Thursday, October 23, 2014

Duke Ellington - Jazz Caravan

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 65:22
Size: 149.7 MB
Styles: Big band, Swing
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[4:36] 1. Take The A Train
[3:12] 2. Creole Love Call
[3:32] 3. The Mooche
[2:54] 4. Shout 'em Aunt Tillie
[4:01] 5. Creole Rhapsody, Part 1
[4:23] 6. Creole Rhapsody, Part 2 Take 3
[3:10] 7. Rude Interlude (Take 1)
[2:47] 8. Rumpus In Richmond
[3:19] 9. Concerto For Cootie
[3:19] 10. Dusk (Take 1)
[2:52] 11. Me And You
[2:59] 12. Transblucency
[2:46] 13. Tonk
[4:13] 14. Caravan
[2:37] 15. Depk
[7:04] 16. The Majesty Of God
[7:31] 17. East Saint Louis Toodle-O Lot O' Fingers Black And Tan Fantasy

Part of the extensive BLUEBIRD'S BEST series of samplers of the work of jazz masters, JAZZ CARAVAN is an entry-level best-of that culls pieces from several periods of Duke Ellington's long career. As well as his signature "Take the 'A' Train," there are early works like "Creole Love Call" and "The Mooche," and "Tonk," a rarely heard duet with his longtime collaborator, Billy Strayhorn. The set also includes "Depk," from Ellington's FAR EAST SUITE, "The Majesty of God," from his THIRD SACRED CONCERT, and the beautiful, crepuscular "Transblucency," featuring Adelaide Hall's ethereal, wordless vocals.

Duke Ellington (piano); Ivie Anderson, Louis Bacon, Adelaide Hall, Kay Davis, Alice Babs (vocals); Ray Nance (violin); Jimmy Hamilton, Rudy Jackson, Barney Bigard (clarinet); Harry Carney (alto saxophone, baritone saxophone); Johnny Hodges (alto saxophone); Cootie Williams, Arthur Whetsol, Bubber Miley (trumpet); Rex Stewart (cornet); Juan Tizol, Lawrence Brown (trombone); Billy Strayhorn (piano). Recording information: Camden, NJ (10/26/1927-10/24/1973); Chicago, IL (10/26/1927-10/24/1973); Hollywood, CA (10/26/1927-10/24/1973); London, England (10/26/1927-10/24/1973); New York, NY (10/26/1927-10/24/1973); Seattle, WA (10/26/1927-10/24/1973). All tracks have been digitally remastered.

Jazz Caravan

Katrine Madsen - Close To You

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 61:17
Size: 140.3 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz vocals
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[4:41] 1. The Look Of Love
[6:50] 2. Just Close Your Eyes
[4:58] 3. And I Love Her
[6:09] 4. Close To You
[5:38] 5. Save You Love For Me
[4:06] 6. In A Sentimental Mood
[5:12] 7. Angel Eyes
[5:28] 8. The Very Thought Of You
[8:21] 9. Be Still My Heart
[5:12] 10. Once Upon A Summertime
[4:37] 11. Go Now

Just reading the track list will likely make the more cynical jazz fan cringe and moan inwardly. Aside from a trio of originals, the set list of Close to You consists of overly familiar ballad standards ranging from Duke Ellington's "In a Sentimental Mood" to the Beatles' "And I Love Her" and Burt Bacharach's legendarily sappy title track. Never fear, however: this is not an album of boring supper-club faux jazz. Fond though Katrine Madsen is of sentimental ballads like "The Very Thought of You," she's fearless about messing with the familiar and well-loved melodies: her rhythmically varied take on "The Look of Love" won't lead anyone to compare her to Patty Waters, but she'd likely get heckled by some drunk in the audience at the Cocoanut Grove, probably with that old standby "Hey, if you get near a tune, sing it!" Madsen's backing, a simple piano trio, stays unobtrusively in the background throughout, providing elegant but somewhat anonymous backing while leaving the focus entirely on her rich and appealing voice. ~Stewart Mason

Close To You

Sonny Clark - Blue Minor

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 68:19
Size: 156.4 MB
Styles: Piano jazz, Hard bop
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[ 6:33] 1. Softly As In A Morning Sunrise
[10:19] 2. Blue Minor
[ 6:02] 3. Tadd's Delight
[ 9:24] 4. Cool Struttin'
[ 9:32] 5. Deep Night
[ 3:19] 6. Black Velvet
[ 9:54] 7. Bebop
[ 4:52] 8. I'll Remember April
[ 8:19] 9. Sippin' At Bells

Like Fats Navarro and Charlie Parker before him, Sonny Clark's life was short but it burned with musical intensity. Influenced deeply by Bud Powell, Clark nonetheless developed an intricate and hard-swinging harmonic sensibility that was full of nuance and detail. Regarded as the quintessential hard bop pianist, Clark never got his due before he passed away in 1963 at the age of 31, despite the fact that it can be argued that he never played a bad recording date either as a sideman or as a leader. Known mainly for seven records on the Blue Note label with a host of players including such luminaries as John Coltrane, Art Farmer, Donald Byrd, Jackie McLean, Hank Mobley, Art Taylor, Paul Chambers, Wilbur Ware, Philly Joe Jones, and others, Clark actually made his recording debut with Teddy Charles and Wardell Gray, but left soon after to join Buddy DeFranco. His work with the great clarinetist has been documented in full in a Mosaic set that is now sadly out of print. Clark also backed Dinah Washington, Serge Chaloff, and Sonny Criss before assuming his role as a leader in 1957. Clark's classic is regarded as Cool Struttin' but each date he led on Blue Note qualifies as a classic, including his final date, Sonny's Crib with John Coltrane. And though commercial success always eluded him, he was in demand as a sideman and played dozens of Alfred Lion-produced dates, including Tina Brooks' Minor Move. Luckily, Clark's contribution is well documented by Alfred Lion; he has achieved far more critical, musical, and popular acclaim than he ever did in life. ~bio by Thom Jurek

Blue Minor

Stephen Bishop - Romance In Rio

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 46:14
Size: 105.9 MB
Styles: Adult Contemporary, Soft rock
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[3:39] 1. Under The Jamaica Moon
[3:36] 2. On And On
[2:40] 3. Hello
[4:44] 4. Un Baile Del Corazon
[4:23] 5. Save It For a Rainy Day
[3:03] 6. Never Letting Go
[3:56] 7. Bish's Hideaway
[5:05] 8. Annalia
[3:39] 9. Take This Empty Heart
[3:32] 10. One More Night
[3:59] 11. Separate Lives
[3:53] 12. New York in the Fifties

Grammy award-nominated singer-songwriter Stephen Bishop joins legendary Brazilian guitarist Oscar Castro-Neves to conjure a sensual, tropical atmosphere — the sound of pure romance. Travel to the far shores of the heart's yearning with Romance in Rio.

"I've been a fan of Brazilian music for years," says Stephen Bishop. His exquisite songs have often evoked a tropical mood. But with "Romance in Rio," this Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter takes listeners to a private resort of the soul - shimmering with sensual, entrancing melodies and swaying rhythms. Romance in Rio means to have an earnest, heartfelt longing, especially for something or someone beyond reach," he explains of the album's title. It's a longing; it's much more than nostalgia."

With legendary Brazilian guitarist Oscar Castro-Neves (A.C. Jobim, Ella Fitzgerald, Stevie Wonder) and longtime Bishop collaborator Peter Bunetta sharing production duties, Bishop set out to evoke this feeling, selecting six classics from his catalog and six new songs for "Romance in Rio." In addition to such favorites as "On and On, " "Bish's Hidewaway," "Separate Lives (previously an Oscar-nominated #1 duet for Phil Collins and Marilyn Martin) and "Save It For A Rainy Day," Bishop delivers several lovely new compositions. With "Romance in Rio," Bishop's fans can enjoy what is perhaps his most intimate offering yet, an enticing soundtrack to the eternal dance of the heart.

Oscar Castro-Neves (guitar, keyboards, sampler); Gary Meek (woodwinds, saxophone); Don Grusin (piano, keyboards); Kevin Ricard (percussion).

Romance In Rio

Sandy Gardner - Everything I Love

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:27
Size: 111,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:33)  1. Walkin' After Midnight
(2:36)  2. I Like You, You're Nice
(3:14)  3. Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans
(4:19)  4. If You Could See Me Now
(2:19)  5. Tangerine
(3:11)  6. East of the Sun and West of the Moon
(4:03)  7. My Ship
(4:07)  8. Triste
(4:13)  9. Polkadots and Moonbeams
(2:47) 10. Love Is Here To Stay
(2:02) 11. Everything Happens To Me
(2:24) 12. Honeysuckle Rose
(3:10) 13. Don't Give Up On Me
(2:58) 14. I Thought About You
(3:25) 15. Everything I Love

A native of Tulsa, Oklahoma, Sandy Gardner began her musical career in church and school choirs. She played the part of Lisel in a Tulsa Little Theater production of The Sound Of Music. While at Oklahoma State University, Sandy performed with the Student Entertainers and was one of seven students selected to tour with the U.S.O. Her vocal talents were displayed as a finalist in both the Tulsa and Grand Lake preliminary pageants for The Miss America Scholarship Pageant. Sandy performed with several big bands while living in Colorado Springs.

When she married her favorite pianist, Chuck Gardner, she decided to broaden her musical career by studying the bass guitar. Now as an accomplished bassist, Sandy has worked as a vocalist and bassist with the Larry Herman Orchestra, Ed Geimer Orchestra, and the Nobuko Jazz Trio in San Antonio, Texas. While living in Cincinnati, Ohio, she performed as bassist with the Shirley Jester Trio, the late jazz guitarist, Cal Collins, and with the Herb Kirschner Trio. She was featured on Cincinnati Public Television in a tribute to Shirley Jester. She has been a featured vocalist in Tulsa at Mayfest , the Greenwood Jazz Festival, and the Tulsa Jazz Society's "Women in Jazz" Concerts. She performs as vocalist and bassist with "SCORE", a trio featured locally and provides back up for vocalist Chuck Cissel, CEO of the Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame. As a writer member of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP), Sandy has earned the respect of her fellow musicians as both a fine vocalist and bassist. She and Chuck have performed together in Colorado Springs, San Antonio, Las Vegas, Tulsa, and Cincinnati. http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/sgardner

Joe Pass - But Beautiful

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:28
Size: 173,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:58)  1. Autumn Leaves (feat. Bud Shank, Clare Fischer)
(4:00)  2. Ontem a Noite (feat. Bud Shank, Clare Fischer)
(3:36)  3. Sambinha (feat. Bud Shank, Clare Fischer)
(3:20)  4. Barquinho (feat. Bud Shank, Clare Fischer)
(2:39)  5. But Beautiful
(4:11)  6. Elizete (feat. Bud Shank, Clare Fischer)
(3:38)  7. Just Friends
(2:17)  8. Serenidade (feat. Bud Shank, Clare Fischer)
(3:55)  9. Gostoso (feat. Bud Shank, Clare Fischer)
(5:50) 10. Falling in Love with Love
(2:39) 11. Nancy Joe (feat. Gerald Wilson)
(5:10) 12. Projections
(4:23) 13. Moment of Truth (feat. Gerald Wilson)
(3:14) 14. Me & Groove (feat. Richard Groove Holmes, Les McCann Quartet)
(5:02) 15. It Could Happen to You (feat. Les McCann)
(5:48) 16. Black Groove (feat. Richard Groove Holmes, Les McCann Quartet)
(4:23) 17. Stay Loose
(6:16) 18. Offering Time (feat. Paul Bryant, Johnny Griffin)

Joe Pass did the near-impossible. He was able to play up-tempo versions of bop tunes such as "Cherokee" and "How High the Moon" unaccompanied on the guitar. Unlike Stanley Jordan, Pass used conventional (but superb) technique, and his Virtuoso series on Pablo still sounds remarkable decades later. Joe Pass had a false start in his career. He played in a few swing bands (including Tony Pastor's) before graduating from high school, and was with Charlie Barnet for a time in 1947. But after serving in the military, Pass became a drug addict, serving time in prison and essentially wasting a decade. He emerged in 1962 with a record cut at Synanon, made a bit of a stir with his For Django set, recorded several other albums for Pacific Jazz and World Pacific, and performed with Gerald Wilson, Les McCann, George Shearing, and Benny Goodman (1973). However, in general Pass maintained a low profile in Los Angeles until he was signed by Norman Granz to his Pablo label. 1973's Virtuoso made him a star and he recorded very prolifically for Pablo, unaccompanied, with small groups, on duo albums with Ella Fitzgerald, and with such masters as Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Oscar Peterson, Milt Jackson, and Dizzy Gillespie. Pass remained very active up until his death from cancer. Bio ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/artist/joe-pass-mn0000209773/biography

Rigmor Gustafsson - When You Make Me Smile

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:57
Size: 110,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:31)  1. Call Me Lonely
(3:02)  2. Forget About the Moonlight
(2:55)  3. A Different Kind
(3:36)  4. If Dreams Are Made of Sand
(5:03)  5. When You Make Me Smile
(3:46)  6. I Get Along
(3:44)  7. Nobody Does It Better
(4:11)  8. Stay, Stay, Valentines Day
(4:03)  9. Finally Falling in Love
(4:22) 10. Blind as a Bat
(3:10) 11. Woke Up On Sunday (In Saturday's Shoes)
(4:13) 12. Let It Go
(2:15) 13. Hymn

Rigmor Gustaffson's extensive discography, stretching back to 1997, has seen the Swedish vocalist working with major jazz musicians such as Jacky Terrasson and Eric Harland. When You Make Me Smile is her sixth album all of which have included "You" in the title. Gustafsson is a subtle vocalist no over-the-top melodrama or blues hollerin' here and this is a polished collection of songs. The album title and its cover photo of a smiling Gustafsson hint strongly at an upbeat, if sentimental, collection of pop-jazz songs. There's certainly plenty of examples "A Different Kind," "Blind As A Bat" and "Forget About The Moonlight" to name just three but Gustafsson also adds a couple of bluesy numbers and one or two slow, sad, songs. It all adds up to a collection with a wider stylistic and emotional range than the title and photo suggest. 

With the exception of Marvin Hamlisch and Carole Bayer Sager's "Nobody Does It Better" this is a set of original songs. Gustafsson provides the music to most of them, with lyrics by Tomas Bäcklund and Ollie Olson. Gustafsson's regular working trio Jonas Ostholm on piano, Martin Höper on bass and Jonas Holgersson on drums form a sympathetic musical center for these songs, aided and abetted by a strong set of guest players. Sweden's Dalasinfoniettan features on some of the songs, its appearances giving a lush romanticism to "Forget About The Moonlight" and "If Dreams Are Made Of Sand." Sweeping strings also suit the sadness of "Let It Go," a duet with Eagle-Eye Cherry (son of Don Cherry) and of "Hymn." The Dalasinfoniettan's contribution to "Nobody Does It Better," by contrast, is a little too lush Östholm, Höper and Holgersson all make considered and sympathetic contributions that get rather overwhelmed by the orchestra. 

The lovely waltz-time ballad "Call Me Lonely" and the slinky bossa nova of "When You Make Me Smile" (which features Magnus Lindgren's flute solo) have an immediate and lasting impact. So, too, do two songs with a small band accompaniment. "I Get Along" is a soulful blues enlivened by Jesper Nordenström's atmospheric organ playing. "Woke Up On Sunday [In Saturday's Shoes]" is another blues, but this time there's a bit more of an edge, lyrically and musically. Bäcklund's lyrics tell the tale of a lost weekend, the protagonist "still wearing Friday night's clothes." Holgersson and Höper keep things funky, as does guitarist Max Schultz, and Lindgren makes another welcome appearance, this time on clarinet. ~  Bruce Lindsay  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/when-you-make-me-smile-rigmor-gustafsson-act-music-review-by-bruce-lindsay.php#.VEaAgslNeKU
 
Personnel: Rigmor Gustafsson: vocals; Jonas Östholm: piano; Max Schultz: guitar; Jesper Nordenström: organ; Martin Höper: bass; Jonas Holgersson: drums; Calle Rasmusson: percussion; Eagle-Eye Cherry: vocals (12); Magnus Lindgren: tenor saxophone, clarinet, flute (3, 5, 11); Patrik Skogh: trumpet, flugelhorn: 3, 5, 9, 10); Karin Hammar: trombone (3, 5, 9, 10); Anders Wiborg: bass trombone (5, 9, 10); Jonas Nydesjö: conductor; Dalasinfoniettan.

Steve Lacy - Indian Blanket

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:45
Size: 109,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:48)  1. Johnny Came Lately
(3:12)  2. It Could Happen To You
(3:02)  3. Why Don't You Take Up the Piccolo?
(3:29)  4. Gee Baby
(2:38)  5. Out of Nowhere
(3:18)  6. Fidgety Feet
(3:05)  7. My Heart Is a Hobo
(3:51)  8. Indian Blanket
(3:10)  9. Potatoes
(3:00) 10. Some of These Days
(3:10) 11. You Stepped Out of a Dream
(3:18) 12. Rosetta
(2:04) 13. Let's Get Lost
(3:34) 14. Give Me the Simple Life

One of the great soprano saxophonists of all time (ranking up there with Sidney Bechet and John Coltrane), Steve Lacy's career was fascinating to watch develop. He originally doubled on clarinet and soprano (dropping the former by the mid-'50s), inspired by Bechet, and played Dixieland in New York with Rex Stewart, Cecil Scott, Red Allen, and other older musicians during 1952-1955. He debuted on record in a modernized Dixieland format with Dick Sutton in 1954. However, Lacy soon jumped over several styles to play free jazz with Cecil Taylor during 1955-1957. They recorded together and performed at the 1957 Newport Jazz Festival. Lacy recorded with Gil Evans in 1957 (they would work together on an irregular basis into the 1980s), was with Thelonious Monk's quintet in 1960 for four months, and then formed a quartet with Roswell Rudd (1961-1964) that exclusively played Monk's music; only one live set (for Emanen in 1963) resulted from that very interesting group.

Lacy, who is considered the first "modern" musician to specialize on soprano (an instrument that was completely neglected during the bop era), began to turn toward avant-garde jazz in 1965. He had a quartet with Enrico Rava that spent eight months in South America. After a year back in New York, he permanently moved to Europe in 1967 with three years in Italy preceding a move to Paris. Lacy's music evolved from free form to improvising off of his scalar originals. By 1977 he had a regular group with whom he continued to perform throughout his career, featuring Steve Potts on alto and soprano, Lacy's wife, violinist/singer Irene Aebi, bassist Kent Carter (later succeeded by Jean-Jacques Avenel), and drummer Oliver Johnson; pianist Bobby Few joined the group in the 1980s. Lacy, who also worked on special projects with Gil Evans, Mal Waldron, and Misha Mengelberg, among others, and in situations ranging from solo soprano concerts, many Monk tributes, big bands, and setting poetry to music, recorded a countless number of sessions for almost as many labels, with Sands appearing on Tzakik in 1998 and Cry on SoulNote in 1999. His early dates (1957-1961) were for Prestige, New Jazz, and Candid and later on he appeared most notably on sessions for Hat Art, Black Saint/Soul Note, and Novus. Lacy, who had been suffering with cancer for several years, passed away in June of 2004. His legacy continues to grow, however, as various live shows from throughout his career are issued. Bio ~ https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/steve-lacy/id53698#fullText

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Betty Johnson - Family Affair

Size: 105,7 MB
Time: 44:50
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1995
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Baubles, Bangles And Beads (2:24)
02. Let Me Love You (2:34)
03. How Deep Is The Ocean (2:56)
04. I'm Confessin' (2:32)
05. Speak Low (3:03)
06. The Very Thought Of You (Lydia Gray) (2:12)
07. Tea For Two (Elizabeth Gray) (2:48)
08. First Warm Day/My Love Is A Wanderer (2:55)
09. Mean To Me (Lydia Gray) (2:32)
10. So In Love (2:57)
11. S'wonderful/Time After Time (4:18)
12. Besame Mucho (3:24)
13. Autumn Leaves (3:03)
14. Spring Is Here (Lydia Gray) (3:01)
15. Today I Love Everybody (2:00)
16. In The Garden (2:02)

When Betty Johnson returned to the limelight in 1993 after a thirty-year pause, she reminded America that she had come from a singing-family tradition. A Family Affair, the first release of new Betty Johnson material after her comeback, featured prominently her daughters Lydia and Elisabeth. Professional singers in their own right, their lovely and sophisticated voices left no doubt that they dwelt vibrantly in the Johnson Family realm.

It was natural that Betty Johnson featured her daughters on the album as Betty herself had sung in a family fold as a child. Betty first touched audiences in the late 1930s and 1940s as a member of the popular Johnson Family Singers. Throughout the South and beyond, the Family sang sacred music with unchained enthusiasm, becoming one of the most popular family acts of the era.

In A Family Affair, Betty has carried on the tradition, bringing the Johnson Family sound into its seventh decade. Highlights from this collection include “The Very Thought of You,” “Today I Love Everybody,” and “How Deep is the Ocean” (which Betty sang on Arthur Godfrey’s Talent Scouts in the early 1950s).

Family Affair

Berdon Kirksaether & The Twang Bar Kings - Latenighters Under A Full Moon

Size: 88,8 MB
Time: 37:58
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Blues Jazz
Art: Front

01. Go Cat Go (4:29)
02. Cool Cats On The Move (2:53)
03. Conrad's Bar Bounty (3:18)
04. Rendezvous (3:28)
05. Jumping The Night Away (2:54)
06. Midnight Haze (3:22)
07. Another One Going Down (4:15)
08. Take It Away - Takeaway (3:39)
09. Pitstop By The River (3:10)
10. Walk And Your Feet Will Follow (3:33)
11. Latenighters Under A Full Moon (2:50)

It is really no longer appropriate to call American Music American. It is Global music and that is all it can be. Gone are those days when shellac and vinyl discs had to be exported. Music from anywhere on earth is as close as one's computer.

Norwegian blues? Why not? Guitarist and composer Berdon Kirksaether has made a cottage industry of it at home, first as part of the locally renowned CIA and now as leader of the trio, the Twang Bar Kings. The elaborately titled Latenighters Under a Full Moon turns out to be quite apropos in its conception.

This eleven-selection disc plays like a noir suite made up of moody and tense mini-suites. Kirksaether can seamlessly adopt any guitar personae or combinations thereof he wishes. "Conrad's Bar Bounty" could have been conceived and executed during a jam session between Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown and Kenny Burrell. "Rendezvous" could easily be Jim Hall covering a Jimmy Buffett song while "Midnight Haze" would have been welcome on any Santana recording.

A blues musician? Certainly, but that is not all of the tricks in Kirksaether's talent bag. On Latenighters, he achieves the near impossible by achieving so many disparate moods in seemingly seamless songs bound by little more than a harmonic spider web. Each piece flows gently into the next making the whole of this recording greater than the simple sum of its parts. ~C. Michael Bailey

Latenighters Under A Full Moon

Sara Renner - Shine The Light

Size: 83,8 MB
Time: 35:31
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals, Holiday
Art: Front

01. Joy To The World (4:05)
02. Angels From The Realms Of Glory (4:00)
03. Give Love (4:22)
04. This Christmas (3:37)
05. The Little Drummer Boy (3:56)
06. What A Blessed Child (4:10)
07. Come And Worship (Christ The Lord) (2:19)
08. Go Tell It On The Mountain (4:43)
09. The Christmas Song (4:15)

Sara Renner has shared her unique blend of Pop, Gospel & Jazz music in over 1000 churches, festivals and event centers in 30+ states and 10 countries. Based out of Minneapolis, Minnesota this award-winning songwriter and vocalist has produced four CDs and one live-concert DVD.

This CD went straight to the top of my Christmas music rotation. Having a substantial and varied selection, I don't always get through all of them and this one has already been played numerous times. The arrangements are fresh but not so radically different as to be almost unrecognizable as some artists tend to do. The heart of Christmas permeates the selections like the spices in mulled wine, which, by the way, is a great pairing with this CD! Well produced and arranged. A real treat to slow down with during the bustle of the season. All are worth a listen, but my favorites are "Joy to the World" and "What a Blessed Child." Two frozen thumbs up! ~Bruce T.

Shine The Light

Jack Van Poll - Just Friends (Live At The Crypt)

Size: 128,8 MB
Time: 55:20
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz: Piano Jazz
Art: Front

01. Just Friends (4:57)
02. Emily (5:40)
03. Have You Met Miss Jones (6:17)
04. In A Sentimental Mood (5:18)
05. Down Yonder (6:06)
06. Tulpen Uit Amsterdam (2:04)
07. I Cant Get Started (4:49)
08. You Are My Sunshine (7:18)
09. The Day You Left (4:01)
10. Blue Bossa (3:08)
11. Georgia On My Mind (5:37)

Jack van Poll was born in 1934 in Roosendaal, Holland. He started playing piano at the age of four.
After the liberation of the Second World War in 1945, he discovered the first Bebop tunes on V-discs and on the American Forces Network Channel. With his teen age trio "The Rose Valley's", he took part in the Dutch Jazz Competition in Amsterdam in 1946. From the early Fifties on, he backed up single artists from the U.S.A., who performed in Holland and Belgium, like Don Byas, Ben Webster, Johnny Griffin, Clark Terry, Tony Scott, Ted Curson, Buddy DeFranco and many others. In the late seventies he opened the "September Jazz Club" in Antwerp, Belgium. In 1984 he founded the "September Jazz Records" label. He joined the Lionel Hampton band on their East Coast Summer tour in 1985 and made his debut in Manhattan with Dee Dee Bridgewater that same year. He performed at many International Jazz Festivals; Antibes, Pori, Prague, JVC Jazz Festival NYC, Cork, San Sebastian, Grahamstown, NSJF The Hague, Vienna, Comblain La Tour, Cracow, Berlin, Milano and Zurich. Apart from playing piano and tenor sax, he composes, writes lyrics, presents his weekly radio program, teaches music, and is Editor for The Belgian Magazine "Jazz Mozaiek", writes Film Music and supports young musical talents.

Just Friends

Marc Pompe - Monk's Dream

Size: 100,6 MB
Time: 42:39
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. The Music Goes Round And Round (3:29)
02. Stranger In Paradise (3:20)
03. In The Still Of The Night (4:35)
04. Ask Me Now (5:49)
05. Estate (4:36)
06. My Chicago (3:35)
07. I've Got Your Number (3:36)
08. In A Sentimental Mood (5:49)
09. The Song Is You (3:08)
10. In The Wee Small Hours (4:38)

Personnel:
Marc Pompe– Vocals
Bob Ojeda – Arranger, conductor
Dennis Luxion– Piano
Nick Schneider – Bass
Bob Rummage – Drums
Eric Schneider – Alto saxophone
Greg Fishman – Tenor saxophone
Bill Overton – Alto/baritone saxophone
Jerry DiMuzio - Baritone saxophone
Bill Porter – Trombone
Mark Olen – Trumpet
Doug Scharf– Trumpet
Bob Ojeda – Trumpet

“He dreamed it was music he had to play.... he dreamed when he played, he would play his way,” sings Marc Pompe on the title cut of Monk’s Dream. And he means it. It’s been almost 50 years since he and best friend/mentor, legendary saxophonist Bob Centano dreamed about doing a big band recording together back in days of the “Taylor Street Little Italy” neighborhood of Chicago. Joining them was arranger/writer/trumpet player (and future Basie Band member), Bobby Ojeda. Over the years, the project remained a work in progress. But after the recent passing of Bob Centano, Pompe and Ojeda knew it was time to fulfill the dream in his honor. Monk’s Dream is an exquisite dream that has finally come true.

In this stunning recording, Marc Pompe blazes a trail through romance, adventure, lost and found love, passion and hope––and does it all with unbridled joy. Among the wittiest and most versatile performers in today’s world of jazz, the seasoned singer/pianist/lyricist/composer and all-around cool guy, showcases his amazing tapestry of vocal virtuosity in front of an 11-piece band of Chicago jazz all-stars. With wonderful and appealing arrangements by Bobby Ojeda, we are treated to an eclectic and colorful selection of bebop, ballads, bossanovas and burning swing. Driven by a great rhythm section, and powered by the ensemble work and inspired solos of an elite eight-man horn section, Ojeda has created the perfect platform for Pompe’s innovative and highly stylized vocals. Ranging from quirky, high energy phrasing to lush, heart-melting tenderness, Pompe makes every song his own.

Among the standouts on the album are “Estaté,” a sultry bossa nova which Pompe sings in Italian; “My Chicago,” by the late Joe Vessia, with newly updated and highly entertaining lyrics by Pompe; “The Music Goes Round and Round,” a 1930s hit given an adventurous new life by Ojeda’s high-energy arrangement and Pompe’s intense and humorous vocal. The songs that have an especially profound and emotional impact are the two Monk cuts. “Ask Me Now” is a showcase for Pompe’s ability to deliver a reflective lyric over an incredibly dense harmonic landscape. “Monk’s Dream” features Pompe’s punchy-yet-soulful phrasing, along with his super-articulated reading of the lyrics. The song has a rhythmic drive and melodic angularity that tells a mini biography of Monk’s life and approach to music, one that very much mirrors Pompe’s own.

This album is an instant Chicago classic. Everyone shines. Bobby Ojeda’s great arrangements, the top-notch band, and the sonic talents of engineer Steve Yates have all combined to deliver Marc Pompe’s long-time dream of a Taylor Street reunion. Monk’s Dream is indeed a dream come true. ~Reviewed by Judy Roberts

Monk's Dream

Anna Maria Sturm Quintett - Tales Of Woe

Size: 83,7 MB
Time: 35:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz Vocals, Standards
Art: Front

01. Ich Weib Nicht, Zu Wem Ich Gehore (2:35)
02. Help Me (4:56)
03. Indifferente (2:57)
04. Nature Boy (6:34)
05. I Fall In Love Too Easily (5:00)
06. Ces Petits Riens (3:51)
07. You Go To My Head (3:10)
08. Couleur Cafe (2:39)
09. You've Changed (4:14)

I have loved singing and making music ever since I can remember. Thanks to people like the following, I have now recorded some of my favorite jazz standards, Serge Gainsbourg chansons and German songs:
Louis Armstrong. I've discovered “What a Wonderful World” on a cassette when I was approximately 10 years old. I used to rewind it time after time.
Billie Holiday, whose voice I've heard when I was 16 years old and who has enchanted me.
Stan Getz and João Gilberto. I’ve listened to their album “Getz / Gilberto” with pianist Antônio Carlos Jobim and singer Astrud Gilberto when I was 17 years old. Since then, I've known for sure I want to sing.
Wanja Slavin, a saxophone player whom I've met by chance in a music shop in 2006. He has gotten me in contact with the musicians of this quintet and with music as such.
And my grandmother, who could play the piano wonderfully. When I was little, she used to say to me: “It makes me very sad, that none of my grandchildren sings!”

Tales Of Woe

Claudia Acuna - En Este Momento

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 47:46
Size: 109.3 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz vocals, Latin jazz
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[3:19] 1. El Cigarrito
[5:05] 2. Te Recuerdo Amanda
[4:11] 3. Tulum
[5:44] 4. That's What They Say
[4:15] 5. El Derecho De Vivir En Paz
[7:36] 6. Contigo En La Distancia
[3:59] 7. Cuando Vuelva A Tu Lado
[3:27] 8. Vuelvo Al Sur
[2:51] 9. Sueño Contigo
[7:14] 10. La Mentira (Se Te Olvida)

Claudia Acuña's first effort for Marsalis Music and fourth CD overall -- the previous on Max Jazz and two for the Verve label -- is a subdued recording, much more introspective and thoughtful. Due to the presence of acoustic guitarist Juancho Herrera, the mood is more serene and wistful, with words sung in Spanish save a single track done in English. Electric and acoustic pianist Jason Lindner is also much more reserved, in the backdrop and less forceful than he usually is, but no less distinctive. Where bassist Omer Avital and drummer Clarence Penn have worked with Acuña and Lindner for several years, it is very clear from the outset they all know exactly what to do in their subliminal roles. It seems these sensitive and reflective songs have been on Acuña's mind for some time. The Chilean born vocalist taps classic sources and material she knew during childhood, including music from Mexico, Uruguay, Argentina, and Cuba. More specifically, there are lyrics from her fellow Chilean, the freedom fighter and poet Victor Jara, and tunes of her own. Classic works by Jara, "El Cigarrito" and "Te Recuerdo Amanda," kick off the set, the former with clockwork rhythms via Penn swinging and swaying about before an atypical steely electric guitar solo from Herrera, the latter a yearning modal song in 5/4 time. Slow and somber respectively, "That's What They Say" -- sung in English -- is a tune of confusion and not belonging, while Jara's "El Derecho de Vivir en Paz" has Acuña and Herrera conferring in a retreat of reorganization, while the drifting "Contigo en la Distancia" retrospectively observes life from faraway locales. Branford Marsalis joins the group, playing soprano sax on his sole cameo, "Cuando Vuelvo a Tu Lado," while the ensemble goes deep into the dark blue spectrum for Astor Piazzolla's sad tango "Vuelvo a Sur." It takes the band nine tracks to step up their energy as on the bouncy, much more spirited "Sueño Contigo." Lindner is always more than able to play individualistically, no matter the tempo, mood, or underpinning required, and should be listened to with rapt attention. Because of the personal nature of this music, Acuña herself is not as pronounced or bold as on previous dates, but delivers the goods in a deliberate yet subtle manner. This is mood and moody music, suited to be played under cover of darkness, not romantic, not sanguine, definitely heartfelt, and rewarding in many ways that are far less obvious on the surface. ~Michael G. Nastos

En Este Momento

Neil Andersson - C'est Si Bon

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 50:28
Size: 115.5 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz, Gypsy Swing
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[3:42] 1. Bohème Auberge
[5:18] 2. Le Ciel Azur
[4:01] 3. Nuits De Saint Germaine Des Pres
[4:03] 4. Le Rive Gauche
[3:28] 5. Flèche D'or
[4:59] 6. Emerald City Blues
[4:48] 7. Tenderly
[5:14] 8. Douce Ambiance
[4:57] 9. Mélodie Au Crépuscule
[5:25] 10. C'est Si Bon
[4:28] 11. Stardust

Neil Andersson was born in Tacoma, WA and graduated from Wilson High School in1963. He received his Master of Fine Arts in painting and drawing from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, a BFA in painting from the University of Washington, and a BA in Art from the University of Puget Sound.

Neil started playing guitar in high school and in 1964 joined the famous Northwest rock group the Wailers. As a guitarist, he has done session work and played in many groups - recording for United Artists, Janus Records, Etiquette Records, and Modern Hot Records. He is a member of the Northwest Music Hall of Fame. In 1993 he began a collaboration with Dudley Hill that led to the formation of the jazz group Pearl Django; Pearl Django subsequently recorded 10 CDs and maintains its own record label, Modern Hot Records. Neil also released a solo disc, C’est si bon, as well as two collaborations with fellow guitarist Peter Pendras: Malibu Manouche and As the Crow Flies. In 2010 Neil retired from Pearl Django to focus on art and other musical endeavors.

C'est Si Bon

Luther Henderson - Clap Hands!

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 30:57
Size: 71.0 MB
Styles: Jazz-pop/Easy listening
Year: 1959/2012
Art: Front

[2:14] 1. Stay As Sweet As You Are
[2:25] 2. Out Of Nowhere
[2:36] 3. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
[3:10] 4. Three Little Words
[2:23] 5. The Honey Song
[3:11] 6. Sometimes I'm Happy
[2:22] 7. I Love Paris
[2:39] 8. Let's Fall In Love
[2:12] 9. A-Two-At-A-Time
[2:53] 10. Lover, Come Back To Me
[2:29] 11. Clap Hands, Here Comes Charley
[2:17] 12. I'll See You Again

Henderson developed into one of the main so-called "classical arms" of Duke Ellington, stepping in to score and arrange orchestrations that went beyond the big-band format. According to various biographical sources Henderson was not consistently satisfied with the credit he received for these contributions to the Ellington canon, a reoccurring theme in the story of one of the greatest jazz composers in which many sidemen, particularly horn players, claimed to have improvised riffs that were later copyrighted by the bandleader.

The inevitable career result is best described by Henderson biographer Devra DoWrite: "Luther Henderson is not a household name, not even a B-list celebrity in the eyes of the general public. Finding a publisher for his biography has been a lengthy and difficult process, but I am pleased to say that I have been offered a contract, am in negotiations right now, and hope to announce the signing very soon. Meanwhile, people are asking me 'Luther who?' and 'Why him?'"

From the '50s onward Henderson kept his own studios going for various arranging and conducting assignments. He worked with vocalists Eartha Kitt and Carmen McRae as well as performers from the world of musical comedy including the lovely Polly Bergen and the hilarious Victor Borge. Much of this work was done for the expanding television industry; Henderson contributed to the Playhouse 90 series and The Ed Sullivan Show, among other boob tube offerings. On Broadway he was associated with many hits: Flower Drum Song, Funny Girl, No No Nanette, Ain't Misbehavin', and Jelly's Last Jam among them.

Shortly before his death Henderson was named a National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master. He is not the same Luther Henderson who played trumpet on a handful of recordings from the '20s. ~excerpt from the bio by Eugene Chadbourne

Clap Hands!

The Oliver Gannon Quartet - That's What

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:55
Size: 144,2 MB
Art: Front

(7:19)  1. Jay's Blues
(5:51)  2. Bright Mississippi
(6:54)  3. Four Cats
(5:31)  4. Brooklyn
(7:23)  5. Goodbye Porkpie Hat
(9:04)  6. Stella By Starlight
(6:46)  7. That's What
(5:48)  8. Talk Of The Town
(8:16)  9. Soul Journey

Gannon's February 28, 2004 performance at the Cellar documented on That's What features pianist Miles Black, bassist Miles Hill and drummer Blaine Wikjord. There are three Gannon originals, two pieces by Black, a pair of standards (Victor Young's classic "Stella by Starlight and Jerry Livingston's "Talk of the Town ) and one apiece by Monk and Mingus. His choice of the unhackneyed "Bright Mississippi as the Thelonious Monk tune is an inspired one. Based on "Sweet Georgia Brown, the tune is one of the more obscure compositions in Monk's ouevre. It lives up to the first word in its title and includes some delightful paraphrases of other pieces by the Sphere-ical one as Black's solo takes off. Mingus's "Goodbye Porkpie Hat has long been a favorite with jazz guitarists. Gannon's version can stand with the best of them, as he takes the bittersweet paean to Lester Young at a medium lope, a shade faster than many folks have in the past, and conveys the joy as well as the pathos inherent in the melody. There's a deep blues bedrock underlying this interpretation. ~ Bill Bennett  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/mike-rud-live-from-lotusland-the-oliver-gannon-quartet-thats-what-by-bill-bennett.php#.VEGnohawTP8

Personnel: Oliver Gannon: guitar; Miles Black: piano; Miles Hill: bass; Blaine Wikjord: drums.

Madeleine Peyroux - Keep Me In Your Heart For A While: The Best Of Madeleine Peyroux CD 1 And CD 2

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:01 (CD 1)
Size: 128,4 MB (CD 1)
Time: 54:11 (CD 2)
Size: 128,5 MB (CD 2)
Art: Front

CD 1

(3:11)  1. Don't Wait Too Long
(3:26)  2. You're Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go
(3:14)  3. (Getting Some) Fun Out Of Life
(3:45)  4. Between The Bars
(3:29)  5. I'm All Right
(3:22)  6. La Vie En Rose
(4:23)  7. Half The Perfect World
(3:58)  8. Dance Me To The End Of Love
(4:01)  9. Smile
(4:01) 10. Once In A While
(3:58) 11. The Summer Wind
(3:53) 12. Careless Love
(3:55) 13. Guilty
(5:20) 14. Desperadoes Under The Eaves

CD 2

(3:10)  1. Changing All Those Changes
(2:56)  2. J'Ai Deux Amours
(5:22)  3. River Of Tears
(3:43)  4. The Things I’ve Seen Today
(4:38)  5. Damn The Circumstances
(4:12)  6. La Javanaise
(4:00)  7. The Kind You Can't Afford
(3:29)  8. Bye Bye Love
(4:49)  9. Walkin' After Midnight
(5:47) 10. Standing On The Rooftop
(5:14) 11. Instead
(3:35) 12. Keep Me In Your Heart
(3:10) 13. This Is Heaven To Me

Vocalist and composer Madeleine Peyroux has a stylistic reach well beyond that of jazz. Her only peer in this respect is Nora Jones. True, she has a great fascination with Billie Holiday, but she has managed to assimilate this influence into her own presence and parlay it into the para-jazz realm with intelligent programming and song choice. These have been the hallmark of Peyroux's art over her six recordings.

Peyroux's music is beautifully crafted and organic with more polish than late '90s Cassandra Wilson. The instrument choice on a given song is as carefully chosen as the song itself; careful programming being another hallmark of Peyroux's art. Her book is no rubber-stamp of the Great American Songbook, assaulted yet another time. Charlie Chaplin's "Smile" is the closest thing to a standard in this collection (from Half a Perfect World, (Rounder, 2006)). It is delivered with spare instrumentation and a gently strolling tempo.

Peyroux's cover of Edith Piaf's iconic "La Vie En Rose" is perfect in its sardonic spirit, begging the question why Piaf has not provided much more material to contemporary singers to interpret. Randy Newman's "Guilty" is given a sleek, Ray Charles circa 1963 strings treatment. Her singing is closely set among the elaborate instrumentation, bearing a slight sepia tone without sounding archival. Part of Peyroux's genius lies in her melding of the new and the old into something that is both new and familiar.

Notable are the inclusion of two Warren Zevon pieces, making Peyroux Zevon's biggest benefactor since Linda Ronstadt. "Desperados Under the Eaves" is delicately provocative, sung in a comely and humid fashion. This is grown-up Zevon, performed with intent and grace. "Keep Me in Your Heart," one of Zevon's last songs is given a plaintive treatment demonstrating the extent of Peyroux's evolution from the album opener, "Don't Wait Too Long." In an age when a "Best of" compilation is suspect in the absence of the 45 rmp record (downloads are meaningless), it says a lot to release a recording like this. A collection of Peyroux's best is long overdue. ~ C.Michael Bailey  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/keep-me-in-your-heart-for-a-while-the-best-of-madeleine-peyroux-madeleine-peyroux-rounder-records-review-by-c-michael-bailey.php#.VEaKqMlNeKU

Personnel: Madeleine Peyroux: vocals and guitar; Dean parks: guitars (1-3, 5, 6, 8-11, 13, 15); Larry Goldings: keyboards (1-3, 5, 9, 11, 15); David Piltch: bass (1-3, 5-8, 15); Jay Bellerose: drums (1-3, 5, 8-11, 15). Cyrus Chestnut: piano (4); Steve Kirby: bass; Leon Parker: drums; Sam Yahel: keyboards (6, 8, 10); Till Bronner: trumpet (6); Scott Amendola: drums (6, 8); Mark Ribot: guitar (7, 12); Regina Carter: violin (7); Charlie Giordano: accordion (7); Gary Foster: alto saxophone (8); Christopher Bruce: guitar (12); Charlie Drayton: drums (12); John Kirby: keyboards (12); Meshell Ndegcello: bass (12); Larry Klein: bass (13); Vinnie Colaluta: drums (13); Jim Beard; piano (13); Duke Vinnie: guitar, bass (14); Jane Scarpantoni: cello (14); Robert Burke: drums(14); Lee Thornberg: trumpet (15).

Keep Me In Your Heart For A While: The Best Of Madeleine Peyroux CD 1, CD 2

Sonny Criss - Saturday Morning

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:41
Size: 79,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:26)  1. Angel Eyes
(6:44)  2. Tin Tin Deo
(5:06)  3. Jeannie’s Knees
(6:41)  4. My Heart Stood Still
(5:02)  5. Saturday Morning
(5:39)  6. Until the Real Thing Comes Along

Just a week after recording the classic Criss Craft for Muse, altoist Sonny Criss made the nearly equal Saturday Morning for Xanadu. Assisted by the great bop pianist Barry Harris, bassist Leroy Vinnegar and drummer Lenny McBrowne, Criss performs four superior if often-overlooked standards ("Angel Eyes," "Tin Tin Deo," "My Heart Stood Still" and "Until Tthe Real Thing Comes Along"), his blues "Jeannie's Knees" and one of his better originals, "Saturday Morning." Criss, an underrated altoist who was instantly recognizable within three notes, was neglected during long portions of his career but he did leave behind several memorable recordings, such as this one. Recommended. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/saturday-morning-mw0001881966

Personnel: Sonny Criss (alto saxophone); Barry Harris (piano); Leroy Vinnegar (bass); Lenny McBrowne (drums)

Saturday Morning