Friday, July 3, 2015

Lisa Lauren - My Own Twist

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:31
Size: 93,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:58)  1. Sweet Seasons
(4:19)  2. A Shame
(6:06)  3. Life Goes On
(4:27)  4. My Own Twist
(2:59)  5. It Sucks To Be You
(3:55)  6. That's All She Wrote
(4:09)  7. A Little Romance
(3:36)  8. Here Comes The Sun
(3:29)  9. A Guy Thing
(3:28) 10. Yours And Mine

For all the hype in 2002 surrounding jazz hybrid vocalist Norah Jones, she can't really hold a candle to the far superior, multi-faceted Lauren, an indie artist from Chicago who artfully blends pop and jazz influences with a dash or two of country and worldbeat. So it's promotion that's missing. Or is it the narrow play lists of adult contemporary and smooth jazz stations which would rather stick with tried-and-trues and Mariah Carey and Sade instead of allowing new voices in the mix Lauren went Beatles-happy on her previous CD, and here does a cool jazz seduction with "Here Comes the Sun," also playing an elegant, purposeful piano line that challenges Fareed Haque's strumming guitar and Jim Gailloreto's silky soprano sax to keep up. 

More high-profile sax contributions come from none other than David Sanborn on the sassy, Steely Dan-inspired "A Shame," whose lyrics brim with attitude and wistful energy; Lauren sounds a bit like Marilyn Scott on this tune, and that's a compliment. Fellow Chicagoan and smooth jazz guy Steve Cole offers a tender soprano line behind one of Lauren's more romantic moments on "A Little Romance." "Life Goes On" is designed as a quartet piece, with soft, seductive drum brushes easing past a tender-hearted delivery of a lyric pondering love's mysteries. Lauren sometimes runs the risk of being overshadowed by her high-profile personnel, such as on this tune, where Fareed Haque's credit reads "homage to Pat Metheny." In the end, though, she more than holds her own. Lauren's a strong vocalist and honest songwriter, but she's also aces with cover tunes, making old songs like Carole King's "Sweet Seasons" sound fresh via colorful arrangements (this one with harmonica-laced country seasoning). ~ Jonathan Widran  http://www.allmusic.com/album/my-own-twist-mw0000210489

Personnel: Lisa Lauren (piano, keyboards); Fareed Haque (guitar, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, slide guitar); Inger Carle, Susan Voelz (violin); Stacia Spencer (viola); Alison Chesley (cello); Jim Gailloreto (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); David Sanborn (alto saxophone); Rob Parton (trumpet); Mike Halpin (trombone); John Blasucci (keyboards); Steve Rodby (acoustic bass); Jeff Thomas (drums, percussion); Kevin Connelley, Larry Beers, Tom Hipskind (drums).

Louis Durra - Rocket Science

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:46
Size: 112,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:06)  1. The Hardest Button to Button
(4:27)  2. One Love
(4:26)  3. Black Horse and the Cherry Tree
(4:59)  4. Home
(3:32)  5. El Mango
(4:30)  6. Nine Eleven
(3:41)  7. According to You
(4:47)  8. Living for the City
(4:08)  9. Back in the U.S.S.R.
(3:53) 10. Un Canadien Errant
(4:54) 11. In My Life
(2:18) 12. La Puerta Negra

The constant revitalization of the piano trio is one of the most rewarding developments in recent jazz history and it continues apace with Louis Durra's Rocket Science. Durra isn't introducing a major paradigm shift, but with Ryan McGillicuddy on bass and longtime compatriot Jerry Kalaf on drums, he's bringing a few fresh new tunes to the party and delivering them with a light, engaging yet imaginative flair. Rocket Science follows on from The Best Of All Possible Worlds (Self Produced, 2012) and consists, for the most part, of an intriguing mix of covers. Durra avoids the American Songbook classics, concentrating on more contemporary composers whose work is regularly adopted by jazz players Stevie Wonder's "Living For The City," John Lennon and Paul McCartney's "Back In The USSR" and "In My Life" and some who've yet to reach this status.

There's a pleasing variation in mood and pace. Jack White's "The Hardest Button To Button" gets a foot-stomping groove from Durra's left hand and Larry Steen's bass; Michael Buble and Alan Chang's "Home" is a melancholy ballad; Juan Villarreal's "El Mango" has a jaunty, up-tempo beat with a Vince Guaraldi cheeriness. Durra's "Nine Eleven," the album's sole original composition, is a lovely tune, performed beautifully by Durra with particularly sympathetic and respectful support from McGillicuddy and Kalaf. Two of the album's most left-field selections leave the most lasting impressions. KT Tunstall's "Black Horse and the Cherry Tree" loses a little of Tunstall's assertiveness but gains a shuffling, funky feel from Kalaf's drums.

The trio performs "Un Canadien Errant," a traditional song from Quebec, as a gently, wistful waltz with an occasional shift in pulse and emphasis that surprises without spoiling the mood it also gives McGillicuddy the chance to take the spotlight with his own lyrical solo. Durra, McGillicuddy and Kalaf play three or four nights a week around Los Angeles and this consistent work clearly helps them to knit together as a unit. Durra has also played some critically acclaimed shows at the Edinburgh Festival, not the easiest of places to make an impression. All this experience and expertise, coupled with Durra's inspired song selection, gives Rocket Science a special spark. ~ Bruce Lindsay  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/rocket-science-louis-durra-self-produced-review-by-bruce-lindsay.php
 
Personnel: Louis Durra: piano; Ryan McGillicuddy: bass; Jerry Kalaf: drums; Larry Steen: bass (1, 7).

Joe Locke - Force of Four

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:56
Size: 126,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:09)  1. Like Joe
(8:22)  2. Ruminations
(7:56)  3. Ricky's Tune
(7:13)  4. No Moe
(5:16)  5. Available in Blue
(6:48)  6. Alpha Punk
(8:20)  7. Laura
(4:49)  8. Blue November

Certain sounds are so easy to love: the blurry whine of a muted trumpet, the beefy growl of a robust tenor saxophone, the rich, frictional cry of the cello, and the buoyant, sustained ring of a mallet hitting a key on a vibraphone. Vibraphonist Joe Locke's profile seems to have risen on a sharp angle since Live in Seattle (Origin Records, 2006), a CD that found its way onto several critic's top ten of the year lists. Since then he has offered up Live at JazzBaltica (MaxJazz, 2006) and Sticks and Strings (Music Eyes, 2007), proving that his excellence was no one-off affair. Force of Four finds Locke in the company of a crack quartet his vibraphone and a piano trio offering up perhaps his finest recording to date. And though the instrumental make-up is the same as that of the legendary Modern Jazz Quartet (MJQ), Locke and company are more about energy and forward momentum and grooves than they are about a chamber atmosphere.

"Like Joe" is a bouncy tribute to tenor titan Joe Henderson that features seamless piano/vibes interplay. It's easy to think that the two instruments could bump heads and step on each other's toes, but that's never the case on this disc. "Ruminations" has a pensive atmosphere and drifting quality, and a sublime quartet weave of sound.

"No Moe," from the pen of Sonny Rollins, is tight groove that brings in one of the album's two guests, trumpeter Thomas Marriott, playing a beautiful muted horn. "Alpha Punk" and "Blue November" feature tenor saxophonist Wayne Escoffery the former an energetic romp that brings the Yellowjackets sound to mind, the latter a relaxed dark-toned piece of introspective beauty.

Joe Locke might just be this generation's Milt Jackson. And with Force of Four he might be headed to the year's top ten lists again. ~ Dan McClenaghan  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/force-of-four-joe-locke-origin-records-review-by-dan-mcclenaghan.php

Personnel: Joe Locke: vibes; Robert Rodriguez: piano; Johnathan Blake: drums; Ricardo Rodriguez: bass; Wayne Escoffery: tenor sax (6, 8); Thomas Marriott: trumpet (4).

Force of Four

Jessica Gall - Little Big Soul

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:04
Size: 106,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:08)  1. Breaking Waves
(3:22)  2. Come Rain Or Come Shine
(3:33)  3. Saturday Night
(3:53)  4. Beautiful Girls
(3:25)  5. Part Of My Dreams
(4:50)  6. The Moment When You Need Me
(4:11)  7. On The Other Side
(3:26)  8. Summer Evening
(3:23)  9. Road To Salvation
(3:41) 10. You Are
(4:20) 11. Touch The Rain
(3:46) 12. Little Big Soul

While her debut album mainly featured cover songs, she has taken a new direction with "Little Big Soul", creating an innovative soundscape together with producer Robert Matt and her pianist Bene Aperdannier. “I love the space on the album. Pedal steel guitar and dobro have brought a warm Southern States vibe to the Spree!” One should approach Jessica Gall with an open mind. True, there have been many female vocalists in the last few years; but her voice delivers sound in a unique way. Jessica Gall has really found her own voice. https://herzogrecords.bandcamp.com/merch/cd-little-big-soul-jessica-gall

Ray Brown, Monty Alexander, Johnny Griffin, Martin Drew - Summerwind

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:15
Size: 129,5 MB
Art: Front

( 7:02)  1. Blues For Groundhogs
(10:16) 2. Medley: Sophisticated Lady/Rocks in My Bed
( 3:27)  3. Put Your Little Foot Right Out
( 6:20)  4. Consider
( 3:13)  5. Swamp Fire
( 5:54)  6. Summerwind
( 2:34)  7. Griff and Me
( 4:26)  8. Delaunay's Dilemma
( 2:04)  9. Hard Times
( 3:11) 10. Thanks for the Memory
( 2:23) 11. Woogie Boogie
( 5:20) 12. Street Life

Time and time again, the Manhattan Bop Police have claimed that a jazz album isn't legitimate unless it is recorded in the 212 area code. But if that's true, why did so many jazz heavyweights from Dexter Gordon to Bud Powell spend so much time living and recording in Europe? Why have so many important jazz indies (Steeplechase, Storyville, Owl, Black Lion, Timeless, among countless others) had European addresses? The fact is that if you're a serious jazz connoisseur, your CD collection is probably full of recordings that were made in Europe. Ray Brown certainly spent plenty of time performing overseas; Ludwigsburg, Germany, in fact, is where Brown recorded Summerwind, a 1980 session that finds the acoustic bassist forming a quartet with tenor saxophonist Johnny Griffin (one of the reasons jazz musicians are proud to be from Chicago), pianist Monty Alexander, and British drummer Martin Drew. 

This hard-swinging combination of American, Jamaican, and British improvisers enjoys a strong rapport on a diverse program that ranges from Ray Charles' "Hard Times" to pianist John Lewis' "Delaunay's Dilemma" to the title track (a song that is closely identified with Frank Sinatra). The inclusion of a song associated with Ol' Blue Eyes should come as no surprise to admirers of Alexander, who has never made a secret of his passion for Sinatra's legacy. Nor has Alexander made a secret of his love of R&B; one of the highlights of this CD is a piano trio performance of the Crusaders' "Street Life" (which Griffin is absent from). Although the Crusaders are primarily an instrumental jazz group, they enjoyed a major R&B hit in 1979 when they featured singer Randy Crawford on "Street Life"; on Summerwind, however, the tune works nicely as an acoustic bop/soul-jazz instrumental. This rewarding CD is well worth searching for. 
~ Alex Henderson  http://www.allmusic.com/album/summerwind-mw0000701893

Personnel: Ray Brown (bass instrument); Monty Alexander (vocals, piano); Johnny Griffin (saxophone); Martin Drew (drums).

Joe Williams, Count Basie - Greatest! Count Basie Plays, Joe Williams Sings Standards

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:46
Size: 80,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:18)  1. Thou Swell
(2:49)  2. There Will Never Be Another You
(3:37)  3. Our Love Is Here To Stay
(2:35)  4. 'S Wonderful
(2:24)  5. My Baby Just Cares for Me
(3:54)  6. Nevertheless
(2:25)  7. Singin' in the Rain
(3:05)  8. I'm Beginning to See the Light
(2:27)  9. A Fine Romance
(3:58) 10. Come Rain Or Come Shine
(2:37) 11. I Can't Believe That You're In Love With Me
(2:32) 12. This Can't Be Love

When it comes to accompanying a singer, there is probably no better jazz orchestra than the Count Basie Band. They swing so hard, that no matter who is singing with them, they seem to find a way to prop up even the best of jazz stylists. Such is the case with Joe Williams, a singer who should need no formal introduction to jazz fans. Williams' deep and rich tone is immediately recognizable and is, indeed, one of the great voices the idiom has produced. On THE GREATEST!!, Buddy Bregman's arrangements can often be angular and edgy. Other times, especially on the ballads, his arrangements are soft, mellow and lush. For example, on "My Baby Just Cares For Me," the brass shoots razor-sharp notes against a canvas of swingin' reeds. 

In contrast, on "Nevertheless," the music is serene and romantic, wistful and sentimental. Highlights on this album include the diverse and familiar "Singin' In the Rain," "A Fine Romance," and "I Can't Believe That You're In Love With Me." http://www.cduniverse.com/productinfo.asp?pid=1177317&style=music&fulldesc=T

Personnel: Count Basie (piano, organ); Joe Williams (vocals); Buddy Bregman (arranger); Marshall Royal (alto saxophone, clarinet); Bill Graham (alto saxophone); Frank Foster (tenor saxophone); Charlie Fowlkes (baritone saxophone); Thad Jones, Reunald Jones, Wendell Culley (trumpet); Henry Coker, Bill Hughes, Ben Powell (trombone); Freddie Green (guitar); Eddie Jones (bass); Sonny Payne (drums).

Greatest! Count Basie Plays, Joe Williams Sings Standards

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Lauren White - Meant To Be

Size: 100,1 MB
Time: 42:13
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Angel Eyes Your Heart Is As Black As Night (4:33)
02. I Can't Be New (4:29)
03. Chove Chuva (3:52)
04. Heart's Desire (3:59)
05. Wish (4:00)
06. Music After The Rain (3:37)
07. Now You Know (4:29)
08. The Meaning Of The Blues (4:18)
09. Everything Must Change (5:02)
10. Meant To Be (Saudades De Casa) (3:50)

Eminently soulful and stylish Los Angeles based vocalist Lauren White may be a relatively new face on the indie jazz scene, but she’s been leading up to her emergence with Meant To Be with a colorful career as a performer that includes appearing in musical shows on and off Broadway, acting on soap operas and working as a popular cabaret performer for many years.

It’s always inspiring when artists new to the public don’t play it safe by rehashing the same old standards we’ve heard a million times. More than simply a genre-transcendent 10 track set celebrating White’s many influences, Meant To Be is a true invitation. With her beautiful voice and crisp, emotional phrasing that goes inside the lyrics, she opens a door beyond these fresh interpretations of magical (and sometimes obscure) gems that will hopefully prompt listeners to embark on a whimsical musical discovery tour of their own.

It’s exciting to come along for the right as she doesn’t simply revisit, but fully re-imagines pieces by a fascinating and diverse roster of renowned artists and songwriters. The launching pad was Jorge Ben’s bossa classic “Chove Chuva” (originally recorded by Sergio Mendes), and she and her producer, keyboardist and chief arranger Quinn Johnson whip up a delightfully exotic treat. Wrapping the listener’s heart around their fingers, they tap into the catalogs of Susan Werner (“I Can’t Be New”), Dave Frishberg/Alan Broadbent (“Heart’s Desire”), Joshua Redman (“Wish,” with lyrics by one of the album’s arrangers, Eli Brueggemann), Stephen Sondheim (“Now You Know” from “Merrily We Roll Along”), Bobby Troup (“The Meaning of the Blues”), Bernard Ighner (“Everything Must Change”) and Ivan Lins (“Saudades de Casa,” refashioned in English as “Meant To Be”).

White also takes a unique liberty for a jazz-oriented recording by doing two original “mashups” (unexpected medleys)—one featuring the classic “Angel Eyes” mixed seamlessly with Melody Gardot’s “Your Heart Is As Black As Night,” the other blending the early Carole King tune “Music” with John Coltrane’s “After The Rain.”

Drawing on her long history and love of collaborations, Lauren brings these arrangements to life with a host of Los Angeles jazz stalwarts, including bassists Trey Henry and Hussain Jiffry, drummers Ray Brinker and Kevin Winard, saxophonist Bob Sheppard, and guitarists Bob Mann and Kleber George. Although Lauren’s sultry voice and keen phrasing are the driving forces of Meant To Be, she says that the album is the dynamic result of a one of a kind synergy she shares with Johnson and the album’s executive producer, Clifford Bell. She met both of these key creative partners through Michael Orland (renowned for his work as Associate Musical Director on “American Idol”), who co-produced Lauren’s 2010 self titled debut album with guitarist Ted Perlman (“Buffalo Sound”) and performed traditional cabaret shows with her many times at Los Angeles venues like the Cinegrill and the Bel Age Hotel.
There are a lot of excellent standards interpreters around, but if you’re looking for fresh voices and songs that haven’t been done too often, Lauren White’s Meant To Be is an exciting place to start. ~Jonathan Widran

Meant To Be

Cory Weeds - Up A Step: The Music Of Hank Mobley

Size: 139,5 MB
Time: 60:22
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. A Dab Of This And That (7:25)
02. Up Over And Out (7:13)
03. Bossa For Baby (6:10)
04. Baptist Beat (8:30)
05. Up A Step (8:06)
06. I See Your Face Before Me (8:28)
07. Straight, No Filter (6:34)
08. Perfectly Hank (7:53)

Featuring Cory Weeds, tenor saxophone / Oliver Gannon, guitar / Mike LeDonne, Hammond B3 organ / Jesse Cahill, drums

Last fall, the Vancouver, B.C.-based tenor saxophonist Cory Weeds (b.1973) began planning this CD–his fifth as a leader. “Over a number of years,” says Weeds, “I’ve gotten to know (the New York-based pianist and organist) Mike LeDonne (b.1956) as a friend,” he explains, “and we’ve played together a lot. I’ve booked him at my jazz club in Vancouver (Weeds, of course, owns The Cellar there) several times. And I recorded my first CD as a leader (2008's BIG WEEDS, Cellar Live CLO11308) with him (and Peter Bernstein and Joe Farnsworth). So I decided to bring him to The Cellar for two nights, put together a little tour for right after that–two nights in Bellingham (Washington), two in Seattle, and two in Edmonton–and the last night of the tour, do a live record.”
But, from there, Weeds was in the weeds. “I needed an original concept for the album,” he says. “Then I talked to Mike (LeDonne), and he suggested doing an album of Hank Mobley tunes. And I thought that was a fantastic idea, but I wanted to avoid things like ‘This I Dig of You,’ which has been recorded a lot…So I started looking up what Hank had written…”Weeds immediately zeroed in on one of his favorite Mobley songs: “A Baptist Beat,” from Mobley’s 1960 album ROLL CALL. And, LeDonne singled out five others: “A Dab Of This And That” and “Bossa For Baby” from Mobley’s 1967 date FAR AWAY LANDS; “Up A Step,” from Mobley’s 1963 LP NO ROOM FOR SQUARES; “Up, Over And Out” from the 1968 Mobley album REACH OUT; and “Straight No Filter,” from Mobley’s LP of the same name (recorded in 1963, but unreleased until 1985). Then, the two agreed on a Weeds choice, the Arthur Schwartz and Howard Dietz ballad “I See Your Face Before Me,” from the 1937 Broadway show BETWEEN THE DEVIL–recorded by Mobley on his 1965 album DIPPIN’, as well as by John Coltrane, Frank Sinatra, Johnny Hartman and Miles Davis–and a blues, LeDonne’s own “Perfectly Hank.” And, the organist went to work writing arrangements.

Up A Step

Aled Jones - Reason To Believe

Size: 116,8 MB
Time: 49:44
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2007
Styles: Pop
Art: Full

01. No Frontiers (4:33)
02. Reason To Believe (3:33)
03. Some Kind Of Wonderful (Feat. Cerys Matthews) (3:34)
04. If (2:40)
05. Father And Son (3:41)
06. Hallelujah (3:19)
07. Angel (3:47)
08. All My Trials Lord (4:12)
09. Always There (4:12)
10. The Rose (3:21)
11. You've Got A Friend (4:48)
12. Be Still My Soul (4:36)
13. Whenever God Shines His Light (3:22)

One would never guess that Reason to Believe was an Aled Jones album, after all, wasn't he the choir boy with the angelic soprano voice singing the sorts of songs one would hear regularly on Songs of Praise or other religious television programs? Well, yes he was, but even choir boys grow up, and Jones shows a maturity in his voice on Reason to Believe that is both surprising and pleasant. There were still the religious overtones on tracks such as "Hallelujah," "All My Trails Lord," "Be Still My Soul," and "Whenever God Shines His Light," which was the only up-tempo track among of a sea of ballads, but the rest of the album was a mix of non-religious originals and cover versions. He duets with Cerys Matthews on "Some Kind of Wonderful," and Gretchen Peters joined him on the opening track "No Frontiers." Unlike both the original Cat Stevens and the Boyzone cover version of "Father and Son," he doesn't bother differentiating his voice between the two viewpoints. When he sings a beautiful original ballad like "Angel" or "Always There," one is left wondering why he felt the need to record inferior cover versions of David Gates' "If," Bette Midler's "The Rose," and James Taylor's "You've Got a Friend." His version of the title track is closer to the Glen Campbell version than the more famous Rod Stewart recording, but then it really would be too much to ask Aled Jones to sound like the biggest gravel-voiced crooner of all. ~by Sharon Mawer

Reason To Believe

Jody Kidwell - My Funny Valentine

Size: 115,0 MB
Time: 49:14
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz/Pop/Classical Vocals
Art: Front

01. Lorelei (2:40)
02. Charade (2:47)
03. Is You Is Or Is You Ain't (2:56)
04. Everytime We Say Goodbye (4:29)
05. My Funny Valentine (3:50)
06. I Get A Kick Out Of You (5:04)
07. No Moon At All (2:57)
08. Here's That Rainy Day (2:52)
09. All The Things Things You Are (4:42)
10. What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life (3:29)
11. Come Rain Or Come Shine (2:37)
12. Can't Help Lovin' That Man (4:32)
13. Cry Me A River (3:24)
14. The Night Has A Thousand Eyes (2:50)

Jody Kidwell, Mezzo-Soprano, was a winner in the third Luciano Pavarotti International Voice Competition, and was later chosen by Mr. Pavarotti to appear in Luisa Miller filmed by PBS. Gian Carlo Menotti directed her in his opera, The Saint of Bleecker Street and her portrayal of Desideria was heralded by critics as "all stops out singing..haunting..steamy..intense".

As Zulma in Opera Company of Philadelphia's L'Italiana in Algeri, Ms. Kidwell was heard and seen on WHYY's Philadelphia Performs series. Other roles include Carmen in Carmen, Isabella in L'Italiana in Algeri, Olga in Eugene Onegin, Maddalena in Rigoletto.

Recently Ms. Kidwell appeared with Opera Columbus as Aldonza/Dulcinea in Man of LaMancha, and as Dido in Dido and Aeneas, with the Lehigh Chamber Symphony in Allentown, Pennsylvania. Ms. Kidwell is equally known for her character work as Czipra in The Gypsy Baron, Mrs. McLean in Susannah, and Mrs. Peachum in Kurt Weill's Threepenny Opera. At home on the concert stage, Ms. Kidwell has performed the major concert works of Verdi, Beethoven, Rossini, Elgar, DeFalla, Mahler and Mozart with the North Carolina Symphony, The Las Vegas Philharmonic, The Philadelphia Orchestra, The National Symphony of San Jose, Costa Rica and Bogota, Columbia. She has also sung the major oratorio works of Bach, Handel, and Mendelssohn. She can be heard on the Lyrachord label in Mozart's Requiem with Vox Ama Deus.

Last spring Ms. Kidwell was soloist with the Vox Ama Deus ensemble in Bach's B Minor Mass at the Kimmel Center in Philadelphia. Additionally, Ms. Kidwell has performed with Peter Nero and the Philly Pops and is a regular guest with the Ocean City Pops on the famous Jersey Shore Boardwalk at the Music Pier. In August 2008, Ms. Kidwell was guest soloist with the Philharmonic Orchestra of Bogota in Mahler's Das Lied von der Erde. Ms. Kidwell returned to the Kimmel Center in November as soloist in Beethoven's Missa Solemnis, with Vox Ama Deus; to be released on the Lyrachord label.

Ms. Kidwell resides in Philadelphia and is Cantorial soloist at Congregation Rodeph Shalom and a member of the faculty at Settlement Music School.

My Funny Valentine

Jason Carroll & The Smooth Jazz Symphony - 2 Smooth

Size: 126,2 MB
Time: 54:21
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Take 2 (4:33)
02. It Could Be Real (4:29)
03. Weather Channel (5:11)
04. Gx2 (Groove Times Two) (4:42)
05. Taste The Sun (4:38)
06. Mirrors (3:45)
07. Time Of My Life (4:22)
08. Window Shopping (4:17)
09. Come Along (3:34)
10. Remember (5:17)
11. Paradise (4:39)
12. Brand New (4:47)

Smooth jazz producer, multi-instrumentalist and artist Jason Carroll first got his name when he released his ultra smooth debut album entitled Cool which continues to fascinate smooth jazz fans around the world. Jason is known mostly for his ability to play various instruments extremely well and blend them together perfectly on his smooth works.

Jason is a pianist, drummer, bass player, guitarist, and talented producer that has produced for and worked with various artists. He recently finished his sophomore album 2 Smooth and continues to create great music. He's also recorded songs that place the guitar in the spotlight. Add that to his already soulful, funky and smooth production and you have a "revolutionized Norman Brown."

2 Smooth

Dion Parson & 21St Century Band - St. Thomas

Size: 136,2 MB
Time: 58:26
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz Fusion, Reggae, Calipso
Art: Front

01. St. Thomas (5:15)
02. Calypso Bayou (4:51)
03. What A Wonderful World (4:40)
04. Minor Details (4:11)
05. Ambergris Cay (5:36)
06. Rockin' In Rhythm (4:13)
07. All Blues (6:10)
08. Come Now (3:40)
09. Three Little Birds (6:27)
10. 21St. Century (4:17)
11. Knights At The Round Table (9:00)

As the next generation of emerging U.S.V.I. artists, Dion Parson & 21st Century Band is fast becoming the model for musicians from the Virgin Islands. St. Thomas - an amalgam of flavors ranging from soulful melodies to hard-hitting rhythms - demonstrates the technical skills and creativity cultivated from such a lush musical and cultural heritage.

"Ultimately, St. Thomas is the musical expression of the journey through the diverse history and musical diaspora of the U.S. Virgin Islands, presented in a jazz format with the freedom of interpretation through various improvisational styles." - Dion Parson

Dion Parson & 21st Century Band: Dion Parson - Drums/Percussion Ron Blake - Tenor/Soprano/Baritone Saxophone Rashawn Ross - Trumpet Victor Provost -Steel Pan Reuben Rogers - Bass Carlton Holmes - Piano/Keyboards Alioune Faye Saber - Drums/Percussion Special Guest - Boo Reiners on Banjo.

In 21st Century Band, GRAMMY award-winning drummer and composer Dion Parson has put together a powerhouse ensemble. Comprised of seven of the world's finest musicians, the band features a fresh innovative sound that boasts a superb mix of US Virgin Islands traditions such as Quelbe, and other Caribbean infusions like reggae, calypso, soca, mento, ska, zouk, steel pan, chutney, and funk with New Orleans and African overtones. Together, these supremely talented artists deliver their special brand of Caribbean Jazz with down-home sophistication and a high energy level that has audiences-young and old- soaring to their feet time and time again. Their sold-out performances at prestigious venues like Jazz at Lincoln Center's Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola in New York City have garnered such rave reviews from fans and critics alike that the club has hosted the ensemble for week-long performances every year since June 2008.

St. Thomas

Stan Getz - Stan Getz Plays

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 24:20
Size: 55.7 MB
Styles: West Coast jazz, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1952/2001/2013
Art: Front

[3:12] 1. 'tis Autumn
[3:01] 2. The Way You Look Tonight
[2:56] 3. Time On My Hands
[2:56] 4. You Turned The Tables On Me
[3:21] 5. Stars Fell On Alabama
[2:55] 6. Lover, Come Back To Me
[3:14] 7. Body And Soul
[2:42] 8. Stella By Starlight

Tenor saxophonist Stan Getz is in excellent form playing with one of his finest groups, a quintet with guitarist Jimmy Raney and pianist Duke Jordan. Although the music does not quite reach the excitement level of the Getz-Raney Storyville session, this music (particularly the ballads) really shows off the tenor's appealing tone. This set is rounded out by four titles that Getz cut with a quartet in 1954 that co-starred pianist Jimmy Rowles. ~Scott Yanow

Stan Getz Plays

Becca Stevens Band - Perfect Animal

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:43
Size: 111.5 MB
Styles: Singer-songwriter, Folk
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[3:33] 1. I Asked
[5:06] 2. Imperfect Animals
[4:05] 3. Thinkin' Bout You
[5:04] 4. Be Still
[4:36] 5. 105
[5:36] 6. Tillery
[5:07] 7. You Make Me Wanna
[5:00] 8. Reminder
[5:21] 9. Higher Love
[5:11] 10. JAC

“I wanted to use the word ‘animal’ in the album title, because writing and recording this set of songs was like taming something that had a life of its own,” Becca Stevens says of her revelatory new album Perfect Animal (April 2015). ”The title came from the track ‘Imperfect Animals’ which I wrote about the instinct to strive for perfection pulling against the understanding that such a condition is not humanly possible. That’s a big theme for me, and it’s something that I go through in my daily life, in my relationships, and every time I write a song.”

Perfect Animal marks a quantum musical leap for the North Carolina-bred, New York-based artist. It boasts her most personally-charged songwriting and her most urgent, impassioned singing to date, along with vivid, adventurous arrangements that show off her fiercely expressive guitar work as well as the talents of her longstanding band: keyboardist/accordionist Liam Robinson and bassist Chris Tordini, both of whom Stevens has worked with since 2005, and drummer/percussionist Jordan Perlson, who joined three years later.

Perfect Animal

David Berger & The Sultans Of Swing - Doin' The Do

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:25
Size: 133.8 MB
Styles: Swing
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[3:52] 1. Are You Fer It
[3:59] 2. Makin' Whoopee
[3:58] 3. Doin' The Do
[4:17] 4. My Heart Belongs To Daddy
[4:16] 5. Exactly Like You
[3:39] 6. Miss Thing
[6:00] 7. Good Queen Bess
[3:29] 8. How To Get You Out Of My Heart
[4:12] 9. Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me
[4:10] 10. Ya Gotta Live It
[4:01] 11. Oops, My Bad!
[6:04] 12. Busy Woman Blues
[6:22] 13. Birthday Jam Happy Birthday Stompy Jones

A generous helping of well-cooked nouveau swing by David Berger's undeniably talented Sultans of Swing that's easy to swallow but doesn't sharpen one's craving for more of the same.

Berger arranged everything except the album's bonus track, Duke Ellington / Mildred Hill's "Birthday Jam," which he transcribed. While the charts are admirable, the music itself is on the whole less than exhilarating, especially the eight vocals (on thirteen tracks), half a dozen by Aria Hendricks, the others by trombonist Wayne Goodman ("Oops, My Bad!") and a trio comprised of Goodman, saxophonist Matt Hong and trumpeter Brian Pareschi ("Exactly Like You"). There are some engaging selections ("Good Queen Bess," "Ya Gotta Live It," for example) but they are counterbalanced by too many others that are no better than pedestrian.

Even so, the Sultans are seasoned pros who play well as a unit and solo capably whenever asked to stand and deliver. Trumpeters Steve Bernstein and Irv Grossman, clarinetist Dan Block, alto JerryDodgion and trombonist Noah Bless are splendid on Johnny Hodges—Lunceford—like "Good Queen Bess," Dodgion, Block, Pareschi and trombonist Joel Helleny likewise on Berger's "Ya Gotta Live It." Grossman, by the way, sounds like he's been memorizing pages from the Clark Terry Manual of Jazz Improvisation. Speaking of solos, no less than thirteen of the Sultans have their say on the bouncy "Birthday Jam" (subtitled "Happy Birthday Stompy Jones"). ~Jack Bowers

David Berger, conductor, arranger; Jerry Dodgion, Matt Hong, Dan Block, Mark Hynes, Jay Brandford, reeds; Bob Millikan, Brian Pareschi, Irv Grossman, Steve Bernstein, trumpet; Wayne Goodman, Joel Helleny, Noah Bless, trombone; Isaac Ben Ayala, piano; Dennis Irwin, bass; Jimmy Madison, drums; Aria Hendricks, vocals; Wayne Goodman, Matt Hong, Brian Pareschi, vocal trio.

Doin' The Do

Conrad Herwig - Obligation

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:56
Size: 142,1 MB
Art: Front

(10:20)  1. Forget About Me
( 8:56)  2. Solid Ground
( 9:26)  3. Lazy Bones
( 7:52)  4. Lua Flora
(10:52)  5. Obligation
( 7:21)  6. Tell Me a Riddle
( 7:05)  7. The Blue Shore Off Silence

From Latin romps through Coltrane territory to updating the two bone lead first launched by Kai and J.J., Conrad Herwig's musical diversity over the course of his six previous Criss Cross releases has been nothing short of remarkable. On "Obligation," he takes things a step further with a funky organ combo set up that highlights the extraordinary work of guitarist Mark Whitfield and the budding talents of organist Kyle Kohler. Tenor saxophonist Seamus Blake and drummer Gene Jackson complete the lineup, helping to make this set stand out among Herwig's already impressive catalog. ~ Editorial Reviews  http://www.amazon.com/Obligation-Conrad-Herwig/dp/B000AA4K4C

Personnel: Conrad Herwig (trombone); Mark Whitfield (guitar); Seamus Blake (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Gene Jackson (drums).

Tom Lockwood With Jaimee Paul - Common Ground

Styles: Jazz/Blues, Vocal
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:19
Size: 121,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:07)  1. Route 66
(3:26)  2. If Is A Mighty Big Word
(4:04)  3. This Side Of Birmingham
(3:35)  4. Then There's The Truth
(4:14)  5. Stormy Monday
(4:30)  6. Blues For Dom
(4:14)  7. Georgia
(3:08)  8. Lately
(3:49)  9. Gary Seven
(4:29) 10. Black Coffee
(4:13) 11. I'd Rather Go Blind
(3:42) 12. Last Two Dollars
(4:43) 13. Through The Eyes Of A Child

Tom performed in many bands through the early 1970s before moving to Chatham (from Detroit) in 1977. Through the 1980s, Tom's focus was on composing music on Classical and steel string guitar. During the nineties, Tom released 2 CD's. 2011 marks 34 years of private guitar teaching for Mr. Lockwood. He can also be seen performing solo or with his band at Blues festivals, corporate events, or special entertainment for various functions.

In Nashville, Jaimee is known as the "New Voice of Blues and Jazz. Jaimee and Leif perform in Canada, the USA, Europe and Japan. Recently Leif played trumpet on tour with Jack White. Both Jaimee and Leif have toured with Kelly Clarkson.

Band: Vocals - Jaimee Paul;  Guitar - Tom Lockwood;  Trumpet - Leif Shires;  Bass - Bob Hiltz & Bob Wilson;  Keyboards - Mark Tremblay;  Drums - Mark Wolfe

Common Ground

Joe Williams - One More For My Baby

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1985
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:30
Size: 104,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:00)  1. Hallelujah I Love Her So
(4:30)  2. Nobody Knows The Way I Feel This Morning
(2:30)  3. How Sweet It Is
(3:23)  4. Evil Man Blues
(2:16)  5. Young Man On the Way Up
(3:14)  6. Hurry on Down
(2:22)  7. When I Take My Sugar to Tea
(2:13)  8. Honeysuckle Rose
(2:55)  9. Did I Really
(2:50) 10. Loneliness, Sorrow and Grief
(3:46) 11. Imagination
(4:23) 12. One More For My Baby
(2:43) 13. Everyone Wants to Be Loved
(2:53) 14. Everybody Loves My Baby
(2:25) 15. If I Were a Bell

After leaving RCA Victor Records in 1966, Joe Williams began performing with the recently formed Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Orchestra, which had some of the rhythmic impetus he had enjoyed with Count Basie. Contracted to Solid State Records, they cut two albums, a blues collection called Presenting Joe Williams And The Jazz Orchestra (1967) and a ballad set, Something Old, New And Blue (1968). This budget-priced compilation selects a mere four tracks from the former and 11 of the 12 tracks from the latter (the missing one is "Everybody Loves My Baby"). While a more complete collection might have been hoped for, the music is still impressive, as Williams re-lives the kind of sound he achieved with Basie and the Jones-Lewis organization proves itself an effective neo-swing unit. ~ William Ruhlmann  http://www.allmusic.com/album/one-for-my-baby-mw0000606981

Paula Morelenbaum - Telecoteco (Um Sambinha Cheio De Bossa...)

Styles: Bossa Nova
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:54
Size: 103,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:49)  1. Manhã de Carnaval
(3:22)  2. Não Me Diga Adeus
(3:40)  3. O Samba e o Tango
(3:46)  4. Love Is Here To Stay
(3:46)  5. Um Cantinho e Você
(4:02)  6. Ilusão à Toa
(3:38)  7. Teleco-Teco
(3:00)  8. Sei Lá se Tá
(3:17)  9. O Que Vier Eu Traço
(3:31) 10. Você Não Sabe Amar
(4:17) 11. Ternura Antiga
(3:41) 12. Luar e Batucada

Refresh your memory, revisiting the story, under a contemporary and modern look. This seems to be the purpose of this launch of this talented singer. "Telecoteco (A Sambinha Bossa Full)" is so. It covers with rare efficiency end of the music from the 30s to early 60s Embracing this period prior to the bossa nova, the album has somehow explanatory Profile, exposing the 'mix' of influences (Choro, Tango, American musical ) that culminated in the emergence of the style immortalized by João Gilberto. In a carefully prepared repertoire, the album is pretty much an open trial that unites tradião and modernity, giving classic composiões a contemporary garb tasteful. Highlights for "Samba and Tango," "A Corner And You", "Telecoteco" that gives title to the album, "I know there If T" and "Tenderness Old". Highlights also for the exceptional musical production, now elaborate and sophisticated, now lean and simple, giving composições a unique character. "Telecoteco (A Sambinha Bossa Full)" is a beautiful album of rare musical quality that unites tradição and modernity. Translate by google  http://www.territoriodamusica.com/resenhas/?c=2527

Joe Locke - Love Is a Pendulum

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:18
Size: 152,2 MB
Art: Front

( 2:07)  1. Variation on Wisdom
(11:36)  2. Love Is the Tide
( 7:53)  3. Love Is a Planchette
( 8:43)  4. Love Is a Pendulum
( 4:52)  5. Love Is Letting Go
(10:37)  6. Love Is Perpetual Motion
( 5:44)  7. For Jesse Mountain
( 6:43)  8. Last Ditch Wisdom
( 7:59)  9. Embrace

Since signing with Motema Music a couple years back, vibraphonist Joe Locke has been releasing some of the best and most diverse music in a career now entering its fourth decade. From the near-fusion energy of 2012's Signing the long overdue studio followup to the Joe Locke / Geoffrey Keezer group's incendiary Live in Seattle (Origin, 2006) to the expansive beauty of his 2013 quartet collaboration with Lincoln, Nebraska's Symphony Orchestra on Wish Upon a Star and, just a few months later the same year, an exploration of two musical forms that have been of seminal importance to the vibraphonist, Lay Down My Heart -Blues & Ballads Vol 1, Locke has been afforded virtual carte blanche to look forward and, perhaps for the first time in his career, plan out a series of recordings that demonstrate the depth and breadth of a vibraphonist who has, slowly but surely, emerged as one of the finest if not the finest of his generation. 

Words have always meant a lot to Locke, even when the majority of his music is instrumental; poetry and literature are regular pastimes for the vibraphonist, and so it's no surprise to see that the central core of Love is a Pendulum is inspired by multi-dimensional artist Barbara Sfraga's poem of the same name. Bookended by "Variation On Wisdom" a relatively brief, through-composed album opener that, in its innate marriage of challenging complexity and irrepressible lyricism, is the perfect set-up for the five-part, 44-minute "Love is a Pendulum" suite that follows and three closing tracks that include the fiery "Last Ditch Wisdom," from which the opening "Variation" is drawn, Love is a Pendulum is Locke's first album in many years to be based around a core quartet augmented by a number of guests including saxophonists Rosario Giuliani and Donny McCaslin, vocalist Theo Bleckmann, guitarist Paul Bollenback (last heard with Locke on the triptych of albums for the now-defunct Sirocco Jazz label, beginning with 2001's Beauty Burning and concluding with 2002's State of Soul) and steel pan player Victor Provost.

Love is a Pendulum is, in fact, Locke's first album since State of Soul to feature an expanded lineup to any significant degree (2008's Force of Four (Origin) featured a couple of guests, but only on a couple of tracks), and the first since his wonderful but short-lived Four Walls of Freedom group last heard on Dear Life (Sirocco, 2004) to feature the vibraphonist with horns in any significant way. The addition of Giuliani on six of Love is a Pendulum's nine tracks is key to the record's success, as is Locke's recruitment of the equally redoubtable McCaslin on two of those compositions and, on the "Love is a Pendulum" suite's closing movement "Love is Perpetual Motion," the addition of Provost, turning Locke's quartet into a sophisticated septet with plenty of potential and creating, in its astute blending of vibes and steel pans, an appealing textural palette new to Locke and one which certainly warrants further exploration. With the entire set grounded by Terreon Gully a drummer who brings a very specific kind of energy to any date with which he's associated but in particular with Locke, as a member of the Joe Locke / Geoffrey Keezer Group  Love is a Pendulum may be the vibraphonist's most ambitious record yet. 

With plenty of through-composed music, it takes a special kind of group to take the music off the page and breathe life into it, but with Gully (who co-produced the album with Locke) joined by pianist Robert Rodriguez and bassist Ricky Rodriguez both members of Locke's quartet responsible for Force of Four Locke has a quartet capable of traversing considerable territory. From the balladry of "For Jesse Mountain" (a song crying out for lyrics) and similarly low-keyed album closer "Embrace" that, based on the jazz standard "Embraceable You," was written as a feature for Provost (and an impressive one at that), to the knottily constructed but ultimately relentlessly swinging "Last Ditch Wisdom," where Giuliani delivers his most potent solo of the set, Locke's core quartet doesn't just lift his music off the written page, they make it leap out of the speakers, filling the room with an energy that's almost uncontainable, whether it be a ballad or a more buoyant tune.

Bleckmann adds electronically induced clouds of wordless vocals during the introduction to "Love is a Planchette," a gently swinging piece that still manages to suggest a more powerful undercurrent, while Bollenback, despite not being featured as as soloist, contributes much to "For Jesse Mountain" with his crystalline acoustic guitar work. Still, despite plenty of room afforded to his band mates and guests, the star of Love is a Pendulum remains Locke, a vibraphonist whose effortlessly virtuosity is given plenty of opportunity to shine on tracks like "Last Ditch Wisdom," but whose equally important allegiance to melody is a defining quality on tracks like "Love is Letting Go," where his a cappella introduction, lasting nearly half of the track's five-minutes, is as impressive for the notes he chooses not to play as it is for those he does. 

It's the kind of introduction to a rubato tone poem at which Locke excels, and if his trade-offs with Provost on "Love is Perpetual Motion" are, like his positively nuclear, motivic solo on "Last Ditch Wisdom," more immediately impressive, it's his more understated work on tracks like "Love is Letting Go" that somehow manages to remain more memorable in the long-term. Of course, Locke has to possess instrumental mastery to do what he does, but it's when he applies that mastery to remain in service of the song that he truly excels as a selfless player who always places that song ahead of himself.  As a composer, Locke has continued to evolve over the years to the point where, in the middle of the new millennium's second decade, there's clearly little beyond his reach. As important as Love is a Pendulum is and it is important it's when the record is taken in context with the three other albums he's released on Motema since 2012 that his significance becomes clear. There are, no doubt, other vibraphonists who can accomplish what Locke has in terms of overt virtuosity; but few, if any, have imbued their music with the kind of multidisciplinary interests that have driven the vibraphonist throughout his career, culminating with Love is a Pendulum truly one of Locke's most compelling and commanding recordings to date. ~ John Kelman  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/joe-locke-love-is-a-pendulum-by-john-kelman.php
 
Personnel: Joe Locke: vibes; Robert Rodriguez: piano; Terreon Gully: drums; Ricky Rodriguez: acoustic and electric bass; Rosario Giuliani: alto saxophone (2, 5-8), soprano saxophone (4); Donny McCaslin: tenor saxophone (6, 7); Victor Provost: steel pan (6, 9); Theo Bleckmann: voice (3); Paul Bollenback: guitar (1, 7).