Showing posts with label Lani Hall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lani Hall. Show all posts

Friday, April 29, 2022

Lani Hall (feat. Herb Alpert) - Seasons Of Love

Styles: Vocal,Trumpet Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:05
Size: 81,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:13) 1. Happy Woman
(3:40) 2. Seasons Of Love
(2:40) 3. Lovely Day
(3:39) 4. The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face
(4:08) 5. Waters Of March
(3:08) 6. You Are
(4:24) 7. No Te Vayas No (I Don't Want You To Go)
(3:18) 8. Now You Know
(3:23) 9. Sorri
(3:28) 10. Here Comes The Sun

Vocalist and author Lani Hall has not released an album of her own in 20 years. That is our loss, for sure. Her last effort not counting her work with husband Herb Alpert on his tours and on a number of his fine Grammy-winning sessions was in 1998. With Seasons of Love Hall's stepping out in front shows nothing has changed. She still has an outstanding voice with plenty of walloping emotional impact. She "returns" with this effort, delivering ten fine songs most well-known which are all beautifully performed, impeccably presented, and superbly produced.

The title track is a dramatic take on the well-known feature from the Broadway hit Rent and it is a highlight. The late Bill Withers' upbeat "Lovely Day" is taken straight up by Hall, and builds over a terrific rhythm bed with Alpert's horn singing along with strings. It is a strong, involving track. "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" is an intimate play on the Roberta Flack classic. Hall caresses the rich lyric over an accompanying acoustic guitar and, later, with strings. Her approach is elegant and avoids any hint of being sappy or saccharine.

Hall's voice is full and right on point. It is a more seasoned sound than on the early Sergio Mendes and Brasil '66 days. She is up front, direct, and honest with outstanding emotional depth, dynamic precision, and killer diction. Her approach to the lyrics is pristine and emotive. There is a ton of dramatic presentation across the session, as well. Herb Alpert handles the instrumental solos and sounds better than ever. His improvised accompaniment lines are well-chosen, lush, melismatic, and frame the vocals superbly without stepping on heels. The accompanying musicians are simply superb throughout.

The Bossa classic "Waters of March" puts Hall on a re-harmonised bed and is dramatically moving. "You Are" has Hall rhythmic over an energetic percussion platform with Alpert blowing on the chorus and a slick modulation. The dramatically lovely "No Te Vayas No (I Don't Want You to Go)" has Hall singing in impeccable Spanish. "Now You Know" is a very moving track with Hall accompanied by piano and strings and Alpert's trumpet filling a simply glorious experience. "Sorri" is a lush Bossa take on Charlie Chaplin's "Smile" where the suave syllabication of Hall's Portuguese lends a romantic and intimate flavoring to the optimistic focus of the tune. George Harrison's "Here Comes the Sun" has Hall's vocal sunshine all over it, closes the date and is very "all right."

As with anything Alpert, this is an impeccably produced and engineered production which plays perfectly to vocal, trumpet, percussion, and all background textures. Seasons of Love is almost an hour of excellent music. A very minor flaw is that a couple of the tracks, as great as they are, seem to end when listeners could certainly want more. But, then again who is to argue with genius?

Personnel: Lani Hall: voice / vocals; Herb Alpert: trumpet; Bill Cantos: piano; Hussain Jiffry: bass, electric; Mitchell Long: guitar; Andre De Santanna: bass; Rafael Padilla: percussion; Eduardo DelBarrio: piano.

Additional Instrumentation: Herb Alpert: vocals, flugelhorn; Bill Cantos: keyboards, strings;

Seasons Of Love

Wednesday, August 22, 2018

Herb Alpert & Lani Hall - Anything Goes (Live)

Styles: Trumpet And Vocal Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:28
Size: 148,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:14)  1. Fascinating Rhythm
(5:47)  2. Para Raio (Pah dah hi yoo)
(3:48)  3. The Trolley Song
(4:43)  4. That Old Black Magic
(6:29)  5. Dinorah (Gee no rah) / Morning
(1:56)  6. It's Only a Paper Moon
(5:15)  7. Let's Face the Music and Dance
(3:25)  8. Morning Coffee
(3:50)  9. I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face
(4:30) 10. Who Are You? (w/ Bill Cantos)
(4:44) 11. Besame Mucho
(3:34) 12. Anything Goes
(4:26) 13. I've Got You Under My Skin
(5:41) 14. Laura

Though trumpet legend Herb Alpert and wife Lani Hall have been together for more than three decades, it's hard to believe that Anything Goes is their very first album together. A musician and entrepreneur, Alpert is best known for his work in the 1960s with his Tijuana Brass, five number one hits, eight Grammy Awards and fifteen gold albums. As co-founder of A&M Records, Alpert's impact on music has been even greater. After signing Sergio Mendes and Brasil '66 to A&M and producing the group's first recordings in the 1960s, Alpert met and later married lead singer Lani Hall. After being together on stage many times, Alpert and Hall collect a set of eight live performances recorded across the United States for Anything Goes.  The selection of music could not be better, as the duo draws on a total of fourteen pieces including standards from the songbooks of Harold Arlen and Cole Porter to Gershwin and Irving Berlin classics, Latin and Brazilian music. The years have treated Hall kindly, as her vocal energy has not diminished in any discernible way. Some of her finest performances can be heard on songs like "That Old Black Magic" and "I've Got You Under My Skin," but perhaps her best and most powerful vocals are on the two Brazilian songs, Djavan's "Para-Raio" and Ivan Lins' classic, "Dinorah," both sung in Portuguese.  Hall shares vocals with pianist Bill Cantos on the opening " Fascinating Rhythm" and the stunning Cantos original , "Who Are You," where she reaches high notes with ease. Cantos joins Alpert on "I've Grown Accustomed To Her Face," with drummer Michael Shapiro and bassist Hussain Jiffry rounding out the group's musical support. As for Alpert, he is simply amazing; whether on open trumpet or muted horn, he leads the music, providing a slew of gritty solos and holding court on several instrumentals including "The Trolley Song," Consuelo Velazquez's Latin classic, "Besame Mucho," and David Raskin's immortal "Laura." Alpert may be viewed through the prism of pop music, largely because of his success in the genre and partly of his own doing when he stated that, during the 1960s and 1970s, " [I] was in the closet as a jazz musician because I wasn't quite sure where I fit in." He now firmly asserts that, "I' m basically a jazz musician...Jazz is always in my spirit." With Anything Goes, Alpert cements his jazz pedigree, and as for this long-awaited duo record, these two very special people and partners for life make beautiful music together...and lucky for us. Anything Goes immortalizes their performance once and for all; hopefully there is an encore in the waiting.~ Edward Blanco https://www.allaboutjazz.com/anything-goes-herb-alpert-concord-music-group-review-by-edward-blanco.php

Personnel: Herb Alpert: trumpet, vocals; Lani Hall: vocals; Bill Cantos: piano, vocals; Hussain Jiffry: bass; Mike Shapiro: drums, percussion.

Anything Goes (Live)

Friday, January 12, 2018

Lani Hall - Es Facil Amar

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:08
Size: 87.3 MB
Styles: Latin pop
Year: 1985/2014
Art: Front

[3:49] 1. Es Facil Amar
[3:59] 2. De Repente El Amor (Feat Roberto Carlos)
[4:18] 3. Fantasma
[3:47] 4. Amor Sin Manana
[3:47] 5. Si Me Amaras
[3:14] 6. Un Amor Asi
[4:35] 7. Ramito De Vio;etas
[3:17] 8. Dama Dama
[3:46] 9. Paginas Prohibidas
[3:33] 10. Pequeno Ser

The original voice of Sergio Mendes' Brasil '66, singer Lani Hall was also the wife of trumpeter and A&M Records co-founder Herb Alpert. Upon exiting Brasil '66, she made her solo debut in 1974 with the LP Sundown Lady; a series of releases including 1975's Hello It's Me, 1977's Sweetbird and 1979's Double or Nothing followed, but after appearing on the soundtrack to the 1983 James Bond film Never Say Never Again, Hall largely disappeared from the recording scene, resurfacing only to make the occasional cameo appearance on her husband's recordings. However, the rise of Latin pop during the 1990s inspired Hall to return to the studio, and in 1998 she issued Brasil Nativo. ~ Jason Ankeny

Es Facil Amar mc
Es Facil Amar zippy

Thursday, August 3, 2017

Herb Alpert - Herb Alpert & Colors

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:29
Size: 106,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:57)  1. Libertango
(6:33)  2. The Look of Love
(5:32)  3. Colors
(3:34)  4. i Want You
(4:16)  5. Think About it
(5:04)  6. Dorita
(3:38)  7. Lady in My Life
(3:22)  8. Love at First Glance
(5:56)  9. Magic Man
(4:32) 10. Slow Train

It would be easy for the former Tijuana Brassman and founder of A&M to just rest on his career achievements or just make music to pass the time, but instead, the 60-something trumpeter rings in with one of the year's most remarkable jams. Alpert's recent output has ranged from the heart of smooth jazz (Second Wind, produced by Jeff Lorber) to fiery Latin (Passion Dance), but here the muse takes him to the mystical world of studio-bred trip-hop. Working with multi-instrumentalists and producers Will Calhoun and Doug Wimbush, Alpert surrounds his muted trumpet with hypnotic vibes and ambiences some of which seem to drift into the sonic atmospheres, others bred from thick machine generated exotic percussion textures percolating over throbbing urban bass grooves. While ethereal experimentation with tons of cool studio equipment and sonic possibilities seems to be the general philosophy, he hasn't forgotten his Latin roots. The opening track, "Libertango," features a lighthearted horn melody drifting over a throbbing urban bass groove, percussion clicks, and the galloping flamenco flavors of Wimbish's acoustic guitar, all wrapped up in a dramatic synth orchestral sweep. "Dorita" centers Bernard Fowler's Spanish vocals amidst a wacky swirl of pitter patter and marching percussion, spacey sound effects, exotic soundscaping, moody retro keyboards, and Alpert's catchy, laid-back melody. Bridging past and present, Alpert approaches Burt Bachrach's "The Look of Love" as if it were a Miles Davis/Brian Eno collaboration, his smoky horn enhanced by his wife Lani Hall's breathy vocals. He also covers himself with a new hip-hop shuffle arrangement of his popular early-'80s gem, "Magic Man." Older and wiser than either Rick Braun or Chris Botti, Alpert gives the genre's two top horn guns a powerful run for their smooth jazz money. ~ Jonathan Widran http://www.allmusic.com/album/colors-mw0000667240

Personnel: Herb Alpert (vocals, trumpet, flugelhorn); Will Calhoun (vocals, snare drum, percussion); Lani Hall (vocals, sampler); Bernard Fowler (vocals); Heitor Pereira (guitar); Doug Wimbish (acoustic guitar, trumpet); Jorge "Coco" Trivisonno (bandoneon); Bernie Worrell (organ, keyboards); Gregory Smith (keyboards, programming); Eduardo del Barrio (string synthesizer, sampler); Paulinho Da Costa (percussion); Danny Saber (programming).

Herb Alpert & Colors

Monday, July 31, 2017

Herb Alpert - Keep Your Eye On Me

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1987
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:50
Size: 104,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:11)  1. Keep Your Eye On Me
(3:56)  2. Hot Shot
(4:53)  3. Diamonds
(3:14)  4. Traffic Jam
(5:26)  5. Cat Man Do
(4:32)  6. Pillow
(3:54)  7. Our Song
(5:55)  8. Making Love In The Rain
(3:51)  9. Rocket To The Moon
(2:53) 10. Stranger On The Shore

The unbelievable sales success of this record is a testament to Herb Alpert's extraordinary ability to keep his ear to the ground no doubt aided by his position as vice-chairman and co-owner of A&M Records and adapt to the times. At a time when A&M's Janet Jackson was blazing up the charts, Alpert journeyed to Minneapolis and cut some tracks with Jackson's producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, producing the others himself in a mostly similar techno-pop vein. Presto!, three Top Ten R&B singles came out of the album, "Keep Your Eye on Me," "Making Love in the Rain," and the number one hit "Diamonds." The flashy, trashy "Diamonds" no doubt was aided on its rush up the charts by Jackson and Lisa Keith's bouncy lead vocals; it's really their record and that of Jam and Lewis, despite Alpert's top billing. Jackson and Keith also take the lead in the simple-minded lyrics of "Making Love in the Rain," which nevertheless has a haunting effect accented by Alpert's muted musings through an electronic gauze. At first, this seems like a gleaming digital machine of a record, loaded with repetitive sampling effects and drum machines churning out that ubiquitous '80s backbeat. But the techno stuff gradually gives way to Alpert's humane trumpet, which in a touching valentine to the '60s on Acker Bilk's "Stranger on the Shore," is eventually allowed to soar unimpeded over the electronics. ~ Richard G.Ginell http://www.allmusic.com/album/keep-your-eye-on-me-mw0000188950

Personnel:  Herb Alpert (harmonica, trumpet, flugelhorn, celesta); Jellybean Johnson (vocals, percussion); Janet Jackson, Lisa Keith, Terry Lewis (vocals, background vocals); James Greer, Jerome Benton, Lani Hall (vocals); Michael Landau (guitar); John Barnes (tuba, organ, keyboards); Laythan Armor (keyboards, bass synthesizer, drums, percussion, programming); Les Pierce (keyboards, drums, programming); Roy Bittan (keyboards); Chuck Domanico (acoustic bass); Jimmy Jam (bass guitar, drums, percussion, keyboard programming); Steven Schaeffer (drums, percussion); Jeff Porcaro (drums); Paulinho Da Costa (percussion); David Eiland (keyboard programming, sampler).

Keep Your Eye On Me

Thursday, May 4, 2017

Lani Hall - Collectibles

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1984
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:53
Size: 83,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:29)  1. Midnight Lovers
(3:10)  2. Never Say Never Again
(4:06)  3. Come What May
(6:12)  4. Send In The Clowns--We Could Be Flying
(3:41)  5. Nobody Gets This Close To Me
(4:01)  6. Rio
(3:43)  7. Come Down In Time
(4:29)  8. I Don't Want You To Go
(2:59)  9. How Can I Tell You

The original voice of Sergio Mendes' Brasil '66, singer Lani Hall was also the wife of trumpeter and A&M Records co-founder Herb Alpert. Upon exiting Brasil '66, she made her solo debut in 1974 with the LP Sundown Lady; a series of releases including 1975's Hello It's Me, 1977's Sweetbird and 1979's Double or Nothing followed, but after appearing on the soundtrack to the 1983 James Bond film Never Say Never Again, Hall largely disappeared from the recording scene, resurfacing only to make the occasional cameo appearance on her husband's recordings. However, the rise of Latin pop during the 1990s inspired Hall to return to the studio, and in 1998 she issued Brasil Nativo. ~ Jason Ankeny http://www.allmusic.com/artist/lani-hall-mn0000103460/biography
 
Personnel: Lani Hall (vocals); Jay Graydon (guitar).

Collectibles

Thursday, December 15, 2016

Lani Hall - Hello It's Me

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:43
Size: 74.9 MB
Styles: Latin jazz vocals
Year: 1975/2016
Art: Front

[3:36] 1. Hello It's Me
[4:12] 2. Peace In The Valley
[4:18] 3. Time Will Tell
[2:50] 4. Banquet
[2:36] 5. Wheelers And Dealers
[2:36] 6. Happy Woman (Happy Man)
[3:48] 7. Exclusively For Me
[3:15] 8. Save The Sunlight
[3:33] 9. Sweet Jams And Jellies
[1:55] 10. Corrida De Jangada

Wonderful album from a too often overlooked vocalist. She was great with Sergio Mendes and Brazil '66. But on her own . . . marvelous ~Jay Montgomery

Hello It's Me

Saturday, July 2, 2016

Lani Hall - 2 albums: Sundown Lady / Sweet Bird

The original voice of Sergio Mendes' Brasil '66, singer Lani Hall was also the wife of trumpeter and A&M Records co-founder Herb Alpert. Upon exiting Brasil '66, she made her solo debut in 1974 with the LP Sundown Lady; a series of releases including 1975's Hello It's Me, 1977's Sweet bird and 1979's Double or Nothing followed, but after appearing on the soundtrack to the 1983 James Bond film Never Say Never Again, Hall largely disappeared from the recording scene, resurfacing only to make the occasional cameo appearance on her husband's recordings. However, the rise of Latin pop during the 1990s inspired Hall to return to the studio, and in 1998 she issued Brasil Nativo. ~bio by Jason Ankeny

Album: Sundown Lady
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:56
Size: 84.6 MB
Styles: Latin, Vocal
Year: 1972/2016
Art: Front

[3:11] 1. Love Song
[4:06] 2. Tiny Dancer
[2:57] 3. How Can I Tell You
[4:01] 4. You
[3:42] 5. Siren Song
[3:56] 6. Sundown Lady
[3:39] 7. Come Down In Time
[3:31] 8. Sun Down
[5:57] 9. Vincent
[1:53] 10. Wherever I May Find Him 

Sundown Lady

Album: Sweet Bird
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:19
Size: 78.6 MB
Styles: Latin, Vocal
Year: 1976/2016
Art: Front

[2:21] 1. Send In The Clowns
[3:07] 2. That's When Miracles Occur
[3:40] 3. Early Mornin' Strangers
[3:28] 4. Misty Blue
[4:39] 5. Too Many Mornings
[6:27] 6. At The Ballet
[3:23] 7. Happy Woman
[4:17] 8. Dolphins Lullaby
[2:53] 9. Sweet Bird

Sweet Bird

Friday, October 11, 2013

Herb Alpert & Lani Hall - Steppin' Out

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 62:41
Size: 143.5 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz, Trumpet jazz, Easy Listening
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[2:59] 1. Puttin' On The Ritz
[4:13] 2. Jacky's Place
[5:03] 3. Our Song
[4:04] 4. Green Lemonade
[3:29] 5. I Only Have Eyes For You
[4:01] 6. Good Morning Mr. Sunshine
[4:25] 7. Oblivion
[3:29] 8. What'll I Do?
[4:02] 9. Cote D'azur
[2:38] 10. La Vie En Rose
[3:17] 11. It's All In The Game
[4:42] 12. Europa
[3:07] 13. And The Angels Sing
[4:34] 14. Skylark
[3:51] 15. Migration
[4:38] 16. The Lonely Bull

The 16-song set features Alpert on trumpet and vocals, his wife Lani Hall on vocals, Bill Cantos on keyboards, Michael Shapiro on drums and percussion, Hussain Jiffry on bass, Coco Triuisonno on bandoneon, and Ramon Stagnaro on acoustic guitar. The album includes versions of such classics as Puttin' on the Ritz, I Only Have Eyes For You, What'll I Do and La Vie En Rose mixed with originals by Alpert and Jeff Lorber. Closing out the album is a 50th anniversary version of Alpert and the Tijuana Brass' hit The Lonely Bull.

Herb Alpert and Lani Hall produced the bulk of the album, while Puttin’ on the Ritz was produced by Randy “Badazz” Alpert and Herb Alpert. Jacky’s Place, Green Lemonade, Côte d’Azur, and Migration were produced by Jeff Lorber and Herb Alpert, and co-produced by Lani Hall, with additional guitar Paul Jackson Jr.

Steppin' Out