Sunday, January 5, 2014

Ute Lemper - Forever: The Love Poems Of Pablo Neruda

Size: 147,0 MB
Time: 62:48
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Pop/Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. La Nuit Dans L'ile (5:38)
02. Madrigal Escrito In Invierno (3:47)
03. If You Forget Me (7:35)
04. Tus Manos (3:57)
05. El Viento En La Isla (5:10)
06. Alianza - Sonata (6:35)
07. Siempre (3:11)
08. Always (4:06)
09. Ausencia (4:07)
10. El Sueno (3:57)
11. Oda Con Un Lamento (7:35)
12. The Saddest Poem, Nr. 20 (7:05)

It could almost be a flaw from a classical tragedy. A gifted singer, swollen with acclaim and popularity, suddenly believes he or she can write songs. It's rife among jazz singers who, vexed by trying to make standards live anew, trot out trite ditties of their own, oblivious to their listeners' attempts to hide.

Cabaret is another area. Ute Lemper, the most potent cabaret artist on earth, could be forgiven for thinking she has sung a lifetime's worth of Weill/Brecht, Kander/Ebb, Brel and Piaf, despite having leavened the journey with Piazzolla, Waits and Cave. She could be forgiven for trying to pen her own; even be forgiven when they were not in the Weill/Brel class, because in concert they were book-ended by masterpieces, and she was so extraordinary, anyway.

Now there's no need to forgive. With Forever Lemper, the queen of interpreters, finally proves herself as a composer. She has taken the love poems of the late Chilean Nobel Laureate Pablo Neruda and let them unfold organically through music.

I use that wretched word ''organically'' because you can almost hear how she must have sung the tunes to herself as she read the poems; hear (as she has said) that these songs came easily to her. You can hear the depth of her response to Neruda's words in her presenting different songs in the original Spanish, or French or English adaptations.

And what words! Neruda's poems seem to be the wellspring of life rather than a mere reflection of it. They flow from a life full of wrong turns, while lived to the drinking/eating/laughing/crying/soaked-bed hilt.

Lemper has generally kept the poems that burn with that peculiarly South American spirit in Spanish (with music to match), set the heart-breaking ones in French (cue sweeping melodies) and set the more bullish ones in English (amid jazzier surroundings). The works pulse with the blood of the poems.

Perhaps without her Piazzolla project she would never have arrived here, because her sound world is alive with bandoneon and guitar, as well as piano, bass, percussion and strings. The playing is superb, and the production quality sumptuous.

Her voice can be brittle or can arch up like a spine above a mattress. It implores and threatens, cajoles and snuggles, laments and smiles, all the while drawing you into her music, as though she is taking your hands and guiding you through a door. And once there it is not as though the music is wildly unfamiliar, because you can hear the Brel/Piazzolla/Piaf/Cave influences, now twisted together around the molten core of Neruda's words. ~John Shand

Forever

Saturday, January 4, 2014

David Hazeltine - The Classic Trio

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 67:13
Size: 153.9 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 1997
Art: Front

[7:49] 1. You Make Me Feel So Young
[5:10] 2. The Fruit
[8:54] 3. Sweet & Lovely
[5:00] 4. Concentration
[5:29] 5. Catherine's Fantasy
[7:00] 6. One For Peter
[7:32] 7. You've Changed
[5:28] 8. My Stuff's On The Street Blues
[8:10] 9. These Foolish Things
[6:37] 10. Midnight Waltz

This 1997 album, featuring an impeccable rhythm section of Louis Hayes and Peter Washington, is a tour de force for pianist David Hazeltine's versatile skills as instrumentalist and composer. In addition to four very strong originals, the group tackles challenging compositions by piano masters Bud Powell and Cedar Walton, and offers fresh takes on standards like "You Make Me Feel So Young" and "These Foolish Things." Although he has yet to develop a particularly distinctive personality at the piano, Hazeltine has successfully synthesized the lessons of his modern jazz piano predecessors. This terrifically talented pianist deserves major attention. ~Joel Roberts

The Classic Trio

Christine Ebersole - Sings Noel Coward

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 52:18
Size: 119.7 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[3:27] 1. Someday I'll Find You
[3:19] 2. Any Little Fish It's Only You
[3:32] 3. You Were There
[4:03] 4. A Room With A View
[2:27] 5. Chase Me Charlie
[3:37] 6. Matelot Come The Wild, Wild Weather
[3:41] 7. I'll Follow My Secret Heart
[4:48] 8. World Weary
[5:08] 9. If Love Were All
[4:28] 10. Mad About The Boy
[4:31] 11. Never Again Sail Away
[4:01] 12. The Dream Is Over
[3:03] 13. When My Ship Comes Home
[2:08] 14. I'll See You Again

Two-time Tony Award winner Christine Ebersole, whose soprano voice was heard singing Noël Coward songs between scenes of the most recent Broadway revival of Blithe Spirit, has teamed up with Musical Director Larry Yurman on an album of Coward tunes.

For her work in the dual roles of Edith Bouvier Beale and "Little" Edie Beale in the Off-Broadway and Broadway productions of Grey Gardens, Christine Ebersole was honored with the Tony Award, the Drama Desk Award, anOuter Critics Circle Award, an Obie, a special citation from the New York Drama Critics Circle and the Drama League's 2006 Distinguished Performance of the Year Award. She also received a Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical for her work as Dorothy Brock in the hit revival of 42nd Street and a 2003 Tony nomination for her performance in Lincoln Center's production of Dinner at Eight. Ebersole's other Broadway credits include Blithe Spirit, The Best Man, Getting Away with Murder, Harrigan 'n Hart, Camelot, Oklahoma!, On the Twentieth Century, I Love My Wife, Angel Street and the City Center Encores! productions of A Connecticut Yankee, Ziegfeld Follies of 1936, Lady in the Dark and Allegro. Ebersole was also seen Off-Broadway in Talking Heads and in the recent City Center Encores! production of Applause.

Sings Noel Coward

Kelly Mittleman - Kelly

Styles: Jazz Vocals
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:55
Size: 134,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:33)  1. Boy From Ipanema
(5:17)  2. My Funny Valentine
(4:08)  3. The Shadow Of Your Smile
(2:39)  4. Love For Sale
(4:56)  5. This Masquerade
(3:46)  6. Nature Boy
(4:42)  7. Feel Like Making Love
(3:44)  8. Autumn Leaves
(4:43)  9. Sunny
(4:31) 10. Never Really Knowing Why
(4:59) 11. Another Star
(4:30) 12. My Foolish Heart
(7:21) 13. God Bless The Child

She takes the standards and infuses them with overtones of soul and r&b with distinctive clarion vocals combined with a hip, sultry and sexy mix. The story it tells, the haunting melody..now put it together with a modern pulse. Kelly sings her stories over a new current with grooves of hip hop and dance and acoustic and trance. The message and the meaning of the past are preserved through Kelly's unique approach to rhythm and her clarion vocals. Kelly's self-titled CD is produced by the legendary Nile Rodgers (Madonna, Joss Stone, Maroon 5 and Diana Ross) and the vibe is fresh, hip and sexy. http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/kellymittleman

Lee Ritenour - Rit's House

Styles: Fusion
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:50
Size: 141,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:29)  1. Module 105
(4:59)  2. "13"
(5:23)  3. Mizrab
(5:37)  4. 78th & 3rd
(5:03)  5. Rit's House
(5:13)  6. A Little Dolphin Dreamin'
(4:00)  7. Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic
(5:13)  8. Condor
(5:09)  9. Olinda
(6:22) 10. Night Owl
(4:18) 11. Party Time
(5:58) 12. Just Listen

Creatively, Lee Ritenour has had his ups and downs over the years. Many of the guitarist's commercial pop-jazz efforts have wasted his skills as an improviser; when Ritenour is catering to NAC/smooth jazz radio, improvisation is the usually the first thing to go. But when Ritenour does have a chance to stretch out, he can be an appealing improviser. Although quite accessible, Rit's House is among his more memorable and substantial efforts. This 2002 release has a soul-jazz/post-bop outlook that often recalls the late '60s and early '70s; for the most part, it is the sort of album that guitarist Grant Green would have been comfortable recording during that era. But Ritenour's guitar playing owes a lot more to Wes Montgomery, who is obviously his primary influence on Gabor Szabo's "Mizrab," as well as original tunes like "78th & 3rd" (which features organist Joey DeFrancesco) and the dusky "Olinda." One of the CD's best tracks has nothing to do with jazz: "Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic." Featuring former Doobie Brothers vocalist Michael McDonald, this interesting remake of the Police's 1981 hit is not only a departure from the rest of the album  it is also a big departure from the original version. 

While the Police's version was up-tempo pop/rock, Ritenour and McDonald transform "Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic" into an adult contemporary/quiet storm ballad. That track is the CD's only vocal offering; the rest of Rit's House is instrumental. Arguably, 1992's Wes Bound is still Ritenour's best studio album certainly from a jazz perspective. But this CD is also respectable, and those who enjoyed hearing the guitarist stretching out on that mostly straightahead disc will also find a lot to enjoy about Rit's House.  ~ Alex Henderson   
http://www.allmusic.com/album/rits-house-mw0000221004

King Curtis - Soul Meeting

Styles: Jazz
Year: 1960/1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:04
Size: 181,2 MB
Art: Front

( 5:11)  1. Da-Duh-Dah
(10:23)  2. Have You Heard?
( 5:25)  3. Willow Weep For Me
( 8:34)  4. Little Brother Soul
(10:36)  5. In A Funky Groove
( 7:01)  6. Soul Meeting
( 7:16)  7. Lazy Soul
( 5:31)  8. All The Way
( 6:57)  9. Jeep's Blues
( 5:42) 10. What Is This Thing Called Love?
( 6:25) 11. Do You Have Soul Now?

King Curtis, an influential and greatly in-demand R&B tenorman, made relatively few jazz dates in his career. This CD has two of the best, complete albums originally called The New Scene of King Curtis and Soul Meeting; the former is also available as a separate CD but should be skipped in favor of this one. Curtis teams up with the passionate cornetist Nat Adderley, pianist Wynton Kelly, either Paul Chambers or Sam Jones on bass and Oliver Jackson or Belton Evans on drums. The music is blues-based bop, with seven basic Curtis originals and four standards. Highly recommended, this set serves as proof that King Curtis could have been a viable jazz player.~ Scott Yanow 
http://www.allmusic.com/album/soul-meeting-compilation-mw0000124320

Harold Alexander - Sunshine Man

Styles: Jazz Funk
Year: 1971
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:15
Size: 92,4 MB
Art: Front

(11:13)  1. Sunshine Man
( 6:12)  2. Quick City
( 3:42)  3. Tite Rope
( 5:42)  4. Mama Soul
( 7:05)  5. Aquilla
( 6:18)  6. Clean-Up

Harold Alexander's Sunshine Man exists somewhere in the space between jazz-funk and free improvisation. Produced by Bob Thiele, the record combines Alexander's intricate, abstract melodies with the wickedly tight drumming of the great Bernard "Pretty" Purdie to create music with both profoundly spiritual and resolutely physical dimensions. Each of the record's six long songs shun direct paths from points A to B, instead coveting the eccentric twists and hairpin turns of roads less traveled, but the cosmic reach of Alexander's flute and soprano saxophone never dwarfs the rock-solid support of Purdie and keyboardist Neal Creque. Sunshine Man is the rare record that's both far-out and funky. ~ Jason Ankeny  http://www.allmusic.com/album/sunshine-man-mw0000754368

Friday, January 3, 2014

Bob Wilber & The Scott Hamilton Quartet - S/T

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 57:53
Size: 132.5 MB
Styles: Swing
Year: 1977/1994
Art: Front

[3:47] 1. Riff
[4:09] 2. Rocks In My Bed
[6:05] 3. Between The Devil And The Deep Blue Sea
[3:16] 4. Time After Time
[4:01] 5. I Never Knew
[4:08] 6. Jonathan's Way
[4:52] 7. All Too Soon
[3:11] 8. Freeman's Way
[3:35] 9. Treasure
[3:25] 10. Puggles
[3:28] 11. Taking A Chance On Love
[6:31] 12. 144 West 54th
[7:20] 13. Jazzspeak

On this CD reissue, Bob Wilber (who triples on clarinet, soprano and alto) meets up quite successfully with the relatively young swing stylist Scott Hamilton (heard near the beginning of his career) and the tenor's rhythm section of the period (guitarist Chris Flory, bassist Phil Flanagan and drummer Chuck Riggs). Together they perform melodic and swinging renditions of six of Wilber's originals along with six veteran standards; the logical arrangements help to set up the solos. Also included on the reissue is a seven-minute "Jazzspeak" in which Wilber remembers how the date came about. Easily recommended to mainstream and small-group swing fans. ~Scott Yanow

Bob Wilber & The Scott Hamilton Quartet

Claudia Acuna - Wind From The South

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 56:07
Size: 128.5 MB
Styles: Latin jazz vocals
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[4:12] 1. Pure Imagination
[3:25] 2. Viento De Sur (Wind Of The South)
[6:26] 3. My Man's Gone Now
[3:29] 4. Prelude To A Kiss
[4:56] 5. Gracias A La Vida (Thanks For Life)
[4:01] 6. What'll I Do
[4:59] 7. Long As You're Living
[6:32] 8. Bewitched, Bothered And Bewildered
[3:22] 9. Alfonsina Y El Mar (Alfonsina And The Sea)
[5:15] 10. I'll Find You
[3:02] 11. The Thrill Is Gone
[6:21] 12. Visions

For her debut recording, Acuna makes an impression that is hard to forget or dismiss. A native of Santiago, Chile, she has been living in NYC and working on her craft at the Blue Note and Small's. On this date she hooks up with peer-group younger musicians as pianist Jason Lindner, bassist Avishai Cohen, drummer Jeff Ballard, and some special guests. Acuna is clearly a gifted singer with a strong, flexible, attractive voice that can lilt or soar. Her resiliency and directness can be favorably compared to Roseanna Vitro, and she proves to be quite an arranger in her own right, charting this set of standards and Hispanic lyric songs. Acuna likes odd meters, using 6/8 on the dramatic "My Man's Gone Now," while adopting shades of Flora Purim (she facially resembles a young Purim) with soaring vocal overdubbing on her original, the title cut, which is supported and colored by Avi Leibovich's trombone. Saturated in percussion and Latin pulse, the horn-fired 6/8 arrangement of Cohen's design "Gracias a la Vida" has tenor saxophonist David Sanchez and trumpeter Diego Urcola swimming in this mix and trading figures during the bridge. A driving 5/4 pushes "The Thrill Is Gone" (not B.B. King's) into a free section, while that same rhythm, more patient in a shuffle style, conjures more drama during the poignant "Long as You're Living." Though in 4/4, beats of separated five and three with beautiful breezy piano chords from Lindner sets this version of "Pure Imagination" apart from any other you'll hear -- a real triumph. There's a hard-bop two-note vamp take of "Prelude to a Kiss" and a quick waltz version of "Bewitched" where Acuna stretches the lyric line. Pianist Harry Whitaker is Acuna's lone foil for the ballad "What'll I Do?" while the trio with Whitaker and Leibovich dances with the singer in wafting, wordless, childlike wonder for "I'll Find You." Cohen and Acuna go it alone in mysterious, deep, and tender moments for "Alfonsina y el Mar"; Stevie Wonder's "Visions" is replete with "Autumn Leaves" paraphrasings, sporting devices both free and modern with dramatic punctuations and stop-starts, with Sanchez on soprano sax. Not only is there promise, but potential too, which is realized; when you consider this is Acuna's maiden voyage, her lengthy travels have already borne the seasoned fruit of a more experienced singer. Recommended. ~ Michael G. Nastos

Recorded at Avatar Studios, New York, New York on November 17-20, 1999.

Claudia Acuña (vocals, background vocals); David Sanchez (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Diego Urcola (trumpet); Harry Whitaker, Jason Lindner (piano); Avishai Cohen (electric piano, acoustic bass, electric bass); Jeff Ballard (drums, percussion). 

Wind From The South

Winnie Dahlgren - Till We Meet Again

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 55:12
Size: 126.4 MB
Styles: World fusion
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[6:12] 1. I Wouldn't Mind
[7:57] 2. 1-2-60
[4:49] 3. Now Let's Move On
[9:01] 4. To My Grandmother
[7:03] 5. Sunset Over Noyalito Avenue
[6:18] 6. Yeleni
[7:25] 7. Join Me
[6:24] 8. Till We Meet Again

Winnie Dahlgren provides the listener with a distinct musical experience with delicate twists. Her classical background showcases her musical technique as a performer, but her use and knowledge of Latin, world music and jazz styles give her performances a modern quality. Her compositions contain a contemporary harmonic universe marked with Latin and world influences, and run the gamut of playful and energetic to sweet and endearing pieces with thoughtful melodies. As a vibraphonist leading her quintet, the band presents a unique instrumental sound.

When writing music I can’t help but be inspired by my surroundings. Sometimes the music is inspired by one single person or event, other times it’s solely about the music. When the latter is the case and it’s time to title a song, it’s the spirit of the moment that brings forth the words. The titles on this album are a mix of these two scenarios. For “I Wouldn’t Mind”, “Now Let’s Move On”, and “Join Me” the titles can be open to your own interpretation as I simply let the “title muse” inspire me. The rest of compositions have a more specific meaning or event leading up to them.

“1-2-60” was written for my parents the year they both celebrated their 60th birthday. “To My Grandmother” is also a birthday song, this one inspired by Danish children songs. “Sunset Over Noyalito Avenue” was written at a time when a relationship to a friend was changing, causing me to reflect on my life. “Yeleni” is my African name. While visiting Mali in 2000/01, I was given this name by one of the local majors in Bamako, as it is tradition to give an African name to visitors. After having observed me for a few days, he told me I shall be called Yeleni. He explained that the name means a celebration of the African woman and is a symbol of a strong woman. What an honor to have been given such a powerful name! In 1999/2000 I went to Mozambique, on my very first trip to Africa, to visit a friend in Maputo and to celebrate the beginning of the new millennium. This trip marked me with very strong emotions and powerful memories. Not knowing when I would be able to return to this beautiful place or when I would see my friend made me write “Till We Meet Again”.

Till We Meet Again

Rodney Jones-Tommy Flanagan Quartet - My Funny Valentine

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 38:15
Size: 87.6 MB
Styles: Guitar-Piano jazz
Year: 1990
Art: Front

[4:25] 1. Giant Steps
[3:31] 2. Oleo
[7:16] 3. I'll Remember April
[1:33] 4. Yesterday
[6:02] 5. D Natural Blues
[4:23] 6. Star Eyes
[2:30] 7. Morning Of The Carnival (Theme)
[8:32] 8. My Funny Valentine

An underrated cool-toned guitarist who sounds at his best in straight-ahead settings, Rodney Jones had his highest visibility during his period with Dizzy Gillespie (1976-1979), when he was in his early twenties. Jones had previously worked with Jaki Byard and recorded with Chico Hamilton, and he would follow the association with Gillespie by working for a time as Lena Hornes accompanist. As a leader, Jones has recorded for Timeless (in 1978 and 1981), the RR label, and in the late 80s for Minor Music.

My Funny Valentine  

Sarah Ellen Hughes - Darning The Dream

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:05
Size: 119,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:47)  1. That's All
(5:23)  2. On A Misty Night
(3:32)  3. Afro Blue
(4:18)  4. Devil May Care
(5:19)  5. Darning The Dream
(4:09)  6. Love For Sale
(4:13)  7. Workin' Hard
(6:06)  8. You Go To My Head
(4:33)  9. When Sunny Gets Blue
(4:49) 10. Some People
(3:31) 11. But Not For Me
(2:20) 12. A Hymn For Janet

A naturally swinging musician, with a finely controlled vibrato, a keen ear for apposite songs, an avoidance of an all-purpose transatlantic accent, and knack for gathering like-minded confreres: that's Sarah Ellen Hughes. If you need to package her - and I don't but some might - I'd say she's listened to Anita O'Day closely and has assimilated Ella Fitzgerald's propensity to scat, something  as on That's All - I can well do without, but which is liked in some circles. When Ian Shaw joins to joust in a scat battle in Devil May Care I have to admit I switch off, but it's undeniably exciting and virtuosic.

Her boppish phrasing is evident on Misty, cleverly segued with On a Misty Night. Semi-ubiquitous Dave O'Higgins lends some Latin grooves to Afro Blue. Darning the Dream is all one could reasonably ask - sensitively phrased, fine vibes from Jim Hart, and a winner of a coda. The unexpectedly demotic lyrics to Love for Sale, I noticed, are by none other than Sting - they add an undeniable verit‚ to the proceedings, though a rather blatant one. Shaw is on more conventional ground on When Sunny Gets Blue where Hughes plays flute. Her own song, Workin' Hard drolly deals with life on the road, and making copies of her CDs to sell. Some People is another original - a soulful opus that engages strongly

But one of the things I most liked about her singing is encapsulated in a small detail from You Go To My Head where she sings `..that you might...' rather than the more often encountered `...that you might...' I liked the particularity of this, and also the melodic tweaking, which works - so too the long vibes solo. A Hymn for Janet is a deeply and richly sensitive envoi.

From Georgie Fame inspired vocalise on But Not For Me to a careful curating of the standard repertoire Hughes proves up to the challenges. She has a fine band - with Rick Simpson ever supportive on piano. The two bass players alternate. ~ Jonathan Woolf   http://www.musicweb-international.com/jazz/2010/hughes_darning_the_dream_01.htm

Personnel : Sarah Ellen Hughes (vocals and flute): Dave O'Higgins (saxophone): Ian Shaw (vocals); Rick Simpson (piano): Tom Farmer, Andy Hamill (bass): Jim Hart (vibes); Darren Altman (drums)

Nanette Natal - Sweet Summer Blue

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:20
Size: 85,5 MB
Art: Front

(7:14)  1. Silver Night
(4:18)  2. The Eye Of The Storm
(4:14)  3. It Sure Ain't Nothin' New
(5:49)  4. Deep In My Memory
(4:11)  5. The Devil Is Working Here
(6:32)  6. Don't Take The Easy Way Out
(4:58)  7. I Got Rhythm

If you’re expecting the bold flights of wordless vocalizing that have defined so much of Nanette Natal’s previous recorded work, proceed directly to Sweet Summer Blue’s seventh and final track, a lissome “I Got Rhythm” filled with those inimitable Natal touches. The balance of the album, comprising six original compositions, might wrongly be perceived as a new direction for Natal. In fact, they recall the earliest phase of her career, harkening back to her long-ago days on the coffeehouse circuit.

The recording technique skewed old-school too, with live performances transferred direct to two-track and then onto analog tape, contributing to the pervading warmth. The intimacy is heightened by the largely acoustic settings, featuring Rolf Sturm on guitars, Dave Silliman on drums, Tony Cimorosi on bass, Clarence Ferrari on violin, with Natal accompanying herself on guitar on three tracks. The arrangements provide her a pan-Americana palette, with waves of country, folk, blues and jazz variously roiling beneath.

Thematically, the songs are equally wide-ranging, extending from the evocation of quicksilver romance on “Silver Night” to the growly assertion of openheartedness on “Don’t Take the Easy Way Out.” Her slinking “It Sure Ain’t Nothin’ New,” propelled by Silliman’s bongos, skillfully examines the chimera of humankind, while the madrigal-like “The Eye and the Storm” and august “Deep in My Memory” offer impassioned prayers for peace. Most poignant, though, is Natal’s forlorn tally of modern American woes on “The Devil Is Working Here.”  Christopher Loudon  
http://jazztimes.com/articles/28542-sweet-summer-blue-nanette-natal

Barbara Dennerlein - Straight Ahead!

Styles: Hammond Organ
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:29
Size: 159,4 MB
Art: Front

( 5:51)  1. Bad And Blue
(11:57)  2. It Just So Happens
( 5:59)  3. What's Up
( 8:32)  4. All That Blues
( 4:58)  5. Open And Free
(11:30)  6. Stormy Weather Blues
( 4:31)  7. Straight Ahead
( 5:38)  8. Rumpelstilzchens Bossa
( 4:14)  9. Opus De Funk
( 6:15) 10. A Night In Tunesia

After several recordings on her own Bebap label and for a few tiny German companies, organist Barbara Dennerlein came to the attention of a larger public with the release of this superior effort for Enja. Teamed up with eccentric trombonist Ray Anderson, fiery guitarist Mitch Watkins, and drummer Ronnie Burrage, Dennerlein performs six of her swinging originals, one apiece by Anderson and Burrage plus "Opus de Funk" and "A Night in Tunisia." The colorful voices of these musicians constantly inspire each other, and Dennerlein (whose sound with the use of MIDI had become quite original) quickly emerged as one of the brightest new stars of the organ in the late '80s. ~ Scott Yanow   
http://www.allmusic.com/album/straight-ahead-mw0000207690

Personnel: Barbara Dennerlein (organ), Ray Anderson (trombone), Mitch Watkins (guitar), Ronnie Burrage (drums)

Straight Ahead!

Pippo Guarnera - Spinnin'

Styles: Hammond Organ
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:52
Size: 112,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:56)  1. Gumbo Lickers
(7:02)  2. Peep'n
(5:48)  3. Brother Jack
(6:34)  4. After Hours
(7:28)  5. The Way I Feel
(5:57)  6. Spinnin' The Blues
(4:03)  7. Are Are
(6:00)  8. Tight Mall

Born in Sicily in 1953, got his first Jazz gig at the Rome MUSIC INN  jazz club. 1974 sees the beginning of a collaboration with "NAPOLI CENTRALE", an Ethno Jazz-Rock band  with several albums out and about 500 concerts performed during two years span ; worth mentioning the opening for WEATHER REPORT and DUKE COBAHM BAND in Rome 1975 and an appearance at the Swiss MONTREUX JAZZ FESTIVAL.  After various studio sessions and a tour with EUGENIO FINARDI  (1976), Guarnera moves to Los Angeles in 1977 refinishing his musical skills studying arrangement, composition, orchestration and film scoring at the GROVE SCHOOL, located at that time in Studio City Los Angeles CA, under the direction of masters as Dick Grove, Jack Eliot, Albert Harris, Jack Smalley, Allyn Ferguson, Mundell Lowe, Roger Kellaway, Clare Fischer.

In 1983 Guarnera is back in Rome, Italy to participate to the TV show MISTER FANTASY on national channel RAI 1. In 1985 moves to Bologna starting a collaboration with Blues artists Andy Forest and Billy Gregory paying another visit to the MONTREAUX JAZZ FESTIVAL. A tour with Enzo Jannacci  during 1987 and 1988 ends in a TV show on RAI 2 with Dario Fo`- Franca  Rame and Jannacci.  Again on tour in 1991 with Neapolitan singer Edoardo De Crescenzo and brazilian percussionist Nanà Vasconcelos.

In 1991 Guarnera joins the RUDY ROTTA BAND which collects performances at many european blues and jazz festivals as : Gaildorf, Lugano, Fribourg, Locarno, Montreux, Leipzig, Dresden,  Hohentwiel, Sanremo Blues, Pistoia ... The MEDITERRANEAN BLUES CRUISE with John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, Marcia Ball, Little Charlie and the Nightcats, Buckwheat Zydeco, Louisiana Red, John Mooney and USA as well at the KANSAS CITY BLUES & JAZZ FEST con Jay McShann, Al Green e Taj Mahal, historical blues clubs as The Grand Emporium in Kansas City and Rosa's in Chicago, performing and recording with Carey Bell, Lovie Lee, Jeann Carroll, Sugar Blue, Karen Carroll, Luther Allison, Lowell Fulson, Billy Brunch, Zora Young, Coco Montoya, Maria Muldaur,  Corey Harris and many others. During the 2000 decade starts new collaborations,  BLUE TRAIN TRIO with Jimmy Villotti and Vince Vallicelli , the trio MEMPHIS ON STHEROIDS (Green Onions),  Antonio Gramentieri  and Matteo Monti  and not to forget the MAGIC TRIO with James Thompson and Vince Vallicelli plus some other tours with the jazz singer Harriet Lewis. A participation  to the Dubai International Jazz Festival with  guitarist Enrico Crivellaro. The following is a long series of collaborations with Jono Manson, tours with Sax Gordon Beadle, Chris Cain, Guy King, Peaches Staten, J.W. Williams, Katherine Davis.

Discography includes Tolo Marton "Quarantasuonati", AndyForest "Cat On A TinHarp" "Grooverockbluesfunk'n'roll", furthermore  DIABOLIC LIVE, SO` DI BLUES , LIVE IN KANSAS CITY and BLURRED with the Rudy Rotta Band, SUGARVILLE with Green Onions, “The Night the Mòjo Stood Still” with the Magic Trio renamed as  “FEARLESS GUMBO”, "ANIMA BLUES" a blues project with Eugenio Finardi, "SPINNIN' THE BLUES" under his own name, "SAX GORDON LIVE AT NAIMA" and countless studio session at Hammond Organ and piano with among others Alberto Solfrini,  Ligabue, Gianna Nannini, Stadio , Grignani and Timoria.  http://www.studiologic-music.com/musicians/pippo-guarnera.html

Spinnin' the Blues

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Sam Cooke - Twistin' The Night Away

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 28:44
Size: 65.8 MB
Styles: R&B
Year: 1962/2013
Art: Front

[2:38] 1. Twistin' The Night Away
[2:15] 2. Sugar Dumpling
[2:07] 3. Twistin' In The Kitchen With Dinah
[2:31] 4. Somebody's Gonna Miss Me
[2:19] 5. A Whole Lotta Woman
[2:26] 6. The Twist
[2:07] 7. Twistin' In The Old Town Tonight
[2:33] 8. Movin' And Groovin'
[2:12] 9. Camptown Twist
[2:54] 10. Somebody Have Mercy
[2:06] 11. Soothe Me
[2:30] 12. That's It, I Quit, I'm Moving On

This was one of Cooke's more successful LPs, only his second ever to chart (the first was his 1957 debut long-player), and from here on, all of his albums would sell in serious numbers. Twistin' the Night Away remains one of Cooke's most accessible records, despite the fact that it was a "twist" album, aimed by the producers at cashing in on that craze, and Cooke was shoehorned into doing numbers like "Camptown Twist," "Twistin' in the Kitchen With Dinah," and "Twistin' in the Old Town," as well as his version of Hank Ballard's "The Twist." Around them, the singer is at his most soulful, exciting, and passionate, on the bluesy "Somebody Have Mercy"; the romantic lament "Somebody's Gonna Miss Me"; the ebullient "Sugar Dumpling"; the achingly beautiful, yearning "A Whole Lot of Woman"; the soaring "Soothe Me" (with Lou Rawls); and the slow dance number "Movin' and Groovin' ." One of the great dance albums of its period, but a brilliant soul album as well, which is why it holds up 40 years later. ~Bruce Eder

Twistin' The Night Away

Charlie Rouse - Soul Mates (Feat. Sahib Shihab)

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 61:58
Size: 141.9 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1995
Art: Front

[5:45] 1. November Afternoon
[5:08] 2. Green Chimneys
[5:39] 3. Prayer Song
[5:10] 4. So Nice
[6:05] 5. Soul Mates
[5:36] 6. Bohemia After Dark
[5:58] 7. Soft Shoulder
[7:41] 8. I'm Never Happy Anymore
[4:50] 9. Dida
[5:33] 10. Bittersweet
[4:29] 11. Bird's Nest

Soul Mates, an exciting studio date from 1988, combines a front line of Charlie Rouse, Sahib Shihab, and Claudio Roditi (who doubles on trumpet and flügelhorn), with a first-rate rhythm section of Walter Davis, Jr., Santi Debriano, and Victor Lewis. With Don Sickler providing most of the arrangements, the full sextet is heard on six of the 11 tracks. The fast-paced hard bop opener, "November Afternoon," is a neglected work by Tom McIntosh and features some of the hottest playing of the two sessions that make up the date. Rouse, already well-versed in Thelonious Monk's "Green Chimneys," makes the most of Sickler's well-crafted chart, which incorporates quick quirky phrases by Shihab and Roditi to accent his tenor sax. Shihab composed and arranged the tricky "DiDa," in which Davis mirrors the baritone saxophonist throughout the introduction. Rouse is heard with just the rhythm section in his lyrical arrangement of the ballad "Bittersweet." On a sad note, by the time this Uptown CD was finally released in 1993, Rouse, Shihab, and Davis had all passed away. ~Ken Dryden

Soul Mates (Feat. Sahib Shihab)

Henry Mancini - Breakfast At Tiffany's (50th Anniversary Edition)

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 42:48
Size: 98.0 MB
Styles: Easy Listening
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[2:35] 1. Moon River (Original Main Title)
[3:09] 2. Something For Cat
[3:07] 3. Sally's Tomato
[2:31] 4. Mr. Yunioshi
[2:28] 5. The Big Blow Out
[2:02] 6. Moon River (Audrey Hepburn Version)
[2:31] 7. Hub Caps And Tail Lights
[2:47] 8. Breakfast At Tiffany's
[2:57] 9. Latin Golightly
[3:20] 10. Holly
[3:10] 11. Loose Caboose
[3:08] 12. The Big Heist
[2:36] 13. Moon River Cha Cha
[2:42] 14. Moon River (Choral Version)
[3:38] 15. Moon River [fjohnny Mercer Vocals]

It seems extraordinary now to think that Moon River almost didn't make it into the final cut of Blake Edwards' iconic 1961 film, Breakfast at Tiffany's. However, when a Paramount executive suggested it be deleted after an early screening, it was only at the insistence of the film's star, Audrey Hepburn, that the song was kept in. Of course, the rest is history. Moon River went on to win an Academy Award for Best Original Song, alongside the film's other Oscar, for Best Score.

Henry Mancini's soundtrack is certainly a work of musical storytelling genius. As brassy big band numbers rub shoulders with slinkily suave city sophisticate ones, you find yourself submersed within the 1960s New York It Girl glamour to which Hepburn's character, Holly Golightly, aspires. Then, amidst all this jazzy energy and upper Manhattan class comes Moon River. Simple, wistful, strummed on a guitar as Golightly perches over the fire escape, it's a striking encapsulation of the culture divide between her New York existence and her country roots.

Fast-forward to the present day and, whilst Mancini's music itself sounds as alive and evocative as ever (with the exception of the bizarre Mr Yunioshi theme), it's hard to make a new recording look fresh and desirable when it's been on the market in one form or another since 1961. That said, Jackpot Records have made a pretty good fist of it by offering more bonus tracks than any previous or existing recording.

In addition to the soundtrack itself, there are seven Henry Mancini Orchestra tracks, featuring songs such as Misty and Blue Satin. Then, there are five extra Moon River recordings, performed by Danny Williams, the Eddie Harris Quartet, Jerry Butler & Orchestra, the Grant Green Quartet, and finally Audrey Hepburn's version extracted directly from the film.

Less impressive is the fact that whoever compiled these extra bonus tracks did so by the powers of logic rather than of musical flair, grouping them into two distinct sections. Most people would agree that five Moon Rivers in a row is a bit much even for the most enthusiastic Tiffany's fan. Still, it's all good stuff, and if you don't yet own the soundtrack this will be the version to go for, not least because it's cheaper than the others. You may want to do a bit of re-sequencing, though. ~Charlotte Gardner

Breakfast At Tiffany's (50th Anniversary Edition)

Diane Marino - From The Heart

Styles: Vocal Jazz, Samba
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:53
Size: 160,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:48)  1. I Concentrate On You
(6:27)  2. Don't Misunderstand
(6:33)  3. Incompatibilidade De Genios
(5:32)  4. (The Man From) The Old Country
(8:38)  5. Killer Joe
(4:26)  6. Anyone Who Had A Heart
(2:51)  7. This Can't Be Love
(6:24)  8. You Don't Know What Love Is
(4:25)  9. So Danco Samba
(6:29) 10. Moanin'
(5:09) 11. Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye
(4:28) 12. Bernie's Tune
(5:35) 13. Once I Loved / O Amor Em Paz

The whole is the sum of its parts. That statement is a principle in the science of mathematics and the art of music. You're holding a sampling of the sum of what I'm musically about. These selections flow from my soul to your heart via the sounds of my voice and piano. This music carries a kind of communication that words alone cannot, and emanates from deep inside me where thoughts are often expressed, and unavoidably felt. To hear these selections, priorities from my life of musical nurturing, is to know me as I've been, and accompany me as I go in multiple directions, often onward, always upward and never backward. I feel as though my music, although having its foundation in Jazz, is resistant to a particular branding. Following the release of my album, "Just Groovin," some people assumed I was a exclusively a smooth jazz artist. Because I'm comfortable with Brazilian music, others later surmised I'm a Brazilian artist. Admittedly, the labels are flattering, but ultimately restrictive. My music is diversified and it's my own, offered for my satisfaction and your edification. I might even refer to this CD as “Eclectic Jazz”. “Eclectic jazz? With this album, have I birthed a new genre? If so, it was intentional, and was the unavoidable upshot of a maverick artist, and the lovable liability of that incessant spiral onward, upward and never backward. Diane Marino… Building Bridges Across Jazz Lines…

When you combine an accomplished vocalist, an accomplished pianist, and accomplished arranger all in one individual, you have the dynamic Diane Marino. M&M Records Recording Artist Diane Marino has recorded, performed, and shared the stage with jazz legends Houston Person, Joe Henderson, Wycliffe Gordon, Pete Escovedo, Tania Maria, Kirk Whalum, pop music icon Felix Cavaliere and many others. Having a passion to “Build Bridges Across Jazz Lines”, Diane arranged and blended the elements of contemporary, traditional, smooth and Latin jazz with great pop standards from the sixties. This creative mosaic of music led to Diane’s 2008 Release, ‘Just Groovin’.
Critically acclaimed, “‘Just Groovin’ is a stellar collection featuring twelve wonderful re-interpretations of pop standards from the sixties. These are not copies of other versions. Diane's fantastic voice and arranging is a breath of fresh air for these tunes, reminding us once again that a great song can be interpreted in any number of styles”… Bob Perry – The Penthouse Radio.

Diane’s debut jazz quartet CD ‘A Sleepin’ Bee’ was released in 2003 and has received national acclaim charting #25 on the national JazzWeek charts as well as receiving extensive radio airplay and rave reviews. This CD offers a wide array of vocal and instrumental traditional jazz standards, Latin jazz, and Brazilian jazz (sung in Portuguese). Diane’s second CD ‘On the Street Where You Live’, released in May of 2004 has also received national acclaim charting on the national JazzWeek charts and proves once again that Diane is a natural whether playing, singing, or both. This CD will take the listener to the very depths of emotions. There is a re-current theme throughout that tells stories of love, and love lost, as well as playful gems of Latin and Brazilian jazz. Diane is joined by bandmates Frank Marino (bass), Mitch Reilly (saxes/flute), and Chris Brown (drums).

Diane has performed at Trumpets Jazz Club in NJ, The Metropolitan Room-NYC, Montreux Atlanta Festival, Town Point Jazz Festival, Music City Jazz & Heritage Festival, WorkPlay Theatre, BayFest, Jazz n’ June Huntsville, Minnetrista Cultural Center Jazz Series, Churchill Grounds Atlanta, Riverfest, Jazz In The Valley, Music Midtown, Bowling Green International Festival, The Jazz Factory, HarborFest, Main Street Jazz Festival, City Stages, Three Rivers Music Festival, Jazz Junction, Bele Chere Music Festival, Franklin Jazz Festival, Summer Lights Music Festival, Celebration of The Arts USCS, and more.

Singer/pianist Diane Marino was born in Manhattan, NYC. She received her early piano training of classical studies and improvisation from the age of 10. Diane was accepted on NYC’S ‘Famed’ High School for the Performing Arts as a classical piano major. She later attended and graduated from Mannes College of Music in Manhattan where she studied piano with world-renowned concert pianist Murray Perahia.  
http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/dianemarino4

Johnny Guarnieri - Walla Walla

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1975
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:26
Size: 120,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:32)  1. Gliss Me Again
(1:56)  2. Walla Walla
(3:59)  3. I Left My Heart in San Francisco
(2:23)  4. Sweet Georgia Brown
(2:56)  5. Tea for Two
(3:03)  6. My Honey's Lovin' Arms
(2:37)  7. The Sheik of Araby
(4:13)  8. Love for Sale
(4:03)  9. Sometimes I'm Happy
(2:37) 10. Cherokee
(3:59) 11. Back Home Again in Indiana
(0:56) 12. One O'Clock Jump
(1:58) 13. Walla Walla (take 2)
(3:19) 14. Black and Blue
(3:38) 15. Gypsy in My Soul
(3:28) 16. Back Home Again in Indiana
(3:41) 17. Gliss Me Again (take 2)

Johnny Guarnieri (March 23, 1917 – January 7, 1985) was an American jazz and stride pianist, born in New York City, perhaps best known for his big band stints with Benny Goodman in 1939 and with Artie Shaw in 1940. Guarnieri is also noted for his embellishment and juxtaposition of jazz with classical piano, such as Scarlatti and Beethoven. In the early 1980s, Guarnieri recorded "Johnny Guarnieri plays Duke Ellington" on a Bosendorfer Grand "SE" player piano, for the Live-Performance Jazz Series.

Throughout the 1940s Guarnieri was a busy sideman, recording with artists such as Charlie Christian, Cozy Cole, Ike Quebec, Charlie Kennedy, Hank D'Amico and Ben Webster. He also led his own group called the "Johnny Guarnieri Swing Men" and recorded with them on the Savoy label, a group that included Lester Young, Hank D'Amico, Billy Butterfield and Cozy Cole. He also led a trio in the 1940s composed of himself, Slam Stewart and Sammy Weiss, recording again for Savoy. During the 1940s he also recorded for the short-lived Majestic label, playing solo piano and with his trio. In 1949 Guarnieri recorded an album with June Christy titled June Christy & The Johnny Guarnieri Quintet.

In his later years Guarnieri shifted more toward jazz education. In commemoration of his reputation as a teacher, Guarnieri's students financed a label for him called Taz Jazz Records. In the 1970s Guarnieri recorded numerous albums on his new label, and until 1982 worked at the "Tail of the Cock" nightclub in Studio City, California. He died onstage during a performance with Dick Sudhalter.  
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnny_Guarnieri