Showing posts with label Barney Kessel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barney Kessel. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 16, 2024

Mitzi Gaynor - Sings The Lyrics of Ira Gershwin

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:48
Size: 80,9 MB
Art: Front

(2:05)  1. Soon
(3:52)  2. Half of It Dearie Blues
(3:31)  3. Spring Again
(2:35)  4. Gotta Have Me Go With You
(2:29)  5. Here's What I'm Here For
(3:42)  6. I Can't Get Started
(2:26)  7. Treat Me Rough
(2:19)  8. That Certain Feeling
(3:23)  9. My Ship
(2:06) 10. There's A Boat Dat's Leavin' Soon For New York
(2:48) 11. Island In The West Indies
(3:27) 12. Isn't It A Pity

With her delicate, fluttery voice (which can also go into overdrive with a very satisfactory belt when required), Gaynor tackles two numbers closely identified with Judy Garland "Gotta Have Me A Go With You" and "Here's What I'm Here For" as well as a lullaby-esque "My Ship" intimately scored with soft, hesitant strings and just the right amount of brass and a gangbusters "Soon" amongst others.By Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Sings-Lyrics-Gershwin-Mitzi-Gaynor/dp/B002D1GND2

Personnel: Pete Candoli, Don Fagerquist, Cappy Lewis, Uan Rasey, Manny Klein (tp); Dave Wells, Ed Kusby, Tommy Pederson, Lloyd Ulyate, Joe Howard, Hoyt Bohanon (tb); George Roberts, Kenny Shroyer (b-tb); Paul Horn (as); Paul Smith (p, celeste); Jimmy Rowles (p); Barney Kessel, Jack Marshall, Al Hendrickson (g); Max Bennett, Joe Mondragon (b); Jack Sperling, Mel Lewis (d); Ralph Hensell (perc); plus 8 violins.

Sings The Lyrics of Ira Gershwin

Barney Kessel - On Fire

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1965
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:45
Size: 80,5 MB
Art: Front

(8:20)  1. Slow Burn
(4:03)  2. Just In Time
(3:25)  3. The Shadow Of Your Smile
(4:53)  4. Recado Bossa Nova (Gift Of Love)
(3:30)  5. Sweet Baby
(2:24)  6. Who Can I Turn To
(8:07)  7. One Mint Julep

Rare and groovy work by Barney Kessel originally recorded for a strange subsidiary of Phil Spector's record label! The album's quite different than some of Kessel's other albums of the earlier years recorded live with a gritty feel that's really nice a bit more edge on the strings of the guitar, and a rumbling tone that's a far cry from his lighter work for Contemporary in the 50s. Kessel still retains much of his ability to produce a bell-like tone on the guitar but he rings out with a tremendous amount of force spurred on by the crackling club rhythm section of Jerry Scheff on bass and Frank Capp on drums. Titles include 2 great originals "Slow Burn" and "Sweet Baby" plus an excellent version of "Recado Bossa Nova", and the tunes "The Shadow Of Your Smile", "Just In Time", and "One Mint Julep".  https://www.dustygroove.com/item/735355

Personnel: Bass – Jerry Scheff ;  Drums – Frankie Capp;  Guitar – Barney Kessel.

On Fire

Sunday, March 24, 2024

Oscar Peterson - Dimensions: A Compendium Of The Pablo Years (4-Disc Set)

Oscar Peterson, Count Basie, Louis Bellson, Ray brown, Benny Carter, Martin Drew, Harry "Sweets" Edison, Roy Eldridge, Duke Ellington, Jon Faddis, Dizzy Gillespie, Stephane Grappelli, Coleman Hawkins, Louis Hayes, Johnny Hodges, Barney Kessel, Neils-Henning Orsted Pedersen, Joe Pass, Mickey Roker, Clark Terry, Toots Thieleman, Ed Thigpen, David Young, and more.

Oscar Peterson's recordings on the Pablo label span the years from the '50s to the '70s and have long needed this type of lavish anthology. Over the course of four discs, you get to hear five tunes by the classic trio matching the peerless pianist with guitarist Herb Ellis and bassist Ray Brown. But the best of that particular band – arguably Peterson's finest – resides largely on the Verve label, so the Pablo years find Peterson interacting with a number of stars with whom he shared studio or concert stage time on an occasional, sometimes casual basis. The supporting cast on the Pablo years is dazzling, and the results are rarely less than deeply satisfying. Peterson sounds delightfully restrained during a charming piano duet with Count Basie, deliciously witty with growling trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison, and nearly intimidated by the virtuosity of Stephane Grappelli, but then again, "Nuages" is the tune this box showcases, and the violinist had a few decades after Django's death to stake his claim to that number.

Half of the 46 tracks here are live, and live recordings always bring out the flashy entertainer in Peterson. Yet even for those critics like myself who find Peterson more focused and inspired in the studio, there are ecstatic rewards in the live offerings here. A 1967 concert with the Ellington band finds Peterson navigating a strangely compelling blues line through a show-stopping "Take the A Train" that succeeds in spite of obvious showboating. Another live bit of Ellingtonia that succeeds, a medley of Perdido and Caravan at dizzying speed, comes from a 1986 Los Angeles concert where Peterson's telepathic empathy with guitarist Joe Pass equals in sheer majesty his interaction of the '50s with Herb Ellis.

There are a handful of regrettable clinkers: a misguided vocal that sounds like Nat King Cole recorded at the ocean floor, a quizzical number on clavichord, surely not Peterson's ideal instrument (as he was quick to recognize), and an overripe orchestrated tribute to the late Princess Di that resembles in sap content Ellington's tribute to the Queen. These gaffes aside, this is a sterling, well-programmed set certain to please fans of our forever-young, and arguably, greatest living pianist. ~Norman Weinstein

Album: Dimensions: A Compendium Of The Pablo Years (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:13
Size: 169.9 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2003

[4:48] 1. That Old Black Magic
[5:00] 2. Tenderly
[3:22] 3. How High The Moon
[4:40] 4. The Way You Look Tonight
[3:40] 5. You Are Too Beautiful
[4:47] 6. Smedley
[5:08] 7. Someday My Prince Will Come
[6:03] 8. Daytrain
[3:33] 9. Moonglow
[4:36] 10. Sweet Georgia Brown
[6:23] 11. C Jam Blues
[6:37] 12. Wes' Tune
[8:42] 13. Okie Blues
[6:50] 14. You Can Depend On Me

Album:Dimensions: A Compendium Of The Pablo Years (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:59
Size: 169.4 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2003

[8:40] 1. You Are My Sunshine
[6:58] 2. Caravan
[7:09] 3. Stella By Starlight
[4:43] 4. Little Jazz
[5:28] 5. Soft Winds
[6:30] 6. Mean To Me
[7:52] 7. Oh, Lady Be Good
[4:20] 8. On A Slow Boat To China
[4:26] 9. Summertime
[7:18] 10. Blues For Birks
[4:54] 11. How Long Has This Been Going On
[5:34] 12. Hogtown Blues

Dimensions: A Compendium Of The Pablo Years (Disc 1) (Disc 2)

Album: Dimensions: A Compendium Of The Pablo Years (Disc 3)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:01
Size: 174.0 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2003

[ 5:22] 1. Blues Etude
[ 3:37] 2. Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans
[ 7:18] 3. I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
[ 6:44] 4. Just In Time
[ 4:46] 5. I'm Confessin' (That I Love You)
[ 6:23] 6. Goodbye
[ 6:25] 7. Falling In Love With Love
[ 7:13] 8. Nigerian Marketplace
[ 6:28] 9. Sometimes I'm Happy
[13:14] 10. Perdido
[ 8:27] 11. Cool Walk


Album: Dimensions: A Compendium Of The Pablo Years (Disc 4)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:47
Size: 166.6 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[ 5:27] 1. Take The 'a' Train
[12:57] 2. Ballad Medley 5400 North
[ 6:14] 3. Exactly Like You
[11:17] 4. Au Privave
[10:50] 5. If I Were A Bell
[ 8:05] 6. Nuages
[ 3:46] 7. Some Of These Days
[ 4:58] 8. Lady Di's Waltz
[ 9:09] 9. Stuffy

Dimensions: A Compendium Of The Pablo Years (Disc 3)(Disc 4)

Thursday, December 14, 2023

Barney Kessel - Hard to Hide

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 91:18
Size: 213,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:51)  1. Body and Soul
(2:57)  2. Cheeta's for Two
(4:19)  3. Some Like It Hot
(3:15)  4. Lullaby of Birdland
(7:08)  5. New Rhumba
(3:23)  6. Tea for Two
(2:32)  7. East of the Sun (And West of the Moon)
(4:21)  8. Brasilia
(3:43)  9. All for You
(3:42) 10. I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face
(3:59) 11. Happy Feeling
(4:35) 12. Forward Blues
(2:16) 13. El Tigre
(5:50) 14. Summertime
(3:51) 15. Time Will Tell
(4:35) 16. Passeone Blues
(3:22) 17. The Cobra
(3:55) 18. The Blues
(3:57) 19. Moten Swing
(2:33) 20. Perdido
(2:47) 21. String of Pearls
(2:58) 22. Backward Blues
(3:50) 23. A Woman of Stature
(4:27) 24. The Twister

One of the finest guitarists to emerge after the death of Charlie Christian, Barney Kessel was a reliable bop soloist throughout his career. He played with a big band fronted by Chico Marx (1943), was fortunate enough to appear in the classic jazz short Jammin' the Blues (1944), and then worked with the big bands of Charlie Barnet (1944-1945) and Artie Shaw (1945); he also recorded with Shaw's Gramercy Five. Kessel became a busy studio musician in Los Angeles, but was always in demand for jazz records. He toured with the Oscar Peterson Trio for one year (1952-1953) and then, starting in 1953, led an impressive series of records for Contemporary that lasted until 1961 (including several with Ray Brown and Shelly Manne in a trio accurately called the Poll Winners).

After touring Europe with George Wein's Newport All-Stars (1968), Kessel lived in London for a time (1969-1970). In 1973, he began touring and recording with the Great Guitars, a group also including Herb Ellis and Charlie Byrd. A serious stroke in 1992 put Barney Kessel permanently out of action, but many of his records (which include dates for Onyx, Black Lion, Sonet, and Concord, in addition to many of the Contemporaries) are available, along with several video collections put out by Vestapol. Kessel was diagnosed with inoperable cancer in 2001, which eventually took his life in May of 2004. He was 80 years old. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/barney-kessel-mn0000784527/biography

Hard to Hide

Wednesday, December 21, 2022

Barney Kessel - Whatever You Want

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:25
Size: 174,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:13) 1. By The Beautiful Sea
(6:31) 2. My Man's Gone Now
(2:26) 3. Sweet Georgia Brown
(5:59) 4. Flowersville
(2:14) 5. Summertime
(3:57) 6. The Gypsy's Hip
(4:58) 7. Free As A Bird
(3:07) 8. Tumbling Tumbleweeds
(2:56) 9. Don't Blame Me
(4:25) 10. Wall Street
(2:10) 11. Heartaches
(5:07) 12. Opus 711
(4:47) 13. My Funny Valentine
(2:43) 14. They Can't Take That Away From Me
(6:43) 15. Joy Spring
(3:46) 16. How Deep Is The Ocean (How High Is The Sky)
(2:33) 17. It Ain't Necessarily So
(4:00) 18. If You Dig Me
(3:41) 19. I Wanna Be Loved By You

One of the finest guitarists to emerge after the death of Charlie Christian, Barney Kessel was a reliable bop soloist throughout his career. He played with a big band fronted by Chico Marx (1943), was fortunate enough to appear in the classic jazz short Jammin' the Blues (1944), and then worked with the big bands of Charlie Barnet (1944-1945) and Artie Shaw (1945); he also recorded with Shaw's Gramercy Five. Kessel became a busy studio musician in Los Angeles, but was always in demand for jazz records. He toured with the Oscar Peterson Trio for one year (1952-1953) and then, starting in 1953, led an impressive series of records for Contemporary that lasted until 1961 (including several with Ray Brown and Shelly Manne in a trio accurately called the Poll Winners).

After touring Europe with George Wein's Newport All-Stars (1968), Kessel lived in London for a time (1969-1970). In 1973, he began touring and recording with the Great Guitars, a group also including Herb Ellis and Charlie Byrd. A serious stroke in 1992 put Barney Kessel permanently out of action, but many of his records (which include dates for Onyx, Black Lion, Sonet, and Concord, in addition to many of the Contemporaries) are available, along with several video collections put out by Vestapol. Kessel was diagnosed with inoperable cancer in 2001, which eventually took his life in May of 2004. He was 80 years old.By Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/barney-kessel-mn0000784527/biography

Whatever You Want

Saturday, October 29, 2022

Grant Green - Funk in France - Paris to Antibes

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 118:06
Size: 271,2 MB
Art: Front

( 4:33)  1. I Don't Want Nobody to Give Me Nothing
( 4:21)  2. Oleo (Live): Oleo
( 7:18)  3. Insensatez (How Insensitive)
( 8:07)  4. Untitled Blues
( 7:01)  5. Sonnymoon for Two
( 7:05)  6. I Wish You Love
(18:00)  7. Upshot
(14:34)  8. Hurt So Bad
(19:46)  9. Upshot
(27:17) 10. Hi-Heel Sneakers

Resonance's Funk in France: From Paris to Antibes (1969-1970) is two archival recordings in one package. Most of the first disc is devoted to an October 26, 1969 concert given at La Maison de la Radio's Studio 104, where Grant Green was supported by bassist Larry Ridley, drummer Don Lamond, and, on "I Wish You Love," guitarist Barney Kessel, while the second part of Funk in France combines four highlights from two July 1970 appearances at the Antibes Jazz Festival. While the two performances were separated by a matter of months, they're quite different in execution. The Paris concert finds Green pushing toward the funky pop-jazz hybrid he'd make his specialty in the early '70s but not quite committing to it just yet. Green doesn't hide his allegiance to funk by opening the proceedings with a percolating version of James Brown's "I Don't Want Nobody to Give Me Nothin' (Open Up the Door and I'll Get It Myself)," a version that doesn't serve as a keynote as much as a harbinger to what came later. Apart from a loosely lyrical "Untitled Blues," Green and company are in relatively straightforward bop territory, playing two Sonny Rollins tunes and the standard "I Wish You Love" along with Antonio Carlos Jobim's "How Insensitive." It's a lively set, but understated when compared to the cooking selections from Antibes.

Working with an organist and saxophonist lets Green lean into R&B, and the quartet digs in hard, spending nearly 20 minutes grooving on the original "Upshot," then extending Tommy Tucker's dance hit "Hi-Heel Sneakers" to nearly half an hour. Here, Green is woodshedding the hard jazz-funk he'd debut on Alive!, the landmark Blue Note LP he'd record just a month later, and while the performances on Funk in France are neither as pop-oriented nor hard-charging as the material there, that's also their appeal. Green has his style in place and he has the freedom to jam as long as he desires. The results aren't just mesmerizing, they're danceable. ~ Stephen Tomas Erlewine https://www.allmusic.com/album/funk-in-france-from-paris-to-antibes-1969-1970-mw0003168826

Personnel: Grant Green – guitar; Larry Ridley – bass; Don Lamond – drums; Barney Kessel – guitar; Claude Bartee – tenor saxophone; Clarence Palmer – organ; Billy Wilson – drums

Funk in France - Paris to Antibes

Sunday, October 23, 2022

Barney Kessel with Shelly Manne and Ray Brown - The Poll Winners

Styles: Jazz
Year: 1957
Time: 40:42
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 93,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:31) 1. Jordu
(6:34) 2. Satin Doll
(4:28) 3. It Could Happen to You
(6:32) 4. Mean to Me
(4:38) 5. Don't Worry 'bout Me
(4:04) 6. On Green Dolphin Street
(4:25) 7. You Go to My Head
(3:21) 8. Minor Mood
(3:06) 9. Nagasaki

There’s a striking new reissue from Craft Recordings I’m sure many jazz fans and collectors are as excited about as I am: 1957’s The Poll Winners. This LP features three of the greatest jazz musicians of their time (as well as the immediate future) Barney Kessel on guitar backed by Shelly Manne on drums and Ray Brown on bass. From the liner notes, we learn all three of these fine musicians won the three major American jazz popularity polls in 1956 in Down Beat, Metronome, and Playboy magazines.

Understand the album title better now? Long before the Internet was even a glimmer of an idea, reading print publications a.k.a., physical newspapers and magazines was how people learned about new music they might have heard on the radio or in a record store. In the 1950s, there were some significant publications tracking the world of jazz that had a lot of influence on the music world. (Times have changed.)

At any rate, getting these artists together for a recording session was an obvious stroke of opportunistic genius. So popular was this trio, in fact, that they went on to record four more albums in this series. First, some background. The central focus here is, of course, Barney Kessel, one of the all-time great guitarists in jazz history, a fantastic player who crossed many cultural/societal and musical boundaries in his career. He recorded with everyone from Chico Marx and Charlie Parker to Lester Young, Oscar Peterson, and Art Tatum. But Kessel’s career did not end there, and by the early 1960s, he was a much in-demand session player, one of the first-call musicians in that now-beloved aggregation known as The Wrecking Crew. You can hear his work on many pop and rock hits by the likes of Sonny & Cher, The Monkees, The Beach Boys, The Coasters, and Sam Cooke.

Shelly Manne was also one of the go-to session and live players in his day, a regular on the West Coast Jazz scene and a prominent figure at Contemporary Records. They issued many albums with him backing others as well as by his own band (Shelly Manne & His Men). You can hear Shelly on recordings with Stan Getz, Hampton Hawes, Benny Carter, and even on the first Ornette Coleman album. He also worked on many film soundtracks.

Bassist Ray Brown is often remembered for his work with Oscar Peterson and Ella Fitzgerald, but if you poke around in your collection, you’ll probably see his name on many other sessions and liners. He’s played with everyone from Dizzy Gillespie to Steely Dan. (He’s on their second album, July 1973’s Countdown to Ecstasy.) And Brown also put out many albums as a bandleader himself.

So now you have some understanding of who these players are, why they were hot in 1957, and hopefully, with this perspective why they’re still popular enough today to warrant a premium reissue like this new QRP pressing from Craft Recordings.

Before I get to how this sparking new reissue of The Poll Winners sounds compared to my original pressing, I must point out that simply finding a fairly clean original stereo (or mono) copy of this particular album is not an easy task. For example, at the time of this writing, there were six mono and five stereo copies (at best, in VG+ condition) on Discogs selling for upwards of $50. It took me many years and several upgrades along the way to find a fairly decent copy, and even that has its moments of click, ticks, and pops. But I don’t really mind, as the recording is excellent and timeless.

This is probably a good time to mention a bit about Contemporary Records, a label many newer collectors seem to overlook in favoring releases on Blue Note, Impulse, and Prestige. That said, many audiophiles and jazz collectors know Lester Koenig’s Contemporary Records is home to some of the best-sounding recordings of the times, equal to if not exceeding the best platters from Blue Note and Prestige. One of the label’s “secret sauce” ingredients setting them apart was engineer Roy DuNann, who brought a great sense of musicality and fidelity to his work (and I can’t always say this about every Prestige and Blue Note title, as great as the music may be). But pretty much every album on this label I’ve heard sounds great. (Just sayin’)

Another interesting detail about The Poll Winners is it was originally released at the dawn of stereo recordings. Initially issued in 1957 in mono on the Contemporary Records branded label (which was bright yellow), it was issued in stereo in 1958 on a new and short-lived subsidiary label non-ironically titled “Stereo Records.” Eventually, the Stereo Records label went away and just became a black label Contemporary Records variation, but for that year or so, it was a thing. They issued quite a number of well-recorded albums, mostly in the jazz realm. However, they did issue some classical albums, and I see on Discogs they even issued some 45rpm singles. Talk about being ahead of their time, issuing stereo singles. . .

But now, back to the reviewing. I’m sure by now, you’re wondering how The Poll Winners album sounds and compares to my original. In short, it is pretty fantastic. The Poll Winners is generally a great-sounding recording to begin with, and some of you might even want to consider using this as a demo disc with its simple but sweet stereo soundstage. This recording is a classic West Coast jazz trio setting, with these sensitive players performing swinging versions of now-classics like “Satin Doll,” “On Green Dolphin Street,” and “Mean to Me.”

However, some of that dynamic might have been pulled back on the low end a bit, so as to not cause mistracking on average turntables of the period. Thus, the new edition is much bigger-sounding in many ways, notably on the low end. Ray Brown’s bass here is richer and rounder than on my original. The high end on my original is a wee bit better, but that isn’t surprising if you understand the nature of magnetic tape it deteriorates over time, losing bits of information with every pass of the tape. I’m no doubt splitting hairs as the new edition sounds excellent, all things considered. And I think that, at the end of the day, I’d rather have richer, rounder lows and mids than worry about a slightly brighter high end.

Kudos to Bernie Grundman for his fine finesse on this all-analog mastering from the master tapes. The 180g black vinyl Contemporary Records Acoustic Sounds Series pressing from QRP is well-centered, dead-quiet, and, ultimately, musically invisible. All these factors are easily checked off my list.

In fact, I was so pleased with the reissue that I was almost prepared to purge my original. But then I noticed one little physical incongruity that makes the completist collector in me want to hold onto my old copy namely, the cover and the label designs are a smidge different!

The album designs are pretty much identical, but if you look closely, you’ll see they had to invoke some production alchemy on the title text over in order to make room for the longer album ID number there. It’s really quite clever what they did, as it is easy to overlook. The label design is period-accurate and similar to my original “deep groove” version, but it too shows some variance. If you care about that sort of “OG” minutiae [I do! MM], do take note.

I’m more than happy to keep my original as a reference copy, but will likely play the new Craft Recordings issue from here out for regular listening. And that’s the best compliment I can offer: I’ve enjoyed listening to this fine reissue of The Poll Winners featuring Barney Kessel, Shelly Manne, and Ray Brown. I suspect you will too.
https://www.analogplanet.com/content/poll-winners-win-again-barney-kessel-shelly-manne-and-ray-brown-score-craft-recordings-qrp

Barney Kessel with Shelly Manne and Ray Brown - The Poll Winners

Friday, July 15, 2022

Buddy DeFranco - I Hear Benny Goodman & Artie Shaw Disc 1 And Disc 2

Album: I Hear Benny Goodman & Artie Shaw  Disc 1

Styles: Clarinet Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:39
Size: 126,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:16)  1. Don't Be That Way
(3:31)  2. After You've Gone
(4:51)  3. The Sheik Of Araby
(7:51)  4. Flying Home
(5:40)  5. Soft Winds
(5:59)  6. Medley: Sweet Lorraine / Body And Soul / Memories Of You
(4:53)  7. Limehouse Blues
(5:53)  8. Medley: Poor Butterfly / Where Or When / These Foolish Things
(3:58)  9. Rose Room
(7:44) 10. Oh, Lady Be Good


Album: I Hear Benny Goodman & Artie Shaw  Disc 2

Time: 52:38
Size: 125,4 MB

(4:05)  1. 'S Wonderful
(4:09)  2. My Heart Stood Still
(2:32)  3. Temptation
(3:43)  4. Night And Day
(2:44)  5. Keepin' Myself For You
(5:38)  6. Medley: It Could Happen to You / I Cover the Waterfront / Someone to Watch Over Me
(7:00)  7. Concerto For Clarinet
(3:45)  8. All The Things You Are
(5:01)  9. Softly as in a Morning Sunrise
(3:24) 10. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
(3:27) 11. I Surrender Dear
(7:04) 12. Tin Reed Blues

Two CD set. Subtitled: The Complete 'Plays Benny Goodman And Artie Shaw' Sessions, Vol. Two. Second of two volumes from the Jazz clarinet player paying tribute to two influential Jazz greats. 

Both volumes combined feature five complete albums originally released by DeFranco: I Hear Benny Goodman & Artie Shaw, Buddy DeFranco Plays Benny Goodman, Buddy DeFranco Plays Artie Shaw, Wholly Cats and Closed Session. This double disc volume features 22 tracks including ''S Wonderful, 'Flying Home', 'After You've Gone' and more. Lonehill Jazz. 2007. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Hear-Benny-Goodman-Artie-Shaw/dp/B000OLHFDK

Personnel:  Buddy DeFranco (cl), Don Fagerquist (tp), Georgie Auld (ts), Victor Feldman (vib), Carl Perkins (p), Barney Kessel (g), Leroy Vinnegar (b), Stan Levey (d), Larry Bunker (vb), Bob Neal (d),Ray Linn (tp), Jimmy Rowles (p), Barney Kessel (g), Joe Mondragon (d)

I Hear Benny Goodman & Artie Shaw Disc 1, Disc 2

Saturday, February 26, 2022

Shorty Rogers & Andre Previn - In Collaboration

Styles: Trumpet And Piano Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:53
Size: 140,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:37)  1. Heat Wave
(3:35)  2. Everything I’ve Got
(3:00)  3. It Only Happens When I Dance With You
(2:24)  4. You Stepped Out Of A Dream
(3:00)  5. General Cluster
(2:41)  6. 40º Below
(3:23)  7. Claudia
(3:22)  8. Some Antics
(2:26)  9. It’s Delovely
(2:45) 10. Porterhouse
(3:06) 11. You Do Something To Me
(2:16) 12. Call For Cole
(3:00) 13. Lullaby Of Birdland
(2:50) 14. You’re Driving Me Crazy
(3:25) 15. Tomorrow Mountain
(2:47) 16. Treat Me Rough
(2:33) 17. Mountain Greenery
(2:47) 18. You Took Advantage Of Me
(2:30) 19. Sidewalks Of Cuba
(3:23) 20. My Man’s Gone Now
(2:53) 21. Island In The West Indies

This is a really unusual and outstanding album. It presents two of the most celebrated and creative personalities of the Hollywood jazz and studio fields in collaboration. In the early Fifties, trumpeter, bandleader, composer and arranger Shorty Rogers was the head of the flourishing West Coast school of jazz, and André Previn was one of the most gifted pianists, conductors and composers of the scene; he wielded an awesome command of almost every kind of music. In addition to writing the challenging instrumental sides, they also wrote together the scores for André’s wife Betty Bennett, a respected well-known jazz & pop singer who never had had a chance to show how she really sanguntil Shorty’s Giants backed her, that is. 

Featuring: Shorty Rogers (tp), Milt Bernhart, Frank Rosolino (tb), Bud Shank (as, fl), Harry Klee (as), Bob Cooper (ts), Jimmy Giuffre (bars), André Previn (p), Al Hendrickson, Jack Marshall, Barney Kessel (g), Joe Mondragón, Curtis Counce, Ralph Peña (b).

Sunday, December 12, 2021

Barney Kessel - Some Like It Hot

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 57:26
Size: 131.5 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[4:16] 1. Some Like It Hot
[3:40] 2. I Wanna Be Loved By You
[3:19] 3. Stairway To The Stars
[4:42] 4. Sweet Sue
[3:20] 5. Runnin' Wild
[3:40] 6. Sweet Georgia Brown
[4:03] 7. Down Among The Sheltering Palms
[3:27] 8. Sugar Blues
[3:16] 9. I'm Thru With Love
[3:10] 10. By The Beautiful Sea
[4:49] 11. Sweet Sue
[6:32] 12. Runnin' Wild
[3:11] 13. Fascinating Rhythm
[1:58] 14. Laura
[3:55] 15. The Abc Blues

The release of the movie Some Like It Hot served as a good excuse for guitarist Kessel to join together with Art Pepper (switching between alto, clarinet, and tenor), trumpeter Joe Gordon, pianist Jimmy Rowles, rhythm guitarist Jack Marshall, bassist Monty Budwig, and drummer Shelly Manne to interpret a variety of vintage numbers, most of which dated from the 1920s. Such tunes as "I Wanna Be Loved by You," "Runnin' Wild," "Down Among the Sheltering Palms," and "By the Beautiful Sea" are given fairly modern arrangements but still retain the flavor of the 1920s, and it's particularly interesting to hear Gordon and Pepper soloing on these ancient songs. [Some reissues add two alternate takes. ] ~Scott Yanow

Some Like It Hot

Saturday, December 11, 2021

Barney Kessel - Modern Jazz Performances from Bizet's Carmen

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1958
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:34
Size: 100,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:51)  1. Swingin' The Toreador
(6:46)  2. Apadon The Edge Of Town
(4:03)  3. If You Dig Me
(5:00)  4. Free As A Bird
(3:15)  5. Viva El Toro!
(5:59)  6. Flowersville
(4:43)  7. Carmen's Cool
(3:58)  8. Like, There's No Place Like...
(3:56)  9. The Gypsy's Hip

This is an unusual set that has been reissued on CD. During an era when many Broadway and movie scores were recorded in jazz settings (thanks in part to the success of Shelly Manne's best-selling My Fair Lady album), guitarist Barney Kessel chose to interpret nine melodies from Bizet's opera Carmen. The guitarist is heard in three different settings: joined by five woodwinds and a rhythm section; with five jazz horns (including altoist Herb Geller and trumpeter Ray Linn) and a trio; and with vibraphonist Victor Feldman in a quintet. Kessel also wrote the arrangements, which pay tribute to the melodies while not being shy of swinging the themes. An interesting if not essential project. ~ Scott Yanow  
http://www.allmusic.com/album/modern-jazz-performances-from-bizets-carmen-mw0000207507

Personnel: Barney Kessel (guitar); Herb Geller (alto saxophone); Justin Gordon (tenor saxophone, flute, alto flute); Chuck Gentry (baritone saxophone); Ray Linn (trumpet); Harry Betts (trombone); Buddy Collette (flute, alto flute, clarinet); Bill Smith (clarinet, bass clarinet); Jules Jacob (clarinet, oboe); Pete Terry (bass clarinet, bassoon); Victor Feldman (vibraphone); Andre Previn (piano); Joe Mondragon (bass); Shelly Manne (drums).

Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Dinah Washington - September In The Rain

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1961
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:09
Size: 75,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:05) 1. September In The Rain
(3:05) 2. Without A Song
(2:24) 3. This Heart Of Mine
(1:58) 4. As Long As I'm In Your Arms
(3:51) 5. With A Song In My Heart
(2:31) 6. Softly (Baby)
(2:47) 7. I Can't Believe That You're In Love With Me
(2:25) 8. I Was Telling Him About You
(3:13) 9. I've Got My Love To Keep Me Warm
(2:30) 10. I'll Never Kiss You Goodbye
(2:30) 11. I'll Come Back For More
(2:47) 12. Tell Love Hello

Dinah Washington was at once one of the most beloved and controversial singers of the mid-20th century beloved to her fans, devotees, and fellow singers; controversial to critics who still accuse her of selling out her art to commerce and bad taste. Her principal sin, apparently, was to cultivate a distinctive vocal style that was at home in all kinds of music, be it R&B, blues, jazz, middle of the road pop and she probably would have made a fine gospel or country singer had she the time. Hers was a gritty, salty, high-pitched voice, marked by absolute clarity of diction and clipped, bluesy phrasing. Washington's personal life was turbulent, with seven marriages behind her, and her interpretations showed it, for she displayed a tough, totally unsentimental, yet still gripping hold on the universal subject of lost love. She has had a huge influence on R&B and jazz singers who have followed in her wake, notably Nancy Wilson, Esther Phillips, and Diane Schuur, and her music is abundantly available nowadays via the huge seven-volume series The Complete Dinah Washington on Mercury.

Born Ruth Lee Jones, she moved to Chicago at age three and was raised in a world of gospel, playing the piano and directing her church choir. At 15, after winning an amateur contest at the Regal Theatre, she began performing in nightclubs as a pianist and singer, opening at the Garrick Bar in 1942. Talent manager Joe Glaser heard her there and recommended her to Lionel Hampton, who asked her to join his band. Hampton says that it was he who gave Ruth Jones the name Dinah Washington, although other sources claim it was Glaser or the manager of the Garrick Bar. In any case, she stayed with Hampton from 1943 to 1946 and made her recording debut for Keynote at the end of 1943 in a blues session organized by Leonard Feather with a sextet drawn from the Hampton band. With Feather's "Evil Gal Blues" as her first hit, the records took off, and by the time she left Hampton to go solo, Washington was already an R&B headliner. Signing with the young Mercury label, Washington produced an enviable string of Top Ten hits on the R&B charts from 1948 to 1955, singing blues, standards, novelties, pop covers, even Hank Williams' "Cold, Cold Heart." She also recorded many straight jazz sessions with big bands and small combos, most memorably with Clifford Brown on Dinah Jams but also with Cannonball Adderley, Clark Terry, Ben Webster, Wynton Kelly, and the young Joe Zawinul (who was her regular accompanist for a couple of years).

In 1959, Washington made a sudden breakthrough into the mainstream pop market with "What a Diff'rence a Day Makes," a revival of a Dorsey Brothers hit set to a Latin American bolero tune. For the rest of her career, she would concentrate on singing ballads backed by lush orchestrations for Mercury and Roulette, a formula similar to that of another R&B-based singer at that time, Ray Charles, and one that drew plenty of fire from critics even though her basic vocal approach had not changed one iota. Although her later records could be as banal as any easy listening dross of the period, there are gems to be found, like Billie Holiday's "Don't Explain," which has a beautiful, bluesy Ernie Wilkins chart conducted by Quincy Jones. Struggling with a weight problem, Washington died of an accidental overdose of diet pills mixed with alcohol at the tragically early age of 39, still in peak voice, still singing the blues in an L.A. club only two weeks before the end.~ Richard S. Ginell https://www.allmusic.com/artist/dinah-washington-mn0000260038/biography

Personnel: Ernie Freeman, Joe Zawinul (piano) Rone Hall, Barney Kessel (guitar) Red Callender, Jimmy Rowser (bass) Earl Palmer (drums) Dinah Washington (vocals)

September In The Rain

Sunday, September 22, 2019

Harry 'Sweets' Edison - Gee, Baby Ain't I Good to You

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:26
Size: 100,0 MB
Scans: Front

(7:38)  1. Blues For Piney Brown
(4:50)  2. Blues For The Blues
(9:31)  3. Blues For Bill Basie
(3:32)  4. Gee, Baby Ain't I Good To You
(6:52)  5. You're Getting To Be A Habit With Me
(7:03)  6. Taste On The Place
(3:57)  7. Moonlight In Vermont

Harry "Sweets" Edison got the most mileage out of a single note, like his former boss Count Basie. Edison, immediately recognizable within a note or two, long used repetition and simplicity to his advantage while always swinging. He played in local bands in Columbus and then in 1933 joined the Jeter-Pillars Orchestra. After a couple years in St. Louis, Edison moved to New York where he joined Lucky Millinder and then in June 1938, Count Basie, remaining with that classic orchestra until it broke up in 1950. During that period, he was featured on many records, appeared in the 1944 short Jammin' the Blues and gained his nickname "Sweets" (due to his tone) from Lester Young. In the 1950s, Edison toured with Jazz at the Philharmonic, settled in Los Angeles, and was well-featured both as a studio musician (most noticeably on Frank Sinatra records) and on jazz dates. He had several reunions with Count Basie in the 1960s and by the '70s was often teamed with Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis; Edison also recorded an excellent duet album for Pablo with Oscar Peterson. One of the few swing trumpeters to be influenced by Dizzy Gillespie, Sweets led sessions through the years for Pacific Jazz, Verve, Roulette, Riverside, Vee-Jay, Liberty, Sue, Black & Blue, Pablo, Storyville, and Candid among others. Although his playing faded during the 1980s and '90s, Edison could still say more with one note than nearly anyone; he died July 27, 1999, at age 83. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/harry-sweets-edison-mn0000670641/biography

Personnel: Trumpet – Harry'Sweets'Edison; Bass – Ray Brown; Drums – Alvin Stoller; Guitar – Barney Kessel; Piano – Oscar Peterson; Tenor Saxophone – Ben Webster

Gee, Baby Ain't I Good to You

Monday, August 12, 2019

Thelma Gracen - Thelma Gracen / Introducing Milli Vernon

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 1955
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:01
Size: 165,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:50)  1. I’ll Remember April
(3:01)  2. Night and Day
(4:17)  3. I’ll Never Be the Same
(2:34)  4. Tea for Two
(3:40)  5. I’ll Get By
(2:35)  6. Out of Nowhere
(3:55)  7. Solitude
(1:47)  8. Just You, Just Me
(4:14)  9. I’m Yours
(2:46) 10. People Will Say We’re in Love
(3:48) 11. More Than You Know
(1:59) 12. Let There Be Love
(2:19) 13. Weep for the Boy
(2:11) 14. Moments Like This
(2:58) 15. Spring Is Here
(2:48) 16. ST. James Infirmary
(3:14) 17. My Ship
(2:05) 18. This Year’s Kisses
(3:03) 19. Moon Ray
(2:35) 20. Everything but You
(3:02) 21. Every Time
(2:52) 22. Blue Rain
(2:39) 23. I Don’t Know What Kind of Blues I’Ve Got
(3:37) 24. I Guess I’ll Have to Hang My Tears out to Dry

Thelma Gracen
Just where the boundary lies between the singer of popular songs and the real jazz singer is very often difficult to delineate. Thelma Gracen’s name may not ring any bells for neither jazz fan nor pop addict, but don’t let that deter you. After enjoying a few of her songs, you will realize that she had what it takes to be not only a good singer, but a good jazz singer. She has the beat, the feeling, and that special inner understanding of a lyric that can make an indifferent song sound good, a good song sound great, and a great song sound the way it was meant to sound.

Introducing Milli Vernon
Before this recording session, Jazz singer Milli Vernon was virtually unknown, and for good reason. She had served her apprenticeship singing with various bands under the name Pat Cameron, and on club dates in the New York area for about six years. Her voice was pretty and expressive, and she had a strong sense of time, good intonation and a kind of flexible, intimate quality to her voice that makes her sound like no other. For her first album, Milli was backed beautifully by Dave McKenna, Jimmy Raney, Wyatt Ruther, Jo Jones, and on all but three of the tracks by Ruby Braff as well, in a collection of seldom recorded tunes which include Artie Shaws’s moody Moon Ray. https://www.freshsoundrecords.com/thelma-gracen-milli-vernon-albums/46591-thelma-gracen-introducing-milli-vernon-2-lp-on-1-cd.html

Personnel: Thelma Gracen, Milli Vernon (vcl), Ruby Braff (tp), Georgie Auld (ts), Quentin Anderson (tb), Lou Levy, Dave McKenna (p), Barney Kessel, Jimmy Raney (g), Joe Comfort, Wyatt Rhuter (b), Sid Bulkin, Jo Jones (d)

Thelma Gracen / Introducing Milli Vernon

Sunday, June 2, 2019

Gene Krupa, Buddy Rich - The Drum Battle

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:47
Size: 82,7 MB
Art: Front

(0:42)  1. Introduction
(6:46)  2. Idaho
(4:39)  3. Sophisticated Lady
(5:56)  4. Flying Home
(9:04)  5. Drum Boogie
(3:36)  6. The Drum Battle
(5:01)  7. Perdido

This set was initially issued as the 15th instalment in Norman Grantz's Jazz at the Philharmonic series of LPs, EPs, and 45s. As that highly collectible compilation of performances has been out of print since the 1960s, many of the volumes were later issued under the respective artists' name. As the title would imply, Drum Battle: Jazz at the Philharmonic features the artistry of the Gene Krupa Trio with Buddy Rich (drums) sitting in on a few numbers as well as the inimitable jazz scat vocalizations of Ella Fitzgerald on a hot steppin' and definitive "Perdido." Opening the disc is Krupa's trio with Willie Smith (alto sax) and Hank Jones (piano) providing a solid and singularly swinging rhythm section. While Smith drives the band, Krupa is front and center with his antagonistic percussive prodding. "Idaho" is marked with Jones' rollicking post-bop mastery as he trades solos with Smith and can be heard quoting lines from Monk before yielding to Smith. The cover of Duke Ellington's "Sophisticated Lady" sparkles from beginning to end. Jones' opening flourish sets the tenure as Smith settles into a smoky lead, containing some nice syncopation and regal augmentation from Jones. Krupa primarily provides ample rhythm work on the emotive ballad. Smith's diversion into "Stormy Weather" is notable for exemplifying the lyrically improvisational nature of this combo. The tempo is significantly stepped up on a cover of Benny Goodman's "Flying Home," which is full of high-spirited playing and garners a sizable reaction from the audience. 

The lengthy "Drum Boogie" is one of Krupa's signature pieces and is greeted with tremendous enthusiasm. Buddy Rich climbs on board for a one-on-one duel with Krupa, whose styles mesh into a mile-a-minute wash of profound percussion. The duet segues into an inspired and free-form jam on "Perdido," with Fitzgerald belting out her lines with authority, class, and most of all, soul. ~ Lindsay Planer https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-drum-battle-mw0000318913

Personnel:  Gene Krupa – drums; Buddy Rich – drums; Roy Eldridge – trumpet; Charlie Shavers – trumpet; Benny Carter – alto saxophone; Flip Phillips – tenor saxophone; Lester Young – tenor saxophone; Hank Jones – piano; Oscar Peterson – piano; Willie Smith – piano; Barney Kessel – guitar; Ray Brown – double bass; Ella Fitzgerald – vocals

The Drum Battle

Saturday, May 18, 2019

Barney Kessel - Supreme Jazz

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:11
Size: 142,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:43)  1. Speak Low
(3:25)  2. Love Is Here To Stay
(3:15)  3. On A Slow Boat To China
(3:18)  4. How Long Has This Been Going On?
(3:09)  5. A Foggy Day
(3:18)  6. 64 Bars On Wilshire
(3:12)  7. Prelude To A Kiss
(4:26)  8. Begin The Blues
(3:22)  9. Embraceable You
(3:07) 10. Midnight Sun
(3:49) 11. Jeepers Creepers
(3:37) 12. My Old Flame
(2:50) 13. You Stepped Out Of A Dream
(3:55) 14. I Didn’t Know What Time It Was
(4:02) 15. Easy Like
(4:09) 16. That's All
(2:44) 17. April In Paris
(2:43) 18. North Of The Border

One of the finest guitarists to emerge after the death of Charlie Christian, Barney Kessel was a reliable bop soloist throughout his career. He played with a big band fronted by Chico Marx (1943), was fortunate enough to appear in the classic jazz short Jammin' the Blues (1944), and then worked with the big bands of Charlie Barnet (1944-1945) and Artie Shaw (1945); he also recorded with Shaw's Gramercy Five. Kessel became a busy studio musician in Los Angeles, but was always in demand for jazz records. He toured with the Oscar Peterson Trio for one year (1952-1953) and then, starting in 1953, led an impressive series of records for Contemporary that lasted until 1961 (including several with Ray Brown and Shelly Manne in a trio accurately called the Poll Winners). After touring Europe with George Wein's Newport All-Stars (1968), Kessel lived in London for a time (1969-1970). In 1973, he began touring and recording with the Great Guitars, a group also including Herb Ellis and Charlie Byrd. A serious stroke in 1992 put Barney Kessel permanently out of action, but many of his records (which include dates for Onyx, Black Lion, Sonet, and Concord, in addition to many of the Contemporaries) are available, along with several video collections put out by Vestapol. Kessel was diagnosed with inoperable cancer in 2001, which eventually took his life in May of 2004. He was 80 years old. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/barney-kessel-mn0000784527/biography

Supreme Jazz

Thursday, November 15, 2018

Buddy DeFranco - Wholly Cats: The Complete 'Plays Benny Goodman And Artie Shaw' Sessions, Vol. One

Styles: Clarinet Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:53
Size: 164,6 MB
Art: Front

( 5:55)  1. Benny's Bugle
( 6:39)  2. A Smooth One
( 4:37)  3. Air Mail Special
( 5:23)  4. More Than You Know
(11:49)  5. Wholly Cats
( 2:28)  6. Goodbye
( 4:45)  7. Seven Come Eleven
( 3:55)  8. My Blue Heaven
( 4:45)  9. Stardust
( 4:48) 10. Cross Your Heart
( 5:09) 11. Frenesi
( 3:31) 12. Medley: Dancing In The Dark / Moonglow / Time On My Hands
( 3:31) 13. Indian Love Call
( 4:31) 14. Summit Ridge Drive

5 complete LPs presented on 2 companion volumes! Featuring Carl Perkins, Jimmy Rowles, Barney Kessel and Don Fagerquist! Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw were among the most famous and beloved figures in swing music both as clarinet soloists and orchestra conductors. Th ey were still very active musically in 1957, when Buddy De Franco decided to record a series of sessions paying homage to them. Thirty-five performances were recorded (including four medleys containing three songs each) in four extended sessions made on four consecutive days and with two different groups (guitarist Barney Kessel, however, is present on most of the tracks). 

The first two sessions included trumpeter Don Fagerquist, tenor saxophonist Georgie Auld and pianist Carl Perkins. The second group includes trumpeter Ray Linn and another modern jazz pianist: Jimmy Rowles. These two companion volumes include the complete LPs FOR THE FIRST TIME EVER ON CD!: "I Hear Benny Goodman & Artie Shaw", "Buddy De Franco plays Benny Goodman", "Buddy De Franco plays Artie Shaw", "Wholly Cats" and "Closed Session". https://www.freshsoundrecords.com/buddy-defranco-albums/4708-wholly-cats.html

Personnel:  Buddy DeFranco (cl), Don Fagerquist (tp), Georgie Auld (ts), Victor Feldman (vib), Carl Perkins (p), Barney Kessel (g), Leroy Vinnegar (b), Stan Levey (d)

Wholly Cats

Monday, August 6, 2018

Grant Green - Funk in France: From Paris to Antibes (1969-1970) Disc 1 And Disc 2

Album: Funk in France: From Paris to Antibes (1969-1970) Disc 1

Styles: Guitar Jazz 
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:39
Size: 130,4 MB
Art: Front

( 4:34)  1. I Don't Want Nobody to Give Me Nothing (Open Up the Door I'll Get It Myself)
( 4:24)  2. Oleo
( 7:19)  3. How Insensitive (Insensatez)
( 8:07)  4. Untitled Blues
( 7:00)  5. Sonnymoon for Two
( 7:08)  6. I Wish You Love
(18:04)  7. Upshot

Now recognised as one of the presiding prodigies of guitar jazz, Grant Green died in 1979 having narrowly missed out on the sort of bigtime success enjoyed by the likes of Wes Montgomery and, especially, George Benson ironically Green was scheduled to play a gig at George Benson’s club in Harlem when he was finally felled by a heart attack. He was 43 years old, and his reputation was soon in eclipse. Indeed Sharony Andrews Green’s biography is subtitled Rediscovering the Forgotten Genius of Jazz Guitar.  Well, the rediscovery of Grant Green is fully under way, thanks to his music being embraced and redeployed first by Acid Jazz performers, then hip hop artists, not to mention devotees of funk. More importantly, there is a growing recognition of the true stature of his recordings such as the 1963 classic Idle Moments on Blue Note. And now Resonance Records has continued its campaign of unearthing classic lost performances with a flood of Grant Green collector’s items.  Released on vinyl as a Record Store Day special, Funk in France comes in a staggeringly lavish double gatefold cover which opens up to reveal two albums, consisting of three discs all told The Round House comprises a single disc and you could call it both a live album and a studio album it was recorded live, but in ideal acoustic conditions in a studio at La Maison de la Radio, the headquarters of the ORTF (the French Office of Radio and Television) in Paris on 26 October 1969. Then there is Haute Funk, a double album, also live, preserving an Antibes Jazz Festival performance on 18 July 1970. The Paris set opens with a title that almost consumes the word count for this review: I Don’t Want Nobody to Give Me Nothing (Open Up the Door I’ll Get it Myself). The fact that this is a James Brown track clearly announces Grant Green’s intention to move funk-wards. It’s dark, edgy and searching with Green playing percussively. 

Larry Ridley’s bass writhes and wraps around the guitar lines like ivy on a tree branch. Sonny Rollins’ tune Oleo is delivered in a hip, open, breezy rendition with Green creating colours and highlights as if he’s shearing glistening fragments off a block of ice.  But the set really begins to cook with Tom Jobim’s Insensatez, introduced by the excited stopwatch ticking of Don Lamond’s drums and underpinned by, then interwoven with, Ridley’s bass. Green’s exploration of the song is plangent and (appropriately enough) resonant. The relaxed and funky Untitled Blues is followed by another high point, Charles Trenet’s I Wish You Love, for which Barney Kessel joins the trio. The duelling guitars are an occasion for sharply clipped playing that paradoxically gives rise to a fat warm sound, with a killer sense of laidback timing, playing elastically behind the beat in a way that makes the listener feel the cares of the day simply drop away. The guitarists explore the tune almost pianistically, giving it unexpected stature and profundity.  Haute Funk is very different, It consists of four long tracks, each allocated the entire side of an LP. On Upshot (the first of two versions here) Green takes a headlong plunge into Montgomery-style soul jazz. One might expect Clarence Palmer’s organ to similarly hue close to Jimmy Smith, but on the contrary his sound is much more brooding, menacing and modernistic.

However, it’s difficult to draw too many conclusions about the supporting musicians. The crystal clarity of the Paris radio studio recording is gone here and the rest of the band often seems to be recessed behind the dominant sound of Green’s guitar. Nevertheless, the different line up, with Claude Bartee on tenor sax and Billy Wilson on drums, and the urgent driving energy of the festival performances are compelling. Hurt So Bad (a hit for Little Anthony and the Imperials) sees Claude Bartee’s tenor taking a welcome spell in the spotlight. (Bartee had previously played with Grant Green in New York and would go on to work for him for several years.) Grant Green seems to pick his way carefully and thoughtfully in a response to the sax which manages to both float and drive the tune forward.  This is an almost shockingly sumptuous package, with a full size 12-page colour booklet in addition to the elaborate heavy duty sleeve. And the vinyl is top quality: 180gram pressings, mastered by Bernie Grundman. Nevertheless, it’s the original tapes which count and the Paris radio studio recordings beat the Antibes sets hands down. The Paris sessions also benefit from brevity all of the Antibes tracks are extended workouts. On the other hand, the presence of Claude Bartee on tenor in Antibes adds a rousing additional dimension. Producer Zev Feldman’s liner notes mention that he seriously considered not including the Paris sessions in this package at all (because they’d already escaped into the wild in the form of a video and subsequent bootleg audio recordings). Thank the jazz gods he relented. 

Those performances on their own are reason enough for this triple vinyl Green-fest.  Funk in France is a seriously luxuriant offering for any Grant Green aficionado or any lover of jazz guitar and it looks set to fly out the door on Record Store Day. And if annual orgies of vinyl aren’t your thing, you can pick up the deluxe double CD version. http://www.londonjazznews.com/2018/04/lp-review-grant-green-funk-in-france.html

Personnel:  Released May 25, 2018:  Grant Green - guitar;  Larry Ridley – bass;  Don Lamond - drums;  Barney Kessel - guitar (Track 6) - July 18 & 20, 1970 at the Antibes Jazz Festival in Juan-les-Pins:  Grant Green - guitar;  Claude Bartee – tenor saxophone;  Clarence Palmer – organ;  Billy Wilson - drums.

Funk in France: From Paris to Antibes (1969-1970) Disc 1
Album: Funk in France: From Paris to Antibes (1969-1970)  Disc 2

Time: 61:39
Size: 141,4 MB

(14:37)  1. Hurt So Bad
(19:47)  2. Upshot
(27:13)  3. Hi-Heel Sneakers

Funk in France: From Paris to Antibes (1969-1970) Disc 2

Thursday, June 14, 2018

Benny Carter - Jazz Giant (Remastered)

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:09
Size: 89.6 MB
Styles: Bop, Swing, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1957/1987
Art: Front

[7:50] 1. Old Fashioned Love
[5:48] 2. I'm Coming Virginia
[6:00] 3. A Walkin' Thing
[4:58] 4. Blue Lou
[3:40] 5. Ain't She Sweet
[6:13] 6. How Can You Lose
[4:38] 7. Blues My Naughty Sweetie Gives To Me

Alto Saxophone – Benny Carter (tracks: 1, 3 to 7); Bass – Leroy Vinnegar; Drums – Shelly Manne; Guitar – Barney Kessel; Piano – André Previn (tracks: 1, 4 to 7), Jimmy Rowles (tracks: 2, 3); Tenor Saxophone – Ben Webster (tracks: 1 to 4, 6); Trombone – Frank Rosolino (tracks: 1 to 4, 6); Trumpet – Benny Carter (tracks: 2, 6). Recorded at Contemporary's Studio in Los Angeles; June 11 (#1, 4), July 22 (#2, 3), October 7, 1957 (#6) and April 21, 1958 (#5, 7).

Benny Carter was one of the top-admired original major alto saxophonists and perhaps one of the top world class jazz ensemble leaders up until the late-1950’s, where he was undoubtfully, as the title of this album suggests, a “Jazz Giant”, but this time this landmark project sounds even better in it’s own digitally-remastered complete format. Released in 1958 to critical success, Jazz Giant presents an all star session where it gradually showcase a lyrical and original form of fresh music that is unpretentious: bright, relaxed and buoyant placed along with a full dash of of infectious swing as each musician on the album get a chance to show off there worthy solos while Carter played with characteristic lyricism, technical faculty and a bounty of sounds on alto and- and on two tracks- flawlessly on trumpet, his first love. The track set proceed with exclusive style on other memorable reinditions of classic standards including Old-Fashioned Love, Blue Lou, A Walkin’ Thing, How Could You Lose?, Ain’t She Sweet, for whom Carter and the all-stars performs quintessential style and exquisite integrity. The last two tracks even comes to life in a fortuitous manner where Carter had been set out on the session, but became ill towards the last minute, and with noted jazz guitarist Barney Kessel taking over the musicians had decided to use some of there congenial informal playing where included some of the finest work recorded in the saxophone section. Remastered in its proud complete edition, what made Jazz Giant a time-honoured success can be owed to the band members who gratefully participated where they consisted of Kessel on the guitar, tenor saxophonist Ben Webster, both Andre Previn or Jimmy Knowles at the piano, session trombonist Frank Roselino and Shelly Manne at the drums, who help made this one of Carter’s finest and most beloved masterpieces. ~RH

Jazz Giant (Remastered) mc
Jazz Giant (Remastered) zippy

Saturday, June 9, 2018

Barney Kessel - Just Friends

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1973
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:13
Size: 86,5 MB
Art: Front

(7:48)  1. Just Friends
(3:42)  2. Bewitched
(5:38)  3. Going Thru Some Changes
(5:37)  4. Old Devil Moon
(6:09)  5. Days Of Wine & Roses
(3:30)  6. "Samba" From Black Orpheus
(4:47)  7. True Blues

This Sonet recording features guitarist Barney Kessel, bassist Sture Nordin and drummer Pelle Hulten at a live club date in Stockholm. The music is essentially bebop plus a few bossas. Fortunately, Kessel (the main voice throughout) varies the moods and the tempos, so the set (which includes "Just Friends," ahis original "Going Thru Some Changes" and "Days of Wine & Roses," among others) holds on to one's interest. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/just-friends-mw0000901123  

Personnel:  Barney Kessel - Guitar; Sturen Nordin - Bass; Pelle Hulten - Drums.

Just Friends