Saturday, April 4, 2015

Gabor Szabo - Spellbinder

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:11
Size: 82.8 MB
Styles: Post bop, Guitar jazz
Year: 1966/1998/2015
Art: Front

[5:25] 1. Spellbinder
[4:33] 2. Witchcraft
[2:43] 3. It Was A Very Good Year
[5:08] 4. Gypsy Queen
[2:24] 5. Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)
[4:04] 6. Cheetah
[5:25] 7. My Foolish Heart
[2:53] 8. Yearning
[3:31] 9. Autumn Leaves/Speak To Me Of Love

Released just six months after Gypsy '66, Gabor Szabo's second album as a leader (after leaving a sublime Chico Hamilton band that also included Charles Lloyd) remains one of his finest moments in the studio. Szabo utilized the tales of bassist Ron Carter and his old boss Hamilton on drums, as well as a pair of fine Latin percussionists -- Willie Bobo and Victor Pantoja. The groove quotient was very high on Spellbinder, maybe even higher than on later albums such as Jazz Raga or Sorcerer. This set is all Szabo, drifting, wafting, and soaring above all that rhythm; the track selection provides ample space for Szabo's highly individualized Eastern modal style to shine. The set opens with the title track, a snaky guitar masterpiece with plenty of droning strings and pinched chords that are followed by open string flourishes. Carter holds the entire band together as Hamilton plays in counterpoint to the percussionists. This is followed with two nuggets from the pop book of the day, the Coleman/Leigh classic "Witchcraft" and "It Was a Very Good Year." From the performances here, it's apparent that Szabo was deeply influenced by singers, and Frank Sinatra was at his pinnacle during this time. There's the emerging '60s psychedelic sound in Szabo's playing, but it is underlaid with bossa rhythms and swells. These tracks, while flavored with Latin and pop stylings, are gorgeous guitar jazz. Szabo gets back into his own mystic thang with "Gypsy Queen" (the opening droning moments of which the Doors lifted entirely for "The End"). Here the Latin rhythms and guitar go head to head, point to counterpoint. A pronounced yet elusive melody line propels a series of polyrhythms forward into an abyss of melody, mode, and frighteningly intense legato phrasing, leaving the listener breathless. He takes the edge off with Sonny Bono's "Bang Bang (She Shot Me Down)." Szabo sings here in his plaintive Hungarian-inflected English, and the tune becomes something other than a pop song, but a tome on despair and loss.

The funky "Cheetah" follows with gorgeous arpeggios, pointedly turning into chords of distinction as Hamilton rides the crash cymbal into territories unknown and double-times the band until it notches up the intensity. This set follows with one more Szabo original ("Yearning") and a trio of standards, with a heartbreakingly beautiful read of "My Foolish Heart" and a medley of "Autumn Leaves" and "Speak to Me of Love." Szabo's read on jazz in the '60s was brilliant. He embodied all of its most popular aspirations with a genuine spirit of innovation and adventure. Spellbinder is a masterpiece. ~Thom Jurek

Spellbinder

Ed Thigpen - Young Men & Olds

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:17
Size: 133.4 MB
Styles: Hard bop
Year: 1991
Art: Front

[6:20] 1. Strike Up The Band
[5:48] 2. Yesterdays
[7:09] 3. Summertime
[5:50] 4. Night And Day
[5:49] 5. Scramble
[6:39] 6. Shufflin' Long
[4:25] 7. Oh My Gosh
[8:59] 8. Dark Before The Dawn
[7:16] 9. I Should Care

Terence Blanchard (trumpet) Bill Easley (alto saxophone) Branford Marsalis (tenor,soprano saxophone) Ronnie Mathews or Sir Roland Hanna (piano) Rufus Reid (bass) Ed Thigpen (drums) Bobby Thomas Jr. (hand drums). Recording Date: November 20 - 21, 1990

Edward Leonard Thigpen was born in Chicago, Illinois on December 28, 1930. His father, Ben Thigpen, was a professional jazz drummer who worked in Andy Kirk's band for close to twenty years throughout the 1930s and 40s. At the beginning of 1959, Thigpen joined Oscar Peterson and Ray Brown to form perhaps the most revered incarnation of the Oscar Peterson Trio. The group stayed together until 1965 and can be heard on close to 50 recordings.

The sensitive, quiet burn of Thigpen's famed brushwork and the forward-leaning foundation of Brown's bass playing made for one of the most well-developed drummer/bassist relationships in the history of the piano trio. Once asked to discuss the style of his longtime drummer, Oscar Peterson explained, Ed Thigpen was a reflective yet complete percussionist. He wasn't really a drummer, he was a percussionist. He had that feeling all the time that it wasn't just drums that he was sitting at. He sees his drums as a complete, not instrument, but orchestra. Whatever he wants it to be. Ed Thigpen has a touch on the drums that you seldom hear. Jo Jones had that same thing.

Young Men & Olds

Katharine Whalen - Katharine Whalen's Jazz Squad

Styles: Vocal, Retro Swing
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:14
Size: 88,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:40)  1. Deed I Do
(2:35)  2. No Greater Love
(2:53)  3. Sugar
(4:59)  4. Yesterdays
(3:20)  5. Just You, Just Me
(2:11)  6. Now or Never
(3:23)  7. My Old Flame
(2:54)  8. That Old Feeling
(3:02)  9. Badisma
(3:36) 10. All My Life
(3:46) 11. After You've Gone
(2:49) 12. My Baby Just Cares For Me

Singer and banjoist Katharine Whalen is one of the founding members of the Squirrel Nut Zippers, the North Carolina-based retro band whose joyful fusion of raw jump blues and hot jazz has been one of the most unlikely success stories of the 1990s. On her solo debut, Whalen steps out a bit (though not entirely) from the shadow of Billie Holiday, whose nasal, declamatory style has been a huge influence on Whalen from the beginning. She sings "'Deed I Do" and "There Is No Greater Love" in a somewhat warmer, sexier voice than usual; same with the finger-popping "That Old Feeling" (which, strangely, sounds like it was faded out halfway through the track). But she delivers "Yesterdays" with what almost sounds like a tribute to Holiday's delivery of the classic and controversial "Strange Fruit." The program ends with a strutting, ska-inflected version of "My Baby Just Cares for Me." Derivative or not, Whalen is a gifted chanteuse and a wonderful interpreter. Highly recommended. ~ Rick Anderson  http://www.allmusic.com/album/katharine-whalens-jazz-squad-mw0000243941

Personnel: Katharine Whalen (vocals); James Mathus & His Knockdown Society (guitar, banjo); Mike Minguez (clarinet); Cecil Johnson (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Je Widenhouse (trumpet); John Kennedy (trombone); Robert Griffin (piano); Ted Zarras (drums).

Wendy Zoffer - Bird Of Beauty

Styles: Jazz, Smooth Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:53
Size: 77,9 MB
Art: Front

(2:52)  1. Autumm Leaves
(3:40)  2. Nica's Dream
(3:51)  3. Sunday Kind Of Love
(3:35)  4. Black Orpheus
(2:29)  5. Can't Help Lovin Dat Man
(3:12)  6. Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me
(2:41)  7. One Note Samba
(3:26)  8. On the Street Where You Live
(3:18)  9. Wave
(4:44) 10. Bird Of Beauty

Wendy Zoffer is a flutist extraordinaire. Her clear lilting tone and fluid style are a breath of fresh air to the listener. Classically trained, Wendy has crossed over to the world of jazz, blues and popular standards. She expresses her enthusiasm and love of music whether she plays pop, standards, Broadway, Brazilian, or jazz. Wendy shapes classic melodies with exquisite feeling extracting the full melodic potential of her material-"it sounds as if she is singing through her flute."

The upbeat melodies on this CD will excite anyone who appreciates a finely crafted tune. "I've known Wendy Zoffer for several years and every time I hear her play the flute she sounds better and better. This CD especially impressed me. Her tone and choice of material is excellent! Wendy can improvise without lossing the message of the song. The jazz trio does a great job accompanying Wendy throughout and the recording sound is as good as any I've heard. This is a CD to be proud of." ~ Richie Cole  http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/wendyzoffer

Steve Tyrell - The Disney Standards

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:06
Size: 110,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:52)  1. When You Wish Upon A Star
(3:46)  2. Kiss The Girl
(3:27)  3. You've Got A friend In Me
(2:58)  4. Bella Notte
(2:52)  5. Ev'rybody Wants To Be A Cat
(3:38)  6. Beauty and the Beast
(3:07)  7. He's A Tramp
(4:42)  8. You'll Be In My Heart
(2:48)  9. A Deeam Is A Wish Your Heart Makes
(3:07) 10. When She Loved Me
(2:46) 11. The Bare Necessities
(3:29) 12. Once Upon A Dream
(3:33) 13. Cruella De Vil
(3:54) 14. Baby Mine

On 2006's Disney Standards, pop vocalist Steve Tyrell offers up a charming set of tunes from vintage Mouse House films. Although Tyrell's gravelly voice may seem like an unlikely match for the melodies from animated classics such as Dumbo and Pinocchio, the project works to wonderful effect, allowing the vocalist to imbue the songs with plenty of emotion. Trumpeter Chris Botti joins Tyrell on a delicate reading of "When You Wish Upon a Star" (from Pinocchio), and Dr. John sits in on an easy-going rendition of "You've Got a Friend in Me" (from Toy Story). (The latter is a slightly strange pairing since Tyrell's voice echoes Dr. John's own singing style). Other highlights include "A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes" (a dreamy, piano-driven version of the beloved Cinderella song) and "The Bare Necessities" (a smooth, orchestral take on the Jungle Book original). For fans of both Disney movies and Tyrell, this disc is sure to entertain. http://www.allmusic.com/album/disney-standards-mw0000702722

Personnel: Steve Tyrell (vocals); Bob Mann (guitar, keyboards); Dave Koz (saxophone); Chris Botti (trumpet); Dr. John, Lee Musiker (piano); Paulinho Da Costa (percussion).

Friday, April 3, 2015

Ruby Braff - The Canadian Sessions (2-Disc Set)

Ruby Braff has often recorded in small groups, which suit him well because all he really needs is a minimal backing for his beautiful musical statements. The duets between Ruby Braff and Gene DiNovi on this double CD were recorded in Toronto in 1984, and the quartet was recorded there in 1979.

Pianist Gene DiNovi cites his main influences as Teddy Wilson, Mel Powell, Ellis Larkins and Duke Ellington - all pianists with elegant taste. Ellis Larkins recorded some celebrated duets with Ruby Braff in 1955 and 1972, which proved that Braff needs a delicate pianist who is not going to drown him out. Gene DiNovi is another such pianist. Like Larkins, he is experienced in accompanying singers: a task which demands subtlety and which prepares a pianist for accompanying the singing cornet of Ruby Braff.

Most of the second CD puts Braff in a quartet which includes substantial players Don Thompson and Terry Clarke. Yet they don't drown out Braff either, and Ed Bickert supplies ideally gentle accompaniment and inventive solos. But it is good for Ruby to be challenged occasionally, and Terry Clarke's dynamic drumming adds sparkle to such tracks as I've Got A Feeling I'm Falling. Terry even swaps fours with Ruby on The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise. Gene DiNovi sings on a few tracks but his mediocre vocals add little to the album. Yet who cares when you have the mellow Ruby Braff with sympathetic accompanists for more than 140 minutes? ~Tony Augarde

Gene DiNovi (p, voc); Ruby Braff (co); Ed Bickert (g); Don Thompson (b); Terry Clarke (dr). Recording Date: June 14, 1979 & January, 1984.

Album: The Canadian Sessions (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:54
Size: 160.0 MB
Styles: Trumpet jazz
Year: 1999

[9:15] 1. Medley: My Funny Valentine My Heart Stood Still Be Careful It's My Hea
[4:12] 2. Have A Heart
[3:33] 3. Says My Heart
[2:11] 4. Nobody's Heart
[4:32] 5. Break My Heart
[3:46] 6. My Foolish Heart
[3:08] 7. Sweethearts On Parade
[3:38] 8. Blues In My Heart
[3:10] 9. This Heart Of Mine
[3:23] 10. Beware My Heart
[5:36] 11. Medley: Love Walked In/Embraceable You/The Man I Love
[2:38] 12. Love Is Sweeping The Country
[4:07] 13. Of Thee I Sing
[3:29] 14. For You, For Me, For Evermore
[4:08] 15. I've Got A Crush On You
[5:50] 16. Oh, Lady Be Good
[3:08] 17. Maybe

The Canadian Sessions (Disc 1)

Album: The Canadian Sessions (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:08
Size: 162.9 MB
Styles: Trumpet jazz
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[3:27] 1. True Love
[5:01] 2. I've Got A Feeling I'm Falling
[4:33] 3. This Year's Kisses
[4:24] 4. The World Is Waiting For Sunrise
[5:38] 5. The Very Thought Of You
[7:02] 6. After Awhile
[5:16] 7. What Is There To Say
[5:11] 8. My Funny Valentine
[8:08] 9. Medley The Song Is Ended When I Fall In Love
[4:20] 10. I Must Have That Man
[4:38] 11. If Dreams Come True
[4:08] 12. Medley: Trumpeter/Blow Your Golden Horn/Do It Again
[3:25] 13. Isn't It A Pity
[5:49] 14. He Loves And She Loves

The Canadian Sessions (Disc 2)

Julian Jackson Quartet - I Can't Get Started

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:41
Size: 134.3 MB
Styles: Harmonica jazz
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[3:15] 1. Alfie
[6:50] 2. Etude No. 1
[9:38] 3. I Can't Get Started
[1:57] 4. When I Fall In Love
[5:04] 5. Airegin
[7:42] 6. I Hear A Rhapsody
[5:56] 7. Three Views Of A Secret
[6:41] 8. Autumn Leaves
[8:07] 9. You Must Believe In Spring
[3:27] 10. Laurie

Julian Jackson (harmonica); Tim Lapthorn (piano); Tom Herbert (bass); Patrick Levett (drums).

You only have to listen to the first few seconds of this album to realize that Julian Jackson is a true master of the harmonica and that he has a tone to rival that of his heroes, Larry Aldler and Toots Thielemans, the superabundance of his ideas and his natural jazz feeling recalling the great Toots in particular.

Jackson has put together a nicely balanced programme for his debut solo jazz album. His harmonica sings beautifuly on the ballads "Alfie", "I Can't Get Started" and "When I Fall in Love", the latter an impressive a cappella version of Victor Young's classic tune, and effervesces on the swingers "I Hear a Rhapsody" and "Autumn Leaves". Sonny Rollins' "Airegin" is an exhilarating work-out for the quartet and features a telling solo from the talented Tim Lapthorn on piano. Jackson takes us on a wonderful musical journey on Jaco Pastorius' searching jazz waltz "Three Views of a Secret" with Lapthorn at his bluesy best, Patrick Levett displaying some impressive jazz-rock chops on drums. Jackson's lilting theme "Etude No 1" recalls the work of bossa nova genius Antonio Carlos Jobim, Michel LeGrand's haunting "You Must Believe in Spring" similarly infused with hypnotically swaying latin rhythms after its poignant rubato beginning. The album ends with Bill Evans' exquisite melody "Laurie", the last few bars evanescing into the ether with a series of harmonically ambiguous suspended chords, leaving the listener in a state of supreme calm.

Finally, taking time off from his bass guitar duties with award-winning groups Acoustic Ladyland and Polar Bear, Tom Herbert is rock-solid on acoustic bass, providing the necessary foundation for Jackson and co. to take flight. ~Geoff Eales

I Can't Get Started

Jo Jones - Count On Me

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:25
Size: 179.5 MB
Styles: Mainstream jazz, Swing
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[4:42] 1. Georgia Mae
[6:39] 2. Embraceable You
[7:06] 3. Stomp It Off
[5:48] 4. Satin Doll
[5:50] 5. Shoe Shine Boy
[3:57] 6. Cubano Chant
[4:39] 7. Nice Work If You Can Get It
[6:29] 8. Lover Man
[6:38] 9. Ol' Man River
[4:43] 10. Ballin' The Jack
[5:14] 11. Squeeze Me
[4:49] 12. Splittin'
[7:45] 13. Lincoln Heights
[4:01] 14. Caravan

The sound of Jo Jones' drums defined the sound of swing: he brought the beat up from the bass drum into the drummer's hands, which took rhythm into the modern era. He expanded the drum kit's palette of accents, and forged a path for every drummer who has followed in his soft steps. His "ting-ta-ting" taps are ubiquitous, yet few listeners realize this is the sound Jo built.

Jones's elegant, propulsive groove laid the foundation for William "Count" Basie's breakout big band hits, such as "Tickle Toe," and "One O'Clock Jump." . Also not to be missed are the drummer's memorable small-group sessions with Benny Goodman, Billie Holiday and Lester Young, such as "I Can't Get Started" and "A Sailboat in the Moonlight."

Count On Me

Sunny Sumter - Sunny

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:10
Size: 135.5 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[3:49] 1. Nick Of Time
[5:53] 2. Detour Ahead
[5:32] 3. I Fall In Love Too Easily
[8:23] 4. Jim
[3:56] 5. The Best Is Yet To Come
[5:33] 6. Nobody Knows The Trouble I've Seen
[7:21] 7. Overjoyed
[6:09] 8. Daydream
[7:47] 9. Save Your Love For Me
[4:43] 10. Lonely Woman

After hearing Sarah Vaughan on the radio at the age of 9, Washington, D.C. native Sunny Sumter knew that the life of a jazz singer was her future. After attending Washington's renowned Duke Ellington High School, she went on to Howard University to earn a music degree. Private studies from pianist/composer Geri Allen and drummer/vocalist Grady Tate were the icing on Sumter's educational cake. While at Howard, she worked at local clubs and in 1992, took a short tour of Europe. Sumter shared the stage at the Dominican Republic Jazz Festival with David Sanchez, Jason Marsalis, Mimi Fox and Pamela Williams. 1998 was a break through year. She opened for Shirley Horn and Dee Dee Bridgewater at D.C.'s Lincoln Theater, toured Russia (Moscow and St. Petersburg), performed at Camelot Jazz Club in Tel Aviv and at the LaVilla Jazz Club in Paris. Returning to the US, Sumter was at Sanford University with modern trombonist Wycliffe Gordon. Sumter was also a guest on a BET Jazz Central show hosted by Ramsey Lewis. Sumter's debut recording was Getting to Know You and her latest Sunny, on the Mapleshade label, features an eclectic program of ballads performed and/or composed by Sarah Vaughan, Billie Holiday, and Stevie Wonder. With influences as disparate as Sarah Vaughan, Phyllis Hyman, and Kate Bush along with a warm, deep and soulful voice, Sumter has all the musical tools to become a legitimate jazz diva. ~bio by Dave Nathan

Sunny     

David Bowie - The Best Of 1980-1987

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:42
Size: 175.6 MB
Styles: Album rock, Dance rock
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[4:04] 1. Let's Dance
[3:35] 2. Ashes To Ashes
[4:02] 3. Under Pressure
[3:25] 4. Fashion
[3:57] 5. Modern Love
[4:14] 6. China Girl
[3:32] 7. Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps)
[3:13] 8. Up The Hill Backwards
[3:51] 9. Alabama Song
[2:25] 10. Drowned Girl
[4:10] 11. Cat People (Putting Out Fire)
[3:51] 12. This Is Not America
[7:06] 13. Loving The Alien
[5:35] 14. Absolute Beginners
[3:35] 15. When The Wind Blows
[3:09] 16. Blue Jean
[4:09] 17. Day-In Day-Out
[4:16] 18. Time Will Crawl
[4:24] 19. Underground

The '80s were a curious time for David Bowie. Never had he sold more records, had bigger hits, his influence was everywhere, and yet, the music he made often fell a little flat, especially after his commercial high-water mark of 1983's Let's Dance. The 2007 compilation Best of David Bowie 1980/1987 deals with that drop-off in quality in an admirable fashion, perhaps the only appropriate fashion: it ignores it. There are two tracks from 1984's Tonight, and two from its 1987 sequel Never Let Me Down, while there are four apiece from Let's Dance and Scary Monsters -- a skewed ratio that is nevertheless an accurate barometer of the worth of the albums. It also makes for a better listen as a compilation, since the hit singles from these records are surrounded by non-LP cuts and soundtrack contributions like "This Is Not America" and "Absolute Beginners," a move that's not only helpful as a clearinghouse of relative oddities, but also helps make this Best of David Bowie 1980/1987 a truly representative collection of the best music of some patchy years, which is a more worthwhile endeavor than having this be truly representative of the decade as a whole. For some Bowie fans, this may be all they need from that decade (although they'd be well-advised not to ignore the truly masterful Scary Monsters, and use that as a supplement to this excellent disc). ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

The Best Of 1980-1987

Phil Woods & Franco D'Andrea - Our Monk

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:58
Size: 151.0 MB
Styles: Bop,Saxophone jazz
Year: 1994/2011
Art: Front

[7:12] 1. Ask Me Now
[7:18] 2. Well You Needn't
[8:50] 3. 'round Midnight
[5:51] 4. Straight No Chaser
[6:38] 5. Pannonica
[6:28] 6. I Mean You
[7:08] 7. Misterioso
[5:59] 8. In Walked Bud
[4:52] 9. Epistrophy
[5:36] 10. Blue Monk

This lively duo date with pianist Franco D'Andrea is a very enjoyable all-Monk affair. Phil Woods was a part of several larger groups led by Thelonious Monk, and his effortless swing makes it clear why he was chosen. Another choice track is "I Mean You," highlighted by Woods' singing tone. D'Andrea isn't nearly as well known, but he justifies his presence with a clever tapestry of chords around Woods on "Well, You Needn't." Recommended. ~Ken Dryden

Our Monk

Andy Leggett - 2 albums: Shades Of Bechet / Shades Of Bechet #2

Since 1996 Andy Leggett has worked in Germany as the clarinet/sax player in the Rod Mason Hot Five. The two "Shades of Bechet" CDs however are Andy's own tribute to one of the great New Orleans instrumentalists. Sidney Bechet wrote (or in a few cases claimed to have written) at least 120 tunes.

The first CD contains 16 tracks, 12 of which are Bechet's own. In addition, "The Coffee Grinder" which he claimed as his, was in fact based on the "Rubber Plant Rag" by Geo. L. Cobb, published in 1909 when Bechet was 12. There are also 3 tracks written and arranged by Andy Leggett, featuring Bechet-style clarinet and soprano sax. One of these, "Pussy Willow Blues" highlights the distinctive rolling piano of Dave Collett, composer of Acker Bilk's "Summer Set". The remaining tracks, recorded in Dormagen Germany in 2000/2001, were arranged over a three-year period. They display the improvisational and reading talents of outstanding German and English musicians, brought together as a studio band especially for the CD.

The second CD containsa further 17 tracks, 15 of which are Bechet compositions. In addition, the 12 bar "Blues In Thirds" is credited to Earl Hines but owes much to Bechet's three immortal chorusses. There is one more Leggett original – "Montserrat". Like the former CD, "Shades of Bechet #2" was recorded in the COMA Media Studio, Dormagen/Germany, and features an 8 piece Anglo-German band.

Album: Shades Of Bechet
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:53
Size: 134.8 MB
Styles: Traditional jazz combo
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[2:47] 1. The Fish Seller
[5:42] 2. As-Tu Le Cafard
[3:37] 3. Dans Les Rues D'antibes
[3:31] 4. I Keep Calling Your Name
[4:33] 5. Buddy Bolden Stomp
[4:50] 6. Refrain For Jane
[3:19] 7. The Coffee Grinder
[2:28] 8. I Had It But It's All Gone Now
[3:05] 9. Petite Fleur
[3:32] 10. Viper Mad
[3:49] 11. Pussy Willow Blues
[2:21] 12. The Onions
[3:01] 13. Southern Sunset
[4:23] 14. Old Stack O'lee Blues
[3:45] 15. Ce Mossieu Qui Parle
[4:02] 16. Gentle Treatment

Andy Leggett's tribute to the memory of the first great jazz soloist on the soprano saxophone. Bechet's compositions are arranged for an international 8-piece line-up.

Shades Of Bechet

Album: Shades Of Bechet #2
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:12
Size: 121.8 MB
Styles: Traditional jazz combo
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[3:19] 1. Polka Dot Rag
[2:24] 2. Waste No Tears
[3:07] 3. Ghost Of The Blues
[4:26] 4. Si Tu Vois Ma Mere
[2:43] 5. Blackstick
[2:50] 6. Passport To Paradise
[3:11] 7. I Want You Tonight
[3:02] 8. Okey Doke
[4:11] 9. Bechet's Fantasy
[2:43] 10. Montserrat
[2:58] 11. Georgia Cabin
[3:18] 12. Blues Dans Le Blues
[3:59] 13. Halle Hallelujah
[2:49] 14. Blues In Thirds
[2:51] 15. Lastic
[2:37] 16. Egyptian Fantasy
[2:35] 17. DSC Blues

Recorded in Dormagen, Germany early in 2005. The following international line-up took part: Andy Leggett, soprano sax and clarinet; Matthias Seuffert, tenor sax and second clarinet; John Emms, trumpet; Christoph Wackerbarth, trombone; Fraser Gartshore, piano; Benny Daniels, string bass; Sean Moyses, guitar & banjo; Joerg Mueller, drums.

Andy Leggett's second tribute album to the first great jazz soloist on the soprano saxophone. Mostly Bechet's own timeless compositions, again arranged for an international 8-piece band.

Shades Of Bechet #2

Lee Konitz, Steve Swallow, Paul Motian - Three Guys

Styles: Post-Bop, Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:56
Size: 115,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:02)  1. It's You
(5:31)  2. Come Rain or Come Shine
(7:47)  3. Thingin'
(4:08)  4. Luiza
(3:14)  5. From Time to Time
(5:39)  6. Ladies' Waders
(6:44)  7. Johnny Broken Wing
(6:11)  8. Eiderdown
(5:36)  9. A Minor Blues in F

Lee Konitz continues to record at peak form, as clearly evidenced by this trio with Steve Swallow on electric bass and Paul Motian on drums. All of the nine pieces are originals by members of the trio, the exceptions being a compelling version of "Come Rain or Come Shine" and a gorgeous take of Jobim's "Luiza." As to be expected, these three veterans mesh well together. While there are few extraordinary moments, there is plenty of well-played, emotionally satisfying jazz, the way Konitz has been doing it for a lifetime. You might confuse his pinched alto for a soprano at times, but there is no questioning his immaculate phrasing. Konitz has always shined best with a repertoire of standards, and the choice of tunes here is slightly less interesting. Motian is a good choice on the sticks, while Swallow remains an acquired taste. ~ Steve Loewy  http://www.allmusic.com/album/three-guys-mw0000246402
 
Personnel: Lee Konitz (alto saxophone); Steve Swallow (electric bass); Paul Motian (drums).

Earl Hines - At Sundown

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:20
Size: 131,5 MB
Art: Front

(9:39)  1. At Sundown
(8:25)  2. There Will Never Be Another You
(7:07)  3. You're Driving Me Crazy
(7:15)  4. Love Me or Leave Me
(8:50)  5. Makin' Whoopee
(6:32)  6. Just in Time
(9:29)  7. My Buddy

During the final decade of his career, Earl Hines was very busy touring and recording. The pianist is in terrific form on At Sundown, accompanied by veteran drummer Panama Francis and talented young bassist Jimmy Leary. Hines starts things off with a stunning solo rendition of his composition "At Sundown," which shows off the pianist's still impressive technique. Leary's dancing bass and Francis' brushwork complement the master's interpretation of "There Will Never Be Another You." 

The remainder of the set draws from songs Hines had been playing for decades, including a very playful up-tempo "Love Me or Leave Me" and an entertaining take of "Makin' Whoopee" with an elaborate, wonderfully disguised introduction. Originally recorded during a 1974 studio session in France for Black & Blue, this 1995 CD reissue expands upon the original LP by adding an upbeat version of "Just in Time." This highly recommended CD is an excellent example of Hines' productive final years. ~ Ken Dryden  http://www.allmusic.com/album/at-sundown-mw0000086223

Personnel: Earl Hines (piano); Panama Francis (drums); Jimmy Leary (bass)

Don Patterson & Booker Ervin - Legends Of Acid Jazz

Styles: Hard Bop, Soul Jazz
Year: 1964
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:16
Size: 145,0 MB
Art: Front

(10:11)  1. S'bout Time
( 5:14)  2. Up In Betty's Room
( 3:52)  3. Oleo
(10:58)  4. When Johnny Comes Marching Hom
(10:01)  5. The Good Life
(16:33)  6. Hip Cake Walk
( 6:25)  7. Love Me With All Your Heart

Among all the practitioners of soul-jazz during the genre heyday of the late 1960s into the 1970s, Hammond B-3 organ groovemeister Don Patterson and modern Texas tenor Booker Ervin (also a veteran of jazz ensembles led by Randy Weston and Charles Mingus) are among those usually overlooked. Yet the pair teamed up to release several albums during that time that were, if not standards of the genre precisely, full of vitality and fervor Ervin's playing, especially, often sounded so emotional and combustible that it seemed like he was suffering a nervous breakdown through his horn, perhaps a residue of his time with Mingus. 

Legends of Acid Jazz: Don Patterson / Booker Ervin surfs the cream of three mid-'60s recording sessions: in a trio setting with drummer Billy James, all five selections from The Exciting New Organ of Don Patterson, including one of Miles Davis' early signature tunes, "Oleo" (actually a Sonny Rollins composition); the title track from Hip Cake Walk, a 17-minute monument to the soulful power of organ that endured as Patterson's most-beloved hip-swiveler (featuring Leonard Houston on alto sax); and "Love Me With All Your Heart" from Patterson's People. Legends of Acid Jazz: Don Patterson / Booker Ervin suffers only slightly from a program that leans heavily toward the mainstream "Love Me With..." goes more than six minutes, and "When Johnny Comes Marching Home" nearly eleven. ~ Chris Slawecki  http://www.allmusic.com/album/legends-of-acid-jazz-mw0000615832

Personnel:  Organ – Don Patterson;  Tenor Saxophone – Booker Ervin;  Alto Saxophone – Leonard Houston (tracks: 6);  Drums – Billy James

Legends Of Acid Jazz

Thursday, April 2, 2015

Jane Morgan - In My Style...

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:59
Size: 77.8 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 1965/2014
Art: Front

[2:38] 1. Side By Side
[3:43] 2. My Coloring Book
[2:30] 3. I'm Sorry
[2:46] 4. My Heart Belongs To Daddy
[2:58] 5. You Belong To Me
[2:38] 6. Till I Waltz Again With You
[2:47] 7. Fascination
[2:54] 8. Downtown
[3:01] 9. People
[2:40] 10. Why Don't You Believe Me
[2:49] 11. We'll Sing In The Sunshine
[2:30] 12. Old Cape Cod

Vocalist Jane Morgan is known best for her lone Top Ten hit, "Fascination," drawn from the 1957 Billy Wilder film Love in the Afternoon. Born in Boston (as Jane Currier) but raised in Florida, Morgan was an early success as a singer in France. She made the transition back to America as a nightclub act, and signed to Kapp in the mid-'50s.

Jane Morgan made her chart debut late in 1956, appearing alongside Roger Williams on "Two Different Worlds." One year later she hit number seven with her theme "Fascination," based on the old French composition "Valse Tzigane." Both "The Day the Rains Came" and "With Open Arms" followed "Fascination" into the Top 40 during the late '50s, but Morgan had disappeared from the charts by the turn of the decade. (Her last hit was also a movie theme, for 1959's Happy Anniversary, directed by David Miller and featuring David Niven.) She continued recording for Kapp until 1962, and resurfaced four years later on Epic for Fresh Flavor, a rock-crossover LP that was only slightly embarrassing (her cover of "Good Lovin'" is a minor moment of kitsch). ~bio by John Bush

In My Style      

Clare Fischer - The Latin Side

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:49
Size: 150.7 MB
Styles: Latin jazz, Piano jazz
Year: 1997
Art: Front

[6:16] 1. Como Come
[7:24] 2. Malibu Glide
[7:22] 3. C.P
[9:18] 4. Pensativa
[8:52] 5. Dancing Song
[5:50] 6. Memories Of You
[6:52] 7. Morning
[9:24] 8. Blues Bossa
[4:28] 9. Pajaro Loco

Clare Fischer, keyboards, with the Netherlands Metropole Orchestra conducted by Rob Pronk and Vince Mendoza.

Continuing its series of collaborations with well–known American Jazz musicians, the Netherlands Metropole Orchestra travels south of the border, figuratively speaking, for a program of Latin Jazz by one of its leading exponents, composer/pianist Clare Fischer. The eight studio tracks, conducted by longtime music director Rob Pronk, were recorded in 1991; the ninth, “C.P.,” was recorded in concert at The Hague in 1997 and conducted by Vince Mendoza. Fischer arranged every number and composed all but Eubie Blake/Andy Razaf’s ballad, “Memories of You,” which the two–time Grammy Award winner plays unaccompanied. If arranging for the relatively large and string–laden Metropole Orchestra presented a challenge, Fischer shows that he was up to the task, scrupulously dotting every i and crossing every t. The charts, in other words, are first–class. To further assure their success, the former director of the vocal group known as the Hi–Los brought with him one of its alumni, Don Shelton, who doesn’t sing but displays his superior talents on soprano saxophone (“Como Come?”), clarinet (“Pensativa,” a duet with Fischer) and flute (on five selections). Fischer also recruited his son, Brent, to play bass with the orchestra. Fischer plays acoustic piano on three numbers (“C.P.,” “Blues Bossa,” “Memories of You”), “digital piano” (which sometimes sounds like a harpsichord) on the others. It’s an acquired taste, but he’s such an accomplished musician that it charms more often than it annoys. “Pensativa” is perhaps Fischer’s best–known composition, but each of the others deserves comparable recognition. Shelton and Fischer are the principal soloists, with a handful of earnest but uncredited ad libs by members of the orchestra. Unlike some of the Metropole Orchestra’s recordings, this one is generously timed at 66:43, and is easily recommended to those who appreciate Latin Jazz, especially when written by a superlative composer and performed by a world–class orchestra. ~Jack Bowers

The Latin Side

Carlos Barbosa-Lima - Merengue

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:20
Size: 99.2 MB
Styles: Latin rhythms, Guitar jazz
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[3:03] 1. Prelude No. 2
[5:19] 2. Seis Milonga
[3:00] 3. Danza Del Altiplano
[2:45] 4. Guajira Criolla
[2:23] 5. Cajita De Musica
[2:57] 6. Canhoto
[2:59] 7. Implicante
[2:56] 8. Cancion Carorena
[3:37] 9. Pais De Abanico
[5:34] 10. Nunca Te Olvido
[2:40] 11. Escorregando
[6:00] 12. Fantasy On A Hawaiian Lullaby

On Merengue, his fifth ZOHO CD, guitarist Carlos Barbosa-Lima takes an adventurous musical journey through Ibero-America, including his native Brazil, performing music by renowned composer-guitarists of Latin-America and Hawaii. Carlos invited as special guests Hendrik Meurkens (U.S.) on harmonica, Duduka Da Fonseca (Brazil) on percussion, Gustavo Colina (Venezuela) on cuatro, Marcilio Lopes (Brazil) on mandolin, and George Anderson (U.S.) on bass. “Merengue” also features the debut recording of the “World Guitar Trio”, with Barbosa-Lima joined by guitarist Karin Schaupp (Australia) and Christopher McGuire (Texas).

Barbosa-Lima’s career as concert guitarist has run uninterruptedly for over fifty years. He has recorded over fifty albums, initially for Chanteclair and Concord Records –now regrettably deleted- and since 2000 for ZOHO. Many composers, including Ginastera, Mignone, Santórsola, Cordero, Scott and Yasui, have written pieces for him, thus significantly enlarging the guitar literature. His imaginative concert programs have broken down the worn-out dichotomy between popular and classical music. Tt is therefore only just, in my humble opinion, to define Maestro Carlos Barbosa-Lima as a living legend!

Congratulations, Carlos, on this CD full of musical surprises, innovative arrangements and brilliant guitar playing - it is one of your best! Definitively, Carlos resembles great wine which also matures and gets better with the passage of time. ~Ernesto Cordero

Merengue

Les McCann & The Jazz Crusaders - Jazz Waltz

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:19
Size: 76.3 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Soul-jazz
Year: 1963/2012
Art: Front

[2:35] 1. Spanish Castle
[3:12] 2. Blues For Yna Yna
[4:13] 3. Damascus
[3:28] 4. 3 4 For God & Co
[2:57] 5. Bluesette
[2:58] 6. Big City
[3:05] 7. This Here
[3:46] 8. Jitterbug Waltz
[4:22] 9. All Blues
[2:37] 10. Jazz Waltz

Bass – Robert Haynes; Drums – "Stix" Hooper; Piano, Electric Piano, Organ – Les McCann; Piano, Organ – Joe Sample; Saxophone – Wilton Felder; Trombone – Wayne Henderson.

This short CD features both Les McCann and The Jazz Crusaders. While the song Damascus was previously issued on Les McCann's Relationships compilation, the rest of the record was never before released on CD until now. Every track is soul-jazz gold. I'm glad they finally reissued it. ~DW

Jazz Waltz

Karen Souza - Hotel Souza

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:57
Size: 86.9 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[3:45] 1. Paris
[2:34] 2. Night Demon
[3:57] 3. My Foolish Heart
[3:23] 4. Delectable You
[2:43] 5. Break My Heart
[3:44] 6. I Heard It Through The Grapevine
[3:55] 7. Wake Up
[4:14] 8. I've Got It Bad
[2:33] 9. Full Moon
[3:59] 10. Dindi
[3:08] 11. Lie To Me

Karen Souza: vocals; Alan Pasqua, Tom Ranier: piano; Trey Henry: bass; Larry Koonse, John Goux: guitar; Jaime Branly, Ralph Humphrey: drums; Steve Kujala, Brian Scanlon, Dan Higgins: woodwinds; Rick Baptist, Wayne Bergeron: trumpets; alan Kaplan: trombone; Brian Kilgore: percussion; Roger Wilke: Concertmaster; Track 6: "I Heard It through the Grapevine": Dany Thomas: acoustic piano, Hammond V3, keyboards;Andre De Santana: arranger, electric and upright bass; James Gadson: drums; Edgar Sandoval Violin; Horns: Miguel Gandelman: sax; Ray Monteiro: trumpet; Garrett Smith: trombone.

There is a 19th Century short story by author Frank Stockton entitled, The Lady, or the Tiger? The hook of that work is the teaser leave-you-hanging ending: is there a Lady or the man-eating Tiger behind the door that is selected and "opened." With Hotel Souza, her second CD, Buenos Aires-based vocalist Karen Souza leaves little to the imagination. This hotel has musical rooms of exquisite talent, beauty, elegance and intimacy.

Displaying sensuality without a cloying phoniness, Souza delivers eleven beautifully-performed and impeccably-arranged songs, backed here by some of L.A.'s "usual suspects." The result is a marvelously entertaining tour d' hote. Souza's voice is one of elegant restraint and sensuousness. Hers is not an overpowering vocal presence, but rather, a very inviting one. She seduces deliciously with gentleness and whisper-to-the mic sultriness. That feeling is pervasive across an interesting selection of ballads, bossas (Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Dindi"), softer swing ("Delectable You," "Full Moon") and soft-rock grooves ("Night Demon"). She hits a soulful home run with a dark blue rendition of Marvin Gaye's classic, "I Heard It Through the Grapevine," recorded here with members of Gaye's original band. The Joel McNeely arrangements are slick and frame Souza well without over-dominating her. That savvy set-up allows Souza's lyric and tonal skills to dominate. Her diction, phrasing, dynamic nuance and intonation are exceptional.

In addition to her song-styling chops, the compositions Souza co-authored here—eight of them, demonstrate that she has a flair for the melodic and poetic. The ensemble and brief solo outings across the board are First Class and without studio sterility. The famous Michelin Travel Guide may rate the world's hotels and attractions and not musical fare. Perhaps if they did, Hotel Souza would score extremely well. Select any musical door here and a Lady of exuberant talent and taste awaits. ~Nicholas F. Mondello

Hotel Souza