Showing posts with label Sultans Of Swing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sultans Of Swing. Show all posts

Sunday, September 6, 2015

David Berger & The Sultans Of Swing - Hindustan

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:45
Size: 139.1 MB
Styles: Swing, Big band
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[4:08] 1. Stompin' On A Riff
[5:19] 2. No Refill
[7:57] 3. Hindustan
[4:56] 4. Monkey Business
[3:53] 5. Bumper Cars
[4:32] 6. Poor Butterfly
[2:23] 7. Too Marvelous For Words
[3:46] 8. The Very Thought Of You
[2:51] 9. I Don't Hurt Anymore
[5:29] 10. Do It Again
[6:38] 11. The Rising Storm
[4:52] 12. A Whole New You
[3:54] 13. Parting Words

Hindustan is the fourth recording of composer/arranger/conductor David Berger and his band The Sultans of Swing. This spectacular documentation of big band jazz in full swing features vocalist Aria Hendricks and 15 first-call, world-class musicians. It was recorded in Malmo, Sweden at the end of a Scandinavian road trip in September 2005. Berger, who formed The Sultans Of Swing in 1996, explains the significance of this: “Every time we go on tour the music improves daily. After a few days we surpass the highest level we ever achieved as a band. By the end of the tour we are all on a high that doesn’t require artificial stimulants. I’ve always wanted to capture our peak moments on a recording. Well, here it is! So if you can’t hear us live, or you want to re-experience what it felt like when you did, this album is for you.” Hindustan follows Berger’s critically acclaimed CD, Marlowe, and is his most compelling expression to date--as creator, composer, producer and conductor.

Hindustan proudly and exuberantly displays its lineage to the famous big bands of a bygone era; however, the music that is conceived from Berger’s mind and soul, and played by these master musicians, is anything but retro, and far from being a throwback. This is due in part to its emotional impact, which ranges from the universal and timeless feelings of ebullience (swing) to those of lamentation (the blues). Berger elaborates, “Over the past 70 years most people have forgotten the feeling of swing (what Albert Murray calls ‘the American imperative’), if they are old enough to have known it at all. Still this music infects those who are lucky enough to be exposed to it. In those moments we truly feel alive.”

Throughout the recording it is pleasingly evident that, like the great bandleaders that have put their indelible stamp on the jazz idiom, Berger has composed and arranged this music with these particular players in mind. And, in return, they have expertly crafted their improvisations to complement and complete the written music. David Berger and The Sultans Of Swing sound like one glorious, magnificent instrument on Hindustan--one that is capable of providing much pleasure to the ear, heart and mind.

The sonic experience is heightened by the extreme care taken to record the band live in the studio without headphones, mix it with absolutely no compression and run it through an analog board, so that what you hear on this CD is as close to a live performance as ever captured on any jazz CD. Leif Marten Olofsson the CEO/Chief Designer of Marten Design, makers of top-of-the-line audiophile speakers says, ”In the autumn of 2005 I had the pleasure to see and listen to David Berger and his Sultans of Swing live in Sweden. Since then they have been a favourite for me both musically, and when we do demos with our speakers. This latest album has a directness and uncompressed dynamic that shows all the benefits of our speakers. Fantastic! “

Hindustan

Thursday, July 2, 2015

David Berger & The Sultans Of Swing - Doin' The Do

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:25
Size: 133.8 MB
Styles: Swing
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[3:52] 1. Are You Fer It
[3:59] 2. Makin' Whoopee
[3:58] 3. Doin' The Do
[4:17] 4. My Heart Belongs To Daddy
[4:16] 5. Exactly Like You
[3:39] 6. Miss Thing
[6:00] 7. Good Queen Bess
[3:29] 8. How To Get You Out Of My Heart
[4:12] 9. Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me
[4:10] 10. Ya Gotta Live It
[4:01] 11. Oops, My Bad!
[6:04] 12. Busy Woman Blues
[6:22] 13. Birthday Jam Happy Birthday Stompy Jones

A generous helping of well-cooked nouveau swing by David Berger's undeniably talented Sultans of Swing that's easy to swallow but doesn't sharpen one's craving for more of the same.

Berger arranged everything except the album's bonus track, Duke Ellington / Mildred Hill's "Birthday Jam," which he transcribed. While the charts are admirable, the music itself is on the whole less than exhilarating, especially the eight vocals (on thirteen tracks), half a dozen by Aria Hendricks, the others by trombonist Wayne Goodman ("Oops, My Bad!") and a trio comprised of Goodman, saxophonist Matt Hong and trumpeter Brian Pareschi ("Exactly Like You"). There are some engaging selections ("Good Queen Bess," "Ya Gotta Live It," for example) but they are counterbalanced by too many others that are no better than pedestrian.

Even so, the Sultans are seasoned pros who play well as a unit and solo capably whenever asked to stand and deliver. Trumpeters Steve Bernstein and Irv Grossman, clarinetist Dan Block, alto JerryDodgion and trombonist Noah Bless are splendid on Johnny Hodges—Lunceford—like "Good Queen Bess," Dodgion, Block, Pareschi and trombonist Joel Helleny likewise on Berger's "Ya Gotta Live It." Grossman, by the way, sounds like he's been memorizing pages from the Clark Terry Manual of Jazz Improvisation. Speaking of solos, no less than thirteen of the Sultans have their say on the bouncy "Birthday Jam" (subtitled "Happy Birthday Stompy Jones"). ~Jack Bowers

David Berger, conductor, arranger; Jerry Dodgion, Matt Hong, Dan Block, Mark Hynes, Jay Brandford, reeds; Bob Millikan, Brian Pareschi, Irv Grossman, Steve Bernstein, trumpet; Wayne Goodman, Joel Helleny, Noah Bless, trombone; Isaac Ben Ayala, piano; Dennis Irwin, bass; Jimmy Madison, drums; Aria Hendricks, vocals; Wayne Goodman, Matt Hong, Brian Pareschi, vocal trio.

Doin' The Do