Friday, June 7, 2024

Teri Thornton - Devil May Care

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2011
Time: 81:20
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 187,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:47) 1. Lullaby of the Leaves
(3:29) 2. My Old Flame
(2:35) 3. Blue Skies
(3:10) 4. Detour Ahead
(5:58) 5. Dancing in the Dark
(5:52) 6. Blue Champagne
(3:47) 7. What's Your Story, Morning Glory
(2:46) 8. Devil May Care
(3:26) 9. Left Alone
(2:41) 10. I Feel a Song Comin' On
(4:09) 11. What's New?
(2:32) 12. The Song Is You
(2:59) 13. Somewhere In The Night
(2:51) 14. I've Got Your Number
(3:33) 15. There's A Boat Dat's Leavin Soon For New York
(2:52) 16. Lonely One
(2:29) 17. You've Got To Have Heart
(4:14) 18. Stormy Weather
(2:51) 19. I Believe In You
(4:33) 20. Mood Indigo
(2:26) 21. Quizas, Quizas, Quizas
(2:33) 22. I've Got The World On A String
(2:47) 23. Clap Yo' Hands
(3:49) 24. Serenade In Blue

Dubbed by Cannonball Adderley “the greatest voice since Ella Fitzgerald” Detroit-born Teri Thornton (1934-2000) moved to the Big Apple in 1960, where she was an immediate hit with the city’s seasoned jazz musicians and sophisti- cated audiences. It led to her first album, Devil May Care, for Riverside, where she was backed by some of New York’s brightest jazzmen, including Clark Terry, Britt Woodman, Seldon Powell and a rhythm section that boasted, among others, Wynton Kelly, Sam Jones, Jimmy Cobb and Freddie Green. A sagacious venture into the Great American Songbook allowed her to display a fine feel for the lyrics and a voice like nobody else’s.

In 1961 Chicago deejays gave her the “Coming Star of the Year” Award and the following year she signed for Dauntless. Hailed as “one of the most exciting voices of her generation”, she had a hit single with Somewhere in the Night, which became the name of her 1963 album. Again front-rank jazzmen were involved, among them Charlie Mariano, Joe Farrell, Nick Brignola, Eddie Bert and Dave Frishberg. Well-chosen material allowed her to make the most of her contralto-rich, distinctive vocal quality and decided individuality of delivery, and both albums add up to a fitting memorial to a singular jazz vocal talent of whom Freddie Green once said: “This girl has got to make it. If she doesn’t, something’s very wrong.” He was right.
https://www.freshsoundrecords.com/teri-thornton-albums/6520-lullaby-of-the-leaves-the-voice-of-teri-thornton-2-lp-on-1-cd.html

Album details: Teri Thornton, vocals in all tracks. Clark Terry, trumpet; Britt Woodman, trombone; Earl Warren, alto sax; Seldon Powell, tenor sax; Wynton Kelly, piano; Freddie Green (#1-6) or Sam Herman (#7-12), guitar; Sam Jones, bass; Jimmy Cobb, drums.

Devil May Care

Stanley Turrentine - The Look Of Love

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1968
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:02
Size: 87,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:23) 1. The Look Of Love
(3:26) 2. Here There And Everywhere
(3:22) 3. A Beautiful Friendship
(6:01) 4. Blues For Stan
(2:34) 5. This Guy's In Love With You
(4:41) 6. MacArthur Park
(2:25) 7. I'm Always Drunk In San Francisco
(3:14) 8. Emily
(3:43) 9. Cabin In The Sky
(4:07) 10. Smile

With its mix of pop covers and jazz material, The Look of Love could be considered a typical Turrentine album from the late '60s. What sets this and a few other of his Blue Note titles apart, though, are the full yet tasteful string and band arrangements by jazz flügelhorn player and composer Thad Jones. With his flexible phrasing and muscular tone, Turrentine dives into the lush arrangements, especially on the sweeping rendition of Burt Bacharach's "Look of Love." Other pop selections bring mixed results: The plodding arrangement on "McArthur Park" garners a lukewarm response from Turrentine, while the tender settings for "Emily" and another Bacharach number, "This Guy's in Love With You," elicit the kind of velvety vaporous tone and sincere romantic phrasing Turrentine usually killed with on ballads.

More upbeat, straight-ahead material like "A Beautiful Friendship" and the blues swinger "Blues for Stan" keep the date well balanced and set the table for some masterful Turrentine solos. Again, special mention should be made of Thad Jones who, along with Oliver Nelson (Nancy Wilson's Welcome to My Love in particular) and Duke Pearson, supplanted the usual syrupy arrangements found on "cross-over" dates with intelligent, complimentary charts. Turrentine certainly appreciated it, as evidenced by his strong work here. Purists who usually cringe at late-'60s jazz dates like this (yes, there is a Beatles cover here) might be pleasantly surprised. For those who feel Bacharach and Jimmy Webb provide fine material for jazz, then The Look of Love is a must.By Stephen Cook https://www.allmusic.com/album/look-of-love-mw0000899764

Personnel: Stanley Turrentine - tenor saxophone; Jimmy Nottingham, Snooky Young - flugelhorn; Benny Powell - bass trombone; Jim Buffington - French horn; Kenny Burrell - guitar; Hank Jones - piano; Duke Pearson - piano, arranger ; Roland Hanna - piano; George Duvivier - bass; Grady Tate - drums; Mickey Roker - Thad Jones - drums

The Look Of Love

Beaver Harris, Don Pullen 360° Experience - Well Kept Secret

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2019
Time: 29:01
File: MP3 @ 128K/s
Size: 27,0 MB
Art: Front

(17:27) 1. Gorée
(5:34) 2. Land of the Pharoahs
(8:41) 3. Double Arc Jake
(7:57) 4. Well Kept Secret
(6:47) 5. Newcomer

One of the most striking Don Pullen albums of the 80s a beautifully open session that has the pianist co-leading a version of the 360 Experience group of drummer Beaver Harris with an excellent lineup that also features Ricky Ford on tenor sax, Hamiet Bluiett on baritone, and Buster Williams on bass! The mix of players is unusual, and the sound here is as well a record that easily steps between freer moments and more tuneful passages imbued with the creative spirit of the loft jazz generation, but also taken a step further too possibly via the album's production work by Hal Willner.

There's some truly majestic moments on the album and the whole thing is a great demonstration of the way that the farther fringes of the jazz universe were finding even more focused expression in the 80s during a time when records like this really helped give musicians a great outlet for their new ideas. The set begins with the very long "Goree", which has additional work by Candido on percussion – and other tracks include "Land Of The Pharoahs", "Double Arc Jake", and "Newcomer".© 1996-2024, Dusty Groove,Inc.
https://www.dustygroove.com/item/880168/Beaver-Harris-Don-Pullen-360-Experience:Well-Kept-Secret

Personnel: Beaver Harris, drums; Don Pullen, piano; Hamiet Bluiett, baritone saxophone; Ricky Ford, tenor saxophone; Buster Williams, bass; Francis Haynes, steel drums; Candido, percussion (1); Sharon Freeman, Willie Ruff, Bill Warnick, Greg Williams, french horns (1)

Well Kept Secret

Chick Corea Akoustic Band with John Patitucci & Dave Weckl - Live

Styles: Piano, Bop
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 134:43
Size: 312,4 MB
Art: Front

( 9:22) 1. Morning Sprite
( 7:30) 2. Japanese Waltz
( 7:13) 3. That Old Feeling
( 9:27) 4. In A Sentimental Mood
(14:22) 5. Rhumba Flamenco
(12:43) 6. Summer Night
( 7:30) 7. Humpty Dumpty
( 9:20) 8. On Green Dolphin Street
(11:44) 9. Eternal Child
(14:23) 10. You And The Night And The Music
( 8:31) 11. Monk's Mood
(12:08) 12. Humpty Dumpty
(10:25) 13. You’re Everything

A posthumous review of a live record sounds like an oxymoron. Particularly when it seems that Chick Corea was with us only yesterday. The sound of this record is lively, bright, and imbued with a richness of colors. The trio of Corea, bassist John Patitucci, and drummer Dave Weckl can take your breath away in an instant. This addition to their rich library is played with as much enthusiasm as it is heart, and with as much passion as it is a sense of fun. The question becomes is it good or is it great? That is for the listener to decide. This is a two live CD set, with only one song, "Humpty Dumpty," emerging from both sets. The trio dug in and played long and creative versions of just about everything, with each set featuring over an hour of hearty improvisational jazz.

Corea kicks off lightly with Patitucci and Weckl soon to follow in a modern take on the Corea composition "Morning Sprite." The nine plus minutes take touched on almost every edge and every corner of what was to come. It was a taste of what was in store. Corea was always concerned about setting the mood and having everyone feeling comfortable. Now placed in a receptive environment, the trio dances into Corea's "Japanese Waltz." Fluid and evenly paced this waltz has Patitucci in duo, with Weckl on brushes, inside the larger hypnotic and interactive trio movement. The pace is lifted as they groove into "That Old Feeling" with a bounce in their step. Weckl concludes with high end artistry that wasn't rushed despite the fiery bebop lines of Patitucci leading him in. Corea's note selection creatively had a Freddie Hubbardesque horn cadence to it. Like most musicians, he did a lot of transcribing. We can wonder if the progressions were knowingly horn centric or if they had just become a part of him.

Just at a moment when the trio could have raised the temperature a bit more, Corea slyly went the other direction with Duke Ellington's "In a Sentimental Mood." The familiar romantic theme is reset with warm lines and soft colors by Corea in solo. He gravitated ever so slightly back to the melody as his mates climbed on board. Their collective note selections and exchanges seem to make the tune melt around you. In no rush, the luscious serenade wrapped just under the ten minute mark. That pales in comparison to the over fourteen minutes of Corea's Latin laced "Rhumba Flamenco." Starting out close to the vest, the song bursted exponentially moments in with a Weckl pop that was pounced on by Corea and Patitucci. The beauty of improvised music. It could just as easily been Corea or Patitucci that led the direction, or the direction could have been different. No matter, they chase after each other with equal skill, passion, and fun. Three masters in their domain racing into a cloud of thunder. A jaw-dropped audience erupted at the conclusion of the driving selection that included an exquisite drum take from Weckl, Patitucci's powerful and tenacious grooves, and eight thousand (slight exaggeration) directional changes by Corea. This piece had show closer written all over it. But not on this night. Not with two more pieces on the playlist. Or was there a playlist? Maybe they were just calling out tunes. Either way, "Summer Night" was up next. The warm sensation of one of those summer nights that you wish would never end was encapsulated in a thirteen minutes plus treatment that has Patitucci finely fingering gently into a warm abyss. Corea embraced it moving with gradual advance into a seamless full swing trio. Corea's flurry of note selections were vivid and energizing, with Weckl and Patitucci playing in kind. "Summer Night" was the delicate balance of upper shelf performance and having a blast doing it. "Humpty Dumpty" made an appearance, with Patitucci and Weckl quickly out the gate in driving swing. The Corea classic found the master jetting on his keyboards with high speed changes on the fly, in a vast array of directions. The show closed with Patitucci really feeling and pushing the groove and Weckl furiously zinging around his kit in unison. Corea reengaged the melody again and again, buzzing mercurial lines of expression in between until it was time for Humpty to fall and call it a night.

Set two, also known as disc two, finds the trio in immediate full swing and groove. Their improvisational graces filling every lane "On Green Dolphin Street." The oft traveled road has been driven at many speeds by a litany of jazz greats over the years. Miles Davis, along with Bill Evans, and John Coltrane recorded what is often referred to as the definitive version in the late 1950's. Spirits were high right out the starting gate, this second night playing live at SPC Music Hall in St. Petersburg, Florida in 2018. Patitucci smoldering, with Weckl in hot pursuit, paved the way for Corea's customarily relentless pursuit of innovation. Polishing every corner at every seamlessly navigated turn, Corea shined brightly, leaving no doubt he was plugged in this night. With Patitucci's solo a taut extension of where he had been throughout the tune and Weckl's remarkable ability to play with robust energy while maintaining a balance in not overpowering his bandmates, this was an opening number of note. This was followed by Patitucci taking his bow to his strings. What emanated was a dark yet elegant pathway delving into Corea's "Eternal Child." The mood was dramatically set for Corea to solo from ground zero. In no rush, he exposes his deep emotional pallet with heart and sincerity. Patitucci and Weckl quietly emerge in support and the trio gently brings the poignant ballad to a close. The feel of a ballad continues with "You and The Night and The Music." That mood shifts quickly, however, when a more rapid tempo emerges. Corea pounces like white on rice and locks into a fourteen minutes plus riveting piece that thrusts open the floodgates of Corea's fertile imagination. The tune is also a showpiece for Weckl's explosive and fiery drumming. While he again demonstrates his command of power and finesse, it's the recipe that makes it cook. Weckl's bold and recognizable signature sound is defined by his dynamic blend of components forged inside the temperament of a refined artist.

A Thelonious Monk composition seemed inevitable. After all, the telepathic connection between Corea and Monk has long been discussed. "Monk's Mood" was instantly recognizable, with Corea well acquainted with the curiously melodic muse of Monk. His frameless approach seemed to invite the playful and quirky measures of Monk. Not surprisingly, Corea's soloing was at part an immersion into dissonance, while also an integration of their styles. It is easy to become so fixated that you hardly notice Patitucci and Weckl sliding in. Patitucci adds his own spice and quirk to the mix, elevating the epic piece even further. "Humpty Dumpty" is back in the house, and this time sticks around a bit longer. Part of the extension is at the front end, with Corea deftly soloing into a potent wonderland. Now into his own world, free of any boundaries, he spins a fantastical journey before Humpty even began to swing. Even more playful than before, Corea was having about as much as fun as possible, playfully engaging Patitucci and Weckl into interplay that was equally inventive, fun, rhythmic, and energetic. A highly intelligent conversation from the masterful trio. On this night "Humpty Dumpty" did not close out the show. Instead Corea invited his wife and singer Gayle Moran Corea on to the stage, as he had done so many times over the years. She took on the challenge of a very demanding ballad. Corea's composition "You're Everything" covers a lot of range even more when Corea is being playful with it. Half way through the first verse, she laughed and said "My those notes are hard to sing." After an instrumental run, she blistered the second verse with some astonishing high notes. The crowd erupted. Initially for Mrs. Corea's efforts, but then loud and genuine in appreciation of the evening's sensational serenade. Three elite musicians reuniting with the sole purpose of having fun. A celebration of life with longtime friends. The kind of evenings that could be magical...RIP Chick Corea.
~ Jim Worsleyhttps://www.allaboutjazz.com/live-chick-corea-concord-music-group

Personnel: Chick Corea: piano; John Patitucci: bass, acoustic; Dave Weckl: drums; Gayle Moran Corea: voice / vocals.

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