Showing posts with label Dee Dee Bridgewater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dee Dee Bridgewater. Show all posts

Monday, April 15, 2024

Stanley Clarke - Children of Forever

Styles: Jazz Fusion
Year: 1973
Time: 47:57
File: MP3 @ VBR ~160K/s
Size: 54,0 MB
Art: Front

(10:42) 1. Children of Forever
( 5:53) 2. Unexpected Days
( 8:00) 3. Bass Folk Song
( 6:53) 4. Butterfly Dreams
(16:28) 5. Sea Journey

First solo album of RTF's bassist, the Chick Corea-produced Children Of Forever is very much a product of its time, with its cosmic gatefold artwork and its peace & love title, and it was recorded between the first two phases of Return To Forever (the exiting Moreira/Farrell and incoming Bill Connors and the album was released on the Polydor label), so it's quite obvious the mother project's paw is all over this jam-packed album (around 25 minutes aside). I believe this is around the time where Chick Corea told Stanley to move onto the electric bass guitar, or else he would be changing RTF's bassist, so Clarke obliged ? and luckily so for him and us),, since he became a master at it. But in the present album, he plays the contrabass on all tracks except the extravaganza piece closing the first side. The album also features a good flute, but obviously not the former RTF Joe Farrell's, but Arthur Webb's.

Amazingly enough this album starts with a very Kobaian near-11 mins title track piece, as Vander's bunch could easily claim it as theirs; from the electric piano led jazz-rock (courtesy of RTF's Corea) to the Vander-like drumming (courtesy of RTG's White) to very Orffian-like chants (almost incantations) and only Clarke's very strolling bass can effectively instil a doubt that you're not on Seventh Record label product. The following Unexpected Days is a bit less Zeuhl-ish, but the general mood can still evoke it, since the lingering impressions from the preceding piece are still alive. Andy Bey and Bridgewater's vocals are definitely more jazzy (Dee Dee sometimes close to crooning). Don't be fooled by the name of the following almost-instrumental track, which has nothing to do with folk, but everything to do with a bass guitar extravaganza, an awesome showpiece, where Clarke scats a bit like lionel Hampton did on his albums.

The flipside only features two tracks, opening with the album's jazziest 7-mins Butterfly Dreams, and it is the album's low point, not helped by the cheesy Bey vocals. The 17- mins+ Sea Journey starts very much in the mood of its predecessor, but evolves soon into an outstanding excursion in the depths of the oceans, floating on a superb lengthy bowed bass stroll, before leaving guitarist Martino some breathing space. Only the vocals are a bit cumbersome, but don't really hinder the moods either. Let's just say that I'd have no problems with having this CPF album as totally instrumental, because it could stand it easily without modifications.

Strangely enough, this debut solo album is often overlooked by fans (and sometimes books and websites), as my utterances are the first on this page, whereas the other albums are much more reviewed. This is a bit sad, because COF is a great album, despite the fact that Stanley doesn't use the electric bass, which would make him a celebrity. Maybe this is why JR/F fans tend to ignore (their losses) this excellent album.https://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=310321

Personnel: Stanley Clarke / bass fiddle, electric bass, arrangements; Dee Dee Bridgewater / vocals; Andy Bey / vocals; Pat Martino / electric & 12-string guitars; Chick Corea / electric & acoustic pianos, clavinet, arrangements producer; Arthur Webb / fluteLenny White / drums, tambourine

Children of Forever

Monday, December 25, 2023

Dee Dee Bridgewater - This Is Dee Dee Bridgewater: Retrospective

Size: 116,7+132,3 MB
Time: 50:20+57:11
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz Vocals, Soul Jazz, Chanson
Art: Front

CD 1
01. J'ai Deux Amours (4:21)
02. Just One Of Those Things (2:53)
03. Fascinating Rhythm (4:03)
04. A-Tisket, A-Tasket (2:30)
05. Song For My Father (5:35)
06. Nica's Dream (5:13)
07. Good Morning Heartache (5:08)
08. Les Feuilles Mortes/Autumn Leaves (6:47)
09. Ne Me Quitte Pas (5:46)
10. This Is New (3:44)
11. Speak Low (4:15)

CD 2:
01. Mack The Knife (3:57)
02. Midnight Sun (7:19)
03. My Heart Belongs To Daddy (5:01)
04. Afro Blue (5:08)
05. Four Women (5:22)
06. Compared To What (5:18)
07. Lady Sings The Blues (3:28)
08. God Bless The Child (5:11)
09. Precious Thing (Till The Next... Somewhere) (5:02)
10. Cherokee (Live) (6:09)
11. What A Little Moonlight Can Do (Live) (5:13)

One of the best jazz singers of her generation, Dee Dee Bridgewater had to move to France to find herself. She performed in Michigan during the '60s and toured the Soviet Union in 1969 with the University of Illinois Big Band. She sang with the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis orchestra (1972-1974) and appeared in the Broadway musical The Wiz (1974-1976). Due to erratic records and a lack of direction, Bridgewater was largely overlooked in the jazz world by the time she moved to France in the '80s. She appeared in the show Lady Day and at European jazz festivals, and eventually formed her own backup group. By the late '80s, Bridgewater's Verve recordings started to alert American listeners to her singing talents. Her 1995 Horace Silver tribute disc (Love and Peace) was a gem, and resulted in the singer extensively touring the U.S, reintroducing herself to American audiences. She found even more success with another tribute album, Dear Ella, which won a Grammy in 1997. This Is New, released in 2002, featured Bridgewater singing Kurt Weill songs, while 2005's J'ai Deux Amours found her tackling French classics. For 2010's Eleanora Fagan (1917-1959): To Billie with Love from Dee Dee, Bridgewater moved from Verve to Decca/Emarcy, and offered her versions of several songs associated with Billie Holiday. She followed this in August 2011 with her sophomore effort for the label: a compilation collection of jazz standards entitled Midnight Sun, with tunes from previous albums ranging from "Angel Eyes" to Horace Silver's "Lonely Woman." In 2014, she produced and appeared on trumpeter Theo Croker's album, Afro Physicist. Bridgewater's 2015 effort, Dee Dee's Feathers, found her paying homage to the history of New Orleans, as well as marking the tenth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. A collaboration between Bridgewater, New Orleans trumpeter Irvin Mayfield, and the New Orleans Jazz Orchestra, the album also featured appearances from such New Orleans luminaries as keyboardist Dr. John and percussionist Bill Summers. ~by Scott Yanow

This Is Dee Dee Bridgewater CD 1,CD 2

Tuesday, September 13, 2022

Charles Sullivan - Genesis

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1974
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:08
Size: 92,0 MB
Art: Front

( 8:26) 1. Evening Song
( 5:55) 2. Good-Bye Sweet John (In Memory Of John Foster: Pianist)
( 3:43) 3. Field Holler
( 4:33) 4. Now I'll Sleep
(17:29) 5. Genesis

Trumpeter, flügelhornist, and composer Charles Sullivan pegged as a poor man's Lee Morgan or Woody Shaw toiled in many mainstream or progressive big bands of the 1970s, languishing in obscurity until breaking through with this, his debut as a leader. Using a spare, warm tone, Sullivan was a cool customer in the firestorm of progressive jazz and fusion of the day, adapting those idioms to his own brand of personalized jazz. Because of his many professional associations, he was able to employ true cream-of-the-crop musicians like pianists Stanley Cowell, Onaje Allan Gumbs, and Sharon Freeman, saxophonist Sonny Fortune, bassist Alex Blake, percussionist Lawrence Killian, and drummer Billy Hart to play his original compositions. Of the five selections, each has its own distinctive flair, taking from different modern jazz elements prevalent to the time frame while not stuck in a rut with any of them.

As the very first piece he ever wrote, "Evening Song" is compelling with its Latin beat and modal montuno piano where Sullivan takes an extended solo, with Cowell also featured before the trumpeter returns for more. A solemn duet with Gumbs for the late pianist John Foster on "Goodbye Sweet John" contrasts with the funky fusion tune "Field Holler," with Freeman's stabbing electric Fender Rhodes chord-driven lines, featuring Alphonse Mouzon's powerhouse drumming and the electric bass of Anthony Jackson, with a lyrical and basic Sullivan sounding influenced by James Brown.

The remainder of the recording is a twofold message of despair and renewal, as Dee Dee Bridgewater sings beautifully in the paradox song "Now I'll Sleep," about suicide, with the lyric that one might "choose to lose, afraid to love" with Sullivan's horn in way late. "Genesis" is a 17-plus-minute workout that rises from those sullen ashes with an Afro-modal stance similar to Frank Foster's Loud Minority of the same era. Cowell's piano and the impressive tandem of Sullivan and Fortune's fiery alto sax push the ensemble to the limits of African-American progressive jazz expressionism. This recording received a five-star rating in Down Beat magazine, and while there are too few Charles Sullivan recordings in the marketplace, it's well deserving of this accolade as one of the very best post-bop efforts of its decade, and now available on CD. By Michael G. Nastos https://www.allmusic.com/album/genesis-mw0001879323

Personnel: Charles Sullivan - trumpet; Sonny Fortune - alto saxophone; Stanley Cowell, Onaje Allan Gumbs - piano; Sharon Freeman - electric piano; Alex Blake - bass; Billy Hart - drums; Lawrence Killian - congas, percussion; Dee Dee Bridgewater - vocals

Genesis

Friday, May 6, 2022

Ray Brown Trio - Some Of My Best Friends Are...Singers

Styles: Contemporary Jazz, Vocal
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:32
Size: 128,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:19) 1. I Thought About You
(3:24) 2. Poor Butterfly
(5:30) 3. More Than You Know
(2:25) 4. Little Boy
(5:37) 5. But Beautiful
(3:19) 6. At Long Last Love
(5:57) 7. Skylark
(6:15) 8. Cherokee
(4:16) 9. (There Is) No Greater Love
(4:32) 10. Imagination
(3:36) 11. The Party's Over
(5:15) 12. The Perfect Blues

What does a bass player do when he's recording an album as a leader? Surely not an hour's worth of bass solos! Ray Brown solved the bass player's dilemma with a series of recordings under the Some of My Best Friends Are... heading. This 1998 release is the third in the series, following the earlier Some of My Best Friends Are...Piano Players and Some of My Best Friends Are...Sax Players, and it's a gem. Featuring a sextet of fine vocalists, ranging from the well-established to the unknown, this CD is a class act from beginning to end. The rising jazz vocal superstar of the late '90s, Diana Krall, is showcased to great effect on "I Thought About You" and "Little Boy." Well-established female vocal veterans Etta Jones, Dee Dee Bridgewater, and Marlena Shaw deliver superb performances, soulfully giving master lessons in the art of singing. The lone male singer spotlighted here, Kevin Mahogany, wraps his smooth baritone around the ballad "Skylark," and swings gently on "The Party's Over."~Jim Newsonhttps://www.allmusic.com/album/some-of-my-best-friends-aresingers-mw0000042710

Personnel: Ray Brown – double bass; Geoff Keezer – piano; Gregory Hutchinson – drums; Antonio Hart – alto saxophone; Russell Malone – guitar

Some Of My Best Friends Are...Singers

Saturday, May 16, 2020

Dee Dee Bridgewater - This Is New

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:25
Size: 140,8 MB
Art: Front

( 3:47)  1. This Is New
( 5:36)  2. Lost In The Stars
( 6:31)  3. Bilbao Song
( 4:56)  4. My Ship
( 5:38)  5. Alabama Song
( 4:54)  6. The Saga Of Jenny
( 3:54)  7. Youkali
( 5:50)  8. I'm A Stranger Here Myself
( 4:17)  9. Speak Low
( 4:40) 10. September Song
(11:15) 11. Here I'll Say

JazzSet host Dee Dee Bridgewater has a new album: This is New, a collection of songs by German composer Kurt Weill. The CD, released in Europe at the end of May 2002, is now out in the US and worldwide! Dee Dee's interest in Weill dates to her performance at a centennial tribute concert in Poland in March of 2000. https://www.npr.org/programs/jazzset/ddcd.html

Personnel: Dee Dee Bridgewater - Vocals; André Ceccarelli - drums; Ira Coleman - double bass; Thierry Eliez - Hammond organ, piano; Minino Garay - percussion; Antonio Hart - flute, alto saxophone; Daniele Scannapieco; Denis Leloup - trombone; Juan José Mosalini - bandoneon; Louis Winsberg - guitar; Bernie Arcadio - String Arrangements; Cecil Bridgewater - Arranger, conductor

This Is New

Friday, November 9, 2018

Roy Brooks & the Artistic Truth - Black Survival

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1973
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 29:13
Size: 67,1 MB
Art: Front

( 5:04)  1. Black Survival
( 4:09)  2. Black Survival - Here and Now
( 7:30)  3. Sahel
(10:15)  4. Relief
( 2:15)  5. Black Survival - Prologue

"Roy Brooks and the Artistic Truth's Black Survival album is a true holy-grail for deep and spritual jazz collectors around the world. Black Survival is reissued here, digitally remastered and cased in bespoke original artwork exact reproduction on hardboard Japanese-style box case CD. This album was originally independently released to raise funds to combat the ongoing drought in the Sahel region of Africa (an area covering parts of Senegal, Mali, Burkina Faso, Nigeria, Chad, Darfur, Sudan and Ethiopia). In his long and distinguished career, the legendary Detroit-born drummer Brooks played with everyone from Yusef Lateef, Pharoah Sanders, Max Roach, Charles Mingus. From 1959-64 he was in the Horace Silver Quintet performing on classic Blue Note albums such as Song For My Father. During his lifetime Brooks released precious few solo albums. His debut, Beat, was released in 1963 on Motown's then new off-shoot jazz label Jazz Workshop. His connection with his hometown label dated back to his time working with The Four Tops. In 1972, Brooks formed the Artistic Truth. Black Survival, the Sahel Concert at the Town Hall was originally released on the small independent Im-Hotep Records in Harlem in 1974 (which also released Brook's earlier Ethnic Expressions). After many years on the New York jazz scene, Brooks returned to Detroit in 1975, where he continued to perform with the Artistic Truth as well as forming the collective Musicians United to Save Indigenous Culture (MUSIC) along with Strata founder Kenny Cox and members of the Tribe collective, Wendell Harrison and Harold McKinney."

Personnel:  Bass – Reggie Workman;  Congas – Lawrence Williams;  Drums – Roy Brooks;  Oboe – John Stubberfield;  Piano – Joe Bonner;  Saxophone – Sonny Fortune;  Trumpet – Cecil Bridgewater;  Vocals – Dee Dee Bridgewater, JorDora Marshall

Black Survival

Thursday, October 4, 2018

Buddy Terry - Lean on Him

Styles: Saxophone And Flute Jazz
Year: 1972
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:18
Size: 99,4 MB
Art: Front

( 5:55)  1. Lean on Me (Lean on Him)
( 5:39)  2. Holy, Holy, Holy
( 3:13)  3. Climbing Higher Mountains
( 4:52)  4. Amazing Grace
(10:17)  5. Inner Peace
( 5:45)  6. Precious Lord, Take My Hand
( 7:34)  7. Love Offering

One of the fullest albums we've ever heard from saxophonist Buddy Terry a set that has him blowing along with a set of soulful larger backings sometimes with a bit of gospel overtones as well! The lineup on the album's pretty darn hip players who include Larry Willis on electric piano, Jay Berliner on guitar, Ernie Hayes on organ, Wilbur Bascomb on Fender bass, Bernard Purdie on drums, and Lawrence Killian on percussion plus added vocals from a group that includes Dee Dee Bridgewater, Alphonse Mouzon, and Peaches Wilson! Buddy arranges and conducts and while his tenor and soprano get some space in the arrangements, the overall sound is more focused on the full spirit of the group. Titles include "Lean On Me (Lean On Him)", "Love Offering", "Inner Peace", "Amazing Grace", "Precious Lord, Take My Hand", "Holy Holy Holy", and "Climbing Higher Mountains".  © 1996-2018, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/850259/Buddy-Terry:Lean-On-Him

Personnel:  Buddy Terry - tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, flute, arranger;  Eddie Henderson - trumpet, flugelhorn;  Jay Berliner - electric guitar;  Larry Willis - piano, electric piano;  Ernie Hayes - organ;  Wilbur Bascomb - electric bass;  Bernard Purdie - drums;  Lawrence Killian - percussion;  Alphonse Mouzon, Dee Dee Bridgewater - vocals

Lean on Him

Sunday, September 16, 2018

Clint Holmes - Rendezvous

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:35
Size: 118,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:21)  1. Stop This Train
(6:56)  2. At The Rendezvous
(4:49)  3. I Loves You Porgy/There's A Boat That's Leavin' Soon For New York
(4:31)  4. Every Time We Say Goodbye
(5:28)  5. All Of Me
(3:38)  6. Say Something
(4:27)  7. Maria
(3:33)  8. The Perfect Trance
(4:06)  9. Marie
(5:18) 10. My Way
(3:21) 11. What You Leave Behind

Clint Holmes’ original charge was simply to make a great album. But the underlying objective, sometimes mentioned just slyly, was to make it great enough to be nominated for a Grammy.With “Rendezvous,” Holmes not only met, but exceeded those goals.The latest release from the popular Vegas showman and interpreter of songs has been nominated for a pair of Grammy Awards, as the field was announced Tuesday morning. Two songs from “Rendezvous” are on the list of nominees for Best Arrangement, Instruments and Vocals: “Every Time We Say Goodbye,” his duet with jazz great Jane Monheit; and “I Loves You Porgy/There’s A Boat That’s Leavin’ Soon For New York” from “Porgy and Bess,” which Holmes recorded with another acclaimed jazz vocalist, Dee Dee Bridgewater. The arranger on “Every Time We Say Goodbye,” Jorge Calandrelli, is a six-time Grammy winner known for his work on “The Color Purple.” Holmes, producer Gregg Field, master pianist and composer Shelly Berg, and pianist/sax man/composer Gordon Goodwin teamed for the arrangement on “Porgy and Bess.” Field himself has won three Grammys in his five nominations, and as a topnotch drummer also toured with the Count Basie Orchestra in the early 1980s and the Basie Orchestra backed Holmes on “Rendezvous.” 

“This is an incredible feeling and a real achievement for everyone who made the album happen,” Holmes said Tuesday morning. “As you know, this was a long process, and receiving a Grammy nomination is something we really did want, even if we felt we didn’t want to jinx our chances by talking about it.” “Rendezvous” was recorded and mixed over a 2 ½-year period at Capitol Records. The album was largely a jazz project, especially with the contributions from Monheit, Bridgewater and sax master Dave Koz (who wrote the music to Holmes’ “What You Leave Behind”). But there is a significant pop feel to “Rendezvous,” too, which actually prevented the album from being considered in nomination in the jazz field (if an album is deemed 51 percent pop by Grammy officials, it is entered into the open pop categories). Thus, Holmes is in what he calls “tall cotton” with his fellow nominees. Also entered in his category are the cast of “La La Land” and Justin Hurwitz with “Another Day of Sun,” Seth MacFarlane and arranger Joel McNeely for “I Like Myself,” and Randy Newman with “Putin.” Newman is a two-time Academy Award winner and has been nominated for 20 Oscars. He’s also won six Grammys and three Emmys. “It would be a long shot, but this whole album has been a long shot,” said Holmes, who hopes to attend the Jan. 28 ceremony in New York. “But we are nominated. I’ll now always be a Grammy nominee, and it feels good.”https://www.reviewjournal.com/entertainment/entertainment-columns/kats/clint-holmes-rendezvous-receives-a-pair-of-grammy-noms/

Dee Dee Bridgewater, Jane Monheit, Ledisi, Joey DeFrancesco, Dave Koz and Patti Austin help bring the veteran crooner’s story to life on Clint Holmes’ album, “Rendezvous.”

Rendezvous

Saturday, October 14, 2017

Dee Dee Bridgewater - Memphis ...Yes, I'm Ready

Styles: Vocal, Soul
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:09
Size: 144,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:57)  1. Yes, I'm Ready
(4:55)  2. Giving Up
(5:16)  3. I Can't Get Next To You
(4:45)  4. Going Down Slow
(4:36)  5. Why (Am I Treated So Bad)
(4:04)  6. B.A.B.Y.
(5:38)  7. The Thrill Is Gone
(6:45)  8. The Sweeter He Is
(3:06)  9. I Can't Stand The Rain
(4:40) 10. Don't Be Cruel
(3:38) 11. Hound Dog
(5:25) 12. Try A Little Tenderness
(4:18) 13. (Take My Hand) Precious Lord

There's no question that Dee Dee Bridgewater is one of America's great jazz vocalists, but that's hardly the only thing she can do. Bridgewater was born in Memphis, Tennessee, and while her family pulled up stakes for Flint, Michigan when she was only three, she still feels a spiritual connection with the city and its music, and on 2017's Memphis...Yes, I'm Ready, she puts her love of vintage soul and blues front and center. Bridgewater recorded Memphis...Yes, I'm Ready at Royal Recorders, the Bluff City studio where producer Willie Mitchell cut a string of hits with Al Green in the '70s, and Willie's son Lawrence "Boo" Mitchell co-produced the sessions along with Dee Dee and her daughter Tulani Bridgewater. Mitchell pulled together a splendid studio band for this album, including a few members of the old Hi Rhythm Section, and they deliver a superb set of soulful grooves, at once swampy and emphatic, with John Stoddart's electric piano, Jackie Clark's bass, and James "Bishop" Sexton's drums generating just the right amount of funk. With a top-shelf soul band cooking behind her, Dee Dee Bridgewater steps up as a top-shelf soul singer, smooth when she should be, good and gritty when she wants to be, and sounding tough, passionate, and firmly in command at all times. That Bridgewater delivers on soul classics such as "Yes, I'm Ready," "Try a Little Tenderness," and "B.A.B.Y." is not a great surprise, but her transformation of B.B. King's blues perennial "The Thrill Is Gone" into a smoky late-night groove is both unexpected and welcome, and she works an impressive transformation on two numbers associated with Elvis Presley, "Don't Be Cruel" and "Hound Dog," finding a tough R&B center inside them. "The Sweeter He Is" gives Dee Dee a chance to open up her soul and tell us some home truths about cheating men, and the closing performance of the gospel standard "(Take My Hand) Precious Lord" is glorious. Dee Dee Bridgewater strips off some of the polish from her style on Memphis...Yes, I'm Ready without betraying her talent or best musical instincts, and this detour into Soul City is a treat that should please her fans, as well as anyone who digs Southern soul. ~ Mark Deming https://www.allmusic.com/album/memphisyes-im-ready-mw0003087574

Personnel: Dee Dee Bridgewater (vocals); Garry Goin (guitar); Kirk Whalum (tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone); Lannie McMillan, Kirk Smothers (tenor saxophone); Marc Franklin (trumpet); Kameron Whalum (trombone); John Stoddart (keyboards); James Sexton (drums); Lawrence "Boo" Mitchell (cymbals, tambourine); Sharisse Norman, Kevin Whalum, Stax Music Academy, Candise Rayborn-Marshall (background vocals).

Memphis ...Yes, I'm Ready

Monday, September 25, 2017

Christian McBride - Conversations with Christian

Styles: Post-Bop, Straight-Ahead Jazz 
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:27
Size: 175,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:21)  1. Afrika (feat. Angelique Kidjo)
(4:40)  2. Fat Bach and Greens (feat. Regina Carter)
(4:19)  3. Consider Me Gone (feat. Sting)
(6:18)  4. Guajeo Y Tumbao (feat. Eddie Palmieri)
(5:21)  5. Baubles, Bangles and Beads (feat. Roy Hargrove)
(7:07)  6. Spiritual (feat. Dr. Billy Taylor)
(5:09)  7. It's Your Thing (feat. Dee Dee Bridgewater)
(5:32)  8. Alone Together (feat. Hank Jones)
(5:35)  9. McDukey Blues (feat. George Duke)
(9:06) 10. Tango Improvisation #1 (feat. Chick Corea)
(6:39) 11. Sister Rosa (feat. Russell Malone)
(5:36) 12. Shake 'n Blake (feat. Ron Blake)
(6:39) 13. Chitilins and Gelitefish (feat. Gina Gershon)

Plenty of ink has been spilled by those espousing their opinions on the art of the trio, but the duo format doesn't get its due nearly as often either in print or on record. The trio format allows for various permutations in musical interaction, but pairing two artists together is all about direct, head-to-head conversation, and bassist Christian McBride knows a thing or two about this. While McBride has made a name for himself as a go-to bassist for all occasions and styles of music, his podcasts, Sirius-XM Radio Show (The Lowdown: Conversations With Christian McBride) and work as the co-director of The National Jazz Museum in Harlem have also shown the bassist to be an engaging presence in one-on-one games of the aural variety.  While McBride considered the idea of a duo record in the late '90s, he had other things on his mind at the time. Now, more than a decade later, he brings this concept to fruition with some help from thirteen A-list partners. Violinist Regina Carter joins the bassist for a baroque-meets-the-blues exploration of Johann Sebastian Bach's Double Violin Concerto ("Fat Bach And Greens"), vocal-pop icon Sting makes an appearance with guitar-in-hand on "Consider Me Gone," McBride and vocalist Dee Dee Bridgewater engage in saucy repartee on the funky and engaging "It's Your Thing," while shtick comes into the picture on a bluesy Jew's harp and vocals-meet-bass number with actress Gina Gershon ("Chitlins And Gefiltefish").

While McBride is more than comfortable and compelling in every setting on this album, the piano and bass partnerships on display seem to rise above the rest of the performances. Eddie Palmieri brings high energy Latin jazz into the mix on "Guajeo Y Tumbao," the dearly departed Dr. Billy Taylor brings a sense of calm and peace to the album with his own "Spiritual," which opens and closes with some gorgeous arco work from McBride, and George Duke delivers the most chops-heavy piano work on the record, with "McDukey Blues." While the late Hank Jones' isn't nearly as aggressive as Palmieri or Duke, his connection with McBride may be more powerful and palpable, and this pair deserves to be dubbed The Great Jazz Duo for this performance. Preconceived notions concerning structure seem to surround most of these numbers, but McBride's duet with pianist Chick Corea is of the organically-developed variety. Suspense-filled sounds and Spaniard-Argentine influences abound as "Tango Improvisation #1" takes shape, but a blues foundation sneaks into the music as the piece develops, and the final act surrounds choppy, paranoid single-note statements from Corea's piano. Conversations With Christian McBride may, ultimately, be critically eclipsed by the bassist's fine big band record, The Good Feeling (Mack Avenue, 2011), that arrived a mere two months before this collection, but that would be a shame. These albums are actually companion pieces that highlight McBride's mastery of all things musical. ~ Dan Bilawsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/conversations-with-christian-christian-mcbride-mack-avenue-records-review-by-dan-bilawsky.php

Personnel: Christian McBride: bass; Angelique Kidjo: vocals (1); Regina Carter: violin (2); Sting: vocals (3), guitar (3); Eddie Palmieri: piano (4); Roy Hargrove: trumpet (5); Dr. Billy Taylor: piano (6); Dee Dee Bridgewater: vocals (7); Hank Jones: piano (8); George Duke: piano (9); Chick Corea: piano (10); Russell Malone: guitar (11); Ron Blake: tenor saxophone (12); Gina Gershon: vocals (13).

Conversations with Christian                


Sunday, September 17, 2017

BWB - Groovin'

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:49
Size: 139.2 MB
Styles: R&B, Smooth jazz
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[4:47] 1. Groovin'
[4:51] 2. Brown Sugar
[5:46] 3. Ruby Baby
[5:44] 4. A Woman's Worth
[7:27] 5. Hip Hug Her
[6:41] 6. Mercy Mercy Mercy
[7:21] 7. Let's Do It Again (Featuring Dee Dee Bridgewater)
[4:52] 8. It's Your Thing
[7:27] 9. Povo
[5:49] 10. Up For The Down Stroke

This concept sounds like the set-up for a joke: What do you get when you cross three smooth-jazzers with topnotch straight-ahead players? Turns out Norman Brown, Kirk Whalum, and Rick Braun have the last laugh and a damn good time. While they may be three of the most distinct stylists in smooth jazz, they had to turn up the pots to cook with bassist Christian McBride and drummer Gregory Hutchinson. Keyboardist Ricky Peterson, maybe the funkiest organist in contemporary jazz outside of Larry Goldings, plays a producing role and is probably the MVP of BWB. The players aren't the only stars. The impeccable choice of 10 well-known cover tunes adds to an unapologetically fun record that allows B, W, and B to stretch out much more than they do on other recordings. Braun quotes Freddie Hubbard on "Povo," while Whalum explores Cannonball Adderley on "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy," and Brown pays back Wes Montgomery throughout the proceedings. From the sexually charged "Let's Do It Again," featuring a purring Dee Dee Bridgewater and a scatting Brown, to the inspired arrangements of Alicia Keys's "A Woman's Worth" and D'Angelo's "Brown Sugar," there are no holes in any of these grooves. ~Mark Ruffin

Groovin'

Monday, July 4, 2016

Dee Dee Bridgewater - Prelude To A Kiss: The Duke Ellington Album

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:13
Size: 121,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:26)  1. Midnight Indigo
(5:02)  2. I'm Beginning To See The Light
(4:15)  3. Bli-Blip
(3:30)  4. Fleurette Africaine
(3:52)  5. Prelude To A Kiss
(4:29)  6. Caravan
(4:20)  7. Solitude
(4:27)  8. Mood Indigo
(4:16)  9. Night Creature: Fast
(7:28) 10. Night Creature: Andante Misterioso
(3:52) 11. Night Creature: Moderato - Faster Swing - Moderato
(4:11) 12. Come Sunday

This release is more properly identified as a various artists compilation, which includes the pop sounds of the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra. Most of the orchestrations and arrangements are pleasant, even if they're not blatantly original. Alto saxophonist Bobby Watson is superb on "Mood Indigo" and the exotic "Fleurette Africaine." 

The orchestra does a fine job with the rarely heard suite "Night Creature." Singer Dee Dee Bridgewater shines frequently; backed by a superb quartet including Wynton Marsalis, she delivers a delightful cover of "I'm Beginning To See The Light." But it is her hypnotic, chanting introduction, backed by Middle Eastern percussion and Steve Turre's conch shells, that gives this release an occasional freshness usually lacking in similar Ellington tributes. ~ Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/prelude-to-a-kiss-the-duke-ellington-album-mw0000611119

Personnel: Dee Dee Bridgewater (vocals); The Hollywood Bowl Orchestra; John Mauceri (conductor); Robert Sadin, Slide Hampton, Alan Broadbent, Henry Martin, Clare Fischer (arrangers); Hassan Hakmoun (vocals, gimbra, percussion); Charles McPherson, Bobby Watson (alto saxophone); Wynton Marsalis (trumpet); Steve Turre (shells); Bruce Dukov (concertmaster); Cyrus Chestnut (piano); Robert Sadin (organ); Vincent Nguini (guitar); Ira Coleman (bass, drums); Jeff Hamilton (drums); Cyro Baptista (percussion).

Prelude To A Kiss: The Duke Ellington Album

Friday, June 17, 2016

Dee Dee Bridgewater - Eleanora Fagan To Billie With Love

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:55
Size: 119,4 MB
Art: Front + Back

(3:32)  1. Lady Sings the Blues
(3:01)  2. All Of Me
(5:10)  3. Good Morning Heartache
(4:43)  4. Lover Man
(5:10)  5. You've Changed
(2:14)  6. Miss Brown To You
(6:14)  7. Don't Explain
(4:55)  8. Fine and Mellow
(2:47)  9. Mother's Son-in-Law
(5:13) 10. God Bless the Child
(4:33) 11. Foggy Day
(4:16) 12. Strange Fruit

It shouldn't come as much of a surprise that Dee Dee Bridgewater chose to record a tribute album to Billie Holiday. In quick succession beginning in the mid-'90s Bridgewater cut tribute albums to Ella Fitzgerald, Horace Silver, and Kurt Weill, and prior to that, in the late '80s, she was nominated for an award for her one-woman star turn in a European theater production of Lady Day, the Holiday story. That Bridgewater would eventually turn to Holiday (whose given name of Eleanora Fagan explains the title) for an album-length exploration was almost a given it was just a question of when. It's one of her grandest efforts, too. With arrangements by Edsel Gomez (who also provides piano) and a stellar cast of participants including bassist Christian McBride, saxophonist/flutist/bass clarinetist James Carter, and drummer Lewis Nash, Bridgewater doesn't attempt to mimic Holiday's mannerisms or inflections but, as one would expect of such a gifted artist, to absorb and reframe Holiday this is pure Bridgewater, not another performance of Lady Day. Gomez, for his part, quite often pulls the arrangements squarely away from Holiday territory to reinvent these classic songs for a modern audience. The opening "Lady Sings the Blues" is both instantly recognizable yet freshly reconceived as something of an uptempo blues packed with polyrhythmic punch. "All of Me," which follows, is taken at near-breakneck speed, Bridgewater jumping ahead of the beat, following Carter's thrilling soprano sax solo with a raging scat that's more Ella than Billie. Not everything is meant to redefine, though: "God Bless the Child" is mostly true to the original, though Carter's soprano solo again brings the tune into the new century, and "Lover Man," though livelier than Holiday's take, is offered in a somewhat timeless and straightforward manner. 

As one might expect, there's no way a singer with Bridgewater's commitment to jazz history could release a Holiday tribute without tackling "Strange Fruit," the controversial anti-lynching landmark that remains Holiday's most daring moment, and it's saved for last here. It's an eerie, ominous interpretation, Bridgewater's raw vocal up front and fraught with emotion. Carter's brooding bass clarinet and McBride's bass lend a foreboding quality to the take, Nash relies heavily on his cymbals to dramatic effect, and Gomez's piano is subtle, allowing the nakedness of Bridgewater's voice at times unaccompanied  to retell this story that can never be told enough. It's a stunning finale to one of the finest Billie Holiday homages ever recorded.~Jeff Tamarkin http://www.allmusic.com/album/eleanora-fagan-1915-1959-to-billie-with-love-from-dee-dee-mw0001957190

Personnel: Dee Dee Bridgewater (vocals); Edsel Gomez (piano); Lewis Nash (drums).

Eleanora Fagan To Billie  With Love

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Dee Dee Bridgewater - Midnight Sun

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:41
Size: 129.8 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[7:23] 1. Midnight Sun
[5:51] 2. Angel Eyes
[4:56] 3. My Ship
[4:58] 4. Que Reste-T-Il De Nos Amours (I Wish You Love)
[5:21] 5. Lonely Woman
[4:18] 6. Speak Low
[4:09] 7. I'm A Fool To Want You/I Fall In Love Too Easily
[5:04] 8. L' Hymne à L'amour
[3:42] 9. The Island
[5:11] 10. Good Morning Heartache
[5:42] 11. Here I'll Stay

Midnight Sun, issued by Decca/Emarcy, is a ballads collection of jazz and pop standards assembled from Dee Dee Bridgewater's recordings for Verve and other UMG-associated labels dating back to 1993's Keeping Tradition, and moving through 2010's Eleanora Fagan (1915-1959): To Billie with Love from Dee Dee. For those who've followed Bridgewater's career by collecting her albums over the last 18 years, there is only one track here you likely don't already own, a gorgeous version of the Edith Piaf standard "L'hymne a L'amour (J'ai Deux Amours)," previously only issued in Japan as a bonus track on the album of the same name. It's a gorgeous duet with guitarist Luis Winsberg sung in both French and English. Other highlights here include the title track from 1997's Dear Ella album (written by Johnny Mercer), her fine version of the Earl Brent and Matt Dennis nugget "Angel Eyes" from Keeping Tradition, "Lonely Woman," from Love & Peace: A Tribute to Horace Silver, and Kurt Weill's and Jay Lerner's "Here I'll Stay" from This Is New, released in 2002. As an album, these tracks -- all beautifully remastered -- hold together very well despite the variety of instrumental settings, and Bridgewater imbues them all with her consummate phrasing and intimacy. ~Thom Jurek

Midnight Sun

Friday, May 29, 2015

BWB - Groovin'

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:38
Size: 138.8 MB
Styles: Crossover jazz
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[4:45] 1. Groovin'
[4:47] 2. Brown Sugar
[5:44] 3. Ruby Baby
[5:42] 4. A Woman's Worth
[7:26] 5. Hip Hug Her
[6:43] 6. Mercy Mercy Mercy
[7:20] 7. Let's Do It Again
[4:50] 8. It's Your Thing
[7:27] 9. Povo
[5:48] 10. Up for the Down Stroke

This concept sounds like the set-up for a joke: What do you get when you cross three smooth-jazzers with topnotch straight-ahead players? Turns out Norman Brown, Kirk Whalum, and Rick Braun have the last laugh and a damn good time. While they may be three of the most distinct stylists in smooth jazz, they had to turn up the pots to cook with bassist Christian McBride and drummer Gregory Hutchinson. Keyboardist Ricky Peterson, maybe the funkiest organist in contemporary jazz outside of Larry Goldings, plays a producing role and is probably the MVP of BWB. The players aren't the only stars. The impeccable choice of 10 well-known cover tunes adds to an unapologetically fun record that allows B, W, and B to stretch out much more than they do on other recordings. Braun quotes Freddie Hubbard on "Povo," while Whalum explores Cannonball Adderley on "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy," and Brown pays back Wes Montgomery throughout the proceedings. From the sexually charged "Let's Do It Again," featuring a purring Dee Dee Bridgewater and a scatting Brown, to the inspired arrangements of Alicia Keys's "A Woman's Worth" and D'Angelo's "Brown Sugar," there are no holes in any of these grooves. ~Mark Ruffin

Groovin'

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Dee Dee Bridgewater - Dee Dee's Feathers

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:18
Size: 171,1 MB
Art: Front

(6:30)  1. One Fine Thing
(7:20)  2. What a Wonderful World
(6:18)  3. Big Chief
(5:14)  4. Saint James Infirmary
(2:47)  5. Dee Dee's Feathers
(6:38)  6. New Orleans
(5:49)  7. Treme Song / Do Whatcha Wanna
(4:45)  8. Come Sunday
(4:34)  9. Congo Square
(6:33) 10. C'est Ici Que Je T'Aime
(6:18) 11. Do You Know What it Means
(4:22) 12. Whoopin' Blues
(7:04) 13. Rising Tide (Tune Up) Extended Version

Dee Dee Bridgewater's new album, Dee Dee's Feathers, is her debut album on OKeh Records. It is also the first collaboration of the three-time Grammy Award®-winning jazz singer and the Grammy Award®- winning New Orleans Jazz Orchestra (Nojo), founded by artistic director and trumpeter Irvin Mayfield. Dee Dee's Feathers is a modern vision of New Orleans and features traditional songs such as "Big Chief," "St. James Infirmary" and "What a Wonderful World" along with new compositions "Congo Square" and "C'est ici que je t'aime." The album transports the listener through the historic New Orleans neighborhood of Treme. The launch of the album will be tied into the Nojo s New Orleans Jazz Market in Downtown New Orleans, which will open in the spring of 2015 as the premiere venue for jazz in the city. Dee Dee is serving on the Nojo board and the New Orleans Jazz Market main stage will be named after her marking the first time a major stage in the city has been named after a jazz musician. The city of New Orleans will use music from Dee Dee s Feathers in all of their advertising in 2015.

Over the course of a multifaceted career spanning four decades, Grammy® and Tony Award®-winning jazz giant Dee Dee Bridgewater has ascended to the upper echelon of vocalists, putting her unique spin on standards, as well as taking intrepid leaps of faith in re-envisioning jazz classics. Ever the fearless voyager, explorer, pioneer and keeper of tradition, Dee Dee won the 2010 Grammy® for Best Jazz Vocal Album for Eleanora Fagan (1915-1959): To Billie with Love from Dee Dee. Bridgewater s career has always bridged musical genres. She was a member of the legendary Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Big Band, and throughout the 70s, she performed with such jazz notables as Max Roach, Sonny Rollins, Dexter Gordon and Dizzy Gillespie. ~ Editorial Reviews  http://www.amazon.com/Dee-Dees-Feathers-Bridgewater/dp/B00SZFQGEG

Dee Dee's Feathers

Friday, February 27, 2015

Dee Dee Bridgewater - Keeping Tradition

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:19
Size: 128.9 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz, Standards
Year: 1993/2010
Art: Front

[2:53] 1. Just One Of Those Things
[4:03] 2. Fascinating Rhythm
[3:38] 3. The Island
[5:49] 4. Angel Eyes
[3:14] 5. What Is This Thing Called Love
[6:48] 6. Les Feuilles Mortes / Autumn Leaves
[4:05] 7. I'm A Fool To Want You / I Fall In Love Too Easily
[7:01] 8. Lullaby Of Birdland
[3:09] 9. What A Little Moonlight Can Do
[5:37] 10. Love Vibrations
[5:22] 11. Polka Dots And Moonbeams (Around A Pug-Nosed Dream)
[4:35] 12. Sister Sadie

After performing a wide variety of music (much of it commercial) for 15 years, in the mid-'80s Dee Dee Bridgewater returned to jazz. The highly appealing vocalist, although still involved in theater work and other areas of music, has mostly recorded straight-ahead jazz ever since, carving out a niche for herself. This set with her regular French quartet has Bridgewater exploring and swinging some of her favorite standards. She makes such veteran songs as "Just One of Those Things," "What Is This Thing Called Love," "Autumn Leaves," and "Lullaby of Birdland" sound fresh and new. Bridgewater's next project would be a set of Horace Silver songs, and two of the pianist's originals ("Love Vibrations" and "Sister Sadie") are included and point toward the singer's future. This CD is highly recommended, as are all of Dee Dee Bridgewater's Verve recordings. ~Scott Yanow

Keeping Tradition

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Theo Croker - Afro Physicist

Styles: Jazz, Soul, Funk
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:21
Size: 142,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:00)  1. Alapa (For Doc)
(5:37)  2. Realize
(6:14)  3. It's Not You, It's Me (But You Didn't Help)
(3:23)  4. Light Skinned Beauty
(4:43)  5. Wanting Your Love
(5:31)  6. Save Your Love for Me (feat. Dee Dee Bridgewater)
(6:38)  7. Visions (feat. Stefon Harris)
(4:35)  8. The Fundamentals
(4:53)  9. Roy Allan (feat. Roy Hargrove)
(3:23) 10. Moody's Mood for Love (feat. Dee Dee Bridgewater)
(5:30) 11. I Can't Help It (feat. Dee Dee Bridgewater)
(2:50) 12. Bo Masekela

New Album from Trumpet Phenom that blends Soul, Jazz and Funk. Produced by and Featuring the Legendary Dee Dee Bridgewater. Plus Special Guests Stefon Harris and Roy Hargrove. Enter the AfroPhysicist trumpeter/composer Theo Croker. Coming straight out of Leesburg, Florida by way of Shanghai, China, this bold young soul-jazz newcomer, grandson of New Orleans trumpet legend Doc Cheatham, is fortified by tradition with no lack of contemporary electricity to propel him into the future. His trumpet pops over rock guitars and roaring organs, floats on the ballads and bops along on straight ahead swing. Croker deftly bridges generation gaps on Afro Physicist, his first album for OKeh Records, produced by Dee Dee Bridgewater for her DDB Records imprint. On Afro Physicist, Theo's music literally shape-shifts without pause through twelve captivating selections; from the solo opening "Alapa (For Doc)"(dedicated to Cheatham) to the funk-rock furnace blast "Realize" to the dreamy "Wanting Your Love." 

The album includes three vocals sung by Bridgewater including the classic "Moody's Mood For Love," and Michael Jackson's "I Can't Help It," flipped here into a sizzling Afro-Cuban whirlwind. Afro Physicist also features vibraphonist Stefon Harris on a cover of Stevie Wonder's "Visions" and trumpet veteran Roy Hargrove performing on one of Croker's compositions, "Roy Allan." Theo will be touring the U.S. both on his own and with Dee Dee Bridgewater throughout 2014 including an appearance at the Newport Jazz Festival on August 1. ~ Editorial Reviews  http://www.amazon.com/AfroPhysicist-Theo-Croker/dp/B00HQUQQEG