Showing posts with label Johnny Smith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Johnny Smith. Show all posts

Monday, February 21, 2022

Johnny Smith Trio - Easy Listening

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1958/2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:27
Size: 76,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:49)  1. When I Fall In Love
(2:50)  2. It Might As Well Be Spring
(2:22)  3. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
(2:34)  4. Black Is The Colour (Of My True Love's Hair)
(2:38)  5. Like Someone In Love
(2:47)  6. You Don't Know What Love Is
(2:55)  7. Isn't It Romantic
(2:09)  8. I Remember The Corn Fields
(3:03)  9. A Foggy Day
(2:45) 10. Scarlet Ribbons
(2:56) 11. People Will Say We're In Love
(2:34) 12. The Nearness Of You

Guitarist Johnny Smith will always be best remembered for his 1952 hit recording of "Moonlight in Vermont," a mellow ballad that also features Stan Getz. Smith, whose chordal-oriented style is self-taught, originally played trumpet, violin, and viola before switching to guitar. A studio musician from 1947 on, Smith's impressive technique and quiet sound made him in great demand even before "Moonlight" and, although he never had another hit, he was a popular attraction throughout the 1950s. After moving to Colorado in the 1960s he opened a music store, taught, and maintained a lower profile, occasionally recording in New York. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Easy-Listening-Johnny-Smith-Trio/dp/B001J8JTM2

Personnel:  Guitar – Johnny Smith;  Bass – George Roumanis; Drums – Charlie Mastropaolo

Easy Listening (2005 Remaster)

Monday, January 31, 2022

Johnny Smith - My Dear Little Sweetheart

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1960/2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:25
Size: 84,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:45) 1. My Dear Little Sweetheart
(3:45) 2. Indian Summer
(3:08) 3. Softly, as in A Morning Sunrise
(4:20) 4. All the Things You Are
(3:53) 5. It's So Peaceful in The Country
(3:14) 6. Once In A While
(3:27) 7. Flamingo
(3:06) 8. Spring is Here
(3:49) 9. Violets For Her Furs
(3:53) 10. It Never Entered My Mind

Guitarist Johnny Smith's career spans the decades of the 1940's through the 1990's. From the very beginning of his musical career he influenced the playing of other guitarists. In fact, many mention Smith as a major influence on their playing. The major guitar builders as Guild, Gibson, Benedetto, and the Heritage all have their signature Johnny Smith high end models as a tribute to this master. John Henry Smith, Jr. was born in Birmingham, Alabama in 1922 and was only five years old when he became fascinated with the guitar. His father played five-string banjo but guitar was John's first and lasting love. Initially he was frustrated by the lack of a guitar teacher or instruction manuals: determined to master the instrument, he taught himself to play. Many outstanding and individual jazz soloists have fallen back on the empirical method for the same reason as Smith and emerged with wholly distinctive sounds. In 1935 the Smith family moved to Portland, Maine: Johnny was 13 and good enough to play in local bands.

In 1942 he joined the USAAF (he was already a student pilot) and ended up in a band which needed a cornet player rather than a guitarist. In six months he had learned the cornet well enough to be given the position of first cornetist. After his discharge from the Air Force in 1946 he went back to Portland to play both guitar and trumpet on local radio as well as playing in clubs at night, but the pay was never very good. He went to New York to work as an arranger at NBC and in 1947 he became a member of the NBC orchestra. For eight years he worked with the orchestra as guitarist, trumpeter, arranger and composer.

Although he had been greatly influenced by Django Reinhardt and Charlie Christian at the outset (he learned Django's solos from record and actually met the Gypsy guitarist when he came to the United States in 1946) Johnny did not consider himself to be a jazz musician. Nevertheless, he made his first record as leader in March 1952, in the company of Stan Getz, Eddie Safranski, Sanford Gold and Don Lamond. One title from that date, “Moonlight in Vermont,” was a turning point in Smith's career despite its short duration. “Vermont” was made for the Royal Roost label (frequently abbreviated to Roost Records) and the company signed Smith to a long-term contract during which time he produced around 20 albums. Roost was later absorbed by Roulette which reissued several of Johnny's LPs. Most of the albums featured solo guitar or a trio; two backed Smith with strings playing arrangements the guitarist wrote himself. There was a great appeal to Smith's graceful, melodic treatment of superior tunes. Not only the record-buying public but hundreds of guitarists found the music entrancing. The dexterous fingering, the perfection of manner in which he ran chords and arpeggios, all contributed to the acclaim for Johnny's work.

During his tenure at Roost Records, he produced a long list of significant recordings that include the great quartet recordings: “The Johnny Smith Quartet,” and “The Sound of The Johnny Smith Guitar” among others. Also, during this period he made the “Man With The Blue Guitar.” This album, unusual for its time, has probably been transcribed more than any other Johnny Smith recording. Then there was the production “Annotations of The Muses,” on which Johnny Smith displays everything that made him a great musician and an extraordinary guitar player. Johnny Smith retired from the jazz scene in the 1960's to Colorado where he opened a music store. He continued to play in local nightclubs and made a recording with some local musicians “Reminiscing,” that showed he had lost none of the signature Johnny Smith style or technique. His last recorded work was the Concord Records CD “Legends,” in 1994.

The Johnny Smith Guitars:

In 1955, after discussions with the Guild Guitar Company, Smith designed a guitar and sent the drawings and specifications to the company. The Guild designers modified it (to Smith's dissatisfaction), and manufactured the resulting guitar as the Guild Johnny Smith Award.

In 1961, Gibson, went to meet the retired Smith at his home in Colorado Springs. Smith designed the guitar he wanted built. The design was accepted by Gibson with a few minor cosmetic changes which were acceptable to Smith. Gibson began production of the resulting Gibson Johnny Smith model that year. Guild continued to produce their Johnny Smith guitar under the model name Guild Artist Award.

When Gibson moved its manufacturing facilities from Kalamazoo, Michigan to Nashville, Tennessee, several of their managers and artisans chose to stay behind. Many of these ex-employees formed Heritage Guitars and bought the old Kalamazoo factory from Gibson. Given a choice between Gibson and Heritage building the guitar that bore his name, Smith chose to stay with the old artisans at the old location under new ownership. The Heritage Johnny Smith model was introduced in 1989. Like Guild before them, Gibson continued to manufacture their version of the Johnny Smith design with a new name: the Gibson LeGrand.

Fender Musical Instruments Corporation, of which Guild Guitars was a subsidiary, asked Smith if he would be willing to return his endorsement to the Guild Artist Award. Familiar with Schultz's management, and knowing that the construction would be supervised by master luthier Bob Benedetto, Smith agreed. The Guild Johnny Smith Award by Benedetto was available through Guild dealers until early 2006 when Benedetto left Fender. https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/johnny-smith

My Dear Little Sweetheart

Johnny Smith - The Sound Of The Johnny Smith Guitar

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:40
Size: 159.5 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 1961/2001
Art: Front

[4:45] 1. Come Rain Or Come Shine.
[3:20] 2. Gypsy In My Soul
[4:54] 3. Embraceable You
[5:28] 4. Misty
[4:04] 5. As Long As There's Music
[4:28] 6. Round Midnight
[3:20] 7. This Can't Be Love
[3:56] 8. Blues Chorale
[1:26] 9. Prelude
[2:42] 10. I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)
[2:20] 11. Let's Fall In Love
[4:58] 12. The Virus
[2:28] 13. Some Of These Days
[2:11] 14. You Took Advantage Of Me
[2:29] 15. Over The Rainbow
[3:37] 16. Out Of Nowhere
[3:33] 17. Prelude To A Kiss
[3:32] 18. Un Poco Loco
[3:01] 19. Hippo The Sentimental
[2:57] 20. It's You Or No One

When cool-toned guitarist Johnny Smith left New York for Colorado in the mid-'50s, he didn't hang up his guitar. He continued to play locally and make occasional trips back to the Big Apple to record. The two sessions included on The Sound of the Johnny Smith Guitar were the results of two trips in 1960 and 1961. Just about everything goes right on these sessions. Smith's guitar especially shines in the company of pianist Hank Jones, bassist George Duvivier, and drummer Ed Shaughnessy in the second set. There's a lovely, soulful version of "'Round Midnight," with a nice long solo by Smith (he even bends a blue note or two) and a shorter, though poignant one, by Jones. The band goes into overdrive for "This Can't Be Love," filling it with bouncy rhythm and sharp lead work. Pianist Bob Pancoast, bassist George Roumanis, and drummer Mousey Alexander join Smith on the 1960 session, originally issued as Johnny Smith Plus the Trio. As with the 1961 set, solid instrumental choices like "Some of These Days" and "Hippo the Sentimental Hippy" brighten up the proceedings. The band also bravely tackles Bud Powell's "Un Poco Loco," kicking it off with an extended, fiery drum workout by Alexander. In fact, the band doesn't join in until the last minute of the piece. Whether one considers the choice selections, good accompaniment, or wonderful guitar work by Smith, The Sound of the Johnny Smith Guitar is a lovely album and a good introduction to a fine guitarist. ~Ronnie D. Lankford Jr.

The Sound Of The Johnny Smith Guitar

Saturday, September 5, 2020

Art Van Damme - A Perfect Match

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:33
Size: 87,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:05)  1. Bye Bye Blackbird
(3:04)  2. In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning
(2:27)  3. Tickle-Toe
(3:45)  4. Gone with the Wind
(2:34)  5. Valse Hot
(2:28)  6. The Best Thing for You
(3:48)  7. Satan's Doll
(3:05)  8. Bluesy
(4:06)  9. Spring Is Here
(3:47) 10. Tangee
(3:15) 11. Poinciana
(2:04) 12. Nicollet Avenue Breakdown

Jammed with writing assignments this week, I spent yesterday working and listening to accordionist Art Van Damme. It makes no sense to tell you how much Van Damme swings, since all great jazz accordionists swing. What made Van Damme singular were his thick chord voicings and his groovy attack, which sounded almost vocal. So teaming with guitarist Johnny Smith on A Perfect Match (1962) was a brilliant pairing. Van Damme's meaty, sighing chords and Smith's ringing, bell-like guitar notes sound like five people instead of two. Van Damme was born in 1920 in Norway, Mich. He was classically trained on the piano and began playing accordion at age 9, performing regularly at a local theater. After his family moved to Chicago when he was 14, Van Damme added concerts for the Sante Fe Railroad between the Midwest and California. At age 18 in 1938, he became fascinated by swing and started a trio with accordion, bass and guitar. He was hired in 1941 for a few months by bandleader Ben Bernie and left to become a solo act before forming another trio this time with accordion, vibes and bass. Drums were added in 1944.

Van Damme's impeccable playing style and one-man band approach landed him a steady job with NBC Radio in 1945 a spot that lasted until 1960. Thanks to his ability to craft small-group arrangements on the fly, he played on more than 100 episodes of The Art Van Damme Show, a 15minute segment for NBC (I wish someone would haul these out for a fresh listen). He also appeared regularly on TV in the '50s on celebrity-hosted variety shows. His visibility on the radio in the post-war years inspired a generation of jazz accordionists. After NBC, Van Damme opened a music studio and store in suburban Chicago in 1960, moving to Northridge, Calif. in 1968, spending his spare time playing golf. From the 1970s on, Van Damme regularly toured Japan and Europe, where the accordion was a familiar instrument, Van Damme died in 2010 at age 89.~ Jazzwax By Mar4c Myers https://news.allaboutjazz.com/art-van-damme-a-perfect-match

Personnel: Accordion – Art Van Damme;  Guitar – Johnny Smith

A Perfect Match

Thursday, May 2, 2019

Johnny Smith - Legends: Solo Guitar Performances

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:03
Size: 146,7 MB
Art: Front

(2:20)  1. I'm Old Fashioned
(2:07)  2. Macho's Lullaby
(2:47)  3. 'Round Midnight
(1:30)  4. Wally's Waltz
(2:28)  5. Black, Black, Black
(3:02)  6. Golden Earrings
(1:33)  7. Romance De Los Pinos
(3:01)  8. Norteña
(2:12)  9. Maid With The Flaxen Hair
(2:33) 10. Waltz
(3:55) 11. The Old Castle
(4:17) 12. Sevilla
(2:21) 13. Cheek To Cheek
(4:15) 14. A Foggy Day
(1:12) 15. Tangerine
(2:19) 16. Sunny
(1:23) 17. Why Was I Born?
(2:36) 18. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
(5:22) 19. Tea For Two
(4:32) 20. The Man I Love
(1:42) 21. For You
(2:04) 22. I Hadn't Anyone Till You
(2:22) 23. I Could Write A Book

Despite the impression one could reasonably get from the cover of this reissue, these two guitar legends do not perform together, unfortunately. The next best thing are these solo sessions recorded almost 20 years apart. The first 12 items on the play list belong to Smith and capture his tasteful, clean sound coupled with complex chordal voices, which helped Smith in his adventures with playing classical compositions, including for the fabled Arturo Toscanini. Cuts that remind the listener of Smith's occasional classical foray include "Romance de los Pinos," "The Old Castle," and "Maid With the Flaxen Hair." But Smith was no slouch with constructing unique renditions of popular music. In 1952, teaming with Stan Getz, he made one of the best-selling jazz recordings of all times, "Moonlight in Vermont," which still sold well 50 years later. Van Eps was the master of the seven-string guitar, which allowed him to play his own basslines, well demonstrated on such cuts as "Tea for Two." The 11 pieces assigned to Van Eps reveal a predilection for highly rhythmic versions of well-known pop classics. Perhaps not as multi-faceted as Smith, he nonetheless had a fully developed style that approached the depth and complexity of Smith's. This can be heard on such cuts as "I Hadn't Anyone Till You" and "A Foggy Day." Besides which, he could and did swing. Although sideman on many a session, Van Eps left behind a relatively meager discography as a leader. These solo offerings are among his best. Although the styles of these two guitarists may go down different paths, their excellent technical skills, fully elevated imagination, and sensitivity to what they play clearly establish them among the elite of guitar players, true legends indeed. Recommended. ~ Dave Nathan https://www.allmusic.com/album/legends-solo-guitar-performances-mw0000118935

Personnel:  Guitar – George Van Eps (tracks: 13 1o 23), Johnny Smith (tracks: 1 to 12).

Legends:Solo Guitar Performances

Monday, October 10, 2016

Johnny Smith - San Francisco Bay Jazz

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:26
Size: 120.0 MB
Styles: Vocal, Folk-blues, Soul-Jazz
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[3:18] 1. I've Got You Under My Skin
[4:46] 2. Old Devil Moon
[5:37] 3. All Blues
[4:00] 4. Is You Is, Or Is You Ain't (Ma Baby )
[2:40] 5. Fly Me To The Moon
[4:50] 6. Mercy, Mercy, Mercy
[5:37] 7. There Will Never Be Another You
[4:47] 8. Come Rain Or Come Shine
[3:49] 9. Moanin'
[3:27] 10. More
[5:08] 11. Song For My Father
[4:20] 12. Deep Purple

Johnny Smith: guitar, harmonica, vocals; Mark Holzinger: guitar; Christ Justin: bass.

Johnny Smith may not be a musical household name, but his rural Missouri roots and Uncle Delaney and Aunt Bonnie Bramlett gave him some serious soul bona fides. Following a musical youth and a stint in the Marines, Smith returned to his second home of Southern California, skirting big fame, making smart and informed pop music. Now having relocated to the Bay Area, Smith has put together a vibrantly smart trio with guitarist Mark Holzinger and bassist Chris Justin. Smith contributes his acoustic Martin D35, harmonica, and the most expressive vocal capability this side of Joe Cocker. Smith sews all of these elements into a quilt with the Great American Songbook, and the results are beyond refreshing: they are elemental.

Smith recasts several Sinatra warhorses, repackaging them for a new generation. The opener, "I've Got You Under My Skin, and "That Old Devil Moon kick things off in style. Add "Fly Me to the Moon, "There Will Never Be Another You and "Come Rain or Come Shine, and you have a mini-tribute to the Chairman of the Board. These songs are all dispatched with the primacy of folk blues and the rustic all-American vernacular of Smith, scrubbing them so fresh that the listener may gasp. But this Sinatra homage is merely the cream. Miles Davis' "All Blues is given a down-home treatment with Smith's rural harmonica and Midwestern delivery. I will bet few people have ever heard Miles covered like this. The pinnacle of the disc is the trifecta of soul jazz: Joe Zawinul's "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy, Bobby Timmons' "Moanin' and Horace Silver's "Song for my Father. Smith's densely expressive soul brogue sends these songs over the top. Instrumentally, San Francisco Bay Jazz sounds like a California version of Le Hot Club du France, coupling Smith's acoustic guitar with Holzinger's electric. Justin holds his own with a left-handed 4/4, keeping all the pieces skipping along. The tipple point is reached on "Moanin' for all three instumentalists.

Recordings like San Francisco Bay Blues make writing about music a true pleasure. The stars are in line for Johnny Smith et al. and for us listeners also. This is an end-or-the-year pick for sure. ~C. Michawel Bailey

San Francisco Bay Jazz

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Johnny Smith - Moonlight In Vermont

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1952
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:06
Size: 101,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:26)  1. Where Or When
(2:42)  2. Tabu
(3:15)  3. Moonlight In Vermont
(2:33)  4. Jaguar
(3:05)  5. Stars Fell On Alabama
(3:26)  6. Tenderly
(3:10)  7. A Ghost Of A Chance
(2:42)  8. Vilia
(2:15)  9. Cavu
(2:47) 10. I'll Be Around
(2:52) 11. Yesterdays
(2:49) 12. Cherokee
(2:20) 13. Sometimes I'm Happy
(2:26) 14. Nice Work If You Can Get It
(2:30) 15. Jaguar [alternative version]
(2:40) 16. My Funny Valentine

This may be the greatest "forgotten" jazz album of its time. "Moonlight In Vermont" was originally released as the B side of a single in '52. Its lush, gorgeous, laid back groove caressed into life by Smith and Stan Getz made it an immediate radio hit and it was voted Jazz Record Of The Year by Downbeat. Over subsequent decades, "Moonlight In Vermont" and the eponymous album to which it gave birth (originally two 10" issues titled Jazz At NBC ) have gradually faded from view: Smith, a studio musician at NBC and regular performer at Birdland for much of the Fifties, more or less retired from performance in the early Sixties and his work has since been out of catalogue more often than it has been in. An uncannily symmetrical 52 years after its first release, Moonlight In Vermont must now be a strong contender for Jazz Reissue Of The Year. The sixteen tracks, recorded between March '52 and August '53, include the original eight with Getz and a further eight with Getz replaced by either Zoot Sims or Paul Quinchette. The music is meticulously arranged, the harmonic development rich and sophisticated, and the performances, particularly those of Smith, Getz and the "first choice" rhythm section of Gold, Safranski and Lamond, technically awesome; the up-tempo unison passages by Smith and Getz especially are jawdroppingly masterful.

Yet Smith never uses technique for its own sake. Throughout, his rapid fire single note runs (every bit as jetspeed as Tal Farlow's, but more sparingly used) and innovative chordal theme statements and solos (truly harmolodic inventions) are just there's no other word heavenly. Like the title track, much of the album is lush, gorgeous and laid back, but there is plenty of fire and energy here too. Still, gloriously and evocatively, in the original mono, the album has been lovingly remastered in 24-bit by Malcolm Addey. If you like Django, Charlie Christian and/or Wes Montgomery, do yourself an immense favour and check it out. Kinda Interesting Factoid : Somewhat unexpectedly, Johnny Smith is the composer of "Walk Don't Run," that massive, twanging, primeval rock 'n' roll hit for the Ventures in '60. The royalties allowed Smith to relocate from NYC to bucolic Colorado. His lifestyle gain perhaps, but our listening loss for sure. ~ Chris May  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/moonlight-in-vermont-johnny-smith-roulette-jazz-review-by-chris-may.php

Personnel: Johnny Smith (guitar); Stan Getz (tenor saxophone); Sanford Gold (piano); Don Lamond, Morey Feld (drums).

Moonlight In Vermont

Thursday, February 26, 2015

Johnny 'Hammond' Smith - Open House

Styles: Hard Bop, Soul Jazz
Year: 1963
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:09
Size: 159,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:35)  1. Open House
(5:23)  2. Cyra
(4:58)  3. I Remember You
(2:33)  4. Theme From Cleopatra
(6:56)  5. Blues For De-De
(4:37)  6. Why Was I Born
(5:46)  7. I Love You
(5:26)  8. Nica's Dream
(6:20)  9. Cleopatra And The African Knight
(5:44) 10. Bennie's Diggin'
(4:34) 11. Brake Through
(3:52) 12. Eloise
(4:30) 13. A Little Taste
(3:51) 14. Twixt The Sheets

The best organ jazz records fuse elements of gospel, blues, and soul together with the atmosphere of a jam session, as if a bunch of friends got together one night to toss a few back and play some tunes. Johnny "Hammond" Smith certainly has the right idea on the first of the sessions on this two-fer reissue; the instrumentation approximates that of Jimmy Smith's classic "The Sermon" but the music burns at a slightly lower temperature. Whereas Jimmy Smith punctuates tunes with great gusts of chords, Johnny "Hammond" Smith prefers to smolder behind, huffing and murmuring and occasionally taking a solo here and there. The presence of McFadden (who gigged with Jimmy Smith early on) and the fiery Thad Jones enlighten this session considerably, both taking memorable solos on a brisk "I Remember You". The others certainly don't embarrass themselves; Powell, a relative unknown, gets in a few good licks on every tune.

McFadden and Jones are missed on the second session, which features hard bop efforts from Virgil Jones and Person that don't really seem to fit the setting. Both are determined to leave no note unturned and often give the impression that they are trying too hard. The quartet does have all four wheels on the ground on steamy blues like "Eloise" and "Twixt The Sheets" (one of the best names for a song of this type ever), but pales next to the earlier group. However, the first session on this two-fer definitely makes this one worthy of acquisition. 
~ David Rickert http://www.allaboutjazz.com/open-house-johnny-hammond-smith-fantasy-jazz-review-by-david-rickert.php

Personnel: On 1-7: Johnny "Hammond" Smith, organ; Thad Jones, trumpet, cornet; Seldon Powell, saxophone, flute; Eddie McFadden, guitar; Bob Cranshaw, bass; Loe Stevens, drums; Ray Barretto, congas. On 8-14: Johnny "Hammond" Smith, organ; Virgil Jones, trumpet; Houston Person, saxophone; Luis Taylor, drums.

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Johnny 'Hammond' Smith - The Soulful Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:31
Size: 172.9 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Soul jazz
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[4:20] 1. The Sin-In
[2:43] 2. Stand By Me
[2:42] 3. Knock On Wood
[7:28] 4. The Soulful Blues
[2:42] 5. Ebb Tide
[3:32] 6. Summertime
[6:13] 7. Gettin' Up
[3:17] 8. The In Crowd
[8:37] 9. If I Were A Bell
[7:15] 10. Song For My Father
[6:41] 11. Speak Low
[3:44] 12. Unchained Melody
[9:02] 13. Nasty
[7:09] 14. Four Bowls Of Soup

Soulful Blues combines Johnny Smith's Ebb Tide LP from 1967 and Nasty from 1968 onto one CD of decent soul-jazz, albeit often sounding predictably like what you'd expect Prestige soul-jazz from this era to sound like. For Ebb Tide, Smith came right out and declared it in the liner notes: "I'm thinking more commercially and I don't care what the critics say." That meant covering soul hits like "Knock on Wood," "Stand By Me," and "The 'In' Crowd," presumably, in addition to throwing in standards like the title cut and "Summertime," as well as three Smith originals. So what does this critic say? Good job, Johnny! This is superior organ-soul-jazz with a feistier edge than much of the genre, evident right from the opening "The Sin-In," which has riffs worthy of a TV detective show and some fine stuttering keys from the leader. The feistiness in this combo is in large part down to drummer John Harris, who really bashes it out; on "Knock on Wood," for instance, he sounds rather more like a rock drummer than a jazz drummer. Prestige stalwart Houston Person is on hand with tenor sax, while Virgil Jones' trumpet lends the arrangements some good complementary color. In some respects this is more of the same as far as mid- to late-'60s soul-jazz goes, particularly in repertoire ("Summertime" certainly isn't the most imaginative cover choice), but there's a brash energy that makes it a cut or two above the norm for the genre. On the quartet session comprising Nasty, Smith was accompanied by a young John Abercrombie on guitar, Grady Tate on drums, and Prestige mainstay Houston Person on tenor sax. With the exception of "Unchained Melody," the musicians gave the tunes space, with all of the other five tracks clocking in at about seven to nine minutes. Yeah, in a sense it's more run-of-the-mill Prestige late-'60s soul-jazz: quite fine grooves, a dependable yet somewhat predictable house sound, and a reliance upon cover versions for much of the material (two-thirds of the songs, in this case). It's solidly executed, though, in a lean fashion that, to its credit, runs counter to the more excessive arrangements that were creeping into soul-jazz around this time. Smith hits a comely slow-burn groove on his version of Horace Silver's classic "Song for My Father," does a surprisingly swaggering and infectious job with the overdone "Unchained Melody," and gets down into his funkiest and bluesiest mode on the title cut, a nine-minute original composition. ~Richie Unterberger

The Soulful Blues 

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Ruth Price - Sings With Johnny Smith

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 35:00
Size: 80.1 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz, Standards
Year: 1956/2012
Art: Front

[2:38] 1. This Heart Of Mine
[3:33] 2. When You Wish Upon A Star
[1:55] 3. I'm Nobody's Baby
[3:22] 4. Sleeping Bee
[3:53] 5. It Never Entered My Mind
[2:09] 6. Wonderful Guy
[3:36] 7. Until The Real Thing Comes Along
[2:37] 8. Time After Time
[3:24] 9. Goodbye
[2:05] 10. Back In Your Own Back Yard
[3:17] 11. I'll Be Seeing You
[2:26] 12. Run, Little Rain Drop, Run

This album is a set of standards delivered by Ruth Price (who didn't make enough albums during her performing career), backed by Johnny Smith, one of jazz's eminent guitarists. Smith gained significant attention with his album Moonlight in Vermont, which Down Beat named as jazz album of the year, while Price performed in relative obscurity throughout her short career. Because this CD, originally issued by Teddy Reig's Roost Records, offers just a mite more than a half-hour's worth of music, each note should be savored. Price and Smith work wonderfully well together on tasteful arrangements played in an urbane, intelligent, and subdued manner. There are no pyrotechnics on this session. Their collaboration on "This Heart of Mine" rivals Sarah Vaughan's classic rendition. Gordon Jenkins' "Goodbye," with Smith's dramatic guitar and John Rae's softly stroked vibes playing in support of Price, is a highlight of the album. On "When You Wish Upon a Star," made popular by Ukelele Ike Edwards in Pinocchio, Smith abandons his chordal playing for a single string approach behind Price. While comprised mostly of slow ballads, the serious atmosphere is relieved from time to time with an upbeat number, such as "Time after Time" and a bouncy "Back in Your Own Back Yard," done with swinging merriment. Not blessed with an overwhelming voice or great range, Price concentrates on her interpretive skills as she works her cool vocals with very good results. Price didn't record a lot during her career, but what is available is well worth having. ~Dave Nathan

Sings With Johnny Smith

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Hank Jones - Complete Original Trio Recordings

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 77:49
Size: 178.2 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[2:43] 1. You Go To My Head
[2:55] 2. Thad's Pad
[3:37] 3. Things Are So Pretty In The Spring
[2:45] 4. Little Girl Blue
[3:30] 5. Odd Number
[4:07] 6. We're All Together
[4:29] 7. Odd Number 2
[4:49] 8. We Could Make Such Beautiful Music Together
[3:29] 9. Now's The Time
[4:14] 10. Cyrano
[5:15] 11. There's A Small Hotel
[8:11] 12. My Funny Valentine
[5:51] 13. When Hearts Are Young
[5:33] 14. Little Girl Blue 2
[3:30] 15. Pretty Brown
[5:00] 16. Six And Four
[4:22] 17. The Party's Over
[3:21] 18. Have You Met Miss Jones

Contains all of Hank Jones' 1950s trio recordings as a leader. With the exception of an odd 1964 LP of ragtime music, Jones wouldn't record another trio session under his own name until 1975! Four bonus tracks have been added featuring the pianist in trios led by Elvin Jones, Aaron Bell and Charlie Smith.

Charles Mingus (bass); Max Roach (drums); Johnny Smith (guitar); Ray Brown (bass); Wendell Marshall (bass;) Kenny Clarke (drums); Art Davis (bass); Elvin Jones (drums); Aaron Bell (bass); Ed Thigpen (drums); Oscar Pettiford (bass); Charlie Smith (drums).

Complete Original Trio Recordings