Thursday, August 22, 2024

Ann Hampton Callaway - Jazz Goes To The Movies

Time: 54:12
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz Vocals, Cabaret
Art: Full

01. 'S Wonderful (4:32)
02. Let's Face The Music And Dance (3:06)
03. Blue Skies (4:16)
04. The Folks Who Live On The Hill (4:12)
05. As Time Goes By (3:31)
06. The Way You Look Tonight (4:40)
07. This Time The Dream's On Me (2:47)
08. The Nearness Of You (6:06)
09. How Little We Know (3:30)
10. This Can't Be Love (3:40)
11. Just One Of Those Things (2:59)
12. Taking A Chance On Love (3:20)
13. Long Ago And Far Away (4:32)
14. From This Moment On (2:55)

World renowned Tony nominee, New York Cabaret Award "Best Jazz Vocalist" winner and Theater World Award winner Ann Hampton Callaway delivers a must have album. "Jazz Goes To The Movies is a spectacular collection of all-time great movie songs lovingly performed by Ann and her ensemble led by Ted Rosenthal, winner of the Thelonious Monk International Jazz Competition." Jazz Goes To The Movies" conjures stirring images from the golden age of Hollywood. Highlights include the iconic "As Time Goes By" from Casablanca, Irving Berlin's immortal "Blue Skies" from The Jazz Singer, Jerome Kern's "The Way You Look Tonight" from Swing Time and many more movie classics!

Jazz Goes To The Movies

Syd Lawrence - Miller Magic

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 1970
Time: 34:37
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 79,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:02) 1. Moonlight Serenade
(3:06) 2. Little Brown Jug
(2:55) 3. Elmer's Tune
(4:52) 4. Serenade in Blue
(3:10) 5. Flying Home
(4:15) 6. I've Got a Gal in Kalamazoo
(3:45) 7. Stardust
(3:31) 8. Story of a Starry Night
(2:15) 9. Jersey Bounce
(2:43) 10. Caribbean Clipper

Syd Lawrence (1923-1998), was a British bandleader from Chester, England who became famous in the UK for his orchestra's Big Band Sound which drew on the 1940's style of music of Glenn Miller and Count Basie amongst others.

Syd had been a talented trumpet player during the Second World War. He had written and arranged music and his early talent was recognised in those fields as well. He was based in Cairo during the war years, playing and arranging for the RAF service bands. After he left the forces, he played with some of the leading British dance bands of the 1940's, finally being invited to join the BBC's Northern Dance Orchestra in 1953. He stayed with this band for 16 years playing alongside fellow trumpet player Stan Hibbert.

In 1967 Syd teamed up with several of his colleagues at the Northern Dance Orchestra to play the music that he was most enthusiastic about, that of Glenn Miller. Early concerts at the Mersey Hotel in Manchester were a great success, and larger venues were found to play in as the reputation of his band grew.

Yorkshire Television gave The Syd Lawrence Orchestra a regular spot on the comedy show Sez Les. As the music became more popular, Syd and his band started touring around the UK, which they did with great success for many years. Several records were made along with radio and television appearances on variety shows.

Syd retired from touring in 1994 and died of an aneurism in 1998. Following his death, the Syd Lawrence Band continued on and still tours. The orchestra has been led by Brian Pendleton, and presently by Chris Dean. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License and may also be available under the GNU FDL.
https://www.jazzmusicarchives.com/artist/syd-lawrence

Miller Magic

Glenn Zottola/Romero Lubambo/Pamela Driggs - Summer Samba

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2023
Time: 24:47
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 57,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:07) 1. Summer Samba
(6:11) 2. Para Machuchar Meu Coracao
(4:22) 3. Ligia
(4:13) 4. Fotografia
(4:51) 5. Samba e Amor

2023 news reports and events acknowledged and celebrated 50 Years Of Hip-Hop. While noteworthy, it is doubtful that hip hop classics such as "Get Ur Freak On," "Sucker M.C.'s and "Nuthin' But a G Thang" will ever find themselves in the Great American Songbook. The genre simply cannot compare with the vast extent of musical influence emanating from that 1960s period in which Stan Getz, Astrud Gilberto, Antonio Carlos Jobim, et al, took the popular and jazz worlds by storm with the exciting bossa nova sounds of Brazil. "Summer Samba" from should-be-Hall of Fame multi-instrumentalist Glenn Zottola, virtuoso Brazilian guitarist Romero Lubambo, and outstanding vocalist Pamela Driggs epitomizes the substance, vibrancy, and perennial influence that that music has had.

The album offers a handful of beautiful and sublimely-performed selections , all firmly entrenched in the Brazilian canon. The title tune, whose Portuguese name is used here, was a big hit for Brazilian organist Walter Wanderley in 1966, and is covered straight up. Driggs certainly has Gilberto's stylings on loan and adds a fair amount of her own expressiveness to the Marcos and Sergio Paulo Valle composition. Romero Lubambo, who is outstanding throughout the session, here eases all and delivers a fine solo. Then there's Zottola. With a youthful vigor and endless elegance, his luxurious, silk-smooth tenor glides as did that girl on Ipanema Beach. The utterly lovely "Pra Machcar" has Driggs and Zottola as two cavorting musical butterflies with Lubambo adding their rhythmic breeze. Zottola's solo here is a case study in taste. And Lubambo's octaves launch him into a tasteful overdubbed solo.

Driggs, an American who is fluent in Portuguese, has all of the linguistic inflections and their give and take with lyric and melody in her command. Her dynamic approach goes hand-glove with Zottola's tenor and Lubambo's fine acoustics. With a trio set-up such as this, the players must meld perfectly. Toes must be respected and restrained involvement is key. Driggs, Zottola, and Lubambo demonstrate that they are skilled in that regard.

"Ligia," a lesser-known Jobim tune, is more balladic than typical bossa. Lubambo's tasty intro sets up Driggs seduction. It is a romantic grabber and a four-square gorgeous track. Dreamlike, "Fotographia" is also on the relaxed side. "Samba da Amor" offers Zottola's finest solo of the session and a lovely voice/sax unison leading to an apropos "suspended" ending.

"Summer Samba," even with its shorter length, is an exquisite and involving engagement. Hip tip: Hop in and don't listen alone. By Nicholas F. Mondello
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/summer-samba-glenn-zottola-romero-lumbambo-pamela-driggs-self-produced

Personnel: Glenn Zottola - Alto Saxophone; Romero Lubambo - Guitar; Pamela Driggs - Vocal.

Summer Samba

Stephane Belmondo - Love For Chet

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:38
Size: 144,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:59)  1. You Can't Go Home Again
(5:59)  2. I Remember You
(6:11)  3. Love for Sale
(3:36)  4. La chanson d'Hélène
(5:46)  5. With a Song in My Heart
(6:38)  6. Daddy & I
(5:51)  7. Tarde
(3:55)  8. Seven Steps to Heaven
(5:23)  9. Say It So
(6:05) 10. If I Should Lose You
(5:46) 11. Blame It on My Youth
(2:23) 12. On Green Dolphin Street

Since the 1980s, French trumpeter Stéphane Belmondo has been a well-known figure in clubs, from Paris to New York. He has collaborated with jazz personalities such as Dee DeeBridgewater, Horace Silver and Lee Konitz. Above all, Belmondo knows what jazz is all about: with a profound respect for tradition, he explores new paths in complete freedom. Along with forays into classical music and that of Stevie Wonder, among others, his name remains inextricably linked to the musical experiments of the Belmondo Quintet. Belmondo’s distinctive sound flows naturally, like musical poetry; somewhere between Freddie Hubbard and Chet Baker. The latter needs hardly any introduction. The American trumpeter/singer Chet Baker made his mark on the history of jazz like no other, until passed away before his time in 1988. Belmondo’s fascination with Baker has now inevitably led to the tribute ‘Love For Chet’, to be released in spring 2015. http://www.gentjazz.com/en/concerts/stephane-belmondo-trio/

Personnel:  Stéphane Belmondo (trumpet, bugle), Jesse Van Ruller (guitar), Thomas Bramerie (contrabasse)