Showing posts with label Kenny Wheeler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kenny Wheeler. Show all posts

Sunday, September 15, 2024

Vince Mendoza, London Symphony Orchestra – Epiphany

Styles: Post Bop
Year: 2002
Time: 62:18
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 142,6 MB
Art: Front

( 7:16) 1. Impromptu
(10:20) 2. Wheaten Sky
( 8:12) 3. Esperanza
( 6:03) 4. Ambivalence
( 9:06) 5. Sanctus
( 8:56) 6. Epiphany
( 7:44) 7. Barcelona
( 4:39) 8. Deep Song

In and out of print since its initial release in '99, composer/arranger Vince Mendoza's Epiphany represents one of the finest examples of orchestration in a jazz setting. While there have been other fine examples of large-scale blending, they have often simply retrofitted existing material, as was the case with last year's Promises Kept, where pianist Steve Kuhn's compositions were lushly interpreted by arranger Carlos Franzetti.

Mendoza is a composer in his own right who may not be known to a broader audience, but has been a favourite source for artists including Gary Burton, John Abercrombie and Charlie Haden since he emerged on the scene in the mid-'80s. He's also a well-respected arranger, having worn that mantle for artists as diverse as Joe Zawinul, Joni Mitchell and Bjork. So it's a good thing that Michael Watts Productions has seen fit to reissue this significant disc so that it can be revisited by a fresh audience.

Unlike some jazz ensemble-with-orchestra collaborations where clumsy transitions between the two do nothing more than highlight their stylistic disparities, this effort reflects Mendoza's views that all the instruments available to him are part of a larger palette. Consequently the entire affair feels completely organic and unforced. There are times when the focus is on the orchestra, other times where the ensemble is in the forefront, and still other occasions where the two meet on common ground. The integration is so seamless that one is often unaware of the remarkable way in which Mendoza shifts the emphasis.

Mendoza has used sequencers as part of the writing process in the past, something that remains evident even on his more recent compositions, where repetition of complex passages act as a backdrop for themes that are occasionally convoluted yet always memorable. But with the broader textures available from the orchestra, he is able to construct subtle rubato passages. On the title track, where the strings gently introduce the piece, drummer Peter Erskine finally and delicately establishes time as the ensemble gradually inserts itself and pianist John Taylor takes a well-constructed solo that seems to intuitively ebb and flow with the support of the orchestra.

And yet as complex as Mendoza's charts can clearly be, even when the meter is irregular, they feature nothing jarring or angular. The overall ambience is lush without being saccharine, tender without being overly sentimental, easy on the ears without losing the challenge that bears new experiences on repeated listens. A broader dramatic arc imbues the entire cycle; one might listen to individual tracks, but taken as a whole Epiphany yields an altogether richer experience. With only six albums to his name, Epiphany is an all-too-rare opportunity to hear Mendoza in his own element, focusing on his own compositions with the broadest possible range of available textures and an all-star cast of improvisers. A classic. By John Kelman
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/epiphany-vince-mendoza-michael-watts-production-review-by-john-kelman

Personnel: Vince Mendoza (composer, arranger, conductor), London Symphony Orchestra, John Abercrombie (guitar), Michael Brecker (tenor saxophone), Peter Erskine (drums), Marc Johnson (bass), Joe Lovano (tenor saxophone), John Taylor (piano), Kenny Wheeler (trumpet, flugelhorn)

Epiphany

Tuesday, July 25, 2023

Barbara Thompson - First Light

Styles: Saxophone And Flute Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:42
Size: 179,2 MB
Art: Front

(14:27) 1. The Tie Game
( 6:43) 2. Threnody
(11:57) 3. The Awakening - First Light
(10:03) 4. The Awakening - Second Light
( 4:48) 5. The Awakening - Daylight
( 6:23) 6. Miguel The Speed Freak
( 5:27) 7. Favela
( 4:17) 8. Esmeralda's
( 6:52) 9. Touch Of Blue
( 6:40) 10. Black Pearl

Tremendous lost work from British saxophonist Barbara Thompson a wonderful 70s player who didn't always get her due! The set brings together material from three different sessions, all nicely different really demonstrating the range of expression that Thompson could bring to her work as she blows tenor, soprano, and flute here all in the company of very different groups!

The set begins with a combo that features Peter Lemer on piano a nicely avant group that also includes Johnny Dyani on bass and Laurie Allen on drums, plus some cool wordless vocals from Pepi Lemer at points too on the titles "Threnody" and "The Tie Game". Next is a very striking large ensemble directed by Neil Ardley with Thompson in a very hip lineup that also includes Howard Riley on piano and organ, Henry Lowther and Kenny Wheeler on trumpet and flugelhorn, Don Rendell on reeds, Bill LeSage on electric piano and vibes, and even Norma Winstone on a bit of voice as the group perform the longer "The Awakening" suite of tracks.

Last is the Jubiaba group with Lemer on electric piano, Bill LeSage on vibes, Ian Carr on trumpet, Trevor Tomkins on percussion, and Derek Wadsworth on both acoustic and electric trombones! Titles from that group include "Miguel The Speed Freak", "Favela", "Touch Of Blue", and "Black Pearl". © 1996-2023, Dusty Groove, Inc.
https://www.dustygroove.com/item/152958/Barbara-Thompson:First-Light

Personnel: Ian Hamer, Kenny Wheeler - trumpet, flugelhorn; Henry Lowther - trumpet, flugelhorn, violin; Derek Wadsworth - trombone; Don Rendell, Barbara Thompson - saxes, flutes; Charles Tunnell - cello; Howard Riley - piano, electric piano, organ; Bill LeSage - electric piano, organ, vibes, percussion; Jeff Clyne - bass

First Light

Monday, December 2, 2019

Kenny Wheeler Quintet - Butterfly Flutter By

Styles: Flugelhorn, Cornet Jazz
Year: 1988
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:33
Size: 112,4 MB
Art: Front

(9:33)  1. Everybody's Song But My Own
(5:11)  2. We Salute The Night
(9:21)  3. Miold Man
(8:51)  4. Butterfly Flutter By
(8:23)  5. Gigolo
(7:14)  6. Little Fella

Recorded at a time when trumpeter Kenny Wheeler was playing regularly in bassist Dave Holland's band, this quintet outing with Holland, Stan Sulzman (who switches between soprano, tenor and flute), pianist John Taylor and drummer Billy Elgart features six of Wheeler's originals, some of which were written quite a few years before. "Everybody's Song But My Own" and "Flutter By, Butterfly" are probably the most memorable of the compositions but each of the performances (which feature consistently rewarding solos) are worth hearing.
 ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/flutter-by-butterfly-mw0000197545

Personnel: Kenny Wheeler - flugelhorn, cornet; Stan Sulzmann - soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone, flute; John Taylor - piano; Dave Holland - bass; Billy Elgart - drums

Butterfly Flutter By

Friday, October 5, 2018

Kenny Wheeler - Kayak

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:18
Size: 129,2 MB
Art: Front

( 7:21)  1. 5 4 6
(11:03)  2. Gentle Piece - Old Ballad
( 9:16)  3. Kayak
( 6:09)  4. Sea Horse
( 6:01)  5. Sea Lady
(10:29)  6. C Man
( 5:55)  7. C.C. Signor!

Jazz trumpeter and flügelhornist Kenny Wheeler was one of the most advanced voices on his instrument. Blessed with a full, lovely tone and an astounding range, Wheeler sounded equally at home in fiery free jazz explorations or softer, more lyrical post-bop meditations. Wheeler was born in 1930 in Toronto, Ontario, and began playing trumpet at age 12. After studying at Toronto's Royal Conservatory, he moved to London in 1952, where he gigged with swing and dance bands. He appeared with John Dankworth's orchestra at the 1959 Newport Festival and remained with that group until 1965. In 1966, Wheeler discovered free jazz, and, fascinated, joined John Stevens' Spontaneous Music Ensemble for the next four years. In addition, he played jazz-rock fusion with the Mike Gibbs Orchestra from 1969-1975, and joined Tony Oxley's sextet (along with free jazz giants like Derek Bailey and Evan Parker) from 1969-1972. Through the latter, Wheeler was invited to join German pianist Alexander von Schlippenbach's groundbreaking free jazz big band the Globe Unity Orchestra in 1970, an association Wheeler maintained for years to come. During the first half of the '70s, Wheeler played with Anthony Braxton, which became his primary focus. In 1975, he signed with the ECM label and recorded the well-received Gnu High, which established him as a solo artist of note; the following year, he left Braxton and joined the trio Azimuth. Wheeler turned out a series of excellent ECM albums, including 1977's Deer Wan and 1983's Double, Double You (that year, Wheeler also began a four-year run with the Dave Holland Quintet). Several more generally fine outings followed in the '90s, including the ECM dates Music for Large and Small Ensembles and The Widow in the Window (both recorded in 1990), plus other recordings for Justin Time and Soul Note later in the decade. During the 2000s and 2010s, he recorded several dates for CAM Jazz, including 2008's Other People with the Hugo Wolf String Quartet and 2011's One of Many with Steve Swallow. Wheeler died on September 18, 2014 after a brief illness. His final studio session, the Manfred Eicher-produced Songs for Quintet, was released in 2015 on what would have been Wheeler's 85th birthday. ~ Steve Huey https://www.allmusic.com/artist/kenny-wheeler-mn0000767652/biography

Personnel:  Kenny Wheeler: trumpet and flugelhorn;  John Rook: french horn;  Stan Sulzmann: soprano and tenor saxophones, flute;  Julian Argüelles: soprano and tenor saxophones;  Dave Horler: trombone;  Chris Pyne: trombone;  Dave Stewart: bass trombone and tuba;  John Taylor: piano;  John Horler: piano;  Chris Laurence: bass;  Peter Erskine: drums

Kayak

Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Bill Frisell - Selected Recordings

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:37
Size: 177,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:10)  1. Mandeville
(3:02)  2. Introduction
(7:25)  3. India
(4:22)  4. Singsong
(4:35)  5. In Line
(5:47)  6. Resistor
(4:49)  7. Music I Heard
(8:04)  8. Tone
(4:40)  9. Lonesome
(6:29) 10. Alien Prints
(2:28) 11. Hangdog
(4:44) 12. Kind Of Gentle
(5:01) 13. Closer
(9:54) 14. Sub Rosa

Whatever the musical context, guitarist Bill Frisell has always been a team player. From the edgy avant-garde of Naked City to the deeply melodic music of the Ginger Baker Trio and several wide-ranging groups of his own, he's proven repeatedly that he has the versatility and perceptiveness to fit into wildly different surroundings. His ECM work has for the most part been of the quiet, melodic sort. Since he last recorded under his own name for the label in 1987, he's forged onward with a more country/blues orientation on his own recordings. Some critics have slapped the term "Americana" on this new material, but Frisell dismisses the label: "People say this has come into my playing in recent years. I think it's been there all along." Perhaps so. Regardless, this set documents a fertile period during the '80s when Frisell was finding his own voice. In his solo recordings, Frisell prizes space and texture. The solo guitar piece "Introduction" (from the Paul Motian band recording Psalm ) has as much silence as sound. "In Line" (from Frisell's record of the same name) explores extremes of timbre and pitch overlaid on a solid, pulsing acoustic foundation. Then there's his work with saxophonist Joe Lovano and drummer Paul Motian. In trio or quintet settings, these players have a very rare kind of cohesion. Surely Lovano has developed his sound substantially since the '80s this material emphasizes his sure grasp of melody, but it lacks the deftness of tone and angularity of phrasing which he acquired in the '90s. But in some sense, the '80s were golden years for these players. They deliver some of their strongest, most memorable playing on these tunes. Frisell's work with trumpeter Kenny Wheeler (documented here on three tunes from 1984's Rambler ) has a sharper edge, more extreme in tone and color than the rest of the collection. Frisell plays here and there with effects to thicken atmospheric backgrounds and sharpen his crispy improvisations. You can hear the roots of his post-ECM music in the soft blues of "Lonesome" and the stretched, gossamer meanderings of "Alien Prints." Just in case you thought you had Frisell pinned down, he tosses out "Hangdog," a punchy, dissonant fragment from the same record, 1987's Lookout for Hope.  The luminaries: Paul Motian, Joe Lovano, Jan Garbarek, Eberhard Weber, Kenny Wheeler, Joey Baron, Lee Konitz, Dave Holland, Paul Bley, John Surman. (Definitely in the big leagues.) The big surprise: Frisell on banjo on "Hangdog." He turns the instrument inside out and it works. (Note: this disc represents the fifth volume of :rarum, a series of artist-picked compilations from ECM Records. It comes with brief notes by the artists, an extensive biography, and discographical information.) ~ AAJ Staff https://www.allaboutjazz.com/rarum-selected-recordings-of-bill-frisell-bill-frisell-ecm-records-review-by-aaj-staff.php

Personnel: Bill Frisell: guitars, banjo, guitar synth; Joe Lovano: ts; Billy Drewes: as; Ed Schuller: b; Paul Motian: d; Jan Garbarek: ss; Eberhard Weber: b; Michael DiPasqua: d; Kenny Wheeler: tpt, ct; Bob Stewart: tuba; Jerome Harris: bg; Hank Roberts: cello; Kermit Driscoll: bg; Joe Baron: d; Lee Konitz: as; Dave Holland: b; Paul Bley: p; John Surman: ss; Jamie McCarthy: recorder; Roger Heaton: cl; Alexander Balanescu: v; Martin Allen: vb; John White: p; Gavin Bryars: b.

Selected Recordings

Tuesday, July 3, 2018

Phil Woods - Floresta Canto

Styles: Clarinet, Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1975
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:10
Size: 110,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:57)  1. Canto De Ossanha (Let Go)
(4:01)  2. Let Me
(4:23)  3. O Morro
(8:57)  4. Chaldean Prayer
(3:57)  5. Sails
(4:25)  6. Roses
(4:17)  7. Without You
(5:08)  8. Portrait Of Julia
(4:16)  9. Jesse
(2:44) 10. Menino Das Laranjas

At first glance, this LP by Phil Woods might appear to be a rather easily dismissed commercial affair, but just eyeballing a record jacket can be deceiving. Woods' conception of a large orchestra performing bossa novas was realized through his collaboration with Chris Gunning and his orchestra during a trip to England in 1976; what is surprising is that this recording, sometimes with strings and backing vocals, was done completely without any overdubs. Gunning and Woods both contributed arrangements and orchestrations. Another treat is hearing Woods on soprano sax, an instrument he has used sporadically on recordings, on both the opening track, "Canto de Ossanha (Let Go)," and Gunning's "Chaldean Prayer." Woods is also in top form on his main instrument, alto sax, which he plays on most of the rest of the tracks. Keyboardist Gordon Beck (who had previously worked with Phil Woods & His European Rhythm Machine), trumpeter Kenny Wheeler, and saxophonist Tony Coe are among the most notable names in the musicians present. Although both the strings and the backing vocals grow tiresome over time, the effort put into the production of this LP is still rather impressive. Not a likely candidate for reissue, but this long out of print record should still be relatively easy to find.~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/floresta-canto-mw0000885153

Personnel:  Phil Woods - Arranger, Clarinet, Composer, Orchestration, Sax (Alto), Sax (Soprano);  Chris Gunning - Arranger, Conductor, Orchestration;  Gordon Beck - Keyboards;  Alf Bigden - Drums;  Tony Carr - Marimba, Timbales;  Tony Coe - Sax (Tenor), Saxophone;  Bob Efford - Sax (Baritone), Saxophone;  Tony Fisher - Trumpet;  Louis Jardim - Percussion;  Robin Jones - Percussion;  Chris Karan - Chimes, Clavichord, Drums;  Dave Markee - Bass, Bass (Electric);  Nat Peck - Trombone;  Chris Pyne - Trombone;  Jack Rothstein - Concert Master, Violin;  Darryl Runswick - Bass, Bass (Electric);  Stan Sulzmann - Saxophone;  Tony Uter - Congas, Percussion;  Kenny Wheeler - Trumpet;  Roy Wilox - Flute.

Floresta Canto

Thursday, May 10, 2018

Ronnie Scott & The Band - Live at Ronnie Scott's

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1969
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:21
Size: 108,6 MB
Art: Front

( 4:37)  1. Recorda me (Remember me)
( 6:49)  2. King Pete
( 7:22)  3. Second Question
( 6:30)  4. Marmasita
( 6:19)  5. Too late, Too late
( 5:10)  6. Lord of the Reedy River
(10:32)  7. Macumba

Ronnie Scott is something of a jazz legend here in the UK, though ironically, his iconic status has little to do with his musicianship, and more to do with the fact that he was an affable entrepreneur with a penchant for memorable one-liners who ran a famous andï very hip London jazz club. The great thing about this reissue is that it reminds us what a talented tenor saxophonist he was. Recorded live in 1968 at Scott’s eponymous club, this CD features an effervescent big band comprising Brit jazz luminaries (but then young lions) Kenny Wheeler, John Surman, Tony Oxley and Gordon Beck. The arrangements, some of which were supplied by US sax man Joe Henderson, who was in Britain in late ’68, are superb, with more swing than a Sugar Ray left hook. Kenny Wheeler’s Second Question, a stupendous organ-led workout, is one of the main highlights along with sinewy Latin grooves such as Marmasita and Ricorda Me. The original album, deleted years ago and now coveted by collectors, is bolstered with four bonus cuts, among them tunes by Hank Mobley, Antonio Carlos Jobim and a tasty Scott original, May Day. Stuart Nicholson’s detailed sleevenotes feature interviews with some of the musicians. Excellent! http://recordcollectormag.com/reviews/live-at-ronnie-scotts

Personnel:  Tenor Saxophone – Ronnie Scott;   Alto Saxophone, Flute – Ray Warleigh;  Baritone Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – John Surman;  Bass – Ron Mathewson;  Drums – Kenny Clare, Tony Oxley;  Piano, Organ – Gordon Beck;  Trombone – Chris Pyne;  Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Kenny Wheeler

Live at Ronnie Scott's

Saturday, October 28, 2017

Liane Carroll - Up and Down

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:51
Size: 128,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:02)  1. Buy and Sell
(3:01)  2. What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life
(4:29)  3. Moanin'
(3:29)  4. Take Me Home
(6:11)  5. What Now My Love
(6:46)  6. Turn Out the Stars
(3:58)  7. Some Children See Him
(2:45)  8. Witchcraft
(5:33)  9. My Funny Valentine
(4:54) 10. Old Devil Moon / Killer Joe
(7:56) 11. Make Someone Happy
(2:41) 12. I Can Let Go Now

Liane Carroll is a much-admired British singer and pianist, winner of accolades including Musician Of The Year at the 2008 Parliamentary Jazz Awards. She has worked with musicians as varied as Sir Paul McCartney and Charlie Haden, while on this album her invited guests include tenor saxophonists Kirk Whalum and Julian Siegel, and Kenny Wheeler on flugelhorn. She already has a strong body of work to her name, but Up And Down might just be her finest album to date. Carroll's voice is superb bluesy, smooth, ballsy, cheeky, romantic, heartbreaking, and never less than honest. This combination makes Carroll eminently capable of performances of tremendous emotional intensity when the songs are upbeat and positive this results in moments of intense joy, when the songs are sad this intensity can be hard to bear. Aided by producer and horn player James McMillan and a roll-call of top British jazz musicians, Carroll draws out the full impact of these songs in some unexpected ways. The most surprising is her approach to "What Now My Love?" The opening Carroll singing over Mark Edwards' gospel-style organ with Whalum adding brief tenor phrases is in keeping with the song's usual sentiment, but everything moves up a few notches with the entry of Mark Hodgson's rock solid bass beat. As Whalum and Edwards add some funky and fiery riffs it's no longer a torch song, a cry of pain from a spurned lover. Now it seems from Carroll's bluesy but almost triumphant tone that she's engineered her lover's departure all along. "What now my love? A nice gin and tonic and a sit down I think. And good riddance."

"Buy and Sell" opens with the sounds of children at play, features electric guitar with an Ernie Isley vibe courtesy of Mark Jaimes and an electric piano solo from Edwards, and adds a vocal chorus courtesy of Carroll's multi-tracked voice. The result gives a fittingly late-60s feel to this beautiful Laura Nyro song. Wheeler guests on Bill Evans' "Turn Out The Stars," adding a starkly emotive solo to Carroll's poignant vocal. Carroll's singing on Tom Waits' "Take Me Home" and Rodgers and Hart's "My Funny Valentine" are two of her finest vocals. The emotional engagement of both performances is staggering. On Waits' ballad Carroll, playing some delicate and graceful piano phrases, makes a heartfelt plea to her lover that would melt all but the hardest of hearts. On "My Funny Valentine," Carroll, Edwards on piano and McMillan on flugelhorn give one of the album's most powerful performances: superbly stark and raw, it reaches into the song's heart to draw out the full poignancy of the words. Up And Down is beautiful. The song choices and arrangements are inspired, and the musicians are uniformly superb. Carroll is a singer of superb style, capable of projecting every nuance and subtlety of a lyric. What more is there to say? This is one of the finest vocal jazz albums to appear for many a moon. ~ Bruce Lindsay https://www.allaboutjazz.com/up-and-down-liane-carroll-quietmoney-recordings-review-by-bruce-lindsay.php

Personnel: Liane Carroll: vocals, piano (1, 2, 4, 8, 12); James McMillan: trumpet (1), flugelhorn (1, 2, 7, 9), celesta (2); Mark Bassey: trombone (2, 4, 7); Rob Leake: flute (2); Mark Edwards: piano (3, 6, 9, 10), Hammond organ (3, 5), electric piano (1); Simon Purcell: piano (11); Mark Jaimes: guitar (1, 12); Roger Carey: bass (4, 6, 8, 10); Mark Hodgson: bass (2, 3, 5); Steve Pearce: bass (1); Mark Fletcher: drums; Julian Siegel; tenor saxophone (11); Kirk Whalum: tenor saxophone (3, 5); Kenny Wheeler: flugelhorn (6).

Up and Down

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Kenny Wheeler Big Band - The Long Waiting

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:12
Size: 156.1 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[ 4:15] 1. Canter N.6
[ 9:48] 2. Four Five Six
[ 7:24] 3. The Long Waiting
[ 5:31] 4. Seven Eight Nine
[11:20] 5. Enowena
[ 7:55] 6. Comba N.3
[14:08] 7. Canter N.1 Old Ballad
[ 7:47] 8. Upwards

Kenny Wheeler: flugelhorn; Peter Churchill: conductor; Diana Torto: vocals; Ray Warleigh: alto saxophone; Duncan Lamont: alto saxophone; Stan Sulzmann: tenor saxophone; Julian Siegel: tenor saxophone; Julian Argüelles: baritone saxophone; Henry Lowther: trumpet; Derek Watkins: trumpet; Tony Fisher: trumpet; Nick Smart: trumpet; Dave Horler: trombone; Mark Nightingale: trombone; Barnaby Dickinson: trombone; Dave Stewart: bass trombone; John Taylor: piano; John Parricelli: guitar; Chris Laurence: bass; Martin France: drums.

While likely not the reason behind its title, The Long Waiting could easily fit for fans of the Canadian expat trumpeter who has lived in England since the 1950s. Since coming to Cam Jazz in 2004 with his duo recording with longtime pianist and fellow Cam Jazzer John Taylor, Where Do We Go From Here?, Kenny Wheeler has ramped up his output, releasing four more albums in the ensuing years. But all of the octogenarian's Cam Jazz recordings have been small ensemble affairs, and though he's collaborated with larger ensembles like Italy's Colours Jazz Orchestra on Nineteen Plus One (Astarte, 2009), it's been far too long since Wheeler released a big band recording solely under his own name—22 years, in fact, when Music for Large & Small Ensembles was released by ECM.

The wait is over. That eight players are back speaks both to their dedication to the music of one of jazz's most important composers of the past six decades, and of Wheeler's faith in their ability to bring his distinctive charts to life. Some—trumpeters Henry Lowther and Derek Watkins—go right back to Wheeler's first leader date, the 1969 Fontana classic Windmill Tilter, though any who follow Wheeler's career will find plenty of familiar faces in this brass-heavy, nineteen-piece big band. Perhaps the most notable newish face is Nineteen Plus One's Diana Torto. Like Wheeler's previous vocalist of choice, Norma Winstone, Torto possesses inestimable chops, but knows when to use them—and when to lay back. Here, her wordless vocals add distinction to the melody of the buoyant waltz-time "Enowena," navigating Wheeler's interval-challenging melody with ease as part of the larger ensemble, and delivering an impressive scat solo that more effectively distances her from Winstone's spare approach for one of The Long Waiting's high points.

Wheeler's writing is immediately recognizable, a kind of gentle melancholy dominating the melodies, even at brighter tempos. Most of The Long Waiting's eight tracks are new, though he does revisit "Coma N.3," a particularly heartbreaking ballad from It Takes Two! (Cam Jazz, 2006), but its larger palette here facilitating a build to more climactic peaks. It Takes Two!'s John Parricelli is not featured on this version, though his warm electric solos on "Enowena" and the fierier "Canter N.1," are just two more reasons why this veteran session guitarist deserves greater recognition. "Canter N.1" and a reprised "Old Ballad" from Kayak (Ah Um, 1992) also feature incendiary and softer solos, respectively, from tenor saxophonist Julian Siegel, whose work with Partisans and his own records including Urban Theme Park (Basho, 2011) have placed him at the vanguard of a younger generation of significant British jazzers.

Wheeler continues to focus solely on flugelhorn these days, but at 82 his technique remains impeccable, his signature leaps into the stratosphere still as accurate—and thrilling—as ever. Based on history and given his age, it's unlikely that another big band recording will be coming from Wheeler in another 22 years (though we can certainly hope). Still, with plenty of other projects yet to come, if The Long Waiting turns out to be the trumpeter's final large ensemble recording, it's as good a big band swan song as anyone could hope for, filled with resonant charts that brim with strong melodies, effervescent solos and a harmonic complexion that could only come from the pen and horn of Kenny Wheeler. ~John Kelman

The Long Waiting

Friday, November 4, 2016

Lee Konitz & Kenny Wheeler Quartet - Olden Times: Live At Birdland Neuburg

Size: 181,0 MB
Time: 78:18
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1999/2016
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Lennie's (Live) ( 8:09)
02. Where Do We Go From Here (Live) ( 7:34)
03. Kind Folk (Live) ( 8:32)
04. Thingin' (Live) (14:34)
05. On Mo (Live) ( 9:33)
06. Olden Times (Live) ( 4:21)
07. Aldebaran Play Fiddle Play (Live) ( 3:59)
08. Kary's Trance (Live) ( 8:54)
09. Bo So (Live) ( 6:12)
10. No Me (Live) ( 6:25)

This re-release of the 1999 recording Live At Birdland has been remastered for optimal sound quality and includes a bonus track not previously included on the album. Lee Konitz was born in 1927 in Chicago. When he was 11 years old, he received his first instrument, a clarinet, but later dropped the instrument in favor of the tenor saxophone. He eventually moved from tenor to alto. His greatest influences at the time were the Swing big bands he and his brother listened to on the radio, in particular Benny Goodman. He started his professional career in 1945, and played with all the greats, from Miles Davis to Joe Henderson. Kenny Wheeler was born in 1930 in St. Catharines, Ontario. He studied trumpet in Toronto and moved to London in 1952. Versatile artist as he was, he played free improv in the Globe Unity Orchestra of Alexander von Schlippenbach as well as jazz-rock in the United Jazz & Rock Ensemble. He passed away on September 18, 2014. Light shines on this rerelease, on the glistening vibrato of the alto saxophone, the lyrical melancholy of the flugelhorn, the spinning web-like weaving of the piano as well as the clever architecture of the bass. Everything joins into a shimmer mesh of interaction and strategy of technical brilliance and solo sophistication.

Olden Times

Thursday, October 27, 2016

Pepper Adams - Conjuration: Fat Tuesday's Session

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1983
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:12
Size: 160,5 MB
Art: Front

(8:08)  1. Conjuration
(8:19)  2. Alone Together
(8:04)  3. Diabolique II
(7:37)  4. Claudette's Way
(6:44)  5. Dylan's Delight
(7:44)  6. Dr. Deep
(7:16)  7. Old Ballad
(6:56)  8. Quittin' Time
(5:44)  9. Dobbin
(2:35) 10. Tis

The great baritonist Pepper Adams is teamed up with the adventurous trumpeter Kenny Wheeler and veteran pianist Hank Jones for this live quintet date. Wheeler, although often associated with the avant-garde, has never had any difficulty playing changes and his strong style clearly inspired Adams. Together they perform three of the baritonist's originals, Thad Jones "Tis," Wheeler's "Old Ballad," and the standard "Alone Together." ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/conjuration-fat-tuesdays-session-mw0000265496

Personnel: Pepper Adams (baritone saxophone); Kenny Wheeler (trumpet, flugelhorn); Hank Jones (piano); Clint Houston (bass); Louis Hayes (drums)

Conjuration: Fat Tuesday's Session

Monday, October 17, 2016

Marc Copland, John Abercrombie, Kenny Wheeler - That's for Sure

Styles: Piano, Guitar And Trumpet Jazz 
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:22
Size: 134,2 MB
Art: Front

(8:14)  1. When We Met
(7:49)  2. That's for Sure
(6:49)  3. Kind Folk
(6:08)  4. Soundtrack
(6:21)  5. Played Straight
(8:05)  6. Dark Territory
(6:46)  7. How Deep Is the Ocean
(5:13)  8. # 114
(2:54)  9. Neba

The Netherlands-based Challenge label has brought together three masters of the art of harmonious jazz. While overall the album leans toward the avant-garde side of the genre, these e three protagonists are wise enough to make their music sufficiently accessible so that the regular run of the mill jazz fan, as well as those more advanced, can get equal pleasure from it. Kenny Wheeler's "Neba" for example, is a lovely ballad where the trumpet plays slightly off center adding a little more bite to the ballad. John Abercrombie's pensive sometimes moody guitar adds a dark hue to those cuts he is prominent on. In some cases, Marc Copland plays a foil to that mood with his sprightly piano playing, a role he assumes on other tracks as well, like the sun breaking if not through the clouds, then through the haze. This contrast in temperament is apparent on the title tune, "That's for Sure". All but one of the items on the play list are originals written by one of the members of the trio. The other is Irving Berlin's "How Deep Is the Ocean". Throughout, the players create a musical vignette with each tune. Sometimes the depiction is meditative as on "Kind Folk" and there's probably no player around who is able to create a trumpet sound as Wheeler is able to do. Other places it's a bit, but not much more, lively such as on "Soundtrack". The bottom line with this album to write this is almost apostasy these days when attractive is considered passe this is very pretty music beautifully played by three highly skilled and sensitive musicians. Recommended. ~ Dave Nathan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/thats-for-sure-challenge-records-review-by-dave-nathan.php 
 
Personnel: Marc Copland - Piano; John Abercrombie - Guitar; Kenny Wheeler - Trumpet/Flugelhorn

That's for Sure

Sunday, October 9, 2016

Kenny Wheeler & The Colours Jazz Orchestra - Nineteen Plus One

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:32
Size: 157,2 MB
Art: Front

( 2:35)  1. Only the Lonely
(11:37)  2. All or Nothing at All
(10:05)  3. How Deep Is the Ocean
( 4:25)  4. Stella by Starlight
( 9:01)  5. I Should Care
( 8:42)  6. When Your Lover Has Gone
(11:20)  7. The Man I Love
(10:43)  8. W.W.


Following Kenny Wheeler's career can be a knotty proposition. Born in Canada, the trumpeter/composer relocated to Britain in the 1950s, becoming an integral part of its jazz scene. He recorded for Germany's ECM Records for over two decades, including the classic Gnu High (1976) in addition to his Azimuth collaborations with pianist John Taylor and singer Norma Winstone. More recently shifting his affiliation to Italian labels including EGEA and CAM Jazz, he's focused largely on small groups, though he's made a handful of albums for larger ensembles, including Music for Large & Small Ensembles (ECM, 1990). Regardless of context, the emphasis has always been on his own inimitable writing, making Nineteen Plus One a distinct entry in his discography. Collaborating with Italy's brass-heavy Colours Orchestra, Wheeler brings his densely modernistic harmonic approach to rearrangements of seven standards. From the brief fanfare of "Only the Lonely" to the more expansive "All or Nothing at All," "How Deep is the Ocean" and "When Your Love Has Gone" all exceeding ten minutes, with plenty of solo space for the Orchestra as well as Wheeler it's no surprise that, despite an unfailing allegiance to the essence of these enduring songs, they sound as if Wheeler wrote them in the first place. 

As if to hammer that point home, the disc ends with Wheeler's sole original  "W.W.," from Wheeler's quintet date Double, Double You (ECM, 1984) and later reworked for larger ensembles including Finland's UMO Jazz Orchestra on One More Time (Challenge, 2000). Contrasting UMO's more left-of-center disposition, Colours is a warmer, more centrist affair, swinging amiably through this and all of Wheeler's charts, with singer Diana Torto capably handling Wheeler's melody lines, originally written for Winstone, with equal aplomb. Wheeler's writing possess a characteristic melancholy; joining this one original with his standards arrangements further clarifies the distinctive touch found in anything on which he lays his hands. Saying that Wheeler's playing remains strong for a man in his eighties would be unfair; surrounded by a group of fine players including conductor Massimo Morganti, who puts his baton aside for a concise, plangent trombone solo on "How Deep is the Ocean" Wheeler's ability to weave lyrical lines with brief intervallic leaps into the stratosphere remains a stylistic touchstone few players half his age can match. 

Torto's lyric interpretations reference Winstone's less-is-more approach, though she demonstrates greater extremes in the thrilling duet with drummer Massimo Manzi that closes "W.W." Guitarist Luca Pecchia receives a moment in the spotlight during the intro to "I Should Care," solely supporting Torto before the ensemble enters to paint a broader palette, which in turn bolsters the guitarist's lithe solo and a particularly fluid feature from Wheeler. The material may be familiar, but the interpretations are completely fresh. Winstone's assertion that Wheeler is "the Duke Ellington of our times" is borne out by Nineteen Plus One. Few musicians alive can be recognized for their charts after just a few notes, or are as capable of making material recorded thousands of times their own within the space of a few short bars. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/nineteen-plus-one-kenny-wheeler-astarte-records-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Kenny Wheeler: trumpet, flugelhorn; Diana Torto: voice; Massimo Morganti: conductor, trombone solo (3); Simone La Maida: alto and soprano saxophones; Maurizio Moscatelli: alto saxophone; Filippo Sebastianelli: tenor saxophone; Enrico Benvenuti: tenor saxophone; Marco Postacchini: baritone saxophone; Giorgio Caselli: trumpet and flugelhorn; Luigi Faggi Grigioni: trumpet and flugelhorn; Giacomo Uncini: trumpet and flugelhorn; Samuele Garofole: trumpet and flugelhorn; Mauro Ottolini: trombone; Tony Cattano: trombone; Luca Pernici: trombone; Pierluigi Bastioli: bass trombone; Luca Pecchia: guitar; Emilio Marinelli: piano; Gabriele Pesaresi: bass; Massimo Manzi: drums.

Nineteen Plus One

Thursday, October 6, 2016

Kenny Wheeler - Dream Sequence

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:33
Size: 152,4 MB
Art: Front

(13:45)  1. Unti
( 6:29)  2. Drum Sequence
( 5:11)  3. Dream Sequence
( 9:35)  4. Cousin Mary
( 7:06)  5. Nonetheless
( 7:46)  6. A Flower Is A Lovesome Thing
( 4:52)  7. Hearken
(11:47)  8. Kind Folks

The latest edition to trumpeter/flugelhornist Kenny Wheeler's discography commences with variable pulses and emphatic horn charts on "Unti." But while this production launches with an up-tempo groove, the majority of this set simply corresponds to the wistful implications set forth by the album title. 

Recorded during several visits to London's Gateway Studio spanning 1995 to 2003, Wheeler performs solely on flugelhorn, along with a core sextet separating into duo, trio, and quintet consortiums. Simply stated, the great flugelhornist is a weaver of dreams! Featuring alto saxophonists Ray Warleigh, Stan Sulzmann, guitarist John Parricelli and others, the group delves into ethereally executed blues motifs and airy dreamscapes. Warleigh's misty flute work and Parricelli's mid-toned electric guitar voicings on "Nonetheless" propose a vibe that might suggest a trouble-free world. The dreaminess continues with a sublime quartet rendition of Billy Strayhorn's ballad "A Flower is a Lovesome Thing." Here, Wheeler's yearning lines bespeak a sense of solitude, marked by wraithlike overtones. Wheeler and his musical associates project a dirge-like momentum on "Kind Folks." However, they equalize the rhythmic aspects via positive intimations by quietly soaring skyward. In sum, the musicians project a velvety soundscape supplanted by warmly stated choruses and keenly articulated soloing spots. (Highly recommended...) ~ Glenn Astarita https://www.allaboutjazz.com/dream-sequence-kenny-wheeler-psi-review-by-glenn-astarita.php

Personnel: Ray Warleigh, alto saxophone & flute; Stan Sulzmann, tenor saxophone; Tony Levin, drums; Kenny Wheeler, flugelhorn; John Parricelli, guitar; Chris Laurence

Dream Sequence

Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Kenny Wheeler - All the More

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:03
Size: 144,9 MB
Art: Front

( 6:31)  1. Phrase One
( 6:00)  2. All the More
(10:14)  3. Mark Time
( 6:53)  4. Introduction to No Particular Song
( 9:36)  5. The Imminent Immigrant
( 6:04)  6. Nonetheless
( 8:24)  7. Kind of Bill
( 9:17)  8. Summer Night

Kenny Wheeler's gorgeous trumpet anchors these tracks, but also attracting attention here is the understated beauty and subtle adventurousness of John Taylor's piano. With that kind of combination in his playing, Taylor is a perfect match for Wheeler, who has straddled a few divides in his time. Much of this disc features the ethereal ECM-ish music Wheeler has made his trademark, but some of it harks back to Wheeler's earlier days as a pillar of the English "free music" scene along with John Stevens, Derek Bailey, Evan Parker, and another refugee from the edge, bassist Dave Holland. On "All the More" Wheeler plays with fire and resorts here and there to some of the expanded techniques that those musicians were and are searching for. Here, of course, such effects are thoroughly integrated into the fabric of conventional jazz form, so that they do not jar but add an emotional fire to the musiTo hear Wheeler's immense sound in full glory, don't miss "Summer Night," where it is washed in the ebbs and flows of Joe LaBarbera's drums but still comes through sharply, clearly, beautifully. ~ Robert Spencer ttps://www.allaboutjazz.com/all-the-more-kenny-wheeler-soul-note-review-by-robert-spencer.php

Personnel: Kenny Wheeler (trumpet, flugelhorn); John Taylor (piano); Furio Di Castri (bass); Joe La Barbera (drums).

All the More

Saturday, October 1, 2016

Kenny Wheeler & John Taylor - Where Do We Go From Here?

Styles: Trumpet And Piano Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:14
Size: 124,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:20)  1. Summer night
(5:03)  2. For Tracy
(5:01)  3. Mabel
(4:31)  4. Au Contraire
(5:25)  5. Cancer N.1
(5:56)  6. Squiggles
(6:44)  7. One Two Three
(5:12)  8. Where do we go from here?
(3:38)  9. Dance
(6:20) 10. Fordor

Over the past thirty years, pianist John Taylor has clearly been trumpeter Kenny Wheeler's accompanist of choice. Cerebral yet quietly passionate, intuitive and supportive, with a musical personality rooted in Bill Evans that has, nevertheless, long since evolved beyond comparative considerations, Taylor's ability to get inside Wheeler's often melancholic compositions is without equal. From big band records to intimate settings like this new CamJazz release, Where Do We Go From Here? , Taylor is the perfect foil for Wheeler, and neither have sounded better. Consisting of one standard, two Taylor compositions and seven mostly-new Wheeler compositions, this particularly warm recording finds Wheeler, always an inward-looking player with just the occasional flare for expressionism, in a particularly introverted mood. His tone is warm, and he avoids, for the most part, the signature intervallic leaps into the stratosphere that mark his more outgoing work. "Mabel" sits somewhere between the more rhythmically-informed version on Wheeler's '84 ECM quintet recording, Double Double You , and Taylor's more abstract reading on his own ECM trio release, '03's Rosslyn. By taking a technique often used more for effect and turning it into another musical expression of the instrument, Taylor opens "Canter N. 1" by plucking and strumming the piano strings in a way that is far more conceptually developed.

While the overall emphasis of the programme is on impressionistic chamber jazz, it is not all moody abstraction. The aforementioned "Canter No. 1" relies on a steady rhythmic pulse from Taylor, while even the darker Taylor composition "Dance" moves along insistently. Still, more open-time pieces like "Forder" and the poignant title track rely more on ambience and harmony than rhythm. All too often standards within a mainly original set seem out of place, but here Al Dubin and Harry Warren's "Summer Night," with its bittersweet and plaintive melody, fits in perfectly with the rest of the programme. What makes Where Do We Go From Here? such an outstanding recording is the remarkable empathy between Wheeler and Taylor. Years of performing together will typically build a good chemistry between capable players, but Wheeler and Taylor go beyond mere comfort into a level of telepathy that finds them completely attuned to each other. The two are so much a part of each other's playing that the smallest nuance, the tiniest phrase from one can spark a response from the other that moves things in another unexpected direction. Yet their responses to each other are so subtle, so graceful, that these unpredictable shifts feel completely natural, smooth and seamless. Wheeler and Taylor have a substantial shared discography and have explored intimate settings in the past on Moon , which found them in a trio with Italian clarinetist Gabriele Mirabassi, and Overnight , where they shared the bill with bassist Ricardo Del Fra, but never have they sounded so completely simpatico as on Where Do We Go From Here? , an album that clearly raises the bar for musical interaction by making it so delicate and elegant as to be almost elusive. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/where-do-we-go-from-here-kenny-wheeler-cam-jazz-review-by-john-kelman.php
Personnel: Kenny Wheeler: trumpet, flugelhorn; John Taylor: piano.

Where do we go from here?

Friday, September 30, 2016

Kenny Wheeler - Six for Six

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:01
Size: 132,9 MB
Art: Front

( 8:18)  1. Seven, Eight, Nine (Part 1)
( 5:06)  2. Canter N. 6
( 5:55)  3. The Long Waiting
( 8:06)  4. Four, Five, Six
( 7:24)  5. Ballad N. 130
( 5:34)  6. Seven, Eight, Nine (Part 2)
( 6:56)  7. The Imminent Immigrant
(10:38)  8. Upwards

When artists move into their eighties, every new album is a gift. It's difficult enough for any octogenarian musician to maintain his/her game, but especially horn players, for whom embouchure and breath are so essential to tone and reach. Six for Six is, however, a curious gift from expat Canadian trumpeter Kenny Wheeler, who's made Britain his home since the mid-'50s. Recorded in 2008, it's his first sextet recording since 2003's Dream Sequence and even that album only featured one piece for all six players. What that really means, then, is that Six for Six is Wheeler's first real sextet date since 1980's Around 6, and his very first with a lineup consisting, in addition to his inimitable horn work, of two saxophones, piano, bass and drums. It's a curious program: a full six of its eight tracks were heard just last year on Wheeler's superb big band outing, The Long Waiting (Cam Jazz, 2012), but they couldn't be more different, demonstrating just how malleable Wheeler's charts can be. Recorded in 2011, The Long Waiting, "Seven, Eight, Nine" was a relatively concise, mid-tempo swinger that featured just one solo (Wheeler); here, it's broken into two parts spread across the record. The album-opening "Part 1" opens with a powerful a cappella intro from drummer Martin France that sets the tone for an album that's Wheeler's most flat-out incendiary since Double, Double You (ECM, 1984). Unlike The Long Waiting's mixed meter reading of 7/8, 6/8 and 4/4, "Part 1" here sticks with a constant 4/4, but at a much brighter clip and with plenty more solo space for Wheeler, tenor saxophonist Bobby Wellins and soprano saxophonist Stan Sulzmann.

Excising the original's second theme for further extrapolation, "Seven, Eight, Nine (Part 2)," is taken at a slightly slower pace than "Part 1" (but still considerably brighter than the big band version) and, while significantly shorter, still leaves room for impressive solos from Sulzmann (this time on tenor), Taylor and Wheeler, with Laurence a firm but pliant anchor and France, once again, playing with fire and unfettered freedom throughout this bright 6/8 take. Wellins is the only new face here, with Sulzmann, pianist John Taylor and bassist Chris Laurence all longtime Wheeler collaborators; and, although France only made his first recorded appearance with Wheeler on The Long Waiting, he's been gigging with the trumpeter for some time, and has been a member of Taylor's trio since the pianist's superb Angel of the Presence (Cam Jazz, 2006). Still, with Wellins an alumnus of British luminaries like Stan Tracey and Tubby Hayes, it's unlikely that this is the first time he and Wheeler have broken musical bread together. On the flip side to more powerful tracks like "Upwards," which more closely mirrors the energy of The Long Waiting's version, albeit with a significantly altered arrangement, Six for Six's fresh look at "The Long Waiting," with its spare duo intro from Wheeler and Taylor, is taken at a slower pace, while the more amiable pulse of the big band's "Four, Five Six" is deserted here for a shorter version that still manages to squeeze in another piano/trumpet intro, a fiery rubato exchange between Sulzmann and Wellins and, finally and at a faster clip space for concise but high octane solos from Wellins, Taylor, Wheeler and France.

It's not just because, with the exception of The Long Waiting, Six for Six is Wheeler's first Cam Jazz recording to feature a drummer though France certainly lights one heckuva fire underneath his band mates, while still proving capable of a gentler disposition on more subdued fare like "Ballad N. 130" and the brighter, but lighter-textured "The Imminent Immigrant," making its first appearance since Wheeler's quartet date All the More (Soul Note, 1997). In a career now approaching its sixth decade, Wheeler's writing has not lost any of the unmistakable lyricism that's been a defining touchstone since early recordings like the classic Gnu High (ECM, 1976), but even as he's passed the 83 mark this year, Wheeler's lost neither his tone nor his remarkable reach his closing, stratospheric note at the end of "Four, Five, Six" being something to which many trumpeters half his age still aspire. Not since Double, Double You has Wheeler released an album as exhilarating as Six for Six. With a sextet capable of delivering both the firepower and the poetry, hopefully this won't be another of the one-shot deals that have defined the rest of Wheeler's nevertheless impressive discography. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/kenny-wheeler-six-for-six-by-john-kelman.php
 
Personnel: Kenny Wheeler: trumpet, flugelhorn; Stan Sulzmann: tenor and soprano saxophone; Bobby Wellins: tenor saxophone; John Taylor: piano; Chris Laurence: bass; Martin France: drums.

Six for Six

Thursday, September 29, 2016

Kenny Wheeler & John Taylor - On The Way To Two

Styles: Trumpet And Piano Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:43
Size: 108,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:12)  1. Canter#2
(5:54)  2. Fedora
(1:42)  3. Sketch No. 1
(5:47)  4. Quiso
(4:33)  5. Who Knows?
(2:57)  6. Sketch No. 2
(5:05)  7. Clore To Mars
(3:22)  8. Fortune's Child
(2:45)  9. Sketch No. 3
(8:22) 10. Flower Is A Lovesome Thing

Trumpeter/flugelhornist Kenny Wheeler's death in September, 2014 led to the posthumous release on ECM of the beautiful and moving Songs For Quintet. However, since 2004, Wheeler recorded on CAM Jazz label, many times with the pianist who seems to be everywhere, John Taylor, starting with the duo-recording Where Do We Go From Here?.  2005 found Wheeler recording two albums with Taylor, a quartet record, What Now? and a second duo record 2005 Other People.  It turns out that there was a third recording in 2005, the understated, beautiful and moving duo recording with Taylor, On The Way To Two. Making this release especially poignant is the fact that during the album's production Taylor wrote these words to Wheeler in the liner notes:

To my friend Kenny,

I want to tell you what a joyful and exhilarating time I have had listening to this music that we made a decade ago. You sound so alive and brilliantly creative inspiring me all the way. The new pieces are beautiful and your playing of them breathtaking. I should have asked how you did it and also how you managed to cope with some of my rather oblique comping throughout the session! I remember we were not so convinced of our efforts at the time  which was often the case of course but the passage of time has allowed me a more objective view.  It was a privilege and joy to play with you for most of my life and I wish you were here now to listen to this music again with me. All thanks and love, John.

Unfortunately, Taylor himself passed before the album's production was finished. On the short side, with just under forty-five minutes of music, the core individual musical attributes of Wheeler and Taylor, as well as their remarkable communication is on display for all to hear. Of the ten tracks, five are Wheeler compositions, with three improvisatory "Sketches," one Taylor composition, and ending with the longest track, Billy Strayhorn's "A Flower Is A Lovesome Thing." Recorded spaciously, the music is quite intense in the sense of there being absolutely nothing extra, requiring concentration; this is not background music. In juxtaposition and in contradiction to this intensity is the music's low heat that works delightfully with the composed/improvised lines that manage to be unpredictable while feeling inexorably logical. The one Taylor composition, "Close To Mars," has the mournfulness of a Wheeler composition, but with a clearer construction, making this track feel a bit more grounded, while the three "Sketches," which include some inside-the-piano sounds, provide some aural palate cleansing and a bit of relaxation. Everything comes together with the magnificent rendition of the Strayhorn tune. Wheeler's sound, pitch choices and the way he plays each note differently are completely apropos for this tune, as is Taylor's lush accompaniment and close reactions to Wheeler. On The Way To Two is just about perfect and is a fine musical document to the memories of Kenny Wheeler and John Taylor. ~ Budd Kopman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/on-the-way-to-two-kenny-wheeler-john-taylor-cam-jazz-review-by-budd-kopman.php
 
Personnel:  Kenny Wheeler: trumpet, flugelhorn;  John Taylor: piano.

On The Way To Two

Saturday, September 24, 2016

Kenny Wheeler, Norma Winstone & London Vocal Project - Mirrors

Styles: Jazz, Post-Bop
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:40
Size: 160,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:21)  1. Humpty Dumpty
(3:58)  2. The Broken Heart
(5:36)  3. The Lover Mourns
(7:48)  4. Black March
(8:59)  5. Through the Looking Glass
(3:59)  6. The Hat
(5:57)  7. Breughel
(8:37)  8. Tweedledum
(6:16)  9. The Bereaved Swan
(8:42) 10. The Deathly Child
(4:22) 11. My Soul

That trumpeter/flugelhornist/composer Kenny Wheeler is challenging himself at 80 is surely inspirational. Mirrors represents his first recording where poems provide the music's source, though he composed the music over 20 years ago. The project was then commissioned for five solo voices in 1998, but the combination of Wheeler, singer Norma Winstone and the London Vocal Project, led by Pete Churchill, brings a fluid, suite-like permanency and epic scale to the original concept. Poets Stevie Smith, Lewis Carroll and W.B. Yeats provide strikingly diverse imagery surreal, visceral and profound and Wheeler weaves it all together in a sumptuous melodic tapestry where the music of language is meaning enough. The inimitable Winstone's strength and nuanced delivery belie her 70 years. Hers is a remarkable performance, though the balance struck between all the voices makes Mirrors a truly collaborative success. Bassist Steve Watts, drummer James Maddren and pianist Nikki Iles engender a swinging undercurrent, breezy and understated, that's irrevocably felt throughout. These musicians enjoy tremendous understanding; Winstone and Wheeler first recorded together in Azimuth in the 1970s and Iles, saxophonist Mark Lockheart, Watts and Maddren all play with Winstone in the group Printmakers. Little wonder, then, that the evident chemistry seems so effortless and joyfully intuitive.

The LVP's seven sopranos, eight altos, five tenors and five basses are the protagonists on three numbers. "Humpty Dumpty" is a playful take on Carroll's poem, with delightful passing around of the vocals between the choir sections. A deceptive intensity inhabits the mantra-like vocal rhythm of Smith's "The Broken Heart," a particularly hypnotic number punctuated by Wheeler's fine bluesy solo. Wheeler and Iles shine on a swinging arrangement of Smith's "Black March," though its buoyancy derives primarily from the snappy choral cadences. Winstone's performance sets the jewel in the crown. Her dreamy, almost ethereal reading of Carroll's "Through the Looking Glass" is wonderfully sympathetic. A rootsy and mellifluous instrumental passage, driven by Wheeler and Lockheart, serves as an interlude before the choir restores the contemplative mood. Carroll's "Tweedledum" is similarly episodic; jaunty in the choral passages, intimate and spare when Winstone holds court, and swinging when the quintet steps up. The singer, Iles and Lockheart confer a gentle majesty on Smith's seemingly throwaway, four-line poem, "My Hat."

Winstone and Iles treat the ghostly subject matter of "The Deathly Child" with a palpable sense of wonder, though when Winstone sits out the ensemble refashions this harbinger-of-death tale into joyous celebration. The fatalistic view of humankind's condition in Smith's "Breughel" is similarly dressed in more soothing robes by a lovely Burt Bacharach-esque melody. "The Bereaved Swan" captures the contrasting elements of melancholy and lyricism in Smith's words, whereby the choir's graceful waves form a canvas for Wheeler and Lockheart's more emotionally urgent colors. The subdued rhythm of "My Soul" highlights the powerful lyric content, lent suitable poignancy by Winstone's pitch-perfect delivery. How to categorize this glorious music, the ingenuity of Wheeler, Winstone and the LVP? To quote Smith: "Whatever names you give me, I am a breath of fresh air, a change for you." And what price Vol. 2 from James Joyce, via Robert Frost to John Cooper Clarke? ~ Ian Patterson https://www.allaboutjazz.com/mirrors-kenny-wheeler-edition-records-review-by-ian-patterson.php
 
Personnel: Kenny Wheeler: flugelhorn; Norma Winstone: vocals; Nikki Iles: piano; Mark Lockheart: saxophones; Steve Watts: double bass; James Maddren: drums; London Vocal Project: Pete Churchill: Director; sopranos: Fini Bearman; Hannah Berry; Jessica Berry; Helen Burnett; Katie Butler; Joanna Richards; Janni Thompson; tenors: Tommy Antonio; Sam Chaplin; Brendan Dowse; Richard Lake; Adam Saunders; altos: Mishka Adams; Paolo Bottomley; Nikki Franklin; Clara Green; Andi Hopgood; Chloe Potter; Emma Smith; Emmy Urquhart; basses: Kwabena Adjepong; Pat Bamber; Ben Barritt; Pete Churchill; Andrew Woolf.

Mirrors

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Tubby Hayes Orchestra - 100% Proof

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1966
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:34
Size: 97,7 MB
Art: Front

(14:13)  1. 100% Proof
( 6:31)  2. Night In Tunisia
( 7:43)  3. Milestones
( 4:39)  4. Sonnymoon For Two
( 5:06)  5. Bluesology
( 4:19)  6. Nutty

"But being as this is 100% Proof, the most powerful big band album in the world, and would blow your head clean off, you've got to ask yourself one question: Do I feel lucky? Well, do ya punk? As a jazz fan himself, I'm sure Clint 'Dirty Harry' Eastwood wouldn't object too much to the plagiarising and adaptation of one of his most famous lines, but it does seem strangely appropriate to apply it to one of the best big band albums ever made. But, "and I know what you're thinking , why all the hype? Well, maybe hype is what's needed in order to get folks to listen to something of outstanding quality and originality that's been sadly overlooked for nearly forty years. 100% Proof represented the pinnacle of modern British jazz in the '60s. The stellar line-up of musicians employed on the record underpinned its sumptuous and gloriously overstated arrangements. In order to assess the album in terms of the canon of outstanding jazz recordings, it is important to avoid the all-too ubiquitous stereotyping of Brit-jazz or 'British ness' (whatever this means) as applied to Tubby Hayes. Although certainly one of the UK's most famous jazz musician by a mile, (perhaps second only to his friend and one time fellow Jazz Courier, Ronnie Scott who was undoubtedly the most famous jazz musician in Britain, probably because he owned one of the greatest jazz clubs in the world, although Scott himself, like Hayes was a world-class tenor player and indeed played and soloed on 100% Proof) Hayes was also England's most accomplished musician and arranger. His fame was not limited to the parochial shores of the sceptered isle. Tubbs travelled on more than one occasion to the USA where he played as part of a musician exchange deal. He recorded with many of the greats of jazz including, amongst others, Clark Terry, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, James Moody, Louis Hayes, Horace Parlan, Eddie Costa, and had already recorded in the UK with the likes of Dizzy Reece, Victor Feldman and John Dankworth. He even famously sat in with the Ellington band on one of their concerts in London, with virtually no notice.

So without doubt, Tubby Hayes was a global player who, had he lived longer than his 38 years and been in good health, which had steadily deteriorated over the latter part of his life, would have been recognised as the most significant and talented musician to emanate from the United Kingdom, even in comparison to other later eminences from Britain including the redoubtable John McLaughlin, John Surman and Dave Holland. By the beginning of the '60s, Hayes had moved from the small British Tempo label to the Philips-owned Fontana label which had international connections and other prestigious jazz stars recording for it, such as John Dankworth. 100% Proof, recorded in London on 10, 12 and 13 May 1966, was a follow-up to Hayes' previous big-band album Tubbs' Tours recorded in 1964. Tubbs' Tours was a very successful session with some wonderful tracks which drilled deeply into the memory banks of the brain. Perhaps the most notable, though least vaunted, of these tracks was Tubbs' own composition, the elegant "In the Night on which he played flute. Other standout tracks include "Pedro's Waltz and "The Killers of W1. Tubbs' Tours really has to be heard to appreciate the dynamism of Tubbs' big band arrangements. 100% Proof was different to Tubbs' Tours in that there were fewer tracks and a warmer sound, perhaps due to being performed by a more well-rehearsed big band that had played together for quite a while.

The arrangement of the title track was Tubby Hayes own work. He also did a fine job arranging "Milestones and "Bluesology. Trumpeter Ian Hamer did a superlative job arranging "Sonnymoon for Two and especially "Night in Tunisia transforming it into something extremely different, volatile and very powerful, and arguably one of the best arrangements ever heard of this terrific number. The final track "Nutty was arranged by Stan Tracey, who was an excellent arranger as well as a superb pianist with a unique style. All the arrangements are so good that they transform what might otherwise be a predominantly 'standards' type album into a totally novel one. To a certain extent it's the arrangements of these standards that push the boundaries of this recording into unchartered waters of cohesion, dynamics and originality. The personnel on the album comprised some of the most talented jazz musicians in Britain at that time and included Roy Willox, Ray Warleigh, Ronnie Scott, Bob Efford, Ronnie Ross and Harry Klein on saxophones. Kenny Baker, Ian Hamer, Greg Bowen, Les Condon and Kenny Wheeler played trumpets. Keith Christie, Nat Peck, Johnny Marshall and Chris Smith were on trombones. The rhythm section was made up of Gordon Beck on piano, Jeff Clyne on bass and and Ronnie Stephenson/Johnny Butts on drums. Tubbs plays with equal confidence and ability tenor, flute and vibes and positively tears up a storm on "100% Proof with his trusty tenor sax deployed in his typically shaken not stirred style, although paradoxically leaving the listener both shaken and stirred. Interestingly there are a couple of short phrases in Tubbs' solo here that seem to have influenced at least a couple of other British sax players of the next generation.

His sensitive flute playing is heard on Dizzy Gillespie's "Night in Tunisia and Miles Davis' "Milestones where Gordon Beck has a good piano solo too followed by further Tubby tenoring. Sonny Rollins' "Sonnymoon for Two has further typically coruscating Hayes tenor and on the penultimate track, Milt Jackson's "Bluesology he demonstrates his outstanding ability on vibes which is closely followed by an excellent Ronnie Scott tenor solo. The recording concludes with Thelonius Monk's "Nutty where Tubbs takes a step back to allow Ray Warleigh and Les Condon to shine on the solos whilst Hayes can be heard on flute in the orchestra. Perhaps the defining 'proof' of the success of 100% Proof was its success in the Melody Maker jazz polls of 1968 where it came top in the LP of the year section. Also in that poll Hayes won first position in the top musician, flute, tenor and vibes categories. Although originally issued in both mono and stereo on the Fontana label and a few years ago disappointingly issued in mono only on a Japanese CD reissue, it really is important to hear this album in stereo. Produced at a time when stereophonic recording was still something of a novelty, it clearly demonstrates how essential it is to have big band jazz spread out over a wide aural spectrum, and the mono and stereo versions of the album do sound different, the former distinctly less effective. One of the ironies of Hayes dying so young was that his fame was based primarily on his playing and his recordings, yet during the '60s, the last full decade of his career, his composing abilities had begun, albeit in a modest way, to burgeon. It was only with his penultimate Fontana studio album Mexican Green that he had composed an entire album of material. 

Listening to the BBC recording that was posthumously released as 200% Proof on the Mastermix label, it was clear that his compositional skills were on an upward trajectory. It is quite probable that the main obstacle to his composing hitherto was the fact that he was kept so busy with playing both live gigs and as an in-demand session musician and ironically, only when he, perforce, started to slow down due to ill-health did he have more time to write. As it states on the LP's original sleevenotes, written by Terry Brown, it was without hesitation and a unanimous decision by all concerned that when they heard the playback tapes of 100% Proof the only title that could possibly be used for the LP title was indeed 100% Proof. This was surely not merely a measure of loyalty but a gauge of the strength of the music Hayes had composed and arranged. 100% Proof will certainly 'blow your head clean off.'~Roger Farbey http://www.allaboutjazz.com/tubby-hayes-100-proof-by-roger-farbey.php 

Personnel: Tubby Hayes (tenor sax, flute, vibes); Roy Willox, Ray Warleigh, Ronnie Scott, Bob Efford, Ronnie Ross and Harry Klein (saxophones); Kenny Baker, Ian Hamer, Greg Bowen, Les Condon and Kenny Wheeler (trumpets); Keith Christie, Nat Peck, Johnny Marshall and Chris Smith (trombones); Gordon Beck (piano); Jeff Clyne (bass); Ronnie Stephenson, Johnny Butts (drums).

100% Proof