Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Charles Rutherford's Jazz Pacific Orchestra - Note Walker

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:08
Size: 166,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:36)  1. Tenor Time
(8:04)  2. Rebel Rouser
(5:55)  3. Songs For Pepper
(3:14)  4. My Funny Valentine
(4:18)  5. Ornithology
(7:10)  6. Who Asked
(2:51)  7. All Of Me
(7:43)  8. Where Did Summer Go
(9:36)  9. Note Walker
(5:43) 10. Concord Blues For Blue
(4:09) 11. I Thought About You
(8:43) 12. Sambiana

Liner Note Author: Charles Rutherford.
Personnel includes: Christine Rosander (vocals); Jeff Jorgenson, Jerry Pinter (tenor saxophone); Brian Williams (baritone saxophone); Ron Stout, Bob Bennett, Kai Palmer (trumpet).
Personnel: Christine Rosander (vocals); Paul Bastin, Jeff Jorgenson, Brian Williams , Everett Carroll, Jerry Pinter (flute, saxophone); Bob Bennett, Kai Palmer, Don Clark, Ron Stout, Matt Fronke (trumpet, flugelhorn); Benjamin Olariu, Francisco Torres, Mike Zelazo, Corey Wicks, Len Wicks, Jim Boltinghouse (trombone); Bob Swaaely, Sy Eubank (piano); Eric Stiller (electric bass); Ray Price (drums).

JazzTimes (5/96, p.116) - "...Section work has that precision `pop!,' and when these guys HIT! it can be, almost, thrill enough to wake the dead."
Jazziz (10/95, p.38) - "...Rutherford's band is awesomely tight..."  http://www.cduniverse.com/productinfo.asp?pid=1462325&style=music

Natalie Jean - Natalie Jean

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:42
Size: 115,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:09)  1. You Are My Everything
(3:51)  2. Guitar
(4:24)  3. I Found You
(4:37)  4. Whiskey
(3:27)  5. My Man
(4:56)  6. In The Mood
(4:30)  7. Falling Again
(3:59)  8. Through With You
(3:44)  9. Misbehaving
(4:28) 10. I Surrender
(3:15) 11. Boxed
(4:16) 12. I'm Not Ready

Natalie Jean is excited to announce the much-anticipated release of her second album, titled simply, ‘Natalie Jean.’ Natalie Jean is a dynamic artist who grew up loving music.  She enjoyed singing with her Haitian father - who was also an artist himself - and her love for music further blossomed when she began to write her own poetry. Natalie takes inspiration from her daily life and hopes to touch the lives of others through her music. She is currently based in Kensington, MD. This year, Natalie Jean’s songs have received over 20 nominations, including the Artists in Music Awards, LA Music Awards, The Indie Music Channel Awards, The Indees, American Songwriting Awards, Hollywood Music and Media Awards, and the Akademia Music Awards.  She was named one of the Top Five Vocalists in the Singer Universe Vocalist of the Month for June 2014. Her album ‘Natalie Jean’ features a fiery collection of jazz and blues songs filled with passion such as ‘You Are My Everything’ and ‘My Man.’ Inspired by Lena Horne, Celine Dion, Billie Holiday, and Ella Fitzgerald, her beautiful voice and melodies will surely leave you wanting for more! Be sure to check her out live in upcoming shows near you.  http://www.natalie-jean.com/

Sammy Davis, Jr. - Lonely Is The Name

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1968
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 29:21
Size: 54,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:15)  1. Lonely Is The Name
(3:28)  2. Up Up And Away
(2:43)  3. The Good Life
(3:02)  4. Shake Shake Shake
(2:50)  5. We'll Be Together Again
(2:38)  6. Don't Take Your Time
(3:26)  7. Children, Children
(3:05)  8. Medley: Uptight / You've Got Your Troubles
(2:16)  9. All That Jazz
(2:34) 10. Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye

For Lonely Is the Name (1968), Sammy Davis, Jr. once again blended his interminable hipness with a batch of popular standards and fresh interpretations of selections that he had previously delivered in a distinctly different style. Although Davis' emphasis remained ensconced within orchestral and big band-backed melodies for a decidedly adult-oriented audience, his take on "Up, Up and Away" and the medley pairing Stevie Wonder's "Uptight" with "You've Got Your Troubles" is evidence that he was trying to broaden his appeal. Driving that point home is the sassy and swinging "Shake, Shake, Shake," which is arguably over the top when considering modern pop and soul music in 1968. The uptempo and soaring arrangement isn't unified when juxtaposed against the comparatively syrupy title track "Lonely Is the Name" or the cool and refined balladry of the noir-tinged "Children, Children." Those incongruities aside, this collection has a few bright moments, particularly on "We'll Be Together Again" and Cole Porter's ageless "Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye" both of which had been recorded by Davis and Laurindo Almeida (guitar) on their 1966 collaboration Sammy Davis, Jr. Sings/Laurindo Almeida Plays. Another revisitation is an unquestionable return to form on the Benny Carter composition "All That Jazz" from the motion picture A Man Called Adam (1966). Of course, Davis had starred in the film, but it was Mel Tormé's (vocal) be-boppin' that gave the number a boost in the context of the movie. Here, Davis gets his chance, taking the tune to a new and similarly jazzy place, giving the Velvet Fog a run for his money with his own deliciously improvised scat vocal. [In 2004 Collectors' Choice Music included Lonely Is the Name as one of their entries in the restoration of Davis' classic 1960s Reprise Records catalog.] ~ Lindsay Planer  http://www.allmusic.com/album/lonely-is-the-name-mw0000672032

Monday, November 3, 2014

Freddie Cole - Waiter, Ask The Man To Play The Blues

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 32:04
Size: 73.4 MB
Styles: Blues-jazz vocals
Year: 1964/2004
Art: Front

[2:18] 1. Waiter, Ask The Man To Play The Blues
[2:35] 2. Black Night
[2:34] 3. Rain Is Such A Lonesome Sound
[2:38] 4. Bye Bye Baby
[3:24] 5. Just A Dream
[2:16] 6. Muddy Water Blues
[2:39] 7. Black Coffee
[2:28] 8. The Joke Is On Me
[2:44] 9. I Wonder
[2:21] 10. This Life I'm Living
[3:41] 11. Blues Before Sunrise
[2:21] 12. I'm All Alone

Originally released either in 1956, according to Freddy Cole's official website, or 1964, per the reissue's information, Waiter Ask The Man to Play the Blues: Freddie Cole Sings & Plays Some Lonely Ballads isn't as the title might tempt one to think an exercise in despondent blues and wrist slashing. Actually, it has plenty of tight, low, sizzling bluesy swing.

Cab Calloway alumni Milt Hinton and Sam "The Man Taylor (the latter being the instrumental star of the session) are the most notable musicians in the quintet. Cole sings and plays the piano in fine form, Osie Johnson offers smartly played drumming, and Barry Galbraith and Wally Richardson split the guitar duties. The New York recording is a product of its time, with assured long-lasting worth nonetheless. All of the cuts are short and to the point. They do, however, generate interest and radiate musicality.

"Muddy Water Blues is a cool, yet engaging percussive piece with a characteristic blues march. Taylor seems eager to jump in until he does exactly that about halfway through with energetic aplomb and swing. This one is a jumping jive that would make an audience clap with abandon.

On "I Wonder, Cole sweetens the pot with his tasteful piano playing on a mellow blues, Hinton lays back ever so strong, Taylor seduces with his classic jazzy saxophone tone, and Johnson eats this romantic cooker up. "Black Night and "Rain is Such A Lonesome Sound are similar in scope, extension, and sonic character. On both of these numbers, particularly the second, you'll find yourself marking time with your feet or snapping your fingers to the steady beat.

This release is a superb example of urban settled and cosmopolitan blues arousing affection through sheer straightforwardness even when as expected of the blues many of the lyrics are thematically inclined to the loneliest travails of love and life. ~Javier AQ Ortiz

Bass: Milt Hinton. Drums: Osie Johnson. Guitar: Barry Galbraith & Wally Richardson. Piano & vocal: Freddy Cole. Tenor sax: Sam "The Man" Taylor.

Waiter, Ask The Man To Play The Blues

Carte Blanche - S/T

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 52:01
Size: 119.1 MB
Styles: Standards, Jazz/pop
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[3:18] 1. After You've Gone
[3:22] 2. Loca
[3:37] 3. Raphael
[3:39] 4. Corcovado
[3:29] 5. Milord
[4:25] 6. Chan Chan
[7:09] 7. God Bless The Child
[3:19] 8. Cucurrucucu
[2:40] 9. Cette Nuit La
[4:26] 10. As Time Goes By
[2:55] 11. Quizas, Quizas, Quizas
[2:27] 12. On A Slow Boat To China
[4:09] 13. Preciso Me Encontrar
[2:58] 14. Padam Padam

NYC based 6-piece jazz ensemble Carte Blanche breathes new life into jazz classics from around the world. Effortlessly transitioning from 20’s and 30’s American jazz standards to 40’s Parisian swing, bossa nova, cumbia, Russian, Yiddish, and Italian selections, the band’s dynamic and engaging act is a time capsule filled with vintage international musical gems- many of them rarely heard live. The group also incorporates original compositions, offering a modern twist on the tried and true styles of the 20’s 30’s and 40’s. The band features Spanish born, Mexican/American raised vocalist Cristina Kaminis whose unusual and sultry vocal quality captures the essence of the era, and enchants audiences with her impressive knack for languages and musical styles; easily flowing from Edith Piaf to Buena Vista Social Club renditions. The ensemble’s versatile instrumentation featuring accordion and violin has a rich and captivating sound that is powered by a tight rhythm section. With their stunning white vintage accoutrements, they have developed a large group of devoted fans around the globe who love them as much for their look as for their commitment to preserving the music of a by-gone era.

Carte Blanche

Bob Wilber - Bean: Bob Wilber's Tribute To Coleman Hawkins

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 59:57
Size: 137.2 MB
Styles: Mainstream jazz
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[4:21] 1. The Man I Love
[3:03] 2. Netcha's Dream
[4:03] 3. Crazy Rhythm
[2:45] 4. Buh-De-Daht
[4:28] 5. Low Flame
[3:24] 6. Avalon
[2:56] 7. Stuffy
[3:10] 8. Romanza
[3:35] 9. Spotlite
[2:35] 10. Just A Gigolo
[4:02] 11. Tenderly
[3:09] 12. Pick-Up Boys
[4:34] 13. Bean N' Soul
[2:52] 14. Stumpy
[3:23] 15. When Day Is Done
[3:14] 16. Feedin' The Bean
[4:16] 17. Flight Of The Hawk

Bob Wilber, Harry Allen, Antti Sarpila, Tommy Whittle, tenor saxophones ; Mick Pyne, piano ; Dave Cliff, guitar ; Dave Green, bass ; Clark Tracey, drums.

Throughout his long career, Bob Wilber has done a lot to keep classic jazz alive. A bit misplaced (most jazz players of his generation were much more interested in bop and hard bop), Wilber (along with Kenny Davern, Ralph Sutton, and Dick Wellstood) was one of the few in his age group to stick to pre-bop music. In high school he formed a band that included Wellstood, and as a teenager he sat in at Jimmy Ryan's club in New York. Early on he became Sidney Bechet's protégé and led his own young group, the Wildcats (with whom he made his recording debut). The close association with the dominant Bechet led to a bit of a personality crisis in the 1950s as Wilber sought to find his own voice. He studied with Lennie Tristano and formed the Six, a group that tried to modernize early jazz. When that ended, he played Dixieland with Eddie Condon, and in 1957 joined Bobby Hackett's band for a year. Wilber freelanced throughout the 1960s, in 1968 became a founding member of the World's Greatest Jazz Band, and in 1973 he formed Soprano Summit with Kenny Davern, one of the top swing-oriented groups of the decade. A few years later the band broke up and Wilber teamed up with his wife, singer Pug Horton, in Bechet Legacy (which also featured either Glenn Zottola or Randy Sandke on trumpet).

In addition, Bob Wilber has worked with the New York Jazz Repertory Company, released music on his own Bodeswell label, wrote the authentic soundtrack to the movie The Cotton Club (1984), in 1988 led a band at Carnegie Hall to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Benny Goodman's famous concert, and authored his frank memoirs, Music Was Not Enough. Influenced on soprano, clarinet, and alto by respectively Bechet, Goodman, and Johnny Hodges, Wilber has long had his own sound on each of his instruments. He recorded frequently through the years for many labels, including Arbors in the '90s and 2000s. ~ bio by Scott Yanow

Bean: Bob Wilber's Tribute To Coleman Hawkins

Richie Beirach & Laurie Antonioli - The Duo Session

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:42
Size: 120,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:08)  1. Flamenco Sketches
(4:39)  2. You And The Night And The Music
(6:22)  3. Blue in Green
(4:48)  4. Green Dolphin Street
(4:37)  5. New Souls
(3:59)  6. The Island
(5:02)  7. Moonlake (Nightlake)
(4:36)  8. You Don't Know What Love Is
(5:01)  9. Sounds From Your Heart (Elm)
(7:25) 10. Memories, Dreams & Reflections

Recorded in 1992 in San Francisco, this session of piano/vocal duets features a silky-smooth singer in performance with an expressive pianist. Their warm, endearing approach brings you into their circle with open arms and a heartfelt embrace. Together, the two artists interpret moody standards, hip reflections, and searing originals with candor. Laurie Antonioli's clear alto voice and extensive vocal range allow her to express ideas and emotions freely and accurately. What she's thinking is what comes out naturally. Partnering with Beirach, she's confident and convincing. Richie Beirach's consonant harmonies and lush undercurrents provide a kind of acoustic depth that fills the room. His shadows cast far and wide. Each piece finds the pianist as musical partner to the vocalist, sharing in the experience with a lot to say. They give "Green Dolphin Street" a moody texture and "Flamenco Sketches" a dreamy whirl. Miles Davis had passed away the year before this date, and he was surely looking down from above with a smile. 

The session runs solemn and moody, befitting the legacy that the trumpeter left behind. Beirach and Antonioli collaborated on several original numbers, pouring the same heartfelt emotion into each one. They prefer slower pieces that allow ample room for patient expression. Their "Memories, Dreams & Reflections" summarizes the performance through its creative infusion and unique duet interaction. Today, Antonioli is head of the Vocal Jazz Department at KUG University in Graz, Austria and Beirach is head of the Jazz Piano Department at Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy in Leipzig, Germany. They're working together again in live performance. It's time they recorded a few more duo albums to let a worldwide audience enjoy the spirit of their work. Surely any followup to this highly recommended album would feature the same wholesome music. ~ Jim Santella  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-duo-session-richie-beirach-nabel-review-by-jim-santella.php#.VFKxVslZi5g
Personnel: Richie Beirach: piano; Laurie Antonioli: vocals.

The Duo Session

Oscar Pettiford - Hit That Jive

Styles: Jazz, Bop
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:21
Size: 143,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:00)  1. But Not for Me
(5:41)  2. Indiana
(4:54)  3. Summertime
(4:52)  4. Stuffy
(5:51)  5. Low Idea
(7:03)  6. This Side Up
(4:47)  7. Poor Butterfly
(5:35)  8. Sophisticated Lady
(5:23)  9. O.P.
(3:35) 10. Hit That Jive
(5:33) 11. Blues in the Closet
(2:31) 12. Treffpunkt Blues
(3:30) 13. A Smooth One

Oscar Pettiford was (along with Charles Mingus) the top bassist of the 1945-1960 period, and the successor to the late Jimmy Blanton. In addition, he was the first major jazz soloist on the cello. A bop pioneer, it would have been very interesting to hear what Pettiford would have done during the avant-garde '60s if he had not died unexpectedly in 1960. After starting on piano, Pettiford switched to bass when he was 14 and played in a family band. He played with Charlie Barnet's band in 1942 as one of two bassists (the other was Chubby Jackson) and then hit the big time in 1943, participating on Coleman Hawkins' famous "The Man I Love" session; he also recorded with Earl Hines and Ben Webster during this period. Pettiford co-led an early bop group with Dizzy Gillespie in 1944, and in 1945 went with Coleman Hawkins to the West Coast, appearing on one song in the film The Crimson Canary with Hawkins and Howard McGhee. Pettiford was part of Duke Ellington's orchestra during much of 1945-1948 (fulfilling his role as the next step beyond Jimmy Blanton), and worked with Woody Herman in 1949. Throughout the 1950s, he mostly worked as a leader (on bass and occasional cello), although he appeared on many records both as a sideman and a leader, including with Thelonious Monk in 1955-1956. After going to Europe in 1958, he settled in Copenhagen where he worked with local musicians, plus Stan Getz, Bud Powell, and Kenny Clarke. Among Pettiford's better-known compositions are "Tricotism," "Laverne Walk," "Bohemia After Dark," and "Swingin' Till the Girls Come Home." Bio ~ https://itunes.apple.com/br/artist/oscar-pettiford/id2625844#fullText

Oscar Peterson & Roy Eldridge - Oscar Peterson Mets Roy Eldridge

Styles: Piano and Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1975
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:00
Size: 98,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:44)  1. Little Jazz
(7:34)  2. She's Funny That Way
(6:21)  3. The Way You Look Tonight
(5:44)  4. Sunday
(7:32)  5. Bad Hat Blues
(5:16)  6. Between The Devil And The Deep Blue Sea
(5:45)  7. Blues For Chu

Part of his five sessions that featured duets with different trumpeters, pianist Oscar Peterson's matchup with trumpeter Roy Eldridge (reissued on CD) has its strong moments. Eldridge did not quite have the range of his earlier years, but his competitive streak had not mellowed with age. Peterson pushes Eldridge to his limit and the music is generally quite exciting. Highlights include "Little Jazz," "Sunday," and "Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea." ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/oscar-peterson-roy-eldridge-mw0000087839

Reuben Wilson - The Godfathers Of Groove

Styles: Soul Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:08
Size: 142,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:14)  1. The Okiedokie
(6:46)  2. Flipity Flop
(7:21)  3. Sweet Home Chicago
(8:19)  4. My Father's Song
(6:47)  5. Long Live New Orleans
(4:51)  6. Everday I Have The Blues
(7:59)  7. Summer Sun
(6:09)  8. People Get Ready
(8:37)  9. Just My Imagination

The godfathers of groove are an All-Star group comprised of Reuben Wilson on the Hammond B3, Bernard "Pretty" Purdie on drums, and Grant Green Jr. on guitar. In the late 60s, organist Reuben Wilson began ascending to his current status as a "godfather" of acid-jazz with "On Broadway", the first in a string of albums for Blue Note Records. With these recordings Wilson revealed a command of funk that helped redefine the soul jazz movement created by the likes of Jimmy Smith, Jimmy McGriff and Richard "Groove" Holmes. Bernard Purdie was born June 11, 1939 in Elkton, Maryland as the eleventh of fifteen children.  At 14 years of age he purchased his first real drum set and became the most important provider for the family - earning his pay with country and carnival bands.   Purdie moved to New York in 1960 and played with (among others), Lonnie Youngblood before landing his first hit with King Curtis. This led to his engagement with Aretha Franklin in 1970 - the beginning of an unparalleled career.

Since then, Purdie has been a regular guest in the studios of the stars of Jazz, Soul, and Rock, working together with Paul Butterfield, Larry Coryell, Miles Davis, Hall & Oates, Al Kooper, Herbie Mann, Todd Rundgren and Cat Stevens, Steely Dan's "Aja", Isaac Hayes, Donny Hathaway, B.B. King, "Sweet" Lou Donaldson, Joe Cocker and Hank Crawford to name a just a few.  No other drummer in the last three decades has seen the interior of a recording studio as often as Bernard "Pretty" Purdie. Purdie has laid down the beat on over 3000 albums to date. As the son of legendary jazz guitarist Grant Green (1931-1979), Grant Green Jr. was exposed to exceptional musicianship and superb guitar playing right from the start. Growing up in the Palmer Woods section of Detroit, Grant enjoyed a constant parade of jazz greats streaming through his living room and at the tender age of five, with his hands barely big enough to grasp the guitar, Grant Jr. played his first chords.  Grant eventually settled in New York City where he fine-tuned his craft in the many blues and jazz clubs throughout Manhattan. His ability to blend funky grooves with the melodic soul-jazz and blues made him a popular session player and musician's musician.  http://www.jwpjazz.com/masters.html

Sunday, November 2, 2014

Yuko Ito - Mania De Voce

Size: 106,4 MB
Time: 45:39
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2009
Styles: Brazilian Rhythms
Art: Front

01. Berimbau (4:16)
02. Corcovado (4:48)
03. Ela E Carioca Smile (4:44)
04. Garota De Ipanema (3:37)
05. Magamalabares (3:41)
06. Mania De Voce (4:52)
07. Dindi (5:00)
08. Qui Nem Jilo (4:27)
09. Flor De Lis (4:29)
10. Agua De Beber (5:40)

Yuko Ito's new CD Mania De Você represents her profound respect and love for Brazilian music with renditions of classic works by Antonio Carlos Jobim, Djavan, Luiz Gonzaga, Rita Lee, Carlinhos Brown and Baden Powell. Mania De Você represents how a little hard work, determination, and passion can make one capable of turning a dream into a reality.
Yuko grew with her rebellious rock attitude into a mature songstress and it shows on her recent release. Yuko Ito, originally from Japan, has evolved into a born again Brazilian New Yorker.

Mania De Voce

Joey DeFrancesco - Home For The Holidays

Size: 138,4+100,6 MB
Time: 59:08+40:01
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz, Holiday
Art: Front

CD 1: The Party
01. Mistletoe And Holly (3:01)
02. Home For The Holidays (4:36)
03. Baby It's Cold Outside (4:03)
04. Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas (4:23)
05. The Twelve Days Of Christmas (6:42)
06. What Are You Doing New Year's Eve Backup (4:16)
07. Christmas At 3 A.M (4:45)
08. Rudolph The Red Nosed Reindeer (4:48)
09. Santa Claus Is Coming To Town (3:36)
10. The Christmas Song (5:15)
11. Merry Christmas Baby (4:21)
12. I'll Be Home For Christmas (4:50)
13. Blue Christmas (4:26)

CD 2: The Tradition
01. Joy To The World (2:21)
02. O Little Town Of Bethlehem (4:09)
03. It Came Upon A Midnight Clear (4:01)
04. We Three Kings (4:46)
05. O Come All Ye Faithful (2:45)
06. Silent Night (5:12)
07. What Child Is This (5:24)
08. Away In A Manger (3:15)
09. The First Noel (3:58)
10. O Holy Night (4:05)

Keyboardist Joey DeFrancesco will release his first Christmas album, Home for the Holidays, Oct. 28 on JD Music on October 28. The recording, jointly produced by Joey and his wife Gloria DeFrancesco, is a double album featuring traditional Christmas songs such as “Rudolph The Red Nosed Reindeer,” “Merry Christmas Baby,” “Santa Claus Is Coming To Town” and “Blue Christmas” plus new, original DeFrancesco compositions: the title track, “Home for the Holidays,” and “Christmas at 3 a.m.”

On various tracks DeFrancesco performs solo, with his trio, quartet and quintet. The core Trio comprises guitarist Jeff Parker, drummer George Fludas and DeFrancesco on Hammond organ, with guest musicians in other configurations including John Webber on bass, Jerry Weldon and George Coleman Sr. on tenor saxophones, and George Coleman Jr. on drums. Two songs recorded in California, “I’ll Be Home For Christmas” and “The Twelve Days of Christmas,” feature Roman Banda (drums), Jose ‘Papo’ Rodriguez (percussion), Steve Wilkerson (flute) and Tony Banda (bass). DeFrancesco also plays piano and trumpet, and sings on “Blue Christmas” and “Merry Christmas Baby.”

Home For The Holidays CD 1
Home For The Holidays CD 2

Carmen McRae - Classics

Size: 113,8 MB
Time: 48:47
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. Blue Moon (2:33)
02. Yardbird Suite (1:56)
03. How Long Has This Been Going On (4:03)
04. Invitation (2:51)
05. Bye Bye Blackbird (3:24)
06. Baltimore Oriole (3:50)
07. Summertime (2:57)
08. My Funny Valentine (4:19)
09. I Was Doing All Right (2:46)
10. Bob White (2:54)
11. Isn't It Romantic (3:01)
12. Skylark (3:00)
13. A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square (4:57)
14. Body And Soul (3:34)
15. You Took Advantage Of Me (2:36)

Carmen McRae always had a nice voice (if not on the impossible level of an Ella Fitzgerald or Sarah Vaughan) but it was her behind-the-beat phrasing and ironic interpretations of lyrics that made her most memorable. She studied piano early on and had her first important job singing with Benny Carter's big band (1944), but it would be another decade before her career had really gained much momentum. McRae married and divorced Kenny Clarke in the '40s, worked with Count Basie (briefly) and Mercer Ellington (1946-1947), and became the intermission singer and pianist at several New York clubs. In 1954 she began to record as a leader' and by then she had absorbed the influences of Billie Holiday and bebop into her own style. McRae would record pretty steadily up to 1989 and, although her voice was higher in the '50s and her phrasing would be even more laid-back in later years, her general style and approach did not change much through the decades. Championed in the '50s by Ralph Gleason, McRae was fairly popular throughout her career. Among her most interesting recording projects were participating in Dave Brubeck's the Real Ambassadors with Louis Armstrong, cutting an album of live duets with Betty Carter, being accompanied by Dave Brubeck and George Shearing, and closing her career with brilliant tributes to Thelonious Monk and Sarah Vaughan. Carmen McRae, who refused to quit smoking, was forced to retire in 1991 due to emphysema. She recorded for many labels including Bethlehem, Decca (1954-1958), Kapp, Columbia, Mainstream, Focus, Atlantic (1967-1970), Black Lion, Groove Merchant, Catalyst, Blue Note, Buddah, Concord, and Novus. ~Biography by Scott Yanow

Classics

Charlie Rouse - Yeah!

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 57:12
Size: 131.0 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz, Hard Bop
Year: 1961/2010
Art: Front

[6:26] 1. You Don't Know What Love Is
[5:59] 2. Lil Rousin'
[6:14] 3. Stella By Starlight
[8:39] 4. Billy's Blues
[4:41] 5. Rouse's Point
[6:21] 6. (There Is) No Greater Love
[5:48] 7. When Sunny Gets Blue
[5:49] 8. Quarter Moon
[7:11] 9. I Should Care

Tenor saxophonist Charlie Rouse is best known for his work with Thelonious Monk, playing with the enigmatic pianist and composer during Monk's Columbia years from 1959 until 1970. Rouse's sound with Monk was so fluid and smooth that's it's easy to forget how many eccentric, jagged turns he had to navigate night after night, and that Rouse did it with quiet, steady grace is a testament both to his sax playing and to the space Monk built into his puzzle box compositions. Rouse headed up few sessions on his own as a bandleader, but as this calm, workmanlike set, recorded in 1960 and originally released in 1961 on Epic Records, clearly shows, he could rise to the occasion. Working with a rhythm section of Dave Bailey on drums, Peck Morrison on bass, and Billy Gardner on piano (this was actually Gardner's debut in a recording studio), Rouse's sax lines seem to float effortlessly over the top of things, feeling less urgent and angular than his work with Monk. Highlights include the opener, "You Don't Know What Love Is," the Gardner composition "Billy's Blues," and the pretty ballad, "(There Is No) Greater Love," that closes things out. It's all very pleasant, falling to the easy side of the hard bop spectrum with very few rough edges or surprises. Rouse arguably was at his best as a solid supporting player, but this session has its moments, and it shows a more romantic, gliding side to Rouse than was usually on display with Monk. Everything here on this Japanese reissue was included in Epic's Unsung Hero release, which also added three additional tracks, making it a marginally better purchase than this one. ~Steve Leggett

Yeah!

Judy Carmichael - I Love Being Here With You

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 54:07
Size: 123.9 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[5:47] 1. I Can't Give You Anything But Love
[3:17] 2. If Dreams Come True
[4:32] 3. I Don't Know Enough About You
[5:58] 4. Say It Isn't So
[8:48] 5. Why Can't You Behave
[2:44] 6. This Can't Be Love
[6:19] 7. Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me
[3:43] 8. I Love Being Here With You
[5:26] 9. The Lamp Is Low
[2:53] 10. Somebody Loves Me
[4:35] 11. Talk To Me

Judy’s first all-vocal CD and her first time giving the piano duties to someone else, in this case the great Mike Renzi, who played for Mel Tormé, Peggy Lee, Liza and all those wonderful Muppets, as Musical Director for Sesame Street.

As Judy says in the liner notes: “People who know my music, think of me as the gal who plays upbeat, energetic, stride piano. A few of my close pals know I’m also a fan of juicy ballads, early musicals, cheeky lyrics and swinging’ standards. This recording gave me a chance to connect with these other areas of my musical passions.”

Judy Carmichael: Vocals; Mike Renzi: Piano; Harry Allen: Tenor Sax; Jay Leonhart: Bass.

I Love Being Here With You

Joe Carter - The Samba Rio Trio

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 52:37
Size: 120.5 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz, Brazilian jazz
Year: 1997
Art: Front

[4:46] 1. Insensatez (How Insensitive) (feat. Nilson Matta; Portinho)
[6:10] 2. Paraty (feat. Nilson Matta; Portinho)
[4:47] 3. Alvorado (Dawn)
[6:12] 4. Lamento No Morro (feat. Nilson Matta; Portinho)
[5:26] 5. This Is For Luisa (feat. Nilson Matta; Portinho)
[5:17] 6. Samba Contente (Joyful Samba) (feat. Nilson Matta; Portinho)
[4:12] 7. Se E Tarde Me Perdoa (If It Is Too Late, Please Forgive Me)
[5:58] 8. Sonho De Marina (Dream of Marina) (feat. Nilson Matta; Portinho)
[4:26] 9. Fungi Mama (feat. Nilson Matta; Portinho)
[5:57] 10. Amor Em Paz (Once I Loved)/ Inutil Paisagem (Useless Landscape)

This set features beautiful and expertly played Brazilian jazz as performed by guitarist Joe Carter, bassist Nilson Malta, and drummer Portinho. Several Jobim songs, Blue Mitchell's "Fungii Mama," and a couple Carter originals are in the repertoire, with each of the tunes featuring strong melodies, pretty guitar, and close interplay between the musicians. All of Joe Carter's recordings are tasteful and rewarding, and this one is no exception. ~ Scott Yanow

Joe Carter (guitar); Nilson Matta (bass); Portinho (drums). Recorded at Sorceror Sound, New York, New York on November 6 & 7, 1993 and Rosewood Music, Greenwich, Connecticut.

The Samba Rio Trio

Jessica Lalonde - Spinning Daydreams

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:43
Size: 102,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:46)  1. Taking A Chance On Love
(3:58)  2. Imagine That
(4:34)  3. Until The Real Thing Comes Along
(4:05)  4. Isn't It Romantic
(3:42)  5. On A Slow Boat To China
(5:48)  6. It Might As Well Be Spring
(4:01)  7. Begin The Beguine
(4:21)  8. Whispering Grass
(4:09)  9. I'll Be Seeing You
(2:46) 10. Not A Care In The World
(4:26) 11. You Belong To Me

Jessica Lalonde has gone from singing since early childhood in local music festivals to making her dreams of a music career come true. With such a distinct voice, genuine natural talent and undeniable beauty, she is almost surprisingly down to earth for someone with such abilities. Leading up to the launch of her upcoming debut CD of jazz covers, she has been on a unique musical journey, making her an exceptional and already accomplished artist, who is very hard to label. A native of Midland, Ontario, Lalonde has spent her life following her passion for music, which has often led her in many different directions. She grew up with parents that listened to classic rock, yet she gravitated more towards her grandparent’s taste in music for the big band era. Soon Lalonde discovered Billie Holiday which was a very pivotal moment for her. “I literally became obsessed with her and then my musical voyage went from there,” she says. “Billie was a major influence for sheer emotional power for me.” She then also immersed herself in the music of other dynamic female artists such as Ella Fitzgerald, Jo Stafford, Helen Forrest and Nina Simone; and developed a love for opera and classical music along the way. “First and foremost, I just realized that I loved to sing,” she reflects. “Taking in a variety of genres and influences to this day keeps everything fresh for me.” While in high school an invitation from her music teacher to come do a song with the acclaimed Music Maker’s Big Band that he was part of, turned into much more than that, after the 15 year old Lalonde blew away the other skeptical band members to earn herself the permanent vocalist position. Performing with an actual big band was such a thrill and motivated her further into pursuing a life of music. 

Over the years, Lalonde has been a featured soloist at various charity venues, galas and choral concerts. She was part of the world première broadcast of Craig Galbraith’s The Spell of the Rose on CBC Radio Two’s “New Hours” and in 2006, she was the winner of the Laurier Concerto Competition, the Stratford Civic Orchestra’s Concerto Competition and the recipient of the Keith Knights Memorial Award for Performance at Laurier.Lalonde completed her Bachelor of Music in Voice Performance and attained her Opera Diploma at Wilfrid Laurier University where she studied under the direction of mezzo-soprano, Kimberly Barber. In the summer of 2007, she even traveled to Italy and participated in the renowned Centro Studi Lirica opera programme, under the direction of Joan Patenaude-Yarnell. While at Laurier, she held the title role in Puccini’s Suor Angelica and performed La Princesse in Ravel’s L’enfant et les sortilèges, Lady Billows in Albert Herring and Sarah Good in The Crucible.“It occurred to me that by studying opera I could learn to sing better and develop a fuller vocal range,” comments Lalonde. “As well, I was always drawn to artists and songs that really told stories and the world of opera is built around understanding the roles you play and stories you tell. This has definitely made me a stronger performer and more emotionally in touch with the songs I am singing.” While at Laurier, she had the opportunity to create the role of ‘Rebecca Reid’ in the première of a new Canadian opera, To Daniel, by Glenn James. “The experience was so collaborative,” Lalonde enthuses. 

“To actually be able to help develop the character was incredibly liberating. It made me want to have more creative input in what I was doing and brought me back to the jazz and crooner style of music that I always seemed to relate to the most.” In late 2007, when Lalonde made the decision to move to Toronto, she re-connected with life long family friend Rob Brooks and suddenly everything just fell into place. Brooks with over 36 years of music business experience, including 30 with international music giant EMI, was quick to sign her to his company, Bloo&Wite management. Soon after he arranged for her to meet with Bill King, one of Canada’s most respected jazz musicians. The two immediately hit it off and plans to record an album of jazz styled songs with a nostalgic feel began. “Bill King has really created a flourishing environment for many young artists to find their direction and their voice,” says Lalonde. “I feel so privileged to be developing a project I’m so passionate about with people that share a similar vision and know how to make it all happen.” This extends to the musicians that she got to work with on this album, which not only includes King (who is arranging and producing the album), but also some of Canada’s other most sought after players such as: Kevin Breit (Norah Jones, kd lang, Cassandra Wilson), Davide DiRenzo (Jacksoul, Sophie Milman, Tomi Swick), Duncan Hopkins (Diana Krall, Mark Murphy, Rob McConnell and the Boss Brass) and Ann Lindsay (Blue Rodeo, Dionne Warwick, The Chieftans). Never did Lalonde expect her first proper studio and album recording experience to involve such established artists. “It was surreal,” she admits.

The album, currently scheduled for release late summer 2008, is all covers and includes such engaging classics as “Slow Boat To China,” “You Belong To Me,” and “It Might As Well Be Spring.” The approach to deciding the material comes back to great stories again for Lalonde. “These songs take you somewhere. They connect you with such universal themes and emotions of young love and longing for those who aren’t near,” she remarks. “These are stories that take you back to another time, but still very much resonate with the world we live in today.” The chance to take these songs and bring her ‘own flavour’ to them, with the help of her new creative/musical team, has been extremely inspiring. It is especially fitting for her to cover the Stafford classic “You Belong To Me” and make it her own, as Lalonde often garners similar accolades to the beloved American pop singer. She too is often admired for the purity of her voice and for being such a versatile vocalist, the way that Stafford was in her day. The studio experience itself has been an exciting new adventure for Lalonde. “It blew my mind!” she raves. “Being in the studio provides such freedom. To be able to approach things in a gentle and creative manner so that you can fully develop your own feel to a song and story is so powerful to an artist. I’m used to performing live where you’ve got only one shot to get it right.” Although now a fan of the studio, she ultimately can’t wait to take these songs on the road, as the stage is the home she knows and loves best.Lalonde is not one to just rest on her inherent talent. Her deep-rooted love and passion for music motivates her to constantly become better at her craft. Even with the launch of her debut CD still forthcoming, those that know her already can’t wait to see and hear what she will do next. Bio ~ http://music.cbc.ca/#!/artists/Jessica-Lalonde

Chihiro Yamanaka - Forever Begins

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:14
Size: 141,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:35)  1. So Long
(5:43)  2. Blue Pearl
(6:01)  3. Summer Wave
(6:34)  4. Cherokee
(5:47)  5. W.W.W.
(6:30)  6. Good Morning Heartache
(4:45)  7. Saudade E Carinho
(6:31)  8. Forever Begins
(4:53)  9. The Moon Was Yellow
(8:51) 10. Avance

Much better known in her native Japan (where she regularly tops the jazz charts), pianist Chihiro Yamanaka makes a strong claim to neo-bop mastery with Forever Begins, played with her trio, also featuring Ben Williams on bass and Kendrick Scott on drums. Yamanaka takes a playful tone on the original opener, ironically called "So Long," establishing that she will play lightning runs, sometimes taking up the whole keyboard, to sinuous rhythms. She acknowledges a major influence with Bud Powell's "Blue Pearl." Her "Cherokee" is a multi-part reinvention of the old swing standard, and she invests "Good Morning, Heartache" with unusual liveliness. Not surprisingly, given her energy, she particularly enjoys Latin rhythms on "Saudade e Carinho" and "The Moon Was Yellow." And she moves toward post-bop with her nearly nine-minute take on Russell Ferrante's "Avance." American mainstream jazz fans who may not be aware of Chihiro Yamanaka (even though she is based in the U.S.) would do well to seek out this album and some of the pianist's earlier work. ~ William Ruhlmann  http://www.allmusic.com/album/forever-begins-mw0002131240

Personnel: Chihiro Yamanaka (piano); Kendrick Scott (drums).

Michael Carvin - Marsalis Music Honors Series

Styles: Straight-ahead/Mainstream
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:01
Size: 153,6 MB
Art: Front

( 5:58)  1. I'll Remember April
( 6:53)  2. The Lamp Is Low
( 9:42)  3. Prisoner of Love/ Body and Soul
( 4:57)  4. In Walked Bud
(12:42)  5. Forest Flower
( 9:11)  6. A Night in Tunisia
(11:46)  7. You Go to My Head
( 5:49)  8. Hello, Young Lovers

Other than the ability to record musicians like drummers Jimmy Cobb and the less well-known Michael Carvin, what status could allow this young label led by a lion (Branford Marsalis) to be said to honor either of these men? Actually the company is honoring itself, and doing some justice to the veteran Carvin, whose sometime partner Jackie McLean has alas just died. Those two are credited with producing one masterpiece (Antiquity, Steeplechase 1974), and Carvin himself is acknowledged with a lot of musical and especially jazz associations, coaching (a term he prefers to "teaching") and playing; and with an enormous amount of work getting this programme with this band right. Getting right not just trying to!  Like Cobb on the partner CD, Carvin performs within a quartet comprised of people he's been working with of late, notably Marcus Strickland on tenor saxophone. On the track on which "Prisoner of Love segues into "Body and Soul, Branford Marsalis himself sits in, first alternating solos, then part-choruses with Strickland.

Strickland is not intimidated, and his own ballad take on "Forest Flower, with sometimes an almost baritone sound on tenor, is a terrific performance. It also demonstrates why Carvin has of late has featured Carlton Holmes on piano. His solo following Strickland's extended opening improvisation is all you could hope for. "In Walked Bud has already demonstrated the bassist Dezron Douglas's ability to combine with Carvin in bass and drums accompaniment of a sort featured in Monk quartet performances, with the piano dropping out. The quartet does get very directly to work at the start of that Monk number. Other highlights include the rhythm section work and the drummer's celebration on "A Night in Tunisia ; and, after a great intro from Douglas's bass, a ballad performance of "You Go to My Head that's remarkable for sustaining tension over almost twelve minutes. Sonny Rollins might be given credit for pioneering the sort of paraphrase of an initial melody which adds gold to "Hello, Young Lovers (a Rollins-like choice of song, whether or not Rollins himself ever delivered improvisations on it!), but this specific example signals the high class of this quartet and its whole set. Their merits might not be loudly blatant upon first listen, but discovering them justifies many more. ~ Robert R.Calder  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/marsalis-music-honors-michael-carvin-michael-carvin-marsalis-music-review-by-robert-r-calder.php#.VFGDOslZi5g
 
Personnel: Michael Carvin: drums; Carlton Holmes: piano; Marcus Strickland: tenor saxophone; Dezron Douglass: bass; Branford Marsalis: tenor saxophone (3).

Tina Brooks - Back to the Tracks

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1960
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:35
Size: 88,5 MB
Art: Front

( 8:05)  1. Back to the Tracks
(10:21)  2. Street Singer
( 8:56)  3. The Blues and I
( 6:06)  4. For Heaven's Sake
( 5:05)  5. The Ruby and the Pearl


And "Street Singer," an outtake from Jackie McLean's Jackie's Bag (Blue Note, 1960) sessions, adds slots in the solo rotation for McLean's alto sax and Paul Chambers' bass. To be sure, such predictable solo rounds are far from unheard of, but the formula may have accounted, at least in part, for Blue Note's decision to leave the album in the can. After the Mosaic release, the album did eventually appear on CD and is currently available as a CD import and a 33-1/3-rpm mono LP. But thankfully, Music Matters has chosen to include it as part of its 45-rpm vinyl reissue program (with 45-rpm necessitating a two-disc format). For not only does the musicianship overcome what might seem a staid musical concept, it also brings to light (or, more precisely, to sound) a fabulous "lost" work by a musician who recorded and lived for far too brief a period (born in 1932, Brooks died in 1974). 

Three of the album's tunes are Brooks originals. They are based on simple, repetitive passages in the hard bop mode a modernist form that had no qualms broadcasting itself as a soloist's jungle gym and contain all the power of Brooks' fabulous and similarly structured numbers on True Blue (Blue Note, 1960). Brooks has a light, playful sound on most of the pieces on Back To The Tracks. His tone courses rounded hills and valleys that usually lead into sharper bop peaks with slashing angles. Shying away from the one-note R&B squawks fired at times on True Blue, Brooks' playing here is a bit more relaxed and soulful, especially on "Street Singer" and "For Heaven's Sake," the latter finding the saxophonist swooning with a deep, reedy timbre. Trumpeter Blue Mitchell, a trusty sideman who gained lesser fame up-front, largely follows Brooks' lead, fashioning bright, metal statements or antagonistic growls that echo the saxophonist's moods. The reliable Drew, a hard bop pianist perhaps best known for his work on John Coltrane's Blue Train (Blue Note, 1957), wields a light yet confident touch in tapping out quick, hard-swinging solos from the stereo's "center channel." 

His harmonic solo on "For Heaven's Sake" employs classical overlays, producing a desperate yearning effect in front of Paul Chambers' dipping bass. The excellent Chambers is afforded a brief moment in the sun near the close of "Street Singer," a tune he transforms with nice, muddy lines. (Again, it is notable that the bassist was given solo light only on the McLean-led track.) Drummer Art Taylor never emerges from the rear. But his percussive support is solid throughout and he comes on with a strong, varied attack on the exotic closer "The Ruby And The Pearl." The stereo sound of this vinyl reissue is impeccable. Play it next to the True Blue CD and you'll hear the difference a warm, live tone that sacrifices none of the stereo separation nor chisels it into a series of conjoined instrumental cubicles; the group dynamic is never lost. You can almost smell the smoke swirling up from a cigarette abandoned in an ashtray at the Van Gelder Studio. The year is 1960 and the music of an extremely talented young saxophonist is blowing with all the promise of a bright future. ~ Matt Marshall  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/tina-brooks-back-to-the-tracks-by-matt-marshall.php#.VFVL78lZi5g

Personnel: Blue Mitchell, trumpet; Jackie McLean, alto saxophone; Tina Brooks, tenor saxophone; Kenny Drew, piano; Paul Chambers, bass; Art Taylor, drums.

Back to the Tracks