Showing posts with label Stan Kenton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stan Kenton. Show all posts

Saturday, April 8, 2023

Stan Kenton - Journey Into Capricorn

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1976
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:56
Size: 93,1 MB
Art: Front

( 5:10) 1. Too Shy To Say
( 4:58) 2. Pegasus
( 4:36) 3. Granada Smoothie
( 6:11) 4. 90° Celcius
( 6:54) 5. Journey Into Capricorn
(12:05) 6. Celebration Suite

Journey Into Capricorn is the last studio album by American jazz musician Stan Kenton and his orchestra, released in late 1976, by Creative World Records. Recording sessions for the album took place in Hollywood, California on August 16–18, 1976. The initial release of the album titled both the album and the individual tune Journey To Capricorn. The later release reworked the cover art and corrected both titles to Journey Into Capricorn

Though written by Mark Taylor, Granada Smoothie is very reminiscent of Hank Levy's compositions. Taylor's well thought out arrangement of Too Shy To Say is a clever transformation of Stevie Wonder's pop music hit, the chart represents a continued push to keep Kenton's musical direction moving forward.

During the sessions two compositions were recorded but never got issued on the release: Ken Hanna's "Sensitivo" and Alan Yankee's arrangement of "Lush Life". Producer Bob Curnow, "I have an uneasy feeling that the takes were not really the best on any of their unreleased material, but still it would be nice to have them out after all these years." Curnow is unclear who now possesses the unissued Creative World masters; whether the masters were part of the deal with Gene Norman or if they are in possession of the Kenton estate.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journey_Into_Capricorn

Musicians: piano and leader: Stan Kenton; saxophones and flutes: Alan Yankee, Bill Fritz (track: 6), Dave Sova, Greg Metcalf, Roy Reynolds, Terry Layne; trumpets: Dave Kennedy, Jay Sollenberger, Joe Casano, Steve Campos, Tim Hagans; trombones: Allan Morrissey, Dick Shearer, Jeff Uusitalo, Mike Egan, Doug Purviance (bass trombone); tuba: Mike Wallace; acoustic and electric bass: John Worster; drum set: Gary Hobbs; percussion: Ramon Lopez

Journey Into Capricorn

Friday, March 31, 2023

Stan Kenton - Solo: Stan Kenton Without His Orchestra

Styles: Hard Bop
Year: 1974
File: MP3@128K/s
Time: 40:47
Size: 38,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:02) 1. Theme to the West
(3:29) 2. Eager Beaver
(5:12) 3. Theme for Sunday
(2:58) 4. Reflection
(4:52) 5. Guess Where I Used To Work _ Blues
(4:23) 6. Concerto to End All Concertos
(2:47) 7. Sunset Tower
(4:18) 8. Interlude
(1:39) 9. Lush Waltz
(7:02) 10. Self Portrait

Stanley Newcomb Kenton (December 15, 1911 - August 25, 1979) led a highly innovative, influential, and often controversial American jazz orchestra. In later years he was widely active as an educator.

Stan Kenton was born in Wichita, Kansas, and raised first in Colorado and then in California. He learned piano as a child, and while still a teenager toured with various bands. In June 1941 he formed his own band, which developed into one of the best-known West Coast ensembles of the Forties.

Kenton's musical aggregations were decidedly “orchestras.” Sometimes consisting of two dozen or more musicians at once, they produced an unmistakable Kenton sound--as recognizable as that of the bands of Glenn Miller, Duke Ellington, or Count Basie. So large an orchestra was able to produce a tremendous, at times overpowering, volume in the dance and concert halls of the land; among musical conservatives it developed a reputation for playing strange-sounding pieces much too loudly, and indeed one comical MC introduced Stan Kenton as “Cant Standit.”

A Kenton specialty was Afro-Cuban rhythm, as exported to North America by such bandleaders as Machito (whose brass and reed sound, in turn, began to show the influence of Kenton). Translated into the Kenton idiom, however, the Latin rhythms might be scored for a full panoply of percussion instruments: tympani, bongos, conga, timbales, claves, and maracas. This component of Kenton's work may be heard on the 1947 recording “Machito” and on the album Cuban Fire, still in print after more than fifty years of ceaseless change in popular music.

Many of Kenton's band arrangements were written by Kenton himself, as well as other composers and arrangers such as Gene Roland, Pete Rugolo, W. A. Mathieu, Johnny Richards, Lennie Niehaus, Gerry Mulligan, Hank Levy, Bill Russo, Dee Barton, Bill Holman, Shorty Rogers, Ken Hanna, and Bob Graettinger (ref. his formidable but fascinating “City of Glass”). The music, which could be intensely dissonant, made use of powerful brass sections and unconventional saxophone voicings that showed Kenton's love of experimenting, reflected in the names he gave his ensembles: “Innovations Orchestra,” “Neophonic Orchestra,” and “Mellophonium Orchestra.” Kenton's theme song from the early days to the last was called, significantly, “Artistry in Rhythm.” It was owing in part to Kenton's ambitious musical nomenclature that many critics dismissed his work as mannered and pretentious. But apart from recording a few dance-band albums (Kenton's men could play standards beautifully), he avoided compromising his idea of jazz to please either critics or public.

Kenton played in the 1930s in the dance bands of Vido Musso and Gus Arnheim, but he was born to be a leader. In 1941 he formed his first orchestra, which later was named after his theme song “Artistry in Rhythm.” A decent Earl Hines-influenced pianist, Kenton was much more important in the early days as an arranger and inspiration for his loyal sidemen. Although there were no major names in his first band (bassist Howard Rumsey and trumpeter Chico Alvarez come the closest), Kenton spent the summer of 1941 playing regularly before a very appreciative audience at the Rendezvous Ballroom in Balboa Beach, CA. Influenced by Jimmie Lunceford (who, like Kenton, enjoyed high-note trumpeters and thick-toned tenors), the Stan Kenton Orchestra struggled a bit after its initial success. Its Decca recordings were not big sellers and a stint as Bob Hope's backup radio band was an unhappy experience; Les Brown permanently took Kenton's place.

By late 1943 with a Capitol contract, a popular record in “Eager Beaver,” and growing recognition, the Stan Kenton Orchestra was gradually catching on. Its soloists during the war years included Art Pepper, briefly Stan Getz, altoist Boots Mussulli, and singer Anita O'Day. By 1945 the band had evolved quite a bit. Pete Rugolo became the chief arranger (extending Kenton's ideas), Bob Cooper and Vido Musso offered very different tenor styles, and June Christy was Kenton's new singer; her popular hits (including “Tampico” and “Across the Alley From the Alamo”) made it possible for Kenton to finance his more ambitious projects. Calling his music “progressive jazz,” Kenton sought to lead a concert orchestra as opposed to a dance band at a time when most big bands were starting to break up. By 1947 Kai Winding was greatly influencing the sound of Kenton's trombonists, the trumpet section included such screamers as Buddy Childers, Ray Wetzel, and Al Porcino, Jack Costanzo's bongos were bringing Latin rhythms into Kenton's sound, and a riotous version of “The Peanut Vendor” contrasted with the somber “Elegy for Alto.” Kenton had succeeded in forming a radical and very original band that gained its own audience.

In 1949 Kenton took a year off. In 1950 he put together his most advanced band, the 39-piece Innovations in Modern Music Orchestra that included 16 strings, a woodwind section, and two French horns. Its music ranged from the unique and very dense modern classical charts of Bob Graettinger to works that somehow swung despite the weight. Such major players as Maynard Ferguson (whose high-note acrobatics set new standards), Shorty Rogers, Milt Bernhart, John Graas, Art Pepper, Bud Shank, Bob Cooper, Laurindo Almeida, Shelly Manne, and June Christy were part of this remarkable project, but from a commercial standpoint, it was really impossible. Kenton managed two tours during 1950-1951 but soon reverted to his usual 19-piece lineup. Then quite unexpectedly, Kenton went through a swinging period. The charts of such arrangers as Shorty Rogers, Gerry Mulligan, Lennie Niehaus, Marty Paich, Johnny Richards, and particularly Bill Holman and Bill Russo began to dominate the repertoire. Such talented players (in addition to the ones already named) as Lee Konitz, Conte Candoli, Sal Salvador, Stan Levey, Frank Rosolino, Richie Kamuca, Zoot Sims, Sam Noto, Bill Perkins, Charlie Mariano, Mel Lewis, Pete Candoli, Lucky Thompson, Carl Fontana, Pepper Adams, and Jack Sheldon made strong contributions. The music was never predictable and could get quite bombastic, but it managed to swing while still keeping the Kenton sound.

Critics of Kenton have not limited their attacks to his music only. In 1956, when the band returned from its European trip, the Critics Poll in Down Beat reflected victories by Negroes in virtually every category. The Kenton band was playing in Ontario, Canada, at the time, and Stan dispatched a telegram which brought near apoplexy to critic Leonard Feather.

The telegram lamented “a new minority, white jazz musicians,” and stated Kenton's “complete and total disgust [with the] literary geniuses of jazz.” Feather, alone of all the critics, took up his cudgel to answer and attack Kenton. In the October 3, 1956, issue he wrote an open letter which distorted Kenton's words, and in the heat of anger (though he claimed it was sorrow) he questioned Kenton's racial views, his alleged disparagement of Negro leaders like Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Dizzy Gillespie. Feather inferred that Kenton's failure to win the Critics Poll was the major reason for the complaint; that there had been a prejudice for many years and now it had to be expressed; that Kenton had not hired enough Negro musicians over the years.

All points except the last were based on conjecture, and events preceding and following Feather's complaint have shown how ridiculous they were. The latter point was based on a poor or prejudiced memory of the writer, for in noting the presence of only a handful of Negroes in Kenton's band he overlooked at least five times as many others who have played with or been aided by Kenton. (The night that Kenton sent the telegram there were two Negroes playing in the trombone section.) Not least among these would be Charlie Parker and, particularly, Art Tatum, who was given more exposure on a Kenton sponsored tour than he ever received elsewhere.Feather's weak memory tore his thesis to threads.

In reality, every musician who has ever played with Kenton will tell you that he has been a staunch defender of the Negro's place in jazz and that he has fought just as violently against the Crow-Jim concept of some Negroes that jazz is their music alone. As critic Ralph J. Gleason wrote, also in Down Beat, Feather's verdict was passed on Kenton “...without, unfortunately, any public statement from the only musicians really in a position to know.” Again, unfortunately, it took critic Feather four years to realise his error, for it was not until August, 1960, that he took stock and tried to clear the scene.Kenton later was asked if Feather had apologised for his article before the jazz world in Down Beat. The answer was: “Yes: I think it was on the back page of the Pittsburg Inquirer.” Kenton was pointing to the irony that Feather had created a great tempest, and no matter how apologetic the critic would be he had created great ill-feeling, and there is still much of that prejudice-in-reverse by Negro musicians toward Stan. Nearly three years before this, in the December 16, 1953, issue of Down Beat, critic Nat Hentoff had written that “...Stan is as free from prejudice of any kind as any man I know.”

Kenton's last successful experiment was his mellophonium band of 1960-1963. Despite the difficulties in keeping the four mellophoniums (which formed their own separate section) in tune, this particular Kenton orchestra had its exciting moments. However from 1963 on, the flavor of the Kenton big band began to change. Rather than using talented soloists, Kenton emphasized relatively inexpensive youth at the cost of originality. While the arrangements (including those of Hank Levy) continued to be quite challenging, after Gabe Baltazar's “graduation” in 1965, there were few new important Kenton alumni (other than Peter Erskine and Tim Hagans). For many of the young players, touring with Kenton would be the high point of their careers rather than just an important early step. Kenton Plays Wagner (1964) was an important project, but by then the bandleader's attention was on jazz education. By conducting a countless number of clinics and making his charts available to college and high-school stage bands, Kenton insured that there would be many bands that sounded like his, and the inverse result was that his own young orchestra sounded like a professional college band! Kenton continued leading and touring with his big band up until his death in 1979.
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/stan-kenton

Solo: Stan Kenton Without His Orchestra

Wednesday, March 22, 2023

Stan Kenton & His Orch. - Stan Kenton Live in Europe (1977)

Styles: Jazz, Swing, Big Band
Year: 1977
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size side 1: 53,1 MB
Size side 2: 52,5 MB
Art: Front

(23:08) side 1: Lush Life, Love for Sale, Turtle Talk, My Old Flame

(22:53) side 2: Tattooed Lady,I'm Glad There Is You, Fire and Ice, Eager Beaver,Artistry in Rhythm


Though Stan Kenton would lead his band on tours in 1977 and 1978, this live recording from September 1976 is the band's last official recording. This is a thrilling, if unplanned, finale to Kenton's recording career.

In a way, "Live in Europe" summarizes Kenton's career. Charts are drawn from all 4 decades of the band's history - "Eager Beaver/Artistry in Rhythm" from the `40's; "Love For Sale" and "My Old Flame" from the `50's; "Turtle Talk" and " I'm Glad There is You" from the 60's; and the remaining 3 charts," Lush Life"," Tattooed Lady" and "Fire and Ice" are from the 70's, written especially for this band by arranger Alan Yankee. Other arrangers include Pete Rugolo, Dee Barton, Marty Paich, and Kenton himself - an impressive line-up, indeed.

Throughout the program you hear the Kenton band's great command of dynamics from extremely soft to all-out fortissimo. The band cuts its Latin speciality ("Love For Sale"); swings hard ("Tattooed Lady" and parts of "Lush Life"); caresses a ballad ("I'm Glad There is You"); plays with tremendous control building up to a dramatic climax at a very slow tempo ("My Old Flame"), and tackles modern harmonic material like "Turtle Talk" and the awe-inspiring "Fire and Ice." And it's great to hear Stan do the band call before the out-chorus on "Artistry in Rhythm."

The band's performance is typically Kentonian, which is to say tight and powerful, and includes strong solos from trombonists Dick Shearer and Jeff Uusitalo, alto saxophonist Terry Layne, trumpeter Steve Campos, and especially from tenor saxophonist Roy Reynolds and trumpeter Tim Hagans, who blow two of the hottest solos ever captured on a Kenton recording on "Fire and Ice". The rhythm section of John Worster, bass Gary Hobbs, drums, and Ramon Lopez, Latin percussion drives the band hard and is right on the money at every tempo. And of course, one must never forget the lyrical piano solos of Stan Kenton and especially his inspiring leadership and personality which were the keys to the band's success.

"Live In Europe" is full of atmosphere and good memories, and proves once again why the Stan Kenton Orchestra was such a powerful and popular musical force for four decades. Warmly recommended to Kenton fans and those discovering the Kenton sound for the first time.
(John Tapscott, https://www.amazon.com/Live-Europe-Stan-Kenton/dp/B000ANDBGM)

Personnel: Alan Yankee - Arranger (A1, B1, B3), Baritone Saxophone; Allan Morrissey - Bass Trombone; Dave Kennedy, Jay Sollenberger, Joe Casano, Steve Campos (Soloist on B1), Tim Hagans (Soloist on A3, A4, B3) - Trumpets; Dick Shearer - Trombone (Soloist on A1, A2), Associate Producer; Doug Purviance - Bass Trombone, Tuba; Gary Hobbs - Drums; Jef Uusitalo (Soloist on A3, B1), Mike Egan - Trombones; Ramon Lopez - Percussion; Roy Reynolds (Soloist on A4, B3), Teddy Andersen - Tenor Saxophones; Stan Kenton - Arranger (B2, B4, B5), Solo Piano (B2, B4), Piano (Soloist on A1, B5); Terry Layne - Alto Saxophone (Soloist on A3)

Notes: Recorded live in Veghel, Holland, September 18, 1976.

Stan Kenton Live in Europe

Tuesday, November 8, 2022

Various - Capitol Sings Johnny Mercer

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:03
Size: 162.7 MB
Styles: Vocal, Easy Listening
Year: 1991
Art: Front

[3:17] 1. Ella Mae Morse - Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive
[3:11] 2. Martha Tilton - And The Angels Sing
[2:49] 3. Gordon MacRae - Autumn Leaves
[3:12] 4. Jo Stafford - Blues In The Night
[1:53] 5. Blossom Dearie - Charade
[3:40] 6. Judy Garland - Come Rain Or Come Shine
[2:22] 7. Nat King Cole - Day In-Day Out
[3:16] 8. Matt Monro - Days Of Wine And Roses
[2:47] 9. The Pied Pipers - Dream
[2:32] 10. Benny Goodman - Goody Goody
[2:52] 11. Johnny Mercer - Glow Worm
[2:55] 12. The Four Freshmen - I Thought About You
[2:49] 13. Dinah Shore - I'm Old Fashioned
[2:57] 14. Dean Martin - In The Cool Cool Cool Of The Evening
[2:16] 15. Stan Kenton & His Orchestra - Jeepers Creepers
[2:22] 16. Vic Damone - Laura
[3:26] 17. Lena Horne - Moon River
[3:03] 18. Johnny Mercer - On The Atchison, Topeka & The Sante Fe
[4:13] 19. Harold Arlen - One For My Baby (And One More For The Road)
[2:58] 20. Kay Starr - P.S. I Love You
[2:21] 21. Nancy Wilson - Satin Doll
[4:00] 22. Hoagy Carmichael - Skylark
[2:54] 23. Keely Smith - That Old Black Magic
[2:47] 24. Andy Russell - Too Marvelous For Words

Singer/songwriter Johnny Mercer was one of the founders of Capitol Records in the early '40s, so it's appropriate that he rates his own volume in the label's various-artists songbook compilation series of the 1990s (one that has already had discs devoted to Cole Porter and George Gershwin). As a lyricist working over a long career, Mercer provides a varied range of material for inclusion. This is a man who was setting words to 1930s swing hits like "And the Angels Sing," "Goody Goody," and "Satin Doll," and was still going strong in the 1960s, when he was writing movie themes like "Moon River" and "The Days of Wine and Roses" with Henry Mancini. In between, there were standards of the ‘40s such as "Blues in the Night" and "That Old Black Magic," and ‘50s favorites like "Autumn Leaves" and "In the Cool, Cool, Cool of the Evening." Capitol was devoted to singers, which allowed it to take advantage of the post-swing era of the late ‘40s and ‘50s when singers ruled. Tops among them was Frank Sinatra, a Capitol artist, who apparently didn't allow his recordings to be compiled on this sort of collection. But many other important singers are included, among them Judy Garland, Nat King Cole, Dinah Shore, and Dean Martin. And Mercer himself pops in several times, as do a couple of his composer collaborators, Harold Arlen and Hoagy Carmichael. Although Mercer has an identifiable writing style, full of a self-invented Southern slang ("swingeroonie!," "my huckleberry friend"), his teaming with different sorts of composers allows for many different musical styles on this disc, making it one of the rangier volumes in the series. ~William Ruhlmann

Capitol Sings Johnny Mercer

Wednesday, September 21, 2022

Various - Capitol Sings Cole Porter: Anything Goes

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:44
Size: 148.2 MB
Styles: Standards, Easy Listening
Year: 1991
Art: Front

[2:16] 1. Annie Ross - All Of You
[2:03] 2. Peggy Lee - Always True To You In My Fashion
[2:21] 3. Count Basie - Anything Goes
[3:26] 4. Gordon Macrae - Begin The Beguine
[2:44] 5. Martha Tilton - Blow, Gabriel, Blow
[3:47] 6. Stan Kenton - Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye
[1:50] 7. Peggy Lee - From Now On
[2:41] 8. Stan Kenton - I Get A Kick Out Of You
[2:53] 9. Judy Garland - I Happen To Like New York
[2:15] 10. Helen O'connell - In The Still Of The Night
[2:38] 11. Dinah Shore - It's All Right With Me
[2:35] 12. Louis Prima - I've Got You Under My Skin
[2:13] 13. Nat King Cole - Just One Of Those Things
[2:37] 14. Liza Minnelli - Looking At You
[2:08] 15. Frances Faye - Miss Otis Regrets (She's Unable To Lunch Today)
[2:25] 16. John Raitt - So In Love
[2:30] 17. Dean Martin - True Love
[1:51] 18. Keely Smith - What Is This Thing Called Love
[3:16] 19. Margaret Whiting - Why Shouldn't I
[2:48] 20. Jo Stafford - Wunderbar
[2:35] 21. Nancy Wilson - You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
[2:35] 22. Jean Turner - You're The Top
[2:11] 23. Trudy Richards - Let's Do It (Let's Fall In Love)
[3:03] 24. Jeri Southern - Get Out Of Town
[2:50] 25. The Andrews Sisters - You Do Something To Me

As far as all-star Cole Porter compilations go, Capitol Sings Cole Porter: Anything Goes is recommended as an entertaining sampler of 25 titles performed by some of the label's biggest stars. These include, on the hip end of the spectrum, Nat King Cole, Nancy Wilson, Frances Faye, Jo Stafford, and Annie Ross, a disarming vocalist who collaborates warmly with baritone saxophonist Gerry Mulligan. Peggy Lee is heard with George Shearing, Keely Smith with Louis Prima, Dinah Shore with Red Norvo, Tony Bennett with Count Basie and Chris Connor, and June Christy with Stan Kenton. Pop singers heard on this collection include Judy Garland, Liza Minnelli, Margaret Whiting, Dean Martin, Gordon MacRae, and the Andrews Sisters. This mini-survey of great moments in mid-20th century pop culture is suitable for casual listening (and optional singalong) while cleaning house, preparing food, shampooing the cat, or operating heavy machinery during rush hour. ~arwulf arwulf

Capitol Sings Cole Porter: Anything Goes

Thursday, December 9, 2021

Stan Kenton - A Merry Christmas

Styles: Piano, Christmas
Year: 2003
File: MP3@128K/s
Time: 34:21
Size: 33,7 MB
Art: Front

(1:58) 1. O Tannenbaum
(1:52) 2. The Holly And The Ivy
(2:14) 3. We Three Kings Of Orient Are
(1:44) 4. Good King Wenceslas
(4:07) 5. The Twelve Days Of Christmas
(2:04) 6. Once In Royal David's City
(1:46) 7. God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen
(3:17) 8. O Come, All Ye Faithful
(2:11) 9. Angels We Have Heard On High
(2:10) 10. O Holy Night
(8:24) 11. Christmas Medley
(2:29) 12. What Is Santa Claus?

When bandleader Stan Kenton was approached to record an album of holiday music in 1961 he agreed, on one condition -- no songs about singing snowmen or flying reindeer. The resulting album, A Merry Christmas, is a polyphonic masterpiece that is at once progressive and traditional. Included are such well-known classics as "O Tannenbaum" and "The Twelve Days of Christmas" as well as lesser known gems like "The Holly and the Ivy" and "Once in Royal David's City." Featuring Kenton's idiosyncratic style of arranging piercing trumpets over a wooly blanket of trombones and mellophones, this is beautiful, forward-thinking and angular music that addresses both complex classical harmony and Basie-style swing. Epitomizing this is the intricate and delicate harmonic dissonance on "O Come, All Ye Faithful," a must-hear for Kentonites. As a bonus, the album includes Kenton regular trumpeter Maynard Ferguson's stellar 1960 medley "Christmas for Moderns," which features the high-note master's hip takes on such other holiday nuggets as "White Christmas and "Jingle Bells." Fans should also get a kick out of Kenton's humorous 1963 spoken word piece "What Is Santa Claus?."~Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/album/a-merry-christmas%21-mw0000316697

A Merry Christmas

Saturday, November 13, 2021

Ann Richards, Stan Kenton - Two Much!

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:04
Size: 91.7 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1961/2017
Art: Front

[3:53] 1. It's A Wonderful World
[3:59] 2. The Morning After (The Night Before)
[3:52] 3. I Was The Last One To Know
[4:34] 4. My Kinda Love
[4:07] 5. I Got Rhythm
[4:34] 6. No Moon At All
[3:46] 7. Don't Be That Way
[4:07] 8. Suddenly I'm Sad
[3:13] 9. Nobody Like My Baby
[3:53] 10. All Or Nothing At All

Ann Richards never received the same acclamation as her more famous vocal predecessors with the Stan Kenton Orchestra, Anita O'Day, June Christy, and Chris Connor. While these three went on to carve out successful careers as singles, Richards, after her divorce from Kenton, slowly sank into obscurity. With a style closer in style to O'Day's, Richards could swing out a tune with the best of them and could scat with vim and verve. She demonstrates these talents on "It's a Wonderful World" and "All or Nothing at All." She could also credibly deliver on blues tunes as on "The Morning After (The Night Before)." Richards could move to a lower range and get torchy, which she does on "My Kinda Love." Then she slow-drags "I Got Rhythm," riding atop the doleful tones of the trombone section and a muted trumpet. While he didn't have the big names that peppered earlier bands, this Kenton group could swing and play as a cohesive group. Like all Kenton bands, it featured the high note blaring trumpet. Here it's Bud Brisbois that supplied the upper atmospheric notes on the horn. There are a couple of selections where Richards is backed by just a small group, as on "No Moon at All," where she doesn't have to compete with the larger aggregation, showing off her voice to its full advantage. With a slim discography, this album is an important contribution to the legacy of a good singer whose career was far too short. ~Dave Nathan

Two Much!

Monday, May 31, 2021

Stan Kenton - Stan Kenton Presents

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1950
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:52
Size: 83,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:19) 1. Art Pepper
(4:17) 2. Maynard Ferguson
(5:01) 3. Halls Of Brass
(3:44) 4. Evening In Pakistan
(4:07) 5. June Christy
(4:18) 6. House Of Strings
(4:28) 7. Shelly Manne
(4:36) 8. Soliloquy

Stan Kenton's most ambitious orchestra was his huge 1950 band. This LP has self-titled showcases for "Art Pepper," "Maynard Ferguson," "June Christy" and "Shelly Manne" in addition to such pieces as "Halls of Brass," "House of Strings" and "Soliloquy." The soloists (which also include trombonist Milt Bernhart) are very impressive but it is the writing (by Shorty Rogers, Bill Russo, Frank Marks, Johnny Richards and Kenton himself) that is most startling, combining together aspects of modern classical music with the most advanced forms of jazz. Although Kenton's Innovations Orchestra was a short-lived project and did not influence the future of jazz, its recordings still sound very adventurous over four decades later. The album was reissued on CD with the contents of the same year's Innovations in Modern Music (plus much additional material) as the two-disc set The Innovations Orchestra.~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/stan-kenton-presents-mw0000899398

Personnel: Stan Kenton – piano, arranger; Alfred "Chico" Alvarez, Buddy Childers, Maynard Ferguson, Don Paladino, Shorty Rogers – trumpet (tracks 1–4, 7 & 8); Milt Bernhart, Harry Betts, Bob Fitzpatrick, Bill Russo – trombone (tracks 1–4, 7 & 8); Clyde Brown (tracks 1–3 & 7), Bart Varsalona (tracks 4 & 8) – bass trombone; John Graas, Lloyd Otto – French horn (tracks 1–4, 7 & 8); Gene Englund – tuba (tracks 1–4, 7 & 8); Art Pepper – alto saxophone, clarinet (tracks 1–4, 7 & 8); Bud Shank – alto saxophone, flute (tracks 1–4, 7 & 8); Bob Cooper – tenor saxophone, oboe, English horn (tracks 1–4, 7 & 8); Bart Caldarell – tenor saxophone, bassoon (tracks 1–4, 7 & 8); Bob Gioga – baritone saxophone, bass clarinet (tracks 1–4 & 6–8); Jim Cathcart, Earl Cornwell, Anthony Doria, Lew Elias, Jim Holmes, George Kast, Alex Law, Herbert Offner, Carl Ottobrino, Dave Schackne – violin (tracks 1–4 & 6–8); Stan Harris, Leonard Sclic, Sam Singer – viola (tracks 1–4 & 6–8); Gregory Bemko, Zachary Bock, Jack Wulfe – cello (tracks 1–4 & 6–8); Laurindo Almeida – guitar (tracks 1–5, 7 & 8); Don Bagley – bass (tracks 1–5, 7 & 8); Shelly Manne – drums, tympani (tracks 1–5, 7 & 8); Carlos Vida – congas (tracks 1–4, 7 & 8); Jack Costanzo – percussion (track 5); June Christy – vocals (track 5)

Stan Kenton Presents

Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Stan Kenton - Adventures In Jazz

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1961
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:15
Size: 122,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:33)  1. Turtle Talk
(5:50)  2. Stairway To The Stars
(4:29)  3. Limehouse Blues
(4:25)  4. Malaguena
(3:37)  5. Misty
(6:45)  6. Waltz Of The Prophets
(5:20)  7. Body And Soul
(5:17)  8. It Might As Well Be Spring
(6:32)  9. Waltz Of The Prophets (First Version)
(5:24) 10. Body And Soul (First Version)

This is one of the finest albums ever recorded by the remarkable Stan Kenton Orchestra. It features two compositions by the composer/trombonist/drummer Dee Barton, "Turtle Talk" and "Waltz of the Prophets," that are among the best-known works from the Kenton library. Barton later went on to fame (like those other Kenton stalwarts, Pete Rugolo and Lennie Niehaus) as a composer for films such as Clint Eastwood's Play Misty for Me. The CD includes a well-known version of the song "Misty," but the arrangement is by Gene Roland, not Dee Barton. "Misty" showcases the incredible mellophonium work of Ray Starling, undoubtedly the finest soloist who ever mastered that notoriously difficult brass instrument. Another featured soloist is Sam Donahue, a deep-throated tenor player in the Vido Musso tradition, who provides a stratospherically high solo on his own arrangement of "Body and Soul." An alternative version of "Body and Soul" (along with another version of "Waltz of the Prophets") is included as a CD bonus, but it lacks the polish of the take included on the original LP. The composer/arranger Bill Holman is represented by two of his best charts: "Stairway to the Stars," a tour de force arrangement of the standard featuring the alto of Gabe Baltazar; and the big production arrangement of Lecuona's "Malaguena," an arrangement that was a staple of Kenton concerts and clinics in the 1960s and 1970s. Aficionados of Stan Kenton's band won't want to be without this CD. This is Kenton at the peak of his power, leading a dynamite collection of soloists and sidemen during the last glory days of the travelling big bands. ~ William Grim https://www.allaboutjazz.com/adventures-in-jazz-stan-kenton-capitol-records-review-by-william-grim.php

Personnel:  Stan Kenton, piano;  Jim Amlotte, trombone;  Buddy Arnold, tenor sax;  Gabe Baltazar, alto sax;  Norman Baltazar, trumpet;  Dee Barton, trombone;  Bob Behrendt, trumpet;  Allan Beutler, baritone & bass saxes;  Bud Brisbois, trumpet;  Dwight Carver, mellophonium;  Sam Donahue, tenor sax; Wayne Dunstan, bass sax;  Bob Fitzpatrick, trombone; Marvin Holladay, baritone sax;  Joel Kaye, baritone & bass saxes;  Keith LaMotte, mellophonium;  Jerry Lestock McKenzie, drums;  Red Mitchell, bass;  Bud Parker, trombone;  Paul Renzi, tenpr sax;  Bob Rolfe, trumpet;  Carl Saunders, mellophonium;  Pat Senatore, bass;  Dalton Smith, trumpet;  Jack Spurlock, trombone;  Marvin Stamm, trumpet;  Ray Starling, mellophonium;  Dave Wheeler, bass trombone, tuba

Adventures In Jazz

Tuesday, July 17, 2018

Stan Kenton - Artistry Jumps

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:49
Size: 98.0 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[2:35] 1. Artistry Jumps
[2:36] 2. Balboa Bash
[2:15] 3. Harlem Folk Dance
[2:41] 4. Tampico
[3:51] 5. End Of The World
[2:51] 6. Around The Town
[2:33] 7. Shoo Fly Pie And Apple Pan Dowdy
[4:28] 8. Capitol Punishment
[2:25] 9. Are You Livin' Old Man
[2:01] 10. Lover
[2:59] 11. Taboo
[3:04] 12. I 've Been Down In Texas
[2:53] 13. Painted Rhythm
[3:19] 14. Two Moose In A Caboose
[2:13] 15. Everybody Swing

Stan Kenton’s life might best be described as one long battle: to win over public acceptance in his struggle to elevate “popular” music by combining elements of jazz and classical sounds in to a new, artistic style of American music. “You’ve got to believe in something to achieve whatever goal you’re shooting for. My own ideas may be wrong, but I’m going to stick with them until they break me,” declared Kenton in 1943. At the same time, and from the opposite perspective, several classical composers like Stravinsky and Villa-Lobos, were incorporating elements of jazz into their music. “Artistry in Rhythm” was Kenton’s most radical example to date of his innovative conceptions to effect a combination of the two styles. When Kenton opened at the Rendezvous Ballroom in Balboa Beach, CA, for the summer season in 1941, he lacked the essential feature of an identifying song. Every band needed its own instantly recognizable signature tune, so rather than chose an already-known melody, Stan set to and composed a 45-second original piece which he called simply “Theme.”By July 1943, Kenton had expanded the work into the fully developed, semi-symphonic orchestration that he called “Production on Theme.” But when it was recorded at the band’s first Capitol session on November 19, 1943, Capitol executives balked at the highbrow title, and persuaded Kenton it was better named after the orchestra’s slogan—“Artistry in Rhythm.” “And, of course,” commented Stan, “It’s stuck ever since.”

Artistry Jumps mc
Artistry Jumps zippy

Monday, January 1, 2018

Stan Kenton - Standards In Silhouette

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:23
Size: 103.9 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 1960/1998
Art: Front

[5:52] 1. Willow Weep For Me
[4:52] 2. The Thrill Is Gone
[5:24] 3. The Meaning Of The Blues
[4:44] 4. When Sunny Gets Blue
[5:24] 5. Ill Wind
[5:00] 6. Django
[5:06] 7. I Get Along Without You Very Well
[5:30] 8. Lonely Woman
[3:26] 9. Lazy Afternoon

Stan Kenton, piano; Jimmy Campbell, drums; Jim Amlotte, bass trombone; John Bonnie, tenor sax; Bud Brisbois, trumpet; Bill Chase, trumpet; Pete Chivily, bass; Rolf Ericson, trumpet; Marvin Holladay, baritone sax; Bobby Knight, bass trombone; Kent Larson, trombone; Archie LeCoque, trombone; Charlie Mariano, alto sax; Roger Middleton, trumpet; Jack Nimitz, baritone sax; Mike Pacheco, bongos; Clyde Reasinger, trumpet; Don Sebesky, trombone; Dalton Smith, trumpet; Bill Trujillo, tenor sax; Bill Mathieu, arranger

There was always much more to the Stan Kenton band than stratospheric trumpets and walls of sound. Nobody could play a ballad quite like Kenton. Lugubious tempos so slow they added an extra dimension of emotion to the overall effect. Dynamic control so profound that it seemed at times almost superhuman. And arrangements of such startling harmonic complexity that they breathed life into even the most hackneyed tunes from Tin Pan Alley.

Standards in Silhouette is one of Kenton's finest albums of ballads, and is unusual in that it features exclusively the arrangements of the then 22-year old Bill Mathieu. The selection of tunes is outstanding. From well known standards like "Willow Weep for Me" (also recorded previously by Kenton with a vocal by June Christy), Harold Arlen's "Slow Wind" and Hoagy Carmichael's "I Get Along Without You Very Well" to numbers you wouldn't expect to hear a Kenton band performing like John Lewis' "Django," this album is an aural delight for Kenton cognoscenti and newcomers alike. The soloists on this album are among the finest from the many great sidemen who performed with Kenton over the years. Archie LeCoque on trombone adds his name to the illustrious ranks of Milt Berhnard, Kai Winding and Dick Shearer with inspired solos on "I Get Along Without You Very Well," "Willow Weep for Me" and "Lonely Woman." Bill Trujillo and Rolf Ericson are particularly effective throughout the album on tenor sax and trumpet respectively. The legendary alto saxophonist Charlie Mariano produces outstanding solos on "I Get Along Without You Very Well," "The Thrill Is Gone" and swings like a maniac on "Django." As always, the section work is second to none. One song that deserves special attention is Bobby Troup's brilliant but sadly neglected "The Meaning of the Blues." Although there are a few vocal recordings of this work (The Four Freshmen and Janis Siegel immediately come to mind), Mathieu's arrangement is one of the few instrumental versions of this number ever recorded. Rolf Ericson and Bill Trujillo handle their solos brilliantly while the trademark Kenton high trumpets are employed to great effect in the out chorus.

A lot of critics didn't like (and still don't like) Kenton's band, calling it stilted or unswinging or too musically complex to be authentic jazz. Fortunately, real jazz fans ignored the critics because they knew the critics were wrong. Standards in Silhouette shows just how wrong the critics were. ~William Grim

Standards In Silhouette mc
Standards In Silhouette zippy

Sunday, September 24, 2017

Stan Kenton - Easy Go

Styles: Piano Jazz, Big Band 
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:17
Size: 142,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:09)  1. Easy Go
(3:15)  2. Love For Sale
(3:19)  3. Viva Prado
(2:56)  4. Something New (Sunset Tower)
(2:39)  5. Theme For Alto
(3:15)  6. Riff Rhapsody
(3:08)  7. Dynaflow
(3:13)  8. What's New
(3:04)  9. Jump For Joe
(2:42) 10. Night Watch
(2:44) 11. Francesca
(2:46) 12. Soliloquy
(2:50) 13. Lazy Daisy
(2:33) 14. Mambo Rhapsody
(3:10) 15. Riff Raff
(2:57) 16. Star Dust
(3:06) 17. Bags And Baggage
(2:54) 18. Bill's Blues
(3:26) 19. Cool Eyes
(3:04) 20. Beehive

Easy Go is a compilation of straight ahead charts recorded by the Kenton band in the years 1950-52 between tours of the Innovations Orchestra. While an artistic triumph, the Innovations Orchestra was not so successful financially, and Kenton had to record a number of albums devoted to just dance and swing tunes to recuperate his losses. Nevertheless, these recordings feature the Kenton band at its most swinging and most relaxed. And all the critics who have said that Kenton never swung need only listen to this CD to hear how wrong they've been over the years. What a collection of sidemen and arrangers. Stan Kenton, Pete Rugolo, Shorty Rogers, Gene Roland, Johnny Richards and Bill Russo all contributed charts. As an example of the range of jazz greats on this album, the trumpet section included Ray Wetzel, Buddy Childers, both Candoli brothers, Shorty Rogers, Al Porcino, and a young kid from Montreal named Maynard Ferguson. Most of the tunes included on Easy Go are long familiar to Kenton fans. Of all the great arrangers whose works appear on this CD, Shorty Roger's original tune "Viva Prado" and his rendition of the standard "What's New" stand out among the crowd. Another chart of special interest is William Russo's "Bill's Blues," one of the most swinging compositions ever penned by the most cerebral of the Kenton stable of composer/arrangers. Easy Go is a must for all Kenton fans and a good starting point for those who are new to the Creative World of Stan Kenton. ~ William Grinnm https://www.allaboutjazz.com/easy-go-stan-kenton-capitol-records-review-by-william-grim.php

Personnel: Stan Kenton, piano, arranger; Ruban McFall, trumpet; Dick Meldonian, sax; Clyde Reasinger,trumpet; George Roberts, trombone; Jimmy Salko, trumpet; Ray Wetzel, trumpet; Ralph Blaze, guitar; Al Porcino, trumpet; Johnny Halliburton, trombone; Dick Kenney, trombone; Paul Weigand, trombone; Don Dennis, trumpet; Bart Caldarell, sax; Jack Millman, trumpet; Mike Pacheco, timbales; Johnny Richards, arranger; Shorty Rogers, arranger, trumpet; Herbie Steward, sax; Milt Bernhart, trombone; Harry Betts, trombone; Bob Fitzpatrick, trombone; Bob Gioga, Sax; John Howell, trumpet; Laurindo Almeida, guitar; Eddie Bert, trombone; Conte Candoli, trumpet; Frank Capp, drums; Buddy Childers, trumpet; Eddie Gomez, maraccas; Herbie Harper, trombone; Bill Holman, Sax; Shelly Manne, drums; Art Pepper, sax; Bud Shank, sax; Don Bagley, bass; Pete Candoli, trumpet; John Graas, French horn; Lennie Niehaus, Sax; Gene Roland, arranger; Pete Rugolo, arranger; Bill Russo, arranger, trombone

Easy Go

Friday, September 22, 2017

Stan Kenton - Artistry In Bossa Nova

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1963
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:06
Size: 88,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:48)  1. Artistry In Rhythm
(3:10)  2. Opus In Chartreuse
(2:28)  3. Interlude
(3:53)  4. Kentonova
(3:32)  5. Eager Beaver
(3:15)  6. Concerto To End All Concertos
(2:21)  7. Brasilia
(3:25)  8. Painted Rhythm
(3:01)  9. Opus In Pastels
(3:29) 10. Jump For Joe
(2:50) 11. Loco-Nova
(2:49) 12. Artistry In Bossa Nova

This LP features the Stan Kenton Orchestra (during the period when it had a mellophonium section) performing some of its familiar standards and a few newer songs with a light Brazilian rhythm provided by percussionists Frank Guerrero and Milt Holland (Larry Bunker fills in for Holland on three songs). Although one might consider this project to be an example of Kenton jumping on the bandwagon (since the bossa nova fad was at its peak at the time), the music is quite enjoyable. 

Kenton on piano is the main soloist throughout, with Conte Candoli having a couple solos on trumpet and high-note trumpeter Bud Brisbois getting a few spots. Kenton's "Brasilia" is a charming piece deserving to be revived. Otherwise, it is interesting to hear such songs as "Interlude," "Concerto to End All Concertos," "Eager Beaver," and even "Artistry in Rhythm" in this setting. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/artistry-in-bossa-nova-mw0000899928

Personnel:  Stan Kenton - piano, arranger, conductor;  Bob Behrendt, Bud Brisbois, Conte Candoli, Bob Rolfe, Dalton Smith – trumpet;  Gil Falco, Bob Fitzpatrick, Kent Larsen – trombone;  Jim Amlotte, - bass trombone;  Dave Wheeler - bass trombone, tuba;  Joe Burnett, Dwight Carver, Bob Grull, Tony Scodwell – mellophone;  Gabe Baltazar - alto saxophone;  Ray Florian, Steve Marcus - tenor saxophone;  Jack Nimitz - baritone saxophone;  Joel Kaye - baritone saxophone, bass saxophone;  Don Bagley – bass;  Dee Barton – drums;  Larry Bunker, Frank "Chico" Guerrero - Latin percussion

Artistry In Bossa Nova

Wednesday, September 20, 2017

Stan Kenton, June Christy, The Four Freshmen - Road Show

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:15
Size: 174.6 MB
Styles: Big band, Vocal jazz
Year: 1959/1991
Art: Front

[3:24] 1. Artistry In Rhythm
[3:27] 2. Stompin' At The Savoy
[5:16] 3. My Old Flame
[9:38] 4. The Big Chase
[1:39] 5. I Want To Be Happy
[2:49] 6. It's A Most Unusual Day
[4:14] 7. Midnight Sun
[2:26] 8. Kissing Bug
[5:22] 9. Bewitched
[3:05] 10. How High The Moon
[3:11] 11. Day In Day Out
[4:06] 12. Angel Eyes
[3:04] 13. I'm Always Chasing Rainbows
[1:36] 14. Paper Doll
[3:20] 15. Them There Eyes
[3:41] 16. Love For Sale
[4:57] 17. September Song
[3:47] 18. Walking Shoes
[5:12] 19. The Peanut Vendor
[1:50] 20. Artistry In Rhythm (Reprise)

A great example of the Kenton powerhouse in action – a live recording that really set a new standard for jazz sets of its type! The album features a side apiece dedicated to each of the three acts – one by Kenton's orchestra, one by Christy on vocals, and one by the Four Freshmen – the latter two supported by Kenton's group on their own sides, then joining together for a final fourth side that features all artists together. The approach is a great one – very vibrant, and certainly crowd-pleasing – and titles include "Artistry In Rhythm", "My Old Flame", "I Want To Be Happy", "Midnight Sun", "Day In Day Out", "Angel Eyes", and "Love For Sale".

Road Show 

Sunday, September 17, 2017

Stan Kenton - Kenton In Hi-Fi

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:29
Size: 136.2 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 1956/1992
Art: Front

[2:34] 1. Artistry Jumps
[3:01] 2. Interlude
[4:15] 3. Intermission Riff
[3:02] 4. Minor Riff
[2:58] 5. Minor Riff (Alternate Take)
[2:35] 6. Collaboration
[3:03] 7. Painted Rhythm
[3:05] 8. Southern Scandal (1945 Version)
[4:33] 9. The Peanut Vendor
[3:20] 10. Eager Beaver
[7:03] 11. Concerto To End All Concertos
[2:38] 12. Artistry In Boogie
[2:30] 13. Lover
[3:10] 14. Unison Riff
[4:05] 15. Opus In Pastels
[2:52] 16. Machito
[4:36] 17. Artistry In Rhythm

After years of big band experimentation, Stan Kenton seemed to settle into a more grounded groove on 1956's In Hi-Fi. To his credit, Kenton did keep things swinging before, even in the midst of high brow bombast like the string-laden, 39 piece Innovations in Modern Music orchestra and numerous jazz meets Stravinsky projects. This uncanny balance of flow and brains came out of Kenton's own tempered direction and fine contributions by the likes of arranger Pete Rugolo, trumpeter Shorty Rogers, alto saxophonist Art Pepper, and singers Anita O'Day and June Christy. Thanks to a seamless mix of dazzling charts and liberal doses of Lunceford and Ellington-inspired swing, the marriage certainly works on Kenton in Hi-Fi. Old hits like "Eager Beaver" and "Artistry In Boogie" sparkle in the warm glow of '50s stereo technology, while fiery renditions of "Lover" and "The Peanut Vendor" show the famous muscle of the Kenton band. With the stellar playing of tenor saxophonist Vido Musso, trumpeter Pete Candoli, and drummer Mel Lewis to look forward to, one can see why this album was not only one of Kenton's most popular releases, but a critical success as well. ~Stephen Cook

Kenton In Hi-Fi

Sunday, September 10, 2017

Stan Kenton - Live From The Las Vegas Tropicana

Styles: Piano Jazz, Big Band
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:21
Size: 170,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:33)  1. Artistry In Rhythm
(3:41)  2. Bernie's Tune
(3:25)  3. Tuxedo Junction
(4:31)  4. Street Scene
(3:44)  5. Puck's Blues
(5:25)  6. This Is Always
(3:23)  7. Don't Get Around Much Anymore
(4:49)  8. Design For Blue
(4:24)  9. Home Journey
(3:32) 10. A String Of Pearls
(4:32) 11. It's All Right With Me
(6:00) 12. Intermission Riff
(3:36) 13. I Concentrate On You
(5:47) 14. The End Of A Love Affair
(1:21) 15. You And I And George
(4:43) 16. Sentimental Riff
(3:47) 17. Random Riff

The 1959 Stan Kenton Orchestra, which boasted such soloists as trumpeter Jack Sheldon, altoist Lennie Niehaus, Richie Kamuca and Bill Trujillo on tenors and trombonist Ken Larsen, is heard in spirited form on this live LP. Performing arrangements mostly by Gene Roland along with one apiece by Johnny Richards, Niehaus and Kenton, the band plays some surprising material (such as "Tuxedo Junction" and "Street Scene") but mostly comes up with creative, fresh and concise statements. This is admittedly not one of the classic Stan Kenton recordings but is generally superior to his studio recordings of the period. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/kenton-live-from-the-las-vegas-tropicana-mw0000879812

Personnel: Stan Kenton (arranger, piano); Lennie Niehaus (arranger, alto saxophone); Gene Roland, Bill Mathieu, Johnny Richards (arranger); Bill Trujillo, Richie Kamuca (tenor saxophone); Billy Root, Sture Swenson (baritone saxophone); Frank Huggins, Bud Brisbois, Jack Sheldon, Joe Burnett, Roger Middleton (trumpet); Archie Lecoque, Kent Larsen, Jim Amolette (trombone); Bob Olson, Bill Smiley (bass trombone); Red Kelly (bass); Jerry McKenzie (drums)

Live From The Las Vegas Tropicana

Sunday, December 18, 2016

Various - Capitol Records From The Vaults: Vine Street Divas

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:06
Size: 172.0 MB
Styles: Easy Listening
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[2:53] 1. Jo Stafford - Long Ago (And Far Away)
[3:15] 2. Ella Mae Morse - Shoo-Shoo Baby
[2:49] 3. Benny Carter - Hurry, Hurry
[3:09] 4. Betty Hutton - It Had To Be You
[3:15] 5. Martha Tilton - I'll Walk Alone
[3:06] 6. Stan Kenton - And Her Tears Flowed Like Wine
[3:10] 7. Margaret Whiting - Moonlight In Vermont
[2:57] 8. Martha Tilton - I Should Care
[3:10] 9. Paul Weston And His Orchestra - It Might As Well Be Spring
[3:07] 10. Martha Tilton - A Stranger In Town
[2:42] 11. June Christy - It's Been A Long, Long Time
[3:02] 12. Betty Hutton - Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief
[3:19] 13. Peggy Lee - I Don't Know Enough About You
[2:57] 14. Jo Stafford - Day By Day
[2:50] 15. Peggy Lee - It's A Good Day
[2:24] 16. Nellie Lutcher - Hurry On Down
[3:11] 17. Benny Goodman - I Want To Be Loved (But Only By You)
[2:58] 18. Peggy Lee - Golden Earrings
[2:54] 19. Jo Stafford - Serenade Of The Bells
[3:04] 20. Margaret Whiting - But Beautiful
[3:12] 21. Peggy Lee - Everybody Loves Somebody
[3:05] 22. Kay Starr - You Were Only Fooling (While I Was Falling In Love)
[2:12] 23. Blue Lu Barker - A Little Bird Told Me
[3:05] 24. Helen O'Connell - Teardrops From My Eyes
[3:11] 25. Jo Stafford - Some Enchanted Evening

This volume of From the Vault highlights early Capitol Records hits by the ladies of the tower, so to speak. Individual talents such as Jo Stafford, Anita O'Day, and Peggy Lee began to emerge from many top orchestras and soon became Vine Street divas in their own right. The timing for this incipient wave of girl power couldn't have been better -- since WW II was preoccupying many of the country's top male vocalists. The extensive selection of musical genres on the label didn't hurt either. Among the most popular of these were show tunes. Jo Stafford led her fellow female artists scoring Top Ten hits with songs from both stage and screen. Vine Street Divas includes two Stafford classics -- "Long Ago (And Far Away)" from the film Cover Girl, as well as "Some Enchanted Evening" from the stage adaptation of South Pacific. Among the other soundtrack or cast recordings featured on this compilation are Ella Mae Morse's "Shoo-Shoo Baby" from the motion picture Three Cheers for the Boys," and Betty Hutton's classic "Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief" as featured in The Stork Club. This volume has cleverly gathered rare and hard to find early recordings by ladies who quickly gained international acclaim -- such as Anita O'Day ("And Her Tears Flowed Like Wine,") June Christy ("It's Been a Long, Long Time"), and Margaret Whiting -- who is featured with no less than three different orchestras on this collection. Vine Street Divas is accompanied by a ten-page liner notes booklet containing vintage memorabilia, photos, and other previously unpublished eye candy. Plus, to fill in the details is an essay by musician and music historian, Billy Vera. Initial pressings -- limited to 10,000 -- are cleverly packaged in a digipack designed to replicate the 78 rpm records and sleeves of the era. ~LindsayPlaner

Capitol Records From The Vaults: Vine Street Divas

Tuesday, October 11, 2016

Various Artists - Capitol Records From The Vaults: Capitol Jumps

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:43
Size: 166.5 MB
Styles: Easy Listening, Swing, Big band
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[3:07] 1. Nat King Cole Trio - Sweet Lorraine
[2:41] 2. Martha Tilton - Does Everyone Know About This
[3:00] 3. Coleman Hawkins - Stuffy
[3:00] 4. Benny Carter - Poinciana
[2:56] 5. Ella Mae Morse - Buzz Me
[2:36] 6. Stan Kenton & His Orchestra - Artistry Jumps
[3:06] 7. Cootie Williams And His Orchestra - Juice Head Baby
[2:36] 8. Alvino Rey - Cement Mixer (Put-Ti, Put-Ti)
[2:43] 9. Johnny Mercer - My Sugar Is So Refined
[2:40] 10. Geechie Smith & His Orchestra - T-Town Jump
[2:53] 11. Nellie Lutcher - Fine Brown Frame
[3:01] 12. Sam Donahue & His Orchestra - Robbin's Nest
[2:21] 13. Crown Prince Waterford - Move Your Hand, Baby
[3:14] 14. T-Bone Walker - I Got A Break Baby
[2:42] 15. Julia Lee And Her Boyfriends - King Size Papa
[3:04] 16. Benny Goodman - On A Slow Boat To China
[2:28] 17. Stan Kenton & His Orchestra - How High The Moon
[3:06] 18. Peggy Lee - Don't Smoke In Bed
[2:43] 19. Charlie Barnet - Be-Bop Spoken Here
[3:06] 20. Johnny Mercer - One For My Baby (And One More For The Road)
[3:08] 21. Dizzy Gillespie - You Stole My Wife-You Horse Thief
[3:07] 22. Kay Starr - Evenin'
[3:15] 23. Billy May - Lean, Baby
[3:01] 24. The Four Freshmen - Tuxedo Junction
[2:56] 25. Duke Ellington - Satin Doll

The swing era and pre-bop jazz age of the '40s was a zenith for Capitol Records, which was jumpin' not only on radios and jukeboxes nationwide, but at cash registers as well. This third volume in the venerable label's From the Vaults series is an indispensable guide to Capitol's ever-increasing talent roster, highlighting this unique period in American popular music. Aptly subtitled Capitol Jumps, the album does considerably more, ranging from the erudite cool of the Nat "King" Cole Trio on "Sweet Loraine" to decidedly more "alternative" bop classics such as Dizzy Gillespie's "You Stole My Wife You Horse Thief." On the lighter side are remnants of big-band orchestras led by Benny Goodman ("On a Slow Boat to China") and Johnny Mercer ("One More for My Baby (And One More for the Road)"). The passing of the pop music baton from big band to jazz is reflected in this volume most notably by the Four Freshmen's brilliant interpretation of "Tuxedo Junction" and the intoxicating one-two punch of Ella Mae Morse's "Buzz Me" and "Juice Head Baby by Cootie Williams & His Orchestra, featuring vocalist Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson. One trend continuing for Capitol was that of hitmaker. Among the seven Top 40 hits on Capitol From the Vaults, Vol. 3 are Alvino Rey's ultra-danceable "Cement Mixer (Put-Ti, Put-Ti)," Benny Carter & His Orchestra with "Poinciana," and the Johnny Mercer conducted orchestra on "My Sugar Is So Refined." This all-star recording also features labelmates the Pied Pipers, accompanied by Paul Weston & His Orchestra. As with other volumes in this collection, the sonic transfer is superior, making it an essential component to any comprehensive overview of American popular music. The 12-page liner notes booklet contains lots of memorabilia wrapped around another installment of Billy Vera's informative essays. ~Lindsay Planer

Capitol Records From The Vaults: Capitol Jumps

Friday, June 24, 2016

Stan Kenton - The Stage Door Swings

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:49
Size: 72.8 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 1958/2005
Art: Front

[2:38] 1. Lullaby Of Broadway
[2:54] 2. The Party's Over
[2:42] 3. Baubles, Bangles And Beads
[3:14] 4. Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye
[2:25] 5. Whatever Lola Wants
[2:02] 6. Bali Ha'i
[2:29] 7. Hey There
[2:57] 8. Younger Than Springtime
[2:08] 9. On The Street Where You Live
[2:25] 10. I Love Paris
[3:10] 11. I've Never Been In Love Before
[2:37] 12. All At Once You Love Her

Stan Kenton's orchestra was never the place to hear a nice tune played sweetly; arrangers including Kenton himself, Pete Rugolo, Bob Graettinger, and Bill Holman commonly emphasized the progressive end of jazz -- advanced harmonics, complex charts, powerful soloists -- much more than such a simple thing as swing. When Kenton decided to record an album of show tunes in 1958, however, he proceeded directly to Lennie Niehaus. Niehaus, an altoist with the Kenton band beginning nearly a decade earlier, had written a chart for "Pennies from Heaven" in 1953 that proved to be a highlight of the Sketches on Standards LP. (Kenton would probably have chosen Bill Russo, who had helmed his two previous standards LPs of the '50s, but he had left the band a few years earlier.) Kenton's band of 1958 didn't boast the firepower of earlier editions, but new arrivals Jack Sheldon and Bill Trujillo contribute a lot to the highlight, "The Party's Over" (which, Michael Sparke's liner notes tell us, was often used by the contrarian Kenton to begin his sets). Elsewhere, Niehaus gives himself a feature on the hard-swinging "Baubles, Bangles & Beads. ~John Bush

The Stage Door Swings

Monday, December 28, 2015

Stan Kenton - Cuban Fire!

Styles: Piano Jazz, Latin Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:06
Size: 125,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:02)  1. Fuego Cubano (Cuban Fire)
(5:53)  2. El Congo Valiente (Valiant Congo)
(5:01)  3. Recuerdos (Reminiscences)
(4:49)  4. Quien Sabe (Who Knows)
(5:09)  5. La Quera Baila (The Fair One Dances)
(4:20)  6. La Suerte De Los Tontos (Fortune Of Fools)
(2:59)  7. Tres Corazones (Three Hearts)
(3:51)  8. Malibu Moonlight
(4:34)  9. El Panzon
(5:22) 10. Carnival
(3:05) 11. Wagon
(2:56) 12. Early Hours (Lady Luck)

This CD contains one of the classic Stan Kenton albums, a six-part suite composed and arranged by Johnny Richards. The Kenton orchestra was expanded to 27 pieces for these dates including six percussionists, two French horns and six trumpets. With such soloists as tenor-great Lucky Thompson (on "Fuego Cubano,") trombonist Carl Fontana, altoist Lennie Niehaus, Bill Perkins on tenor and trumpeters Sam Noto and Vinnie Tanno, and plenty of raging ensembles, this is one of Stan Kenton's more memorable concept albums of the 1950s. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/cuban-fire!-mw0000264239

Personnel : Stan Kenton (piano);  Lennie Neihaus, Gene Baltazar (alto saxophone);  Bill Perkins, Lucky Thompson (tenor saxophone);  Billy Root, Marvin Holliday (baritone saxophone);  Ed Leddy, Sam Noto, Lee Katzman, Phil Gilbert, Al Mattaliano (trumpets); Vinnie Tano (trumpet, flugelhorn); Bob Fitzpatrick, Carl Fontana, Kent Larsen (trombone); Irving Rosenthal, Julius Watikins (French horn); Jay McAllister (tuba); Gene Roland (mellophonium); Ralph Blaze (guitar); Curtis Counce, Pete Chivily (bass); Art Anton, Mel Lewis (drums); Tommy Lopez, George Acevedo (congas); George Laguna (timbales); Roger Mozian (claves); Mario Alvarez (maracas).

Cuban Fire!