Showing posts with label Billy Harper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Billy Harper. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 25, 2024

Randy Weston & Billy Harper - Roots of the Blues

Styles: Piano And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:42
Size: 126,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:09)  1. Carnival
(4:31)  2. Blues to Senegal
(5:45)  3. Berkshire Blues
(3:24)  4. Body And Soul
(2:38)  5. Congolese Children Song
(3:23)  6. If One Could Only See
(4:42)  7. Blues to Africa
(3:57)  8. How High The Moon
(2:37)  9. Cleanhead Blues
(2:08) 10. Timbuktu
(2:34) 11. Roots of the Nile
(4:32) 12. Take the A Train
(7:35) 13. The Healers
(2:40) 14. African Lady (Bonus Track)

Randy Weston and Billy Harper‘s long partnership has culminated in their first duo recording, The Roots of the Blues, recorded by French producer Jean-Phillippe Allard for Universal and recently released stateside by the Sunnyside label. Ace producer Allard has been at the console for such Weston record dates as Spirit! The Power of Music Verve/Gitanes 1999), Earth Birth (Verve/Gitanes 1995), Khepera (Verve/Gitanes 1998), Saga (Verve/Gitanes 1995), Volcano Blues (Verve/Gitanes 1993), Marrakech in the Cool of the Evening (Verve/Gitanes 1992), The Splendid Master Gnawa Musicians (Verve 1992), and the classic The Spirits of Our Ancestors (Verve 1991). The latter featured three distinctive, spiritually adept tenor men Pharoah Sanders, Dewey Redman (the tenor exchange between those two on an extended version of “African Cookbook” is worth the price of the CD alone), and Harper. But the Weston/Harper hook-up goes back further than that auspicious record date.

In 1971, as part of his overall plan to develop an African cultural beachhead in Tangier, Morocco that would serve as a hub for African and African Diaspora culture, while continuing to operate his African Rhythms Club in the northernmost African city, Weston began planning a grand festival which would eventually become the first primarily jazz festival in Africa. As part of his planning he recruited his boyhood friend Max Roach and arts activist Mary Jo Johnson as his US-based liaisons to secure and arrange travel for the US artists Randy planned to bring to the festival. The idea was to produce a festival that would find US and African artists collaborating creatively. The US artists who committed to playing the festival, which commenced September 1-3, 1972, included Mandrill, Pucho & the Latin Soul Brothers, Odetta, Hubert Laws, Ahmed Abdul-Malik, and Max Roach’s Quartet, with Cecil Bridgewater on trumpet, Juney Booth on bass, and Billy Harper. However for some then-unexplained reason Max was not on the flight! Additionally, Dexter Gordon and trumpeter Richard “Notes” Williams joined the lineup from Europe.

Randy puzzled over Max’s absence for years, not learning until after Roach’s passing that the reason he didn’t make the flight was to maintain marital bliss, Max’s wife being very much pregnant at the time. Come festival time – at a grand outdoor venue that was actually a converted bull ring stadium, a setting Weston described as fraught with the usual logistical nightmares of a short-funded start-up (the Moroccan government fell short of its promised financial support), Max’s band soldiered on without him, Harper even taking to the traps for part of the performance, which he also did handily for Hubert Laws set. Though clearly an artistic success, the festival dug such a deep hole for Weston that he was forced to padlock his African Rhythms Club and return home to Brooklyn to recoup. Obviously Billy Harper left a major impression on Weston, such that in recent years whenever a performance calls for or affords him the option of having a tenor player in his band, Weston calls on Harper.In preparing the liner notes for The Roots of The Blues, I interviewed both Weston and Harper on the project, starting with Weston, with whom I had the advantage of a 10-year head start from writing his autobiography African Rhythms. More..http://www.openskyjazz.com/2013/11/randy-weston-billy-harper-on-the-roots-of-the-blues/

Personnel:Piano – Randy Weston (tracks: 1 to 5, 7 to 14); Tenor Saxophone – Billy Harper (tracks: 1 to 10, 12 to 14)

Roots of the Blues

Thursday, August 6, 2020

Jay Rodriguez - Your Sound (Live at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola)

Styles: Saxophone, Flute and Clarinet Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:54
Size: 145,0 MB
Art: Front

(9:53)  1. Ghost Dancer (Live)
(5:36)  2. Golden Earring (Live)
(5:01)  3. Clouds (Live)
(5:03)  4. All of You (Live)
(6:01)  5. Your Sound (Live)
(6:03)  6. When the Stars Fell (Live)
(6:51)  7. Spirits (Live)
(6:02)  8. Inolvidable (Live)
(7:22)  9. Lover (Live)
(4:58) 10. Let's Just Kiss and Say Goodbye (Live)

You might hear Jay Rodriguez and wonder, “Is there anything you can’t do?” The fact is, it might be tough to track down something along Jay’s musical continuum that he hasn’t done. A versatile bandleader, with flute, clarinet and saxophone chops, the Colombia-born, New York City-bred musician is profoundly talented and incredibly prolific. Since graduating from the New York School of Performing Arts and attending the New School of Jazz at its inception alongside Larry Goldings, Brad Mehldau and Roy Hargrove. He has had musical adventures in salsa with Celia Cruz, Tito Puente, Ray Barretto, Paquito D’Rivera, pop/hip-hop with Prince, Guru, the Wu-Tang Clan, DJ Premier and Groove Collective, straight-ahead with Doc Cheatham, Mingus Big Band, David Murray, Craig Harris, Jason Miles and Miles Davis. He has played alongside Joe Lovano, Gil Evans, Elvis Costello, Stevie Wonder, Bernie Worrell and Joan Osborne, to name a few. His original work is daring, groovy, breathtaking and soulful, sometimes all at once. His new recording, Your Sound: Live at Dizzy’s Club, captures all of lovely rawness in real time. Accompanied by Billy Harper on tenor sax, Larry Willis on piano. Eric Wheeler on bass, JT Lewis on drums and percussionist Billy Martin, Rodriguez frees himself up to showcase his work on saxes, flutes, and bass clarinet. The result is magical. Over his career, Rodriguez has tackled composition, arranging, accompanying, and leading. It is high time for the world to hear all the wonderful things Jay Rodriguez musician, personality, iconoclast, and innovator has to offer. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/your-sound-live-at-dizzys-club-coca-cola-jay-rodriguez

Personnel: Jay Rodriguez: saxophones, flute, bass clarinet;  Billy Harper: tenor saxophone;  Larry Willis: acoustic piano;  Eric Wheeler: acoustic bass;  J.T. Lewis: drums;  Billy Martin: percussion.

Your Sound (Live at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola)

Friday, April 26, 2019

Grachan Moncur III Octet - Exploration

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:04
Size: 124,7 MB
Art: Front

(8:11)  1. Exploration
(5:26)  2. Monk In Wonderland
(8:48)  3. Love And Hate
(9:54)  4. New Africa
(7:34)  5. When?
(6:59)  6. Frankenstein
(2:55)  7. Excursion
(4:13)  8. Sonny's Back!

Ralph Ellison once wrote a great essay in which he seemed to predict jazz's ultimate dependence on a music industry driven (and subsidized) by a star system. The irony, Ellison suggested, is that jazz is largely created by anonymous musicians, who because they are "devoted to an art which traditionally thrives on improvisation [...] very often have their most original ideas enter the public domain almost as rapidly as they are conceived to be quickly absorbed into the thought and technique of their fellows." There is a bittersweet implication here as if it's somehow nobler to be an unknown, poverty-stricken musician, and as if becoming a jazz celebrity inevitably involves selling out. But I don't know if you could convince trombonist and composer Grachan Moncur of either of these propositions. Though he may agree that the star system is a horrible invention, he recently had the opportunity to reestablish his own reputation, and I can almost hear him thanking [insert the deity of your choice here] for that. After all, until this chance came along, Moncur was coming very close to total obscurity and from what I can tell, he wasn't enjoying it, materially or philosophically. In the '60s, he had been a participant and leader in several stellar Blue Note sessions (now collected on a Mosaic box set), but he more or less hadn't been heard from again until, well, last year. Why? It could be that his (smart) impulse to control his own publishing rights got him blacklisted by the Blue Note big wigs. Or maybe that blacklisting had something to do with his turn toward the avant-garde. Or perhaps it was something else altogether something even more painful (see Fred Jung's AAJ interview with Moncur for several moving allusions). 

In any case, here at last is one of the rewards of a jazz culture that has become downright curatorial in recent years (a fact sometimes too-quickly decried by those of us who prefer our music in the clubs): at least we're starting to value the contributions of lesser-known veterans. To be sure, Moncur's new album, Exploration, is markedly different from his '60s output. Here, he is dealing with a much larger ensemble (an octet featuring such varied personages as Gary Smulyan, Billy Harper, and Andrew Cyrille), for which Mark Masters' compelling, dense arrangements are perfectly suited. True to its name, Exploration is not a simple repackaging of Moncur's work, but, rather, a sincere statement of artistic growth (a noble thing any age, but particularly when you're in your late 60s). A brief summary: "New Africa" is a gorgeous suite whose creation was apparently assisted by Moncur's wife, Tamam. "Sonny's Back" weighs in on the "almost-bop" side of things and is named after Moncur's friend, Sonny Rollins. And speaking of friends in high places, Moncur's signature tune ("Monk in Wonderland") is named after another fellow traveler (you-know-who), who I suspect is his biggest influence. (I'd be remiss if I didn't mention the amazing alto solo on this tune, incidentally. Thanks, Gary Bartz.) "Love and Hate" is strangely named; it sounds like all love to me (slow, mellow, sweet). And for the hardcore fan, "Excursion" is a more or less totally free several minutes. I could go on, but you get the idea. Bottom line: welcome back, Grachan. We missed you. ~ Andrew Durkin https://www.allaboutjazz.com/grachan-moncur-iii-exploration-by-andrew-durkin.php

Personnel: Personnel: Grachan Moncur III, trombone; Mark Masters, arrangements; Tim Hagans, trumpet; John Clark, French Horn; Dave Woodley, trombone; Gary Bartz, alto sax; Billy Harper, tenor sax; Gary Smulyan, baritone sax; Ray Drummond, bass; Andrew Cyrille, drums.

Exploration

Friday, March 15, 2019

Thad Jones & Mel Lewis Jazz Orchestra - Consummation

Styles: Flugelhorn Jazz
Year: 1970
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:36
Size: 107,7 MB
Art: Front

( 5:13)  1. Dedication
( 3:07)  2. It Only Happens Every Time
( 6:42)  3. Tiptoe
( 4:09)  4. A Child Is Born
( 3:37)  5. Us
( 7:57)  6. Ahunk Ahunk
(10:38)  7. Fingers
( 5:09)  8. Consummation

Of the many albums recorded by the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra, this was the greatest. Reissued on CD as part of a large Mosaic box set, this set introduced Jones' best-known composition, "A Child Is Born," and also has a colorful rendition of his sly "Tiptoe," and finds the big band ripping the roof off during the lengthy and very exciting "Fingers." The all-star cast (which includes flugelhornist Jones, drummer Lewis, trumpeter Marvin Stamm, trombonist Jimmy Knepper, tenor great Billy Harper, the reeds of Jerome Richardson, Jerry Dodgion and Eddie Daniels, keyboardist Roland Hanna, and bassist Richard Davis, among others) is well served by Thad Jones' inventive and swinging arrangements. A classic. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/consummation-mw0000221310

Personnel:  Thad Jones – flugelhorn; Snooky Young – trumpet; Danny Moore – trumpet; Al Porcino – trumpet; Marvin Stamm – trumpet; Eddie Bert – trombone; Benny Powell – trombone; Jimmy Knepper – trombone; Cliff Heather – bass trombone; Jerome Richardson – soprano saxophone, alto saxophone, flute, alto flute; Jerry Dodgion – alto saxophone, clarinet, flute, alto flute; Billy Harper – tenor saxophone, flute; Eddie Daniels – tenor saxophone, clarinet, flute; Richie Kamuca – baritone saxophone, clarinet; Pepper Adams – baritone saxophone; Joe Farrell – baritone saxophone; Roland Hanna – acoustic piano, electric piano; Richard Davis – acoustic bass, electric bass; Mel Lewis – drums; Jimmy Buffington, Earl Chapin, Julius Watkins  - French horn; Howard Johnson - tuba; David Spinozza - guitar

Consummation

Wednesday, September 19, 2018

Randy Weston - Saga

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:46
Size: 174,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:17)  1. The Beauty Of It All
(7:19)  2. Loose Wing
(8:47)  3. Tangier Bay
(6:45)  4. F.E.W. Blues
(8:06)  5. Uncle Neemo
(4:21)  6. Lagos
(4:41)  7. A Night In Mbari
(6:39)  8. Saucer Eyes
(6:14)  9. The Three Pyramids And The Sphynx
(2:58) 10. Casbah Kids
(5:30) 11. Jahjuka
(7:03) 12. The Gathering

Randy Weston was still at the peak of his powers, despite nearing his 70th birthday, for this set recorded with a septet in 1995. Weston's writing and playing have long drawn from a combination of American jazz and African traditions. This set celebrates that rich and entwined heritage, and Weston fearlessly juxtaposes dissonant note clusters with sweetly inviting melodies. "Tangier Bay," is, for example, relentlessly propulsive with undulating counter-rhythms.  His three front-line soloists are distinct and inventive: tenor saxophonist Billy Harper, alto saxophonist Talib Kibwe, and trombonist Benny Powell. This album, along with Earth Birth and the Portraits series, made the '90s an expansive and productive decade for Weston. https://www.allmusic.com/album/saga-mw0000183236

Personnel:  Piano, Composed By – Randy Weston;  Alto Saxophone, Flute – Talib Kibwe;  Double Bass – Alex Blake;  Drums – Billy Higgins;  Percussion – Neil Clarke; Tenor Saxophone – Billy Harper;  Trombone – Benny Powell

Saga

Monday, September 10, 2018

Randy Weston - The Spirits of Our Ancestors Disc 1 And Disc 2

Album: The Spirits of Our Ancestors  Disc 1

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:21
Size: 101,8 MB
Art: Front

( 3:21)  1. African Village Bedford-Stuyvesant 1
(10:48)  2. The Healers
(17:16)  3. African Cookbook
( 6:43)  4. La Elaha-Ella Allah/Morad Allah
( 6:12)  5. The Call

Pianist Randy Weston and arranger Melba Liston had a musical reunion on this special double-CD, their first joint project since 1973's Tanjah. Liston's charts for the pianist's ten originals perfectly fit Weston's adventurous style and the twelve-piece group (which includes three percussionists) is filled with highly individual voices including the tenors of Billy Harper and Dewey Redman. With trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie and tenor-saxophonist Pharoah Sanders making guest appearances and Randy Weston heard at the peak of his powers, this is a highly recommended set. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-spirits-of-our-ancestors-mw0000276414

Personnel:  Randy Weston - piano (not on 4);  Idrees Sulieman - trumpet (on 2,3,5,6,7,9);  Dizzy Gillespie - trumpet (on 9);  Benny Powell - trombone (on 2,3,5,6,7,9);  Talib Kibwe - flute, alt sax (on 2,5,6,7,9);  Billy Harper - tenor sax (on 2,3,5,6,7,9);  Dewey Redman - tenor sax (on 2,3,5,6,7,9);  Pharoah Sanders - tenor sax, gaita (on 3 >8);  Alex Blake - bass (on 2,3,5,6,7,8,9);  Jamil Nasser - bass (on 2,3,4,5,6,8,9);  Idris Muhammad - drums (on 2,3,5,6,7,8,9);  Azzedin Weston - percussion (on 2,3,4,6,9);  Big Black - percussion (on 3,5,6,7,8,9);  Yassir Chadly - percussion, karkaba, vocal (on 4 >8)


Album: The Spirits of Our Ancestors  Disc 2

File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:11
Size: 142,6 MB

( 8:30)  1. African Village Bedford-Stuyvesant 2
(16:28)  2. The Seventh Queen
(12:01)  3. Blue Moses
(19:54)  4. African Sunrise
( 5:16)  5. A Prayer for Us All

R.I.P.

Born:  April 6, 1926
Died:  September 1, 2018


Friday, August 4, 2017

Robin Kenyatta - Stompin' At The Savoy

Styles: Flute And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1974
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:38
Size: 88,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:28)  1. Stompin' At The Savoy
(3:07)  2. Smooth Sailing
(9:59)  3. The Need To Smile
(2:29)  4. Two Bass Blues
(5:23)  5. Neither One Of Us
(4:32)  6. Mellow In The Park
(3:59)  7. Jessica
(5:37)  8. River Boat

A great blend of older jazz styles and the sweet 70s funk of Robin Kenyatta served up with a hip sort of sparkle overall! There's a few familiar jazz modes in here that definitely live up to the spirit of the title but most of the record is more open, laidback, and somewhat spiritual thanks to help from a hip lineup that includes Billy Harper on tenor sax, Dwight Brewster and Larry Willis on electric piano, Winston Wright on organ, Lew Soloff on trumpet, and Jimmy Knepper on trombone! Some of the best tracks here are surprisingly open and earthy almost pointing back towards Kenyatta's Until album, but a bit more inside and other cuts have a warmer sort of 70s glow, more in the mode that Robin was hitting on other Atlantic albums of the time. Titles include "The Need To Smile", "Mellow In The Park", "Jessica", "River Boat", "Two Bass Blues", and "Smooth Sailing". © 1996-2017, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/475315

Personnel: Robin Kenyatta (flute, saxophone, soprano saxophone, alto saxophone); Tasha Thomas, Robin Clark, Carl Hall (vocals); David Spinozza (guitar, electric guitar); Hux Brown (guitar); Billy Harper (tenor saxophone); Lew Soloff (trumpet, flugelhorn); Jimmy Knepper (trombone); Gladstone Anderson, Neville Hinds, Sonelius Smith (piano); Dr. John (electric piano, keyboards); Dwight Brewster, Larry Willis (electric piano); Winston Wright (organ); Ron Carter (bass instrument, acoustic bass, upright bass, electric bass); Lewis Worrell, Walter Booker (acoustic bass); Chuck Rainey, Jackie Jackson (electric bass); Alphonse Mouzon, Winston Grennan, Bernard "Pretty" Purdie (drums); Gilmore Digap (congas, tambourine); Guilherme Franco, Ralph MacDonald, Joao Palma (percussion).

Stompin' At The Savoy

Tuesday, January 31, 2017

The Cookers - Warriors

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:17
Size: 124.3 MB
Styles: Bop, Straight ahead jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[ 6:53] 1. The Core
[ 4:57] 2. Spookarella
[ 6:14] 3. Close To You Alone
[ 7:29] 4. Priestess
[ 5:45] 5. Sweet Rita Suite
[10:58] 6. Capra Black
[ 7:01] 7. Ladybugg
[ 4:56] 8. U Phoria

Acoustic Bass – Cecil McBee; Alto Saxophone – Craig Handy; Drums – Billy Hart; Flugelhorn – Eddie Henderson; Flute – Craig Handy; Piano – George Cables; Tenor Saxophone – Billy Harper; Trumpet – David Weiss, Eddie Henderson.

The Cookers is an all-star ensemble made up primarily of veteran bandleaders and star soloists, including tenor saxophonist Billy Harper, trumpeters Eddie Henderson and David Weiss, alto saxophonist Craig Handy, pianist George Cables, bassist Cecil McBee, and drummer Billy Hart. The fireworks begin with their sizzling treatment of the late Freddie Hubbard's "The Core," though it is a shame that the liner notes don't specify the order of the trumpet solos. The veterans in the group contributed the remaining songs. Cables' off-center, loping "Spookarella" has a Monk-like humor and playful flute solo by Handy, while the pianist's pretty ballad "Sweet Rita Suite, Pt. 2: Her Soul" is a complex work that the band interprets with finesse, with Handy again a major voice on flute, and lush ensembles by the brass and tenor. Harper penned the funky, insistent "Priestess." His passionate "Carpa Black" is often dissonant, highlighted by his burning tenor sax. McBee's lush ballad "Close to You Alone" (showcasing Handy's heartfelt alto solo) and delicious hard bop vehicle "U Phoria" also merit strong praise. The solos and ensembles are enjoyable throughout this session, while the musicians obviously had a great time and are likely eager to schedule a follow-up meeting for Jazz Legacy. ~Ken Dryden

Warriors

Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Billy Harper - Somalia

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:32
Size: 141,7 MB
Art: Front

(13:36)  1. Somalia
(21:56)  2. Thy Will Be Done
(12:45)  3. Quest
( 7:59)  4. Light Within
( 4:15)  5. Quest In 3

The passionate tenor saxophonist Billy Harper had not been heard on record as a leader in quite a few years when this superlative Evidence CD was released in 1995. Harper (who is joined by trumpeter Eddie Henderson, pianist Francesca Tanksley, bassist Louie Spears, and both Newman Taylor Baker and Horace Arnold on drums) brings back the spirit of John Coltrane, performing a very spiritual and generally intense set of music. The five originals are highlighted by the title cut, "Quest" and the nearly 22-minute "Thy Will Be Done." This CD contains some of Billy Harper's finest playing in years. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/somalia-mw0000646635

Personnel: Billy Harper (tenor saxophone, cowbell, vocals); Eddie Henderson (trumpet); Francesca Tanksley (piano); Louie "Mbiki" Spears (bass); Newman Taylor Baker, Horacee Arnold (drums); Madeleine Yayodele Nelson (shekere).

Somalia

Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Billy Harper & Jon Faddis - Jon & Billy

Styles: Saxophone And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1974
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:43
Size: 89,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:02)  1. Jon & Billy
(8:05)  2. Walter Bridge - Mizu Hashi San
(4:05)  3. Ballad For Jon Faddis
(7:06)  4. Two 'D' s From Shinjuku, Dig & Dag
(5:28)  5. 17-Bar Blues
(7:54)  6. This All-Koredake

Jon Faddis and Billy Harper made an interesting, if at times mismatched, team on this 1974 date recently reissued by Evidence. Faddis was then laboring to find his own voice on trumpet; his mentor, Dizzy Gillespie, remained both his predominant influence and stylistic guiding light. Harper had won critical attention and praise for his work with Lee Morgan, and his robust tenor sax was well-displayed throughout this date. The times were probably responsible for Sir Roland Hanna sometimes turning to electric piano; his elegant figures, precise melodies, and harmonic interplay are not as expertly articulated on electric as acoustic, which he also plays. But the date's value is in hearing where Harper and Faddis, as well as jazz itself, were in the mid-'70s and then comparing how far they and the music have and have not come since then. ~ Ron Wynn http://www.allmusic.com/album/jon-billy-mw0000197645

Personnel: Billy Harper (tenor saxophone); Jon Faddis (trumpet); Roland Hanna (acoustic & electric pianos); George Mraz (bass); Motohiko Hino (drums); Cecil Bridgewater (kalimba).

Jon & Billy