Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Katie Cavera - Who's Foolin' Who

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 49:57
Size: 114.3 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals, Swing
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[3:05] 1. Too Busy
[5:16] 2. Do Something
[3:34] 3. Some Of These Days
[2:23] 4. I'm The One
[5:59] 5. Foolin' Myself
[5:27] 6. Nilda Avenue Breakdown
[4:35] 7. Nobody Cares If I'm Blue
[4:02] 8. Don't Wait Up
[2:51] 9. You've Been A Naughty Boy
[3:39] 10. Irrational Pastime No. 1
[4:13] 11. Telling It To The Daisies
[4:48] 12. Who's Foolin' Who

Katie Cavera has made a name for herself on the West Coast playing Banjo, Rhythm Guitar, and New Orleans style String Bass. She also sings in the 20’s pop style of Helen Kane and Ruth Etting.

A few of her band credits include: The Bobby Gordon Sextet, Clint Baker’s New Orleans Jazz Band, The Reynolds Brothers Rhythm Rascals, Jim Cullum’s Jazz Band, Hal Smith’s Rhythmakers,The Ray Skjelbred Quartet, and Leon Oakley’s Friends Of Jazz.

Originally from Southern Indiana, she attended Indiana University where she studied jazz composition and performance with David Baker. She currently resides in Los Angeles where she works as a full time musician and occasionally works on theatrical productions and short films.

"She loves what she does and she makes everyone feel good about playing music with her. She's a timekeeper with a heartbeat sound." – Ray Skjelbred

Who's Foolin' Who

Cal Tjader - Cal Tjader's Latin Kick

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 40:29
Size: 92.7 MB
Styles: Latin jazz
Year: 1959/1995
Art: Front

[4:12] 1. Invitation
[3:42] 2. Lover Come Back To Me
[2:59] 3. September Song
[3:27] 4. Will You Still Be Mine
[5:52] 5. I Love Paris
[3:13] 6. Tropicville
[2:55] 7. Moonlight In Vermont
[3:36] 8. Bye Bye Blues
[3:16] 9. Manuel's Mambo
[4:09] 10. All The Things You Are
[3:03] 11. Blues From Havana

Cal Tjader's era-defining mixture of Afro-Cuban rhythms and mainstream jazz solos undergoes a bit of a horizontal expansion in these 1956 sessions. The tracks are often longer than on previous albums, finally taking advantage of the logistics of the LP, and as a result, both the Latin and jazz elements benefit. Tenor saxophonist Brew Moore gets extended chances to blow in an easy-grooving Getz-like manner on several tracks, and on "I Love Paris," Luis Miranda (congas) and Bayardo Velarde (timbales) engage in some spirited percussion battles over the vamping of the brothers Duran (Manuel on piano and Carlos on bass). Everything cooks in a bright yet disciplined manner, and Tjader's elliptical, swinging vibes preside genially over the ensemble. ~Richard S. Ginnell

Cal Tjader's Latin Kick

Marty Elkins & Dave McKenna - In Another Life

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:10
Size: 87,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:12)  1. Willow Weep For Me
(2:51)  2. Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans
(3:40)  3. Jim
(2:56)  4. Gimme A Pigfoot And A Bottle Of Beer
(2:42)  5. Summertime
(3:48)  6. Until The Real Thing Comes Along
(2:01)  7. I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart
(3:01)  8. When Your Lover Has Gone
(2:36)  9. I Wished On The Moon
(3:12) 10. Willow Weep For Me (Alternate Take)
(2:50) 11. Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans (Alternate Take)
(5:16) 12. Fuse Blues

When I get new jazz compact discs to review, a good percentage feature women jazz singers.  I am sure that they are wonderful people who love the music, but many of them have odd ideas of forming a style.  Some have ingested every syllable Billie Holiday ever recorded; some rely on huge voices with gospel trimmings to get them through; some meow and growl their way through a lyric, suggesting an undiagnosed hairball problem.  Almost all of the new singers emote in capital letters, their voices rich with imagined melodrama.  None of these tricks works, but the singers press on. For me, there are perhaps a dozen women singing jazz today if you’ve been reading my posts, you can count them off.  Now it’s time to increase that number.  May I introduce  (or re-introduce) Marty Elkins? I first met Marty perhaps a year ago when she and I ended up sharing a table at the crowded Ear Inn.  We chatted pleasantly, and I really had no idea of her talents until Jon-Erik Kellso asked her to sit in and she sang a few choruses of YOU TOOK ADVANTAGE OF ME with the band.  

The Ear Inn is more conducive to trumpets and trombones than to unamplified singers, but I could hear that Marty swung, knew the harmonic ins and outs of the song, could improvise neatly, and was expressive without being melodramatic.  She used her quiet talents to make the material sound good rather than asking Rodgers and Hart to step aside so that she could shine.  When she was through, I asked her if she had recorded CDs that I could hear her better and at greater length.  She casually mentioned that she had done a duet session with Dave McKenna years back, and that it would be issued some day. The disc is called IN ANOTHER LIFE, and it’s issued on the splendidly reliable Nagel-Heyer label (CD 114).  It captures Marty and Dave in an informal session with good sound, in 1988  when Dave was still in full command. The first thing that must be said will seem tactless, but this CD is not the combination of a young, untried singer with a master pianist.  Not at all.  

The Elkins , McKenna pairing is a meeting of convivial equals.  From the very first notes of this session, she shows off her relaxed, expert naturalness.  Her naturalness comes from loving the lyrics  that is, knowing what the words mean! and admiring the composer’s original lines.  She has a sweet, earnest phrase-ending vibrato, reminiscent of a great trumpet player, and she holds her notes beautifully.  Marty’s delivery is full of feeling and warmth, but she doesn’t shout, grind, or act self-consciously hip.  Her voice is also attractive wholly on its own terms  it has a yearning, plaintive quality that fits the material, but that never overwhelms the song or the listener. On JIM, for instance, a rather masochistic song, Marty embraces and entrances the lyrics without ever suggesting that things are so dire that she needs therapy or an intervention.  It’s a performance I found myself going back to several times.  And she’s equally home with the somewhat archaic enthusiams of GIMME A PIGFOOT  she sings the song rather than singing at it from an ironic distance.  (And, as a sidelight, her diction is razor-sharp, enabling me to hear a phrase in the lyrics that has always mystified me in Bessie Smith’s version.)  On a number of the other selections, she avoids the perils of over-dramatization (I’m thinking especially of SUMMERTIME, which has attained the status of National Monument, making it almost impossible to sing it plainly without histrionics) by lifting the tempo just a touch  what Billie and Mildred did in the Thirties.  It works.  I was able to hear the most famous and well-worn songs on this disc without thinking of their more famous progenitors.  On her second choruses, she improvises, subtly and effectively; her voice takes delicate little turns up or down, which seem both new and natural.  And she knows the verse to WHEN YOUR LOVER IS GONE!  What more could we ask for? For his part, McKenna is in especially empathetic form: he doesn’t put on his locomotive-roaring-down-the-tracks self, but you always know he’s there.  And at times his accompaniment sounds so delicately shaped that I would have sworn Ellis Larkins had slid onto the piano bench. The alternate takes are revealing for both Marty’s subtle reshapings of her first inspirations, and for Dave’s inventiveness and drive.  

The CD’s last track, FUSE BLUES, comes from a 1999 Nagel-Heyer session Marty did with Houston Person, Tardo Hammer, Herb Pomeroy, Greg Skaff, Dennis Irwin, Mark Taylor, and it’s a thoroughly naughty composition of Marty’s that will make you look at your electrician in a whole new way.  I think it should be Consolidated Edison’s theme song, but doubt that they’ll take me up on it. As an afterthought, because the liner notes are very spare, I asked Marty to comment on the session, which she did: The original recording was just for a demo for me, and Dave really did it as a favor for very little bread as he was an old friend from my days in Boston. I went to Boston U and just kind of stayed up there, hanging around with musicians for about ten years after college. I met Dave at the Copley Plaza hotel, where he was a regular performer, and he let me sing with him and was pretty much my first accompanist. The funny story I always tell is that he said, “When you go out there and sing with other musicians, don’t expect them to play in the key of B…” because he would say “Just start singing, baby, I’ll follow you.”  I guess that really was starting at the top! Everyone loved Dave – he was the most accessible guy and not even aware of his own genius. He leaves a lot of broken hearted pals. We did the recording at Jimmy Madison’s (the great drummer) studio on the Upper West Side. I think Dave was in town for a gig at the old Hanratty’s, because by then I was living in New York. The Nagel-Heyers did the remastering, and it really sounds good now.  I hear new things in Dave’s playing every time I listen to it.  I had hoped it would come out before Dave left us, but it was not to be.    Marty is planning a late-summer CD release party at Smalls  with, among others, Jon-Erik Kellso  and she has promised to let me know the details so that I can alert all of you.  Until then, this CD is winning music.  http://jazzlives.wordpress.com/2009/06/19/marty-elkins-in-another-life/

In Another Life

Joscho Stephan & Olivier Holland - Gypsy Meets Jazz

Styles: Gypsy Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:05
Size: 103,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:21)  1. Made In France
(4:57)  2. Morning Drop Off
(4:49)  3. Take the Train
(2:58)  4. Sleepless
(4:51)  5. Spain
(3:05)  6. Crazy Daisy
(4:12)  7. Afro Shuh
(2:54)  8. Donna Lee
(3:53)  9. Tears
(3:43) 10. Senor Carlos
(2:39) 11. Babik
(3:38) 12. Gutted


Two virtuosos of the strings sought and found each other: On the one hand, the master guitarist from Mönchengladbach, Joscho Stephan, on the other, the German-New-Zealander double bass player Olivier Holland. Ever since the 1990s, the paths of these two exceptional musicians have crossed in joint projects. The two artists always find new ideas and inspiration for their playing, which gave riseto a collaborative studio effort, where the two artists bundled their creative energies to form an exciting fusion style that also gave the album its title: "Gypsy Meets Jazz". The two musicians are joined by Stephan's father Günter on rhythm guitar, bass Max Schaaf, violinist Sebastian Reimann and percussionist Thomas Kukulies. Together they create a fascinating musical kaleidoscope with compositions by the two string virtuosos themselves and refreshingly interpreted classics by Bireli Lagrène and Charlie Parker, Chick Corea and Django Reinhardt. "Gypsy Meets Jazz" shows two brilliant trailblazers engaging in an extremely creative and highly entertaining excursion that enriches both genres in a fascinating manner.  http://www.joscho-stephan.de/en/music

Larry Coryell - The Virtuoso Guitar of Larry Coryell

Styles: Guitar Jazz, Fusion
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:20
Size: 131,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:25)  1. Inner Urge
(6:50)  2. Spiral Staircase
(4:49)  3. Something
(5:30)  4. Complusion
(6:45)  5. Star Eyes
(2:38)  6. Limehouse Blues
(5:16)  7. New High
(7:07)  8. Bumpin' On Sunset
(4:48)  9. Tonk
(8:08) 10. Good Citizen Swallow

Larry Coryell, along with colleague John McLaughlin, nearly single-handedly redefined the technique and sound of jazz guitar. He brought what amounted to a nearly alien sensibility to jazz electric guitar playing in the 1960s, a hard-edged, cutting tone, phrasing and note-bending that owed as much to blues, rock and even country as it did to earlier, smoother bop influences. Yet as a true eclectic, armed with a brilliant technique, he is comfortable in nearly every style, covering almost every base from the most decibel-heavy, distortion-laden electric work to the most delicate, soothing, intricate lines on acoustic guitar. On this best-of anthology, Coryell s crackling up-tempo bursts and engagingly rough-hewn energy give this music a vividness and infectious enthusiasm that should appeal to a wide spectrum of the guitarist's jazz and fusion fans. ~ Editorial Reviews   http://www.amazon.co.uk/Prime-Picks-Virtuoso-Guitar-Coryell/dp/B003IY47JA

The Virtuoso Guitar of Larry Coryell

Aldo Romano - New Blood Plays the Connection

Styles: Avant Garde
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:49
Size: 89,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:55)  1. Who Killed Cock Robin
(4:36)  2. Wigglin'
(3:58)  3. Music Forever
(4:13)  4. Time to Smile
(3:04)  5. Theme for Sister Salvation
(3:00)  6. Jim Dunn's Dilemma
(3:04)  7. O.D. (Overdose)
(5:42)  8. Murmur
(2:42)  9. Conception
(4:31) 10. Ballade for Jackie

Although born in Italy, Aldo Romano moved to France with his family at a young age. He was already playing guitar and drums professionally in Paris in the '50s when he heard Donald Byrd's group with drummer Arthur Taylor. Since then, he has dedicated himself to the drums and contemporary jazz. In Paris jazz clubs like le Chat Qui Pêche and the Caméléon, Romano has accompanied visiting Americans like Jackie McLean, Bud Powell, Lucky Thompson, J.J. Johnson, and Woody Shaw while also exploring free music with Don Cherry and Gato Barbieri, Frank Wright and Bobby Few, Michel Portal, François Tusques, Jean-Louis Chautemps, and Steve Lacy. Romano's boundless curiosity for any living music brought him in contact with electric jazz in the '70s, playing at the Riverbop with longtime associate/bassist Jean-François Jenny-Clark, in addition to François Jeanneau, Henri Texier, Charlie Mariano, and Philip Catherine. In 1978, he released his first album as a leader with Claude Barthélémy (Il Piacere, OWL), followed by 1980's Night Diary with Didier Lockwood and Jasper Van't Hof, and 1983's Alma Latina with Philip Catherine. In 1980, Romano brought pianist Michel Petrucciani to the world's attention, introducing him to the producer of Owl Records. 

His Italian roots were lovingly remembered with the foundation of his Italian Quartet with Paolo Fresu, Franco D'Andrea, and Furio Di Castri. The quartet recorded To Be Ornette to Be and Water Dreams (Owl) and Non Dimenticar, a collection of Italian songs (Verve). Palatino  named for the Rome-Paris night train  also includes Fresu, with Glen Ferris on trombone. Intervista (Verve, 2001)  with bassist Palle Danielsson, saxophonist Stefano di Battista, and Brazilian guitarist Nelson Veras  is a magnificently played overview of his musical career, with Ornette Coleman-ish tunes, Latin-American compositions, and operatic arias; a bonus CD contains a charming interview. https://itunes.apple.com/nz/artist/aldo-romano/id3572852#fullText

Personnel:  Aldo Romano – drums; Baptiste Herbin - alto sax; Alessandro Lanzoni- piano; Michel Benita - bass

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Lester Young - Blue Lester

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 44:25
Size: 101.7 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[2:53] 1. (Back Home Again In) Indiana
[3:21] 2. Blue Lester
[3:14] 3. Jump, Lester, Jump
[3:18] 4. Ghost Of A Chance
[2:58] 5. Basie English
[2:55] 6. These Foolish Things (Remind Me Of You)
[3:11] 7. Exercise In Swing
[3:20] 8. Salute To Fats
[2:45] 9. Crazy Over J-Z
[2:23] 10. Blues 'n' Bells
[2:23] 11. Ding Dong
[2:34] 12. June Bug
[3:11] 13. Circus In Rhythm
[2:55] 14. Poor Little Plaything
[3:00] 15. Tush

Basically Young's Savoy Master Takes, Blue Lester finds the svelte tenor innovator on a prime mix of sides from 1944 and 1949. As was the trend of most swing soloists by the mid-'40s, Young heads up a few different extended combos here, featuring the likes of pianist Johnny Guarnieri, trumpeter Jesse Drakes, drummer Cozy Cole, and old Basie bandmates Freddie Green and the Count himself. The numbers with Basie are particularly good, especially "I Don't Stand a Ghost of Chance With You" and "Back Home in Indiana." And for the topper, Young is heard in the company of the entire Basie band (Clyde Hart is on piano, though) for the three tracks that close things out. Not a bad place to start your Lester Young collection. ~Stephen Cook

Blue Lester

The Hi-Lo's - The Hi-Lo's Happen To Bossa Nova

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 33:34
Size: 76.9 MB
Styles: Vocal group, Bossa Nova
Year: 1963/2005
Art: Front

[2:34] 1. Carnaval
[2:51] 2. The Gift (Recado Bosso Nova)
[2:20] 3. Let's Go To Brazil
[3:08] 4. A New Dream
[3:03] 5. Gold Brazilian Sun
[2:40] 6. One Note Samba (Samba De Uma Nota So)
[2:07] 7. The Duck (O Pato)
[2:44] 8. Cry Your Sadness (Chora Tua Tristeza)
[2:42] 9. Desafinado
[2:59] 10. Once Again (Outra Vez)
[3:01] 11. Love And The Rose (O Amor E A Rosa)
[3:19] 12. No More Blues (Chega De Sauade)

Looking back on the long history of popular music in the U.S., there are fewer periods as overlooked or misunderstood as the post WWII to pre-rock ‘n’ roll period---or roughly 1946 to 1956. Tucked away in that ten year time frame, hidden away in the awful dreck of novelty tunes and saccharine love songs so common in that era was a vocal group with a style and substance that confounded critics, arrangers, and record producers alike. In fact, they were so singular they confounded many record buyers as well.

Despite this fact, their many hard-core fans included the likes of Frank Sinatra, Mel Torme, Rosemary Clooney, Nelson Riddle, Sammy Davis, Jr, Jose Ferrer, Steve Allen ("without a doubt the best vocal group of all time."), Bing Crosby ("these guys are so good they can whisper in harmony."), Marty Paich, Ralph Farnon and many more. Herbie Hancock has even remarked that as a young student at Grinnell College he would study the group's records for their sophisticated harmonies.

The group was called the Hi-Lo’s. And, even if you’ve never heard the name before, their legacy has been carried forth by contemporary groups such as The Manhattan Transfer, Take 6, The New York Voices, The Bobs, and Chanticleer. ~James Bridges

The Hi-Lo's Happen To Bossa Nova

June Bisantz-Evans - Let's Fall In Love

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 40:22
Size: 92.4 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[4:22] 1. For Heaven's Sake
[3:11] 2. There's A Lull In My Life
[3:14] 3. I Fall In Love Too Easily
[4:27] 4. Little Girl Blue
[2:19] 5. My Funny Valentine
[2:35] 6. Like Someone In Love
[4:16] 7. I've Never Been In Love Before
[4:49] 8. Everything Happens To Me
[3:53] 9. Imagination
[2:21] 10. Come Rain Or Come Shine
[3:22] 11. There's A Lull In My Life Reprise
[1:26] 12. Blue Room

June Bisantz Evans is a visual artist and musician, who has co-written and produced several albums of original jazz, all of which received national attention. She has recorded with distinguished jazz and pop musicians such as Steve Swallow, Bob Moses, Lou Soloff and Will Lee. Reviews and articles about her work include People Magazine, USA Today, Downbeat Magazine, Jazziz Magazine, Sound Choice, High Performance Review, New York Newsday, the Boston Globe, the Hartford Courant, the Hartford Advocate and the New York Native.

Her new release "Let's Fall in Love" is a collection of jazz ballads based on the vocal music of legendary trumpet player Chet Baker. The CD features Alex Nakhimsovsky on piano, Norman Johnson on guitar, Genevieve Rose on bass, Greg Caputo on drums and Gabor Viragh on trumpet and flugelhorn.

Let's Fall In Love

The John Scofield Band - Uberjam Deux

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 61:44
Size: 141.3 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[5:15] 1. Camelus
[5:04] 2. Boogie Stupid
[6:07] 3. Endless Summer
[6:06] 4. Dub Dub
[5:53] 5. Cracked Ice
[5:50] 6. Al Green Song
[7:12] 7. Snake Dance
[4:34] 8. Scotown
[5:50] 9. Torero
[4:44] 10. Curtis Knew
[5:04] 11. Just Don't Want To Be Lonely

It's been a decade since Up All Night (Verve, 2003), John Scofield's second and, at the time it seemed, final album with his Überjam band, a group of younger players who, following his earlier forays into the territory—1998's first meeting with Medeski, Martin & Wood, A Go Go (Verve), and the larger-casted Bump (2000)—placed the guitarist smack dab on the jam band map with a combination of viscerally accessible grooves and oodles of solo space to focus on his more soulful, blues-tinged side. Still, regardless of context, Scofield has always possessed a singular ability to push even the most seemingly conventional blues line outside the box—and the precise intuition to know exactly when to reel it back in.

Dispensing with the horns and woodwinds that distinguished Up All Night from its predecessor, Überjam Deux is a more logical follow-up to the group's 2002 self-titled Verve debut. Scofield's reunion with guitarist/sampler Avi Bortnick demonstrates, once again, the true importance—and often underestimated and undervalued skill—of an exceptional rhythm player. Scofield's relentlessly inventive, sonically expansive improvisational explorations are key to Überjam Deux's success, but so, too, is Bortnick's support, which ranges from chunky chords to snaky, muted single-note lines that almost subliminally anchor the music. Former Gov't Mule/Black Crowes bassist Andy Hess—who replaced Überjam's Jesse Murphy on Up All Night—is back, as dexterous, muscular and solid as ever, as is original drummer Adam Deitch, who handles the lion's share of Überjam Deux's twelve tracks with similar aplomb, though 28 year-old drummer Louis Cato takes over on four tracks and is equally impressive.

The biggest surprise is keyboardist John Medeski's participation on half of Deux. Mixed, at times, so in the weeds as to be more felt than heard (the funkified "Boogie Stupid"), elsewhere playing a more dominant role (the reggae-tinged "Dub Dub") and occasionally adding some psychedelic mellotron tinges (the fiery "Curtis Knew," with a heavily effected Scofield adding his own acid flashbacks), Medeski is largely there for color. Still, on these studio concoctions, Medeski substitutes a broader palette for what will, no doubt, be more exciting and extended jams as the quartet hits the road for summer and fall touring.

What distinguishes Deux is the writing. Sure, the largely original material—much of it collaborative between Scofield and Bortnick—is intended as a launching point for some serious jam activity, but there's greater depth this time around. Not that Überjam was light, but Deux's greater emphasis on arrangement (especially the scored interaction between the two guitarists) and songs that reflect both guitarists' broader interests—like the appropriately titled, soul-drenched "Al Green," the Afrobeat-informed "Snake Dance" and, well, shuffle-driven "G.P. Shuffle"—will give Überjam Deux greater longevity over the long-haul.

Speaking of longevity, it also demonstrates that, in any context, Scofield's work is inimitable and instantly recognizable. He may shift gears on a regular basis—his last three recordings ranging from a very personal look at ballads on A Moment's Peace (EmArcy, 2011), to a large ensemble revisitation of his repretoire in collaboration with composer/arranger Vince Mendoza on the enigmatically titled 54 (EmArcy, 2010), and a vocal-driven visit to gospel/New Orleans territory on Piety Street (EmArcy, 2009)—but taken as a whole, and now with the addition of Überjam Deux, it's increasingly clear that no matter what the focus, every Scofield album sounds like it could come from nobody but Scofield. As he enters his early sixties, Scofield has reached that point in his career where he can follow his muse and still retain what's made him one of modern jazz's most influential guitarists, with the kind of lasting significance that truly speaks for itself. ~John Kelman

John Scofield: guitar; Avi Bortnick: guitar, samples; Andy Hess: bass; Adam Deitch; drums (1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 10-12); Louis Cato: drums (3, 6, 8, 9); John Medeski: organ, Wurlitzer and mellotron (2, 4, 6, 10-12).

Uberjam Deux

The Ukelele Orchestra Of Great Britain - The Secret Of Life

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 42:26
Size: 97.2 MB
Styles: Rock
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[3:07] 1. Dy-Na-Mi-Tee
[3:13] 2. Leaning On A Lampost
[2:27] 3. Hard To Handle
[2:08] 4. Wonderful Land
[2:50] 5. Je T'aime - Mais Non Plus
[6:10] 6. Macarthur Park
[3:33] 7. Le Freak
[2:32] 8. Only You
[2:09] 9. Antiphon
[3:19] 10. The Stage
[3:10] 11. You Talk About My Drinking
[7:43] 12. The Secret Of Life

Perhaps the greatest live act in the UK today, the mighty Ukulele Orchestra Of Great Britain is a unique collision of post-punk performance and toe-tapping oldies reinterpreted on Ukulele's. The Orchestra has rhythm, bass, baritone, tenor, soprano and lead Ukulele players, creating a rich palate of orchestration possibilities and registers. Sitting shoulder to shoulder in a semi-circle, they dress in formal evening wear like a symphony orchestra, reworking classics of rock 'n' roll, punk, jazz and classical music. In highlighting both the beauty and vacuity of the material, the Orchestra revel in the triviality and the self-reverence of popular and highbrow music, while being both serious and light-hearted.

Audiences like to have a good time with the Ukulele Orchestra, which shows that musical intelligence and levity are not incompatible with acoustic versions of heavy metal, performance art techniques and the homage of a live karaoke. The band have been selling out shows all over the world and appearing on many TV shows and radio stations, most notably BBC's Jool's Holland's Hootenany, Richard And Judy, Blue Peter, XFM, Radio 1 and Johnny Walker's show on BBC Radio 2. Their album 'The Secret Of Life', produced by Richard Durrant features their brilliant versions of 'Miss Dyna-mi-tee', 'Le Freak' and 'Leaning On A Lamppost'.

The Secret Of Life

Champian Fulton - Champian Sings And Swings

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 56:47
Size: 131.8 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[4:15] 1. Tenderly
[3:59] 2. You're Getting To Be A Habit
[4:50] 3. It's Alright With Me
[3:11] 4. I'd Give A Dollar For A Dime
[7:07] 5. I Cover The Waterfront
[5:47] 6. Samba De Orfeu
[4:26] 7. It's Too Late (Baby, Too Late)
[3:26] 8. Foolin' Myself
[4:52] 9. I'm Gonna Sit Right Down
[3:33] 10. The Shadow Of Your Smile
[4:39] 11. Celia
[6:35] 12. Summertime

Called ''...the most gifted pure Jazz singer of her generation'' by noted jazz critic Mark Stryker of the Detroit Free Press, singer/pianist Champian Fulton marks her Sharp Nine debut with a program of twelve tunes that conveys the depth and breadth of her musical talent: from the sauciest blues of It's Too Late, Baby Too Late to the sophisticated bebop lines she spins on Bud Powell's Celia, the common denominator is the natural born swing that emanates from every word she sings and every note she plays. Accompanied by her working rhythm section throughout, with guest appearances from tenor man Eric Alexander and flugelhornist Stephen Fulton, this set announces the emergence of a complete musical stylist well on her way to making a significant mark on the vocal jazz scene.

Champian Sings And Swings

Kate Reid - The Love I'm In

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:52
Size: 139,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:31)  1. Just Squeeze Me
(4:21)  2. The Lamp Is Low
(6:04)  3. Where Do You Start
(4:06)  4. Nice & Easy
(7:27)  5. So In Love
(3:30)  6. I'm Through With Love
(6:19)  7. I Love You Porgy
(3:17)  8. Something Good
(5:06)  9. Portrait In Black And White
(6:14) 10. With Every Breath I Take
(6:01) 11. Close Enough For Love
(3:50) 12. Nobody Else But Me

Dr. Kate Reid is a faculty member of the Fine Arts department of Cypress College in Southern California. However, Reid is no stuffed shirt, ivory tower type. No, she is a living, breathing, practicing jazz singer, one who holds on to tradition loosely, having fun with the music she performs. She belongs to that treasured group of jazz singers who also plays piano, a group that includes the likes of Shirley Horn, Blossom Dearie, Nina Simone, Patti Wicks, Patricia Barber, Dena DeRose, Diana Krall and Norah Jones. That is quite a creative tradition. Reid is a known entity; her previous self-produced release, Sentimental Mood (2008), is a collection of the singer's favorite standards. The Love I'm In sharpens her focus to compositions with "love" at their core. "The Lamp Is Low" is a popular song from the 1930s. 

Written by Peter de Rose and Bert Shefter, it is based on Maurice Ravel's "Pavane pour une infante défunte," with lyrics provided by Mitchell Parish. Mildred Bailey and Frank Sinatra covered the piece in 1939, keeping it on the pop charts for several months. Reid, back by a standard piano trio, takes up this fine pedigree, delivering a humid, flirty, sexy, smoky version. Reid is closely miked, giving her alto voice a breathy immediacy that floats above the accompaniment. Her piano is sure and true, and her voice swinging. ~ C.Michael Bailey   
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=41529#.U0c4D1dSvro
Personnel: Kate Reid: vocals, piano; Ernie Watts: tenor sax; Steve Reid: trumpet; Chris Conner: bass; Steve Barnes: drums.

The Love I'm In

LaGaylia Frazier & Jan Lundgren Trio - Until it's time

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:07
Size: 142,2 MB
Art: Front

(8:07)  1. Until It's Time for You to Go
(5:22)  2. When We Say Goodbye
(6:35)  3. I'm All Smiles
(7:14)  4. The Sandpiper: The Shadow of Your Smile
(3:18)  5. Walkin' After Midnight
(7:37)  6. Jean
(8:30)  7. If You Go
(9:17)  8. Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)
(6:02)  9. What's Going On

LaGaylia Frazier is an American born Swedish jazz singer and Until it’s time is her second album but as you listen to it the question immediately forms itself, how can such an obviously great jazz singer not have made many others. The answer may be partly attributed to her move to Sweden a decade ago. In any event hers is a wonderfully silky smooth richly layered voice that can be compared with many of the very best voices in jazz. The choice of songs on this album is an excellent one that perfectly shows her talents off in the best possible light. She is accompanied by the Jan Lundgren Trio which is joined by guitarist Andy Pfeiler on three of the tracks and by LaGaylia’s father on track 5, with Jonas Johansen replacing Zoltan Csörsz Jr. on tracks 3 and 4, presumably because dates clashed for him at that time. Jan’s trio provides great and infinitely sympathetic backing for LaGaylia and is a joy to hear on its own too. Highlights for me were Until it’s time for you to go which was a reminder to me as to how good a songwriter (and singer) Buffy Sainte-Marie was and LaGaylia gives it a beautiful rendition that showcases it to perfection. 

I also loved The shadow of your smile a really great song which suits her voice to a tee. It was a nice touch to duet with her father Hal, a nightclub singer on Walkin’ after midnight which I very much enjoyed. The Marvin Gaye/James Nyx song Inner City blues (Make me wanna holler) written in 1971 depicted what it was like to live in black ghettos in the USA and how the situation would make you want to cry out against it. This song has been covered by many of the all-time greats such as Grover Washington Jr, Sarah Vaughn and Joe Cocker. LaGaylia makes it her own with a gutsy and impassioned performance of it. It appeared on a Marvin Gaye album together with this album’s last song What’s going on which earned Gaye 1,000,000 sales. What’s going on is also a fitting song with which to close this album with its message that we need more love in the world about which there can be no argument. This is a disc to savour and there’s no doubt I shall play it often. ~ Steve Arloff   http://www.musicweb-international.com/jazz/2013/Frazier_Lundgren.htm
Personnel:  LaGaylia Frazier (vocals), Jan Lundgren (piano), Mattias Svensson (bass), Zoltan Csörsz Jr. (drums, except 3,4), Special guests: Hal Frazier (vocals on 5), Andy Pfeiler (guitar on 2,8,9), Jonas Johansen (drums on 3,4).

Fraser Macpherson Quartet - Encore

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:19
Size: 140,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:46)  1. Up in Steve's Room
(6:02)  2. Everything I Love
(6:12)  3. Someday You'll Be Sorry
(3:57)  4. Chelsea Bridge
(6:10)  5. Comes Love
(6:25)  6. Rabbit's Habit
(5:23)  7. If Dreams Come True
(4:49)  8. Come Sunday
(5:07)  9. You're Driving Me Crazy
(5:58) 10. Easy Street
(5:27) 11. Night Spot

Swing/bop saxophonist Fraser MacPherson (1928-1993) possessed a style deeply rooted in the tradition of the great pre-bop saxophonists, owing a significant stylistic debt to Zoot Sims. Born in Victoria, British Columbia in 1928, MacPherson moved to Vancouver in 1948 and began a career as a studio and nightclub musician. In 1975, MacPherson formed a trio with guitarist Oliver Gannon and bassist Wyatt Reuther and began to focus solely on jazz. He won a Juno Award in 1983 for Best Canadian Jazz Recording and in 1987 was made a member of the Order of Canada (which is fundamentally the Canadian equivalent of being knighted). ~ Bio   https://itunes.apple.com/ca/artist/fraser-macpherson-quartet/id268255590#fullText

Encore

Monday, April 14, 2014

Paul Desmond - Take Ten

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 55:30
Size: 127.1 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1963/1999
Art: Front

[3:09] 1. Take Ten
[5:36] 2. El Prince [alternate Take]
[3:23] 3. El Prince
[6:52] 4. Alone Together
[4:55] 5. Embarcadero [alternate Take]
[4:00] 6. Embarcadero
[4:11] 7. Theme From Black Orpheus
[7:18] 8. The Night Has A Thousand Eyes [alternate take]
[6:04] 9. Nancy
[4:20] 10. Samba De Orfeu
[5:36] 11. The One I Love (Belongs To Somebody Else)

Alto saxophonist Paul Desmond has been considered one of the avatars of the cool school of jazz. One of the few saxophonists of his generation to not be overly influenced by Charlie Parker, Desmond favored a sound that was somewhat mellow, suave, smooth and dry--so much so that critics and fans would liken his style to "a very dry martini." These appellations certainly weren't meant to imply that there's no emotion or swing in his playing, only that the focus is away from forced emotionalism.

TAKE TEN was recorded in 1963, with a small crew of sympatico musicians, including one of the finest mainstream jazz guitarists ever, Jim Hall. Hall and Modern Jazz Quartet drummer Connie Kay are the closest thing to "counterparts" on their instruments to the Desmond approach: tight, economical, tasteful. Everyone compliments each other perfectly. The program mixes originals, standards ("Alone Together") and several bossa nova pieces ("Samba De Orpheau," "Theme From Black Orpheus"). Desmond makes each piece his own. Nicely recorded, this album is recommended for both fans and newcomers.

Recorded at Webster Hall, New York, New York between June 5 & 25, 1963.

Paul Desmond (alto saxophone); Jim Hall (guitar); Gene Cherico, Gene Wright (bass); Connie Kay (drums).

Take Ten

Anita O'Day - Careless Love

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 77:19
Size: 177.0 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[3:51] 1. I Can't Get Started
[2:52] 2. I Fall in Love Too Easily
[3:39] 3. You Turned the Tables On Me
[3:56] 4. I've Got the World On a String
[3:35] 5. We'll Be Together Again
[4:05] 6. Time After Time
[2:25] 7. No Moon At All
[3:42] 8. I Cover the Waterfront
[3:23] 9. Anita's Blues
[3:53] 10. Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered
[2:20] 11. Taking a Chance On Love
[3:14] 12. All Too Soon
[2:53] 13. You Don't Know What Love Is
[3:36] 14. As Long As I Live
[3:23] 15. Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year
[4:29] 16. My Ship
[2:23] 17. Let's Fall in Love
[2:42] 18. You're Getting to Be a Habit With Me
[3:18] 19. Tenderly
[3:58] 20. A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square
[3:12] 21. Who Cares
[2:32] 22. I'm Not Supposed to Be Blue
[3:48] 23. Fly Me to the Moon

Few female singers matched the hard-swinging and equally hard-living Anita O'Day for sheer exuberance and talent in all areas of jazz vocals. Though three or four outshone her in pure quality of voice, her splendid improvising, wide dynamic tone, and innate sense of rhythm made her the most enjoyable singer of the age. O'Day's first appearances in a big band shattered the traditional image of a demure female vocalist by swinging just as hard as the other musicians on the bandstand, best heard on her vocal trading with Roy Eldridge on the Gene Krupa recording "Let Me Off Uptown." After making her solo debut in the mid-'40s, she incorporated bop modernism into her vocals and recorded over a dozen of the best vocal LPs of the era for Verve during the 1950s and '60s. Though hampered during her peak period by heavy drinking and later, drug addiction, she made a comeback and continued singing into the new millennium. ~John Bush

Careless Love

Pamela Rose - Wild Women Of Song: Great Gal Composers of the Jazz Era

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:38
Size: 145,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:10)  1. I Don't Know Enough About You
(5:09)  2. That Ole Devil Called Love
(5:55)  3. Down Hearted Blues
(5:02)  4. I'm Not Missing You
(4:46)  5. What A Difference A Day Makes
(4:09)  6. Wild Women (Don't Have The Blues)
(4:58)  7. Bruised Around the Heart
(4:25)  8. And Then Some
(3:31)  9. A Fine Romance
(4:30) 10. My Silent Love
(5:01) 11. I'm In the Mood For Love
(3:36) 12. Can't We Be Friends
(5:03) 13. Close Your Eyes
(4:17) 14. If You're So Special

Pamela Rose would make one helluva politician. She's already a firmly established jazz and blues vocalist bearing a slight physical and musical resemblance to Bette Midler. And like Midler, Rose infuses her live and recorded performances with non-stop energy. The political reference involves her fifth release, sub-titled "Great Gal Composers of the Jazz Era." She is not only paying lip service to the likes of Peggy Lee and the lesser-known Dorothy Fields, but the seldom-heard-of Ida Cox, Alberta Hunter, and (thanks to Lee Hildebrand's encyclopedic notes) Bernice Petkere, once known as "the queen of Tin Pan Alley," who wrote "Close Your Eyes;" "The Girl Gershwin," Dana Suesse, who wrote "My Silent Love;" and one who actually worked with Gershwin, Kay Swift, who wrote "Can't We Be Friends." Pam has become a swinging lobbyist, and we're the beneficiaries. No attempt here to channel anyone; Pamela Rose simply honors them with her own approach to all 15 tracks. 

Pianist Tammy Hall provides a 1920s environment for Rose on "Down-Hearted Blues. Mat Catingub comes up with an R & B big band sound for the title track; and he is literally beside himself for "I Get The Blues When It Rains," playing keyboards, saxes, and dubbing a number of voices (himself and Gayle Wilhelm), for a hip vocal cushion behind, and with, Rose. Don't think the accent is on blues. Rose pulls out all the stops for this session: scatting with Hammond B-3 organist Wayne De La Cruz on "I'm In The Mood For Love;" alternating between Latin and straightahead jazz with De La Cruz on "Close Your Eyes;" tenorist Joe Cohen helps Pamela get down and dirty on "If You're So Special," one of three originals by Rose. As infectious as her raucous numbers are, her most memorable singing is devoted to ballads such as "What A Difference A Day Made," "Can't We Be Friends," "And Then Some," and particularly "My Silent Love." The latter is heightened by the sensitive backing of guitarist Mimi Fox. It all adds up to nearly 69 minutes of well-balanced entertainment mixed with heartfelt, female-centric jazz anthropology. ~ Harvey Siders   
http://jazztimes.com/articles/25543-wild-women-of-song-pamela-rose

Hal Galper Trio - Airegin Revisited

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:09
Size: 156,4 MB
Art: Front

(11:23)  1. Embraceable You
( 6:09)  2. Ascendant
( 7:28)  3. One Step Closer
( 9:27)  4. Ambleside
( 8:44)  5. Melancholia
(10:57)  6. Conception
(13:59)  7. Airegin

Hal Galper's Airegin Revisited is exhilarating. The pianist has been working at his artistry for more than a half century, and he is moving surely into the "elder statesman of jazz" category, riding the furious wave of several distinctive and idiosyncratic trio recordings. Galper, like alto saxophonist Lee Konitz and pianist Martial Solal, has gone deeper into the music than seems possible, taking a great many standards and unleashing them, reshaping the familiar tunes with his unwavering vision into a new art. Galper has, in recent years, found a new home at Origin Records, offering a discography Furious Rubato (2007), Art-Work (2009) E Pluribus Unum (2010) and Trip the Light Fantastic (2011) that gets better and more compelling, with each subsequent release. He has also found two likeminded musical brothers in bassist Jeff Johnson and drummer John Bishop, versatile and sophisticated players who can keep up with his rubato concept, one of playing loose and free with tempo and harmony even structure twisting the familiar forms like a rubber band, then pulling them back and letting them fly free. 

Opening with an eleven minute-plus take on George Gershwin's "Embraceable You," the trio shifts shapes and colors, playing with the melody in a joyous exploration that slips, near the end, into a brief straight reading. The floating "One Step Closer," a Galper original inspired by Brazilian harmony, finds Johnson and Bishop laying down a subtle and graceful rhythm, with the pianist going into a sparkling Erroll Garner groove in his solo. Galper did what he calls his "post-graduate work" in Sam Rivers' band in the mid-sixties, and played on the saxophonist's A New Conception (Blue Note, 1966). Homage is paid to the teacher on Rivers' "Melancholia." Rivers was a rule-breaker, and student Galper learned lasting lessons, with the trio's version paying homage by slowing things down to evoke a sense of loss at Rivers' passing near the end of 2011. In another homage, Galper closes the disc with saxophone legend Sonny Rollins' title track. A fourteen-minute tour de force with, Bishop's cymbals steaming, and Johnson, bowing, it adds a viscous underpinning to an exuberant finale to this stunning album.    ~ Dan McClenaghan  
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=43489#.U0WjF1dSvro
 
Personnel: Hal Galper: piano; Jeff Johnson: bass; John Bishop: drums.

Hugh Masekela - The Americanization Of Ooga Booga

Styles: Soul Jazz
Year: 1965
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:33
Size: 97,5 MB
Art: Front

(8:05)  1. Bajabula Bonke (Healing Song)
(6:38)  2. Dzinorabiro (The Good Old Days)
(5:22)  3. Unhlanhla (Lucky Boy)
(5:29)  4. Cantelope Island
(5:25)  5. U-Dwi (Song To My Father)
(0:27)  6. Masquenada
(4:04)  7. Abangoma (Song Of Praise)
(7:00)  8. Mixolydia

Getting Americanization of Ooga Booga released was evidently akin to pulling teeth, because MGM Records' president was convinced it would be a bomb what Hugh Masekela and his band had played at this early-1965 gig at the Village Gate was jazz, but it was too African-based for American tastes, so the label chief maintained. What he missed was the infectious joy woven through every note of music here, which was enough to carry any kind of music from anyplace in the world over any unfamiliar patches, including the language, melodies, references to events, and places on the other side of the world; if this was to be New Yorkers' (and the recording world's) introduction to South African music, it was made incredibly genial and accessible, even from a jazz standpoint. The influence of Dizzy Gillespie and Freddie Hubbard can be heard, along with McCoy Tyner in the playing of pianist Larry Willis, and he shows his debt to John Coltrane as an inspiration on "Mixolydia" as well as his affinity for Brazilian music on "Mas Que Nada." But the core sound was what Masekela called "township bop" his short trumpet bursts, sometimes seemingly approaching microtonal territory, are engrossing celebrations of the melodies of his repertory, which is mostly of South African origin (including a pair written by his then-wife, Miriam Makeba). 

Among the latter, the opening number, "Bajabula Bonke," aka "Healing Song," got its first airing on record here  it would later receive a bolder performance at the Monterey Pop Festival, comprising one of that event's numerous musical highlights, but where that later performance streaked and soared, this one starts out slowly and quietly, exquisitely harmonized and rising gradually and gently like a glider catching rising winds; it's impossible to fully appreciate the Monterey performance without hearing this one. With Herbie Hancock's "Cantelope Island" providing one firm reference point in the American jazz idiom, the set really wasn't that removed from 1965 listeners, as its stronger-than-expected sales proved. The later CD reissue (The Lasting Impressions of Ooga Booga), comprising this set and The Lasting Impressions of Hugh Masekela, is the best way to get this material, but the LPs make fascinating artifacts of an era when South Africa was just being discovered by the rest of the world. ~ Bruce Eder   http://www.allmusic.com/album/americanization-of-ooga-booga-mw0001304086