Sunday, June 2, 2024

Lyn Stanley - Potions

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2015
Time: 58:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 137,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:55) 1. Lullaby Of Birdland
(4:01) 2. Cry Me A River
(3:40) 3. Fly Me To The Moon
(3:29) 4. Hey There
(2:35) 5. I'm Walkin'
(4:35) 6. You Don't Know Me
(4:27) 7. In The Still Of The Night
(4:39) 8. The Thrill Is Gone
(3:31) 9. A Summer Place
(3:26) 10. Love Potion #9
(3:52) 11. Teach Me Tonight
(3:21) 12. After The Lights Go Down Low
(5:23) 13. Misty
(2:47) 14. The Party's Over
(5:56) 15. The Man I Love

We Baby Boomers are a persnickety bunch. We revel in our nostalgia while keeping a jaundiced eye on current trends and how derivative they are compared with those we experienced when they were really new. Critics dismiss this nostalgia as wasted pathos, pining away for what can never be again. That is missing the point. Memory and reminiscence are powerful comforts much like a cat's purr. They help us recall and allow us to put the past into perspective in the relative safety of our own minds and time.

Music proves to be a most potent generator of nostalgia. Most properly, it acts as our life soundtrack, the Stones' "Gimme Shelter" in turbulent times and Vivaldi's "Winter" when calm. A well-programmed collection of songs, housed within a thoughtful theme can be a most effective nostalgia stimulant. Such programming maximizes the joy and pleasure of the music above and beyond the songs considered individually.

It is this invention in programming and repertoire choice that makes singer Lyn Stanley accomplished by any measure. Her debut recording, Lost in Romance (A.T. Music, LLC, 2011) revealed the singer's keen ear for the well-known and not-so-well-known in the American Songbook. By including the less known songs, Stanley has effectively expanded the Songbook, something she continues on Potions: From the '50s.

On Potions, Stanley assembles 15 pieces prominent in the 1950s. They are not all jazz standards or showtunes, though both are in evidence. Stanley's artistic care and attention to detail expresses itself from the start in George Shearing's superb "Lullaby of Birdland." Pianist Bill Cunliffe consorts with bassist Mike Valerio and drummer John Robinson, establishing a light Latin vibe over which Stanley delivers George David Weiss' piquant lyrics. Tom Rainer provides a woody clarinet to the mix, making the piece quite international. "Cry Me a River" is taken at a ballad pace, accented by Ricky Woodards's tenor saxophone. The effect is close, smoky, intimate.

Stanley's nod to Sinatra is in a sprite and bouncy "Fly Me to the Moon. The singer assimilates the country and western of Eddy Arnold's "You Don't Know Me" and the early New Orleans rock of Fats Domino's "I'm Walkin,'" Bill Cunliffe and guitarist Thom Rotella trading eights in the solo section. Central to the collection's theme is Leiber & Stoller's "Love Potion #9." Stanley pulls a sexy samba out of the tune, propelled by Kenny Werner's piano and Hammond B3. Stanley punctuates the disc with a delicate and revealed "Misty" that showcases her command of all things ballad.

The music industry is changing so quickly and seems moving away from the cogently produced arranged album format. That is too bad. On Potions, Stanley perfects the thematic ring of her collection, adding one more bit of the past, analog recording. Music this warm should be bonded like fine brandy heated by the smoke of a Monte Cristo.By C. Michael Bailey
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/potions-from-the-50s-lyn-stanley-at-music-llc-review-by-c-michael-bailey

Personnel: Lyn Stanley: vocals; Kenny Werner: keyboards; Bill Cunliffe: Keyboards; Mike Lang: keyboards; Johannes Weidermeuller: bass; Mike Valerio: bass; Joe LaBarbera: drums; Ari Hoenig: drums; John Robinson: drums; Glenn Drewes: trumpet, flugelhorn; Thom Rotella: guitar; Rickey Woodward: tenor saxophone; Tom Rainer: clarinet; Luis Conte: percussion.

Potions

Hendrik Meurkens - The Jazz Meurkengers

Styles: Harmonica Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 53:42
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 123,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:49) 1. A Slow One
(6:09) 2. Belgian Beer At Dawn
(6:01) 3. A Lullaby For Benny
(5:37) 4. Silver's Serenade
(6:05) 5. Meurks' Mood
(6:59) 6. Dreamsville
(5:53) 7. If I Were A Bell
(5:46) 8. A Tear For Toots
(5:19) 9. Smada

Harmonica virtuoso Hendrik Meurkens brought together an outstanding group of musicians in The Jazz Meurkengers, which is a swinging tribute to the allure of hard-bop jazz. Supported by the resourceful and highly adaptable rhythm section of pianist Steve Ash, bassist Chris Berger and drummer Andy Watson, the band was augmented by the impeccable guitarist Ed Cherry on four tracks and bebop tenor saxophonist Nick Hampton on four different tracks giving the ensemble the energy, creativity, and reverence of the jazz tradition.

The nine-track session opens with a Meurkens original, "A Slow One," with a bubbling tone and slicing swing. Meurkens, Cherry and Ash are leading the way, each focusing equally on melody and texture as they interrogate the music. "Belgian Beer At Dawn" is another Meurkens number and contrafact based on the chord changes on "Stella By Starlight." It is a spirited chart, with Meurkens offering a juicy and distinct solo while Hampton's tenor has a rich tone in his unhurried playing. Watson makes his drums musically expressive in his exchanges with Meurkens and Hampton.

Horace Silver's composition "Silver's Serenade" comes from the 1963 Blue Note recording of the same name. It is one of Silver's most recognizable pieces, with an artful balance of mood and structure. Meurkens, Cherry and Ash use authoritative solos filled with long, seamless phrases conveying knowledge of harmony and form. Peter Gunn was a 1950s TV detective series in which jazz was noteworthy. The Henry Mancini composition "Dreamsville" was the background music to the romantic sequences. Meurkens, Cherry, and Ash are again front and center, with solos unsurpassed in clarity and elegance. In all the charts in which Cherry participated, his guitar work has been fluid and expressive, and his solos brimming with soul and sophistication.

"If I Were A Bell" was composed by Frank Loesser for the 1950 musical "Guys and Dolls." It became a jazz standard after it was recorded by trumpeter Miles Davis on the 1958 Prestige album Relaxin' with The Miles Davis Quintet. Meurkens' arrangement has a powerful sense of swing with an energetic solo from Hampton. Ash's up-tempo excursion shows he is a pianist who relishes logic and discovery.

Toots Thielemans was a Belgian-born musician who made his mark on jazz history with the playing of the chromatic harmonica. Acknowledging his inspiration from his playing, Meurkens wrote a ballad, " A Tear For Toots." for Thielemans's centennial year in 2022. Meurkens' reading is heartfelt and filled with delicate lyricism. Both Cherry and Ash are emotionally lucid and sure-footed. In summary, Meurkens and his ensemble have crafted a tasteful and inventive release.By Pierre Giroux https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-jazz-meurkengers-hendrik-meurkens-cellar-music-group

Personnel: Hendrik Meurkens - harmonica; Ed Cherry - guitar on tracks 1,4,6,8; Nick Hempton - tenor saxophone on tracks 2,5,7,9; Steve Ash - piano; Chris Berger - bass; Andy Watson - drums

The Jazz Meurkengers

Shorty Rogers - Short Stops

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1953
Time: 63:49
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 146,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:52) 1. Powder Puff
(2:42) 2. The Pesky Serpent
(3:27) 3. Bunny
(3:14) 4. Piroutte
(3:31) 5. Morpo
(3:20) 6. Diablo's Dance
(3:07) 7. Mambo Del Crow
(2:40) 8. Indian Club
(3:00) 9. Coop de Graas
(3:37) 10. Inifinity Promenade
(3:18) 11. Short Stop
(3:39) 12. Boar-Jibu
(3:28) 13. Contours
(3:26) 14. Tale Of An African Lobster
(3:31) 15. Chiquito Loco
(2:43) 16. Sweeheart Of Sigmund Freud
(2:54) 17. Blues For Brando
(2:40) 18. Chino
(3:20) 19. The Wild One (Hot Blood)
(3:12) 20. Windswept

This double LP offers listeners a strong introduction to the trumpet playing and arrangements of Shorty Rogers, but unfortunately it has gone out of print and was the first and last in its series. The 32 selections feature six different groups headed by Rogers during 1953-1954, ranging from an octet to a big band; all of the bands feature sidemen who essentially formed a who's who of West Coast jazz.

Among the other soloists are altoist Art Pepper; tenors Bill Holman, Bill Perkins, Zoot Sims, Bob Cooper, and Jimmy Giuffre; trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison; pianist Hampton Hawes; and altoists Herb Geller and Bud Shank. The majority of the selections are Rogers originals; there is music from the Marlon Brando film The Wild One and a Count Basie tribute set. Swinging and surprisingly fiery "cool jazz" that deserves to be reissued on CD in full. By Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/short-stops-mw0000192401#review

Short Stops

George Colligan Trio - Living For The City

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2011
Time: 66:11
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 151,5 MB
Art: Front

(9:27) 1. It Don't Mean A Thing If It Ain't Got That Swing
(7:20) 2. Water Babies
(9:06) 3. Living For The City
(7:25) 4. Close To You
(7:05) 5. I Can't Make You Love Me
(6:10) 6. Keep Me Hanging On
(7:20) 7. Along Came Betty
(6:31) 8. Cold Duck Time
(5:44) 9. The Girl From Ipanema

George Colligan is an advanced jazz pianist and composer who has done high-ranking work as a sideman and a leader. His most high-profile association, with vocalist Cassandra Wilson, began in 2000 and continues at the time of this writing. He has also played with Ravi Coltrane, Robin Eubanks, David Gilmore, Myron Walden, Steve Wilson, and many other stellar musicians, young and old. His own bands have boasted talents as formidable as Mark Turner and Kurt Rosenwinkel.

Born in New Jersey and raised mostly in Maryland, Colligan began his musical life on the trumpet, an instrument on which he still occasionally performs and records. (Colligan is also a viable jazz drummer.) He attended the Peabody Conservatory as a classical trumpet major but became increasingly drawn to jazz piano. In 1990 he attended the Banff Summer Jazz Workshop in Canada.

After several years as a freelancer in the Maryland area, Colligan relocated to New York, where his success has continued to mount. Colligan released his first two albums, 1996's Activism and 1997's Newcomer, on the Steeplechase label. Switching to the Fresh Sound New Talent label, he followed up in 1999 with Unresolved and in 2000 with Desire. Agent 99 appeared in summer 2001.
https://www.jazzmusicarchives.com/artist/george-colligan

Personnel: Piano – George Colligan; Bass – Joshua Ginsburg; Drums – E.J. Strickland

Living For The City