Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Barbara Dennerlein - That's Me

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:15
Size: 144.8 MB
Styles: Bop, Organ jazz
Year: 1992
Art: Front

[5:02] 1. Grandfather's Funk
[9:36] 2. Dancing Shoes
[6:09] 3. That's Me
[6:56] 4. Three Hearts
[7:50] 5. Monkology
[6:45] 6. Love Affair I. The Ballad
[8:04] 7. Love Affair II. Forever And Never
[5:59] 8. One For Miss D
[6:50] 9. Downtown N.Y

By adding synthesizers and MIDI to her sound, Dennerlein has largely escaped from the dominant Jimmy Smith influence that buries most organists' potential musical personalities. With the exception of the somewhat overblown "Love Affair - The Ballad," she excels on the swinging set, holding her own with such extroverted soloists as trombonist Ray Anderson, tenor-saxophonist Bob Berg and guitarist Mitch Watkins; drummer Dennis Chambers completes the quintet. Dennerlein's expert foot pedal work often makes it sound as if there is an independent bassist on the colorful date. She contributed all of the originals except Anderson's "One for Miss D." and the mixture of blues, ballads, a jazz waltz and more complex pieces works quite well. This set is a very good example of Barbara Dennerlein's appealing talents. ~Scott Yanow

That's Me

Alyssa Allgood - From Here

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2024
Time: 63:40
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 146,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:57) 1. Burn (For Betty)
(4:05) 2. Your Wings
(7:04) 3. Both Sides Now
(6:25) 4. Brave Little Flower
(5:15) 5. No Good
(4:20) 6. Other Side
(4:35) 7. Dream
(5:11) 8. On a Clear Day
(5:37) 9. Still Searching
(3:45) 10. Above All Else
(5:41) 11. Time Told
(5:39) 12. Turn to Gold

Acclaimed vocalist and songwriter offers a new view From Here, due April 19 on Next Records, in company of international jazz stars John Patitucci, Geoffrey Keezer, Kendrick Scott and Greg Ward

On her exhilarating fourth album, Alyssa Allgood strides confidently into the next phase of her impressive young career. Her rich, clear contralto comes as no surprise, thanks to her previous recordings, but she has taken her phrasing, improvising, and sense of swing up yet another notch. And while Allgood has included an increasing number of original compositions on each previous disc, From Here made up of nearly all original compositions finds her at a new pinnacle of personal expression and emotional observation.

These songs are reflections of my journey to understand and love myself more deeply, and to fully embrace my artistic vision as a bandleader, composer, and arranger,” says the Chicago-based Allgood. Those reflections concern such themes as embracing change, but also knowing when to stand pat; how to feel good about a breakup, and even better about finding love; the need to treat oneself with compassion, and the hard truth that even the hardships we overcome remain with us in small yet important ways.

Don’t think for a minute that the poetry of Allgood’s lyrics overshadows the propulsion and depth of her music. Sure, she taps into the vocal tradition of songful storytelling. But her immersion in the jazz aesthetic with its emphasis on spontaneity and improvisation, and on compositions informed by a rich harmonic and rhythmic language ensures that her messages swing hard too, and delight the intellect in the bargain.

Featuring some of music’s most lionized artists: GRAMMY winners John Patitucci and Geoffrey Keezer, dynamic drummer Kendrick Scott, saxophonist Greg Ward, and produced by acclaimed jazz vocalist Jeff Baker, ‘From Here’ finds Alyssa Allgood reaching a new pinnacle of personal expression, emotional observation, and artistic achievement. Staying true to her jazz roots, Allgood goes where few singers dare with an album featuring 10 original songs, boldly celebrating the traditions of soulful storytelling, spontaneity, and improvisation.

Working with musicians of this caliber allowed Allgood to approach the recording with greater freedom than ever. In her words, “Their musicianship propelled me to take greater risks in the music and to lead boldly with confidence and conviction. Their sense of exploration and connection radiates throughout every track. Recording my original music with these extraordinary musicians revealed the power of believing in myself and working to bring my dreams to life” assets that resound throughout the songs featured here.

The album springs to life with “Burn (For Betty),” a take-no-prisoners homage to Betty Carter, whose galvanic performances and self-determinative philosophy have been a source of inspiration for Allgood. True to Carter’s example, the track includes two ear-opening scat vocal solos; they bracket racetrack improvisations from Keezer and Ward, establishing a high-water mark for the entire album. Several songs speak to specific people and events in Allgood’s life, yet each message transcends the specifics in order to reach those listeners she’s never met. For instance, “Time Told,” a love song to her fiancé, stems from Allgood’s own experience in grounding love in patience and trust; but her realization contains a universal human truth, emphasized by Ward’s high-flying improvisation. “Turn to Gold” transforms a familiar trope falling autumn leaves as a metaphor for loss into a beacon for life’s next chapter, set to one of her loveliest melodies (and a particularly emotive solo from Patitucci).

On the other hand, there’s the harmonically inventive “Still Searching” which, Allgood remarks, encapsulates a central theme of From Here: the journey toward self-compassion: “It shows the darker, more complicated part of that process, the questions, the struggles, the failures.” (Allgood’s soaring improvisation suggests she’s found many of the answers.) There’s the clear-eyed regret of “Above All Else,” which conveys the need to excise a toxic relationship and the value in having done so another song drawn from her own experience but applicable to anyone who’s ever loved.

But we also get the charming, deceptively simple “Brave Little Flower,” inspired by the improbable sight of a small blossom growing between the boulders lining the shore of Lake Michigan. It’s a parable about fortitude and empowerment, set to a rangy melody in waltz time a song about “growing beyond where I was planted” that Allgood now considers her signature composition. Then she employs her whip-smart sense of fair play on the sassy revenge tune “No Good,” which has become a crowd favorite in performance. To top it off, the album includes two 1960s standards, each of them freshened by the light reharmonizations and changes in meter of Allgood’s arrangements: the Broadway hit “On a Clear Day,” and Joni Mitchell’s ageless “Both Sides Now.”

Allgood is quick to note that the album title has more than one meaning. “First, it refers to these songs coming from my heart,” she says. “It’s from this personal and vulnerable place that I share messages of love, strength, power and understanding and also acknowledge the pain, struggle, and doubt that makes the journey a triumph.” But the title also speaks to the fact that this album establishes a “pivotal moment in my career and a major step in my musical and artistic development. This album is a statement of who I am as a modern jazz vocalist: everything that happens next will be defined from here.”

Described by Downbeat Magazine as “assured and ddaring”, Chicago jazz vocalist and composer Alyssa Allgood stakes her claim amongst the most compelling singers in the modern jazz landscape with her exhilarating fourth album, From Here, her first recording on Next Records. Her three previous albums What Tomorrow Brings (Cellar Music, 2021), Exactly Like You (Cellar Music, 2018), and her self-released debut Out of the Blue (2016) trace a remarkable trajectory from a North Central College grad to a vocalist admired for the clarity of her instrument, the sureness of her phrasing, the range of her improvising, and the burgeoning depth of her interpretative skills.

Allgood first made her name in such legendary Chicago clubs as the Green Mill and the Jazz Showcase, through residences at Winter’s Jazz Club where she has delved into the songbooks of jazz’s classic divas (Ella Fitzgerald, Carmen McRae, Dinah Washington) and at the internationally renowned Chicago Jazz Festival. Appearances followed New York’s famed Birdland and at Jazz at Lincoln Center Shanghai (China). She was a semifinalist in the 2015 Shure Montreux Jazz Voice Competition, where jazz icon Al Jarreau led the jury, before winning the Inaugural Ella Fitzgerald Jazz Voice Competition (2017) and the David Baker Memorial Scholarship offered through the Jazz Education Network (2022). Closer to home, she was a 2016 Jazz Improvisation Fellow of the Luminarts Cultural Foundation in Chicago and was named Best Jazz Entertainer in the Chicago Music Awards (2019).

Increasingly also known as an educator, arranger, and composer, Allgood is an adjunct lecturer at the University of Illinois Chicago, where she directs the vocal jazz ensemble and teaches private lessons as well as a jazz arranging course. She is a highly sought-after clinician and has presented masterclasses at many esteemed institutions including the Jazz Education Network Conference, the Illinois Music Educators Association, the Iowa Choral Directors Association, Anchor Music’s Vocal Jazz Academy, Jazzvoice.com, the University of Chicago and Drake University. She holds a Master of Music in Jazz Studies from DePaul University, where she served as a Graduate Assistant.https://lydialiebman.com/index.php/2024/02/19/new-release-alyssa-allgoods-from-here-is-due-out-april-19-2024-via-next-records/

From Here

Mal Waldron / Steve Lacy - The Mighty Warriors: Live in Antwerp (Live)

Styles: Piano And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 98:41
File: MP3 @ 128K/s
Size: 91,0 MB
Art: Front

(17:14) 1. What It Is (Live)
( 6:04) 2. Epistrophy (Live)
(12:18) 3. Longing (Live)
(12:53) 4. Monk's Dream (Live)
(24:51) 5. Variation Of III (Live)
(25:18) 6. Medley: Snake Out / Variations On A Theme by Cecil Taylor (Live)

Producer/jazz detective Zev Feldman is still at it, ferreting out unreleased recordings from jazz giants of the past and releasing them with buffed-up sound quality and first-rate packaging. Long lost recordings from pianists Bill Evans, Thelonious Monk, Art Tatum and Ahmad Jamal have seen the light of the twenty-first century, thanks to Feldman, as has newly discovered music from trumpeter Chet Baker. Now it is pianist Mal Waldron (1925 -2002) and soprano saxophonist Steve Lacy's (1934 -2004) turn, with The Mighty Warriors. The two-disc set comes from a 1995 concert at De Singel Arts Center in Antwerp, Belgium.

Both Waldron and Lacy expatriated from the United States. Waldron made the move to Europe in the mid-1960s. Lacy moved to Paris in 1970. The pair worked together and recorded together often. Waldron has the distinction of participating as the leader on the first ECM Records release, Free At Last (1970).

Waldron and Lacy are often considered free-jazz guys. There may be some truth in this, but both were melodists of the first order; their music together and apart was approachable and adventurous. Waldron, like Monk and Andrew Hill and Bud Powell, was a stylist who sounded unlike anyone else. John Coltrane gets a lot of credit for popularizing the soprano sax, but Lacy was there before him on this, releasing three albums before Coltrane came out with the groundbreaking My Favorite Things (Atlantic Records, 1961).

The Mighty Warriors is Waldron and Lacy in a quartet setting, joined by drummer Andrew Cyrille and bassist Reggie Workman. The players sound loose, "going for it." The first disc is relatively concise, with four tunes, each running between six and seventeen minutes. The opener, "What It Is," comes from Waldron's pen. It is a rambling seventeen minutes. Waldron lays down a mesmerizing rhythm; Lacy his sound dry and robust searches. Cyrille and Waldron lay down a controlled stumbling bustle of a backdrop. Lacy wrote the twelve-minute "Longing." His horn complains about his unfulfilled desire, then shifts into the prettiest of reveries. Tracks 2 and 4 are Monk originals, "Epistrophy" and "Monk Dream" lift the music away from a brooding atmosphere, adding a welcome touch of familiarity and playfulness to the set.

Disc 2 of The Mighty Warriors moves closer to free jazz, with two extended cuts, "Variation of III" and "Medley: Snake Out/Variations on a Theme by Cecil Tayor," both clocking in at the twenty-five-minute mark. The latter opens like a full-frontal assault, fierce and percussive. The former sounds like a traveler lost in a foreign land. It opens with Workman's lonely arco bass that leads into a marvelous otherworldly musical hesitation that stops and starts.

Waldron and Lacy did not boast the highest of profiles. Their moves to Europe, away from the bigger record labels, and the New York City clubs, were probably partially responsible for this. Their talent and innovative approach to making music was of the highest order and can be experienced on The Mighty Warriors.By Dan McClenaghan
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-mighty-warriors-mal-waldron-steve-lacy-elemental-music

The Mighty Warriors: Live in Antwerp (Live)