Showing posts with label Norman Brown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Norman Brown. Show all posts

Sunday, September 17, 2017

BWB - Groovin'

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:49
Size: 139.2 MB
Styles: R&B, Smooth jazz
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[4:47] 1. Groovin'
[4:51] 2. Brown Sugar
[5:46] 3. Ruby Baby
[5:44] 4. A Woman's Worth
[7:27] 5. Hip Hug Her
[6:41] 6. Mercy Mercy Mercy
[7:21] 7. Let's Do It Again (Featuring Dee Dee Bridgewater)
[4:52] 8. It's Your Thing
[7:27] 9. Povo
[5:49] 10. Up For The Down Stroke

This concept sounds like the set-up for a joke: What do you get when you cross three smooth-jazzers with topnotch straight-ahead players? Turns out Norman Brown, Kirk Whalum, and Rick Braun have the last laugh and a damn good time. While they may be three of the most distinct stylists in smooth jazz, they had to turn up the pots to cook with bassist Christian McBride and drummer Gregory Hutchinson. Keyboardist Ricky Peterson, maybe the funkiest organist in contemporary jazz outside of Larry Goldings, plays a producing role and is probably the MVP of BWB. The players aren't the only stars. The impeccable choice of 10 well-known cover tunes adds to an unapologetically fun record that allows B, W, and B to stretch out much more than they do on other recordings. Braun quotes Freddie Hubbard on "Povo," while Whalum explores Cannonball Adderley on "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy," and Brown pays back Wes Montgomery throughout the proceedings. From the sexually charged "Let's Do It Again," featuring a purring Dee Dee Bridgewater and a scatting Brown, to the inspired arrangements of Alicia Keys's "A Woman's Worth" and D'Angelo's "Brown Sugar," there are no holes in any of these grooves. ~Mark Ruffin

Groovin'

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

Norman Brown - Let It Go

Styles: Guitar Jazz, Smooth Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:32
Size: 128,0 MB
Art: Front

(0:41)  1. Lessons of the Spirit
(4:09)  2. It Keeps Coming Back
(6:18)  3. Let It Go
(5:16)  4. Ooh Child (feat. TrayCar)
(5:51) 5. Conversations (feat. Sisters of Unbreakable love S.O.U.L)
(4:36)  6. Living Out Your Destiny (feat. Sisters of Unbreakable love S.O.U.L)
(4:00)  7. Holding You (feat. Chanté Moore)
(4:52)  8. The North Star (feat. Marion Meadows)
(4:42)  9. Very Woman
(4:39) 10. Liberated (feat. BWB)
(5:13) 11. Remember Who You Are (feat. Kirk Whalum)
(5:10) 12. Man In the Mirror (feat. Sounds of Blackness)

Let It Go, Norman Brown's inspired 2017 debut album for Shanachie Records, has something for everyone, whether an R&B fan or a jazz aficionado. From "Holding You," his sensuous collaboration with R&B great Chanté Moore and Norman's re-imagining of the Five Stairsteps classic "Ooh Child" to the smoothly grooving "Remember Who You Are" and the serenely inspired "Let It Go," Let It Go is Norman Brown at his best. https://www.amazon.com/Let-Go-NORMAN-BROWN/dp/B01LZS6RWZ

Let It Go

Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Rick Braun - Kisses In The Rain

Styles: Trumpet And Flugelhorn Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:28
Size: 100,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:51)  1. Car Wash 2000
(4:33)  2. Kisses In The Rain
(3:44)  3. Use Me
(4:40)  4. Grover's Groove
(4:29)  5. Your World
(4:45)  6. Middle Of The Night
(4:30)  7. One For The Girls
(4:26)  8. Song For You
(4:37)  9. Simplicity
(3:49) 10. Emma's Song

Rick Braun is in high demand these days, both as a trumpeter and a producer he certainly has his thumb on the pulse of today's adult contemporary music. His solo debut on Warner Brother, hot on the heels of last year's successful collaboration with Boney James on Shake It Up, should further extend his mastery of the idiom. The first four tunes are the most jazz-oriented and satisfying; they come complete with catchy melodies, infectious live rhythms, and thoughtful arrangements clean but not overly glossy. Braun alternates between open and muted trumpet, and turns in solos that are a bit more adventurous than you might expect from a commercially-oriented album. About half-way through, the program turns more to the programmed background tracks and moves more into the "romantic evening" groove. To my ears, the sweet-soul vocals ("Your World" and "Song for You") seem a bit formulaic and lower the bar on creativity a couple notches. 

"Middle of the Night" is sort of "Chuck Mangione meets the click track." There are tasty touches here and there, such as a nice tenor solo and interesting background brass parts on "Simplicity," and Braun's expressive balladry on the closer, "Emma." Overall, this is an enjoyable and well-executed program of contemporary work by one of the genre's leading proponents. ~ Dave Hughes https://www.allaboutjazz.com/kisses-in-the-rain-rick-braun-warner-bros-review-by-dave-hughes.php

Personnel: Rick Braun (trumpet, flugelhorn, piano, keyboards, programming); Sue Ann Carwell (vocals, background vocals); Mindy Stein, Shai (vocals); Peter White (guitar, acoustic guitar); Tony Maiden (guitar, electric guitar, wah-wah guitar); Fred Clark , Norman Brown , Ross Bolton (guitar); Larry Williams (strings, tenor saxophone, keyboards); Doug Norwine (flute, saxophone); Euge Groove, Steve Grove (tenor saxophone); Marty Grebb (baritone saxophone); Jerry Hey (flugelhorn); Nick Lane, William Frank "Bill" Reichenbach Jr. (trombone); Al Forman, Mitchel Forman (piano); Ricky Peterson (Wurlitzer organ, keyboards); David Woods (keyboards, drum programming); Johnny Britt, Roberto Vally (keyboards); Harvey Mason, Sr. , Lil John Roberts (drums, percussion); Luis Conte, Paulinho Da Costa (percussion); Paul Brown (programming); Yvonne Williams (background vocals).

Kisses In The Rain

Friday, May 29, 2015

BWB - Groovin'

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:38
Size: 138.8 MB
Styles: Crossover jazz
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[4:45] 1. Groovin'
[4:47] 2. Brown Sugar
[5:44] 3. Ruby Baby
[5:42] 4. A Woman's Worth
[7:26] 5. Hip Hug Her
[6:43] 6. Mercy Mercy Mercy
[7:20] 7. Let's Do It Again
[4:50] 8. It's Your Thing
[7:27] 9. Povo
[5:48] 10. Up for the Down Stroke

This concept sounds like the set-up for a joke: What do you get when you cross three smooth-jazzers with topnotch straight-ahead players? Turns out Norman Brown, Kirk Whalum, and Rick Braun have the last laugh and a damn good time. While they may be three of the most distinct stylists in smooth jazz, they had to turn up the pots to cook with bassist Christian McBride and drummer Gregory Hutchinson. Keyboardist Ricky Peterson, maybe the funkiest organist in contemporary jazz outside of Larry Goldings, plays a producing role and is probably the MVP of BWB. The players aren't the only stars. The impeccable choice of 10 well-known cover tunes adds to an unapologetically fun record that allows B, W, and B to stretch out much more than they do on other recordings. Braun quotes Freddie Hubbard on "Povo," while Whalum explores Cannonball Adderley on "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy," and Brown pays back Wes Montgomery throughout the proceedings. From the sexually charged "Let's Do It Again," featuring a purring Dee Dee Bridgewater and a scatting Brown, to the inspired arrangements of Alicia Keys's "A Woman's Worth" and D'Angelo's "Brown Sugar," there are no holes in any of these grooves. ~Mark Ruffin

Groovin'