Friday, August 9, 2024

Black Art Jazz Collective - Ascension

Styles: Post Bop,Jazz Contemporary
Size: 110,1 MB
Time: 48:06
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Art: Front

1. Ascension (5:36)
2. Mr. Willis (4:16)
3. Involuntary Servitude (6:46)
4. Twin Towers (6:28)
5. No Words Needed (1:54)
6. Tulsa (6:32)
7. Iron Man (6:31)
8. For the Kids (5:33)
9. Birdie's Bounce (4:27)

On Ascension, the Black Art Jazz Collective, a like-minded sextet co-founded in 2012 by trumpeter Jeremy Pelt and saxophonist Wayne Escoffery to salute the artistry of their mentors and musical heroes while moving the idiom forward into the twenty-first century, is unbending in its allegiance to the straight-ahead canon espoused by the architects of modern jazz. It's a stance that gives rise to pluses and minuses.

On the upside, this is splendid music, rhythmically and melodically pleasing, well-played by an ensemble whose members are bright and durable pillars on the New York-area scene. On the downside, the burnished performance can't becloud the fact that there's nothing special on the menu, simply well-arranged jazz that seems somehow vaguely familiar. In other words, the meal is meat and potatoes, even though remarkably well-cooked. Perhaps this has something to do with the fact that every number is an original composition: three by Pelt, two each by pianist Victor Gould and trombonist James Burton III, one apiece by Escoffery and the late Jackie McLean, and, even more so, that none would have seemed out of place in a straight-shooting Prestige-Blue Note session from the '50s or '60s.

That's not to suggest that anything here is less than appetizing. Everyone writes well, and solos are as sharp and resourceful as one would expect from musicians with their awareness and expertise. Still, one can't evade the impression he/she has heard this before in other contexts. And yet, even an "encore" can be no less than agreeable when it is mapped out as well as this. Ascension embodies jazz whose contemporary framework is bolstered by an unerring trust in time- honored precepts as its anchor. By Jack Bowers
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/ascension-black-art-jazz-collective-highnote-records

Personnel: Jeremy Pelt, trumpet; Wayne Escoffery, tenor saxophone; James Burton III, trombone; Victor Gould, keyboards; Rashaan Carter, bass; Mark Whitfield Jr., drums.

Ascension

Lauren Henderson - Riptide

Styles: Vocal
Size: 54,5 MB
Time: 23:07
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Art: Front

1. Ámame (3:21)
2. Riptide (3:01)
3. Separate (4:17)
4. Bajito (5:12)
5. Ennui (3:28)
6. Slow Control (3:47)

Vocalist Lauren Henderson goes deep with a bedroom eyes of a voice on this seductive ep. The team of Chris Pattishallpp-key, Eric Englid/b and Joe Saylor/dr create deep and thick soulful moods for Henderson’s palpably soft coo. The team is a bit funky for the soulful “Amame” as Henderson gives hints of Melody Gardot’s bohemia on “Separate”.

Some clip clop drumming and chunky guitar creates an indie mood for “Bajito” and the stark “Ennui” gets things dramatic while she is playful and coy as she draws you into her world on “Slow Control.” She doesn’t rely on range or chops, preferring to let her implications bring you to the music.
https://www.jazzweekly.com/2018/12/lauren-henderson-riptide/

Riptide

Eddie Chamblee - Blowing In Paris

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:30
Size: 149.9 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[2:27] 1. Gone
[6:32] 2. Jacques, That's The Blues
[4:11] 3. Pour Chamblee
[3:32] 4. A Pretty Song
[5:22] 5. Encore Flying Home
[4:45] 6. New Green Onions
[4:31] 7. Tenderly
[6:00] 8. Satin Doll
[5:07] 9. Blowing In Paris
[4:01] 10. Stompin' At The Savoy
[3:43] 11. Twenty Years After
[5:00] 12. Soul Food Boogie
[2:50] 13. Gone
[4:12] 14. I Cover The Waterfront
[3:09] 15. Limehouse Blues

Eddie Chamblee (ts), Wallace Davenport (tp), Buster Cooper (tb), Earl Warren (as), Arnett Cobb (ts), Milt Buckner (org, vib, vcl), André Persiany (p), Roland Lobligeois (b) & Panama Francis (d).

Eddie Chamblee was a good, sometimes inspirational player who made contributions in both big-band and small-combo settings as well as early R&B. Chamblee studied law at Chicago State University, then played with several Army bands from 1941 to 1946. He headed a small group in Chicago from 1946 until the mid-'50s, then worked for two years with Lionel Hampton, recording and touring in Europe in 1956. Chamblee went back to small combos, and backed vocalist Dinah Washington on many superb dates in 1957, 1958, and 1963. (He and Washington were also briefly married.) Chamblee worked with Milt Buckner and Hampton in the '70s, returning with them to Europe in 1976, 1977, and 1978. He also recorded with each musician, and did some sessions with his own band in 1976. Chamblee played for a short period in Count Basie's orchestra in 1982. ~bio by Ron Wynn

Blowing In Paris

Sarah King - The Masquerade Is Over

Styles: Vocal
Size: 81,3 MB
Time: 35:30
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2024
Art: Front

1. Willow Weep For Me (3:19)
2. I've Got You On My Mind (3:00)
3. Make Someone Happy (3:11)
4. The Masquerade Is Over (5:21)
5. Steppin' Out With My Baby (3:18)
6. Why Try To Change Me Now (3:53)
7. Wake Up! Chill'un Wake Up (4:03)
8. Wild Is Love (3:17)
9. When Sunny Gets Blue (2:39)
10. Wash That Man Right Out Of My Hair (3:24)

Known for her powerhouse voice and "fiery, vulnerable songs," Sarah King creates thought-provoking, versatile Americana music. Her genuine stories about real-life emotions and situations also draw on classic folk-blues themes, balancing songs about the devil and booze with hard-won moments of reflection and acceptance.

Her acclaimed 2021 EP The Hour, produced by Simone Felice and David Baron, earned her recognition as the New England Music Awards songwriter of the Year and performances at the 2022 Folk Alliance International and Philadelphia Folk festivals, as well as supporting slots for acts including Blues Traveler, The Steel Woods, Anders Osborne, & Nathan Graham. She won the Great River Folk Festival Singer/Songwriter Contest in 2023.
https://sarahkingsings.com/about

The Masquerade Is Over