Showing posts with label Cyrus Chestnut. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cyrus Chestnut. Show all posts

Monday, August 19, 2024

Cyrus Chestnut - You Are My Sunshine

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:25
Size: 161,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:31)  1. God Has Smiled On Me
(6:41)  2. It's All Right With Me
(6:56)  3. For The Saints
(7:14)  4. Precious Lord
(4:07)  5. You Are My Sunshine
(5:51)  6. Erroling
(2:45)  7. Total Praise
(3:51)  8. Lighthearted Intelligence
(4:15)  9. Sweet Hour Of Prayer
(5:22) 10. Hope Song
(4:39) 11. Flipper
(5:26) 12. What A Fellowship
(7:41) 13. Pass Me Not O Gentle Savior

Tough times make simple music cathartic, and Cyrus Chestnut’s You Are My Sunshine combines tradition with innovation to attractively articulate this 70-minute collection of modern jazz trio music. Chestnut clearly doesn’t expect this record to change your life, but it does successfully brighten our mood. The record’s opening, “God Smiled On Me,” clearly establishes the comfort of acoustic subtlety within a groove that nicely unites Chestnut with band mates Michael Hawkins on bass and Neal Smith on drums. The pianist brings his gospel leanings to five original compositions and standards such as Dorsey’s “Precious Lord.” “...I borrowed a little Stevie Wonder feeling and added it to the mix to create a wholly different sound,” says Chestnut. He subsumes his hard bop and post bop past in the gospel and blues immersion of the record’s first original song, “For the Saints.” It takes Chestnut back to soul as we have experienced it in the domains of churches and small jazz clubs (how often one does feel like the other). The resonant nature of Chestnut’s playing doesn’t give way to rhythm-driven ensemble groove until the 22nd minute, when Hawkins embarks on a lovely solo on bass. This follows with the kind of sterling piano work that defines a great club gig. We revisit the groove stew on “Flipper.” 

By this point, I was recalling so many nights watching the great Oscar Peterson. You Are My Sunshine is a well-paced record. Phrases, explorations, solos and ensemble combine in a time that spaces out this music. Chestnut moves us from one idea to the next with seamless expertise. Great players learn how to immerse the listener in a stew of musical flavor on the bandstand, at home and, in Chestnut’s case, at Berklee. The experience is very positive. “Errolling,” an original dedicated to Erroll Garner, reflects Chestnut’s embrace of the tradition and the new demand for re-examination. Songs of quietude are best left to resonate. This happens in transcendent simplicity with “Total Praise,” one of the highest moments on this record. Jazz lovers often dismiss songs like this, ideas stated in three minutes or less, as “ditties.” Bill Evans turned such dismissal into legend. Chestnut hints at the brilliance of that here. ”Light Hearted Intelligence” pulls us back to Chestnut’s original groove of ensemble dance. His tickling solo work makes way for one of several short drum solos by Neal Smith, a tasteful assembly of accentuated decisions. This may be the only song on the record that is negatively abbreviated, but Chestnut can forever extend it in concert. You Are My Sunshine is a nice release; it retrospectively values a time when the new seems to pale by comparison to the aged. This record will warm traditional jazz lovers like a good memory. It is refreshing to see this kind of jazz emerge from an artist under 40.By AAJ Staff https://www.allaboutjazz.com/you-are-my-sunshine-cyrus-chestnut-warner-bros-review-by-aaj-staff.php

Personnel: Cyrus Chestnut, piano; Michael Hawkins, bass; Neal Smith, drums.

You Are My Sunshine

Friday, March 29, 2024

Dee Daniels - State of the Art

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:32
Size: 136,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:37) 1. Almost Like Being in Love
(5:13) 2. Cherokee
(5:50) 3. I Wonder Where Our Love Has Gone
(5:23) 4. He Was Too Good to Me
(4:03) 5. I've Got You Under My Skin
(4:32) 6. Night and Day
(3:21) 7. I Let a Song Go out of My Heart
(6:21) 8. Willow Weep for Me
(4:42) 9. Why Did I Choose You
(4:34) 10. Summer Wind
(7:19) 11. Loverman
(4:31) 12. How High the Moon

Dee Daniels should need no introduction. Unfortunately, she too often does. In a music climate clouded by jazz-singing sound-alikes, a vocalist brave enough to let her affinity for hard bop remain undiluted by easy-listening production values; a vocalist who wields her instrument brashly like a player, exploring extended techniques comparable to the most intrepid trumpeters’ and saxophonists’; such a vocalist is bound to appeal foremost to the hard-core jazz aficionado. But given the heights and depths of feeling that Ms. Daniels accesses through her phenomenal vocal range, and the insistent sense of swing that she and her band transmit, her appeal should be obvious to any pair of ears.

Like Jeri Brown and Ranee Lee, two other singers with unashamed virtuoso leanings, Dee Daniels is an American who relocated long-term to Canada. In her case, this move came on the heels of a five-year musical pilgrimage to Holland and Belgium, where she built upon her gospel, r&b and rock roots to hone a career in straightahead jazz. For over two decades afterwards, she based that career in Vancouver, BC, releasing seven albums and a DVD. Just three years ago, to be closer to the action, Daniels moved south of the border to the Big Apple.

There in 2013 she recorded State of the Art, the Criss Cross Jazz label’s first-ever vocalist-led date after some 360 releases. That number symbolizes the completion of a full circle, for Dee Daniels apparently became aware of Criss Cross while living in Amsterdam in 1982, when the Dutch label’s catalogue consisted of a single album. The Criss Cross Jazz release schedule is modest, at this point encompassing about a dozen new albums yearly, but chances are that Daniels will reappear on the label before long: it has a proven track record of loyalty to its musicians, many of whom appear as both leaders and sidemen on numerous releases across the Criss Cross catalogue.

In common with labels like HighNote, Capri, Sharp Nine, Posi-Tone and Cellar Live, Criss Cross stands as a stronghold of straightahead jazz, a haven for players who prize the values of bebop and hard bop. For the first couple of years, label founder and producer Gerry Teekens employed the services of recording engineer Rudy Van Gelder in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey. Since then the majority of albums have been engineered by another former optometrist of Dutch descent, Max Bolleman, who would accompany Teekens yearly from Holland to record Criss Cross artists in NYC. Latterly, sound engineering duties have devolved on other shoulders—in this case, on Max Ross’s. Ross also mastered the recording, which was mixed by Michael Marciano.

Recording quality is impeccably clear and full, keeping Ms. Daniels’ voice front and centre but giving her instrumentalists enough presence to confirm that they worked with her dynamically as a band, not passively as backup. On the earlier sessions with which I’m most familiar, Love Story (1999) and Feels SO Good! (2002), the singer is cited as co-producer. The sound on the first disc, recorded in Vancouver, is gorgeous: warm and transparent, enshrining a sense of intimacy among the players. The next album, recorded in New York, sounds comparatively rough, with a strident edge and tinny piano. The new Teekens production does not sound so delicately suspended beyond time and place as the Vancouver session; State of the Art conveys a more clinical atmosphere in which detail is sharply preserved with a brightness suiting the down-to-business hurly-burly of her new hometown.

The opening track asserts this sense of immediacy when Daniels explodes out of the starting gate: the pent-up energy that propels “Almost Like Being in Love” makes it sound almost like she and the band began the tune in medias res. This is one of two up-tempo standards briskly dispatched on State of the Art; the other ten tracks reside on the slow side. Daniels flaunts her chops early in the tune, scatting atop the buoyant accompaniment of pianist Cyrus Chestnut. The scatting gives way to an economical tenor solo by Eric Alexander, who cut his first album as a leader for Criss Cross in 1992 and has been contributing prolifically to the label as a sideman ever since. On the other fast number, “I Let a Song Go Out of My Heart,” Alexander’s sax trades quips with Alvester Garnett’s kit until the drummer breaks out in a solo display of varied rhythmic resource.

A major revelation on the new album is “Cherokee,” which Dee Daniels delivers more slowly than pretty much anyone. The tune has been recorded only occasionally by vocalists, including one of Dee’s major influences, Sarah Vaughan. Usually it serves as a showpiece for instrumentalists bent on exercising maximum technique at breakneck speed. Tribal tom-toms and dark piano notes open the piece with an air of exoticism befitting the fanciful lyrics. Like other female singers who’ve tackled the tune, Daniels addresses her words to a “sweet Indian warrior,” as opposed to the “sweet Indian maiden” originally specified. As always, on “Cherokee” her low notes are beautifully formed, ruminatively casting an autumnal spell with the help of Garnett’s brushwork and delicate cymbal washes, not to mention a piano solo where Chestnut calmly loiters along the keys.

The other notably languid display here is Daniels’ astonishing take on the warhorse “Willow Weep for Me.” Hers has already earned a place alongside my favourite renditions: Billy Bang (violin); Stanley Turrentine (tenor sax); and Tin Hat Trio (vocals by Willie Nelson). Abetted by Chestnut’s sparse accompaniment, Daniels’ soulfully haunted delivery brings the broken-hearted narrator to life, finding sympathetic desolation in the willow tree’s elaborate weeping. Her artful elongation of syllables and final imploring repetitions of “weep” infuse Ann Ronell’s audacious word-assemblage with keen feeling. In the sax solo, Alexander’s glistening tone supplies objective commentary, an entirely different sound from Houston Person’s on Love Story and Feels SO Good!, where the elder tenorist’s warm soulfulness closely complements Daniels’ dusky timbre.

In “Lover Man,” performed just as slowly as “Willow Weep for Me” and at even greater length, Daniels again hauntingly animates a lovelorn soul. She takes a ruminative approach, phrasing deliberately and ominously to impart an unexpected complexity: this lonely woman wants love but equally dreads its implications. Hear how Daniels drops her voice to draw out the word “strange” at 2:58, underlining this ambivalence. A quietly hair-raising moment. And listen to the final iteration of “Hugging and a-kissing/Oh, [look] what I’ve been missing,” where she lingers thoughtfully over her words, adding “look” with an air of irony as though doubting the value of desire.

Further highlights are too many to mention at length. There’s the brace of Sinatra-associated tunes: “Summer Wind,” with a masterfully undemonstrative piano solo from Chestnut; and Cole Porter’s “I’ve Got You Under My Skin,” sporting a dapper turn from Alexander. Trombonist Wycliffe Gordon, whose disc The Intimate Ellington (2013) boasted Daniels’ first Criss Cross appearance, lends a playful arrangement of another Porter number, “Night and Day.” Here, to stress the ineluctable recurrence of romantic longing, the singer matches wits with introductory drum embellishments that conjure beating tom-toms, ticking clocks and dripping raindrops. “Almost Like Being in Love” likewise wears a Gordon arrangement. The repertoire on Daniels’ disc was influenced too by Houston Person, who reportedly recommended a couple of numbers: “I Wonder Where Our Love Has Gone” and a comparative obscurity, “Why Did I Choose You.” The latter affords bassist Paul Beaudry his one spotlit moment, when he solos forthrightly against a distant trickle of piano keys.

In fact, like her other two albums that I’ve mentioned, Dee’s State of the Art is all highlights nothing added merely to inch the CD towards a one-hour running time. If this disc is a statement definitive of Daniels’ present intent, it seems she’s concerned these days with finding greater subtlety within vocal constraints. Sure, the expressive means remain markedly more varied than most vocalists’, but just compare them to the extreme thrills and spills she delivered on Feels SO Good! where, for example, Daniels’ original tune “Love Ain’t Love Without You” offered the most passionately charged proof of stratospheric vocal reach that you’re likely to hear. State of the Art installs the master more introspectively in her workshop, still choosing from all the tools available, but only as appropriate to the task at hand. The tasks are assigned by the Great American Songbook: no originals this time, and no David/Bacharach songs (like “The Look of Love” on FSG!); just standards and near-standards whose lyrics Daniels inhabits so fully that you feel her coming to terms with whatever process they document. The songs emerge lived-in, lived-through, and with the Dee Daniels “wow” factor intact. What more can I say? Wow! https://wallofsound.ca/musicreviews/definitive-statement-dee-daniels-state-of-the-art-criss-cross-jazz-2013/

Personnel: Dee Daniels, vocal; Cyrus Chestnut, piano; Eric Alexander, tenor saxophone; Alvester Garnett, drums; and Paul Beaudry, bass.

State of the Art

Sunday, March 12, 2023

Cyrus Chestnut - Soul Brother Cool

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:29
Size: 136,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:44) 1. Spicy Honey
(5:52) 2. Soul Brother Cool
(6:32) 3. The Happiness Man
(6:03) 4. Piscean Thought
(6:56) 5. In Search of a Quiet Place
(5:47) 6. The Raven
(5:31) 7. Dawn of the Sunset
(6:27) 8. Intimacy
(4:59) 9. Every Which Way
(6:34) 10. Stripes

Graced with the robust technique of a premier concert hall pianist, Cyrus Chestnut is totally absorbed in exploring and celebrating the seemingly unlimited sonic potential of his grand instrument, using its keyboard and pedals to generate resonant, thickly-textured, amazingly agile, nuanced orchestral effects.By Chicago Tribune
https://cyruschestnutwj3.bandcamp.com/

Credits: Cyrus Chestnut Composer, Piano, Primary Artist; Dezron Douglas Bass; Freddie Hendrix Trumpet; Willie Jones III Drums, Producer

Soul Brother Cool

Thursday, March 9, 2023

Manhattan Trinity - Sunflower

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:23
Size: 141,7 MB
Art: Front

(7:09) 1. The Pink Panther
(5:35) 2. Sunflower
(6:31) 3. Mr. Lucky
(6:08) 4. Whisling Away The Dark
(7:04) 5. Dreamsville
(5:32) 6. Moment To Moment
(5:37) 7. Days Of Wine And Roses
(4:38) 8. Two For The Road
(5:43) 9. Moon River
(7:22) 10. Autumn Kisses

This all-star ensemble featuring Cyrus Chestnut, Lewis Nash, and George Mraz has been performing and recording off and on since the mid-90s. The musical inspiration for the band is "The Great Trio" from the 70s featuring Hank Jones, Ron Carter, and Tony Williams. This ensemble has such a tight connection, that the performances can only be described as sublime. Eric Alexander sometimes joins the group as a special guest.https://www.jazzmusicarchives.com/artist/manhattan-trinity

Personnel: Cyrus Chestnut (piano); George Mraz (bass); Lewis Nash (drums)

Sunflower

Monday, February 27, 2023

Cyrus Chestnut, Renee Rosnes, George Mraz, Billy Drummond - Tribute To Duke Ellington

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:04
Size: 153,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:16)  1. C Jam Blues
(4:39)  2. Satin Doll
(7:49)  3. In A Sentimental Mood
(7:56)  4. Take the a Train
(7:57)  5. Angelica
(7:16)  6. Mood Indigo
(4:26)  7. Don't Get Around Much Anymore
(4:55)  8. The Star Crossed Lovers
(4:44)  9. Come Sunday
(6:58) 10. Caravan
(6:04) 11. Lotus blossom

An adept jazz pianist, Cyrus Chestnut balances his lithe technical skill with a robust, soulful style that speaks to his deep gospel roots and love of swinging hard bop. A native of Baltimore, Maryland, Chestnut first studied piano with his father at the age of five, with official lessons beginning two years later. By the age of nine, he was enrolled in the prep program at the Peabody Institute. He graduated from Berklee with a degree in jazz composition and arranging. Chestnut took his time, working with a number of top-notch musicians (Jon Hendricks, Betty Carter, Terence Blanchard, and Donald Harrison) before finally recording his first solo CD at the age of 30. His initial dates as a leader were recorded for the Japanese label Alfa (reissued on Evidence), and he became an Atlantic artist in 1994. 

A self-titled LP followed in 1998, with Tribute to Duke Ellington following a year later. In subsequent years, Chestnut remained busy, releasing Charlie Brown Christmas in 2000, the all-original Soul Food in 2001, You Are My Sunshine in 2003, Genuine Chestnut in 2006, and Cyrus Plays Elvis in 2007. The following year, he released Black Nile on Japan's M&I label. In 2013, he delivered the hard bop-infused Soul Brother Cool, which featured trumpeter Freddie Hendrix. The following year, he showcased his trio on the concert album Midnight Melodies, recorded live at Smoke in New York City. In 2015, Chestnut released his debut album for HighNote, the trio effort A Million Colors in Your Mind, which featured backing from bassist David Williams and drummer Victor Lewis. https://itunes.apple.com/br/artist/cyrus-chestnut/id157212#fullText

Personnel:  Cyrus Chestnut - Piano (Tracks 2, 4, 6, 7 and 9);  Renee Rosnes - Piano (Tracks 3, 5, 8, 10 and 11);  George Mraz – Bass;  Billy Drummond - Drums

Tribute To Duke Ellington

Sunday, February 12, 2023

Cyrus Chestnut - The Dark Before the Dawn

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:20
Size: 131,7 MB
Art: Front

(7:30)  1. Sentimentalia
(3:27)  2. Steps of Trane
(6:19)  3. The Mirrored Window
(4:42)  4. Baroque Impressions
(2:36)  5. A Rare Gem
(4:09)  6. Call Me Later
(5:36)  7. Wright's Rolls and Butter
(2:53)  8. It Is Well (With My Soul)
(5:36)  9. Kattin'
(4:58) 10. Lovers' Paradise
(3:06) 11. My Funny Valentine
(6:22) 12. The Dark Before the Dawn

Cyrus Chestnut's The Dark Before the Dawn is a mature, versatile album. Chestnut and his trio members Steve Kirby (bass) and Clarence Penn (drums) provide their fortunate listeners with a little bit of everything on this collection. Chestnut pays homage to John Coltrane, and his brilliant "Giant Steps," on the lightning fast "Steps of Trane," and gives J.S. Bach a swinging, 21st century twist on the interesting "Baroque Impressions." "My Funny Valentine" is slow and spacious and represents Chestnut's best ballad playing to date. Mix in originals such as the confident "Sentimentalia," the pretty "The Mirrored Window," the playful "Call Me Later" and the show-stopping "Kattin'." Kirby lays down a rock-solid musical foundation and Penn generates the rhythmic fire, but it is Chestnut who breathes life and soul and meaning into these tunes. He has the unique ability to make complicated music both approachable and enjoyable. The listener won't realize it, but will eventually notice their toes tapping and their fingers snapping to this recommended set. ~ Brian Bartolini https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-dark-before-the-dawn-mw0000125513

Personnel: Cyrus Chestnut (piano); Steve Kirby (bass); Clarence Penn (drums).

The Dark Before the Dawn

Friday, February 3, 2023

Bobby Watson - Back Home in Kansas City

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:49
Size: 151,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:32) 1. Back Home In Kansas City
(7:32) 2. Red Bank Heist
(5:26) 3. Our Love Remains
(6:25) 4. Bon Voyage
(6:33) 5. The Star In The East
(4:38) 6. Mind Wine
(5:41) 7. Celestial
(6:02) 8. Dear Lord
(4:57) 9. Side Steps
(7:15) 10. I'm Glad There Is You
(6:42) 11. Blues For Alto

Saxophonist/composer Bobby Watson draws inspiration from the rich jazz heritage of his Kansas City hometown on his spirited album BACK HOME IN KANSAS CITY, which features an all-star quintet with Watson’s longtime rhythm section of bassist Curtis Lundy and drummer Victor Jones along with pianist Cyrus Chestnut, trumpeter Jeremy Pelt, as well as a special guest appearance by vocalist Carmen Lundy.

“Great melodies are immortal, like a sculpture or a painting,” Watson insists. “This album is more about the singing quality of my instrument.”

As the title suggests, Back Home in Kansas City also pays homage to Watson’s hometown and its own rich musical heritage. The saxophonist grew up in KC, leaving to study at the University of Miami and then spending a quarter century making his name in New York City. He returned home in 2000 to serve as Director of Jazz Studies at the University of Missouri-Kansas City's Conservatory of Music & Dance, retiring 20 years later.

His retirement coinciding with the pandemic, Watson found himself with plenty of time to reflect on Kansas City’s importance to his distinctive sound and, gradually, to play for local audiences who helped attune his approach to the blend of soul and balladry that makes up the new album.

“Being out here in Kansas City has given me a chance to slow down and go deeper into what I want to play,” he explains. “The Kansas City audience is a sophisticated audience because of the history of this town. We've got people out here who have heard a lot of music. So I'm not playing down to the audience, and I'm not trying to simplify anything. I'm simply coming out of what I feel in my heart and my soul.”

The title tune is a contrafact (a new melody written over existing chord changes) on “Back Home Again in Indiana,” also famously the basis for Charlie Parker’s “Donna Lee.” The spirited swinger opens the album on a high note, Jones’ crisp percussion nailing every sudden stop before propelling the band forward again. It’s one of three similar Watson tunes on the album; the yearning “Bon Voyage” is based on Herbie Hancock’s “Maiden Voyage,” while the brisk “Side Steps” is Watson’s reimagining of John Coltrane’s classic (and notoriously challenging) “Giant Steps.”

Watson also drew the haunting ballad “Dear Lord” from the Coltrane songbook, one of several spotlights on the album for his burnished tone and silken melodicism. Chestnut’s achingly delicate touch sets the tone for a gorgeous version of the standard “I’m Glad There Is You,” featuring one of Watson’s most beautiful and moving solo turns. The album closes with the gritty, self-explanatory “Blues for Alto.”

Watson encouraged his bandmates to bring their own material to the session as well. Jones contributes the stealthy “Red Bank Heist,” which feels like Henry Mancini by way of Art Blakey. Chestnut’s sparkling “A Star in the East” is an easygoing waltz that thrives on the rich melody shared by Watson and Pelt. The trumpeter’s offering is the tender “Celestial,” highlighted by his own muted eloquence.

John Hicks’ “Mind Wine” pays tribute to the late pianist, with whom Watson, Lundy, and Jones all worked extensively. Hicks appears on Watson’s 1988 Blue Note debut, NO QUESTION ABOUT IT, as well as LOVE REMAINS; while Watson and Lundy are part of the quartet for Hicks’ 1988 release NAIMA'S LOVE SONG. “John Hicks was a mighty huge influence on me, Curtis and Victor,” Watson says. “When he passed away, that was one of the saddest moments in our lives. He was extremely near and dear to us.”

The saxophonist has long garnered inspiration from vocalists as well as his sax-playing peers and idols. He invited the acclaimed singer Carmen Lundy to join the band for “Our Love Remains,” co-written by Watson and his wife Pamela. In instrumental form, the song was the title track for his 1986 album LOVE REMAINS and was recorded again for 1992’s PRESENT TENSE. The vocal version has previously been recorded by Kevin Mahogany and Melissa Walker, and Lou Rawls was planning his own rendition prior to his death.

“I love hearing singers tell stories,” Watson says. “Joe Williams, Betty Carter, Sarah Vaughan, Carmen McRae, Ella, Gregory Porter, Andy Bey and Carmen does that. She's not just singing the melody, she's putting it out there as a story.”

Throughout Back Home in Kansas City, Watson’s gift for telling stories with his saxophone is on vibrant display. “Johnny Griffin told me that when you solo you want to introduce yourself, talk about how your day went, tell how you feel right now and where you want to take the listener – all through music,” he details. “I know that I have enough technique to last me the rest of my life. But what do I want to say with it? We’re all trying to play one grand solo our whole life in different contexts." https://bobbywatsonjazz.bandcamp.com/

Bobby Watson - alto saxophone; Jeremy Pelt - trumpet;Cyrus Chestnut - piano; Curtis Lundy - bass; Victor Jones - drums

Back Home in Kansas City

Wednesday, February 1, 2023

Tim Warfield - Jazz Is ...

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:13
Size: 161,9 MB
Art: Front

(11:55)  1. Silence - The Angels Are Crying
( 8:14)  2. Origins
(10:24)  3. My Shining Hour
( 9:32)  4. The Magic Bag
( 8:43)  5. Tune # 2
(10:28)  6. My Old Country
(10:54)  7. Until Further Notice

Although it exists solely for the purposes of recordings and the occasional live gig, Tim Warfield’s quintet (Warfield- tenor saxophone; Nicholas Payton- trumpet; Cyrus Chestnut- piano; Tarus Mateen- bass; Clarence Penn- drums) has been a marvel to hear over the course of four albums dating back to the critically acclaimed A Cool Blue from 1995. They say the highest compliment that can be paid a jazz artist is the attainment of an individual voice, and in this regard Warfield stands head and shoulders above many of his peers. With a breathy and soulful timbre, his tenor voice is immediately identifiable; his compositions seek to explore a vociferous and spiritual platform that harkens back to the days of Coltrane. Unfolding in the way that a fine novel reveals itself over the course of many chapters, “Silence- The Angels Are Crying” opens with a whisper before unleashing several solo segments taken at a headier tempo. With a ‘60s Milesian flair, “Origins” possesses a catchy stop-and-go melody and a relaxed gait that allows for several extended forays. By contrast, “My Shinning Hour” is almost all Warfield and a tour-de-force it is, filled with exciting climaxes and those upper register ‘cries’ that give the saxophonist his emotional base. With an opening melody that very briefly recalls “Star Eyes,” Warfield’s “Tune #2” moves at a relaxed pace and lets Payton bask in the limelight for awhile. Just listen to the way the trumpeter paces himself and uses space to give a lesson in improvisation at the highest pinnacle. 

Then Warfield enters with that characteristic swagger and a velvet cushion provided by Mateen and Penn. Rounding things out are “The Old Country,” which finds vibe man Stefon Harris in Hutcherson mode during a well-crafted spot; and “Until Further Notice,” another wonder of shifting tempos and a perfect forum for the multifaceted brilliance of Clarence Penn. At its best, this latest installment in the saga of the Tim Warfield group is yet another lesson in the integrity and complexity that can be achieved with working groups who clearly understand the foundations of jazz. ~ C.Andrew Hovan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/jazz-is-tim-warfield-criss-cross-review-by-c-andrew-hovan.php

Personnel: Tim Warfield (tenor sax), Nicholas Payton (trumpet), Stefon Harris (vibes), Cyrus Chestnut (piano), Tarus Mateen (bass), Clarence Penn (drums)

Jazz Is ...

Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Cyrus Chestnut - Natural Essence

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:14
Size: 145,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:33)  1. Mamacita
(7:12)  2. It Could Happen to You
(6:15)  3. Faith Amongst the Unknown
(6:57)  4. I Cover the Waterfront
(7:34)  5. I Remember
(8:01)  6. Dedication
(9:06)  7. My Romance
(6:21)  8. Toku-do
(6:11)  9. Minority

Thanks also to a formidable rhythm, with Natural Essence Cyrus Chestnut signs one of the most convincing works of his discography. Maintaining the link with the tradition of swing, this trio rhythmically and dynamically defines dynamic tension. To this is added a vibrant communicative vis and the new imprinting, with a swinging average time, in the imaginative rereading of "It Could Happen To You" and "I Cover The Waterfront." Through sophisticated harmonizations, the American pianist ascends the way he knows how to touch and revive the deeper strings of the interpreted standards. 

Its elegant touch, rhythmically incisive, illuminates the solid interplay of a perfect equilibrium formation. His blues feeling pervades every song interpreted, to make us savor the most authentic and genuine roots of jazz. Thanks to a skilful use of dynamics, tension and distension alternate to innervate also the episodes mentioned above, at a slow pace. ~ Maurizio Zerbo https://www.allaboutjazz.com/natural-essence-cyrus-chestnut-highnote-records-review-by-maurizio-zerbo.php?width=1920

Personnel: Cyrus Chestnut: piano; Buster Williams: double bass; Lenny White: battery.

Natural Essence

Tuesday, October 18, 2022

Cyrus Chestnut - Geniune Chestnut

Styles: Piano Jazz 
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:24
Size: 127,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:53)  1. The Brown Soldier
(4:14)  2. El Numero Tres
(5:21)  3. If
(4:27)  4. Ellen's Song
(4:42)  5. Mason Dixon Line
(5:03)  6. Baby Girl's Strut
(6:30)  7. The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face
(5:00)  8. Eyes On The Prize
(6:11)  9. Through The Valley
(5:37) 10. I'm Walkin'
(3:20) 11. Lord I Give Myself To You

One hardly thinks of age six as the start of a career in anything, but that's when pianist Cyrus Chestnut began his. As was the case with many musicians and singers, the church was his first gig. He played at Mount Calvary Baptist in Baltimore, and within three years, he was studying classical music at the Peabody Institute. Over the years, a variety of training and experiences led him to jazz. He worked alongside some modern jazz heavyweights like Terence Blanchard, Wynton Marsalis, Freddie Hubbard, Chick Corea and Dizzy Gillespie, as well as vocalists Joe Williams and Betty Carter. Chestnut also has won numerous awards, including the Oscar Peterson and Quincy Jones scholarships, and The Basie Award. After years as a sideman, Chestnut became a leader, releasing his first album, There's a Brighter Day Comin', then The Nutman Speaks, The Nutman Speaks Again and Nut. Throughout his career, he's blended some straightforward jazz with covers of pop tunes, all in his own unique style. The foundation holds with his Telarc debut, Genuine Chestnut. The album begins with the delightful "The Brown Soldier. In addition to Chestnut's piano, the song highlights Russell Malone's guitar, with nods to Michael Hawkins on bass and Neal Smith on drums. As Chestnut explains, the song is about being a jazz soldier, playing day to day and putting a smile on someone's face with music. Hawkins' bass makes that seem easy as he sets up Malone's guitar solo. The third track, "If, features Malone and Chestnut in a tranquil cover of the popular hit by Bread. With subtle notes by Hawkins and drummer Neal Smith, the song has a traditional jazz feel. A hint of samba appears in "Ellen's Song, an original ballad. 

Chestnut honors tradition but delves in originality as well. A stop-time beat introduces "Mason Dixon Line, a high-energy piece that highlights Smith's pacing on the cymbals while Chestnut and Hawkins go for a ride. Percussionist Steve Kroon adds a Latin flavor to the playful "Baby Girl's Strut. Smith gets a bit more freedom on this one as he complements the leader. The elegant "Eyes on the Prize is the first of three inspirational pieces. While playing as a group, each musician charts his own course on this expression of freedom. And setting up the closer, "Lord, I Give Myself to You, Chestnut and his sidemen deliver a delightful cover of Fats Domino's "I'm Walkin', which features Malone. When Cyrus Chestnut plays, it's often difficult to tell which genre he's in, which is a good thing. Blending contemporary jazz, traditional jazz and gospel, plus the occasional seasonings of Latin and samba, he gives himself plenty of freedom to explore different emotions, while keeping the music in recognizable form. Add to that his apparent ease on the piano, and you've got a musician who really does know how to put a smile on your face. In listening to Genuine Chestnut, one gets the sense that he's smiling, too. ~ Woodrow Wilkins https://www.allaboutjazz.com/genuine-chestnut-cyrus-chestnut-telarc-records-review-by-woodrow-wilkins.php

Personnel: Cyrus Chestnut: piano; Michael Hawkins: bass; Neal Smith: drums; Steve Kroon: percussion; Russell Malone: guitar.

Geniune Chestnut

Sunday, July 24, 2022

Cyrus Chestnut - My Father's Hands

Styles: Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:53
Size: 112,8 MB
Art: Front

(7:24) 1. Nippon Soul Connection
(5:19) 2. Thinking About You
(4:05) 3. Cubano Chant
(4:42) 4. Baubles, Bangles and Beads
(4:14) 5. Yesterday
(3:23) 6. I Must Tell Jesus
(6:31) 7. Working Out Just Fine
(4:15) 8. There Will Never Be Another You
(2:58) 9. But Beautiful
(5:57) 10. Epilogue

Cyrus Chestnut is a mainstreamer, his straightahead sound owing a good deal to gospel and the blues as main building blocks and you find all the ingredients of his sound here. Swing is to the heart of it all and to the fore straight off. I'm thinking in my head from yesteryear John Hicks and Oscar Peterson as simpatico to the Chestnut sound. And if you dig Ronnie Scott's musical director pianist James Pearson you will also get what Chestnut does if so far unfamiliar with this fantastic instrumentalist. Bassist Peter Washington, a straightahead legend of the music (like his generation's very own Ron Carter and brilliant last year with Bill Charlap), is on most of the tracks and the fine drummer Lewis Nash likewise.

The classic 'Cubano Chant' introduced to jazz by its writer Ray Bryant on a 1956 recording (and followed up the same year by Cal Tjader) really exposes us to the touch of Nash. And that is just one superb highlight of a record that is all about supreme musicianship, refinement and the art of the trio. It isn't going to change the world but will warm your soul whether on the Paul McCartney classic 'Yesterday' or the melting balm of Jimmy Van Heusen's 'But Beautiful.' What a tender tribute to Cyrus' dad McDonald Chestnut from his son. My Father's Hands so very winningly is.https://www.marlbank.net/posts/cyrus-chestnut-my-father-s-hands-high-note.

Personnel: Cyrus Chestnut (p); Peter Washington (b, except track 6); Lewis Nash (ds,except track 6)

My Father's Hands

Saturday, June 18, 2022

Dizzy Gillespie All-Star Big Band - I'm BeBoppin' Too

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:16
Size: 157,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:37) 1. I'm BeBoppin' Too
(5:08) 2. Cool Breeze
(7:37) 3. Round Midnight
(5:38) 4. Manteca
(4:52) 5. Birks Works
(7:12) 6. If You Could See Me Now
(4:38) 7. Dizzy's Blues
(7:45) 8. Una Mas
(6:00) 9. I Can't Get Started
(4:55) 10. One Bass Hit
(6:19) 11. Tin Tin Deo
(5:30) 12. Lover Come Back To Me

Tribute bands are often bland affairs, because they become too predictable, while often omitting any artists who played with the deceased artist. Fortunately, this third CD by the Dizzy Gillespie All-Star Big Band mixes veterans who worked with the trumpeter and talented younger players who acquit themselves very well. Trombonist Slide Hampton contributed a fresh chart of Dizzy's "Manteca" that is a bit more introspective and less percussive and shouting, with potent solos by pianist Cyrus Chestnut. Tenor saxophonist Jimmy Heath scored the subtle, hip treatment of Kenny Dorham's "Una Mas," showcasing alto saxophonist Mark Gross, trombonist Douglas Purviance, and baritonist Gary Smulyan.

Vocalist Roberta Gambarini's solid performance of "'Round Midnight" (and Hampton's fresh arrangement) trump those who claim that this landmark Thelonious Monk composition is recorded all too often; there is always room for a top-notch recording such as this one. Gambarini also guests in Heath's setting of Tadd Dameron's bittersweet ballad "If You Could Seem Me Now" and Hampton's snappy setting of "Lover, Come Back to Me." Nor should the brass players be overlooked: Roy Hargrove's lush playing in "I Can't Get Started," plus his comic vocal in the jive piece "I'm BeBoppin' Too," are complemented by Greg Gisbert's searing trumpet and Michael Dease's brief, effective trombone solo. Recommended.~Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/im-beboppin-too-mw0000820620

Personnel: Slide Hampton - musical director, trombone; James Moody - tenor sax, flute, vocals; Jimmy Heath - tenor sax; Antonio Hart - lead alto sax, flute; Gary Smulyan - baritone sax; Frank Greene - lead trumpet; Greg Gisbert - trumpet; Roy Hargrove - trumpet, vocals; Claudio Roditi - trumpet; Jason Jackson - lead trombone; Steve Davis - trombone; Michael Dease - trombone; Douglas Purviance - bass trombone; Cyrus Chestnut - piano; John Lee - bass, executive director; Lewis Nash - drums; Roberta Gambarini – vocals

I'm BeBoppin'Too

Friday, April 22, 2022

Manhattan Trinity - Misty

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:15
Size: 120,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:59) 1. All of Me
(5:04) 2. Misty
(5:53) 3. Li'l Darlin'
(4:04) 4. You Are My Sunshine
(6:38) 5. The Happy Saint
(7:29) 6. Shiny Stockings
(6:42) 7. Tenderly
(4:44) 8. Through the Fire
(6:44) 9. The Very Thought of You
(5:39) 10. Take the a Train

This all-star ensemble featuring Cyrus Chestnut, Lewis Nash, and George Mraz has been performing and recording off and on since the mid-90s. The musical inspiration for the band is "The Great Trio" from the 70s featuring Hank Jones, Ron Carter, and Tony Williams. This ensemble has such a tight connection, that the performances can only be described as sublime.https://www.jazzmusicarchives.com/artist/manhattan-trinity

Personnel: Cyrus Chestnut (piano); George Mraz (bass); Lewis Nash (drums)

Misty

Saturday, April 16, 2022

Kenny Barron, Cyrus Chestnut, Benny Green, Eric Reed - Festival de Jazz de Vitoria-Gasteiz 2017

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:26
Size: 126,1 MB
Art: Front

( 3:47) 1. Thelonious
( 4:01) 2. Bye-Ya
( 5:56) 3. In Walked Bud
( 3:31) 4. Teo
( 5:35) 5. Reflections
( 6:35) 6. Light Blue
( 6:13) 7. Monk's Dream
(12:06) 8. Smoke Gets In
( 6:37) 9. Blue Monk

Kenny Barron, the highest peak of modern jazz piano that fascinated many giant stars such as Dizzy Gillespie and Stan Getz, a rich gospel feeling and a swing feeling unique to jazz. Top acoustic piano runner, Cyrus Chestnut, master of jazz piano tradition, Benny Green, leaders such as "Pure Imagination" ranked in the US jazz chart, and many other masterpieces The pattern of the jazz festival in 2017 Spain by Eric Reed and others who announced the above is recorded with high image quality and high sound quality. We cannot miss the stage of the famous pianists who have added further aging. The recording time will be 50 minutes. Live at 41 Festival de Jazz de Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain, July 12th, 2017 https://monotone--extra-co-jp.translate.goog/SHOP/dvdj-301.html?_x_tr_sl=ja&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en&_x_tr_pto=sc

Personnel: Kenny Barron --piano; Cyrus Chestnut --piano; Benny Green --piano; Eric Reed – piano

Festival de Jazz de Vitoria-Gasteiz 2017

Sunday, April 3, 2022

Eric Reed & Cyrus Chestnut - Plenty Swing, Plenty Soul

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:28
Size: 168,5 MB
Art: Front

(14:39)  1. I'll Remember April
(12:14)  2. All The Things You Are
(14:36)  3. Two Bass Hit
( 6:17)  4. Lift Ev'ry Voice And Sing
( 9:40) 5. It Don't Mean A Thing If It Ain't Got That Swing
( 7:49)  6. Prayer
( 8:09)  7. Plenty Swing, Plenty Soul

Piano duo recordings can be a tricky thing: finding a balance that allows each musician to shine while simultaneously keeping in mind that it is a collaborative affair can result either in a seamless piece of cooperative music-making, or a battle of egos that benefits no one. Fortunately, this falls into the former category. With accompaniment by bassist Dezron Douglas and drummer Willie Jones III, Reed and Chestnut are sympathetic players who know when to step forward, when to hold back, and when to meet in the middle. Although seven years apart in age (Chestnut being the older), Reed and Chestnut share somewhat similar backgrounds: both are from large East Coast cities, both began their musical instruction at a very young age via their fathers, and both have gospel training in their backgrounds.

That common ground gives them not so much similar styles as an understanding of where the other is rooted, and as they burrow deeper into each of the pieces here drawn from a trio of live gigs at New York's Dizzy's club there are many times when it's near impossible to tell that two pianists are playing, let alone who's doing what although the mix separates Reed and Chestnut by placing one in the left channel and the other in the right, one would have to be extremely fine-tuned to the nuances of each musician's playing to pick them out had the engineer not made it easier. The set consists of standards (a spry "I'll Remember April" opens it), a couple of jazz classics (a rousing version of Duke Ellington's "It Don't Mean a Thing if It Ain't Got That Swing"), and a couple of gospel-themed tunes played solo the classic "Lift Ev'ry Voice and Sing," featuring only Chestnut, and Reed's "Prayer." That the pianistry is exemplary throughout goes without saying, but these two fine musicians and their accompanists elevate their meeting into something greater. ~ Jeff Tamarkin http://www.allmusic.com/album/plenty-swing-plenty-soul-mw0001962994

Personnel: Cyrus Chestnut (piano); Eric Reed (piano); Willie Jones III (drums).

Plenty Swing, Plenty Soul

Monday, July 19, 2021

Michael Dease - Grace

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:42
Size: 157.3 MB
Styles: Trombone jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[1:42] 1. Discussao
[6:31] 2. Blues On The Corner
[5:40] 3. In A Mist
[8:26] 4. I Talk To The Trees
[7:10] 5. Four
[4:09] 6. Tippin'
[5:30] 7. Setembro
[5:28] 8. 26-2
[5:56] 9. Toys
[5:56] 10. Love Dance
[6:16] 11. Grace
[5:53] 12. Salt Song

Michael Dease: trombone, valve trombone; Roger Squitero, Circle Rhythm: vocals, percussion; Mark Whitfield: guitar, acoustic guitar; Yotam: acoustic guitar, electric guitar; Sharel Cassity: alto flute, alto saxophone; Eric Alexander: tenor saxophone; Roy Hargrove: trumpet, flugelhorn; Claudio Roditi: flugelhorn; Steve Davis: trombone; Cyrus Chestnut: piano; Gene Jackson: drums.

Michael Dease is to the trombone what Harry Allen is to the tenor saxophone. Lyrical, traditional, well-studied and broad based, both artists can equally get their freak on when necessary. Dease's trombone style contains many influences, but like many conservatory-trained musicians, Dease has had the time and practice to develop is own potent voice. Emerging among a class of young musicians that include Sharel Cassity and Carol Morgan, Dease presents as a neo-traditionalist with pristine chops and a universal exposure (both bandstand and didactic) to music providing him a virtual library from which to draw. Technically, that is all well and good as a description; but what does Dease sound like? Dease's previous recordings, Dease Bones (Astrix Media, 2007) and Clarity (Blues Back Records, 2008) found Dease honing his already very capable craft. His voice and tone have become perfectly rounded with a rich and creamy timbre superbly captured on the Jobim opener, "Discussao."

Bix Beiderbecke's "In A Mist" is post-modern updated by Dease, making it both more densely impressionistic and swinging at the same time, proving that the two not need mutually exclusive. Dease allows himself ample room for exploration with a reigned-in rhythm section providing the propulsion without getting in the way. Dease approaches Miles Davis' "Four" where he doubles on trombone and tenor saxophone. More ballad than bebop, Dease's treatment is languid and moody like an opiate nod. Cyrus Chestnut holds the piece together with a concise solo before Dease does his best Scott Hamilton.

Dease does get his bebop on for Oscar Peterson's "Tippin'" playing J.J. Johnson fast, taking corners like Curtis Fuller. His fluid chops are on display on this song with a taut and effusive solo where he is able to exercise his considerable solo prowess. It is as a balladeer that Dease excels and where his true strength lies, as demonstrated on the two Ivan Lins compositions "Setembro" and "Love Dance." Dease's lone composition, the title piece, is a mid-tempo swinger that sums up well what Dease's finely crafted jazz is all about. C. Michael Bailey

Grace

Friday, May 7, 2021

Vincent Herring - Preaching to the Choir

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:55
Size: 152,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:00) 1. Dudli's Dilemma
(7:47) 2. Old Devil Moon
(6:53) 3. Ojos de Rojo
(5:56) 4. Hello
(7:37) 5. Fried Pies
(6:03) 6. Minor Swing
(6:26) 7. In a Sentimental Mood
(5:02) 8. Preaching to the Choir
(6:36) 9. Granted
(7:32) 10. You Are the Sunshine of My Life

Vincent Herring can certainly preach with his horn a deeply soulful version of alto sax that gets plenty of room to open up and speak its message here working through a set of long, lovely tracks with really great support! The group's a quartet with Cyrus Chestnut on piano, Yasushi Nakamura on bass, and Johnathan Blake on drums instantly hitting that kind of a groove that really makes Herring sound his best a level of accompaniment he doesn't always get on record but when he does, on a set like this, it reminds us all over again how much we can love his music when it finds the right sound! There's a solidity here that makes the record one of Herring's best in years – and titles include "Dudli's Dilemma", "Ojos De Rojo", "Granted", "Preaching To The Choir", "Minor Swing", "Fried Pies", and "You Are The Sunshine Of My Life". © 1996-2021, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/979454

Personnel: Vincent Herring (alto saxophone); Cyrus Chestnut (piano); Yasushi Nakamura (bass); Johnathan Blake (drums)

Preaching to the Choir

Friday, August 14, 2020

Roberta Gambarini - Connecting Spirits: Sings The Jimmy Heath Songbook

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:24
Size: 138,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:59)  1. Without Song
(4:04)  2. Growing - New Picture
(4:14)  3. The Rio Dawn
(5:23)  4. The Thumper
(5:30)  5. A Loved One Lost
(4:23)  6. Life In The City
(5:42)  7. The Voice Of The Saxophone
(5:03)  8. Mandela
(4:23)  9. A Harmonic Future
(4:20) 10. A Mother's Love
(4:03) 11. A Sassy Samba
(2:51) 12. Ellington's Stray Horn
(4:22) 13. Frank Foster

Born and raised in Turin, Italy, to music loving parents (who had actually first met at a jazz concert), two-times Grammy nominated singer Roberta Gambarini grew up constantly listening to her father’s record collection. Her first vocal inspiration was the music of Louis Armstrong and Ella Fitzgerald , but she soon discovered Sarah Vaughan, Billie Holiday,and Carmen McRae, as well as gospel and blues artists such as Mahalia Jackson and Bessie Smith. At age 12 she began studying clarinet, but realizing the versatility and talents of her clear alto, she moved to voice, singing and performing in clubs by the time she was 17. In 1998, Gambarini received a scholarship to study for two years at the New England Conservatory in Boston. Barely 2 weeks after setting foot on american soil for the first time, Roberta surprised the jazz world by being one of the runner-ups in the 1998 Thelonious Monk Vocal Competition.

With this recognition as a springboard and the assistance of some of the greatest musicians in the world, who immediately appreciated her talent and invited her to perform with them, she quickly became a fixture on the international jazz circuit, appearing in major concert halls, Festivals and clubs around the globe ( Carnegie Hall, The Kennedy Center, Hollywood Bowl , Jazz at Lincoln Center , the North Sea Jazz Festival, and many more) . As a result, Roberta has had the good fortune to appear in concert and record with such Giants as Dave Brubeck, James Moody, Hank Jones, Clark Terry, Herbie Hancock, Michel & Randy Brecker, Jimmy Heath, Roy Hargrove, Jimmy Cobb, Al Foster, Slide Hampton, Frank Wess, Harold Mabern, Toots Thielemans, Paquito D’Rivera, Chucho Valdez, Mark O’Connor, Cyrus Chestnut, Percy Heath, Ron Carter, Johnny Griffin, the Dizzy Gillespie All Stars Big Band, Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton, Ray Drummond, George Cables, Mulgrew Miller, Kenny Burrell, Wynton Marsalis’ Jazz at Lincoln Center orchestra, and many others.

Roberta’s first American release ‘Easy to love’, earned the accolades of fans and critics alike and prestigious Grammy nomination, as did her third, ‘So in love’ ,which was also awarded the Grand Prix du Jazz Vocal 2009 by the Jazz Academy of France. She was twice named the “Female Jazz Singer of the Year” by the Jazz Journalists Association (2007 & 2009 ). One of the most important music figures of the 20th century, the late Benny Carter, cited Roberta as his favorite singer. James Moody, the legendary saxophonist and singer, was Roberta’s mentor and teacher, and introduced her to many of the major venues in the world. In 2008 Roberta recorded a superb duet album titled ‘You are there’ with the Legendary pianist Hank Jones. Mr. Jones,who accompanied most of the celebrated vocalists of 20th Century such as Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, Frank Sinatra, Peggy Lee, Carmen McRae, and Nat King Cole, declared Roberta Gambarini to be the best singer to emerge in the last 60 years . In 2015 , Roberta recorded ‘Connecting spirits’, a collection of compositions written by yet another of her mentors: Master saxophonist, composer and arranger Jimmy Heath . Along with Jimmy’s own lyrics, the album includes some of Roberta’s own lyrics to Mr Heath’s tunes performed with the legendary Heath Brothers ,with Master drummer Tootie Heath. Every once in a while, a truly great singer comes along who possesses the beauty, individuality, and talent to remind us once again of the magical majesty of the human voice ( without the aid of today’s technological tricks! ). That singer is ROBERTA GAMBARINI. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/robertagambarini

Personnel: Roberta Gambarini (vocal); Jimmy Heath (ts,ss); Jeb Patton (p); David Wong (b); Albert 'Tootie' Heath (ds); James Mtume (per); Freddie Hendrix (tp); Ed Cherry (g); Dave Stricker (g)Tommy Campbell (ds); Cyrus Chestnut (p); John Lee (b)

Connecting Spirits: Roberta Gambarini Sings The Jimmy Heath Songbook

Saturday, August 17, 2019

Carla Cook - Dem Bones

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:30
Size: 139,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:53)  1. The More I See You
(6:42)  2. Like a Lover
(4:12)  3. Oh Gee
(6:55)  4. Dem Bones
(4:50)  5. Just a Sittin' and a Rockin'
(4:35)  6. Ode to Billie Joe
(5:44)  7. Someone to Light up My Life
(7:17)  8. For the Elders
(6:42)  9. Come, Ye Disconsolate
(5:00) 10. Better Than Anything
(3:37) 11. A Lover's Lullaby

The title of Carla Cook's latest album refers to the trombone choir she's enlisted to blend with her silky smooth voice. Her natural ability makes this one work. Whether she's scat singing, crooning soft ballads, or spinning acrobatic vocalese, Cook is always on pitch and quite in control. Her expressiveness is what makes her performances special. Cook, who grew up in Detroit, has made the connection between jazz and similar art forms. She made her decision to become a jazz singer while still in the 8th grade. On Fred Wesley's "For the Elders," Cook fills the role of fourth chair trombone. Her wordless vocals match the trombone trio that well. With ballads such as "Like a Lover" and "Someone to Light Up My Life," she's at the top of her form. But it's snappy scat singing that reveals itself as Cook's greatest strength. Near the finish of "Better than Anything," for example, she moves into a trumpet-like scat vocal that says it all better than words can. Carla Cook's eclectic program choices reflect her varied background. A degree in Speech Communication and formal training in voice, bass and piano must surely have helped hone her natural skills. Like most singers, exposure to many music forms has made her comfortable with it all. Finding "Ode to Billie Joe" and "Come, Ye Disconsolate" on her jazz album may come as a surprise, but it fits well. Cyrus Chestnut, James Genus and Billy Kilson provide a superb team spirit. More than just a superb follow-up to her It's All About Love debut, Dem Bones reminds us of power that jazz has in its capacity for creating bridges to most other art forms. ~ Jim Santella https://www.allaboutjazz.com/dem-bones-carla-cook-maxjazz-review-by-jim-santella.php

Personnel: Carla Cook: Vocals; Cyrus Chestnut: Keyboards; James Genus: Bass; Fred Wesley, Craig Harris, Tyrone Jefferson: Trombone; Jeffery Haynes: Percussion.

Dem Bones

Sunday, September 9, 2018

Cyrus Chestnut - Kaleidoscope

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:54
Size: 155,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:06)  1. Golliwog's Cakewalk
(5:09)  2. Darn That Dream
(6:19)  3. Gymnopédie No. 1
(5:48)  4. Entre cloches
(5:30)  5. Jimbo's Lullaby
(5:33)  6. Father Time
(4:31)  7. Lord I Want to Be a Christian
(4:09)  8. Son binocle
(4:38)  9. Smoke on the Water
(7:00) 10. Gnossienne No. 1
(4:11) 11. Gymnopédie No. 3
(3:41) 12. Turkish Rondo
(5:12) 13. Prayer for Claudine

Pianist Cyrus Chestnut is a virtuoso player with deep roots in both spiritual gospel music and harmonically sophisticated jazz. That said, he's also a classically trained artist with a wide-ranging and eclectic taste in music. He brings all of these influences to bear on his nuanced and enveloping 2018 trio date, Kaleidoscope. Joining him are bassist Eric Wheeler and drummer Chris Beck, who offer empathetic support throughout. Here, Chestnut has chosen a handful of his favorite classical compositions, including tracks by Erik Satie, Claude Debussy, and Maurice Ravel, which he reworks in his own inimitable jazz style, alongside other standards and his own originals. What's particularly compelling about his choices is just how well the classical songs fit into the jazz trio concept. The Satie selections in particular lend themselves to a jazz approach. Chestnut's languid reading of "Gymnopedie No. 1" has the feel of a hazy summer afternoon, and brings to mind Vince Guaraldi's Peanuts soundtracks. He also turns the composer's "Son Binocle" into a jauntily urbane bossa nova. 

Elsewhere, he transforms Debussy's "Jimbo's Lullaby" into a bluesy, far-eyed rumination, anchored by a soulful bass solo intro from Wheeler. Similarly engaging is the trio's dramatic, modal jazz take on Ravel's "Entre Cloches," in which Chestnut's spiraling solo swells into a sustained din of reverberating bass notes before returning to the main theme. Conversely, his own songs, like the meditative "Father Time" and the lyrical "Prayer for Claudine," evince a classical feel, displaying his knack for finely attenuated melodies and richly textured harmonics. He splits the difference on his swaggering version of Deep Purple's classic rock anthem "Smoke on the Water," diving into the iconic main theme with Rachmaninov-esque dynamism and then pulling back into a mutative, Eastern-influenced improvisation. ~ Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/album/kaleidoscope-mw0003201648

Personnel:  Cyrus Chestnut (p), Eric Wheeler (b) (except tracks 7 & 13), Chris Beck (ds) (except tracks 7 & 13)

Kaleidoscope