the U.K.

In fact, Over Here stems from a ten-day sojourn by a band of four New York-trained masters that opened with a jazz cellar gig in the Viennese suburb Bruck an der Leitha, proceeded to Neuberg, Germany, doubled back to Vienna’s prestigious Porgy and Bess club, continued with a drive to tenor saxophone maestro Piero Odorici’s club in Bologna, and then transitioned to Udine for the recording session.https://www.challengerecords.com/products/16914145778748/Over%20Here

Personnel:Jim Rotondi - trumpet / fluegelhorn; Danny Grissett - piano; Rick Margitza - tenor saxophone; Joshua Ginsburg - bass; Vladimir Kostadinovic - drums

Over Here

Milt Hinton - The Basement Tapes

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:54
Size: 145,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:04)  1. Raincheck
(6:04)  2. A Time For Love
(4:11)  3. Johnny Comes Lately
(4:02)  4. Fascinating Rhythm
(4:35)  5. Blessed Assurance
(6:26)  6. Mona's Feeling Lonely
(3:55)  7. Order In The Court
(3:27)  8. Wade In The Water
(3:23)  9. Night And Day
(3:56) 10. As Long As I Live
(4:04) 11. Love Me Or Leave Me
(3:40) 12. Old Man Time
(6:26) 13. Summertime
(5:35) 14. Travelin' All Alone

In recent years, much of the attention given to late bass great Milt Hinton's career and legacy has been directed at his prowess as a jazz photographer. Nevertheless, we must not forget that behind those extraordinary photographs was an equally extraordinary musician. With Chiaroscuro's recent release of The Basement Tapes, jazz fans will find a welcome reaffirmation of Hinton's formidable gifts as both timekeeper and soloist. Composed of previously shelved material, the disc's 14 tracks offer up a broad slice of the spectrum of styles Hinton encountered over his illustrious career. On the swingin' side of things are two Billy Strayhorn pieces, "Raincheck" and "Johnny Come Lately" - taken at pace by Hinton with the help of Warren Vaché on trumpet and pianist Janice Friedman.

Both Vaché and Friedman offer keen lyrical insight and, with able hands, tend to Strayhorn's touching melodies. Hinton, meanwhile, occupies himself with tempo and swing. His bass walks - nay, runs - deftly across the rolling passes of the tunes, stopping only for an exquisite pair of solos. On "Fascinating Rhythm," a duet with drummer Kenny Washington, the listener is again dazzled by a prodigious display of rhythmic dexterity. Throughout the piece, Washington's traps snap, crackle and pop like the burning coals of a campfire, while Hinton's fat tone casts rounded shapes and bold colors over the playfully erratic Gershwin composition. Other highlights include a burning version of Frank Wess' "Order in the Court" and "Old Man Time," complete with Hinton's lighthearted vocals, Kenny Davern's mood-ified clarinet, guitarist Howard Alden's infectious strums (à la Freddie Green), and drummer Jackie Williams' strokes of skilled brushwork. Above all else, The Basement Tapes is a glaring testament to Hinton's rhythmic reliability. Like a monument at the center of town, his bass stands tall and firm carrying with it an unmistakable air of steadiness and permanency. ~Riel Lazarus https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-basement-tapes-milt-hinton-chiaroscuro-records-review-by-riel-lazarus.php

Personnel: Milt Hinton - Bass; Howard Alden - Guitar; Kenny Davern - Clarinet; Warren Vache - Trumpet; Sylvia Syms - Vocals; Kenny Washington - Drums; Frank Wess - Flute, Tenor Sax; Jackie Williams - Drums; Janice Friedman - Piano; James Williams - Piano.

The Basement Tapes

Marshall Gilkes And WDR Big Band - LifeSongs

Styles: Trombone Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2024
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 88:21
Size: 203,4 MB
Art: Front

( 7:05) 1. Fresh Start
( 9:46) 2. Back in the Groove
( 9:38) 3. Cora’s Tune
( 6:56) 4. My Unanswered Prayer
( 7:54) 5. All the Pretty Little Horses
(10:22) 6. Middle Ground
( 9:26) 7. Sin Filtro
( 6:27) 8. This Nearly Was Mine
( 6:45) 9. Sugar Rush
( 8:25) 10. Longing for Home (Bonus Track)
( 5:32) 11. Taconic Turns (Bonus Track)

Maryland-born trombonist Marshall Gilkes, who spends much of his time working in and around various jazz bases in North America, returns to his "second" home, Cologne, Germany, for Life Songs, his eighth album as leader and third with his former employer, Cologne's world-class WDR Big Band. Gilkes spent the years 2010-13 in the WDR trombone section, shortly before he and the ensemble released the widely praised albums Koln (Alternate Side, 2015) and Always Forward (Alternate Side, 2018).

For Life Songs, Gilkes wrote eight new charts (ten if you count two "bonus" tracks for digital release only), showing on each why he is such a highly regarded composer, Grammy-nominated for one of his themes from Koln, which received a second nomination for Best Large Jazz Ensemble. The album's lone standard is one of Gilkes' personal favorites, Rodgers & Hammerstein's "This Nearly Was Mine" from the groundbreaking musical South Pacific, a luxurious showcase for Andy Haderer's tasteful flugelhorn.

As a soloist, Gilkes is superb, especially on "Sin Filtro," an Iberian-inspired cousin of the Stan Kenton staples "Granada" and "Malaguena." Gilkes is also featured on the robust opener, "Fresh Start," and the beguiling "Cora's Tune," written for his daughter. "Fresh Start" and "Back in the Groove," which follow, were composed with the Covid pandemic and its aftermath in mind, the solemn "My Unanswered Prayer" (featuring pianist Billy Test) as Gilkes' response to the epidemic of gun violence that has engulfed and ravished the U.S.

Gilkes arranged (but did not compose) the delightful children's song, "All the Pretty Little Horses," wherein vocalist Sabeth Perez makes her lone appearance, enhancing the lyric in spite of a reluctance to clearly enunciate the letter "s." The trombones are front and center on the panoramic, chorale-infused "Middle Ground," with enaging solos by Ludwig Nuss and Raphael Klemm leading to brilliant exchanges between Gilkes and Andy Hunter. "Sin Filtro" is next, followed by Gilkes' gorgeous treatment of "This Nearly Was Mine" and the bold flag-waving finale, "Sugar Rush."

Besides Gilkes, Test, Haderer and the trombones, soloists include alto saxophonist Johan Horlen ("Back in the Groove," "Pretty Little Horses") and tenor saxophonist Paul Heller ("Sugar Rush"). As for the ensemble, it is immaculate as always, with brass and reeds responding infallibly to the insistent spark provided by Test, bassist John Goldsby and drummer Hans Dekker. It helps to have outstanding charts on tap, and Gilkes makes sure there are no vacancies in that apartment. This is big-band jazz at its peak, marvelously written by Gilkes and masterfully performed by the impressive WDR Big Band. By Jack Bowers
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/life-songs-marshall-gilkes-and-the-wdr-big-band-alternate-side-records

Personnel:

Marshall Gilkes composer, arranger, trombone, conductor
Johan Hörlén • alto saxophone, flute, clarinet Pascal Bartoszak • alto saxophone, flute, clarinet
Ben Fitzpatrick • tenor saxophone, clarinet
Paul Heller • tenor saxophone, clarinet
Jens Neufang • baritone saxophone, bass clarinet
Andy Haderer • trumpet, piccolo trumpet, flugelhorn Wim Both • trumpet, flugelhorn
Rob Bruynen • trumpet, flugelhorn
Ruud Breuls • trumpet, flugelhorn
Ludwig Nuss • trombone
Raphael Klemm • trombone
Peter Hedrich • trombone
Andy Hunter • trombone (track 6)
Mattis Cederberg • bass trombone, tuba
John Goldsby • bass Billy Test • piano Hans Dekker • drums
Sabeth Pérez • vocals (track 5)
All selections composed and arranged by Marshall Gilkes ASCAP with the exception of All the Pretty Little Horses, traditional, and This Nearly Was Mine composed by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II

LifeSongs