Tuesday, September 10, 2013

The Red Norvo Quintet - The Red Norvo Quintet With Guest Vocalists Mavis Rivers & Ella Mae Morse

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 52:55
Size: 121.2 MB
Styles: Cool jazz, Vibraphone jazz
Year: 1962/1990
Art: Front

[3:21] 1. Spider's Web
[4:38] 2. What Is This Thing Called Love
[4:55] 3. Don't Get Around Much Anymore
[2:51] 4. About A Quarter To Nine
[3:56] 5. Lena And Lenny
[3:55] 6. Undecided
[4:06] 7. Rhee, O, Rhee
[2:16] 8. One Minute To One
[4:37] 9. Perdido
[4:01] 10. Lena And Lenny (Alternate)
[4:19] 11. What Is This Thing Called Love
[2:02] 12. That Old Black Magic
[3:52] 13. Don't Get Around Much Anymore
[4:00] 14. Rhee, O, Rhee (Alternate)

This CD, taken from radio transcriptions cut for the radio show "The Navy Swings," features vibraphonist Red Norvo's group in 1962, which by itself is rather notable, for Norvo made no other recordings as a leader from 1960-68.

Red's quintet (which also includes guitarist Al Viola, pianist Jack Wilson, bassist Jimmy Bond and drummer Bill Goodwin) plays very much in the cool-toned but often heated style of his earlier trios. Mavis Rivers and Ella Mae Morse take a total of three vocals, but it is the 11 instrumentals (counting four alternate takes) that are particularly memorable, most notably "Spider's Web," "Lena and Lenny" and "Rhee, O, Rhee."

The Red Norvo Quintet With Guest Vocalists Mavis Rivers & Ella Mae Morse

Liane Carroll - Ballads

Styles: Jazz Vocals
Year: 2013
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 47:55
Size: 87,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:28)  1. Here's to life
(5:24)  2. Goodbye
(3:07)  3. Only the lonely
(6:27)  4. Mad about the boy
(4:38)  5. You've changed
(5:01)  6. Pretending to care
(4:49)  7. Calgary Bay
(3:43)  8. My one and only love
(4:11)  9. Will you still love me tomorrow
(3:41) 10. The two lonely people
(3:22) 11. Raining in my heart

Ballads is a great title for an album full of slow tempo, beautifully arranged, songs of love and romance. So it's a perfect choice as the title for British singer Liane Carroll's album. Except that it falls way short of communicating just what an achievement this album is.

Carroll's previous album, Up And Down (Quiet Money, 2011), was a superb combination of upbeat, up-tempo numbers and emotionally intense takes on songs including "My Funny Valentine" and Tom Waits' "Take It With Me." Ballads is firmly in the latter territory. James McMillan's production is once again exemplary. It's rare to hear vocals recorded with such clarity, where every aspect of the singer's voice is open to scrutiny. It's fraught with danger: what if the singer's voice is revealed as lacking, as falling short, as weak? Daft questions in this case; the exposure simply enhances Carroll's impact.

There's so much to enjoy on Ballads: old school standards like "Only The Lonely," pop classics (Gerry Goffin and Carole King's "Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow" and Felice and Boudleaux Bryant's "It's Raining In My Heart") and lesser-known gems such as Sophie Bancroft's "Calgary Bay." There's variety, too, in Carroll's musical accompaniments. On "Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow" there's just Mark Jaimes' guitar and Kirk Whalum's tenor saxophone. On "Only The Lonely" she's joined by a big band, while on "Goodbye," "You've Changed" and "Calgary Bay" the City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra provide the accompaniment the arrangements for all four of these numbers coming courtesy of Grammy nominated Chris Walden.

Todd Rundgren's "Pretending To Care" is a tour-de-force but it's Noel Coward's "Mad About The Boy" that shines most brightly among these jewels. It's a song with a seemingly endless ability for re-invention. Coward's performance is marvellously high camp (Marianne Faithfull's version runs it a close second); Dinah Washington can be defiant or matter-of-fact; Julie London is sultry and confident she'll make her move when she's good and ready and the boy won't stand a chance.

Carroll's performance of "Mad About The Boy" with only Gwilym Simcock's piano for company is heartbreaking. She sings as though she's aware of the futility of her desire but unwilling, or unable, to leave it behind. It shows the greatness of Coward's little ditty, the many emotions that the song can reveal and the majesty of Carroll's voice. It's just one highlight of many on this exquisite album: Ballads is a classic-in-waiting.~Bruce Lindsay  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=44432#.Ui394T-wVw8

Personnel: Liane Carroll: vocals, piano (11); James McMillan: trumpet, vibes (1), keyboard (11); Mark Edwards, piano (2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8), celeste (1); Gwilym Simcock: piano (4); Mark Jaimes: guitar (1, 3, 9); Steve Pearce: bass (1); Roger Carey: bass (2, 5, 8); Mark Hodgson: bass (3); Chris Hill: bass (7, 11); Mark Fletcher: drums (2, 5, 8, 11); Ralph Salmins: drums (3); Kirk Whalum: tenor saxophone (9); Simon Gardner: trumpet (3); Noel Langley: trumpet (3); Andy Gathercole: trumpet (3); Andy Baxter: trumpet (3); Pete Beachill: trombone (3); Chris Dean: trombone (3); Pete North: trombone (3); Richard Whigley: trombone (3); Sammy Maine: saxophone (3); Patrick Clahar: saxophone (3); Julian Seigel: saxophone (3); Ben Castle: saxophone (3); Jamie Talbot: saxophone (3); City Of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra (2, 5, 7).

Ballads

Lena Horne - Lovely And Alive

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1963
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:50
Size: 82,9 MB
Art: Front

(2:45)  1. Concentrate on You
(3:43)  2. I Get the Blues When It Rains
(3:06)  3. I've Grown Accustomed to His Face
(2:54)  4. I Got Rhythmn
(3:30)  5. I'm Confessin'
(1:49)  6. I Want to Be Happy
(3:31)  7. I Surrender, Dear
(2:11)  8. I Found a New Baby
(3:49)  9. I Understand
(2:45) 10. I Let a Song Go out of My Heart
(2:22) 11. I Aint' Got Nobody
(3:18) 12. I Only Have Eyes For You

"This is what James Gavin has in the book about the Lovely and Alive LP:"
Horne's RCA contract ran out in 1962...most of the record buying public just wouldn't warm to her...her last LP in the RCA contract finished her run in a blaze of glory.  On LENA...LOVELY & ALIVE (arranger) Marty Paich brought out the swing in Horne that Lennie Hayton never had; no wonder the gloss of his arrangements now felt smothering to her. Hayton couldn't have generated the crackling excitment that Paich did in his updating of "I Concentrate on You"....she growled and hissed, she bit ravenously into words like "sweet" and "tender"...so much of Horne's sexy singing had been an eye-rolling put-on; this time it had a ring of truth.  So did her smoldering desperation in "I Surrender Dear."  Stereo Review: "repudiating the excesses that have frequently marred her performances before audiences, she emerges here a supreme technician with an unerring ability to extract meaning from the material...her interpretive art is so formidable that even the most ordinary lyric takes on special meaning."  LOVELY & ALIVE received two Grammy Award nominations including Best Female Pop Vocal. http://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/TheLenaHornePage/conversations/topics/2646 

Hildegunn Gjedrem - Share Your Secret

Styles: Vocal Pop
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:45
Size: 105,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:42)  1. Warrior Song
(4:30)  2. Love Comes Around
(3:58)  3. Hunted
(4:24)  4. Solveig's Sang
(3:28)  5. The Open Tomorrow
(3:37)  6. Just A Shiver
(5:38)  7. Share Your Secret
(3:43)  8. Nothing More
(3:22)  9. Maybe This Time
(4:33) 10. Merry Go Round
(4:46) 11. Northern Star

Born and raised in the rural southwest of Norway, Brooklyn-based vocalist and songwriter Hildegunn Gjedrem is emerging as a multi-faceted musical force.  Her new album "Share Your Secret" marks a stark departure from her previously jazz-centric career into a new world of smart, lushly arranged pop. Hildegunn left Norway in 2001 to pursue a jazz studies degree at the world-famous University of North Texas, quickly rising to faculty level and conducting several vocal jazz ensembles. While in Texas, she was awarded “Best Jazz Vocalist” by Downbeat Magazine, was granted the coveted Norwegian G9alt Scholarship of the Arts, and was a finalist in the prestigious Montreux Jazz Festival's Vocal Jazz Competition, judged by Al Jarreau. She was also a featured vocalist for the Grammy-nominated One O'Clock Lab Band. Since moving to New York City in 2009, Hildegunn's talents have been employed by celebrities such as Catherine Zeta Jones, Donald Trump, Michael Douglas, and Ralph Lauren, as well as Queen Sylvia of Denmark. She has performed with some of the city's finest jazz and pop musicians, including Travis Sullivan's Bjorkestra and ground-breaking instrumental ensemble Snarky Puppy. ~ http://hildegunn.bandcamp.com/releases

Georges Moustaki - Solitaire

Styles: Chanson
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:40
Size: 81,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:03)  1. Le Temps De Nos Guitares
(3:07)  2. Sorellina
(2:53)  3. Une Fille À Bicyclette (Avec Vincent Delerm)
(2:21)  4. Mélanie Faisait L'amour
(2:32)  5. Partager Les Restes (Avec Stacey Kent)
(3:34)  6. La Jeune Fille
(3:28)  7. Ma Solitude (Avec China Forbes of Pink Martini)
(3:24)  8. L'inconsolable
(3:28)  9. Sans La Nommer (Avec Cali)
(2:20) 10. La Chanson De Jaume
(2:41) 11. Solitaire
(2:44) 12. Donne Du Rhum À Ton Homme (Avec China Forbes)

Although he achieved his greatest fame in France, singing French-language songs in a distinctly French style, singer/songwriter Georges Moustaki was more a citizen of the world or, as he often put it, a "citizen of the French language." Christening himself a cultural "mongrel" in his signature hit "Le Métèque," Moustaki's first love was the classic-style French chanson, but he often appropriated bits of world folk musics from Greece, Turkey, the Middle East, Brazil (bossa nova and MPB), Argentina (tango), and other parts of Latin America, the United States (blues and jazz), Holland, and anywhere else his travels took him. Simplicity was a hallmark of many of his own recordings; possessed of a soft, warm voice, he often sang with only his own guitar for accompaniment, creating an intimacy that translated to his live gigs as well. A successful artist in his own right, Moustaki initially made his name as a songwriter of some renown, composing material for many of the top French singers of the late '50s and '60s (including Edith Piaf's classic "Milord"). He moonlighted as a poet, actor, novelist, and journalist at various points in his career, and remained one of France's more ambitious artists as his trademark beard and long, flowing hair turned white...More Bio ~Steve Huey http://www.allmusic.com/artist/georges-moustaki-mn0000647293/biography .

2008 return of a living legend. Produced by Vincent Segal (Bumcello, M, Agnes Jaoui). 9 new songs and 3 new versions of classics. Including duets with Stacey Kent, Vincent Delerm, Cali, Pink Martini, China Forbes.~Editorial Reviews http://www.amazon.com/Solitaire-Georges-Moustaki/dp/B00176I9W2 .

Monday, September 9, 2013

Antonio Forcione & Sabina Sciubba - Meet Me In London

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 47:37
Size: 109.0 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz, Vocal jazz
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[5:51] 1. Visions
[3:28] 2. Take Five
[5:22] 3. Caruso
[5:43] 4. Why Can't We Live Together
[5:04] 5. Night Train
[4:42] 6. Could You Believe
[5:37] 7. When We Two Parted
[6:32] 8. Brasilico
[5:13] 9. Estate

Sabina Sciubba has a warm voice and guitarist Antonio Forcione is a sympathetic accompanist who often challenges her. The duo, which is often joined by bassist Davide Mantovani and occasionally a few other musicians, performs atmospheric music that includes "Take Five," Al Jarreau's "Could You Believe," "Estate," some folk music and a few originals. Sciubba's versatile, mature, strong and sometimes-haunting voice makes this a disc worth searching for; she is a name that should be remembered. ~ Scott Yanow

Recording information: September Sound, Twickenham, London, England (10/1997-12/1997).

Antonio Forcione (guitar, nylon-string guitar); Sabina Sciubba (vocals); Adam Glasser (harmonica); Malcolm Creese (double bass); Davide Mantovani (electric bass, fretless bass); Bosco DeOliveira (percussion).

Meet Me In London

Nat King Cole - Cole Espanol And More Vol 1

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 28:49
Size: 66.0 MB
Styles: Easy Listening, Vocal
Year: 1958
Art: Front

[2:48] 1. Cachito
[2:39] 2. Maria Elena
[2:43] 3. Quizas, Quizas, Quizas (Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps)
[2:55] 4. Las Mañanitas
[2:46] 5. Acércate Más (Come Closer To Me)
[2:21] 6. El Bodeguero
[2:43] 7. Arriverderci Roma
[2:30] 8. Noche De Ronda
[2:34] 9. Tu Mi Delirio (You Are My Obsession)
[2:38] 10. Te Quiero Dijiste
[2:07] 11. Adelita

Nat King Cole addressed his growing international following with Cole Español, on which he sang in Spanish. Although he did not speak the language, he learned the song lyrics phonetically. Nine of the 11 selections had backing tracks recorded by conductor Armando Romeu, Jr., in Havana, Cuba, in February 1958, with Cole adding his vocals in Hollywood in June. The other two, "Cachito" and "Noche de Ronda," were cut with Hispanic musicians in Hollywood under the direction of Capitol Records' Dave Cavanaugh. The tunes were a mixed bag of Latin standards including Mexican mariachi music ("Adelita") and even the Italian "Arrivederci Roma" (sung in Spanish), and Cole's vocals were augmented by the Rivero Quartet and other uncredited singers. While that no doubt was intended to shore up his tentative performances, it actually showed him up, as the native Spanish singers offered a painful contrast to his own pedestrian readings of words he did not understand and pronounced with no flair. (On one track, "Tú, Mi Delirio," he abandoned the microphone for the piano to delightful effect.) Cole's singing voice was as smooth and attractive as ever, which must have helped, though, and the album's sales -- it reached the Top 20 in the U.S. and was a big hit internationally -- indicated that Spanish-speaking audiences were flattered that an American singer would try so hard to communicate with them in their own language. ~William Ruhlmann

Cole Espanol And More Vol 1

Patricia Kaas - Mademoiselle N'A Pas Chanté Que Le Blues

Styles: Chanson
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:24
Size: 136,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:29)  1. Une fille de l'est
(3:58)  2. C'est la faute à la vie
(2:13)  3. Summertime
(4:18)  4. Mon mec à moi
(3:19)  5. Mne nravitsya
(4:43)  6. Il me dit que je suis belle
(3:49)  7. Peut-être que peut-être
(4:04)  8. Entrer dans la lumière
(4:10)  9. If You Go Away (Ne quitte pas)
(3:01) 10. Et s'il fallait le faire
(3:56) 11. D'allemagne
(3:49) 12. Où sont les hommes ?
(3:52) 13. Si tu rêves
(4:20) 14. Je voudrais la connaítre
(5:24) 15. Mademoiselle chante le blues
(0:53) 16. Lili Marleen (L'ange bleu)

MONTREAL - Patricia Kaas returns with the compilation “Mademoiselle n’a pas chanté que le blues” which measures the entire journey in 25 years by the singer with unique voice. Discovered in 1985 by Gerard Depardieu it was his wife, Elizabeth, who contributed to the release of “Jalouse”, Patricia Kaas first song hummed by the French. Since then, Patricia Kaas has traveled the world singing in several languages (French, English, German, Russian) and sold 17 million albums. This compilation also reflects the cultural broth. We not only find success like “Mademoiselle chante le blues” and “Mon mec à moi”, but also other ones in the three languages that allowed her to conquer territories outside the Francophonie. Jean-Jacques Goldman gave her a new composition of his own, “C’est la faute à la vie”, he has himself taken in a studio with the French diva. (Translated using  Google Translator)  http://fr.canoe.ca/divertissement/musique/nouvelles/2011/09/29/18756746-qmi.html.

Kate McGarry - Girl Talk

Styles: Jazz Vocals
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:46
Size: 103,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:43)  1. We Kiss In A Shadow
(5:36)  2. Girl Talk
(2:17)  3. I Just Found Out About Love
(4:50)  4. The Man I Love
(5:38)  5. O Cantador
(4:25)  6. This Heart Of Mine
(2:34)  7. I Know That You Know
(5:39)  8. Looking Back
(4:49)  9. Charade
(3:10) 10. It's A Wonderful World

There are many reasons to like vocalist Kate McGarry's Girl Talk. There's the lively set list, first of all a mix of all-too-well-known and too-little-known standards, with a fine Brazilian number thrown in. There's the uniform excellence of the band: witness Gary Versace's idiomatic organ accompaniment on "Girl Talk"; guitarist Keith Ganz sensitive throughout, but especially on the forlorn folk tune "Looking Back"; the stately Brazilian duet "O Cantador," with Kurt Elling; and bassist Reuben Rogers' nice feature on "I Just Found Out About Love." McGarry herself approaches every mood and tempo with ease and assurance. 

Her bluesy reading of the title tune, for example, with its hopelessly sexist lyric ("the weaker sex, the speaker sex"), coos and flirts, but winks at every turn in the direction of Betty Carter's feminist deconstruction from Finally (Roulette, 1969). There's all that, and there's McGarry's subtle and important contribution to the long co-evolution of jazz and rock 'n' roll. On the one hand, there are jazz players playing rock 'n' roll tunes, like pianist Herbie Hancock's The New Standard (Verve, 1996). On the other, there are players who incorporate rock 'n' roll textures, techniques, preferences and norms into jazz performance. In recent years, the best example may be bassist Todd Sickafoose, who marvelously described his musical approach in an AAJ interview as "[Duke Ellington's] 'Black and Tan Fantasy,' as played by John [Lennon] and Paul [McCartney]." The first of these tendencies is, in part, a way of dealing with the depletion of the repertoire: how many times can you squeeze meaning out of "All The Things You Are"? Why not do some Nirvana numbers instead? McGarry has played this side of the fence: she garnered notice years back with a plaintive version of The Cars' "Just What I Needed." The second tendency is more complex, and has to do with the necessary regeneration and renewal of musical materials in jazz. 

And it's here that McGarry's contribution is most vivid on this record. The repertoire and the instrumentation fit comfortably in the jazz canon. But McGarry's singing and, to a lesser degree, the acoustic guitar speak to an audience as familiar with Joni Mitchell and Rickie Lee Jones as with Betty Carter. Of course, one need only compare the singing and compositions of Mitchell and Jones to the work of a more traditional folk singer like Joan Baez to recognize that they long ago merged jazz sensibilities into their folk music. McGarry, accordingly, infuses the jazz repertoire with this same jazz-folk sensibility nowhere more evidently than on the masterful version of "The Man I Love." In some ways, McGarry follows the lead of Carter (again), whose glacially paced interpretation on Look What I Got! (Verve, 1988) is similarly bleak. At the same time, and particularly in her soaring vocal coda, McGarry plumbs the Mitchell-Jones vocal groove. In so doing, she manages to convey both whispery fragility and tremendous power; a remarkable performance.~Jeff Dayton-Johnson 
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=42024#.UiSupT-wVw8

Personnel: Kate McGarry: vocals; Keith Ganz: guitar; Gary Versace: organ; Reuben Rogers: bass; Clarence Penn: drums and percussion; Kurt Elling: vocals 

Pat Martino - Alone Together

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:31
Size: 127,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:29)  1. Four on Six
(7:55)  2. Alone Together
(3:15)  3. What are You Doing the Rest of Your Life
(6:48)  4. Sunny
(7:30)  5. Left...or Right
(6:14)  6. The Visit
(9:58)  7. One for My Baby
(8:19)  8.  Israfel

Pat Martino is a legend for more than his speed-demon virtuosity at high-velocity tempos or his angelic harmonies on ballads. He has also faced death several times and tells the tale of his survival and recovery with a perspective akin to a zen master. These recordings from Martino's personal collection document the easy interplay and chemistry that he had forged with rhythm guitarist Bobby Rose on their first duet tour during the summer of 1977. Both men were at the very peak of their powers during these years and we are fortunate to have these superb performances preserved for posterity. ~Editorial Review http://www.amazon.com/Alone-Together-Pat-Martino/dp/B008DL4EPK

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Nina Simone - Nina Simone Sings The Blues

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 37:31
Size: 85.9 MB
Styles: Jazz/blues vocals
Year: 1967/2006
Art: Front

[2:43] 1. Do I Move You?
[2:32] 2. Day And Night
[2:55] 3. In The Dark
[2:19] 4. Real Real
[4:15] 5. My Man's Gone Now
[2:28] 6. Backlash Blues
[2:31] 7. I Want A Little Sugar In My Bowl
[1:50] 8. Buck
[2:49] 9. Since I Fell For You
[3:50] 10. The House Of The Rising Sun
[3:56] 11. Blues For Mama
[2:16] 12. Do I Move You (version 2)
[3:01] 13. Whatever I Am (You Made Me)

Originally released in 1967, SINGS THE BLUES marks the beginning of Nina Simone's tenure on the RCA label. True to its title, the album is steeped in the blues, with Simone's passionate vocals and nuanced piano lines evoking a beautifully bittersweet world of sultry love and inevitable heartache. Backed on many tracks by an ensemble that's intuitive enough to play it loose, Simone settles into a deep groove on songs such as the stirring "Do I Move You?" and the slowburning "In the Dark," while getting lightly funky on "Day and Night." The record's showstopper, however, is a haunting solo rendition of "My Man's Gone Now," one of the most powerful versions of the Gershwin classic ever recorded. A fascinating snapshot of the legendary performer, SINGS THE BLUES is an essential Simone album. Entertainment Weekly (p.68) - "With its blues-guitar vamps, harmonica wails and Willie Dixon remake, 1967's SINGS THE BLUES lives up to its title."

Nina Simone Sings The Blues

Q'd Up - Q'd Up 3

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 72:34
Size: 166.1 MB
Styles: Cool jazz, Vocal jazz
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[5:15] 1. The Dayley Dash
[5:16] 2. In A Mellow Tone
[7:01] 3. Yoruba Land
[6:33] 4. Sole Marks
[6:57] 5. Take A Break, Jake
[4:40] 6. In Another Time And Place
[7:12] 7. Perilous Passage
[5:46] 8. Amazon Rhapsody
[7:55] 9. Your Heart's Timeless Charms
[3:16] 10. Right-Side Drive
[6:13] 11. Blue Daniel
[5:31] 12. Gee Baby, Ain't I Good To You
[0:53] 13. Farewell Fontana

Q’d Up has a unique and infectious sound that is a product of the personalities of the players, the arrangements and compositions of Steve Lindeman and Jay Lawrence and Kelly Eisenhour, the blend of a wide variety of sounds and styles stemming from the impressive versatility of each of the group members, and the energy and synergy that come with the love of the music and of each other. Q’d Up has existed in various incarnations since 1983 and has established itself as a musical force in Utah and the West. Quintessential is the fourth CD project since the group began using the Q’d Up name. The first is self-titled Q’d Up. The second is SQ’d Horizons, and the third is simplyQ’d Up 3. The second, third, and fourth albums include vocals by Kelly Eisenhour, and the third album also includes the amazing trombone wizardry of Andy Martin, top call trombonist from Los Angeles. The CD’s have received much critical acclaim and have enjoyed considerable airplay around the country.

Q'd Up 3

Gerry Mulligan & Jane Duboc - Paraiso

Styles: Brazilian Jazz
Label: Telarc Distribution
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:55
Size: 137,2 MB
Art: Front + Back

(5:36)  1. Paraiso
(4:10)  2. No Rio
(5:39)  3. Sob a Estrela
(5:06)  4. O Bom Alvinho
(8:25)  5. Willow Tree
(6:15)  6. Bordado
(5:05)  7. Tarde Em Itapoan
(5:55)  8. Amor Em Paz
(4:31)  9. Wave
(4:31) 10. Tema pra Jobim
(4:35) 11. North Atlantic Run

Although baritonist Gerry Mulligan is listed as the leader of this date, vocalist Jane Duboc is really the main star. The Brazilian-oriented set consists of eight Mulligan originals (including "Tema Pra Jobim," which finds him switching to piano, and "Willow Tree") and three other numbers, with "Wave" being the only standard. Duboc sings well, although her voice never sticks in one's mind, and Mulligan has short solos and mostly sticks to the background; they are joined by a couple of Brazilian rhythm sections. Pleasant music that mostly stands out as a historical curiosity in Gerry Mulligan's discography.~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/paraiso-jazz-brazil-mw0000113076 .

Personnel: Jane Duboc (vocals); Emanuel Moreira (guitar); Gerry Mulligan (baritone saxophone); Clifford Korman, Charlie Ernst (piano); Duduka Da Fonseca, Peter Grant (drums); Norberto Goldberg, Valtinho Anastacio (percussion). Arranger: Gerry Mulligan. Personnel: Gerry Mulligan (baritone saxophone), Jane Duboc (vocals), Emanual Moreira (guitar), Charlie Ernst, Cliff Korman (piano), Rogerio Maio, Leo Traversa (bass), Duduka DaFonesca, Peter Grant (drums), Norberto Goldberg (percussion).

Recorded at Clinton Recording Studios, Studio A, New York from July 5-7, 1993.

Judy Niemack - Jazz Singers' Practice Session

Styles: Jazz, Brazilian Jazz
Label: Gam
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:09
Size: 116,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:12)  1. Bye Bye Blackbird
(4:47)  2. Misty
(4:10)  3. Lullaby at Birdland
(3:10)  4. How High the Moon
(5:10)  5. Wave
(3:17)  6. You’d Be So Nice to Come Home to
(5:11)  7. All of Me
(3:38)  8. My Funny Valentine
(3:15)  9. Teach me Tonight
(2:59) 10. One Note Samba
(3:28) 11. Summertime
(3:44) 12. Lover Man
(3:03) 13. I Got Rhythm

A talented and adventurous jazz singer, Judy Niemack has long had an underground reputation in jazz, although she finally began to receive more recognition for her abilities. She sang regularly in school, starting at age seven in a church choir, and at 17 decided to become a professional singer. After meeting Warne Marsh the following year, Niemack became dedicated to jazz. She attended Pasadena City College, had several years of classical study, and also attended the New England Conservatory in Boston and the Cleveland Institute of Music, in addition to private lessons with Marsh. In 1977, she moved to New York and the following year made her recording debut for Sea Breeze. Since that time, Niemack has freelanced with many top advanced musicians, including Toots Thielemans, James Moody, Lee Konitz, Clark Terry, Kenny Barron, Fred Hersch, Kenny Werner, Joe Lovano, and Eddie Gomez, among others, written lyrics to other musicians' compositions (in addition to writing songs of her own), and has toured Europe regularly. In addition, she has been a top jazz educator, teaching throughout Europe. Judy Niemack, a colorful improviser, has recorded as a leader for Sea Breeze, Stash, and Freelance. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi  http://www.artistdirect.com/artist/bio/judy-niemack/473472 .

Lennie Tristano - Live In New York

Styles: Jazz
Label: Jazz Door
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:48
Size: 114,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:22)  1. Wow
(2:50)  2. Crosscurrent
(2:47)  3. Yesterdays
(3:06)  4. Marionette
(3:01)  5. Sax Of A Kind
(2:29)  6. Intuition
(3:04)  7. Digression
(3:01)  8. Glad Am I
(2:44)  9. This Is Called Love
(2:45) 10. Blame Me
(2:42) 11. I Found My Baby
(7:43) 12. Remember
(5:44) 13. Indiana
(4:23) 14. I'm No Good Without You

The history of jazz is written as a recounting of the lives of its most famous (and presumably, most influential) artists. Reality is not so simple, however. Certainly the most important of the music's innovators are those whose names are known by all  Armstrong, Parker, Young, Coltrane. Unfortunately, the jazz critic's tendency to inflate the major figures' status often comes at the expense of other musicians' reputations men and women who have made significant, even essential, contributions of their own, who are, for whatever reason, overlooked in the mad rush to canonize a select few. Lennie Tristano is one of those who have not yet received their critical due. In the mid-'40s, the Chicago-born pianist arrived on the scene with a concept that genuinely expanded the prevailing bop aesthetic. Tristano brought to the music of Charlie Parker and Bud Powell a harmonic language that adapted the practices of contemporary classical music; his use of polytonal effects in tunes like "Out on a Limb" was almost Stravinsky-esque, and his extensive use of counterpoint was (whether or not he was conscious of it at the time) in keeping with the trends being set in mid-century art music. Until relatively recently, it had seldom been acknowledged that Tristano had been the first to perform and record a type of music that came to be called "free jazz." In 1949 almost a decade before the making of Ornette Coleman's first records Tristano's group (which included Lee Konitz, Warne Marsh, and Billy Bauer) cut the first recorded example of freely improvised music in the history of jazz. The two cuts, "Intuition" and "Digression," were created spontaneously, without any pre-ordained reference to time, tonality, or melody. The resultant work was an outgrowth of Tristano's preoccupation with feeling and spontaneity in the creation of music. It influenced, among others, Charles Mingus, whose earliest records sound eerily similar to those of Tristano in terms of style and compositional technique. Mingus came by the influence honestly; he studied with the pianist for a period in the early '50s, as did many other well-known jazz musicians, such as Sal Mosca, Phil Woods, and the aforementioned Konitz and Marsh....More Bio https://itunes.apple.com/ca/artist/lennie-tristano/id47528618#fullText

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Jackie Wilson - Original Brunswick Hit Recordings

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 25:56
Size: 59.4 MB
Styles: Soul, R&B
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[2:39] 1. Reet Petite (The Finest Girl You Ever Want To Meet)
[2:41] 2. Lonely Teardrops
[2:02] 3. That's Why (I Love You So)
[2:01] 4. I'll Be Satisfied
[2:27] 5. To Be Loved
[2:49] 6. Doggin' Around
[2:59] 7. Baby Workout
[2:23] 8. Whispers (Gettin' Louder)
[2:58] 9. (Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher And Higher
[2:53] 10. I Get The Sweetest Feeling

Jackie Wilson was the very definition of soul–a sound and style that he helped create. Along with his pals Sam Cooke, Clyde McPhatter, Ray Charles, and Little Willie John, he changed the direction of rhythm and blues during the late 1950s and persisted as a trendsetter for more than a decade. Tragically felled in 1975 by a massive coronary (he never recovered, dying January 21, 1984), Jackie packed a lot of living into his first 41 years on the planet and scored a lot of hits for Brunswick Records.

"Jackie was just such a beautiful person to work with. He was such a professional," said Carl Davis, his Chicago-based producer from 1966 on. "All my memories of him are great."

Original Brunswick Hit Recordings

Anna Wilson - Time Changes Everything

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 65:11
Size: 149.3 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[3:50] 1. That's What Lovers Do
[3:05] 2. Back In The Day
[4:41] 3. Time Changes Everything
[5:03] 4. Fedora
[3:19] 5. Sad Matters
[3:41] 6. One Little Reason
[4:06] 7. Minestrone Soup
[4:39] 8. For Just A Day
[4:35] 9. Sentimental Sundays
[4:10] 10. Savin' My Love
[4:14] 11. In Disguise
[4:15] 12. Gonna Dance
[3:33] 13. Wedding Bell Blues
[3:57] 14. When I Do
[3:43] 15. Drink It Up
[4:14] 16. A House, A Home

Time Changes Everything brings Wilson’s contemporary voice and message to a timeless jazz project. This critically-acclaimed studio album, with two new bonus tracks, brings classic melodies, lyrics and arrangements, reminiscent of the golden age of the Great American Songbook into the modern era with original jazz and big band music that sets standards all their own. It features 14 original songs, including the bossa nova wine inspired single “Drink It Up,” that showcase her dexterity as both a singer and songwriter. She delivers a sonically masterful collection of modern-day life and love-lessons that pull from diverse influences, ranging from Cole
orter to Laura Nyro.

Time Changes Everything

Gary Burton, Jay Leonhart, Terry Clarke & Joe Beck - Play The Music Of Duke Ellington

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 47:46
Size: 109.4 MB
Styles: Vibraphone jazz
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[4:15] 1. In A Mellow Tone
[5:45] 2. C Jam Blues
[5:21] 3. Love You Madly
[4:50] 4. Azure
[5:10] 5. Creole Love Song
[4:52] 6. Take The A Train
[5:18] 7. Squeeze Me
[6:26] 8. Caravan
[5:44] 9. Ishfahan

This swinging session focuses on a dozen standards from the vast Duke Ellington songbook. Bassist Jay Leonhart sings along with his bass a la Slam Stewart to open "In a Mellotone" and "C Jam Blues." A loping "Azure" features Joe Beck's brash guitar contrasting with Gary Burton's bluesy vibes. Burton and Leonhart's smoking duo version of "Take the 'A' Train" and a soft pretty take of "Isfahan" (omitting Beck) are the top tracks of the date. A pleasant, if not essential CD. ~ Ken Dryden Recorded at Clinton Recording Studios, New York, New York on November 8, 1994. Includes liner notes by Duke Ellington.

Jay Leonhart (bass); Joe Beck (guitar); Gary Burton (vibraphone); Terry Clark (drums).

Play The Music Of Duke Ellington

Lorraine Feather - Attachments

Styles: Vocal
Label: Jazzed Media
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:16
Size: 147,1 MB
Art: Front

(6:07)  1. A Little Like This
(6:58)  2. Attachments
(3:35)  3. I Thought You Did
(6:17)  4. Anna Lee
(3:46)  5. 159
(5:07)  6. We Have the Stars
(3:28)  7. I Love You Guys
(4:53)  8. I Hope I Never Leave This Place
(5:55)  9. Hearing Things
(8:25) 10. The Veil
(4:02) 11. Smitten with You
(5:38) 12. True

As expertly-crafted and enjoyable as all of her other recordings, Lorraine Feather's Attachments is her most raw and intimate CD to date. Here, she applies her famously incisive perception, sweet voice, and stunning lyrical gifts to a frank exploration of life's major emotional ties, describing how they can soothe, stretch, and break as they wind through our days on earth. Naturally these include romantic connections whether missed, fulfilled, or simply imagined but as usual, Feather vaults over the tired moon/June/spoon territory to offer her unique and thought-provoking view of ordinary things. For instance, in the sinuous title track, Feather evokes the "silver string of your attachments," a cord which wanders through a familiar series of crushes and lovers, but also embraces the weird guy in the building that everyone looks after. There are songs about love's mysterious glories ("A Little Like This," "We Have the Stars") as well as its gleeful discovery "I Thought You Did" rocks on Dave Grusin's exuberant "Memphis Stomp," first heard in the 1993 movie, The Firm. A lesser talent and one content to splash around in shallower waters would probably restrict the attachment consideration to romance. But Feather ranges much wider, providing a splendid appreciation of jazz musicians in general ("I Love You Guys") with sympathy for such indignities as "being made to wear matching vests/being told, 'the nuts are for the guests.'" There's a haunting song about a dear old friend who ended badly ("Anna Lee"), a gorgeous ode to Feather's home ("I Hope I Never Leave This Place"), and a tribute to a tempo ("159") as well as a rascally dog ("Smitten with You"). The most poignant and personal songs come at the end, where Feather shares the lasting heartbreak around the parent you love but can't reach ("The Veil"), and the endless,"ragged" pain over the one you most adored ("True"), which is fittingly set to one of the most soulful and beloved melodies of Bach. All of Feather's projects are witty. But humor is less central here than it was on songs like "Traffic and Weather," "Where Are My Keys?" and "I Forgot to Have Children," or in her lyrics to the songs of Fats Waller and other famous stridemeisters. For delightful examples of the latter, see New York City Drag (Rhombus Records, 2000) and Fourteen (Relarion, Ink., 2012), where Feather is half of Nouveau Stride with the astonishing young pianist Stephanie Trick. What links all of Feather's disparate projects is her signature honesty, insight, grace, and intelligence. This is all found in abundance on "Attachments," where the booklet adds to the enjoyment by providing every lyric. But this is more to appreciate Feather's poetry than to decipher her words as others have noted, her diction is perfect,as is her pitch. And, as always, her brilliant lyrics are delivered on wonderful melodies, with superb playing all around.~Dr Judith Schlesinger http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=45043#.UipF_D-wVw8

Personnel: Lorraine Feather: vocals; Russell Ferrante: piano (1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 9, 11); Shelly Berg: piano (6, 7, 10); Dave Grusin: piano (3, 12); Michael Valerio: bass (1, 2, 4, 5, 7-9, 11), vocals: (5); Grant Geissman: guitar (1, 5, 9); Eddie Arkin: guitar (2, 5); Michael Shapiro: drums and percussion (1, 2, 5, 9, 11); Tony Morales: percussion (1) Gregg Field: drums (7); Charles Bisharat: violin (1, 2, 4, 8, 9, 11, 12); Bob Mintzer: bass clarinet (11).

Attachments

Mishka Adams - Willow Weep For Me

Styles: Jazz Vocals
Label: Candid
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:56
Size: 109,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:11)  1. Willow Weep For Me
(5:14)  2. Body And Soul
(5:06)  3. Les Feuilles Mortes (Autumn Leaves)
(2:56)  4. On Green Dolphin Street
(4:54)  5. Love Came On Stealthy Fingers
(5:23)  6. God Bless The Child
(4:04)  7. Change Partners
(4:03)  8. The Peacocks (A Timeless Place)
(4:29)  9. I've Never Been In Love Before
(4:32) 10. Somewhere Over The Rainbow

Refreshingly unpretentious and just plain talented, Filipino-English songwriter Mishka Adams makes light work of creating listenable, jazz influenced originals and tasteful standards. ~Time Out, London

'Mint for the mind - balmy and calming...' said the Manila Times on reviewing Mishka's first album. Indeed! This captivating young Anglo-Filipina blessed with that kind of delicate husky voice so pleasing to the ear. As she sings, she blends this roundness and pureness with her impeccable clarity of enunciation and innate ability to interpret songs to wonderful effect. These qualities are abundant in this album which has Miss Adams singing with top musicians both from both continents. Mishka puts her 'gentle subversion' to terrific use in this collection of standards all delivered with a style and panache for which she is becoming more and more renowned.~Editorial Reviews http://www.amazon.com/Willow-Weep-For-Mishka-Adams/dp/B0037FFAWI .