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