Showing posts with label Hungary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hungary. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 16, 2021

Attila Zoller - Gypsy Cry

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:50
Size: 91.2 MB
Styles: Post bop, Guitar jazz
Year: 1970/2005
Art: Front

[2:40] 1. Wild Wild Wes
[4:05] 2. Another Kind Of Love
[3:57] 3. Horns
[4:46] 4. Meet In Berlin
[3:48] 5. The Birds And The Bees
[5:14] 6. Alicia's Lullaby
[3:45] 7. At Twilight
[7:58] 8. Gypsy Cry
[3:35] 9. Sweet Hustler

Bass – Reggie Workman, Victor Gaskin; Drums – Sonny Brown; Guitar – Attila Zoller; Piano, Electric Piano – Herbie Hancock; Tárogató – Lew Tabakin. Recorded at A & R Recording Studios, New York.

Hungarian-born guitarist Attila Zoller was perhaps the least-known guitarist in jazz to the general public. His 50-year-long career, which ended with his death in January of 1998, was filled with professional heights and the wide acclaim of his peers and bandmates, who included at various times: Joe Zawinul (back in Budapest), Lee Konitz, Red Norvo, Benny Goodman, Ron Carter, Tal Farlow, Herbie Mann, Herbie Hancock (who is the pianist on the this date), and others too numerous to mention here. This set is comprised of two dates, both of them recorded in 1970. Hancock plays both acoustic and electric piano. He was struggling to find his new voice after semi-leaving the Miles Davis band to go on his own; Victor Gaskin and Reggie Workman both play bass for reasons that shall be explained in a moment, Lew Tabakin joins on a track or two, and so does drummer Sonny Brown, who disappeared from the face of the jazz world shortly after these sessions. Produced by Mann, the music here is divided into two distinct camps: the "commercial" music as Zoller called it in cadence, music that was in some way accessible to people as jazz, and his freer music, the music that was inspired by Ornette Coleman and Don Cherry, two of his classmates at the Lenox, MA, jazz school. It hardly matters, however, because Zoller wrote all the material here. From his warm and breezy "Wild Wild Wes," which is a tribute to the late guitarist, and his open string chord voicings to the knotty electric charge of "Meet in Berlin" that features Hancock riffing away on the electric piano and trading eights with Zoller, to the gorgeous title track built on Hungarian folk melodies, Zoller's tone is always just on the soft side of raw; it is edgy and full of passion and pain no matter how smooth his chords or riffs were. He could go around edges but never completely round them off. On the funky "Sweet Hustler," which ends the album, Zoller's stinging runs turn around the entire harmonic structure of the tune, even though it's just a funky soul jam. He manages to move through the chord progression turnaround and slip the melody inside out, changing both harmonic and lyrical concerns from straight singing lines into modal intervals. This was Attila Zoller just doing his thing, and on Gypsy Cry he was at his best doing it. This album is a kind of groove-jazz masterpiece. One more word on the Collectables jazz reissues series, called the Collectables Jazz Classics. It's true that many of the titles in this series are lesser-known works, far from the standard canonic lines that make labels like Blue Note or Fantasy's original jazz classics or even Verve such trademarks. But that should matter little because the route Collectables has taken is to insure that very deserving recordings like this one or any one of dozens of others gets the decent presentation, good liner notes, and fine sound it deserves in reissue. In fact, Collectables is doing in its own way what may other labels should have been doing a long time ago: the research to seek out the finest and most overlooked records and get them out onto the marketplace at a price where they can either be reconsidered by those who may have overlooked them, found at last by the few that revered and treasured them in the first place, or discovered in the first place by an entirely new generation of jazz fans. Bravo. ~Thom Jurek

Gypsy Cry

Tuesday, August 7, 2018

Gabor Szabo - Gabor Szabo In Budapest Again

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:07
Size: 117,5 MB
Art: Front

(11:04)  1. Concorde
( 9:11)  2. Magic Mystic Faces
( 3:58)  3. Django Part 1
( 6:12)  4. Django Part 2
( 4:55)  5. Killing Me Softly
( 5:52)  6. The Last Song
( 4:44)  7. The Biz
( 5:07)  8. From A Dream

Gabor Szabo was one of the most original guitarists to emerge in the 1960s, mixing his Hungarian folk music heritage with a deep love of jazz and crafting a distinctive, largely self-taught sound. Inspired by a Roy Rogers cowboy movie, Szabo began playing guitar when he was 14 and often played in dinner clubs and covert jam sessions while still living in Budapest. He escaped from his country at age 20 on the eve of the Communist uprising and eventually made his way to America, settling with his family in California. He attended Berklee College (1958-1960) and in 1961 joined Chico Hamilton's innovative quintet featuring Charles Lloyd. Urged by Hamilton, Szabo crafted a most distinctive sound; as agile on intricate, nearly-free runs as he was able to sound inspired during melodic passages. Szabo left the Hamilton group in 1965 to leave his mark on the pop-jazz of the Gary McFarland quintet and the energy music of Charles Lloyd's fiery and underrated quartet featuring Ron Carter and Tony Williams. Szabo initiated a solo career in 1966, recording the exceptional album, Spellbinder, which yielded many inspired moments and "Gypsy Queen," the song Santana turned into a huge hit in 1970. Szabo formed an innovative quintet (1967-1969) featuring the brilliant, classically trained guitarist Jimmy Stewart and recorded many notable albums during the late '60s. The emergence of rock music (especially George Harrison, Eric Clapton, and Jimi Hendrix) found Szabo experimenting with feedback and more commercially oriented forms of jazz. During the '70s, Szabo regularly performed along the West Coast, hypnotizing audiences with his enchanting, spellbinding style. From 1970, he locked into a commercial groove, even though records like Mizrab occasionally revealed his seamless jazz, pop, Gypsy, Indian, and Asian fusions. 

Szabo had revisited his homeland several times during the '70s, finding opportunities to perform brilliantly with native talents. He was hospitalized during his final visit and died in 1982, just short of his 46th birthday.~ Douglas Payne https://www.allmusic.com/artist/gabor-szabo-mn0000184187/biography

Gabor Szabo In Budapest Again

Monday, January 8, 2018

Janos Varga, The Mediterranean Combo - Latin Fantasy

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:49
Size: 118.6 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[4:37] 1. Mediterranean Nights
[5:18] 2. Copacabana
[5:12] 3. Shall We Dance
[6:03] 4. Samba
[4:37] 5. Flamenco Flounces
[6:34] 6. Bacardi
[3:23] 7. When I'm Going To You
[6:52] 8. Castillan Hills
[4:32] 9. Fading Clouds
[4:36] 10. Sweet Dream

If you love the Latin/Mediterranean sounds of artists such as Oscar Lopez, Armik, the trio (Al Di Meola, Paco de Lucia, John Mc Laughlin) and other fiery acoustic players, you’ll really enjoy the legendary ex-East guitarist Janos Varga’s project recorded with his son Varga Jr. on second guitar and Zsolt Nagy on piano and Tsoukalas Hristos on darbuka. Entitled Latin Fantasy, the tunes exude passion and excitement while offering a melodic treat for the ears. Varga and Nagy also add some wicked hand percussion to the proceedings - in short, some amazing Latin and Mediterranean style music from a place you might not expect - Hungary.

Latin Fantasy mc
Latin Fantasy zippy

Thursday, December 28, 2017

Nikoletta Szöke - Moonglow

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:15
Size: 126.5 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[3:40] 1. I Wish You Love
[3:24] 2. My Baby Just Cares For Me
[3:40] 3. Moon Glow
[4:56] 4. Eu Sei Que Vou Te Amar
[5:16] 5. So Many Stars
[6:52] 6. What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life
[5:20] 7. Smile
[4:35] 8. Someone To Watch Over Me
[5:36] 9. All The Good Life
[4:20] 10. Day In Day Out
[4:06] 11. Teach Me Tonight
[3:25] 12. Let There Be Love

I was born in the city of Zalaegerszeg, on 8 May, 1983. I was only four years old when we moved to Budapest and I started my studies there. From my musician family, to my cimbalom player father since my birth I was surrounded with music and my talent showed in a very early age,however my life went to a different direction. Yet in Zalaegerszeg, I begun to go to kindergarten music but because of moving I had considerably long break, fourteen years. Thereafter at age eighteen after my high-school graduation exam it defined in me that I would like to learn to sing. At my first significant performance I met my future husband bassist József Barcza Horváth and thankfully through him I found the genre of music were I can express most of all my self: that is Jazz. He was the person who introduced me to my later singing teacher,the known and acclaimed Gábor Winand. Finishing Economy Technical College and External Trade Administration Department Qualification achievement I wanted entirely devote my self to singing. In this there was interference, I was studying at the Study of Music Art School and also at the same time at Loránd Eötvös University of Science Liberal Arts English and Russian department, nevertheless when I had to choose the decision was obvious. From thereon nothing could hampered that I want to spend my day to days with singing jazz and in big part because when I was learning singing I begun to perform as well. At first with Robert Szakcsi Lakatos trio and after with more and more combos. After three and a half years of study and continuous performances I applied to the Famous Monteux Jazz festival were they held the third voice competition in 2005 called Shure Montreux Jazz voice Competition were from all around the world under 30 years of age singers could apply. To my big joy I was invited to the only 8 semifinalist, where I came out as the first prize winner and also as the winner of the audience award. For me this achievement is not only important because it comes with prestige but because such artists (Barbara Hendricks, Randy Crawford among others) were judging me that I look up professionally with out any condition. In January 2006 I took part on Conference of International Associaton for Jazz Education (IAJE Conference) in New York, and I performed in Hilton New York Hotel and in the club of Lincoln Center, Dizzy's Club. My partners were: Gilad Hekselman, Israel (2005 Montreux Guitar Competition Winner), Harold Lopez Nussa-Torres, Cuba (2005 Montreux Piano Competition Winner) and Geoff Newman and Anthony Pinciotti from USA. In 2006 I won a scholarship, which can be given to three young Hungarian musicians every year. I am very proud of this scholarship, because the jury consisted of very recognized Hungarian musicians, Béla Sa-chi and Kalman Olah amongst others. I returned to Montreux as a performer with my beloved band - Róbert, József and András - and we made a concert on 30 June 2006 before Paolo Conte.

Moonglow mc
Moonglow zippy

Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Roby Lakatos & Bireli Lagrene - Tribute To Stephane And Django

Size: 167,4 MB
Time: 72:12
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Jazz: Gipsy Jazz
Art: Front

01. Djangology ( 5:30)
02. Tears ( 6:14)
03. Nuages ( 8:12)
04. Troublant Bolero ( 6:12)
05. Mr Grappelli ( 6:21)
06. Minor Swing ( 5:33)
07. Mimosa ( 6:30)
08. Nuits De Saint Germain-Des-Pres ( 8:17)
09. Stella By Starlight (10:08)
10. Cherokee ( 9:10)

Personnel: Roby Lakatos: violin; Biréli Lagrène: guitar; Vilmos Csikos: double bass; Renaud Crols: piano; Niek De Bruijn: drums.

The exciting meeting of two living legends of Jazz!

For the first time "The fastest-fingered fiddler in the world" Roby Lakatos is joined by "speed demon" guitar hero Biréli Lagrène for a unique tribute to Stéphane Grappelli and Django Reinhardt.

Both musicians performed in their youth with Stephane Grappelli. For this album they surrounded themselves with the superlative big band of the Modern Art Orchestra and by two first rate Jazzmen of the younger generation: thrilling drummer Niek de Bruijn and guitar sensation Andreas Varady.

This is an explosive tribute to Manouche Jazz with standards such as "Djangology", "Nuages", "Stella by Starlight" and "Nuits de Saint-Germain-Des-Près".
Roby Lakatos (1965) was born into the legendary family of gypsy violinists descended from Janos Bihari, “King of Gypsy Violinists”. At age nine he made his public debut as first violin in a gypsy band. His musicianship evolved not only within his own family but also at the Béla Bartók Conservatory of Budapest, where he won the first prize for classical violin in 1984. He has collaborated with Vadim Repin and Stéphane Grappelli, and his playing was greatly admired by Sir Yehudi Menuhin. Roby Lakatos is not only a scorching virtuoso, but a musician of extraordinary stylistic versatility. Equally comfortable performing classical music as he is playing jazz and his own Hungarian folk idiom, Lakatos is the rare musician who defies definition. He is referred to as a gypsy violinist or ‘devil’s fiddler’, a classical virtuoso, a jazz improviser, a composer and arranger, and a 19th-century throwback.

Biréli Lagrène (1966) was born in a traditional Manouche-Romani family and community and started playing the guitar at the age of four. When, at the age of eight, he covered Django Reinhardt’s repertoire, his relatives were already calling him a child prodigy. After having mastered the late great Django Reinhardt's Gypsy swing repertoire, the guitarist tried his hand at fusion jazz and rock. This exceptional and precocious talent took the jazz world by storm with his dazzling speed and phenomenal bursts of improvisation. Lagrène met some of the most distinguished jazz musicians on the international scene, such as Stéphane Grappelli, Benny Goodman, Benny Carter, Larry Coryell, Jaco Pastorius and Al Di Meola. Guitarists like Wes Montgomery, George Benson and Jimi Hendrix were his models. At once dynamic and lyrical, this sparkling musician is without a doubt one of the most prominent musicians of his generation.

Tribute To Stephane And Django  

Friday, September 1, 2017

Gabor Szabo - 1969

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:54
Size: 82.2 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 1969/1998
Art: Front

[2:42] 1. Dear Prudence
[2:46] 2. Sealed With A Kiss
[2:57] 3. Both Sides Now
[2:47] 4. Walk Away Renee
[3:43] 5. You Won't See Me
[4:03] 6. Michael From Mountains
[3:18] 7. Stormy
[2:34] 8. In My Life
[4:40] 9. I've Just Seen A Face
[2:27] 10. Until It's Time For You To Go
[3:51] 11. Somewhere I Belong

In the late '60s, many jazz artists were ignoring the rock and soul hits of the day -- when called upon to interpret popular songs, they stuck to their favorite Cole Porter, George Gershwin, and Irving Berlin standards and didn't see Beatles or Marvin Gaye hits as vehicles for jazz improvisation. But there were some jazz artists who didn't feel that way; Grant Green, Herbie Mann, and Charles Earland -- just to give three examples -- saw no reason why rock and soul tunes couldn't receive instrumental jazz makeovers. And on 1969, Gazor Szabo puts a jazz spin on popular songs of the 1960s, including "Walk Away Renee" (a major hit for the Left Banke), the Beatles' "In My Life," and Joni Mitchell's "Both Sides Now." Again, there were many jazz artists who wouldn't have touched these songs in 1969 -- they would have insisted on providing yet another version of "Our Love Is Here to Stay" or "My Funny Valentine." But Szabo acknowledges that worthwhile popular music didn't die with George Gershwin. The Hungarian guitarist doesn't always stretch out as much as he could on this album; at times, he ends a solo that probably should have lasted a few more minutes. But Szabo still deserves credit for bringing a jazz perspective to songs that so many other improvisers were ignoring. Produced by Gary McFarland, this 1969 date originally came out on vinyl and was finally reissued on CD in 1998. ~Alex Henderson

1969

Tuesday, October 11, 2016

Lena Horne, Gabor Szabo - Watch What Happens

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:06
Size: 82.7 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals, Jazz guitar
Year: 1970/2009
Art: Front

[4:05] 1. Watch What Happens
[3:09] 2. Something
[2:54] 3. Everybody's Talkin'
[3:45] 4. The Fool On The Hill
[4:07] 5. Yesterday
[3:30] 6. Rocky Racoon
[4:41] 7. My Mood Is You
[3:17] 8. Message To Michael
[3:39] 9. Night Wind
[2:56] 10. In My Life

The pairing of chanteuse Lena Horne and guitarist Gabor Szabo may seem incongruous on paper, but Watch What Happens! is an unexpected delight, capturing a soulfulness and sass largely absent from the singer's previous efforts. Producer and arranger Gary McFarland's candy-coated orchestral settings afford Horne the opportunity to step out of the elegant but often stuffy refinement of her classic LPs and let down her hair. Her vocals pirouette around Szabo's hypnotically funky guitar leads with the focused abandon of a child playing hopscotch. Keyboardist Richard Tee, bassist Chuck Rainey, and drummer Grady Tate contribute the supple grooves that highlight so many McFarland sessions, and the material is top-notch, including no fewer than three Beatles covers: "In My Life," "Fool on the Hill," and "Rocky Raccoon," the latter featuring the most purely joyful performance of Horne's career. [Watch What Happens! was originally released on Szabo's Skye Records label as Lena & Gabor in 1970.] ~Jason Ankeny

Watch What Happens

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Lena Horne & Gabor Szabo - Empathy

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:51
Size: 84.4 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz, Guitar jazz
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[4:06] 1. Watch What Happens
[3:12] 2. Something
[2:58] 3. Everybody's Talkin'
[3:49] 4. The Fool On The Hill
[4:13] 5. Yesterday
[3:36] 6. Rocky Raccoon
[4:46] 7. My Mood Is You
[3:22] 8. Message To Michael
[3:44] 9. Night Wind
[2:59] 10. In My Life

This is the sound track of the original "LENA & GABOR" by A&R Recording Studio produced during Oct-Nov, 1969 by SKYE Recording Co LTD N.Y. The original LPs went out of production in 1970. This album was used during the 1970's to demo hi-end speakers and stereo systems as the quality of it nearly the same as the Direct-to Disc recordings of that time. I recommend this CD as it is the same as my original SKYE LPs. ~Gregory K Lewis

Empathy

Thursday, February 4, 2016

Peter Horvath - Absolute Reality

Size: 128,4 MB
Time: 55:40
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz: Piano Jazz, Smooth Jazz
Art: Front

01. Absolute Reality (5:11)
02. Carla (6:55)
03. Escape From Oakland (6:04)
04. Nassau Nights (5:15)
05. Waltz For Ella (4:59)
06. Fake Out (5:03)
07. Miss You (5:12)
08. Sardegna (5:16)
09. Foreign Matter (6:02)
10. Braden's Song (5:39)

Hungarian-born pianist and keyboardist Peter Horvath performs with the who­is­who of jazz such as Victor Bailey, Lenny White, Arturo Sandoval, Randy Brecker, Marcus Miller, and many more. While he is a in demand recording musician on numerous albums his solo career has only seen two albums yet. His debut album Foreign Matter (1995) and his sophomore album Absolute Reality.

Peter has assembled for the recordings of his new album a great amount of luminaries Victor Bailey, Marc Van Wageningen and Larry Kimpel (bass), Ricky Lawson and Lenny White (drums), Dean Brown and Ray Orbiedo (guitar), Norbert Stachel (sax), Randy Brecker (trumpet) among many others.

Peter Horvath has composed all tracks, some in collaboration with Norbert Stachel. The album shows up with Absolute Reality. A funky horn arrangement in the style of Tower of Power or East Bay Soul is the launching platform for Peters' rocket like journey over the keys of his grand piano.

Carla comes smoothly like silk with Horvath's intimate Rhodes piano and Bob Mintzer on tenor saxophone. Escape From Oakland is without any doubt a tour de par force. All musicians perform with great speed without neglecting melody, arrangement and improvising.

On Nassau Nights Peter reveals his affinity for smooth jazz and the influence of Fourplay on his work. Elegant performance on Rhodes piano, a harmonic horn arrangement and Kenny Washington on vocals are clear pluses. Waltz For Ella fosters in the contemporary jazz realm, while Latin rhythm elements and Marc Van Wageningen on bass give this fast paced piece some pepper. The tune is dedicated to his daughter Ella Nicole Horvath.

When Victor Bailey on bass, Ricky Lawson on drums, Ray Obiedo on guitar meet Peter Horvath on Rhodes then Fake Out gets a big dose of funk. Norbert Stachel on various brass and flute delivers a fine garnish. Miss You walks the line between jazz and melody, a musical journey with a deep expression of sadness and missing, dedicated to his mom, Matrai Zsuzsa, a great Hungarian singer.

Sardegna is an ode to the Italian island. Elegant Rhodes improvisation and a brass arrangement in the style of EWF are the highlight of this tune.

Foreign Matter dives into the bebop roots and when Peter begins to improvise, it can get a fast and wild ride. Final tune is a solo piano piece entitled Braden's Song and dedicated to his son Braden Michael Horvath.

With Absolute Reality Peter Horvath has put his whole personality and passion into this work. An eclectic album of the deserving wider recognition category.

Absolute Reality

Saturday, April 4, 2015

Gabor Szabo - Spellbinder

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:11
Size: 82.8 MB
Styles: Post bop, Guitar jazz
Year: 1966/1998/2015
Art: Front

[5:25] 1. Spellbinder
[4:33] 2. Witchcraft
[2:43] 3. It Was A Very Good Year
[5:08] 4. Gypsy Queen
[2:24] 5. Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)
[4:04] 6. Cheetah
[5:25] 7. My Foolish Heart
[2:53] 8. Yearning
[3:31] 9. Autumn Leaves/Speak To Me Of Love

Released just six months after Gypsy '66, Gabor Szabo's second album as a leader (after leaving a sublime Chico Hamilton band that also included Charles Lloyd) remains one of his finest moments in the studio. Szabo utilized the tales of bassist Ron Carter and his old boss Hamilton on drums, as well as a pair of fine Latin percussionists -- Willie Bobo and Victor Pantoja. The groove quotient was very high on Spellbinder, maybe even higher than on later albums such as Jazz Raga or Sorcerer. This set is all Szabo, drifting, wafting, and soaring above all that rhythm; the track selection provides ample space for Szabo's highly individualized Eastern modal style to shine. The set opens with the title track, a snaky guitar masterpiece with plenty of droning strings and pinched chords that are followed by open string flourishes. Carter holds the entire band together as Hamilton plays in counterpoint to the percussionists. This is followed with two nuggets from the pop book of the day, the Coleman/Leigh classic "Witchcraft" and "It Was a Very Good Year." From the performances here, it's apparent that Szabo was deeply influenced by singers, and Frank Sinatra was at his pinnacle during this time. There's the emerging '60s psychedelic sound in Szabo's playing, but it is underlaid with bossa rhythms and swells. These tracks, while flavored with Latin and pop stylings, are gorgeous guitar jazz. Szabo gets back into his own mystic thang with "Gypsy Queen" (the opening droning moments of which the Doors lifted entirely for "The End"). Here the Latin rhythms and guitar go head to head, point to counterpoint. A pronounced yet elusive melody line propels a series of polyrhythms forward into an abyss of melody, mode, and frighteningly intense legato phrasing, leaving the listener breathless. He takes the edge off with Sonny Bono's "Bang Bang (She Shot Me Down)." Szabo sings here in his plaintive Hungarian-inflected English, and the tune becomes something other than a pop song, but a tome on despair and loss.

The funky "Cheetah" follows with gorgeous arpeggios, pointedly turning into chords of distinction as Hamilton rides the crash cymbal into territories unknown and double-times the band until it notches up the intensity. This set follows with one more Szabo original ("Yearning") and a trio of standards, with a heartbreakingly beautiful read of "My Foolish Heart" and a medley of "Autumn Leaves" and "Speak to Me of Love." Szabo's read on jazz in the '60s was brilliant. He embodied all of its most popular aspirations with a genuine spirit of innovation and adventure. Spellbinder is a masterpiece. ~Thom Jurek

Spellbinder

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Nikoletta Szoke - Golden Earrings

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:21
Size: 104,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:15)  1. The North Sea
(5:20)  2. En la Orilla del Mundo
(5:59)  3. My Romance
(4:57)  4. Golden Earrings
(4:41)  5. Overjoyed
(5:51)  6. Centerpiece
(5:24)  7. You Must Believe in Spring
(3:25)  8. 'S Wonderful
(4:25)  9. Like Dreamers Do

Nikoletta Szoke was born in Zalaegerszeg (Hungary) in 1983. She was only four years old when her family moved to Budapest and started her studies there. Although she had been born into one of the Hungarian gipsy musical dynasties (her father, Sándor Szoke is a noted cimbalom player), she didn't start learning music until the age of 18. She was accepted at a conservatory and became a student of the noted jazz singer, Gábor Winand in 2002. She started to perform right after her first singing lesson. After three and a half years of studying and performing she entered for the Shure Montreux Jazz Voice Competition held at the prestigious Montreux Jazz Festival in 2005. The competition was open to jazz singers under the age of 30 from all around the world. Nikoletta had been invited and was the winner of the first prize and the public prize, too. Chairing the jury was Barbara Hendricks and Randy Crawford was her deputy. Nikoletta started to take classical singing lessons as well in 2005 as a student of Júlia Bikfalvy, who had coached the soprano diva Andrea Rost to international stardom. In January 2006 she took part at the conference of the International Associaton for Jazz Education (IAJE Conference) in New York, and she performed both at the New York Hilton and Dizzy's Club at the Lincoln Center. In 2006 she won the Lakatos Ablakos Dezso Hungarian state jazz scholarship which is given to three young Hungarian musicians every year. Since the competition she has been pursuing an increasingly successful performing career. 

Her debut album, Golden Earrings was released by the Hungarian company, Gramy Records in October 2008. In January 2009 she also signed a contract with the Japanese label, Atelier Sawano, the latter launching in Japan A song for you, Nikoletta's second album on 17th of the same month. After the great success of "A Song for You" in 2010 she signs a five-album deal with Atelier Sawano. The first album of this contract, "My Song" is released in February. Nikoletta and the band launch the album at the Cotton Club, Tokyo simultaneously. In August she is featured as special guest at the Budapest concert of the extraordinary vocalist, tenfold Grammy-winner, Bobby McFerrin, where they perform a duet. In February 2011 her 4th album, "Shape of My Heart" is out in the stores. In 2011 this album becomes a best-seller at the label (http://www.hmv.co.jp/en/fl/rank/101/33/1/). In February 2012 her fifth album, 'Inner Blaze' is released.  http://www.nikolettaszoke.com/nikoletta_eng.php

Monday, December 22, 2014

Nikoletta Szoke - A Song for You

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:15
Size: 136,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:05)  1. A Song for You
(5:05)  2. Waltz for Debby
(3:42)  3. If I Were a Bell
(3:55)  4. Time After Time
(5:45)  5. Everytime We Say Goodbye
(3:29)  6. I've Grown Accustomed to His Face
(3:07)  7. Summer Night
(3:16)  8. Almost Like Being in Love
(4:05)  9. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
(4:29) 10. Just the Way You Are
(4:21) 11. Nobody Else But Me
(5:37) 12. Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most
(7:13) 13. The Look of Love

Nikoletta Szoke is a young Hungarian jazz singer with a pure, emotive voice and a bright future. Born in 1983 in Hungary into a musical Gypsy family, she showed talent at an early age. She found and began singing jazz after high school, and in 2005 won the first prize and the public prize in the Shure Montreux Jazz Voice Competition. A label that searches for new talent far and wide, Atelier Sawano is now introducing her to jazz fans in Japan and beyond. Following her self-produced debut CD, Golden Earrings, comes a full-fledged new album produced for Atelier Sawano by the late Klaus Weiss, a superb German drummer who helped create many of Sawano's great jazz albums. Szoke is also aided by Weiss' frequent partner and bassist Thomas Stabenow, and a fellow Hungarian and wonderful pianist Robert Lakatos. 

Those familiar with the Sawano discography will realize that this is indeed a superb piano trio! Such talented and experienced musicians, however, do not seem to faze Szoke, who is undoubtedly the star of this recording. Unlike her previous album that reflected her eclectic musical interests, she sticks mostly to standards (except for the title song by Leon Russell and "Just The Way You Are" by Billy Joel), and she sings and swings them confidently.
http://www.eastwindimport.com/product-info.asp?ProductId=972

Personnel:  Nikoletta Szoke (vocal); Robert Lakatos (piano); Thomas Stabenow (bass); Klaus Weiss (drums).

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Ferenc Nemeth & Attila Laszlo - Bridges Of Souls (Feat. Jimmy Haslip, Russell Ferrante)

Size: 140,7 MB
Time: 60:17
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz: Contemporary Jazz
Label: Dreamers Collective Records
Art: Front

01. Bridge Of Souls (6:19)
02. Downhill (6:26)
03. The Untouchable Number (4:44)
04. It's Already That (6:23)
05. Sounds Of My Heart (5:37)
06. Dance (4:46)
07. Alone (Feat. Charlie Horvath) (4:50)
08. Magic City (6:40)
09. Little Heart (Feat. Lara Bello) (4:44)
10. Creep (6:06)
11. Missing You (3:36)

With a propensity for chord dynamics and ingenuity, Bridges of Souls features the versatility of drummer Ferenc Nemeth and guitarist Attila László. The pair's compositions establish a rhythm which keeps the music moving in a state of flux. Joining Nemeth and László are pianist Russell Ferrante and bassist Jimmy Haslip, both longtime members of the Yellowjackets.

Atmospheric and melodically pleasing, the title track is finely finessed, introducing audiences to the duo's terms of synchronicity as they create flowing phrases which build effortlessly, moving along a lithesome rhythm. "Downhill" is clad with bopping grooves and chord dynamics penned in the language of jazz improvisation as the reggae beats of "Alone" buffer the raw, gravelly vocals of Hungarian singer Charlie Horvath.

The nimble movements of Ferrante's keys in "Magic City" quilt a pattern of trickling notes as László's guitar chords loop around the sparkling droplets. Ferrante's cruising keys sustain a contemplative feel in "Little Heart" as the soft vocals of Spanish singer Lara Bello weld a reflective vibe making for a bluesy pop fusion. The duo's performance of Radiohead's pop hit "Creep" takes liberties by infusing a bluesy funk texture into the melody, and switches to a relaxing meditative mood in "Missing You," which is kindled by soft sonic glimmers and ethereal-sounding chords.

Ferenc Nemeth and Attila László expand the breadth of jazz fusion, blending pop music with shades of blues, funk, and improvisation. Bridges of Souls is a product of Nemeth's and László's personalities, asserting their proclivity for honing chord dynamics and ingenuity. Their music embraces the principles of jazz, creating compositions that have a sparse script and depend on the musicians' ingenuity to fill in spaces. ~By Susan Francesny

Musicians:
Ferenc Nemeth - drums, Attila László - guitar, Russell Ferrante - piano and keyboards, Jimmy Haslip - bass, Charlie Horvath - vocals on "Alone," Lara Bello on "Little Heart"

Bridges Of Souls

Monday, October 20, 2014

Gabor Szabo - His Great Hits

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 81:02
Size: 185.5 MB
Styles: Post bop, Crossover jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[ 5:05] 1. Sophisticated Wheels
[ 4:43] 2. Simpatico
[ 5:27] 3. My Foolish Heart
[ 3:02] 4. Twelve-Thirty (Girls Are Coming To The Canyon)
[ 3:10] 5. Krishna
[ 4:24] 6. Mountain Heir
[ 7:01] 7. Gypsy '66 (Lady Gábor)
[ 3:14] 8. Evil Eye
[ 3:21] 9. If I Fell
[ 2:15] 10. Spring Song
[11:01] 11. Lady Gábor
[ 5:21] 12. People
[ 2:07] 13. Search For Nirvana
[ 2:29] 14. White Rabbit
[ 4:38] 15. El Toro
[ 2:54] 16. Yearning
[ 6:37] 17. Space
[ 4:04] 18. Spellbinder

To date, this is easily the best Gabor Szabo sampler ever issued because it thoroughly sums up exactly five years of extraordinary creative curiosity on two LPs. Once Szabo had left the Chico Hamilton band -- though not leaving him entirely behind -- he got caught up in the whole 1960s idea of restless, eclectic experimentation. Yet Szabo fit in brilliantly; his unique tone and attacks gave everything he touched a signature sound, and his yen for hypnotic incantatory improvisations rooted in Hungarian folk music was made to order for the wave of Indian influences that swept the Western music scene then. There is Indian-tinged music here -- Szabo's overdubbed sitar playing may have been technically crude, but it added appealingly off-kilter microtones to his blues jams -- as well as small-combo jazz, big band stuff, Latin grooves, and show and rock tunes. The innovative Gary McFarland often turns up with intriguing big band charts or vibraphone work, presaging their later collaborations on McFarland's Skye label. Szabo the composer is amply represented by superb tunes like the lovely "Spring Song" and the Latin-accented "Evil Eye." The mysterious "Lady Gabor" turns up twice -- once with McFarland and the second time in a lengthy flashback to the Hamilton band of 1962. There were failures, like the hokey TV commercial-like version of John Phillips' "Twelve-Thirty," but it is more noteworthy that so many of these experiments worked. Given the shockingly bare state of Szabo's catalog, GRP ought to lift this entire collection of tracks for a CD reissue. ~Richard S. Ginnell

His Great Hits

Friday, September 5, 2014

Sarik Peter Trio - Jazz Request Show

Size: 153,3 MB
Time: 65:47
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Sex Machine - So What (4:49)
02. Allegro Barbaro (4:47)
03. Hotel California (5:36)
04. Ode To Joy (4:54)
05. Don't Give Up (4:46)
06. Theme From 'Mission Impossible' (5:47)
07. Lacrimosa (7:06)
08. Rehab (5:33)
09. Teardrop (7:15)
10. Can't Buy Me Love (4:34)
11. The Winner Takes It All (6:21)
12. Don't Stop Me Now (4:12)

The Jazz Request Show concerts began in 2010 and have been popular ever since. Every three months, we play the songs requested earlier by our audience. No matter what the original style or genre of the song was, we play a jazz version of it.

Peter Sarik, jazz pianist, composer, teacher
He was born in Cegléd-Hungary, in 1972.
He studied at the Liszt Ferenc Academy of Music, where he got his degree in 1997.
Throughout the years, besides the jazz he has proved himself in almost all genres:
he has played classical, popular, Latin, and world music.
Nowdays he’s leading his own Trio and workind together with several artists and bands.

As a composer, he has had huge international success: his compositions received awards in United States and United Kingdom.

Jazz Request Show

Friday, April 25, 2014

Micheller Myrtill - Save The Last Dance For Me

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:32
Size: 121,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:06)  1. Save The Last Dance For Me
(3:15)  2. With A Little Help From My Friends
(3:54)  3. I Love Paris
(2:37)  4. Mr. Paganini
(4:33)  5. Historia De Un Amor
(3:43)  6. Part-time Lover
(6:02)  7. Parole, Parole
(3:53)  8. Fever
(4:40)  9. If There's Any Justice
(5:27) 10. Careless Whispers
(3:30) 11. Hushabye Mountain
(2:54) 12. Sway
(3:51) 13. Brrlak

Myrtill Micheller has been a well-known artist in the Hungarian music industry for more than ten years and is now a household name. After graduating as a jazz vocalist major from the Franz Liszt Music Academy, she started her music career as a jazz singer and vocal coach. She has performed with many Hungarian bands and solo artists such as Tamas Hevesi, Erika Zoltan, Roy and Adam, United, Animal Cannibals, Zsuzsa Cserhati, TNT, Naksi & Brunner and Istvan Lerch. Myrtill also performed a singing-acting role in the musical production Dr. Bubo and lent her vocal skills to the move classic “Meseauto” (Dreamcar) with the band Escape. She is often a singer guest of the famous Hungarian group Benko Dixieland Band. In 2006 Myrtill took part in two remarkable international singing contests. Myrtill and her guitarist partner Tibor Pinter were awarded the top eigth spot among 55 competitors in an international singing-guitar duet contest in Germany. 

Using the same unique arrangement from the competition, they recorded and released the album “Same As You” (2006). The album was very popular and was nominated for a Fonogram for Best Jazz Album of 2007 by MAHASZ. In 2006 Myrtill performed in another competition at the Lady Summertime jazz contest in Finland and reached third place. Myrtill is also a well-known performer at many Hungarian music pubs, festivals and company events.In June 2007 she was listed as one of the 50 best young Hungarian artists by one of the most remarkable newspapers of the country, the Magyar Hirlap. Myrtill, who is also known as the star singer of the popular Hungarian television show called Szombat Esti Laz (Saturday Night Fever)and is a vocal coach of the famous national singing contest Megastar. Currently, she is also releasing her third solo album called “Save the last dance for me.” In addition to the usual instruments, the arrangement also includes a special whole rhythm section and a string-quartet. We also find the beautiful, well-known jazz evergreens with different, unique arrangements.   
http://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/musician.php?id=2720#.U1bWWlchElU

Personnel:  Myrtill Micheller – voice; Richard Revesz – piano; Tibor Pinter – guitar; Sandor Sarkany – bass; Peter Kaszas – drums; Gabor Szendi – percussion; Balazs Bujtor – violin; Erika Kovacs - violin; Tunde Varasdy – viola; Bela Gal – cello; Krisztian Kurucz – cello; Andras Jasz - alt sax; Csaba Deseo - violin

Monday, March 31, 2014

Veronika Harcsa & Balint Gyemant - Live

Size: 167,7 MB
Time: 72:24
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Jazz: Vocals
Art: Front

01. For My Lover (5:19)
02. Stop Haunting (4:53)
03. Time And Space (5:01)
04. Go On Swimming (4:53)
05. A Szomj (3:23)
06. Lifelover (4:58)
07. Moss And Lichen (4:41)
08. Play Me, Play Me (5:38)
09. Drive Into The Sun (5:22)
10. Nothing Left (4:41)
11. Glisten (7:09)
12. Lacs (5:57)
13. Red Baggage (4:02)
14. Saying No (6:20)

Graduated from The Liszt Academy of Music in 2008. Veronika founded her first own jazz band in 2005, publishing their first album „Speak Low”, covering jazz standards, the same year. In 2007 Speak Low was released in Japan to critical success, reaching the top of the vocal jazz charts at Tower Records.

Her second album „You Don’t Know It’s You”, was released in 2008 and included her own songs. This important second album followed the first one’s success, again reaching the top of the charts in Japan. In Hungary it became a platinum jazz album, and was awarded with the prestigious „Hungarian Jazz Album of the Year” title in 2009 at the Fonogram Gala. The song „Too Early” from this album was the most played song on MR2 radio in February 2008.
The third album Red Baggage reached similar successes in Hungary as well as in Japan, where the releases were followed by two live tours.

The Jazz Quartet includes Attila Blaho (piano), Zoltán Oláh (double bass), Bálint Majtényi (drums). Their regular guest is Bálint Gyémánt (guitars).

Parallel to her Quartet she is a member of the experimental and electronic music band Bin- Jip. Their first album „Enter” won the award for „Alternative Album of the Year” at the 2011 Fonogram awards. The music video for the title track was directed by Pater Sparrow.

The fourth album of the Quartet, will be released in May 2011, titled „Lámpafény” (Lamplight) and will be the first album in Hungarian language, covering works by 20th century Hungarian poets.

Veronika has performed at festivals and clubs in 20 countries worldwide. She is often invited to participate in renowned projects and regularly works together with Italian producer Nicola Conte.

Live

Monday, December 9, 2013

Klára Hajdu Quartet - Come With Me

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:04
Size: 147,5 MB
Art: Front

(9:25)  1. Overjoyed
(8:42)  2. Come With Me (Sicily)
(6:57)  3. Smoky Lights
(8:02)  4. Volt Nékem Szeretom
(7:11)  5. Jonathan Livingston
(5:09)  6. The Good Life
(7:35)  7. In Vain
(4:34)  8. Open Your Eyes
(6:25)  9. Lullaby

Klara was born on 3rd of June, 1982. She started her musical studies in a music preschool, after that came a music primary school and a music school. She sang in a choir and she learned to play the piano. Her parents, being fond of music, made her meet jazz music at a very young age. When she was 15 years old, she started to study jazz singing in Szeged at the HAMMIDO music school. Her teacher was Adrienn Szabó. At this time she started to sing on stage. After High-School in 2001 she won the first prize in the solo voice category of the SONY MUSIC & BRAVO Talent Competition.

Until 2005 she studied at the jazz department of the Dr. Lauschmann Gyula Collage of Jazz Music in Székesfehérvár. Her teachers were Kriszta Pocsai, Barnabás Pély and Noémi Kiss. Then she sang with many great musicians and bands. In 2003 she was among the best 16 singers of the Hungarian TV2 Megasztár 1. competition, the Hungarian version of Pop Idol.  Since 2004 she has been the singer of the famous Hungarian jazz band, Elemer Balazs Group. She sings with the great jazz singer, Gabor Winand. They have given many successfull concerts at numerous festivals in Hungary, Austria, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Germany, Serbia, Transylvania, Italy, Norway, Scotland and England. Their first collective album, titled Refracting Sounds won the Fonogram Award and thus became the “Hungarian Jazz Album Of The Year” in 2005. 

In 2007 they released their album, entitled “Early Music”, in which baroque music is mixed with jazz. In the winter of 2009 they released their latest album, entitled “Memories”, wich was nominee the Fonogram Award “Hungarian Jazz Album Of The Year” in 2010. Klara contributed with background vocals to many singers’ albums and concerts (Tisza Bea, Mujahid Zoltán, Rácz Gergo, Dobrády Ákos, Zentai Márk, Iván, Völgyi Zsuzsi, Bon-Bon…). Klara contributed with background vocals to many singers’ albums.  Her own quartet was founded with pianist József Balázs, bassist Márton Soós and drummer Balázs Cseh in the spring of 2008. She graduated from the vocal jazz faculty of the Liszt Ferenc Academy of Music Budapest in June 2009. Her teachers were Tamás Berki, Ágnes Lakatos and Irma Holczer. ~Bio  http://www.hajduklara.hu/bioen

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Tisza Bea És A Jazzmin - Autumn Leaves

Styles: Vocal Jazz, Bossa Nova
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:18
Size: 110,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:08)  1. Night In Tunisia
(5:15)  2. Peel Me A Grape
(3:03)  3. Orange Coloured Sky
(6:09)  4. Autumn Leaves
(3:56)  5. One Note Samba
(4:29)  6. Fever
(3:46)  7. Les Moulins De Mon Ceur
(2:26)  8. Almost Like Being In Love
(6:24)  9. The Shadow Of Your Smile
(2:51) 10. They Cant Take That Away
(4:45) 11. Reestimating Love

Bea Tisza is one of the leading female jazz vocalists in Hungary. She was born in Miskolc, Hungary. She studied classical piano for six years as a child, then she realized her devotion to singing, so after a short period of not knowing for sure what career to choose, she decided to apply to the Jazz Faculty of the Liszt Ferenc Music Academy, Budapest . For her parents' great satisfaction she also finished a course in Financing at the Miskolc University. She has performed with a lot of established Hungarian jazz stars, such as Gyula Babos, Rudolf Tomsits, and László Dés, and has recorded with Kornél Horváth, Klári Katona, Sándor Zsemlye, Charlie, Andrea Malek, Zsuzsa Cserháti and Gergo Borlai. She has contributed to several pop / jazz recordings and concerts as a soloist, backing vocalist, and composer. In 1994 she took part in Leslie Mandoki's "People" project. In 1995 she had a minor part in the Hugarian film hit "Sztracsatella". She won the Stella Artois Music Award in 1998 with the Kálmán Oláh Sextet. The same year she produced her first album of standards (Autumn Leaves), and three years later her second album came out titled Island. She took part in the shot of a Hungarian movie titled The Wayfarer (A Vándor). She is A regular Performer at Jazz Clubs in Budapest, and Also A Singing Teacher at the Faculty of Jazz Academy of Music.

Personnel Tisza Bea – vocals;  Gyárfás István – Guitar;  Gábor Cseke – piano;  Makovics Dénes - saxophone, Flute; Oláh Zoltán, Hárs Viktor - Bass Ferenc Csomós - drums