Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Ingrid Lucia - Living The Life

Size: 86,1 MB
Time: 36:34
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: New Orleans Jazz/Blues, Jazz Rock
Art: Front

01. Do You Remember Walter (3:42)
02. Put The Radio On (2:01)
03. Going Dancing (2:40)
04. You're In For A Wild Ride (3:04)
05. Mexican Love Song (2:31)
06. Dawn Of A New Day (3:48)
07. Dreams Aren't Just For The Young (3:10)
08. Living The Life (2:33)
09. Yes Yes Girl (4:22)
10. Anchors Aweigh (2:52)
11. I Wave Bye Bye (3:24)
12. Taking A Vacation From Myself (2:23)

Living the Life’s been a long time coming: Ingrid Lucia already discussed the album in an OffBeat cover story and promised a Voodoo-timed release a full 13 months ago. But you can tell how important it was to get this one right. Lucia’s a gifted musical actress who’s slipped into different roles over the years, first appearing as a retro-styled siren and gradually turning hipper and edgier. Along the way, she managed to personalize songs as diverse as Lou Reed’s “After Hours” and Jimmy Webb’s “Wichita Lineman.” But Living the Life is about dropping the masks and telling her own story—which, as it turns out, is the most compelling one she’s told to date.

Because Lucia conceived the album soon after her father’s death, there’s a certain amount of growing up and taking stock in the lyrics. (Lucia wrote all but two songs, collaborating with guitarist John Fohl and bassist/producer Roland Guerin on those). But if that suggests a sobering album about mortality, guess again. Rather, it’s about living—not just well, but coolly and romantically—as things get more complicated. She turns to Jesse Winchester for the one flat-out tearjerker, “I Wave Bye Bye,” which is effectively understated. But there’s a different statement of purpose in “You’re in for a Wild Ride”—a tune she’s done live in recent months and dedicated to the straight-laced guys who’ve gotten involved with edgy women. “I’ve got ideas that will blow your mind,” she promises, before shifting to come-hither mode for the chorus. Women can take this song as an anthem; guys are more likely to ask where they can sign up.

Musically, Living the Life is her most diverse album. While Lucia has flirted with rock in the past, it’s always been from a safe distance. But rock is fully in the mix here, along with torch ballads, jazz and bachelor-pad exotica. Opener “Do You Remember Walter” hails from the Kinks’ fan-favorite album, Village Green Preservation Society, and her casting Walter as an ex-flame instead of a school friend only makes it more poignant. Even the retro-styled tunes feel more personal this time, whether she’s being tender on the title song or playfully neurotic on “Taking a Vacation from Myself.” While one ballad here notes that “Dreams Aren’t Just for the Young,” this album as a whole says that love and adventure aren’t, either.

Living The Life

Christine Ebersole - Strings Attached

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:28
Size: 116,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:01)  1. Shall We Dance
(4:28)  2. The Things We Did Last Summer
(3:48)  3. This Time The Dream's On Me
(5:14)  4. Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye
(3:35)  5. Am I Blue
(5:35)  6. Moon Dreams
(2:46)  7. I Wish I Were In Love Again
(5:10)  8. After You've Gone/Too Gone Too Long
(3:47)  9. Our Love Is Here To Stay
(3:43) 10. I'll Be Seeing You
(4:37) 11. Jitterbug Waltz
(3:08) 12. Something There
(1:29) 13. La La Lu

Two-time Tony Award®-winning actress Christine Ebersole teams with virtuoso violinist/arranger Aaron Weinstein for a program of classic songs imbued with originality, musicality, and swing. Known for her brilliance as an actress and cabaret artist, Ebersole proves that shes equally talented in the jazz arena on a selection of beautifully arranged versions of gems from the Great American Songbook. Tony Award® winner for her roles in 42nd Street and Grey Gardens, Ebersole is currently starring in the hit TBS sitcom Sullivan & Son, is featured in the 2013 blockbuster The Big Wedding (which ends with a song she wrote and performs), and appears in the Fall 2013 Scorsese drama The Wolf of Wall Street. Named a Rising Star Violinist by DownBeat, Aaron Weinstein is quickly earning a reputation as one of the finest jazz violinists of his generation. As a featured soloist he has performed at Carnegie Hall, Jazz at Lincoln Center, Wolftrap Center, Birdland, Blue Note, Iridium, and more. ~ Editorial Reviews  
http://www.amazon.com/Strings-Attached-Christine-Ebersole/dp/B00FMSGYLE

Personnel: Christine Ebersole (vocals); Aaron Weinstein (violin); Tedd Firth (piano).

Jozée Devoua - Low Key

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:19
Size: 70,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:04)  1. You Make Me Feel So Young
(5:33)  2. Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow
(4:22)  3. Chega de Saudades
(4:06)  4. Formi-Formidable
(3:38)  5. My Heart Belongs to Daddy
(4:22)  6. Love Me Like a Man
(5:11)  7. All the Way

A vocalist, a musician, but mostly an avid jazz fan herself, Jozée Devoua's buttery-rich smooth tone coupled with her unsettling sensitivity as a performer has allowed her to develop a unique and refined sound that has multi-audience appeal. Jozée recorded and produced "Low Key" in 2007. Breathing new life into jazz standards, it is an eclectic mix of traditional swing, blues, and latin. Fluent in French and English, she also sings in Spanish and Portuguese to answer to the versatility of her repertoire that includes both the established standards of yesteryear as well as today’s modern classics. (http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/devoua)

Ehud Asherie - Lockout

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:10
Size: 142,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:57)  1. Mixed Emotions
(5:17)  2. Chonky
(6:01)  3. Shaw 'Nuff
(7:20)  4. Isn't This a Lovely Day
(7:31)  5. Lockout
(7:05)  6. Special
(9:04)  7. Un Poco Loco
(7:51)  8. I Had the Craziest Dream
(6:59)  9. Bringing Up Father

Bebop is almost seen now as the default form of jazz. Back in the day though, most jazz musicians still swung and swayed like Sammy Kaye, so the "new sound Dizzy Gillespie and his cohorts invented was as jarring as anything coming out of today's New York jazz underground. With Lockout, pianist Ehud Asherie takes that uptown sound and runs with it, spurred on by a monster quartet that features two major players at Smalls, the downtown club where Asherie cooked up his chops. Four of the nine cuts on Lockout are Asherie originals, though they are almost indistinguishable from the bebop standards with which they share space here. "Mixed Emotions shoots out of the gate with Asherie and tenor saxophonist Grant Stewart flying in tight formation, each shaping the head while injecting enough harmony to create their own individual spaces.

Stewart's phrases are sharp and clipped as he plumbs the depths of his tenor sax, while Asherie comps like a fiend behind him. The Israeli-born pianist takes the spotlight with a quick right hand that dances and bangs, snapping off a fast "Yellow Rose of Texas sub-reference in the middle of a blinding solo. That snap never wanes, not even on the Irving Berlin ballad "Isn't This a Lovely Day or during his in-the-clear intro to Harry Warren's "I Had the Craziest Dream. Asherie's music has the same feel as the picture on the back of the CD booklet: New York at night, all neon and shadows and glowing mist, as urban as it gets. "Chonky is a rolling blues that reeks of "Noo Yawk," and has Stewart' smoking tenor in the Coleman Hawkins tradition; "The Special walks those same mean streets, with slightly flat lines that hint of impending danger. 

The title track could have come straight out of the bells of Dizzy and Bird, with Asherie playing Bud Powell chords to complete the illusion.  Drummer Phil Stewart hooks up with bassist Joel Forbes to provide the classic bebop bass and drum foundation. Both players get room to stretch here and there Stewart most notably on Powell's "Un Poco Loco but their primary mission is to lay the floor for the three players who do the bulk of the heavy lifting. The third soloist is Ryan Kisor, whose searing trumpet appears on four cuts, including the Gillespie composition "Shaw 'Nuff. Kisor and Stewart's solos are stunningly chaotic crazed buglers calling the charge as the track careens downhill, almost at the edge of the cliff. Asherie is firmly in control though, and shows wisdom beyond his years by giving his players the space they deserve. Asherie doesn't always take the first solo, but he doesn't have to: Lockout is clearly his vision, and it injects verve and electricity into a sub-genre that began as innovation, but nowadays can lend itself to stagnation. ~ J Hunter   
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=27857#.UxVRDIVZhhk
 
Personnel: Ehud Asherie: piano; Grant Stewart: tenor sax; Joel Forbes: bass; Phil Stewart: drums; Ryan Kisor: trumpet (3, 5, 8, 9).

Kenny Werner Trio - With A Song In My Heart

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:16
Size: 165,0 MB
Art: Front + Back

( 7:31)  1. With A Song In My Heart
( 8:48)  2. Nardis
( 6:46)  3. Autumn Leaves
( 7:20)  4. If I Should Lose You
(12:18)  5. Beauty Secrets
( 3:38)  6. All The Things You Are
( 9:24)  7. Balloons
( 7:57)  8. 26-2
( 7:29)  9. Blue In Green

Kenny Werner has long been active as a jazz pianist/bandleader, composer and jazz educator, having recorded around two dozen albums as a leader and many more as a sideman. He has performed with quite a few jazz greats, including Charles Mingus, Bob Brookmeyer, Lee Konitz and Toots Thielemans. He's also a sought after pianist by vocalists, having long worked with Broadway star Betty Buckley and jointly leading the Delirium Blue Project with Roseanna Vitro. This trio date pairs the pianist with bassist Johannes Weidenmueller and drummer Ari Hoenig, two top musicians of their generation. Werner incorporates the lyricism of Bill Evans while blending in his own inventive arrangements and intensity. He starts Miles Davis' "Nardis" with a playful hip introduction that even adds the air of a hoedown, though the arrangement only uses Evans' ideas as a launching pad, Werner taking a more spacious route, a tough challenge given the many recordings available by Evans. 

Regardless of who you credit with writing "Blue in Green" (Evans is more likely its composer), Werner's impressionist introduction sets up a haunting arrangement of this modal masterpiece. The off-center take of John Coltrane's "26-2" is a lively affair as well. Werner's "Beauty Secrets" is a gem that unveils itself slowly with many shimmering facets, eventually evolving into the centuries-old "Greensleeves". 

The pianist is a gifted interpreter of standards, delivering a whispering "With a Song in My Heart," a subtly swinging "Autumn Leaves" and a buoyant, waltzing "All the Things You Are" where he seems at times independent of the rhythm section.~ Ken Dryden http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=31119#.UxYOQ4VZhhk
 
Personnel: Kenny Werner: piano; Johannes Weidenmueller: bass; Ari Hoenig: drums.

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Banu Gibson - Sings More Johnny Mercer

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:03
Size: 137,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:41)  1. Blues in the Night
(2:59)  2. Goody Goody
(3:58)  3. While We Danced at the Mardi Gras
(3:29)  4. You Must Have Been A Beautiful Baby
(3:53)  5. Day In, Day Out
(3:12)  6. I'm An Old Cowhand
(3:20)  7. Too Marvelous For Words
(3:54)  8. Skylark
(3:49)  9. On The Atchison Topeka & Santa Fe
(2:16) 10. Strip Polka
(3:33) 11. I Wanna Be Around
(5:21) 12. Autumn Leaves
(2:44) 13. Moon River
(4:17) 14. Something's Gotta Give
(3:37) 15. When October Goes
(5:50) 16. Dream

Johnny Mercer’s songs are American treasures clever, lively and relentlessly well constructed. Banu Gibson treats them as such on her new album, giving them the care and loving treatment they deserve. She and her trio (John Sheridan, Bill Huntington and Jeff Hamilton) embrace the romance of “Moon River” and wring the full measure of loss out of “Autumn Leaves.” Treating them as classics is a mixed blessing, though. At times, Gibson seems more engaged with her love of the material than the sentiments they express, which makes the more lighthearted songs frustrating. “Goody Goody,” for example, celebrates a jilting lover getting his comeuppance, but she sings it as it’s often sung theatrical and unavoidably cutesy because of the title phrase. And Gibson clearly has affection for those songs, including “I’m an Old Cowhand,” “You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby” and “Strip Polka” on the set. Those songs suffer from a lack of imagination, though not a lack of execution or passion for Mercer, and they’re not indicative of the whole album. The autumnal closing suite of songs are heartfelt and beautiful, and the band swings throughout, most impressively when it switches from waltz time to swing on “While We Danced at the Mardi Gras.”~ Alex Rawls  http://www.offbeat.com/2009/03/01/banu-gibson-banu-gibson-sings-more-johnny-mercer-swing-out/

Personnel: Banu Gibson (vocals); John Sheridan (piano); Bill Huntington (upright bass); Jeff Hamilton (drums).

Gina Roché - Thankfully

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:51
Size: 103,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:48)  1. Thankfully
(5:09)  2. As I Am
(3:57)  3. Choose Love
(4:02)  4. Be the Change
(4:03)  5. Breakfast in Bed
(5:08)  6. Song for Mom
(4:18)  7. Love will Arrive
(4:26)  8. I Belong
(4:11)  9. My Fathers Love
(4:45) 10. Flying

Gina Roche, composer, jazz vocalist and guitarist, is happy to celebrate the release of her second CD, "Thankfully," a personal CD of original compositions. These compositions were inspired by experiences in my life over the past few years. Starting with the title track "Thankfully", a composition inspired by my husband John and his loving kindness with our daughters, to the song "Flying" a song written during a family intervention with my brother, about what my family went through, how it affected my mom, my brother. I am happy to report he is doing well and working to help others in recovery. There is a sweet, funny song "Breakfast in Bed" about the challenges of romance while having children (who like to get up too early in the morning!), to the song "Be The Change" this one touches on how even though life can become hectic, busy & frustrating at times, I am finding out that letting go of my past grievances & forgiving (myself & others) helps me make a difference of kindness in the world. Inspired by the Gandhi quote to "be the change you wish to see in the world" and the book The Law of Forgiveness by Connie Domino. http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/ginaroche2

Personnel: Gina Roché (vocals, guitar, shaker); L'Oreal Crisp Seels (spoken vocals); Ricardo Vogt (guitar); George Mesterhazy (accordion); Owen Sczerba (baritone saxophone); Randy Porter (piano); Barry Miles (Fender Rhodes piano); Tony Miceli (vibraphone); Tim Lekan, Nilson Matta (acoustic bass); Keith Hollis, Allison Miller (drums).

David Hazeltine - The Inspiration Suite

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:39
Size: 137,1 MB
Art: Front

(6:12)  1. I Should Care
(7:23)  2. Don't Walk Away
(5:21)  3. The Inspiration Suite 1: Motivation
(7:59)  4. The Inspiration Suite 2: Reverence
(6:45)  5. The Inspiration Suite 3: Insight
(7:19)  6. The Inspiration Suite 4: Gratitude
(6:33)  7. My Ideal
(5:49)  8. Shoulders
(6:14)  9. Personage Of Wes

Jazz pianist David Hazeltine, like many baby-boomer musicians, is influenced by Wes, Buddy, and Monk Montgomery and Cedar Walton. For what he calls his most personally driven recording date, he pays tribute to them by composing a four-part suite inspired by their sounds. Hazeltine and his quintet which includes the formidable vibraphonist Joe Locke and longtime collaborator tenor saxophonist Eric Alexander give alms with some well-conceived and executed modern mainstream jazz. The suite begins as a neo-bop cadence buoys a splattering of several Cedar-flavored motifs, two-note accents, and piano-bass unison lines for "Motivation." "Reverence" has Locke's vibes shimmering on a low and slow Latin-shaded piece, followed by another bright neo-bop melody, "Insight," and the finale is a 6/8 composition, "Gratitude," that could have easily fit into the repertoire of Walton and Bobby Hutcherson's Timeless All Stars book. 

Of the five stand-alone tracks, two are covers left until the end of the CD Walton's much lesser-known "Shoulders" is as straight-ahead as jazz gets, while Buddy Montgomery's "Personage of Wes" is a kinetic, uppity sizzler. A newly arranged complex and arresting intro is tacked onto the standard "I Should Care," and Hazeltine's original "Don't Walk Away" is treated in a Latin fashion, occasional percussionist Daniel Sadownick adding the spice, but again settles in the modern mainstream. Hazeltine has not put out the full-force blockbuster breakthrough recording his clear talent indicates, but this one ranks with his many best efforts. ~ Michael G.Nastos   http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-inspiration-suite-mw0000491879

Personnel: David Hazeltine (piano); Joe Locke (vibraphone, unknown instrument); John Webber (bass instrument); Eric Alexander (tenor saxophone); Joe Farnsworth (drums); Daniel Sadownick (percussion).

Craig Bailey, Tim Armacost & Brooklyn Big Band - Live at Sweet Rhythm

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:06
Size: 156,7 MB
Art: Front

( 9:10)  1. Long Haired Girl
( 9:59)  2. Brazilian Bop
(14:44)  3. Take the Coltrane
( 4:52)  4. East of Enid
( 8:27)  5. Animated
( 7:52)  6. Quiet Time
(10:14)  7. My Blues
( 2:46)  8. Announcement Funk

The 17-piece Brooklyn Big Band, formed in 2000, is heavy on saxophone players, starting with its leaders, Craig Bailey (alto and flute) and Tim Armacost (tenor and clarinet). As displayed on this debut recording, Bailey and Armacost’s conception is to explore contemporary possibilities for the big band, in part by reviewing the past. The unsigned liner notes say of the disc’s longest track, “Take the Coltrane,” “This performance encapsulates a lot of what the group is trying to achieve,” which might be summarized as trying to answer the musical question, “What would Duke Ellington and His Orchestra have sounded like if John Coltrane had been their saxophonist in the 1960s?” “Take the Coltrane” is generously credited to Ellington as composer (notwithstanding that “Take the ‘A’ Train” was written by Billy Strayhorn), and while there isn’t much Ellington in it, it does attempt to reinterpret mature Coltrane in a big-band context. 

But that’s really only one track in a quite varied set. Trombonist Jason Jackson’s “Brazilian Bop” brings in the inevitable Latin tinge prior to “Take the Coltrane,” in what is basically a history lesson that makes up the first section of the disc, following the bravura opener, “Long Haired Girl.” Bailey’s palate-cleansing “East of Enid” inaugurates a mellow midsection for the album, giving David Berkman a chance to make like a New Age pianist before he joins in with a delicate flute line. Armacost’s big moment is his unaccompanied solo late in the melodic “Animated,” after which Bailey makes the argument that his old boss Ray Charles represented a valid strain of big-band jazz in “Quiet Time” and “My Blues.” Whether or not that’s true, the Brooklyn Big Band fully delivers on its claim to be an evolution of the big-band sound here. ~ William Ruhlmann   http://jazztimes.com/articles/25812-live-at-sweet-rhythm-craig-bailey-tim-armacost-brooklyn-big-band

Monday, March 3, 2014

Julie Capili - Passing Fancies

Size: 100,3 MB
Time: 42:51
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2008
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. At Last (4:22)
02. Bewitched (5:08)
03. Between The Devil And The Deep Blue Sea (2:37)
04. I Thought About You (3:09)
05. I'm Old Fashioned (3:11)
06. Spiral Arms (4:08)
07. Sugar (2:44)
08. Yesterdays (4:00)
09. The Nearness Of You (6:32)
10. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To (3:26)
11. Nature Boy (3:30)

Julie Capili is a singer/songwriter from Honolulu who moved to Monterey in order to pursue her passion for Jazz.

A vocalist in the classical tradition, she tends to shy away from more avant-garde approaches in favor of a style firmly rooted in the spirit of the originals.

An anachronism of sorts, Julie embodies the values of days long gone. She is an artist with a rare gift to evoke the spirit of an era. When she sings, you get the sense that you are stepping back in time, hearing things as they once were, experiencing what it must have felt like if you had actually been there when they were new.

Her voice displays a delicate control of the light, airy high-tones combined with a full bodied warmth in the lower registers. The creativity and playfulness in her music is evident, bringing a sense of joy and wonder to her performances. But her subtlety and exquisite control display a maturity beyond her years.

Julie’s influences are eclectic, including artists such as Aretha Franklin, Ella Fitzgerald, Eva Cassidy, and Tori Amos. And although her voice has drawn comparisons to many great singers, she possesses a style all her own.

Julie is excited to be living in Monterey. She recently completed her first full length jazz album, Passing Fancies.

Passing Fancies

Daryl Lowery - Instant!Groove

Size: 148,5 MB
Time: 64:24
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2004
Styles: Acid Jazz, Soul Jazz
Art: Front

01. The Yodel (8:18)
02. Bust A Groove (7:17)
03. Like Cissy (9:08)
04. We Can Move The World (6:48)
05. Hot Shot (7:18)
06. The Full Moon On Its Fourteenth Night (7:41)
07. Home Cookin' (5:04)
08. Hot Dog (7:05)
09. I'll Drown In My Own Tears (5:42)

Daryl Lowery saxophonist was born and raised in the Metropolitan New York area were he was exposed to Jazz, Soul, Funk, R&B and fell in love with these and other African American art forms. Daryl came to Boston to study at New England Conservatory and has since recorded and or performed with such notables as imortals Dizzy Gilespie and Jackie Byard, the eclectic Ran Blake and Boston’s funk legend Ellis Hall. In addition to occasional tours during the past five years with Sony Music artist Al Kooper he performs regularly with the Boston based Soul/R&B Urban Renewal Band, the Greg Hopkins 16 Piece Jazz Orchestra and Blues After Dark. Daryl has been a Berklee College of Music faculty member since 1987.

Drummer Yoron Israel also performs with the Frank Morgan Quartet, James Williams and ICU, Chico Freeman's Latin jazz group, Guataca, and vocalist Vanessa Rubin. His recordings include Chicago (Double-Time), released in 2000 featuring saxophonist Joe Lovano, organist Larry Goldings and guitarist Marvin Sewell. Live at the Blue Note (Half Note), and A Gift for You (Double-Time). Previous performances and recording credits include Ahmad Jamal, Benny Golson, Jimmy Heath, Roy Hargrove, Sonny Rollins, Abbey Lincoln, Kenny Burrell, Horace Silver, Art Farmer, Larry Coryell, Tom Harrell, Joe Lovano, Shirley Caesar and the Chicago Civic Orchestra, and numerous others. Yoron Israel is currently the Assistant Chair of Percussion at Berklee College of Music.

Rick Peckham is an internationally known jazz guitarist, composer, writer and clinician. He has performed with George Garzone, Jerry Bergonzi, Mike Gibbs and Tim Berne, and recorded the album Stray Dog as a member of the highly original jazz ensemble Um, led by trombonist Hal Crook and featuring organist John Medeski. Assistant chair of the guitar department, Peckham has been a Berklee faculty member since 1986. He is also a prolific and accomplished writer, and a frequent contributor to DownBeat and other music magazines.

GrooveMaster of the Hammond B3, Minister of Music at Concord Baptist Church, in Boston's South End Dennis Montgomery III grew up singing and playing organ in Baptist churches in his hometown of Shreveport, Louisiana. As Assistant Professor at Berklee College of Music he is director of the Reverence Gospel Choir and other gospel ensembles. Among those who have passed through his groups are Paula Cole, Lalah Hathaway, and Susan Tedeschi, and guitarist Mark Whitfield. Dennis frequently performs with the Boston based group Blues After Dark and has been a featured guest on National Public Radio's The Connection.

Acoustic bassist Ron Mahdi is has performed with Chet Baker, Art Farmer, Milt Jackson, Donald Brown, Kevin Eubanks, Jeff Watts, and Bill Pierce. He has toured nationally and internationally with Roy Haynes, Dr. Donald Byrd, Nnenna Freelon, and Teodross Avery. Ron lives in Boston where he teaches at Berklee College of Music.
Product Description
The Hammond B3 is at the core of the funky soul-jazz grooves that provide a vehicle for stylistically uncompromised improvisation. While saxophonist Daryl Lowery’s playing is noticeably rooted in the music of John Coltrane and the "post-Coltrane influenced" school the highly original sound of Instant!Groove featuring Yoron Israel (drums), Rick Peckham (guitar), Ron Mahdi (acoustic bass), and Dennis Montgomery, III (B3), is reminiscent of the organ based groups of John Scofield and draws much of its repertoire from the likes of "Big" John Patton, Ruben Wilson, Don Patterson and Leon Spencer.

Daryl Lowery and Instant!Groove is Acid Jazz++ Sometimes makes you want to move. Always it's Funky.

Instant!Groove

Yana Bibb - Not A Minute Too Late

Size: 94,4 MB
Time: 40:37
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. Save Your Love For Me (2:44)
02. Not A Minute Too Late (4:04)
03. Bare It All (3:03)
04. You Don't Know What Love Is (6:03)
05. Need You (4:28)
06. I'm Gonna Lock My Heart (2:56)
07. Deceitfully Sunny (3:03)
08. Oceans (4:40)
09. Send Love (4:01)
10. Huldrans Sang (5:31)

Yana Bibb is a singer and song-writer. Born in Manhattan, she grew up in Sweden. She is currently based in New York City. The music she writes draws from American Folk and Blues and incorporates elements of Scandinavian folk melody.

Yana’s interest in music was cultivated early by her father, Blues artist Eric Bibb, through whom she learned what it means to be a musician. She did her formal training in Jazz Vocal Performance at the City College of New york.

With her band she performs her original music along with selections from the American Songbook and the occasional Swedish lullaby.

She has performed with her own band at the Bitter End, Something Jazz Club and the Living Room in New York City. She has also toured as a member Eric Bibb’s ensemble, performing at the Edmonton and Calgary Folk Festivals, the Stanley Theatre in Vancouver and Cadogan Hall in London. She has also sung at the Blue Note in Greenwich Village.

In 2007 she released a three-track EP entitled “Heartzone”. Her new album, “Not a Minute Too Late” is due for release at the end of February 2014 by Dixiefrog Records.

Not A Minute Too Late

Brent Canter Trio - Soundscape

Size: 94,4 MB
Time: 40:53
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2007
Styles: Contemporary Jazz, Guitar Jazz
Art: Front

01. Soundscape ( 7:30)
02. It Is Written ( 6:29)
03. Sketches ( 8:02)
04. Like A Star ( 8:29)
05. While You Were Sleeping (10:21)

The Brent Canter Trio is one of the most exciting groups to emerge on the jazz scene in recent years. Formed in Los Angeles in late 2006, the Brent Canter Trio has quickly established a fan base which ranges from college students to jazz club regulars, all attracted to the unique mix of modern jazz and more mainstream genres. The trio is led by twenty one year old composer/guitarist Brent Canter. Canter has crafted a unique approach to the guitar through his studies with some of the finest guitarists in the world including the legendary Kenny Burrell, Anthony Wilson (Diana Krall), Ted Greene and saxophonist Bruce Eskovitz. Canter's compositions are accesible and modern, drawing upon the influences of modern rock and R&B and incorporating the cutting edge improvisation which the modern jazz listener demands. The group's organist, Eli Sundelson, brings to the group an eclectic background from his close studies with organist Wil Blades and one time teacher Sam Yahel (Joshua Redman Elastic Band). As proficient in the school of Jimmy Smith as he is in the realm of modern players such as Larry Goldings and Lonnie Smith, Sundelson anchors the group with his tasteful bass lines and creative comping. Drummer Mark Banner completes the group with his powerful rhythmic playing and acts as a driving force by incorporating grooves rarely seen in jazz music. His musical interactions with Canter and Sundelson create dynamic improvisations while sustaining listener interest.

Soundscape

Wendee Glick ( Feat. Ken Peplowski and Eddie Higgins) - True Colors

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:11
Size: 145,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:14)  1. Blue Skies
(4:41)  2. Rainbow Connection
(4:51)  3. Every Time We Say Goodbye
(4:08)  4. Orange Colored Sky
(4:52)  5. Honeysuckle Rose
(5:37)  6. My Foolish Heart/The Second Time Around
(3:22)  7. Look For The Silver Lining
(4:55)  8. Blue Moon
(5:10)  9. What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life
(4:18) 10. Our Love Is Here To Stay
(4:21) 11. Deep Purple
(3:57) 12. I'm Beginning To See The Light
(2:41) 13. Secret Love (My)
(4:57) 14. True Colors

Wendee's second recording this CD features Ken Peplowski and Eddie Higgins. The CD contains songs from the Great American Songbook and some soft pop. Familiar standards that swing gently and leave you wanting to hear more. An experienced jazz vocalist, Wendee Glick is a singer with a strong stage presence, sense of humor, and ability to belt out a tune, even over a full big band orchestra. She can also sing a ballad with a “bell-like” quality that could make a person cry. She has graced the stages of many a New England jazz club, and large venues such as Boston’s Fleet Center and Hatch Shell, performing with top-notch musicians. 

Legally named Wendy Dee, Wendee’s interest in music began at a young age, because her own mother was a singer. Wendee toured Europe with America’s Youth in Concert and went on to study music at the University of Lowell. Classically trained, she started performing musical theater and opera but soon came to love jazz, influenced by jazz legends such as Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughn, Anita O’Day, and June Christy. Wendee has developed a substantial following in the New England area. She is equally at home singing with a small jazz group, or swinging with the Compaq Big Band. Annually, on The Jazz Cruise, she has jammed with and received praise from esteemed musicians such as Red Holloway, Eddie Higgins, Shelly Berg, Keter Betts, Nat Reeves, Chris Foreman, Duffy Jackson, Meredith d’Ambrosio and Wycliffe Gordon. http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/glick2


Thank You Mai Neime
True Colors

Peggy Lee - Black Coffee

Styles: Vocal, Jazz
Year: 1953
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:21
Size: 79,1 MB
Art: Front + Back

(3:06)  1. Black Coffee
(2:28)  2. I've Got You Under My Skin
(2:43)  3. Easy Living
(2:07)  4. My Heart Belongs to Daddy
(3:23)  5. It Ain't Necessarily So
(3:22)  6. Gee, Baby Ain't I Good to You
(3:13)  7. A Woman Alone With The Blues
(2:17)  8. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
(3:19)  9. When the World Was Young
(2:08) 10. Love Me or Leave Me
(3:23) 11. You're My Thrill
(2:47) 12. There's A Small Hotel

"A Woman Alone With the Blues" features sparse piano, whispering drums, and a mournful trumpet lurking in the background. But it's the vocals that really push it over the edge. Peggy Lee doesn't sing this song; she crawls into it and huddles in the dark spaces, as she does on virtually all of the songs on 1956's Black Coffee. Lee got her start with Benny Goodman churning out hits like "Why Don't You Do Right." She used her superior vocal ability to strike out on her own like many of the big band singers of the time, who quickly emerged as the real attraction. But nobody was really prepared for Black Coffee, a statement that easily stands up next to the best work of Ella, Sarah, and Billie. The title song is the typical blue flame ballad that one always associates with smoky jazz clubs and perfectly sets the mood for the rest of the album. The original ten-inch release had Lee backed by a quartet on a handful of torch songs and blues. 

Lee jumps into the river that goes all the way back to Ethel Waters, showing an ability to live through the lyrics normally associated with Billie Holiday. Through the tales of love lost, only "I've Got You Under My Skin" breaks through the clouds, but whoever this fellow may be she's singing about, he didn't last for long. Four tracks pad out the original release to plump it up to a full length LP. A harp, guitar, and vibes provide a gossamer texture, used to good effect on the virtually tempoless "You're My Thrill" and the music box introduction to "There's A Small Hotel." Like any good album, the strength is in the details, and the group has fashioned clever twists to familiar songs that are strung together as an album that deserves to be heard as a complete statement. "I'd rather be lonely than happy with somebody else," Lee sings. The melancholy ballads here may make one believe otherwise. Black Coffee proves that thoughtful song selection, intelligent accompaniment, and brilliant singing can combine to create a work of art. Although known more for her pop efforts, Lee has created one of the best examples of jazz singing ever recorded. ~ David Rickert   http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=15508#.UxKw54VZhhk
Personnel: Peggy Lee - vocals; with (on 1-4 and 7-10) Pete Condoli - trumpet; Jimmy Rowles - piano; Max Wayne - bass; Ed Shaugnessy - drums; (on 5, 6, 11, and 12) Stella Castellucci - harp; Lou Levy - piano; Bill Pittman - guitar; Buddy Clark - bass; Larry Bunker - drums, vibraphone, percussion.

Black Coffee

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers - Moanin'

Styles: Straight-ahead/Mainstream
Year: 1958
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:00
Size: 114,5 MB
Art: Front + Back

(0:19)  1. Warm-Up And Dialogue Between Lee Morgan And Rudy Van Gelder
(9:34)  2. Moanin'
(4:50)  3. Are You Real?
(6:11)  4. Along Came Betty
(7:32)  5. The Drum Thunder (Miniature) Suite
(6:15)  6. Blues March
(5:47)  7. Come Rain Or Come Shine
(9:28)  8. Moanin' [Alternate Take]

Throughout its history, jazz has constantly evolved, developing from and reacting against its earlier incarnations. The mid-1940s saw bebop reinvent jazz as an artist's genre, distinct from the swing style that was the popular music throughout the 1930s and '40s. Bebop was music for listening, not dancing, and the emphasis became virtuosic improvised solos instead of memorable tunes and arrangements. However, the advent of bebop itself led to further reactions and developments within jazz during the 1950s. The newer genre again divided; cool jazz became a reaction against bebop, while hard bop maintained much of the bebop aesthetic. Hard bop players continued in the bebop idiom by emphasizing improvisation, swinging rhythms, and an aggressive, driving rhythm section. Hard bop artists retained bebop's standard song forms of 12-bar blues and 32-bar forms as well as the preference for small combos consisting of a rhythm section plus one or two horns. One of the premier hard bop artists and, in fact, the one who coined the term with the 1956 album Hard Bop, is drummer and bandleader Art Blakey. 

His band, the Jazz Messengers, was an extremely talented and influential group from its conception. Blakey formed the Jazz Messengers in 1953 with pianist Horace Silver, but, with the group's personnel constantly changing, few artists spent an extended period. This frequent turnover resulted in Blakey consistently working with the talented youth on the jazz scene. His band served as a developmental stage for future bandleaders including Hank Mobley, Kenny Dorham, Freddie Hubbard, Lee Morgan, Chuck Mangione, Jackie McLean, Wayne Shorter, Cedar Walton, Wynton Marsalis, Benny Golson, and Bobby Timmons. On October 30, 1958 Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers recorded the album Moanin' at Van Gelder Studio in New Jersey for the Blue Note label. Moanin' is one of the most influential and important hard bop albums due to its outstanding compositions, arrangements, and personnel. The quintet at this time consisted of Pittsburgh native Art Blakey on drums, trumpeter Lee Morgan, tenor saxophonist Benny Golson, bassist Jymie Merritt, and pianist Bobby Timmons, all from Philadelphia. Benny Golson wrote the arrangements and contributed four of the album's six tracks. The title track, "Moanin,'" composed by pianist Bobby Timmons, became the greatest hit of Blakey's lengthy career.

Despite being only twenty years old at the time of the recording, Lee Morgan had already spent two years touring with Dizzy Gillespie's band. His improvisational contributions are indispensable to the sound of the album. Morgan and Benny Golson carry the melodic and solo responsibilities as the only horns in the band. Clifford Brown strongly influenced Morgan's style, characterized by an aggressive rhythmic attack, long melodic phrases, and a brassy timbre. Golson performed with artists such as Tadd Dameron, Lionel Hampton, and Johnny Hodges before joining the Dizzy Gillespie band on a tour of South America from 1956-58, the same years Morgan played for Gillespie. Golson's tunes "Are You Real?," "Along Came Betty," "The Drum Thunder Suite," and "Blues March" lend a notable variety and versatility to Moanin', utilizing varied song forms and musical styles. As an improviser, Golson's smooth tone and fluid lines contrast with and complement the aggressive playing of Lee Morgan. Morgan and Golson provide a solid frontline, but the Jazz Messengers rhythm section drives the band and propels the soloists to ever higher levels. Pianist Bobby Timmons, a jazz veteran who played with Kenny Dorham's Jazz Prophets, Chet Baker, Sonny Stitt, and Maynard Ferguson, composed the title track and consistently makes his presence felt through his tasteful comping and solos. Duke Ellington's bassist Jimmy Blanton especially inspired the Jazz Messenger's Jymie Merritt, though he studied formally with a member of the Philadelphia Symphony at the Ornstein Music School. His first gigs were with Tadd Dameron, Benny Golson, John Coltrane, Philly Joe Jones, and, from 1955- 57, he toured with blues artist B.B. King, Merritt provides the bass lines and rhythmic punctuation depending on the style of the song and is featured as a soloist several times throughout the album.

Drummer and bandleader Art Blakey provides the aggressive, driving pulse that propels the Jazz Messengers and is so characteristic of the hard bop style. Blakey was 39 at the time of this recording, the Jazz Messengers had already progressed through several lineups, and Blakey remained the only constant. Despite the changing personnel, the Jazz Messengers remained the archetypal hard bop group, characterized by an emphasis on the blues roots of the music. Blakey is notable for his aggressive drumming, use of polyrhythm, musical interactions with his soloists, and his personality. Blakey felt strongly that jazz was underappreciated in America and he sought to bring it to a broader audience. As a bandleader, he provided his musicians with ample space for solos and encouraged them to contribute compositions and arrangements. He constantly added new talent to his band and made no effort to prevent musicians from leaving the Jazz Messengers. This combination of Pennsylvania born musicians collaborated to record one of the milestones of hard bop. The track listing includes Bobby Timmons' "Moanin';" Benny Golson's "Are You Real?," "Along Came Betty," "The Drum Thunder Suite," and "Blues March;" and a single standard, Arlen and Mercer's "Come Rain or Come Shine." The selection of songs for Moanin' demonstrates the variety of styles in which the Jazz Messengers comfortably performed. The album features aspects of blues, funky jazz, Latin-American music, and New Orleans style marching bands. The song "Moanin'" is one of the tunes that helped to generate the "soul jazz" style of the late '50s and early '60s. Influenced by gospel, "Moanin'" makes use of call-and-response technique between the piano and horns. Instead of a walking bass, Merritt plays a rhythmically driving bass line, while Blakey plays a swing rhythm with emphasis on beats two and four. Morgan, Golson, and Timmons all play two-chorus solos followed by one chorus by Jymie Merritt. Morgan's solo makes use of blues inflections and maintains its cohesion through the use of catchy riffs. Golson proceeds into his solo from the end of Morgan's and uses a similar riff-based approach. Timmons continues in a bluesy style, alternating piano runs with chords, and progressing to develop upon a series of formulaic riffs. "Moanin'" concludes with the return of the head and a short piano tag. This song is a prime example of funky or soul jazz. Benny Golson's "Drum Thunder Suite" was composed to satisfy Blakey's desire to record a song using mallets extensively. The suite consists of three contrasting themes. 

The first theme, "Drum Thunder," is primarily a drum solo with horns playing short melodic ideas in unison (soli writing). The second theme, "Cry a Blue Tear," utilizes a strongly Latin rhythm in the drums. It features a lyrical melody with trumpet and saxophone playing complementary lines. The final theme, "Harlem's Disciples," begins with a funky melody, and then a piano solo sets the stage for the concluding drum solo. "The Drum Thunder Suite" makes interesting use of different stylistic approaches and arranging techniques. "Blues March," also composed by Benny Golson, is intended to invoke the spirit of a marching band, with the drums clearly marking all four beats of the measure. The rhythm section is minimally invasive in this tune, and all of the listener's attention is drawn to the soloist. Morgan and Golson play typically bluesy choruses, though Bobby Timmons' solo is the highlight of the track. His solo begins with a simple line, developing into an exciting, chordal conclusion. Golson's "Are You Real?" is a more straightforward hard bop tune featuring a 32-bar chorus and a faster tempo. The standard "Come Rain or Come Shine" is performed with the attention to melody and arrangement not typically associated with hard bop, but is convincingly and faithfully represented by the Jazz Messengers. Moanin' is one of hard bop's seminal albums due to the extremely high quality of the personnel and compositions featured. The mastery with which Lee Morgan and Benny Golson provide the frontline is further elevated by the solidarity of Timmons, Merritt, and Blakey. It is a testament to the great quality of the performers, compositions, and the hard bop genre. The accessibility of the album is surely a result of Art Blakey's desire to promote jazz as an art at a time when public interest in the music was waning, and the genre as a whole was threatened by the popularity of emerging musical styles such as doo-wop and rock and roll. ~ Mike Oppenheim   http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=44144#.Uw1m6YVZhhk
Personnel: Art Blakey: drums; Lee Morgan: trumpet; Benny Golson: tenor saxophone; Bobby Timmons: piano; Jymie Merritt: bass.

Moanin'

King Perry - Complete Jazz Series 1950-1954

Styles: Blues, R&B
Year: 1954
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:35
Size: 141,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:31)  1. Everything's Gonna Be Alright Tonight
(2:34)  2. Mellow Gal Blues
(2:37)  3. Blues And Lonesome
(2:32)  4. Natural Born Lover
(2:26)  5. I Ain'T Got A Dime To My Name
(2:23)  6. Day & Night Blues
(2:29)  7. Duck'S Yas Yas Yas
(2:16)  8. The Animal Song
(2:55)  9. I Wonder Who'S Boogin My Boogie
(2:39) 10. I Must Have Been An Ugly Baby
(2:31) 11. Coquette
(2:11) 12. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
(2:40) 13. Everybody Jump
(2:37) 14. Vaccinate Me Baby
(2:28) 15. Card Playin' Blues
(2:10) 16. Welcome Home Baby
(2:43) 17. Christopher Columbus
(2:34) 18. Things Ain'T What They Used To Be
(3:05) 19. Pitching A Party
(2:32) 20. Back To Kansas City
(2:41) 21. Get Out Of My Face
(2:29) 22. Till You'Re In My Arms Again
(2:52) 23. Blues At Xmas
(2:29) 24. Hello Peach

The second of two volumes, this chronological collection resumes King Perry's recording career in 1950 and features the complete Specialty, Got, RPM, Lucky and Hollywood recordings, and ends with the December 1954 release which was waxed for Sherman Williams' Unique Records. By these 1950s dates, most of Perry's repertoire consisterd of blues, jumps and r&b, however he never entirely forgot his jazz background.  http://www.worldsrecords.com/pages/artists/k/king_perry/king_perry_56299.html

The Chronological Blues & Rhythm Classics 5129 - King Perry 1950-1954

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Rebecca Kilgore & Dave Frishberg - Why Fight The Feeling

Size: 136,6 MB
Time: 57:54
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2008
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Thank Your Lucky Stars (2:34)
02. Let's Get Lost (3:30)
03. Can't Get Out Of This Mood (3:46)
04. The Lady's In Love With You (3:27)
05. Say It (Over And Over Again) (3:40)
06. Then I Wrote The Minuet In G (2:20)
07. Somebody, Somewhere (3:17)
08. The Moon Of Manakoora (3:14)
09. On A Slow Boat To China (2:40)
10. I Wish I Didn't Love You So (3:14)
11. Says My Heart (2:44)
12. What Are You Doing New Year's Eve (4:23)
13. Sand In My Shoes (5:09)
14. What A Rhumba Does To Romance (2:41)
15. Why Fight The Feeling (4:01)
16. I Believe In You (4:30)
17. Sit Down, You're Rockin' The Boat (2:36)

Pianist Dave Frishberg describes Frank Loesser as his hero, succinctly describing the importance of Loesser to songwriters everywhere. Loesser could have no better champions than vocalist Rebecca Kilgore and Frishberg. They make the art of interpreting song seem natural and easy, despite the fact it's truly a craft to get to the heart of a great song so elegantly and simply. These two are relaxed and deeply in tune with what makes a great song and a great performance. Here they take on tunes both famous and obscure from the Loesser oeuvre 17 in all still just a small fraction of the composer's prolific output.

Frishberg once called "What Are You Doing New Year's Eve" a perfect song and so it's an appropriate vehicle to hear how two masters can 'improve' upon perfection. Kilgore makes it resonate emotionally for both its specific season and for the rest of the year too. We hear the rarely sung verse and the two achieve a breathtaking intimacy.

These songs have a little of everything humor, pathos, intelligence and often all in the same piece. Try "Let's Get Lost," which Chet Baker took in a wisp of blue. Frishberg and Kilgore find the blue too but there's more than a hint of Latin in Frishberg's brilliant accompaniment as Kilgore anticipates getting away.

The album closes with two true show-stoppers. Kilgore finds the architecture in "I Believe in You" (from How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying) and reveals just how terrific an actress she can be. And Frishberg complements her artistry by following her emotional lead. "Sit Down You're Rocking the Boat" comes from Guys and Dolls and what pianist and singer accomplish is combining personal expression with the feel of an entire Broadway cast rocking the house. This kind of magic can be found throughout this collection. ~Review by Donald Elfman

Personnel: Rebecca Kilgore: vocals; Dave Frishberg: piano

Why Fight The Feeling   

Rebecca Kilgore - Moments Like This

Size: 127,8 MB
Time: 54:38
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2000
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Label: Moonburn
Art: Front

01. I Hear Music (3:40)
02. Dream (3:20)
03. Oh! You Crazy Moon (3:44)
04. You're My Everything (3:51)
05. Now That I Need You (3:34)
06. Miami Beach Rhumba (3:07)
07. Moments Like This (3:18)
08. Summer Song (3:45)
09. Summer Night (2:02)
10. The Day I Found You (3:50)
11. Tulip Or Turnip (2:28)
12. My Kind Of Trouble Is You (4:33)
13. You Say You Care (3:09)
14. Social Call (4:10)
15. I Told Ya I Love Ya (3:22)
16. This Can't Be Love (2:38)

How lucky we are! Super song stylist Rebecca Kilgore is now recording with comparative regularity. Moments Like This is her 5th release in a little more than two years. Some of these have been under her name, on others she guests. But the result is the same, hearing more of one of the most scintillating jazz singers on today's scene. This album is the first she has cut with her trio which she regularly performs with at jazz venues in and around her home base, Portland Oregon. Added to the crew is bassist Scott Steed, whose credits include working with Kitty Margolis and Mark Murphy.

Kilgore continues her journey through the book of romantic standards and traditional pop material. Also on the program are some not too often heard pieces like Dave Brubeck's wistful "Summer Song", Xavier Cugat's Latin favorite "Miami Beach Rhumba" and Don George's questioning "Tulip or Turnip". Kilgore's voice is not one of the strongest (loudest) in the business preferring a delicate, light approach to each of the tunes she performs. Nonetheless, whether they be ballad, up tempo swinger, or a tune with a Brazilian beat, she delivers them with absolute authenticity and authority. This earns her a spot high on that list of singers who, even though they occasionally employ a vocal gambit like scatting, made their name on the basis of their straightforward way with a tune. Among the notables on this list are Ella Fitzgerald, Carol Sloane, Helen Merrill, Rosemary Clooney, Peggy Lee, Anita O'Day, June Christy and yes, Doris Day. For this session, Kilgore applies her unique brand of vocal commentary to songs favored by her high priestesses of song colleagues. "I Told Ya I Love Ya (Now Get Out)" is from Anita O'Day. The upbeat "This Can't Be Love" recalls Fitzgerald's version from her Rodgers and Hart songbook. "Moments Like This" was favored by Peggy Lee and "Tulip or Turnip" by Carol Sloane.

The support by her trio is admirable. They excel whether it be in shaping the musical framework for Kilgore's vocalizing or by the many opportunities she gives them to solo. One prime example of the latter is "You're My Everything", a vehicle for Randy Porter's groovy piano and offering very fancy bass playing by Scott Steed. Neil Masson's drums go a beyond keeping time with some creative stick handling. This is another triumph for Ms Kilgore and is highly recommended. ~Review by Dave Nathan

Personnel: Rebecca Kilgore - Vocals; Randy Porter - Piano; Neil Masson - Drums; Scott Steed - Bass

Moments Like This

Vanessa Rodrigues - Soul Project / Soul Food For Thought

Album: Soul Project
Size: 175,0 MB
Time: 75:22
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2005
Styles: Jazz: Hammond Organ, Soul Funk
Art: Front

01. Marble Rye ( 7:43)
02. Runnin' & Rippin' & Runnin' ( 6:38)
03. One-Eyed Monster ( 5:43)
04. The Red Dirt Jam ( 7:39)
05. Be Careful What You Wish For (10:33)
06. Bemsha Swing ( 6:39)
07. Killa-Jewel In Da House ( 6:59)
08. Bou-Ya ( 7:36)
09. Supabad Stanley ( 8:07)
10. Sconk ( 7:41)

The band:
Vanessa Rodrigues - Hammond B-3 organ
Donna Grantis - guitar
Jean-Pierre Levesque - drums

Special guest - DJ Killa-Jewel - turntables

One of the most pleasant surprises of the '04 Ottawa International Jazz Festival was organist Vanessa Rodrigues, who appeared as part of saxophonist Dave Turner's quartet. At a mere 26 years of age, she delivered accompaniment so empathic and solos so well constructed that the only disappointment was that her work had never been documented on record. Until now. With Soul Project Rodrigues steps out with infectious grooves and outstanding playing, paying homage to the established organ trio tradition while remaining completely modern.
While Rodrigues has a strong background in everything from classical piano to more spiritual works on church pipe organ, it's clearly the soul-drenched music of artists like Dr. Lonnie Smith, with whom Rodrigues spent a month as a live-in student, that is her main passion. On Soul Project Rodrigues is teamed with guitarist Donna Grantis, a player with a warm, Grant Green-esque tone and similarly blues-informed approach; and drummer Jean-Pierre Levesque, who is as comfortable with the New Orleans second line approach of “Marble Rye” as he is the deeper funk of “The Red Dirt Jam.” Turntablist DJ Killa-Jewel is featured on four of tracks, adding a taste of hip hop to the mix.
The album's vibe bears some precedence in guitarist John Scofield's collaboration with Medeski, Martin and Wood, A Go Go, in terms of its in-the-pocket approach, but it avoids the more idiosyncratic playing typical of Scofield and Medeski. That's not to say Rodrigues and her trio are without energy and edge. Rodrigues is a more inside player, but with a keen sense of development—check out her playing on “The Red Dirt Jam,” where she fashions a solo that builds in intensity so gradually one is almost unaware that it's happening. Similarly, on “Be Careful What You Wish For,” Levesque takes DJ Killa-Jewel's solo and invisibly pulls up the dynamics. As much as everyone's playing reflects an intellectual bent, the inherent physicality of the group gives it much of its appeal.
While the programme consists mainly of originals penned by Rodrigues and Grantis, the trio's take on Thelonious Monk's classic “Bemsha Swing” is notable for demonstrating just how one can take liberties without losing sight of a tune's essence. Building the music over a quasi-reggae feel, Rodrigues stretches and twists the recognizable theme so that it lives in a completely new context. Grantis' solo is so relaxed it sneaks up on you.
As democratic as things are, this is really Rodrigues' showcase. While her training, including attendance at the Banff Centre for the Arts and a degree in jazz piano from McGill University, gives her formidable technical ability, she never sacrifices feel for more cerebral concerns. Soul Project, as well-executed as it is, is an audacious début all about heart and soul from an artist who will no doubt continue to be heard from in the future. - John Kelman

Soul Project

Album: Soul Food For Thought
Size: 110,7 MB
Time: 47:30
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2009
Styles: Jazz: Hammond Organ, Soul Funk
Art: Front

01. Funky Pickle (5:00)
02. Chompy (5:29)
03. What's In This (5:03)
04. Ode To Monsanto (7:13)
05. Watermelon Man (6:31)
06. Planted (6:55)
07. Eater's Manifesto (6:33)
08. Funky Pickle (Alternate Take) (4:43)

Vanessa Rodrigues is a prolific local musician whose latest project blends a healthy combination of funk, groove and jazz with food activism. It's called Soul Food For Thought and the self-proclaimed Hammond Diva – she rocks the Hammond B3 organ like nobody's business - brings mindfulness to her complex and innovative tunes.

As with all good musicians, Rodrigues continues to push herself to new musical boundaries. Her collaborators are just as committed to complex music and food activism as she is, but that came more from synchronicity than careful planning. Soul Food For Thought brings together Rodrigues with DJ Killa Jewel and drummer Jean-Pierre Lévesque, long-time collaborators, and newcomers, MC BluRum13 and guitarist Olivier René-de-Cotret. This powerful group not only makes music that makes your hips swing all on their own, but digs under the surface of the food industry.

The album can't easily be classified, since songs slip easily between genres like fresh, organic fish, now jazz, now funk, and even the occasional hip hop groove. Speaking of fish, one very addictive song on the new album, Chompy, is named for the infamous two-jawed fish pulled from Lake Athabasca near the Alberta tar sands. It's a low groove that makes good use of the history of organ music in dark films and though the river described isn't quite a black lagoon, you'll taste traces of it in the rich sound.

The organ also has a history of powerful celebration, particularly in churches and this comes through in Eater's Manifesto, the most evangelical song on the whole album. Without using words, it insists on dancing, joining in and taking a different look on what's on the plate in front of us, and how it got there. Like all good gospel grooves, it carries you along with it, enticing you to agree instead of forcing an idea down your throat.

Any jazz lover knows of the fierce and sometimes destructive competition between singers and musicians. On this project though, you'll only hear creative and thought-provoking riffs from an up and coming rapper surrounded by satisfying grooves. Vanessa has a long history as an impressive band leader, so rather than fight for space, she makes room for all collaborators to add their special blend of spices and they always solo with the understanding that it's ultimately her recipe.

MC BluRum13 raps on two tracks, What's In This, a song asking a fairly reasonable question of our boxed food culture; and Planted, a fascinating story told from the perspective of a plant itself. If you're into Michael Pollan, you'll find these two songs edgy, topical and much less preachy than other activist music out there.

You don't have to love Herbie Hancock to love Watermelon Man and this version will have you craving fresh grooves for weeks to come. Ode to Monsanto blows kisses at one of the giants in the industry and winks at their, shall we say, insouciant attitude towards organic, local foods. Pick up a copy of this eclectic and altogether mouth-watering menu that is sure to tickle your musical palette.

Soul Food For Thought