Saturday, April 11, 2015

Chris Barber - Memories Of My Trip (2-Disc Set)

The double-CD features Chris Barber and various line-ups of the Chris Barber Band with an impressive array of guests, such as Ottilie Patterson, Rory Gallagher, Jimmy Cotton, Muddy Waters, Dr. John, Eric Clapton, Van Morrison, Keith Emerson, Mark Knopfler, Albert Nicholas and many, many more.

The first CD is a complete firework of blues, jazz and gospel songs. We especially like the Muddy Waters Blues Band, playing Kansas City with Chris on trombone. Another great song is Diggin' My Potatoes, with Lonnie Donegan. But this is not the well-known 1954 version recorded at the Royal Festival Hall: it is a recording by the Chris Barber Jazz & Blues Band plus Lonnie Donegan in 1987. And the fireworks of the first CD continue on the second! The opening song is St. Louis Blues / Missouri Special / St. Louis Blues, featuring Ottilie Patterson singing and Edmond Hall playing clarinet. And a great surprise is the duet of Ed Hall and Ian Wheeler, both on clarinet on "High Society". At last this number is now available on CD. The sound changes dramatically with Rock Candy, a rock-oriented recording from 1966 with Keith Emerson and Chris Barber.

It is almost impossible to name and pay the respect to all musicians on this double-CD, so we suggest, sit back in a comfortable chair, sip a good drink (or two!), and listen to more than two hours of great music! All in all, this CD is a fitting tribute to Chris Barber and his more than sixty years as a bandleader and one of jazz's great musicians; it surely is indispensable as an item in every Barber fan's collection.

Album: Memories Of My Trip (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:37
Size: 175.4 MB
Styles: Trombone jazz, Blues, Rock
Year: 2012

[2:53] 1. Memories Of My Trip (With Brownie Mcghee)
[2:42] 2. When Things Go Wrong (With Otillie Patterson)
[2:22] 3. Do Lord, Do Remember Me (With Dick Smith)
[3:53] 4. Weeping Willow (With Eric Clapton)
[6:53] 5. Kansas City (With The Muddy Waters Band)
[3:57] 6. Love Me Or Leave Me (With Alexis Korner, James Cotton)
[4:38] 7. Can't Be Satisfied (With Rory Gallagher)
[5:35] 8. Diggin' My Potatoes (With Lonnie Donegan)
[7:47] 9. Goin' Up The River (With Jeff Healey)
[3:38] 10. How Long Blues (With Van Morrison)
[4:32] 11. Goin' Home (With Van Morrison)
[5:31] 12. Oh Didn't He Ramble (With Van Morrison)
[4:38] 13. Lonesome Road (With Otillie Patterson)
[5:31] 14. I'll Be Rested (With Paul Jones)
[5:15] 15. Precious Lord, Take My Hand (With Paul Jones)
[4:39] 16. Couldn't Keep It To Myself (With Alex Bradford)
[2:02] 17. Another Sad One (With John Slaughter)


Album: Memories Of My Trip (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:46
Size: 168.9 MB
Styles: Trombone jazz, Blues, Rock
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[10:07] 1. St. Louis Blues Missouri Special St. Louis Blues (With Otillie Patterson)
[ 4:42] 2. High Society (With Jedmond Hall)
[ 2:54] 3. Rock Candy (With Keith Emerson)
[10:16] 4. Georgia On My Mind (With Trummy Young)
[ 5:04] 5. Rose Room (With Joe Darensbourg)
[ 6:01] 6. C-Jam Blues (With Albert Nicholas)
[ 6:27] 7. Tea Party Blues
[ 6:25] 8. Jack Teagarden Blues (With Eddie Durham)
[ 4:23] 9. Tailgate Boogie (With Sammy Price, Sandy Brown)
[ 2:49] 10. Winin' Boy Blues (With Jools Holland)
[ 4:39] 11. On The Sunny Side Of The Street (With Jools Holland)
[ 3:42] 12. Blues Stay Away From Me (With Mark Knopfler)
[ 2:46] 13. Dallas Rag (With Mark Knopfler)
[ 3:26] 14. ‘til The Next Time I'm In Town (With Mark Knopfler)


Mavis Staples - Only For The Lonely

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:41
Size: 148.1 MB
Styles: R&B, Memphis soul
Year: 1993
Art: Front

[2:48] 1. Until I Met You
[2:38] 2. Sweet Things You Do
[3:25] 3. The Choking Kind
[3:23] 4. You're Driving Me (To The Arms Of A Stranger)
[4:27] 5. A House Is Not A Home
[2:47] 6. Security
[2:17] 7. Son Of A Preacher Man
[3:06] 8. Pick Up The Pieces
[2:51] 9. Chained
[3:16] 10. Good To Me
[2:55] 11. You Send Me
[4:09] 12. I Have Learned To Do Without You
[3:22] 13. How Many Times
[3:11] 14. Endlessly
[2:36] 15. You're The Fool
[3:35] 16. Since I Fell For You
[2:36] 17. What Happened To The Real Me
[3:29] 18. Since You Became A Part Of My Life
[2:50] 19. It Makes Me Wanna Cry
[2:26] 20. Don't Change Me Now
[2:24] 21. That's The Way Love Is

Mavis Staples's earthy contralto was the Staple Singers' prime asset, and she finally recorded her first solo album in 1969. That album, Mavis Staples, was a tentative, unconvincing collection of pop standards like Dionne Warwick's "A House Is Not a Home," Sam Cooke's "You Send Me" and a pair of Otis Redding songs. The followup, 1970's Only for the Lonely, was much better, yielding the R&B hit "I Have Learned to Do Without You," the exquisite slow blues "How Many Times" and the finger-snapping Memphis soul of "It Makes Me Wanna Cry." Now the 20 tracks from those two albums have been combined on a single CD entitled Only for the Lonely (Stax), and supplemented with "That's the Way Love Is," a duet with Johnny Taylor from Boy Meets Girl, a Stax collection of male-female duets. This isn't Mavis Staples's best work--she went on to do much better singing with her family and on her own--but it's an invaluable glimpse at the first solo steps by one of America's finest singers ~Geoffrey Himes

Only For The Lonely

Melvin Rhyne - Mel's Spell

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:21
Size: 133.6 MB
Styles: Hard bop
Year: 1995
Art: Front

[ 5:23] 1. Billy's Bounce
[ 7:14] 2. Hi-Heel Sneakers
[ 4:30] 3. Stranger In Paradise
[ 5:12] 4. Teach Me A Song
[10:41] 5. Fried Pies
[ 6:05] 6. Sunset Eyes
[ 4:46] 7. Sweet Slumber
[ 5:46] 8. Here's That Rainy Day
[ 5:50] 9. Like Yea
[ 2:49] 10. This Love Of Mine

Recorded December 22, 1994 & December 9, 1995 in New York City, NY. Melvin Rhyne (Org); Peter Bernstein (G); Kenny Washington (D); Daniel G. Sadownick (Perc).

Organist Melvin Rhyne's greatest fame was his participation on four Wes Montgomery Riverside sessions (including Montgomery's first and last album for the label). Fortunately, Rhyne survived long enough, after some lean years, to return to the major-league jazz scene and record some CDs of his own. Born in Indianapolis, Rhyne (a largely self-taught pianist) was an important part of the city's jazz scene. He played with the then-unknown Roland Kirk during 1955-1956, and soon switched to organ. He also had opportunities to back a series of blues (including T-Bone Walker and B.B. King) and R&B artists. Rhyne was part of Montgomery's group for most of 1959-1964. In 1969, he moved to Madison, WI, and four years later he relocated to Milwaukee, where he remained active if obscure for the next two decades. In 1990, he emerged, recording with Herb Ellis and Brian Lynch. Mel Rhyne went on to record two excellent sets for Criss Cross, including a quartet session that has Joshua Redman as his sideman, and has shown that he is an excellent soul-jazz and hard bop soloist in his own right. ~bio by Scott Yanow

Mel's Spell

Jenna Esposito - 13 Men... And Me!

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:30
Size: 104.2 MB
Styles: Vocal, Easy Listening
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[2:35] 1. Eso Beso
[3:31] 2. Dream A Little Dream Of Me
[2:56] 3. Thirteen Men
[3:32] 4. Sorry Said The Moon
[2:20] 5. Just In Time
[3:41] 6. Prelude To A Kiss
[2:20] 7. Sway
[4:18] 8. Since I Fell For You
[5:02] 9. Remembering September In July
[3:16] 10. One Less Bell To Answer
[2:36] 11. Down With Love
[4:00] 12. I Wanna Be Around
[2:43] 13. What Good Would The Moon Be
[2:33] 14. I Feel So Smoochie

A “singer’s singer”…this newcomer to the scene can do it all. She weaves her way through standards, pop and latins with equal amounts of power, beauty and sincerity in her voice. Don’t miss this amazing debut CD, as there are sure to be more to come.

Jenna Esposito made her New York nightclub debut in 2004, and has been delighting audiences across the country ever since. She is best known for her tribute to Connie Francis, which has been a smash hit among critics and audiences, alike. Connie herself has praised Jenna's work, raving, "I've known and loved Jenna for years and love the way she sings. I'm ever so grateful for the love and respect she shows to the catalog of songs that has been so good to me through the years."

In New York City, Jenna has headlined at Birdland, Feinstein's at Loews Regency, The Metropolitan Room, BACKSTAGE dope teatro, The Laurie Beechman Theatre, The Duplex, Danny's Skylight Room, and NYC's historic Friars Club. In 2013, Jenna performed at the Highline Ballroom, in Manhattan, where she was the opening act and duet partner for multi-platinum recording artist, Patrizio Buanne, and in 2011, she made her debut at Manhattan's historic Town Hall, sharing the stage with Liza Minnelli, Chita Rivera, Lucie Arnaz, Larry Gatlin and Marilyn Maye. Jenna has also performed shows at the James Armstrong Theatre and the Nakano Theatre in Torrance, CA, The M Bar in Hollywood, Lorenzo's at the Hilton Garden Inn in Staten Island, NY, the Hoboken Italian Festival in Hoboken, NJ, the St. Nicholas Italian Festival in Philaelphia, PA, the John Cranford Adams Playhouse at Hofstra University in Hempstead, NY, Empire City Casino in Yonkers, NY, Villa Roma in Callicoon, NY, and Monticello Raceway & Casino in Monticello, NY. Dubbed "the voice of Little Italy," Jenna has performed many shows in Manhattan's historic Little Italy, including solo shows at the famed San Gennaro Festival, and she has also made several appearances in Manhattan's Columbus Day Parade.

13 Men... And Me!

Serge Chaloff - The Fable Of Mabel

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:31
Size: 161.5 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1986/1999
Art: Front

[3:17] 1. You Brought A New Kind Of Love To Me
[2:44] 2. Zdot
[5:50] 3. Oh' Baby
[2:56] 4. Love Is Just Around The Corner
[3:24] 5. Easy Street
[4:35] 6. All I Do Is Dream Of You
[4:11] 7. The Fable Of Mabel
[2:04] 8. Sherry
[5:47] 9. Slam
[3:09] 10. A Salute To Tiny
[3:37] 11. Eenie Meenie Minor Mode (Take 2)
[6:02] 12. Let's Jump (Take 2)
[4:32] 13. The Fable Of Mabel
[3:14] 14. A Salute To Tiny
[3:42] 15. Eenie Meenie Minor Mode (Take 1)
[6:53] 16. Let's Jump (Take 1)
[4:26] 17. The Fable Of Mabel

The great bebop baritonist Serge Chaloff is featured in two different Boston sessions on this excellent CD. Six selections showcase him in a quintet actually led by altoist Boots Mussulli and also including Russ Freeman on piano; "You Brought a New Kind of Love," "Oh Baby" and "All I Do Is Dream of You" are among the better tunes. The remainder of this release has six titles (and five previously unreleased alternate takes) from a Chaloff nonet date that also includes trumpeter Herb Pomeroy, altoist Charlie Mariano, and pianist Dick Twardzik. The three versions of "The Fable of Mabel" are each rewarding. This CD is easily recommended to fans of cool-toned bop who do not already own Serge Chaloff's very complete Mosaic box set. ~Scott Yanow

The Fable Of Mabel

Martin Taylor - Kiss and Tell

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:56
Size: 167,3 MB
Art: Front

( 5:11)  1. Kiss and Tell
( 4:48)  2. You've Changed
( 7:53)  3. The Odd Couple
( 6:07)  4. Garden of Dreams
( 0:58)  5. What a Friend We Have in Jesus
( 3:56)  6. Midnight at the Oasis
( 4:51)  7. Mona Lisa
( 6:11)  8. Five-O
( 4:14)  9. Sunstep
( 6:38) 10. Ginger
( 4:16) 11. Midnight Voyage
(11:25) 12. The Nearness of You
( 6:21) 13. I Should Care

The veteran electric guitarist dashes off some spectacular solo runs on this collection, but he seems confused as to which genre he's playing in. His jumpy, shuffling cover of "Midnight at the Oasis" features a blazing Kirk Whalum sax solo and would be a natural for smooth jazz radio if other artists hadn't already redone the 1974 chestnut. On numbers like "You've Changed," however, he slows the pace down to Quaalude calm, aiming for intimacy with a small string section, but ending up with an insomnia cure. Then he's trying the bossa nova thing on the easy swaying "Garden of Dreams," and simply noodling and trying to impress us with his coolness on a brief improvised interlude "What a Friend We Have in Jesus." 

While he's all over the map throughout, he offers some musical oases that the casual listener can turn to while trying to figure out the rest inventive reworkings of the theme songs to '70s TV icons The Odd Couple and Hawaii Five-0. At eight minutes and pretty sluggish, "The Odd Couple" is kind of like watching Felix and Oscar listen to jazz while on Prozac. But "Five-O" features some of Taylor's snappiest soloing as well as a glimmering electric piano solo by Matt Rollings that puts the tune in its rightful retro place. The dichotomy of these two approaches characterizes the whole disc, which is highly listenable in spots, but too inconsistent on the whole. ~ Jonathan Widran  http://www.allmusic.com/album/kiss-tell-mw0000607940

Personnel: Martin Taylor, Pat Bergeron (guitar); Jay Ashey (vocals, trombone, tamborim); Kirk Whalum (soprano & tenor saxophones); George Garzone (tenor saxophone); Randy Brecker (flugelhorn); John Catchings (violin);  (viola); David Davidson (cello); Matt Rollings (acoustic & electric pianos, organ); Brian Siewert (keyboards, programming); Eddie Gomez, Chris Kent (bass); Eric Darken (percussion).

Lucky Thompson - Home Comin'

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:37
Size: 93,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:32)  1. Home Comin'
(5:28)  2. Tea Time
(4:29)  3. Soul Lullaby
(5:01)  4. Then Soul Walked In
(6:25)  5. Fillet of Soul
(5:00)  6. Monsoon
(6:15)  7. Sun Out
(4:23)  8. Yesterday's Child

Born in Columbia, SC, on June 16, 1924, tenor saxophonist Lucky Thompson bridged the gap between the physical dynamism of swing and the cerebral intricacies of bebop, emerging as one of his instrument's foremost practitioners and a stylist par excellence. Eli Thompson's lifelong nickname the byproduct of a jersey, given him by his father, with the word "lucky" stitched across the chest would prove bitterly inappropriate: when he was five, his mother died, and the remainder of his childhood, spent largely in Detroit, was devoted to helping raise his younger siblings. Thompson loved music, but without hope of acquiring an instrument of his own, he ran errands to earn enough money to purchase an instructional book on the saxophone, complete with fingering chart. He then carved imitation lines and keys into a broom handle, teaching himself to read music years before he ever played an actual sax. According to legend, Thompson finally received his own saxophone by accident a delivery company mistakenly dropped one off at his home along with some furniture, and after graduating high school and working briefly as a barber, he signed on with Erskine Hawkins' 'Bama State Collegians, touring with the group until 1943, when he joined Lionel Hampton and settled in New York City.

Soon after his arrival in the Big Apple, Thompson was tapped to replace Ben Webster during his regular gig at the 52nd Street club the Three Deuces , Webster, Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, and Art Tatum were all in attendance at Thompson's debut gig, and while he deemed the performance a disaster (a notorious perfectionist, he was rarely if ever pleased with his work), he nevertheless quickly earned the respect of his peers and became a club fixture. After a stint with bassist Slam Stewart, Thompson again toured with Hampton before joining singer Billy Eckstine's short-lived big band that included Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and Art Blakey  in other words, the crucible of bebop. But although he played on some of the earliest and most influential bop dates, Thompson never fit squarely within the movement's paradigm his playing boasted an elegance and formal power all his own, with an emotional depth rare among the tenor greats of his generation. 

He joined the Count Basie Orchestra in late 1944, exiting the following year while in Los Angeles and remaining there until 1946, in the interim playing on and arranging a series of dates for the Exclusive label. Thompson returned to the road when Gillespie hired him to replace Parker in their epochal combo  he also played on Parker's landmark March 28, 1946, session for Dial, and that same year was a member of the Charles Mingus and Buddy Collette-led Stars of Swing which, sadly, never recorded. More Bio ~ https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/lucky-thompson/id3539270#fullText

Personnel: Lucky Thompson (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Cedar Walton (piano, electric piano); Billy Higgins (drums).

Karla Harris - Sings the Dave & Iola Brubeck Songbook

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:01
Size: 129,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:25)  1. Take Five
(3:56)  2. The Duke
(3:36)  3. Easy As You Go
(5:07)  4. Far More Blue
(7:43)  5. In Your Own Sweet Way
(4:16)  6. There'll Be No Tomorrow
(3:42)  7. My One Bad Habit
(5:11)  8. Summer Song
(7:41)  9. Strange Meadowlark
(5:25) 10. Weep No More
(4:53) 11. Trav'lin Blues

First-Ever Studio Recording Featuring the Vocal Songbook of Dave and Iola Brubeck! Featuring the dynamic vocals of Karla Harris and a top-flight, acclaimed group of musicians (Ted Howe, Tom Kennedy, Dave Weckl), this recording is unlike any other. This project, authorized by the Brubeck estate, intends to pay homage to Brubeck's distinctive musical styling and gorgeous melodies while shaping each arrangement based on the story the lyrics tell. In her Summit Records debut, Karla Harris Sings the Dave and Iola Brubeck Songbook, vocalist Karla Harris brings something rarely heard in a Brubeck tribute: Lyrics. This new release is the first-ever studio recording featuring the vocal songbook of Dave Brubeck's music with lyrics written by the person who had an especially close insight into the iconic jazz pianist's music-his wife of 70 years, Iola Brubeck. 

Harris, a marvelous singer who gained a strong presence on the Pacific NW jazzscape after living for years in Portland, is poised to enter the national stage with this contemporary, respectful and musically innovative tribute. Not since a 1961 live recording of the Dave Brubeck Quartet with guest vocalist Carmen McRae has there been an album of vocal versions of this music, and no one has ever gone into the studio to record and release the Brubeck Songbook as a dedicated vocal project. The project is the brainchild of Los Angeles-based producer, arranger and pianist Ted Howe, whose previous recordings include chart-topping tributes to Gershwin, Elton John and Ellington. Howe, a lifelong Brubeck fan who remembers the first time he heard the pianist in 1954 ('his playing floored me,' he recalls) cites Brubeck as a major inspiration in his own career, and has long wanted to produce a vocal tribute of the composer's music. Impressed with Harris after working with her at a 2013 concert he produced in Atlanta, Howe approached the singer with the idea. 'I loved the concept immediately. It was intriguing, to say the least,' Harris says. 'I had no idea words existed for so many of the songs Dave Brubeck composed or that Iola wrote so many of those lyrics. They've really gone largely undiscovered.' Work got off the ground when Howe, through the Brubeck estate, received a copy of a rare, out-of-print Dave Brubeck songbook published more than 30 years ago-a copy provided by Iola herself in early 2014 for this project, shortly before her passing. 

'It felt like we were uncovering hidden treasure,' Harris says of looking through the music for the first time. 'There was as an opening verse to 'Strange Meadowlark,' for example, that we didn't know even existed. And there was Iola's name listed as lyricist on tune after tune, making it clear this songbook belonged to them both. Her words were sophisticated, filled with imagery and emotion; they changed my experience of some of these songs. I wanted to sing them very much.' Included among the 11 tracks on Karla Harris Sings the Dave and Iola Brubeck Songbook are several Brubeck classics along with a few less-known standouts, as well as some tunes from 'The Real Ambassadors,' a musical the couple wrote together in 1962. Lyrics led the way as Howe created arrangements, opening some unexpected approaches in the process. For example, 'In Your Own Sweet Way,' traditionally played as a bright swing tune, here becomes something plaintive, taking its cue from Iola's surprisingly melancholy lyrics. 'Take Five' melds a haunting new vamp with the classic Desmond progression to bring out what Harris calls 'some frustrated longing' in those lyrics written by Iola and Dave.

Karla tends to take the stage by storm and doesn't let go till it's all over. ~ Jazz Society of Oregon

A powerful singer at ease in any setting. ~ Ross Gentile, Standard In Jazz WSIE-FM

Anyone who sees and hears this gorgeous woman, at once striking and modest, will be enchanted by her performance and personality. ~ Positively Entertainment - Editorial Reviews  http://www.amazon.com/Sings-Dave-Iola-Brubeck-Songbook/dp/B00M0CVYQ0

Personnel: Karla Harris (vocals); Bob Sheppard (alto saxophone); Ted Howe (piano, keyboards); Tom Kennedy (acoustic bass, electric bass); Dave Weckl (drums).

Sings the Dave & Iola Brubeck Songbook

Harold Ashby - Just For You

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:18
Size: 124,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:13)  1. Reminiscining
(5:12)  2. Stampash
(5:39)  3. Lotus Blossom
(5:28)  4. Forever
(5:01)  5. Tasty
(6:57)  6. Just for You
(6:19)  7. Neat
(4:30)  8. The Intimacy of the Blues
(4:44)  9. Sultry Serenade
(6:11) 10. Sweet Nothin's

Former Duke Ellington band member Harold Ashby, although approaching 75 years, shows no sign of slowing down and no decrease in his sax playing prowess. Cut for Mapleshade Records, this album also reveals that Ashby is a composer of no mean accomplishment. All but three of the tunes are his, with the others belonging to Ellington and Billy Strayhorn. Ashby's distinctive rendition of Ellington's "Lotus Blossom" is an outstanding reading. Strayhorn's "The Intimacy of the Blues" swings, and Ellington's "Sultry Serenade" is played by Ashby, with his characteristic, lightly touched tone combined with a kind of frolicking flavor. The tunes penned by Ashby run the gamut of style: "Reminiscing" is a sensual ballad while "Forever" has a faint Latin beat. The title tune is an intimate piece, reminiscent of Ellington's own "Azure," and is an album highlight. On the session's coda, "Sweet Nuthins," Ashby's tenor takes on a Hodge-esque flavor, featuring his soft-played approach to this blues-tinged number.

Ashby is supported by three gifted musicians on the scene today; their efforts are consistent with the very relaxed feeling Ashby and producer Hamiet Bluiett have established for this session. No one is being pushed here, and John Hicks' piano playing is lightly touched. Keter Betts, long-time Washington, DC resident and elegant bass player supreme, combines with premiere drummer Jimmy Cobb to provide the proper rhythmic setting for both Ashby and Hicks to ply their wares. Those who prefer their jazz sophisticated and suave, not loud and raucous, will certainly be attracted to this very good album that amply demonstrates how good this music can sound when in the right hands. ~ Dave Nathan  http://www.allmusic.com/album/just-for-you-mw0000242549

Personnel: Harold Ashby (tenor saxophone); John Hicks (piano); Keter Betts (bass); Jimmy Cobb (drums).

Just For You

Friday, April 10, 2015

Jeff Healey - Last Call

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:16
Size: 117.4 MB
Styles: Jazz-blues
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[2:56] 1. Holding My Honey's Hand
[5:01] 2. Time On My Hands
[2:33] 3. The Wildcat
[2:59] 4. You Can't Pull The Wool Over My Eyes
[4:49] 5. Deep Purple
[3:09] 6. Hong Kong Blues
[3:57] 7. Pennies From Heaven
[4:46] 8. Autumn In New York
[3:06] 9. I'm Gonna Sit Right Down And Write Myself A Letter
[2:50] 10. Black And Blue Bottom
[3:34] 11. Guitar Duet Stomp
[4:52] 12. Laura
[3:54] 13. Keeping Myself For You
[2:43] 14. Some Of These Days

Jeff Healey gained worldwide fame as a stunningly original rock/blues guitarist. His passion, however, was the infectious and joyful music from the classic jazz era. These stripped down Solo, Duo and Trio last sessions could be titled "The Real Jeff Healey." The material Jeff chose to record for his final jazz/swing disc shows his love for all musical styles.From swing guitar instrumentals first recorded by Lonnie Johnson, Eddie Lang and Joe Venuti to interpretations of songs originally done by Fats Waller, Sidney Bechet and Hoagy Carmichael.

Last Call

Red Garland Trio - Groovy

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:04
Size: 91.7 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Piano jazz
Year: 1957/1987
Art: Front

[8:18] 1. C-Jam Blues
[6:43] 2. Gone Again
[4:39] 3. Will You Still Be Mine
[9:33] 4. Willow Weep For Me
[7:11] 5. What Can I Say
[3:38] 6. Hey Now

Bass – Paul Chambers; Drums – Arthur Taylor; Piano – Red Garland. Recording Date: December 14, 1956 - August 9, 1957

Red Garland's third recording as a leader has him playing very well, somewhat energetic and more inclusive in his direction to span the mainstream jazz palate beyond the cool exterior he emanates. The title might be a bit deceptive, for this is not a project where soul-jazz or early boogaloo influences turned jazzmen into groovemeisters -- it's a swinging groove. With bassist Paul Chambers and drummer Art Taylor, Garland has all the support he needs to wing it in a variety of directions. Recorded in that most legendary year of jazz, 1957, Garland is coming into his own in a more confident way, buoyed by his association at the time with Miles Davis. Chambers is flawless in his support role, and on this recording deserves a close listen, especially for students of the acoustic upright. They immediately dig in on the opener "C Jam Blues," with Garland at his heartiest during his bridge solo, they agree in the affirmative during the entirety of the hard bop take of "Will You Still Be Mine?," and repeat but modify the melody à la "Cool Blues" in an adept display of artistry for "Hey Now." Of course Garland has to play a ballad or two, as on "Willow Weep for Me," luscious with chord sequences, and really reflects the influence of Erroll Garner in that chiming, two-handed sustenato style for Garner's "Gone Again." It is said that by the third recording, most musicians should have their style down pat and begin attempting to take the music to a higher level. You really hear that in this recording, which was a springboard to making Red Garland one of the most revered and respected jazz pianists of the modern era. ~Michael G. Nastos

Groovy

Teddy Charles & His Sextet - Salute To Hamp

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:39
Size: 111.4 MB
Styles: Vibraphone jazz
Year: 2010/2013
Art: Front

[5:09] 1. Air Mail Special
[2:40] 2. Midnight Sun
[2:23] 3. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
[2:20] 4. He's Gone Again
[3:18] 5. Stompin' At The Savoy
[3:14] 6. Flying Home
[3:43] 7. Stardust
[4:00] 8. Blue Hamp
[2:53] 9. Moonglow
[2:42] 10. On The Sunny Side Of The Street (Alt Take)
[3:17] 11. Stompin' At The Savoy
[2:40] 12. Moonglow (Alt Take 4)
[4:14] 13. Blue Hamp (Alt Take 5)
[2:55] 14. Jack The Bellboy
[3:04] 15. Jack The Bellboy (Alt Take 3)

Bass – Addison Farmer; Drums – Charlie Smith, Ed Thigpen; Piano – Hank Jones; Tenor Saxophone – Zoot Sims; Trombone – Bob Brookmeyer; Trumpet – Art Farmer; Vibraphone – Teddy Charles.

Trained at the Juilliard School of Music, Teddy was able to reach effortlessly into modern classical music theory and deploy modal scales on solos—giving his compositions and recordings a fresh, hip sound. But what made Teddy's style special was that he was able to combine long-hair thinking with street-smart swing, and for Teddy, swing, ultimately, was everything.

There was no shortage of great vibraphonists in the late '40s. Lionel Hampton, Milt Jackson, Red Norvo, Terry Gibbs and Marjorie Hyams all could drop jaws. But Teddy represented something new—a sound that seemed to be visiting from the future. And as it turned out, that's exactly where it came from, since he would influence many young vibraphonists who followed.

Salute To Hamp

Toots Thielemans - Smooth And Easy

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:23
Size: 168.0 MB
Styles: Harmonica jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[5:15] 1. Isn't It Romantic
[7:14] 2. East Of The Sun
[2:27] 3. Don't Blame Me
[2:44] 4. Scotch On The Rocks
[2:12] 5. Cocktails For Two
[2:23] 6. I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart
[2:58] 7. Sophisticated Lady
[4:36] 8. Don't Be That Way
[3:11] 9. Stars Fell On Alabama
[4:30] 10. Struttin' With Some Barbecue
[4:27] 11. Imagination
[3:46] 12. 18th Century Ballroom
[7:02] 13. Soul Station
[4:53] 14. Fundamental Frequency
[4:40] 15. On The Alamo
[4:30] 16. Diga Diga Doo
[2:01] 17. Skylark
[4:25] 18. Sonny Boy

Today Jean “Toots” Thielemans remains a strong favorite among jazz aficionados and professional critics alike. His music CDs continue to delight (many of which were recorded in the 2000s) and have introduced him to entire new generations of keen fans. Apart from his popularity as an accomplished musician, he is well liked for his modesty and kind demeanor. In his native Belgium, he is also popular for describing himself as a Brussels “ket”, which means “street kid” in old Brussels slang. He received a joint honorary doctorate from the Vrije Universiteit Brussel and the Université Libre de Bruxelles (Belgium) and in 2001 Thielemans was ennobled a baron by King Albert II of Belgium.

In 2005 he was nominated for the title of De Grootste Belg (The Greatest Belgian). In the Flemish version he ended 20th place, in the Walloon version he ended 44th place.

Smooth And Easy

Joan Regan - Just Joan

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:48
Size: 109.5 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 1956/2009
Art: Front

[2:49] 1. It Could Happen To You
[2:07] 2. When I Grow Too Old To Dream
[4:19] 3. I Know Why (And So Do You)
[2:54] 4. I've Got A Feelin' You're Foolin'
[3:13] 5. Deep In A Dream
[2:31] 6. Home
[3:27] 7. Sinner Or Saint
[2:55] 8. That Old Feeling
[3:55] 9. All The Things You Are
[2:46] 10. Someone To Watch Over Me
[3:29] 11. Never In A Million Years
[3:22] 12. For All We Know
[2:45] 13. Ricochet
[2:20] 14. Someone Else's Roses
[2:48] 15. If I Give My Heart To You
[2:01] 16. Wait For Me Darling

Joan Regan is a traditional pop music singer born in the UK at Romford, Essex on 19 Jan 1928. She was popular during 1950s and 1960s, appearing on the variety circuit in numerous shows, and also on TV. She did a Royal Command Performance in 1955 and was a regular at the London Palladium. Originally a talent spotted by impresario Bernard Delfont and signed by Decca Records, she had a hit with ‘Ricochet’ in 1953. Subsequently she made 4 albums, had her own TV programme and international touring engagements. A number of these were in the USA and across Europe.

Married 3 times, she lived in Florida for a time, finally settling in Kent, England with her 3rd husband. He predeceased her, and she died September 12 2013. She is survived by 2 sons from her first marriage and a daughter from her second. She will be remembered by her numerous fans, especially so as she had performed many of her concerts near the end of her career in aid of various charities. She had blonde hair and a broad smile, and her uplifting vocal style and voice lives on in her recordings.

Just Joan

Archie Semple - Hard Candy

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:05
Size: 178.8 MB
Styles: Clarinet jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[4:23] 1. Deep Sleep
[3:03] 2. Summer Is Coming In
[2:14] 3. Queen Bess
[2:59] 4. Lady Sings The Blues
[3:49] 5. Up Jumped You With Love
[3:25] 6. Buddy's Habits
[3:34] 7. Back In Your Own Backyard
[3:26] 8. Kansas City Stomps
[5:09] 9. Night People
[2:41] 10. The One I Love Belongs To Somebody Else
[4:01] 11. I'm Coming Virginia
[4:55] 12. What'll I Do
[3:19] 13. Sugar Babe
[2:39] 14. My Foolish Heart
[3:29] 15. Side Walk Blues
[3:06] 16. She's Funny That Way
[3:36] 17. Just Another Day
[3:24] 18. Ostrich Walk
[5:04] 19. I'm Confessin' (That I Love You)
[3:48] 20. After My Laughter Came Tears
[2:52] 21. King Porter Stomp
[2:59] 22. Lullaby Of The Leaves

b. Archibald Stuart Nisbet Semple, 1 March 1928, Edinburgh, Scotland, d. 26 January 1974. After first playing clarinet in bands in his homeland, Semple moved to London in the early 50s. There he became an important voice in the burgeoning traditional jazz scene, playing with the bands of Mick Mulligan, Freddy Randall and Alex Welsh, with whom he remained until the early 60s. During that decade he played with various bands, led his own small groups and made many records, despite the fast-encroaching effects of a severe drinking problem. A very distinctive player with a rich and quirky musical imagination, Semple was one of the most strikingly individualistic musicians to emerge from the sometimes predictable British trad scene. His presence in the already formidable Welsh band helped to create much memorable music. ~bio by AMG

Hard Candy

Stan Getz - The Best Of The Verve Years (2-Disc Set)

This two-CD sampler is most highly recommended for listeners not familiar with Stan Getz's recordings of the 1950s and '60s. Starting with a version of "Stella by Starlight" that co-stars guitarist Jimmy Raney, this set matches Getz's cool tenor with such artists as trumpeters Dizzy Gillespie and Conte Candoli, trombonist J.J. Johnson, baritonist Gerry Mulligan, pianists Oscar Peterson, Bill Evans and Chick Corea, valve trombonist Bob Brookmeyer and vibraphonist Gary Burton. Also included are his two main bossa nova hits "Desafinado" and "The Girl from Ipanema" along with a couple of tracks from Getz's highly-rated Focus album. It's a fine overview of the great tenor's middle years. ~Scott Yanow

Album: The Best Of The Verve Years (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:43
Size: 159.6 MB
Styles: Post bop, West Coast jazz, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1991

[2:41] 1. Stella By Starlight
[6:36] 2. Hospitality Creek
[3:32] 3. Nobody Else But Me
[7:22] 4. Flamingo
[6:02] 5. Summertime
[8:51] 6. Shine
[7:50] 7. Blues For Mary Jane
[3:53] 8. It Never Entered My Mind
[8:22] 9. My Funny Valentine
[4:54] 10. Tour's End
[3:54] 11. You're Blasé
[5:42] 12. A Ballad

The Best Of The Verve Years (Disc 1)

Album: The Best Of The Verve Years (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:01
Size: 164.9 MB
Styles: Post bop, West Coast jazz, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1991
Art: Front

[4:40] 1. Early Autumn
[8:31] 2. Evening In Paris
[6:10] 3. Her
[8:08] 4. I'm Late, I'm Late
[5:49] 5. Desafinado
[5:46] 6. Manha De Carnaval (Morning Of The Carnival)
[3:19] 7. Insensatez (How Insensitive)
[5:21] 8. The Girl From Ipanema
[5:04] 9. Melinda
[3:58] 10. Here's That Rainy Day
[8:03] 11. Con Alma
[7:07] 12. Sweet Rain

The Best Of The Verve Years (Disc 2)

Wendy Lee Taylor - All You Have To Do

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:48
Size: 127.8 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[2:48] 1. That Old Black Magic
[3:04] 2. Don't Look At Me That Way
[3:26] 3. Anyone Can Whistle
[4:09] 4. After You Who
[5:06] 5. Plus Je T'embrasse
[4:53] 6. Trav'ling Light
[3:00] 7. Boy Next Door
[3:49] 8. All You Have To Do
[2:47] 9. I Concentrate On You
[3:06] 10. Could It Be You
[4:46] 11. Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue
[2:49] 12. Teach Me Tonight
[3:00] 13. Bonjour Tristesse
[3:59] 14. Not A Day Goes By
[5:00] 15. Chez Moi

Wendy Lee Taylor (voc), Pierre Christophe (p), Luigi Trussardi (b), Mourad Benhammou (dm), Cindy Taylor (vib, perc), Fabien Mary (tp), Pierrick Pedron (as), David Sauzay (ts, fl), Xavier Richardeau (bs), Michael Joussein (tb), Laurent Colombani (arr), Michel Delage (arr) Recorded in February 2008, Paris Duration : 56’ 38’’ Safety Records 201002 (Intégral)

Australian singer and dancer Wendy Lee Taylor has trodden a singular path; following an international career in musical theatre, a stint as one the famous Bluebell girls at the Lido de Paris, founding a vocal trio (The Jazzberries), she returned to musical comedy (1999 ‘Lautrec’ written by Charles Aznvour and created for the Shaftesbury Theatre in London) before finally recording her first album “Let’s Do It” (2005) She continues a career encompassing her two fundamentals, dance and singing. ‘All You Have To Do’ is an album recorded some time ago but only recently released, successfully ambitious, as the profusion of horns convivially marries with an absence of pretention.

It’s an album of standards, the majority with a sentimental mood, sung with enthusiasm and lifted by a luxurious staging: counter melodies of flute and muted trumpet on “After you who?” the excellent intro of “Plus je t’embrasse”, the atmosphere of an Art-House Film on “All you have to do”. This sentimental style without soppiness or lament suits Wendy Lee Taylor well and, in a spirit slightly “west-coast be-bop” (Teach me tonight) lets her joy take flight with power and sensitivity. It’s true that’s she has the advantage of a veritable “all-star” of today’s French be-boppers, musicians who illuminated the Franc Pinot in its prime and who distinguish themselves constantly with their own groups: Mourad Benhammou, Fabien Mary, Pierrick Pedron, David Sauzay, Xavier Richardeau, Pierre Christophe, Michael Joussein, are all impeccable and bring a beautiful momentum to the recording, not forgetting the regrettably deceased Luigi Trussardi (29th April 2010). A lovely album: simultaneously rich and simple, classic yet intimate. ~Jean Szlamowicz

All You Have To Do

Bob Enevoldsen - Smorgasbord

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:23
Size: 138,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:52)  1. Iron Works
(5:00)  2. Loaded With Bass
(5:24)  3. Topsy
(8:27)  4. Blues & Rhythm
(5:35)  5. Don't Be That Way
(2:37)  6. Ding Dong, The Witch Is Dead
(2:16)  7. Swingin' On A Star
(3:19)  8. Swinger's Dream
(2:46)  9. My Ideal
(2:27) 10. How Low The Tune
(2:39) 11. John's Jumble
(2:17) 12. You're In Love
(2:50) 13. Thinking Of You
(2:18) 14. No Time For Love
(2:34) 15. Mr. Know-It-All
(2:51) 16. Oh, Look At Me Now
(3:00) 17. Bob's Boy

Back in the early 1950s, jazz musicians were impossibly gifted. A good number not only could play their primary instrument with enormous skill and flair, they often could play quite a few others. This was particularly true on the West Coast, where studio work was abundant but your share depended largely on how many axes you could grind. If you played only the tenor sax, your odds of being called consistently for a job were slim given the competition. But if you played three or more instruments, you could find yourself recording on several sessions a day. One of these highly versatile West Coast jazz musicians was Bob Enevoldsen, who played valve trombone, tenor sax and upright bass. Born in Montana, Enevoldsen (pronounced EE-na-vold-sin) studied music in Montana, served in the army, taught music in  Salt Lake City, and moved to Los Angeles in 1951.

There, he played valve trombone and tenor saxophone with Gerry Mulligan, Shorty Rogers, Shelly Manne and Marty Paich. Soon after he arrived, he learned the bass, perhaps as a way to play with the Harry Babasin Quartet and free up bassist Babasin [pictured] to play the jazz cello.

Enevoldsen also played bass in pianist and singer Bobby Troup's groups from 1954 onward. In 1959, Enevoldsen began working in Las Vegas show bands, and became a staff and studio musician for Steve Allen's TV show from 1962-64. In the decades that followed Enevoldsen remained a steady session and freelance musician on the West Coast. Among Enevoldsen's key recordings of the 1950s are dates with the Gerry Mulligan Tentet (starting in 1953); Shorty Rogers' Shorty Courts the Count (1954); and Bud Shank and Three Trombones (1954), on which he's joined by valve-trombonists Maynard Ferguson and Stu Williamson. Enevoldsen appears on Kenton Presents Jazz: Bill Holman (1954), Russ Garcia's challenging Wigville (1955) and the Marty Paich Dek-tette studio session with Mel Torme (1956). There were singer dates with Anita O'Day and Peggy Lee (1958), as well as swinging ensemble sessions, such as Art Pepper + Eleven (1959). From 1960 onward, Enevoldsen worked on movie soundtracks and TV show themes, and recorded jazz sessions up until his death in 2005.

Perhaps Enevoldsen's finest leadership date from the mid-1950s is Smorgasbord. The album demonstrates his versatility and humor as well as his spirited arranging skills. In addition to being a highly swinging session, it's notable for the musicians who were there and the instruments they played. The recording features Enevoldsen on valve trombone and tenor sax; Marty Paich [pictured] on piano, organ and accordion; Larry Bunker on vibes and drums; Howard Roberts on guitar; Red Mitchell on bass and piano; and Don Heath on drums. Besides the terrific small-group charts by Enevoldsen [pictured], you get to hear Paich play the squeezebox, and he does quite a fabulous job (Swinging on a Star, for example). 

Also spectacular is Larry Bunker on vibes and guitarist Howard Roberts, who too often is overlooked among the crowd of jazz session guitarists in California during this period. As one of jazz's early valve-trombonists, Enevoldsen cannot be compared with Bob Brookmeyer. Bob was and continues to be spectacular, and the two artists weren't in the same league. But Enevoldsen was a solid player and arranger who found steady work playing three different instruments. And he played them with ease and grace. ~ Marc Myers http://www.jazzwax.com/2009/06/bob-enevoldsen-jazz-octopus.html

Personnel:  Bob Enevoldsen - tenor saxophone, valve trombone; Marty Paich - p, accordion, organ; Larry Bunker - vib, p, dr; Howard Roberts – g; Red Mitchell – b; Don Heath - dr

Smorgasbord

Maria Muldaur - Heart Of Mine: Love Songs of Bob Dylan

Styles: Pop, Vocal
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:19
Size: 113,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:12)  1. Buckets of Rain
(3:38)  2. Lay Baby Lay (Lay Lady Lay)
(4:15)  3. To Be Alone With You
(3:13)  4. Heart Of Mine
(3:29)  5. Make You Feel My Love
(4:16)  6. Moonlight
(4:53)  7. You're Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go
(5:21)  8. Golden Loom
(3:30)  9. On A Night Like This
(4:08) 10. I'll Be Your Baby Tonight
(4:36) 11. Wedding Song
(3:42) 12. You Ain't Goin' Nowhere

Maria Muldaur has been taken by Bob Dylan's music from the very start. They were on the coffeehouse circuit in New York in the early '60s, and she's had occasion to sing his praises from the stage and in Martin Scorsese's film No Direction Home. And while other artists from Joan Baez to Judy Collins have cut entire albums of Dylan's tunes, none of them feels quite like this one. Muldaur, a fine blues and jazz singer, has taken the songs form Dylan's romantic canon and has fashioned them in her own image without losing their original bite, wonder, and humor. Accompanied by her road band and a slew of guests that include Amos Garrett, Danny Caron, and Suzy Thompson, she has created a dreamy, languid, memorable song cycle. 

On first listen, it was a bit off-putting with all the license she took with the material, but on second and repeated listens, it settled in like an old friend on the couch telling stories. Beginning with a slippery, country-tinged bluesy "Buckets of Rain," and moving into a jazz groove on "Lay Lady Lay," (a weak tune by Dylan even if it was a hit) in which she changes the lyrics along gender lines and transforms the tune, perhaps offering a definitive version. The blues return on "To Be Alone with You," and she delivers a wrenching version of "Heart of Mine." The other stellar cuts here are the poignant "Wedding Song," the jaunty Caribbean-flavored "On a Night Like This," the sultry "Make You Feel My Love," and a funky jazz version of "You're Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go," which sounds like it could have been produced by Allen Toussaint as does "I'll Be Your Baby Tonight." Recommended. ~ Thom Jurek  http://www.allmusic.com/album/heart-of-mine-love-songs-of-bob-dylan-mw0000348506

Personnel: Maria Muldaur (vocals, fiddle); Danny Caron, Amos Garrett (guitar); Chris Haugen (slide guitar); Joel Jaffe (lap steel guitar, E-bow, shaker, tambourine); Richard Greene & Beryl Marriott (violin); Suzy Thompson (fiddle, accordion); James "Hutch" Hutchinson (bass guitar); Kimberly Bass (background vocals); Cranston Clements (guitar, acoustic guitar); David Torkanowsky (keyboards); Tony Braunagel (drums, percussion).

Hank Crawford - From The Heart

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:41
Size: 88,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:19)  1. Don't Cry Baby
(3:38)  2. Sweet Cakes
(3:17)  3. You've Changed
(3:51)  4. Baby Let Me Hold Your Hand
(4:37)  5. Sherri
(3:06)  6. The Peeper
(5:00)  7. But On The Other Hand, Baby
(5:41)  8. Stoney Lonesome
(5:08)  9. What Will I Tell My Heart

Recorded in 1962 with most of the same band that made Soul Clinic, Hank Crawford turns in a simmering, deep soul performance that draws in equal parts from Ray Charles' R&B, James Moody's blues and Duke Ellington's swing. Accompanied by Texas tenor giant David "Fathead" Newman, baritone saxophonist Leroy Cooper, trumpeters John Hunt and Phil Guilbeau, bassist Edgar Willis and drummer Bruno Carr (with Sonny Forrest on guitar on three tracks), Crawford follows the soul-blues Muse into the night on this set. His four originals, including "Stoney Lonesome," "The Peeper" and "Sherri," are high points, so are his readings of Percy Mayfield's classic "But on the Other Hand," and Charles' "Baby Let Me Hold Your Hand." 

The bookends on the set are the Unger-Bernie-Johnson blues finger-popper "Don't Cry Baby" and the elegant, melancholy ballad "What Will I Tell My Heart." From the Heart features Crawford digging deep into the Memphis tradition for expression. His own playing is exceptional as is that of Newman. These solos are as notable for their restraint in the service of melody as they are for their depth of expression. This is an early highpoint for Crawford. ~ Thom Jurek  http://www.allmusic.com/album/from-the-heart-mw0000142533

From The Heart