Friday, January 10, 2014

The Everly Brothers - Songs Our Daddy Taught Us

Styles: Pop/Rock
Year: 1958
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:29
Size: 93,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:41)  1. Roving Gambler
(3:04)  2. Down In The Willow Garden
(2:26)  3. Long Time Gone
(4:53)  4. Lightning Express
(3:09)  5. That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine
(2:41)  6. Who's Gonna Show Your Pretty Little Feet-
(4:41)  7. Barbara Allen
(2:37)  8. Oh So Many Years
(3:38)  9. I'm Here To Get My Baby Out Of Jail
(3:01) 10. Rockin' Alone (In An Old Rockin' Chair)
(3:10) 11. Kentucky
(3:21) 12. Put My Little Shoes Away

The Everlys had reached their commercial peak when they made this album of sparsely arranged traditional songs, a concept that was quite a surprise from a top rock & roll act, and considerably ahead of its time. It's actually not as enduring as their early rockers and pop ballads, but the singing is superb on their interpretations of standards like "Barbara Allen" and "Kentucky." ~ Richie Unterberger   
http://www.allmusic.com/album/songs-our-daddy-taught-us-mw0000604335

Thursday, January 9, 2014

Rebecca Hardiman - I'll Remember April

Size: 73,8 MB
Time: 31:20
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. This Can't Be Love (3:51)
02. Almost Like Being In Love (4:12)
03. I'll Remember April (2:37)
04. The Nearness Of You (3:11)
05. I Got Rhythm (2:30)
06. The Very Thought Of You (4:21)
07. With A Song In My Heart (2:52)
08. I've Got The World On A String (4:13)
09. Cry Me A River (3:30)

Rebecca started her career with “The Ritz” - a vocal jazz group based in Boston that performed throughout the East Coast including The Montreal Jazz Festival. While with “The Ritz”, she recorded a CD for Denon Columbia Records. After moving back to Portland in 1990, she and her husband started the vocal jazz group “Euphoria”, which performed around Portland for 10 years at various venues including The Cathedral Park Jazz Festival, and was the opening act for Mel Torme’ when he appeared at the Eugene Hult Center. Rebecca also recorded a Gospel Jazz CD of all original songs available on CDBaby.com and PraiseCharts.com. Rebecca’s style is often described as an exciting mix of Doris Day and Ella Fitzgerald.

I'll Remember April  

The New Hot Club Of America - The New Hot Club Of America

Size: 99,8 MB
Time: 41:37
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Gypsy Jazz, Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Swing Guitars (Feat. Ben Powell & Gonzalo Bergara) (3:07)
02. Festival 48 (Feat. Jason Anick & Gonzalo Bergara) (2:57)
03. Blues Skies (Feat. Leah Zeger & Gonzalo Bergara) (3:36)
04. Webster (Feat. Gonzalo Bergara & Jason Anick) (2:00)
05. Blues Clair (Feat. Gonzalo Bergara) (1:46)
06. Undecided (Feat. Gonzalo Bergara & Leah Zeger) (2:38)
07. Billets Deux (Feat. Rob Hardt & Gonzalo Bergara) (2:37)
08. Rhythm Future (Feat. Jason Anick & Gonzalo Bergara) (2:38)
09. Coucou (Feat. Gonzalo Bergara & Leah Zeger) (2:47)
10. Place De Brouckere (Feat. Ben Powell & Gonzalo Bergara) (2:04)
11. Blues Mineur (Feat. Rob Hardt & Gonzalo Bergara) (3:04)
12. Swing 42 (Feat. Gonzalo Bergara & Rob Hardt) (3:22)
13. Minor Swing (Feat. Gonzalo Bergara, Jason Anick, Leah Zeger, Rob Hardt & Ben Powell) (3:24)
14. Artillerie Lourde (Feat. Gonzalo Bergara & Ben Powell) (3:03)
15. Hungaria (Feat. Gonzalo Bergara) (2:29)

Recently formed, The New Hot Club Of America is an ensemble comprised of some of the top gypsy jazz artists living and performing this music in North America. Modeled on the original instrumentation of the Hot club of France, the New Hot club of America pays particular attention to recapturing the sound, style and spirit of the Hotclub of France by performing music composed and performed by Django Reinhardt & Stephane Grappelli. One of the concepts behind the New Hot club of America is to have an evolving group of featured soloists on rotation. In this way the NHOA can celebrate the many collaborations Django Reinhardt made with other artists in Europe and the USA by inviting singers and instrumental soloists to collaborate in the same way.

The New Hot Club Of America

Laura Hull & Her Jazz Gems - Supper Club Live!

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 62:49
Size: 143.8 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[3:48] 1. Lullaby Of The Leaves
[5:14] 2. Dream
[3:37] 3. Alone Together
[4:46] 4. I Can't Get Started
[4:17] 5. Get Out Of Town
[4:39] 6. How Strange
[4:41] 7. Dreamsville
[5:04] 8. Comes Love
[7:52] 9. Only The Lonely
[4:32] 10. I Got Lucky In The Rain
[5:19] 11. I Wish I Knew
[4:59] 12. Call Me
[3:54] 13. How Deep Is The Ocean

A collection of popular songs and obscure gems in tribute to the supper club experience of eras gone by. Recorded live at Richie Cecere's Supper Club in Montclair, NJ.

With influences ranging from Rosemary Clooney and Carmen McRae to Patsy Cline and k.d. Lang, Laura Hull delivers an extraordinary combination of rich, sultry, and expressive vocals with music drawn from an extensive repertoire of American popular songs, jazz standards, and her original compositions.

A native of New York City, Laura took the first steps of her musical journey at the age of seven when she appeared in an all-girls summer camp production of The King and I. Through her formative years, the road led her to the resorts of upstate New York's fabled Catskill Mountains, where she learned to sing in a variety of genres and styles. She spent time as a versatile session and jingle singer and showcased her singing at clubs in and around New York City After a 24-year hiatus from music to pursue a business career, Laura returned to live performance in 2004. In her many performances since, she has emerged as a melodic jazz singer with a real feel for the Great American Songbook.

Tracks 3, 8, 11, recorded live, July 11, 2009. Laura Hull: Vocals; Ted Brancato: Piano; Steve LaSpina: Bass; Lenny Argese: Guitar; Tony Jefferson: Drums. Tracks 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13, recorded live, July 25, 2009. Laura Hull: Vocals; Pat Firth: Piano; Saadi Zain: Bass; Lenny Argese: Guitar; Tony Jefferson: Drums.

Supper Club Live!

Gene Ammons - Bad! Bossa Nova

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 34:17
Size: 78.5 MB
Styles: Soul Jazz, Hard bop
Year: 1962/1989/2012
Art: Front

[4:45] 1. Pagan Love Song
[9:34] 2. Ca' Purange (Jungle Soul)
[3:19] 3. Anna
[3:46] 4. Cae, Cae
[7:44] 5. Moito Mato Grosso
[5:06] 6. Yellow Bird

Bad Bossa Nova is right – as Gene Ammons really hits a great groove here – one that's not exactly bossa, but which has lots of Latin and tropical touches! The session makes great use of 2 guitars at the same time – using that of Kenny Burrell for soulful rhythm, but also adding in Bucky Pizzarelli for some nice acoustic embellishments – in a mode that's similar to the soul jazz-com-bossa style used on records like Ike Quebec's Soul Samba or Charlie Rouse's Bossa Nova Bacchanal. The overall rhythms are a bit more complicated, and a bit more soul jazz based than those sets – with Hank Jones on piano, Oliver Jackson on percussion, and Al Hayes adding in some sweet extra bongo! ~Dusty Groove

Bad! Bossa Nova

Alberto Marsico - Rock Candy

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 57:07
Size: 130.8 MB
Styles: Hammond organ jazz
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[4:46] 1. The Champ
[4:24] 2. Ready And Able
[5:22] 3. The Cat
[3:44] 4. Rock Candy
[5:12] 5. Talkin` About J.C.
[4:47] 6. Lazy
[4:39] 7. A Whiter Shade Of Pale
[4:51] 8. Gotcha
[9:31] 9. 8
[9:45] 10. Monster Blues

2004 release dedicated to Hammond organ history. Classic Hammond tunes played with a 4-piece brass section.

Nato a Torino nel 1966, è attivo a livello professionale da circa venticinque anni come organista e tastierista; la sua passione per l'organo Hammond nasce però nel 1994, dopo aver frequentato i seminari di Jack McDuff a Genova.

Rock Candy

Lisa Hearns - I Got It Bad and That Ain't Good

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:58
Size: 91,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:03)  1. I Got It Bad and That Ain't Good
(3:22)  2. Easy Living
(4:55)  3. I Heard It Through the Grapevine
(2:54)  4. Cheek to Cheek
(3:32)  5. Plus Je T'Embrasse
(3:48)  6. Love for Sale
(4:18)  7. Lonely Woman
(2:51)  8. Wild Is Love
(3:27)  9. On the Street Where You Live
(4:44) 10. Cry Me a River

Nearly a decade ago, the jazz world was introduced to Jane Monheit, an upstart singer with an exceptional voice. Monheit put a fresh face to several standards with her early releases. Lisa Hearns is in that same mold.  The daughter of two music professors, Hearns grew up in Massachusetts and is a graduate of the Berklee College of Music. Though she has sung professionally and made several recordings, I Got It Bad and That Ain't Good is her first foray into jazz. She is aided by Grammy-winning producer Elliot Scheiner. Accompanying musicians are Kelly Friesen on bass, Keith Ingham on piano, Arnold Wise on drums, and guest guitarist Howard Alden appears on several tracks. Hearns starts this 10-song set with the title track. In elegant lounge singer fashion, she brings an earthy touch to the Ellington/Webster composition. 

It begins as a duet between Hearns and Alden, and then the other musicians join in. During the middle break, Friesen solos, accompanied by Ingham and Wise. Hearns demonstrates some impressive control during a series of roulades before the closing sequence. The French "Plus Je T'Embrasse" is delightful. Hearns' voice provides just a touch of sass. Ingham and Alden add to the spirit with solos. The bass and drums, though in the background, add their emphasis as well.  Alden helps carry the rhythm on the upbeat "Wild Is Love." Freisen features prominently. Ingham's solo is punctuated by Wise's rim shots. And, as she does, Hearns sings with a joyous flair.  The one non-jazz song that's covered here is the Motown classic "I Heard It Through the Grapevine." Hearns is an effective lead vocalist who shares the spotlight with her accompanists. Likewise, the musicians are involved enough to be noticed both individually and as a group, but they don't dominate. ~ Woodrow Wilkins  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/profile.php?id=2429

Personnel: Lisa Hearns: vocals; Kelly Friesen: bass; Keith Ingram: piano; Arnold Wise: drums; Howard Alden: guitar (1, 2, 5, 8).

Mary Stallings - Dream

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:11
Size: 112,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:58)  1. Close Enough For Love
(5:23)  2. That Old Black Magic
(4:47)  3. Moon Ray
(4:10)  4. Never Knew
(2:48)  5. A Weaver Of Dreams
(6:05)  6. Mad About The Boy
(3:13)  7. Dream Dancing
(3:39)  8. Hey Now
(5:07)  9. Watching You Watching Me
(1:16) 10. Before You Know It
(7:39) 11. A Timeless Place

Mary Stallings had made her mark over a career stretching nearly a half-century by the time of this recording session, and she still is very impressive in her early seventies. The expressive alto benefits from an outstanding rhythm section, anchored by pianist/arranger Eric Reed, with bassist Hamilton Price and drummer Ralph Penland. "Close Enough for Love" is the striking opener, and while this was a signature song for the late Shirley Horn, Stallings is buoyed by Reed's uptempo, dramatic setting of this standard. Contrasting with that is the lush, very deliberate approach to "That Old Black Magic," with Stallings putting greater emphasis on Johnny Mercer's romantic lyrics in a very sensual way. The neglected "A Weaver of Dreams" is an absolute delight, with Stallings swinging over Reed's tasty stride piano in a duo performance. The vocalist also offers a striking interpretation of "A Timeless Place" (vocalist Norma Winstone's lyrical adaptation of Jimmy Rowles' "The Peacocks"), a shimmering affair in which Stallings captures the essence of the words and melody. "Never Knew" is a rare opportunity for Stallings to record with her daughter, R&B vocalist Adriana Evans (who also co-wrote the piece), for a funky, upbeat number that adds a bit of contemporary flavor to this collection of timeless standards. ~ Ken Dryden   http://www.allmusic.com/album/dream-mw0002029793

Krisanthi Pappas - And The Sun Will Shine

Styles: Jazz, Cabaret
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:22
Size: 125,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:25)  1. The Voice
(4:02)  2. So High
(3:43)  3. Just Another Day Without You
(4:11)  4. You Make Me Crazy
(4:15)  5. Purple Jazz Waltz
(3:53)  6. Just Want To Run Away
(3:57)  7. Move On
(2:25)  8. I've Always Been Cool
(3:39)  9. Going On Vacation
(1:52) 10. Oh What A Day, Feeling Good!
(3:17) 11. Congratulations On Graduation!
(3:56) 12. Celebratin' Swing
(3:07) 13. The Big Apple Lingo
(4:06) 14. Holding On To You
(3:27) 15. If I Had Only Known

Jazz and cabaret singer Krisanthi Pappas has been compared to Diana Krall and Norah Jones by Jazz Times Magazine. Also a Billboard® award winning composer and lyricist, Cadence Magazine compares her songwriting style to Randy Newman (music of “Toy Story”, etc). Her original songs have been featured in ABC television’s “One Life To Live”, NBC’s “Parenthood” and “Passions”, as well as in the films "Green River" and “Tying The Not”. Krisanthi has recorded five CDs and performs full-time throughout New England and New York City, having opened for Branford Marsalis, Chuck Mangione and many others. Her voice and music have received high accolades from Jazz Times Magazine, Downbeat Magazine, Cabaret Scenes New York, Cabaret Hotline, The Boston Globe, The Boston Herald, Cadence Magazine, and many radio personalities nationwide. http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/krisanthipappas5

Jimmy Heath - Little Man, Big Band

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:14
Size: 120,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:06)  1. Trane Connections
(4:25)  2. Two Friends
(7:48)  3. The Voice of the Saxophone
(6:58)  4. Forever Sonny
(7:03)  5. CTA
(7:19)  6. Ellington's Stray Horn
(5:08)  7. Gingerbread Boy
(8:23)  8. Without You, No Me

Bill Cosby produced Little Man Big Band to give journeyman composer and saxophonist Jimmy Heath a larger palette for his work. Most known for his work with small ensembles, especially the Heath Brothers with siblings Percy Heath on bass and Tootie Heath on drums, Jimmy Heath brings to life his compositions, including his greatest hits "CTA" and "Gingerbread Boy," with blaring, upper register trumpets, punchy trombone countermelodies and swirling saxophone ensembles. He is an able practitioner of big band orchestration, concentrating largely on using the band to frame soloists, most prominently himself. The concerto-like pieces "The Voice of the Saxophone" and "Ellington's Stray Horn" are the most adventurous structurally. 

The band made up mostly of members of American Jazz Orchestra is stocked with ace sessionmen who execute the charts with aplomb. That's evident on the twisting melodic variations on the opener and "Gingerbread Boy." While Heath is the featured soloist, Roland Hanna gets a chance to show both as a soloist and as an accompanist why he was in a class with Basie and Ellington as a big band pianist. Guitarist Tony Purrone, a regular with the Heath Brothers, and most of the trumpet section provide complementary solo voices. ~ David Dupont   
http://www.allmusic.com/album/little-man-big-band-mw0000616104

Little Man, Big Band

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Illinois Jacquet & Ben Webster - The Kid & The Brute

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 60:04
Size: 137.5 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1954/1998/2013
Art: Front

[11:52] 1. I Wrote This For The Kid
[ 2:39] 2. Saph
[ 2:50] 3. Mambocito Mio
[ 8:24] 4. The Kid And The Brute
[ 4:29] 5. September Song
[ 3:08] 6. Jacquet's Dilemma
[ 2:40] 7. Little Jeff
[ 1:47] 8. Jacquet Jumps
[ 3:06] 9. Blue Nocturne
[ 3:15] 10. On Your Toes
[ 2:52] 11. R.U. One
[ 2:53] 12. Jatap Conga
[ 3:26] 13. It's The Talk Of The Town
[ 3:19] 14. Heads
[ 3:17] 15. On Your Toes

This single CD reissues all of the music from a former LP and a ten-inch LP. Of greatest interest are two fairly long selections (the blues "I Wrote This for the Kid" and a stomping "The Kid and the Brute") that match Illinois Jacquet with fellow tenor great Ben Webster. Since they have equally passionate and distinctive sounds, their "battle" is a draw. Otherwise, this 1998 CD finds Jacquet with his band of the mid-1950s, featuring short solos and fine support from trumpeter Russell Jacquet, trombonist Matthew Gee and either Leo Parker or Cecil Payne on baritone. Jacquet is at his best on the uptempo numbers, such as "Jacquet Jumps" and two versions of "On Your Toes," where he gets to honk in strategic places. An excellent example of Illinois Jacquet's hard-swinging and accessible music. ~Scott Yanow

The Kid & The Brute

Joani Taylor With Ross Taggart & Friends - A State Of Grace

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 61:30
Size: 140.8 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[5:34] 1. All My Tomorrows
[5:49] 2. The Very Thought Of You
[5:29] 3. Imagine My Frustration
[4:40] 4. A State Of Grace
[5:19] 5. For All We Know
[4:37] 6. Seeing For The Very First Time
[3:23] 7. You Look Good
[5:32] 8. Answer My Questions
[5:35] 9. I Ain't Got Nothing But The Blues
[4:14] 10. You're Blase
[6:11] 11. Detour Ahead
[5:03] 12. You Must Believe In Spring

Joani is Canada's “First Lady of the Jazz Ballad”. She has legendary status in Canadian music circles and has sung on thousands of film scores, commercials and recordings…..working with a variety of luminaries from Bryan Adams and Stevie Wonder to James Galway, David Foster, Cannonball Adderley, and Miles Davis. Joani has flown worldwide to bewitch audiences in concerts and festivals. She has won nominations and awards for her work in both Canada and the U.S. She has had a hit single and recorded five albums, not including the compilations she has been featured on. Joani is releasing her explosive sixth product featuring her own profound and prolific writing, as well as her brilliant vocal performances.

A State Of Grace

Marc Antoine - Cruisin'

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 40:58
Size: 93.8 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz, Smooth jazz
Year: 2001
Art: Front

[3:41] 1. Mas Que Nada
[4:40] 2. On The Strip
[4:15] 3. Cruisin'
[4:23] 4. Sierra Bella
[4:54] 5. Just Chillin'
[4:23] 6. Java Montmarte
[5:52] 7. Indian Summer
[4:24] 8. Caribbean Morning
[4:23] 9. Fuego

Anyone who's ever seen this French guitarist perform live knows that he has yet to record an album that showcases how truly captivating a guitarist he is. Cruisin' comes close and is without question Antoine's most cohesive and thoroughly entertaining disc. It helps that the guitarist has greatly diminished his use of drum machines and instead works with a live sound, which goes a long way in generating more warmth from his strings than was evident in his previous releases. As the title suggests, Crusin' is a record inspired by summer traveling. It is filled with uplifting melodies and energetic grooves just right for driving. The nine-song CD is something of a travelogue too, with stops in Spain, France, and the islands, respectively, on the tunes "Sierra Bella," "Java Montmarte," and "Caribbean Morning." The disc opens with a smooth-jazz reworking of the Brazilian standard "Mas Que Nada" that features exquisite wordless vocal work from Patti Austin. Drummer Peter Erskine, keyboardist Ricky Peterson, and Antoine's fellow Frenchman, keyboardist Philippe Saisse, also contribute stellar performances. And the work of percussionist Luis Conte also helps make this album a smooth-jazz winner. --Mark Ruffin

Cruisin'

The New Seekers - The Best Of The New Seekers

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 36:47
Size: 84.2 MB
Styles: Folk
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[3:23] 1. Look What They've Done To The Song, Ma
[3:50] 2. Beautiful People
[3:22] 3. Nickel Song
[2:40] 4. Blackberry Way
[2:32] 5. A Perfect Love
[3:15] 6. Never Ending Song Of Love
[2:22] 7. I'd Like To Teach The World To Sing (In Perfect Harmony)
[2:51] 8. Tonight
[2:57] 9. Evergreen
[4:36] 10. Circles
[2:49] 11. Beg, Steal Or Borrow
[2:06] 12. Dance, Dance, Dance

The New Seekers were a revival of the successful Australian folk outfit The Seekers that achieved major success in the UK and USA with songs like Georgy Girl, although none of the original members of the Seekers sang in the New Seekers. Their hit-making career started in 1971 with a cover of Melanie Safka's What Have They Done To My Song, but the real breakthrough came later that year with the exuberant Never Ending Song Of Love. The original, by Delaney and Bonnie Bramlett, also made the charts but the New Seekers' lively melodic version with its bright vocals was clearly the more commercially appealing.

Other tuneful hits here include Beg, Steal or Borrow (A UK Eurovision Song Contest entry), the beautiful Circles and a stunning, genuine rock version of Pete Townsend's Pinball Wizard (See Me Feel Me). They also had hits with You Won't Find Another Fool Like Me and I Get A Little Sentimental Over You but these were tepid ballads in my opinion and I'm still not fond of them. The cover versions of famous 60s and 70s songs are better. And then there's their biggest hit that started out as a famous soft drink commercial: I'd Like To Teach The World To Sing. Erm, not my favorite either, probably because it was overplayed then and I've had enough of it forever. It's just a singalong ballad and does not compare well with their best songs like Never Ending Song Of Love and the stunning Pinball Wizard. This album is a great collection of their hits and best album tracks and I recommend it to all who love bright pop music and the poppier side of 60s and 70s folk. ~Peter Uys/amazon

The Best Of The New Seekers

Monica Ramey And The Beegie Adair Trio - St

Styles: Vocal Jazz, Piano Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:56
Size: 165,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:19)  1. As Long As I Live
(5:54)  2. I Thought About You
(6:45)  3. I'll Close My Eyes
(4:07)  4. Witchcraft
(3:33)  5. This Could Be the Start of Something Big
(7:42)  6. Change Partners
(4:05)  7. Look At Me Now
(5:40)  8. Lullaby of the Leaves
(5:17)  9. Fly Away
(4:41) 10. You Fascinate Me So
(5:16) 11. Whisper Not
(5:48) 12. It Amazes Me
(3:46) 13. Will You Still Be Mine
(4:54) 14. Why Did I Choose You

The true beauty of any Beegie Adair recording is that it will be straight down the middle mainstream jazz. It is money in the bank. Adair's 50-year career has found her leading her jazz trio, writing advertising jingles and accompanying vocalists, as she does on the present Monica Ramey and the Beegie Adair Trio. Ramey, a native of the midwest, take a predictably conservative approach to the Great American Songbook. Her doing so does us the favor of reminding us of jazz's most sturdy and enduring legacies, the assimilation and transformation of Tin Pan Alley and Show Tunes into the fabric of the American music vernacular.  Ramey and Adair together create a certain low-key synergy, something like the momentum achieved when a large object starts to move. That large object is the repertoire and the singer and pianist have launched it against a zero coefficient of friction making the music seem to float regardless of its historic baggage. The tempi are breezy to brisk and the arrangements are dependable. The additions of trumpeter George Tidwell and saxophonist Denis Solee are well placed in the overall scheme of the recording. This is a very able recording to remind us of the simple pleasure of cocktail hour jazz: not too demanding and superbly played. ~ C.Michael Bailey   http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=44361#.Usskh7Rc_vt

Personnel: Monica Ramey: vocals; Beegie Adair: piano; Roger Spencer: bass; Chris Brown: drums; George Tidwell: trumpet, flugelhorn; Denis Solee: saxophones, flute.

Monica Ramey and the Beegie Adair Trio

Laura Fygi - Rendez Vous

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:10
Size: 127,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:16)  1. Le Continental
(3:37)  2. Le Temps Qui Passe
(3:32)  3. Divine Biguine
(4:30)  4. Pour Te Plaire
(2:43)  5. C'est Si Bon
(3:31)  6. Nuages
(3:25)  7. Tout Le Jour, Toute La Nuit
(4:24)  8. Volons Vers La Lune
(1:44)  9. Quelqu'un M'Aimera
(4:20) 10. Tu Viens Dans Ma Tête
(3:13) 11. La Complainte De Mackie
(4:33) 12. Autour De Minuit
(4:29) 13. Caravane
(3:47) 14. Dansez Maintenant

Laura Fygi  who celebrated her 15th anniversary as a solo singer last year  returns to her French roots on her  CD Rendez-Vous. The collection of songs on Rendez-vous is inspired by the famous Hot Club de France-era, of which Django Reinhardt and St‚phane Grappelli are well-known exponents. The world-famous tracks from Cole Porter, Kurt Weill, Glenn Miller and George Gershwin and others were adapted by Laura's own band. Rendez-Vous is a wonderful CD of jazzy evergreens sung in French Universal. ~ Editorial Reviews  http://www.amazon.com/Rendez-Vous-Laura-Fygi/dp/B000TZV7E4

Rendez Vous

Judy Blair - Close Encounter

Styles: Hammond Organ
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:40
Size: 134,8 MB
Art: Front

( 4:16)  1. Cayenne Blues
( 7:43)  2. Torii Station
( 5:59)  3. Old Grandad
( 5:17)  4. Until the Real Thing Comes Along
( 6:26)  5. Jingles
(10:46)  6. Houston S Blues
( 6:41)  7. Misty
( 4:53)  8. Bird Alone
( 6:36)  9. C'Est Tout

Judy Blair was born in East Texas and has been singing and playing the piano, synthesizer and the Hammond B3 organ professionally for more than 40 years. Judy has performed solo and with groups all over the United States in New York, Dallas, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Carmel, Reno, Santa Fe, and many other cities including a three year stint in New Orleans playing with the best. She also performed during a two year period in the CARIBBEAN and has appeared on JAPANESE television in a travel series about California. She has played numerous jazz and blues concerts, festivals and clubs in France as well as in other parts of Europe . 

1997 - She recorded and produced an album in France, “LES COULEURS DU NOIR ET BLANC” on which she plays solo piano and sings ballads and American Standards. It includes original compositions by JUDY. 1999 - She recorded a second CD in DALLAS, TEXAS called “THE OTHER PLACE” in collaboration with her brother DONNY BLAIR on guitar, BRUCE TATE on electric bass and DINO VERA on drums. On it, she plays piano and Hammond B3 organ and it includes original pieces by both JUDY and DONNY BLAIR. 

2000 - She recorded a third one “CLOSE ENCOUNTER” in NEW YORK, playing the Hammond B3 organ with HOUSTON PERSON (tenor-sax), ALVIN QUEEN (drums), REGGIE JOHNSON (bass) and DONNY BLAIR (guitar). Like the others, this CD included original material.   

Her fourth CD “SUNSHINE” was recorded in DALLAS, TEXAS. She sings, plays piano and Hammond B3 along with her brother DONNY BLAIR (guitar), ABDU SALIM (tenor sax), CHRISTIAN (Ton Ton) SALUT (drums) and guest artist LUCKY PETERSON (vocals, piano and Hammond B3). All the songs on this album were written by JUDY and one was co-written with LUCKY PETERSON. JUDY BLAIR now resides in SOUTHWEST FRANCE near Cahors in the Quercy region. She continues to record and perform at festivals, concerts, clubs as a solo artist as well as with different musical formations and spends part of her time writing and composing music.
http://www.judyblair.com/?section=bio

Marc Copland - Some More Love Songs

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:59
Size: 112,2 MB
Art: Front

(8:49)  1. I Don't Know Where I Stand
(7:47)  2. My Funny Valentine
(5:47)  3. Eighty One
(5:12)  4. Rainbow's End
(9:45)  5. I've Got You Under My Skin
(4:09)  6. I Remember You
(7:27)  7. When I Fall In Love

Pianist Marc Copland who, oddly, began his jazz career as a saxophonist took an artistic leap forward with his three New York Trio recordings on Pirouet Records. Employing a rotating crew of bassists with Gary Peacock, Drew Gress, and drummers Paul Motian and Bill Stewart, the pianist rose to a higher profile via his nearly unsurpassed musical excellence. The pianist interpreted standards (and some not-so-standards), along with his own top-flight original compositions, in conjunction with an astute marketing choice of releasing, over the course of three years, this triptych of similarly handsomely packaged outings, much in the fashion of Brad Mehldau's five Art of the Trio (Nonesuch Records, 2011) recordings. Before the New York sets there was the perhaps overlooked Some Love Songs (Pirouet Records, 2005), that included transcendent explorations of tunes by Joni Mitchell , saxophonist Wayne Shorter, Richard Rodgers and Victor Young a recording that rivaled almost any of iconic pianist Bill Evans' best work. 

Now Copland follows Some Love Songs with Some More Love Songs. It's hard to imagine the success of Copland without Evans' ground-breaking, his strong contribution to trumpeter Miles Davis' classic Kind of Blue (Columbia, 1959), and the subsequent consistency of his superb trio recordings over a more-than twenty-year run, from the late fifties until the pianist's untimely death in 1980. Copland has taken Evans' approach of trio democracy, sonic luminosity and harmonic depth and created his own personal language on this the high point for now musical journey. 

The set opens with Joni Mitchell's lovely and fragile "I Don't Know Where I Stand," a re-visitation of the tune Copland recorded solo on Alone (Pirouet, 2009). This version benefits from the nuanced accompaniment of his trio mates, bassist Drew Gress, and drummer Jochen Rueckert. The mood is floating and uncertain, mirroring the lyrical content of Mitchell's version, leading into an up-tempo, beautiful and brash take of the classic "My Funny Valentine," with its implacable momentum. "Eighty One" from the songbook of legendary bassist Ron Carter and Miles Davis' ESP (Columbia, 1965), the debut from what would become the trumpeter's second great quintet is cool and mysterious, the interplay highly nuanced. "Rainbow's End," Copland's lone original composition, shimmers like late afternoon sunlight reflecting off the facets of wavelets on a wind-ruffled pond, while Cole Porter's ever-familiar "I've Got You Under My Skin" a 1956 masterpiece by Frank Sinatra, who sounded supremely suave and confident on his take gets a wandering and impressionist treatment by Copland's trio, with the heart of the melody slipping in and out of the shadows. The set closes with one of its most tender moment, Victor Young's "When I Fall In Love," brimming with sparkling optimism and a fitting wrap-up to what may be Copland's finest trio outing to date. ~ Dan McClenaghan   http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=42222#.UssTwrRc_vs

Personnel: Marc Copland: piano; Drew Gress: bass; Jochen Ruekert: drums
 

Frank McComb - Remembering Donny Hathaway: Live At The Bitter End

Size: 99,4 MB
Time: 42:49
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Soul, Jazz Soul
Art: Front

01. Introduction - Love, Love, Love (Feat. Jodine Dorce) (5:22)
02. You Were Meant For Me (5:03)
03. Someday We'll All Be Free (5:06)
04. Flying Easy (3:38)
05. Acknowledgements (2:25)
06. We'll Carry Your Name On (6:52)
07. A Song For All (Medley A Song For You - For All We Know) (9:06)
08. Little Ghetto Boy (Feat. The Civ Soul Band) (5:12)

We've seen it dozens of times: Artists who bristle when being compared to greats of past years, even when the vocal or stylistic similarities are obvious to even casual music listeners. But that has never been Frank McComb. From the moment soul music fans first heard him, either as part of the group Buckshot LeFonque or when he released his solo debut album, Love Stories, the similarity of his voice to that of legendary singer Donny Hathaway was striking. It's not that his style mimicked that of Hathaway. McComb, while also a piano-playing, songwriting baritone, came out of the box with a style more jazz-influenced and more improvisational that Hathaway's. But the questions were nonetheless asked of him again and again, and I always admired the way McComb responded: He saw the comparison not as a threat to his own artistry, but rather as a compliment as to the level of accomplishment of his work. It takes an artist who is comfortable in his own musical skin to not only accept repeated comparisons, but to embrace them. And McComb gives the ultimate hug to Hathaway's legacy with his newest release, Live at the Bitter End: Remembering Donny Hathaway.

For an artist who only released three solo studio albums, Donny Hathaway has cast an unusually large shadow over an entire generation of soul music performers. With an almost singular gravitas as a soul music songwriter and vocal interpreter, he has become the kind of artist whose name is often uttered in hushed tones. Maybe it is for that reason that recorded tributes to him have been surprisingly few. But with Live at the Bitter End (which was supported by a November, 2013 Kickstarter campaign), McComb not only takes the legacy head on, he does it at the location of Hathaway's legendary 1971 concert recording.

The disc opens with an introduction by ubiquitious New York soul music host, Jodine Dorce, and leads into a largely acoustic, intimate set of familiar songs, beginning with "Love, Love, Love." This cut, originally recorded by Hathaway on his Extension of a Man album, sets the template for McComb's approach throughout the album: Vocally, he sounds like Hathaway's long lost son, but musically he avoids being too reverential to the original versions; reinterpreting, improvising and adding runs to take the songs from the familiar to the unknown and back again - all with just a piano and his voice. So, while the recognizeable first bars of "Someday We'll All Be Free" provide the chills of the Hathaway original, McComb detours into dramatic musical interludes that give new life to lyrics that spoke volumes a generation ago. The same can be said for "Flying Easy, "You Were Meant for Me" and the medley "A Song For You / For All We Know," each starting in a familiar fashion before moving through musical diversions that provide both immediacy and uniqueness to the live performance.

Amid the set of covers is an unexpected gem: McComb wrote a tribute song for Hathaway in the early 90s that was never released, but "We'll Carry Your Name On" becomes a surprise highlight of Bitter End; it's a song that serves as a homage to Hathaway's serious legacy while also touching lighter career references like "This Christmas" and even the theme song from the 70s television show, Maude.

At a time when we've grown annoyed with the volume of "covers" albums hitting the market - tired attempts to capitalize on the popularity of the classic songs of Detroit or Philadelphia - once in awhile an album of reinterpreted material arrives that provides a different look and actually helps us to again appreciate the underlying compositions and the original artists who made them. Live at the Bitter End is just that kind of album, a loving tribute made by the right artist at the right location. Best of all, Bitter End removes those overly reverential, church-like hushed tones that have been cast over Hathaway and his music since his death 35 years ago, and instead allows the true, living legacy of the songs, the musicianship and even the fun to scream, full-voiced, all over again. Highly Recommended. ~Review by Chris Rizik

Remembering Donny Hathaway: Live At The Bitter End

Shivani Kumar - Where Do We Go From Here

Size: 109,6 MB
Time: 46:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Well You Needn't (2:56)
02. The Best Is Yet To Come (2:31)
03. Midnight Sun (6:29)
04. Beautiful Love (2:23)
05. Where Do We Go From Here (3:01)
06. Softly, As In A Morning Sunrise (2:37)
07. Round Midnight (4:01)
08. A Night In Tunisia (3:36)
09. The Summer Knows (4:36)
10. I've Got You Under My Skin (3:26)
11. Dindi (3:55)
12. Satin Doll (3:07)
13. A Sleepin' Bee (4:09)

Shivani chose her favorite jazz musicians from her home state of Hawaii to help her create this album. On piano is
Jim Howard and Les Peetz, both top notch players well known for their creativity and empathetic accompaniment talents. On drums we have Chuck James and Lew Maddox, who have both been at the top of the jazz drummer list in Hawaii for many years. On upright bass is Miles Jackson, one of the most talented jazz bassists to have ever lived and played in this island paradise.

Shivani hand picked the songs to highlight her talents as well as those of the other musicians, who really bring these songs to life. So even though they were performed in the studio, it almost seems like you are present at a jazz club or concert. The musical interplay between all the musicians and Shivani can be heard and felt throughout the album.

Shivani began her career at age five and in school played several instruments and won a college music scholarship. She was Denver’s Darling for many years, singing nightly in the hottest jazz club, the Senate Lounge. She fronted several bands and traveled extensively throughout the United States, settling in Los Angeles to became a staff writer for Motown Records. One of her songs “Step By Step” took the winning award at the American Song Festival.

Hawaii has been her home now for many years where she performs regularly with her band Clear Sky, as a soloist, and with other bands. She is currently both featured jazz singer & jazz pianist/accompanist on the Star Of Honolulu dinner cruise boat. She has entertained in the major hotels and clubs, traveled as far as Japan and other parts of Asia, and performed on cruise ships in the Pacific and Caribbean. She is also a composer, recording artist, and private music instructor.

Where Do We Go From Here