Sunday, July 5, 2015

Nikki Yanofsky - Little Secret

Styles: Pop, Vocal
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:05
Size: 90,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:52)  1. Something New
(3:24)  2. Blessed With Your Curse
(3:55)  3. Waiting On The Sun
(3:45)  4. Necessary Evil
(3:19)  5. Little Secret
(3:00)  6. Jeepers Creepers 2.0
(3:36)  7. Out Of Nowhere
(2:28)  8. You Mean The World To Me
(3:00)  9. Knock Knock
(3:12) 10. Enough Of You
(3:10) 11. Bang
(3:20) 12. Kaboom Pow

Yanofsky is trying to find herself on Little Secret, but she’s doing it with the help of none other than Quincy Jones, so maybe the search is, uh, less personal than professional. Yanofsky has the pipes and maybe the look of a pop star. But what is undeniably strange about this recording is the way in which it nominally tries to be a “jazz” record as well as a pop record. Q and his young ward are trying to retain (somewhat) the things that make Yanofsky unique while, simultaneously, putting her over as a soul singer, a pop star, a raucous hit-maker. It’s a tricky needle to thread. The temptation is to spread your bets around the table a bit, try a few different things. And that is the case here. The dominant sound on Little Secret is an enjoyable neo-soul sound that was copped, maybe more than just a little bit, from Amy Winehouse’s fun and joyous Back to Black. The opening track, “Something New”,...isn’t. There’s nothing new about the quick pick-ups to certain bars of the verse played by a honking R&B baritone sax, the horn blasts, and even the tune’s structure/melody/chords, which sound a whole lot like Herbie Hancock’s classic “Watermelon Man”. But that’s cool  novelty is not the most important thing in pop music. And, even though Yanofsky claims in her booklet notes that Quincy thinks she “can give jazz new life”, this is pop music, purely as anything can be.

Yanofsky’s last record, Nikki, came out in 2010, and it packaged her as a different kind of pop star. She was collaborating with Jesse Harris on songwriting Harris being the composer of Norah Jones’s mega-hit “Don’t Know Why”, a guy with a genuine feel for smart, easy-to-love-but-still-hip, jazz-inflected singer-songwriter pop. Little Secret not only abandons those kinds of arrangments, but it finds our young singer using a vocal approach that is infused with the embellishments, vocal tics, and even lyric pronunciations of a standard-issue 2014 soul diva. It’s a vocal style both calculated to sell and probably one that makes lots of sense to a 20 year-old in the year 2014. Still, Little Secret makes this game but often awkward attempt to still be a jazz record. To my ears the feints toward jazz are superficial and odd.  Most plainly, there is the positively peculiar “Jeepers Creepers 2.0”, a funked-out version of the old-timey tune associated with Ella, adorned with both period-styled piano and booming synth bass, both ‘30s-sounding horn bits and electronic precussion. Maybe there’s an audience that wants to hear a corny old novelty song given a dancehall interpretation…maybe? Unlikely.

“You Mean the World to Me”, as written, is an old-fashioned 32-par Tin Pan Alley type song, and for the first 12 bars of the arrangement, the production is that of a jazz record. On the next bar, however, Panofsky’s vocals are suddenly drenched in pop effects and the drums go into a funk backbeat. It’s kind of a big band arrangement and kind of a dance track. And, thus, neither, really. Elsewhere, amidst songs otherwise straight down the middle of the soul/R&B road, Yanofsky is asked to do a whole bunch of scat singing. “Blessed with Your Curse” actually opens with a bit of this, setting it up as the tune’s hook, doubled by horns. For the most part, the tune is drenched in reverb, electronic/groove percussion, and a big, hooky chorus, but it starts with scatting. (Panofsky’s booklet notes refer to this song as being written from a scat line.) Scat singing appears again in the closing seconds of “Waiting on the Sun”, which is a more middle-of-the-road soul ballad, and doo-doot-be-bwee-doooop there it is again in the last 30 seconds of “Necessary Evil”. On “Knock Knock”, a slow funk thing with a punchy horn-based arrangement also laced with some string parts, there it is again.

Then there is the album’s title track, which starts with a bass line and brushes-on-snare groove that clearly sets out to remind listeners of the Peggy Lee classic “Fever”, even stealing a bit of that old song’s melody on the verse. The song quickly revs into a shoutable chorus, with Yanofsky’s soul cry rising up above things. But through to the end, it uses little bits and pieces of nostalgia to evoke the past: quick bits of overdubbed vocal harmony that sound slightly Andrews Sisters-esque, for example. Mostly, though, you can read this recording’s intent even just in the song titles alone: “Knock Knock”, “Kaboom Pow” and “Bang” are pretty clear in this regard. Yanofsky and Mr. Quincy Jones are trying to get your attention. (One irresistible bit from the recording’s booklet: Yanofsky recalls the first time she met “Q”—as he met her in his living room wearing a bathrobe and slippers…and carrying a smoothie. Yes, this is exactly how I want to see Quincy Jones in my mind!) “Enough of You” is a great pop song, pretty much the standard kiss-off of a misbehaving boyfriend, but grooving like mad in that retro way, some vibes clanging amidest the funky beat, a hip horn break right before Yanofsky gives her version of a James Brown cry, then back to the chorus. Tasty, zesty, danceable! “Kaboom” is even better, uptempo groove music you’d want to hear at a party, a wall of sound coming at you rich in pop syncopation, mechanical I suppose but as 2014 pop music goes pretty sincere in just wanting to be fun. (Is there some scat singing in there too? Yes. But the stacked soul vocals on the breakdown chorus toward the end sounds nothing like Ella, and happily so.) “Tonight we’re going 24 hours / So turn it up a little bit louder” a good lyric for a 20 year-old.

If you’re looking for modern jazz singers who happen to be from Canada, there’s always Diana Krall, though she’s currently mired in a David Foster-produced mess on Verve that is also a bid for pop stardom of a much more boring kind. Better, you can check out Elizabeth Shepherd, a jazz-trained pianist and singer whose new The Signal funky and insinuating but smart and sophisticated too an original voice who is organically fusing jazz and pop, not trying to graft them together with gimmicks or Crazy Glue. Nikki, you are released from having to “somehow fuse jazz and pop” or from Quincy’s hope that you will “give jazz new life”. Just make some more grooving pop music a surface pleasure perhaps, but no sin. It’ll sound better with the scat singing and the odd jabs at bigbandiness. Get your young groove on with the retro-guilt. But do have a smoothie with Q for the rest of us. ~ Will Layman  http://www.popmatters.com/review/188285-nikki-yanofsky-little-secret/

Claude Williams - Swing Time In New York

Styles: Violin Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:56
Size: 156,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:15)  1. Limehouse Blues
(6:01)  2. Laura
(3:29)  3. You've Got To See Your Mama Ev'ry Night Or You Can't See Mama At All
(4:23)  4. I've Got The World On A String
(5:40)  5. Mood Indigo
(5:20)  6. You Are The Sunshine Of My Life
(3:59)  7. Just You, Just Me
(5:58)  8. Mean To Me
(5:38)  9. Lester Leaps In
(6:12) 10. My Buddy
(3:44) 11. I Can't Give You Anything
(4:30) 12. Just Squeeze Me (But Please Don't Tease Me)
(4:18) 13. Straight, No Chaser
(3:22) 14. I Want You, I Need You

Violinist Claude Williams, at the age of 86, shows that he is still in his musical prime during this quintet date with Bill Easley (who switches between tenor, clarinet and flute), pianist Sir Roland Hanna, bassist Earl May and drummer Joe Ascione. Williams was with both Andy Kirk and Count Basie shortly before they made it big but has spent most of his long career in Kansas City in obscurity. Fortunately he has made several worthy recordings in his later years and this is one of his best, a well-rounded set ranging in repertoire from one of the first songs he ever learned ("You've Got to See Your Mama Ev'ry Night or You Can't See Mama at All") to Ellington, Monk ("Straight No Chaser") and even Stevie Wonder ("You Are the Sunshine of My Life"). The emphasis is on swing and Claude Williams is heard near the peak of his powers. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/swingtime-in-new-york-mw0000648389

Personnel: Claude Williams (violin, vocals); Sir Roland Hanna, Bill Easley, Earl May, Joe Asione.

Bob Ragona - That Old Feeling

Styles: Vocal And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:59
Size: 119,6 MB
Art: Front

(2:48)  1. That Old Feeling
(7:07)  2. Beautiful Love
(5:54)  3. I Wish I Knew
(5:34)  4. Blue Bossa
(5:05)  5. Darn That Dream
(6:30)  6. Full Moon in Philly
(4:39)  7. The Night We Called It A Day
(4:54)  8. My Foolish Heart
(3:11)  9. I'll Close My Eyes
(6:13) 10. Sonny's Place

Bob Ragona, one of the fine performers of jazz, singing and playing saxophone in local venues in his native n.y.c. and touring the country and europe, has finally produced his own concept of the music he loves ".the great american songbook"....bob is one of those singer's, singers with the ability to interpet a lyric that makes you feel it's just for you. his sense of ballad and swing is superb"jerry weinberger" " sheepshead bay news""that old feeling" represents just that, some warm sensitive ballads some easy swing and some fine saxophone playing by bob, with the help of three of the finest performers in jazz. bobby forrester-piano&hammond b3. dave jackson-bass clarence "tootsie" bean-drums...listen as they celebrate the great american songbook....http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/ragona

Saturday, July 4, 2015

Bud Powell - Mad Bebop

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:29
Size: 90.4 MB
Styles: Bop, Piano jazz
Year: 2004/2009
Art: Front

[3:01] 1. Long Tall Dexter
[3:11] 2. Dexter Rides Again
[3:15] 3. I Can't Escape From You
[2:48] 4. Dexter Digs In (Alt Take)
[2:31] 5. Jay Bird
[2:56] 6. Coppin' The Bop
[3:04] 7. Jay Jay (Alt Take)
[2:38] 8. Mad Bebop
[2:48] 9. Bebop In Pastel
[2:30] 10. Fool's Fancy
[2:31] 11. Serenade To A Square
[2:43] 12. Chasin' The Bird
[2:57] 13. Cheryl
[2:30] 14. Buzzy

Mad Bebop explores four historical sessions marking the development of pianist Bud Powell. Originally recorded for the Savoy label in 1946 and 1947, these 14 tracks were issued under the leaders' names -- Kenny Dorham, Dexter Gordon, J.J. Johnson, and Charlie Parker -- with Powell listed as a sideman. During this period Bird and Powell's development ran parallel to each other, as both were combining incredible speed with limitless improvising dexterity, as heard on "Chasin' the Bird," "Cheryl," and "Buzzy." Those three tracks also mark the amazingly lucid interplay of Powell and Parker before their improvising virtuosity began to deteriorate due to mental illness. Jazz collectors no doubt already own this material but may want to investigate this reissue, as it features state-of-the-art transfers from acetates and tape masters. ~Al Campbell

Mad Bebop

Vanessa Trouble - The Summer Sessions

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:20
Size: 94.6 MB
Styles: Vintage jazz vocals, Classic swing
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[2:37] 1. I Remember You
[3:30] 2. Come Rain Or Come Shine
[2:36] 3. A Night In Tunisia
[6:26] 4. You Don't Know What Love Is
[2:49] 5. The More I See You
[2:33] 6. Dimonds Are A Girl's Best Friend
[2:50] 7. Walkin' After Midnight
[3:21] 8. Round Midnight
[3:51] 9. Fever
[3:37] 10. Caravan
[3:19] 11. The Cow Cow Boogie
[3:47] 12. Love For Sale

Vanessa Trouble is a popular vocalist and band leader, who maintains a busy schedule performing at top Manhattan jazz hotspots, corporate parties, North Fork Wineries, private celebrations and society benefits. Born and raised in Winona, Minnesota, she has performed all over the country and in Europe and Asia. Vanessa has appeared in a musical tribute to Marilyn Monroe, and currently fronts her New York City based “modern retro” band, The Red Hot Swing. Her steady engagements include Swing 46, Opia Lounge, The Grand Havana Room and The Bubble Lounge in Manhattan, Wolffer Estate Vineyard and Pierre’s in Bridgehampton. Other venues: Tavern on the Green, The Screening Room, Café Deville, Torch, Cibar, Metronome, and The Mansfield Hotel “M” Bar. Festivals include Musikfest in Bethlehem, PA, and the Old Westbury Summer Concert Series and The Ram’s Head Inn. Her CDs include The Summer Sessions (1999) and Too Darn Hot (2004).

The Summer Sessions

Frank Vignola & Friends - Playing The Standards

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:10
Size: 137.7 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[2:10] 1. Moonlight Serenade
[3:16] 2. I'm Confessin'
[1:59] 3. Sheik Of Araby
[3:10] 4. Begin The Beguine
[1:55] 5. Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans
[3:21] 6. In The Blue Of Evening
[4:13] 7. It Might As Well Be Spring
[2:42] 8. Tico Tico
[3:54] 9. Sway
[2:58] 10. Stardust
[2:36] 11. Glow Worm
[3:27] 12. Serenade In Blue
[3:55] 13. Besame Mucho
[2:41] 14. Paper Moon
[3:03] 15. Whispering
[4:45] 16. If I Had You
[2:14] 17. Deep Purple
[1:49] 18. My Ideal
[4:00] 19. Moonglow
[1:51] 20. You'll Never Know

Frank Vignola (born December 30, 1965 in Long Island) is an American jazz guitarist. Vignola began on guitar at age five. While he never listened to jazz exclusively, he has a wide range of influences, such as Les Paul, Eddie Van Halen and Frank Zappa. He later studied at the Cultural Arts Center of Long Island. He worked extensively as a sideman in the 1980s, with artists such as Madonna, Leon Redbone, and Ringo Starr. In 1993 he signed with Concord Jazz, when he was 27 and has released several albums under his own name since then. He has written 18 instructional guitar books and has recorded multiple instructional CD-ROMs for Truefire.com. Frank lives in New York state. He has four children, all boys, and a wife, Kate.

Playing The Standards

Louis Smith - Smithville

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:29
Size: 131.6 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Trumpet jazz
Year: 1958/2008
Art: Front

[11:02] 1. Smithville
[ 9:00] 2. Wetu
[ 7:04] 3. Embraceable You
[ 5:31] 4. There Will Never Be Another You
[ 6:25] 5. Later
[ 6:29] 6. Au Privave
[ 6:22] 7. Bakin'
[ 5:32] 8. There Will Never Be Another You

Like his debut, Smithville is another set of thoroughly winning straight-ahead bop from the underappreciated trumpeter Louis Smith. Stylistically, there are no surprises here -- this is mainstream bop and hard bop, comprised of original and contemporary bop numbers, as well as standards ("There'll Never Be Another You," "Embraceable You") -- but since the music is performed so well, it doesn't matter.

There is genuine passion to this music, not only from Smith, but also from pianist Sonny Clark, tenor saxophonist Charlie Rouse, bassist Paul Chambers and drummer Art Taylor. It's a first-rate hard bop set that deserves wider distribution than it has received. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Smithville 

Carmen McRae - I Am Music

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 1975
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:40
Size: 104,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:01)  1. A Letter For Anna-Lee
(3:45)  2. The Trouble With Hello Is Goodbye
(3:20)  3. Faraway Forever
(3:28)  4. I Ain't Here
(5:19)  5. You Know Who You Are
(5:56)  6. I Have The Feeling I've Been Here Before
(3:14)  7. Who Gave You Permission
(5:56)  8. Like A Lover
(3:19)  9. I Never Lied To You
(4:19) 10. I Am Music

“Life is just too much for me to bear…I guess nobody ever really cared…do you?” Carmen McRae poses that question some four minutes into “A Letter for Anna-Lee,” the Benard Ighner song that opens her 1975 Blue Note album I Am Music. It’s a startling moment of direct address in this sad tale of a man for whom “the business of the day won’t let me be,” adding that “this life’s not meant for me.” The song, its accompaniment led by Dave Grusin’s burbling electric piano, shifts from its third-person narration to a reading of the titular letter, then reveals itself as a first-person account. As McRae’s pain and anguish come to the fore, the smooth backing builds to a dramatic crescendo, strings slashing through the gentility. McRae naturally brings a jazz singer’s vocabulary and phrasing to the song, elongating syllables and thoughts, indulging in the kind of melodic improvisation and exploration only she could do. (Its portrait of the strife lurking under the veil of domesticity actually recalls one of Barry Manilow’s finest songs, “Sandra,” so memorably recorded by another legendarily soulful voice: Dusty Springfield.) Carmen McRae was always among the more burnished and precise, yet bluesy, voices of the American songbook. With I Am Music, she created a hybrid of R&B, soul, and contemporary jazz that set it apart from most other titles in her deep catalogue. Its new reissue from Cherry Red’s Big Break Records label sheds some welcome light on this rare gem.

Big Break has previously reissued 1976’s Would You Believe, with its roster of songs from the worlds of R&B (Bill Withers, Skip Scarborough), modern jazz (Chick Corea), Broadway (Cy Coleman, George Gershwin) and pop-rock (James Taylor). The repertoire on I Am Music takes a different approach, avoiding standards. The songs are less familiar, some newly-written, with five coming from the lyrical pens of Alan and Marilyn Bergman (with various composers), two from Benard Ighner and two from Jelsa Palao. The album is rounded out by a Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller song. And though Blue Note was aggressively courting the modern market, the album is more than just a one-note exercise in updating a legendary chanteuse’s sound for a rock crowd more interested in, say, Alice Cooper than “Alice Blue Gown.” (Though it has its own considerable merits, Would You Believe is more explicitly “contemporary” in feel and material than I Am Music. And Carmen actually covered an Alice Cooper song to good effect on that disc!) Roger Kellaway, once Bobby Darin’s accompanist and a talented composer-arranger in his own right, produced the album after Benard Ighner became indisposed. Kellaway arranged the lion’s share of the disc himself, bringing in Dave Grusin and Byron Olson as well.There’s more after the jump!

The cover photograph of McRae, cheerfully ready to party with a cigarette in one hand and a drink in the other, might seem a contradiction when considering the dramatic songs on I Am Music. In addition to the restless soul portrayed in “A Letter to Anna-Lee,” she embodies a grieving widow in “Who Gave You Permission” from the Bergmans and the underrated composer Billy Goldenberg. The song was written for the television film Queen of the Stardust Ballroom, which the team later adapted into the Broadway musical Ballroom under the aegis of visionary director Michael Bennett. It’s an odd fit for the album – for any album, really – as it’s essentially a monologue spoken over orchestral accompaniment. The Bergmans and Goldenberg would more fully musicalize their touching story in Ballroom the musical. But McRae finds both the humor and the pathos in “Permission,” verbalizing sentiments familiar to anyone who’s lost a loved one: who gave you permission to go? It’s honest and heartbreaking, and another portrayal of turmoil amidst the mundane. ~ Joe Marchese  http://theseconddisc.com/2013/02/22/review-carmen-mcrae-i-am-music/ (More..)

Randy Johnston - People Music

Styles: Vocal And Guitar Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:11
Size: 118,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:51)  1. Garden State
(5:22)  2. Nostalgia For What Never Was
(4:19)  3. Parchman Farm
(8:01)  4. Chavez
(5:57)  5. Everyday Heroes
(5:02)  6. Trouble
(4:58)  7. Humpty Dumpty
(6:09)  8. Passing By
(5:27)  9. Cold Duck Time

Perhaps more than any other musical instrument, the guitarists of today come drenched in the music of highly diverse musical genres. The instrument has been a fulcrum of expression, from folk, country and blues to jazz and rock with a smidgen of classical thrown into the mix as well. Thinking about it, the task of developing as a guitarist has got to be daunting, with all of those musical bases to cover.  With People Music, celebrated guitarist Randy Johnston demonstrates that not only has he been exposed deeply to these forms, but that he is truly masterful at exploiting the very best of each. The CD is a stellar showcase, generously displaying Johnston's technical and improvisational virtuosity as well as his breadth. Originally from Detroit that Midwest melting pot of musical forms Johnston grew up from age 13 in Richmond, Virginia. The Motown soul-funk-jazz juices mingled with his Southern blues experiences and the developmental result is an extraordinary talent. A vaunted sideman, he's recorded with artists including Ira Sullivan, Houston Person, Joey DeFrancesco, Etta Jones, and another speedballer, Johnny Griffin.

Johnston's jazz technique is crisp, highly direct and focused. His longer lines mesh intelligently with shorter pulse-bursts and his technique never overshadows musical content. And, when organ phenom Pat Bianchi joins in with his earthy B3 sound, the result is jazz-tinged heavy blues. The paring of Johnston with Bianchi is brilliant, as each plays off the other's significant technical chops. The timbre of Johnston's hard-picked strings with Bianchi's foot bass and blistering hands is a joy. The opening "Garden State" displays foot-pounding drive, while the shuffle blues "Nostalgia for What Never Was" advises that, at its core, Johnston's blood runs blue. The vampish "Chavez," sextuplet-metered and more cerebral than the other cuts here, allows both Johnston and Bianchi to stretch out modally. Johnston offers up two organ-supported vocals with Mose Allison's "Parchman Farm" and "Trouble." While Johnston's singing is not up to his superior guitar playing (how could it be?) these selections offer an earthy funkiness,s with Ray Charles-ian overtones. Johnston's rock-blues style embraces Wes Montgomery and George Benson with his octave work in his solos.

"Everyday Heroes" has a kick-off-the-shoes, "Sittin'-On-the-Dock-of-the-Bay" feel. Drummer Carmen Intorre, Jr. sets up Chick Corea's "Humpty Dumpty," the burner of the date, before Bianchi takes off and demonstrates he can swing and develop cogent "Giant Step-like improvisational ideas superbly. Intorre is wise enough to give support to these cookers without stepping on their toes. Eddie Harris's "Cold Duck Time," a vintage rocker for sure, gets a fun funk revisit and closes out a superior effort. People Music has a sincerity about it that's hard to top. The playing is absolutely first-rate and highly approachable. And there is a solid respect for the jazz and blues: after all, those genres developed from "people music," and the people playing here do so with respect, gusto and consummate soul. ~ Nicholas F.Mondello  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/people-music-randy-johnston-random-act-records-review-by-nicholas-f-mondello.php
Personnel: Randy Johnston: guitar, vocals (3, 6); Pat Bianchi: Hammond Organ; Carmen Intorre, Jr. drums.

Spencer Day - Vagabond

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 52:16
Size: 96,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:14)  1. Till You Come To Me
(3:20)  2. Someday
(3:24)  3. Everybody Knows (The Family Skeleton)
(4:25)  4. Weeping Willow
(4:06)  5. Joe
(3:45)  6. Vagabond
(4:37)  7. Summer
(0:44)  8. Vagabond (Reprise)
(3:51)  9. Little Soldier
(4:45) 10. Out Of My Hands
(3:45) 11. I Got A Mind To Tell You
(3:07) 12. Maybe (Tuesday Morning)
(4:03) 13. 25
(4:02) 14. Better Way

Jazz-influenced singer/songwriter Spencer Day's third studio effort and debut for Concord Records, 2009's Vagabond is a softly cinematic piece of crossover pop that positions Day as a kind of thinking man's crooner, or at least a crooning storyteller. A piano player with a burnished baritone voice and a knack for literate moody ballads, Day will of course draw quick and easy comparisons to other similarly inclined contemporaries like Peter Cincotti, Jamie Cullum, and Norah Jones which, though true enough, slightly reduces Day's own weighty album presence. Vocally, Day has a bit of the emotional swagger of Michael Bublé leavened with just enough downtrodden urban skew as to make one think Day has, at the least, listened to Tom Waits. 

This is especially true on such cathartic pop moments as the character song "Joe" and the lilting and soulful title track. Elsewhere, Day evinces a kind of '60s Elvis quality on the slippery-slick opening number, "Till You Come to Me," and brings to mind a young Harry Connick, Jr. on the slow swinger "I Got a Mind to Tell You." However, it is such superb tunes as the yearning love song "Out of My Hands" and the would-be classic "Maybe (Tuesday Morning)" that help Vagabond rise above the crossover fray and reach toward something more akin to the best of Harry Nilsson and Randy Newman. Ultimately, all of Vagabond is immaculately produced, and a steady mix of strings, horns, and other "old-school" elements combined with Day's own creative merits helps color the album as a kind of latter-day traditional pop love letter. ~ Matt Collar  http://www.allmusic.com/album/vagabond-mw0000822881

The Western Swing Authority - The Western Swing Authority

Styles: Country
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:46
Size: 104,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:17)  1. Stay All Night
(4:06)  2. All of Me
(4:13)  3. Panhandle
(4:50)  4. Faded Love
(3:20)  5. Miles and Miles of Texas
(5:01)  6. Blues for Dixie
(2:58)  7. Leaving and Saying Goodbye
(5:05)  8. Honeysuckle Rose
(3:32)  9. Cherokee Maiden
(6:57) 10. Sweet Memories
(2:22) 11. Redwing

The Western Swing Authority is a unique collaboration of some of Canada’s top studio and touring musicians. Their common love of Western Swing and “new classic’ original songs pay homage to the roots of traditional music. Audiences agree that the fun they have onstage together is infectious. Their live shows are upbeat and the musicianship is top-level, making The Western Swing Authority a favourite with music lovers of all genres and ages. Though individually the members’ touring and recording credits are impressive, it is the sound that the band is creating as a whole that is garnering attention and recognition worldwide. Recently signed to eONE Music Canada, The Western Swing Authority’s third album, “NOW PLAYING” was brought to life this past Feb 2015. Fans all over the world, including Texas ( the birthplace of Western Swing) have revered the band’s fresh take on classics, and their original material alike. http://www.thewesternswingauthority.com/bio/

“As Merle Haggard brought the music of Bob Wills and Western Swing to a new generation of listeners, The Western Swing Authority is paying it forward not only by recording and performing these classics, but also writing new material proudly carrying on the style of traditional Western Swing music.”  “It’s impossible to listen to this record and not feel happy afterwards.” ~ Country Perspective

“A retro treat” ~ New Canadian Music

“Lush and fabulous. ” ~ Robert Oermann, Music Row Magazine

“Perhaps the finest album I have heard for some time” ~ Russell Hill Maverick Magazine

Friday, July 3, 2015

Barney Wilen - Jazz

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:06
Size: 107.8 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[4:24] 1. Swing 39
[4:16] 2. Vamp
[3:30] 3. Ménilmontant
[3:36] 4. John's Groove
[6:33] 5. B.B.B. (Bag's Barney Blues)
[4:25] 6. Swingin' Parisian Rhythm (Jazz Sur Seine)
[2:17] 7. J'ai Ta Main
[5:48] 8. Nuages
[3:02] 9. La Route Enchantée
[2:43] 10. Que Reste-T-Il De Nos Amours
[3:44] 11. Minor Swing
[2:42] 12. Epistrophy

Barney Wilen made a strong impression on the Paris scene in the mid 1950s. Wilen was a self taught player and became one of Europe's best and more modern saxophonists.

Bernard Jean Wilen, AKA Barney was born March 4, 1937, in Nice to a French mother and an American father. He studied the alto and, at 16, moved to Paris where he played with Henry Renaud, Bobby Jaspar and Jimmy Gourley He grew up mostly on the French Riviera; the family left during World War II but returned upon its conclusion.

According to Wilen himself, he was convinced to become a musician by his mother's friend, the poet Blaise Cendrars. As a teenager he started a youth jazz club in Nice, where he played often. He moved to Paris in the mid-'50s and worked with such American musicians as Bud Powell, Benny Golson, Miles Davis, and J.J. Johnson at the Club St. Germain. He was very fortunate to tour and record with Miles Davis in 1957. This led to him performing on the soundtrack to the Louis Malle film “Lift to the Scaffold” in 1957. The recording won the Prix Louis Delluc the next year.

Two years later in 1960 he performed with Art Blakey and Thelonious Monk on the soundtrack to Roger Vadim's Les Liaisons Dangereuses. He also appeared at the 1959 Newport Jazz Festival, one of the first non-Americans to do so. During the '60s, Wilen explored with free jazz and Indian music. He appeared at the 1967 Berlin Festival and engineered Archie Shepp's 1969 live performance at the Algiers Festival.

In the late 70's and 80's he returned to playing the ballads of his influences Sonny Rollins and Harold Land leading to him being awarded the Grand Prix Charles Cros in 1987. In the 90's he continued to be active, playing at many European summer jazz festivals and recording. He died of cancer May 25, 1996 in Paris, France. Much of Wilen's later work was documented on the Japanese Venus label.

Jazz

Marty Paich - The Picasso Of Big-Band Jazz

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:01
Size: 89.3 MB
Styles: West Coast jazz, Piano jazz
Year: 1957/1989
Art: Front

[5:54] 1. From Now On
[4:24] 2. Walkin' On Home
[5:07] 3. Black Rose
[3:59] 4. Tommy's Toon
[3:08] 5. New Soft Shoe
[3:32] 6. What's New
[5:07] 7. Easy Listenin'
[3:05] 8. Martyni Time
[4:42] 9. Nice And Easy

Marty Paich was a pianist, composer, arranger, producer, music director, and conductor. In a career which spanned half a century, he worked in these capacities for such artists as Frank Sinatra, Barbra Streisand, Sarah Vaughan, Stan Kenton, Ella Fitzgerald, Mel Tormé, Ray Charles, Aretha Franklin, Linda Ronstadt, Stan Getz, Sammy Davis Jr, Michael Jackson, Art Pepper, and a hundred others.

However, his name is essentially unknown outside professional circles. He took little interest in self-promotion, never acquired a personal agent, happily saw his business affairs managed by his capable first wife Huddy, and as soon as finances permitted decamped Los Angeles for a ranch in the Santa Ynez Valley north of Santa Barbara. There he engaged his twin fantasies of riding horses and operating a private museum devoted to the saddles, books, rifles and guns of the American west. For a boy raised in urban Oakland California, this was a charmed leap.

He was born Martin Louis Paich on 23 January 1925. His earliest music lessons were on the accordion, and thereafter on the piano. By age 10 he had formed the first of numerous bands, and by age 12 was regularly playing at weddings and similar affairs. Marty first attended Cole Elementary School in Oakland. After graduating from McClymonds High School he attended a series of professional schools in music, including Chapman College, San Francisco State University, the University of Southern California, and the Los Angeles Conservatory of Music where he graduated (1951) magna cum laude with a Master's degree in composition.

The Picasso Of Big Band Jazz

Louie Bellson, Blue Mitchell - Louie Bellson Jams With Blue Mitchell

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:34
Size: 102.0 MB
Styles: Bop
Year: 1979/1994
Art: Front

[6:43] 1. Melody For Thelma
[4:46] 2. Stein On Vine
[4:47] 3. Shave Tail
[5:57] 4. Gonga Din
[3:09] 5. I Wonder Why
[7:01] 6. Ballad Medley
[5:57] 7. Blue Invasion
[6:11] 8. A Gush Of Periwinkles

This CD reissue brings back one of Louie Bellson's better small-group dates for Pablo. In addition to the drummer/leader, his septet includes trumpeter Blue Mitchell (still in good form on one of his last recordings), the underrated but great tenor Pete Christlieb, pianist Ross Tompkins, guitarist Bob Bain, bassist Gary Pratt and percussionist Emil Richards. Most intriguing about the date (which mostly sticks to group originals) is that there is a three-song ballad medley comprised not of standards but of Bellson tunes. "Shave Tail" (an older song co-composed by Bellson and Charlie Shavers) is a highlight. ~Scott Yanow

Louie Bellson Jams With Blue Mitchell

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