Showing posts with label Emil Richards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Emil Richards. Show all posts

Saturday, August 15, 2020

Maui Jazz Quartet Feat. Emil Richards - Maui Jazz Quartet

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:29
Size: 128,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:48)  1. Ciao Bella
(7:01)  2. Yo Go Jo Po
(8:00)  3. Celesta #4
(5:21)  4. Calamari Blues
(5:25)  5. Malloreddus
(7:27)  6. Sheep Lie
(5:25)  7. Bettune
(6:34)  8. Cauliflower Ear
(4:24)  9. Turn up The Audio for Claudio

Emil Richards has been a first call musician in L. A.. as well as an educator for the past 50 years. He has performed on over 1800 film soundtracks and performed with many top artists and composers, such as Frank Sinatra, George Shearing, Quincey Jones, Stan Kenton, Frank Zappa, George Harrison, Ravi Shankar and many more. Recognized and acknowledged as one of the best percussionist in the music industry, Emil was inducted to the Percussive Arts Society Hall of Fame in 1994. The songs on this collection are all Emil's compositions and suggests to a critical listener Emil's mastery and sophistication. On this recording he has teamed up with three excellent musicians from Maui who have also travelled, recorded, and performed with world class musicians. Emil loves to spend time on Maui performing with this Quartet and doing clinics and teaching. https://www.fye.com/emil-richards---maui-jazz-quartet-aec.cdb5637289426.2.html

Jazz Maui, a program of Arts Education for Children Group (AECG) nonprofit organization, provides an opportunity for island residents, music students, aspiring and professional musicians, and jazz music aficionados to participate in or attend high-quality jazz music performances. Through festivals, music clinics and dance workshops, Jazz Maui provides a venue for student performers to establish connections with recognized professionals in music and dance. https://jazzmaui.org/

Personnel: Emil Richards - vibes; Brian Cuomo - piano; Bob Harrison - bass; Paul Marchetti - drums

Maui Jazz Quartet

Saturday, August 8, 2020

Emil Richards, Joe Porcaro All Star Big Band - Odd Men In

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz, Hard Bop
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:40
Size: 133,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:03)  1. Free Flight
(6:27)  2. This is the Moment
(7:59)  3. Blues for Royalty
(5:31)  4. Yo Go Jo Po
(4:00)  5. Turn Up the Audio for Claudio
(4:37)  6. Walking Proud
(5:31)  7. On Green Dolphin Street
(6:43)  8. Blues Machine
(6:12)  9. A Minor Affair
(5:33) 10. Hard Sock Dance

This band was assembled by Emil Richards (vibes) and Joe Porcaro (drums). Emil is a leading percussionist in the studios of LA and Joe is also a leading percussionist in the same area. They both hail from Hartford Connecticut and they have both worked the full gambit of music from jazz to classical and most things in between! The CVs of the band members justify the title of an "Allstar" big band: everyone has paid his dues, performing with the best of the best, and so as you expect this is a big band of great quality. 

The playing is crisp and clean and the solos a delight. The arrangements by the likes of Sammy Nestico and others are extremely musical and it is a real treat to hear them played so well. Today there are only a few working big bands. This wonderful music has become a hobby item for musicians, who earn their living playing in other genres, or it is played by musical educators and enthusiastic amateurs. For the latter group of players this album is an indication of what can be achieved when the charts are played correctly.More.. http://www.musicweb-international.com/jazz/2010/Richards_AIX80035.htm

Odd Men In

Tuesday, August 4, 2020

Emil Richards - Wonderful World Of Percussion

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:38
Size: 99,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:45)  1. Good Grief
(4:57)  2. Enjoy
(5:41)  3. Sheep Lie
(5:34)  4. Underdog Rag
(2:53)  5. Venezuela-la
(3:54)  6. Celesta
(3:28)  7. Alive in Five
(4:52)  8. Yo Yazz
(4:59)  9. Amos
(1:30) 10. Bells of Hollywood

Wonderful World of Percussion is an imaginative and innovative tour de force by studio great, concert showman and now recording artist Emil Richards. The pieces range from zany to romantic, played on percussion instruments that go from African rhythm log to xylophone. Richards gives full voice to the potential of each instrument and destroys the stereotype that percussion's role is to provide rhythm and texture. 

Instead, Richards' percussion pieces are alive with the melody and countermelody that one would expect from music written for any other group of instruments. Richards' works are clear expressions of his knowledge and interest in world music and jazz. https://www.allmusic.com/album/release/wonderful-world-of-percussion-mr0000927278

Wonderful World Of Percussion

Friday, July 31, 2020

Emil Richards - Emil Richards With The Jazz Knights

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:58
Size: 83,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:46)  1. Well I Didn't
(5:04)  2. Yo Go Jo Po
(3:22)  3. Marduk the 12th Planet
(3:22)  4. The Real Camille
(3:05)  5. Himalaya 5-0
(4:56)  6. Celesta III
(4:12)  7. Turn Up the Audio for Claudio
(5:30)  8. Celesta IV
(2:38)  9. Meet the Flintstones/ Merrily We Roll Along

Vibraphonist and longtime first-call Los Angeles studio musician Emil Richards whose playing graced countless movie and TV soundtracks, albums, and jingles died on December 14, 2019. Born in Hartford, Connecticut in 1932, Emilio Joseph Radocchia began studying xylophone at age six. He was soon attracted to the vibraphone after hearing Lionel Hampton. “My roots are from Hamp," Richards said in a 1994 Percussive Notesarticle. “I got all my early training from copying and playing along with Hamp's records, because he was the only one around at the time.” By the time Richards was in tenth grade, he was playing with the Hartford Symphony. He attended the Hartt School of Music from 1949–52, where he studied with Al Lepak, and after being drafted he played in an Army band in Japan, where he worked with pianist Toshiko Akiyoshi. After getting out of the Army Richards settled in New York and soon became a member of George Shearing's group, with which he stayed for three years. In 1959 he moved to Los Angeles where he worked with Paul Horn and Don Ellis, eventually leading his own group, the Microtonal Blues Band. He also worked with instrument innovator Harry Partch, toured and recorded with former Beatle George Harrison, and recorded with artists including Frank Sinatra, Louie Bellson,  Quincy Jones, Stan Kenton, Peggy Lee, Shadowfax, Nancy Wilson, Sam Cooke, Tom Scott, Marvin Gaye, Carly Simon, Phil Spector, Bette Midler, the Beach Boys, Frank Zappa, and many others.

Meanwhile, Richards became active in the L.A. studio scene, playing on everything from the original Flintstones cartoons to TV series such as Mission Impossible(he played the bongos on the theme song), Falcon Crest, Cagney and Lacey, and Dynasty, to movie soundtracks for such films as Cool Hand Luke, Jaws, Taxi Driver, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Batman Returns, Jurassic Park, Men in Black, Pirates of the Caribbean: the Curse of the Black Pearl, Star Trek, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Ghostbusters, Spider-Man 2, and the various Planet of the Apesfilms. "My ideal situation for a session would be playing the hardest mallet parts conceivable," he once said. "I like to go home exhausted from playing good, hard music. By hard I mean difficult, because it's a challenge. I love a challenge." Richards also prided himself on being able to come up with the proper sound for any situation, and he amassed a collection of over 350 instruments from around the world. Composers came to depend on his knowledge of world percussion when scoring films set in exotic locations. Richards, in turn, especially enjoyed working with composers who used instruments in creative ways. "On the movie soundtrack for The River Wild, Jerry Goldsmith wrote melodic figures for timpani and three RotoTom players," Richards recalled. "Having the timpani and RotoToms playing melodic lines together in octaves was really a good noise."

Richards said that one of the most important things he learned was to be selective about the instruments he used. "When I first started, I was very proud of all of these instruments I had collected," he told writer Robyn Flans in a 1985 Modern Percussionistinterview. "I had a tendency to pull everything out of the bag. I've noticed this happens to a lot of percussionists when they play live: They don't let eight bars of music go by before playing on a different instrument. They don't give one instrument a chance to do something. Naturally, if five instruments do work and they provide the colors and help the music, fine, but in most cases you can't really get going playing in a rhythmical context if you're trying to play congas and then jump to a shaker or hit a cowbell.” A longtime supporter of the Percussive Arts Society, Richards donated 65 of his instruments to the PAS museum in Lawton, Oklahoma when it was built in 1992, including his entire collection of Thai gamelan instruments and a Leedy "octarimba," which is similar in concept to a 12-string guitar in that it has bars mounted in pairs and pitched an octave apart that are played with a double-headed mallet. Richards also helped the PAS museum acquire other instruments, such as one of Shelly Manne's drum sets. (Those instruments are now housed in the Percussive Arts Society’s Rhythm! Discovery Center in Indianapolis.) In 1994, Richards was elected to the PAS Hall of Fame. Even while he was busy in the studios, Richards continued to do gigs on vibes. For many years, he and drummer Joe Porcaro co-led a group that was known both as Calamari and Contraband. Richards also did some composing, and his vibes playing and composing were heard to advantage on his solo album, The Wonderful World of Percussion, on the Interworld Music label. "I overdubbed all the parts, and I have as many as 25 overdubs on some tunes," he explained. "I did a piece I wrote in seven called 'Underdog Rag,' and besides playing the four marimba parts I embellished it with all kinds of kooky sounds. The album has some bebop, some straight-ahead vibes and marimba things, and some real fun stuff. I also used some of my real oddball instruments.” Other albums Richards recorded as a leader included Luntana (1996), Calamari: Live at Rocco’s (2000), Emil Richards with the Jazz Knights (2003), and Maui Jazz Quartet (2006). He authored several books, including Mallet Chord Studies – Chord Voicings and Arpeggio Patterns for Vibraphone and Marimba, Sight Reading for Mallets,Melody & Rhythm Permutations,Exercises for Mallet Instruments (all published by Hal Leonard), andWonderful World of Percussion: My Life Behind Bars,published by BearManor Media. https://www.pas.org/About/pas-news/2019/12/16/remembering-emil-richards

Emil Richards With The Jazz Knights

Wednesday, July 29, 2020

Emil Richards - New Time Element (Night Side) And (Day Side)

Album: New Time Element (Night Side)

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 1967
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 16:15
Size: 37,6 MB
Art: Front

(2:41)  1. Georgy Girl
(3:10)  2. Girl Talk
(2:51)  3. Call Me
(2:39)  4. Here
(2:13)  5. Theme From "The Sand Pebbles" (And We Were Lovers)
(2:39)  6. Happy Together


Album: New Time Element (Day Side)

Time: 13:01
Size: 30,2 MB

(2:17)  1. Sunny
(2:32)  2. Hot Fudge Sundae
(1:46)  3. Jimmy
(2:25)  4. Havah Nagilah
(1:49)  5. Take Five
(2:09)  6. Blues For Hari

A well-respected studio musician long based in Los Angeles, Emil Richards has been on a countless number of sessions, contributing his vibes mostly anonymously to recordings in all genres of music. He started playing xylophone when he was six and, while still in tenth grade, Richards played with the Hartford Symphony Orchestra. After graduating from the Hartt School of Music and Hilliard College (1949-52), he played in an Army band in Japan (working with Toshiko Akiyoshi). Richards later worked with Charles Mingus, Willie Ruff, Ed Shaughnessy, Ed Thigpen, George Shearing's Quintet (1956-58), Paul Horn (1960-64), Jimmy Witherspoon, Shorty Rogers and many others. In the early-to-mid 1960's, Richards co-led the Hindustani Jazz Sextet with Don Ellis, mixing together Indian music with jazz. He was also a member of Stan Kenton's Neophonic Orchestra, the Roger Kellaway Cello Quartet and toured with both Frank Sinatra and Frank Zappa in the 1970's. Emil Richards, who recorded as a leader for Impulse (1965-66) and Interworld (two CDs in 1994-95), owns over 350 percussion instruments and has long been interested in ethnic folk music although he considers his main influence to be Lionel Hampton. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/emil-richards-mn0000819595/biography

Personnel: Emil Richards - vibraphone, percussion; Dave Mackay - piano, organ;  Joe Porcaro - drums;  John Morell - guitar; Chuck Domanico - bass;  Chino Valdes - congas, bongos