Saturday, August 15, 2015

Martial Solal - Bluesine

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1983
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:38
Size: 88,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:14)  1. The End Of A Love Affair
(3:00)  2. Bluesine
(3:55)  3. Lover
(5:45)  4. I'll Remember April
(2:49)  5. Moins De 36
(6:02)  6. 'Round About Midnight
(3:04)  7. Yardbirde Suite
(4:04)  8. 14 Septembre
(3:41)  9. Have You Met Miss Jones?

This solo piano affair by Martial Solal dates from early 1983, mixing striking interpretations of standards and familiar jazz compositions along with his own stunning originals. His take of "The End of a Love Affair" has the virtuosity of Art Tatum and the lyricism of Tommy Flanagan in a rather curious blend. His stutter-step introduction to Richard Rodgers' "Lover" is only the beginning of his wild approach to this familiar waltz; his topsy-turvy arrangement is full of humor. "I'll Remember April" is often subjected to rather dull, predictable performances in the world of jazz, though Solal approaches it in angular fashion, working only gradually toward its very recognizable theme. Thelonious Monk's "'Round Midnight" is also tackled in a roundabout way instead of the usual direct fashion, while his enlightened take of Charlie Parker's "Yardbird Suite" is a bit more accessible, though no less novel. Solal's two originals nicely round out this rewarding CD, which is getting more to difficult to acquire after being dropped from the Soul Note catalog. ~ Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/bluesine-mw0000192863

Personnel: Martial Solal (piano).

Bluesine

Friday, August 14, 2015

Eddie Higgins Quartet Featuring Scott Hamilton - My Funny Valentine

Styles: Piano and Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:03
Size: 156,7 MB
Art: Front

(7:02)  1. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
(3:56)  2. I'm A Fool To Want You
(4:55)  3. When Sunny Gets Blue
(7:08)  4. Alone Together
(3:39)  5. My Funny Valentine
(7:53)  6. It's All Right With Me
(7:11)  7. Stardust
(6:45)  8. I Only Have Eyes For You
(7:01)  9. Don't Explain
(7:13) 10. On A Slow Boat To China
(5:19) 11. Imagination

A solid bop-based pianist, Eddie Higgins has never become a major name, but he has been well-respected by his fellow musicians for decades. After growing up in New England, he moved to Chicago, where he played in all types of situations before settling in to a long stint as the leader of the house trio at the London House (1957-1969). Higgins moved back to Massachusetts in 1970 and went on to freelance, often accompanying his wife, vocalist Meredith D'Ambrosio, and appearing at jazz parties and festivals. Eddie Higgins has led sessions of his own for Replica (1958), Vee-Jay (1960), Atlantic, and Sunnyside; back in 1960, he recorded as a sideman for Vee-Jay with Lee Morgan and Wayne Shorter. Bio ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/artist/eddie-higgins-mn0000364205/biography

Personnel: Eddie Higgins (piano); Scott Hamilton (saxophone);  Jay Leonhart (bass); Joe Ascione (drums).

My Funny Valentine

Mary Cleere Haran - Crazy Rhythm

Styles: Vocal, Cabaret
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:05
Size: 128,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:56)  1. Medley: Sidewalks of New York/Manhattan
(3:23)  2. Medley - Crazy Rythm, Runnin' Wild
(4:30)  3. Tree In The Park
(1:54) 4. When The Midnight Choo Choo Leaves For Alabam
(2:28)  5. Pack Up Your Sinners And Go To The Devil
(3:28)  6. What'll I Do
(2:15)  7. They're Blaming The Charlston
(4:00)  8. The Half Of It Dearie Blues
(4:25)  9. It Had To Be You
(2:02) 10. Monkey Doodle Doo
(4:10) 11. Harlem On My Mind
(3:26) 12. Poor Little Rich Girl
(2:24) 13. There'll Be Some Changes Made
(4:55) 14. Moanin'Low
(2:50) 15. Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone
(4:51) 16. Lullaby of Broadway

Early in Mary Cleere Haran's dazzling new cabaret show, ''Crazy Rhythm: Manhattan in the 20's,'' at the Oak Room of the Algonquin Hotel, she assures us that the distant decade of jazz, flappers and speakeasies was not a dream. Moments later, as she and her invaluable accompanist and vocal partner, Richard Rodney Bennett, sail into ''Crazy Rhythm,'' a frantically upbeat Charleston by Joseph Meyer, Roger Wolfe Kahn and Irving Caesar, from the 1928 show ''Here's How,'' the essence of what we call the Roaring 20's is revealed to have been a beat. Buoyant and high-stepping, it was a rhythm propelled by a hysterical urge to throw off the chains of the past, live for the moment and if possible become airborne. As she has done in earlier cabaret shows, especially last year's brilliant and moving evocation of the flaming talent that was George Gershwin, Ms. Haran has created an impressionistic mosaic of an era by blending songs, witty quotations and show business lore with funny self-explanatory asides. Among the personalities she sketches are F. Scott Fitzgerald, Josephine Baker and the brassy speakeasy hostess Texas Guinan.

Leading ''Crazy Rhythm's'' list of musical revelations are its numbers that reveal the friskier, racier side of the young Irving Berlin. ''Pack Up Your Sins and Go to the Devil,'' a comic gem from the 1922 edition of his ''Music Box Revue,'' is a hilarious pitch for the superior life style of the netherworld, a place awash with jazz and where no ''old reformers in heaven'' are making you ''go to bed at 11.'' It is matched in lighthearted subversion by ''The Monkey Doodle-Doo,'' from the 1925 Marx Brothers show ''The Cocoanuts,'' in which Berlin gleefully alludes to the Scopes trial and the fad for injecting monkey glands to restore flagging virility. The song caps a smart monologue in which Ms. Haran suggests how deeply the writings of Freud and Darwin influenced the era's erotic climate. Anyone who thinks that the denunciation of contemporary pop by finger-pointing moralists is a relatively recent phenomenon should appreciate Berlin's ''They're Blaming the Charleston,'' an irresistible upbeat retort to 1920's cultural alarmists.

Grounding this merriment are classic ballads that Ms. Haran delivers in her signature style, stripping away the sentimentality to uncover the lyrics' private, heartfelt truths with an unadorned simplicity. ''It Had to Be You,'' a number most singers breeze through without much thought is slowed down and delivered as a pensive reflection on romantic destiny. Berlin's ''Harlem on My Mind,'' inflected with a period nasality, is a tour de force of restrained belting. http://www.nytimes.com/1999/09/10/arts/cabaret-review-mary-cleere-haran-jazz-baby-roaring-through-the-20-s.html

Personnel: Mary Cleere Haran (vocals); Richard Rodney Bennett (arranger, piano, background vocals); Linc Milliman (bass).

Crazy Rhythm

Stan Getz - Sweet Rain

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1967
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:39
Size: 86,3 MB
Art: Front

(8:33)  1. Litha
(4:45)  2. O Grande Amor
(7:12)  3. Sweet Rain
(8:08)  4. Con Alma
(8:58)  5. Windows

One of Stan Getz's all-time greatest albums, Sweet Rain was his first major artistic coup after he closed the book on his bossa nova period, featuring an adventurous young group that pushed him to new heights in his solo statements. Pianist Chick Corea, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Grady Tate were all schooled in '60s concepts of rhythm-section freedom, and their continually stimulating interplay helps open things up for Getz to embark on some long, soulful explorations (four of the five tracks are over seven minutes). The neat trick of Sweet Rain is that the advanced rhythm section work remains balanced with Getz's customary loveliness and lyricism. Indeed, Getz plays with a searching, aching passion throughout the date, which undoubtedly helped Mike Gibbs' title track become a standard after Getz's tender treatment here. Technical perfectionists will hear a few squeaks on the LP's second half (Getz's drug problems were reputedly affecting his articulation somewhat), but Getz was such a master of mood, tone, and pacing that his ideas and emotions are communicated far too clearly to nit-pick. 

Corea's spare, understated work leaves plenty of room for Getz's lines and the busily shifting rhythms of the bass and drums, heard to best effect in Corea's challenging opener "Litha." Aside from that and the title track, the repertoire features another Corea original ("Windows"), the typically lovely Jobim tune "O Grande Amor," and Dizzy Gillespie's Latin-flavored "Con Alma." The quartet's level of musicianship remains high on every selection, and the marvelously consistent atmosphere the album evokes places it among Getz's very best. A surefire classic. ~ Steve Huey http://www.allmusic.com/album/sweet-rain-mw0000188080

Personnel: Stan Getz (tenor saxophone); Albert Daily (piano); Chick Corea (electric piano); Stanley Clarke, George Mraz (bass); Tony Williams, Billy Hart (drums).

Sweet Rain

Ornette Coleman - Tomorrow Is The Question!

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:43
Size: 98,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:12)  1. Tomorrow Is The Question!
(5:03)  2. Tears Inside
(3:11)  3. Mind And Time
(4:38)  4. Compassion
(3:21)  5. Giggin'
(4:04)  6. Rejoicing
(5:58)  7. Lorraine
(7:54)  8. Turnaround
(5:19)  9. Endless

Shaking out of the contractual obligation forcing him to employ a pianist on his debut, Something Else!!!! (Contemporary, 1958), alto saxophonist Ornette Coleman dispensed with the instrument altogether on 1959's Tomorrow is the Question!, causing a bit of consternation on the part of the mainstream jazz media. This was Coleman's committed step forward toward a harmonically less restrictive sound, en route to the joyful chaos of Free Jazz (Atlantic, 1961). Following, in form, Gerry Mulligan's famous piano-less quartet of the early 1950s, Coleman greatly liberated his solo and rhythm instruments, taking a quantum greater advantage of this freedom compared with Mulligan, had the baritone saxophonist been so inclined. At the same time, the ensemble writing on Tomorrow is the Question! comes off more precise and filigreed than on Something Else!!!! and considerably more musical. Heard by today's ears, it is not so jarring a progression. Novel at the time was Coleman and trumpeter Don Cherry's tearing loose from harmonic convention in their solos, like Coleman's refractive muse on the title piece (sounding like a Jungian analysis of traditional New Orleans jazz) and, "Mind and Time" (an angular Thelonious Monk-like piece taken to the next level). Coleman shares his space with Cherry, who tends to stay melodically closer to home, providing a tether to Coleman's dissonant flights of fancy and imagination. Tenor saxophonist John Coltrane's later path to harmonic freedom followed approximately this same arc, from Live at Birdland (Impulse!, 1963) through A Love Supreme (Impulse!, 1964),, on to Ascension (Impulse!, 1965).

"Tears Inside" approximates the funk achieved by tenor saxophonist Hank Mobley on his "Funk in the Deep Freeze," from Hank Mobley Quintet (Blue Note, 1957). A jangling head gives way to a blues well-grounded by drummer Shelly Manne and bassist Jimmy Heath, both playing more conservatively than Coleman or Cherry. The piece was also covered shortly after by saxophonist Art Pepper on his ironically titled Smack Up (Contemporary, 1960), the altoist straightening out Coleman's crooks, casting the piece as a straight-ahead blues and possibly offering a window into Coleman's otherwise enigmatic composing and playing. "Compassion" echoes pianist Dave Brubeck's 1959 "Blue Rondo a la Turk," From Time Out (Columbia, 1959), with its off-time playing alternating with the straight 4/4. 

It is a bit of complicated playing that mixes up the rhythm direction without steering the show off the road. The presence of Manne and Heath somewhat grounds Coleman in a way bassist Don Payne and drummer Billy Higgins resisted on Something Else!!!!, with the pair finally loosening up on the jubilant "Rejoicing." Bassist Red Mitchell replaces Heath on the disc's final three cuts. "Lorraine" could be classified as a ballad, but it would be one of a new variety, differing in temperament to the conventional ballad. Coleman's alto playing turns blue on this piece, with Cherry's tart trumpet curling the edges of the charts. "Lorraine" prepares the recording for its bluest moment, "Turnabout." Coleman elongates his solo notes into primal screams as opposed to furious flurries of manically expressed ideas, reaching a groove and maintaining it.

The disc closer, "Endless," bounces back to bebop, while breaking completely from the clean turnarounds and brief, pungent solos. Coleman and Cherry reveal that they are not going back to the old ways, but that they are carefully considering where they are going and how they are changing jazz music. Much here sounds like standard bebop/hard bop of the period, but there is an undercurrent of creative anxiety, a nervous tension that continues to build progressively and would be heard more clearly in Coleman's later recordings. ~ C.Michael Bailey http://www.allaboutjazz.com/ornette-coleman-tomorrow-is-the-question-ornette-coleman-by-c-michael-bailey.php

Personnel: Ornette Coleman: alto saxophone; Don Cherry: trumpet; Percy Heath: bass (1-6); Red Mitchell: bass (7-9); Shelly Mann: drums.

Tomorrow Is The Question!

Thursday, August 13, 2015

Pete Jolly Trio - Little Bird

Styles: Jazz, Cool
Year: 1962
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:11
Size: 85,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:22)  1. Little Bird
(2:42)  2. Three Four Five
(6:34)  3. Never Never Land
(8:01)  4. Alone Together
(2:30)  5. To Kill a Mockingbird
(2:59)  6. Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most
(4:22)  7. My Favorite Things
(5:10)  8. Toot, Toot, Tootsie
(2:26)  9. Falling in Love with Love

A hit record for the Pete Jolly Trio in 1963, Little Bird has mostly standards, but it is Jolly's version of the catchy title track that caught on. Pianist Jolly is joined by his trio bassist Chuck Berghofer and drummer Larry Bunker plus a pair of guests, guitarist Howard Roberts and percussionist Kenny Hume. This is a fine all-around straight-ahead session, highlighted by "Never Never Land," "Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most," and "Falling in Love with Love."~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/little-bird-mw0000866942

Little Bird

Slam Stewart - Slamboree

Styles: Jazz, Bop
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:38
Size: 138,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:51)  1. Slamboree
(3:22)  2. On Green Dolphin Street
(3:46)  3. Foolin' Around
(3:38)  4. When Your Lover Has Gone
(3:47)  5. Back Home Again In Indiana
(3:11)  6. All The Things You Are
(3:35)  7. Yes Indeed
(6:49)  8. Willow Weep For Me
(4:42)  9. A Jam With Sam
(3:13) 10. All The Things You Are (take 1)
(3:28) 11. Things Ain't What They Used To Be
(2:47) 12. On Green Dolphin Street (alt take)
(2:24) 13. Yes Indeed (take 1)
(3:12) 14. All The Things You Are (take 2)
(5:01) 15. Willow Weep For Me (take 1)
(3:44) 16. Foolin' Around (rehearsal)

Leroy Eliot "Slam" Stewart (September 21, 1914 – December 10, 1987) was an African American jazz bass player whose trademark style was his ability to bow the bass (arco) and simultaneously hum or sing an octave higher. He was originally a violin player before switching to bass at the age of 20. 

Stewart was born in Englewood, New Jersey on September 21, 1914, and began playing string bass while attending Dwight Morrow High School. While attending the Boston Conservatory, he heard Ray Perry singing along with his violin. This gave him the inspiration to follow suit with his bass. In 1937 Stewart teamed with Slim Gaillard to form the novelty jazz act Slim and Slam. The duo's biggest hit was "Flat Foot Floogie (with a Floy Floy)" in 1938 (see 1938 in music). Stewart found regular session work throughout the 1940s with Lester Young, Fats Waller, Coleman Hawkins, Erroll Garner, Art Tatum, Johnny Guarnieri, Red Norvo, Don Byas, the Benny Goodman Sextet, and Beryl Booker, among others. 

One of the most famous sessions he played on took place in 1945, when Stewart played with Dizzy Gillespie's group (which featured Charlie Parker). Out of those sessions came some of the classics of bebop such as "Groovin' High" and "Dizzy Atmosphere." Throughout the rest of his career, Stewart worked regularly and employed his unique and enjoyable bass-playing style. He taught at Binghamton University in Binghamton, New York, and at Yale University. He died on December 9, 1987 in Binghamton. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slam_Stewart

Personnel:  Slam Stewart (Bass, Composer, Primary Artist, Vocals );  Al Casey (guitar);  Gene Rodgers (bass),  Wild Bill Davis (piano);  Joseph "Kaiser" Marshall,  Jo Jones (drums).

Slamboree

Rumer - B Sides & Rarities

Styles: Vocal, Jazz Soul
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:12
Size: 138,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:56)  1. Arthur's Theme (Best That You Can Do)
(4:07)  2. Dangerous (Bossa Nova)
(4:28)  3. Sailing
(3:24)  4. Hasbrook Heights (with Dionne Warwick)
(3:13)  5. Come Saturday Morning
(3:20)  6. It Might Be You (theme from Tootsie)
(2:33)  7. Moon River (live on BBC Radio 2)
(3:49)  8. Separate Lives (with Stephen Bishop)
(3:21)  9. The Warmth of the Sun
(2:53) 10. Alfie
(3:12) 11. Long Long Day
(3:33) 12. Soul Rebel
(3:49) 13. Here Comes the Sun
(2:41) 14. Marie
(5:29) 15. Frederick Douglas
(3:12) 16. That's All (with Michael Feinstein live on NPR)
(3:05) 17. I Believe in You (theme from Johnny English)

Already sounding of the era, it’s only fitting that Rumer’s B-Sides & Rarities is made up largely of ‘60s and ‘70s soft rock and singer-songwriter staples. Her crystalline, impeccably precise vocals are perfectly suited to the slick arrangements and performances associated with this particular era and style of pop music. And since so many of these songs were and are lovely to begin with, if not necessarily critically revered, her loving renditions simply serve to reaffirm their overall pleasantness. Her take on Christopher Cross’ “Arthur’s Theme (Best That You Can Do)” deviates little from the original, remaining close in both form and arrangement with Rumer sounding as ever like a slightly more assured Karen Carpenter. Giving the song an even smoother (if that’s possible) take, Rumer’s voice is better suited to the material than Cross’ in that hers is a voice in possession of a certain level of weightless effortlessness that feels unhurried, unforced and completely natural. It’s an immensely pleasing and calming voice that manages to toe the line between beauty and pastiche.

Similarly, “Sailing” is slowed even more than the original, given a balladic reading that manages to sound just that much more profound than Cross’ somewhat silly lyrics and delivery would have most believe. Given the level of ironic detachment and loosely- defined enjoyment afforded these so-called “yacht rock” songs over the last decade or so, it’s refreshing to hear someone approach the material with a sort of wide-eyed wonder and earnestness that carries not a trace of irony. Rather than using the songs as the basis for humorous interpretation, Rumer approaches these songs as someone who feels them deeply and wishes to do them justice. In this approach, she’s far more successful, imbuing her performance with a level of reverence not generally afforded such ephemeral pop fluff. It’s a refreshing take that allows these songs to be heard again for the first time.

Taking on a pair of Bacharach/David compositions in “Hasbrook Heights” and “Alfie”, she proves herself a deft interpreter, capable of a level of subtle nuance in her phrasing that would no doubt make the composer proud. Notoriously tricky arrangements and atypical in structure, Bacharach/David compositions have long been a favorite of many artists, but rarely are as successful as they are here. “Alfie” in particular, with its melodic jumps that tend to trip up lesser performers, is delivered with the same pleasant effortlessness as nearly everything else on the album. While much of the material itself can be somewhat hard to take seriously (especially “It Might Be You (Theme From Tootsie)”), the casually reverent way in which she approaches these songs makes it hard to adopt an even remotely jaded stance. Rather there’s such a genuine affection inherent in her performances that it’s clear this is the era of pop music in which she finds herself most comfortable. It’s little wonder then that these songs could just as easily have slotted into her most recent collection of original material. In the hands of a lesser interpreter, it would be nearly impossible for these songs not to border on the parodic.

While many of these songs have been done nearly to death (does the world really need another version of “Moon River” or “Here Comes the Sun”? Turns out it does), Rumer manages to inject enough of herself into fairly tame arrangements to make them worth checking out. With a voice as pure as hers, it’s extremely difficult to find much in the way of fault. Her reading of Randy Newman’s “Marie” in particular is nothing short of heartbreaking. The collection is not without its flaws, however. “Separate Lives”, a live duet with Stephen Bishop, sounds more like a contemporary Christian anthem than a soft pop classic. While their voices manage a relatively pleasant pairing, much like Karen Carpenter, her voice is best served solo or in tandem with itself (see her unlikely take on Bob Marley’s “Soul Rebel”). Wisely, the only other pairing on the album, a lovely rendition of “That’s All”, finds Rumer accompanied only by Michael Feinstein on piano.By no means essential, B-Sides & Rarities is a fine stopgap release for those already enamored of Rumer’s previous releases. Fans of soft pop/rock, singer-songwriters and musicians who place greater focus on subtlety and nuance in their performances will find much to like here. http://www.popmatters.com/review/193582-rumer-b-sides-rarities/

B Sides & Rarities

Stan Getz - The Steamer

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:42
Size: 123,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:53)  1. Blues For Mary Jane
(9:20)  2. There Will Never Be Another You
(4:13)  3. You're Blasé
(6:19)  4. Too Close For Comfort
(6:30)  5. Like Someone In Love
(7:24)  6. How About You?
(6:54)  7. How About You? (Complete Alternative Take, alternate take, complete)
(1:09)  8. There Will Never Be Another You (Breakdown Take) (Incomplete Take)
(0:46)  9. You're Blase (take False Start, false start)
(0:37) 10. Like Someone in Love (Incomplete Take)
(2:30) 11. How About You? (Breakdown Take) (False Start)

It doesn't happen too often, but there are times when the title of a jazz album and the material within interface perfectly. Hence The Steamer, where Stan Getz joined forces with a super West Coast-based rhythm section to produce some truly steaming music. "Blues for Mary Jane" is remarkable; for all of the straight-ahead heat generated by the rhythm section, Getz is incredibly relaxed, poised, and always under control while still managing to swing like mad. In other words, the style that he was able to carry over to his bossa nova adventures in the following decade is right here, ready to go. 

There is also room for the Getz-ballad manner on "You're Blase," and "Like Someone in Love" combines a leisurely swinging tempo with Getz's natural warmth. From the evidence of these sessions alone, not to mention countless others, the team of bassist Leroy Vinnegar and drummer Stan Levey ought to be anointed as one of the greatest rhythm sections in jazz history, and sure-fingered pianist Lou Levy benefits from their finesse and drive. All of this music is available on the three-CD set East of the Sun: The West Coast Sessions, and this Verve Master Edition release offers outtakes from that set at the end of the disc. Indeed, the alternate "How About You?" has some swinging hairpin turns by Getz that will make your head swivel. ~ Richard S.Ginell  http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-steamer-mw0000256953

Personnel: Stan Getz (tenor saxophone); Lou Levy (piano); Leroy Vinnegar (bass); Stan Levey (drums).

The Steamer

Andy Sheppard Quartet - Surrounded By Sea

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:25
Size: 123,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:16)  1. Tipping Point
(5:15)  2. I Want to Vanish
(4:17)  3. Aoidh, Na Dean Cadal Idir, Pt. 1
(5:06)  4. Origin of Species
(5:09)  5. They Aren't Perfect and Neither Am I
(5:02)  6. Medication
(1:14)  7. Aoidh, Na Dean Cadal Idir, Pt. 2
(6:18)  8. The Impossibility of Silence
(3:48)  9. I See Your Eyes Before Me
(4:18) 10. A Letter
(3:29) 11. Aoidh, Na Dean Cadal Idir, Pt. 3
(3:09) 12. Looking for Ornette

Saxophonist/composer Andy Sheppard has found a home in ECM. It's maybe not the perfect home for an artist as eclectic as Sheppard, for it's hard to see some of his other projects notably the Scofield/Lovanoesque quartet Hotel Bristol fitting in with the ECM aesthetic. Still, Sheppard's melodic improvisational approach and the airy lyricism on Movements in Color (ECM, 2009) and Trio Libero (ECM, 2012) fitted the ECM blueprint beautifully and rank among his most seductive recordings. With Surrounded by Sea Sheppard expands the sonic palette of Trio Libero with the addition of guitarist/electronics musician Eivind Aarset, whose ambient craft adds profundity and simmering edge to the prevailing undertstaed lyricism. Surrounded by Sea trades some of Trio Libero's rubato grace for greater harmonic layers and rhythmic dynamics; on the stunning opener "Tipping Point," Michel Benita's deep bass ostinato and Sebastian Rochford's skipping grooves drive Sheppard's tenor siren, while Aarset's embedded drone and softly voiced, washing six-string textures add atmospheric ambient textures. Sheppard's trademark soprano melodicism is to the fore on Elvis Costello's "I Want to Vanish," a lulling ballad of folkloric charm where Rochford's brushes sigh like waves on a pebble beach.

Folk music has colored most of Sheppards' recorded output over the years and here the quartet addresses "Aoidh, Na Dean Cadal Idir," a traditional Scottish song. The tune blossomed into a twenty-minute improvisation in the studio, was subsequently pruned and woven through the album in three parts, conferring a suite-like continuity on the whole. Hauntingly atmospheric and abundantly lyrical, Sheppard's yearning soprano is lent buoyancy by the loose grooves on the first and third parts. Part two is a fleeting vignette whose feathery lyricism dissipates and vanishes like the lightest of breezes briefly felt. More of this improvised/studio-sculpted mini-suite embedded throughout the album wouldn't have gone amiss. 

Gentle eddies of bass and tenor saxophone color the poetic "Origin of the Species," with Aarset's orchestral waves subtly infusing the narrative; Rochford's presence is ghostly sensed rather than heard. A similar aesthetic imbues "The Impossibility of Silence," with brushes more prominent. Fractured rhythms and echoing guitar plot the course on "They Aren't Perfect and Neither Am I," a brooding quartet tale where sketchy composed lines and measured improvisation dovetail easily. The low-rumbling intensity of the intro to "I See Your Eyes before Me" gives way to Sheppard's tenor lead, searching and ruminative in turn. The simple architecture of the dreamy waltz "A Letter" foregrounds Sheppard's beautiful weighted soprano lines.

Sheppard revisits older material on the hypnotic "Medication," previously interpreted with the Bergen Big Band; Aarset shadows Sheppard's defining melody closely before the saxophonist peels away over Rochford's light, yet propulsive groove. On "Looking for Ornette," Sheppard is drawn once more to explore the nuances of his Ornette Coleman-inspired piece that appeared on Dancing Man and Woman (Provocateur Records, 2000), closing this album in quietly celebratory mode. Surrounded by Sea is an intimate statement whose chemistry belies the quartet's brief existence. There's a bold honesty in the music's refined contours and graceful adventure that invites and rewards the patient listener. There's the feeling too, that this quartet has plenty more to offer. 
~ Ian Patterson http://www.allaboutjazz.com/surrounded-by-sea-andy-sheppard-quartet-ecm-records-review-by-ian-patterson.php

Personnel: Andy Sheppard, tenor & soprano saxophones; Seb Rochford: drums, percussion; Eivind Aarset: electric guitars, electronics; Michel Benita: bass.

Surrounded By Sea

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Sarah Jane Nelson - A Little Bit Of Everything

Size: 109,6 MB
Time: 46:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2010
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. Crazy (4:05)
02. Taylor (3:47)
03. Cry Me A River (3:40)
04. No Tomorrow (2:54)
05. Stars And Moon (4:13)
06. I'm A Woman (3:12)
07. Maybe I Like It This Way/What Is It About Her (Feat. Rene Millan) (5:08)
08. Out Of Love (4:14)
09. Peel Me A Grape (3:56)
10. Lay Down Your Head/Baby Mine (4:18)
11. I'll Be Seeing You (3:54)
12. But The World Goes Round (3:25)

Personnel:
Vocals by Sarah Jane Nelson
Piano and Musical Direction by Darcy Danielson
Guitar by Michael “Hawkeye” Herman
Trombone by David MacKenszie
Bass by Bruce McKern

Sarah Jane Nelson made her Broadway debut in “The Green Bird,” a commedia play directed by Julie Taymor. She then went on to star in “SWING!” on Broadway and on the 1st National Tour. Other credits include plays and musicals at The Public, The Guthrie, La Mama, Capitol Rep, The Village Theatre, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, and many more. Nelson played, Lori King, a murderous con-artist on the CBS series “The District” and you've seen and herd her on national voice-overs and commercials for a range of products from Arby’s to Pantene. Internationally, she played the role of Sheila in the 30th Anniversary European Tour of HAIR.

A Note from Sarah Jane:
This CD was inspired by my solo cabaret show performed at Oregon Stageworks in Ashland, Oregon. It’s truly a “Little Bit of Everything” as it reflects my varied musical interests including jazz, musical theatre, blues, standards, and country. I wanted this recording to feel like my live cabaret show, so we used very simple accompaniment and all of the songs were recorded in single takes. Thank you to the incredible musicians who made this such a fun project, and my extraordinary musical director Darcy - Happy 50th! Also, I want to thank my family whose support has always been the foundation of my success. The biggest thanks goes to my incredible husband René and my precious Rosalee and Mateo. You guys make my life absolutely blissful.

A Little Bit Of Everything

Dave Bennett - Clarinet Is King: Songs Of Great Clarinetists

Size: 134,3 MB
Time: 57:34
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2010
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Begin The Beguine (3:33)
02. Stranger On The Shore (4:42)
03. Dizzy Spells (3:29)
04. St. James Infirmary (7:04)
05. You Are My Sunshine (8:42)
06. Nobody Knows The Trouble I've Seen (3:09)
07. Wire Brush Stomp (2:15)
08. Where Or When (2:49)
09. China Boy (5:15)
10. Mood Indigo (4:51)
11. Oh, Lady Be Good! (6:42)
12. Nightmare (4:58)

On this recent CD, Dave Bennett, the young Goodman-inspired, self-taught, clarinetist from Michigan, features a few tunes from the clarinet greats of previous eras: Artie Shaw ('Begin the Beguine'), Benny Goodman ('Dizzy Spells'), Pete Fountain ('You Are My Sunshine'), Barney Bigard ('Mood Indigo'), and others. Bennett's versions are skillful, colorful, and convincing. His technique is second to none. His support personnel; Tad Weeds (piano), Paul Keller (Bass) and Peter Siers (Druns), are highly experienced, striking the right balance bewteen lead-to-sidemen solos and ensemble backup. Taken togther, the full CD is a very worthy addition to the list of very talented small-group clarinetists playing mainstream jazz. However, I have two suggestion on how this CD could have received my highest rating: a) the inclusion of more dramatic tunes from the great American swing library and, b) improvisations played with more dynamic and forcefull expression. My favorite is Bennett's engrossing version of 'Mood Indigo;' one of the best improvised versions I've heard from any clarintetist. This CD also has a few interesting features to note: a clarinet/drum duet on 'You Are My Sunshine,' the use of a bowed bass on 'Lady Be Good,' a horror movie effect on an obscure Artie Shaw tune ('Nightmare'), and a clarinet/drum duet on a tune that Gene Krupa and Goodman should have recorded ('Wire Brush Stomp'). ~By J.D. Traiger

Clarinet Is King

Jason Wanner - Just You, Just Me

Size: 106,8 MB
Time: 46:04
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2010
Styles: Jazz: Piano Jazz, Vocals
Art: Front

01. Polka Dots And Moonbeams (3:30)
02. In A Sentimental Mood (7:02)
03. Just You, Just Me (2:26)
04. Prelude To A Kiss (4:31)
05. Weeping Willow (4:04)
06. You Go To My Head (3:14)
07. You Are My Sunshine (4:38)
08. Sometimes I'm Happy (3:29)
09. La Vie En Rose (3:46)
10. Just Squeeze Me (4:50)
11. Polka Dots And Moonbeams (Alternate Take) (4:30)

Jason Lee Wanner was born on February 1st, 1978 in Sacramento, CA. Even at such a young age, he was constantly exposed to many different kinds of music. Although neither of his parents were musicians, they were obvious fans of many musical styles, and so this love was of course bestowed upon their son everyday. Before he could even walk and talk, he received many daily doses of everything from classic country, to folk, classic rock, doo-wop, big band, ragtime, modern jazz, Sousa marches, Strauss waltzes, polka, motown; anyway the list goes on and on.

By the time he was 3 or 4 years old, Jason was playing by ear his Uncle Richard's organ at Grandma's house. Simplistic 4-year-old versions of Bach's Toccata and Fugue in D Minor and Scott Joplin's "The Entertainer" started to make his parents wonder. The only thing that seemed to be missing was exposure to the modern music of the day.

When Jason started kindergarten, he was a bit "behind" his classmates as far as musical tastes go. He had heard very little music from the 80's at home, but it didn't take him long to start enjoying that as well. It was during this time when one day would change his life forever.

One day at school, the students were required to get their fingerprints taken, and the woman taking Jason's commented on how he had "the fingers of a piano player." Well, Jason already knew that he loved the piano, so he went home and told his parents. They asked if he was interested in taking lessons, to which he replied, "Yeah, I wanna play!"

The lessons began around Jason's 6th birthday, when his parents used what little money they had to get him a piano: a Kohler spinet that he still plays to this day. The first year was difficult trying to find the right teacher. Some couldn't give Jason enough to do, some purposefully gave him too little to do. Finally, a long-time mentor was found in Dan Lofing, who decided to experiment with Jason by skipping traditional methods and jumping directly into classical training.

Jason recalls, "For the first year-and-a-half to two years, I refused to learn how to read music because I much preferred to play by ear. It worked out very well because I would ask my teacher to play my lessons for me before I took them home, and I would remember and figure them out, PRETENDING to read the music of course. It didn't last for very long, though, because as the pieces grew in difficulty, Dan started to realize that I wasn't playing exactly what was written."

For the next 6 years, Jason was practicing classical and ragtime piano for his lessons, learning some of the more popular songs on his own, and wanting so much to be like Vince Guaraldi because he loved the music from the Peanuts cartoons. "I hated practicing! Those were the longest half-hour and one-hour stints of my life. I wanted to sit and play Charlie Brown stuff all day instead. That's what all my friends liked to hear me play."

Jason began to feel his love growing for jazz. This was fueled every year when his dad would take him to the Sacramento Jazz Jubilee. At the age of 12, he finally got his chance to learn how to play jazz when he attended his first year at the STJS Trad Jazz Camp. Two well-known jazz pianists, Johnny Varro and "K.O." Ecklund, took Jason under their wings and taught him the way. Jason began to feel the freedom that he had been looking for since he was 4. When he came back from camp, his parents barely recognized him. Needless to say, the foundation of a soaring career started to take hold, and things began to happen to him.

He joined up with The New Traditionalists (TNT), a trad jazz combo for young musicians, and was finally performing in the same festival his dad had taken him to so many years as a spectator. TNT became Crushed Red Pepper, and later became Timeless Tradition. Jason was playing gigs at restaurants and bars with his friends as well as by himself. All the while he was going to high school, playing in 3 of its bands, working as the rehearsal pianist for the spring musical, and still maintaining good grades.

In 1996, Jason graduated from high school, and, now 18, moved to Los Angeles to attend USC's prestigious music program. What happened next suddenly brought all of this momentum grinding to a halt. Jason remembers, "The musicians at USC were absolutely outstanding. I started to realize that I wasn't the only one doing what I was doing. There were a whole lot of other people doing it too, and a whole lot better than me. That scared me. Plus, I found out that my scholarships were not going to be renewed. So at the end of one year, I moved back home again with my tail between my legs. Everyone thought I was still gone, so no one was calling for gigs or anything. I just wanted to quit."

It was in the middle of this year-long despair, when something magical happened. Jason received a call from the people who run the Sun Valley Swing and Dixie Jamboree in Idaho. They had heard him perform in Mammoth Lakes, CA the summer before he left for USC. They wanted him to appear as a guest artist. Jason immediately said yes, and in October of '97 in Sun Valley, ID Jason could feel the magic flowing once again. "That was where I met the Blue Street guys. I had known Sherri-Lynn from back when I first went to jazz camp. They were looking for a steady piano player, and it seemed like the perfect match for me. I had always wanted to play with that band, and as a teenager had told myself that someday, I would. In February of '98, I got the call. Everything has sort of taken off all over again from that point."

Jason is since performing with Blue Street, enjoying a hobby in photography, composing and arranging for a variety of shows, films, and recordings. He has also taken his mentors' places as an instructor at the same jazz camp he attended as a student. "I want to give back to those who have done so much for me. I want to be as versatile as possible, and learn something new every day of my life. So far it has been more wonderful than I could possibly have imagined. No matter what happens to me, I will never miss Jazz Camp; it is far too important, more important than all of the other things I do combined."

In June of 2008, Jason moved to San Diego to further pursue his interests and career. He was asked to join the Bob Draga Quartet in 2013, and the Titan Hot Seven in 2014. He now often appears at jazz festivals all over the United States with multiple groups at a time. He enjoys being very busy. When he is not traveling domestically or internationally, he can sometimes be found at the Disneyland Resort, performing with various contracted groups. “I really feel that part of my destiny lies there; it’s just the right fit. Disney, and Jazz. How much better can it get?”

Just You, Just Me

Larry Coryell - Aurora Coryellis

Size: 101,4+158,8+119,5 MB
Time: 42:44+68:21+51:36
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz: Guitar Jazz, Jazz Rock, Fusion
Art: Front

CD 1: Jazz Workshop, Boston, MA Sept. 13, 1972
01. Offering (Live) (13:19)
02. Ruminations (Live) ( 9:08)
03. Hen-Hopper (Live) ( 6:50)
04. Scotland Part One (Live) (13:26)

CD 2: Clark University (Little Center) Worcester, MA Jun. 23, 1976
01. Julie La Belle (Live) (8:28)
02. Juju (Live) (3:49)
03. Rodrigo Reflections (Live) (6:33)
04. Eyes Of Love (Live) (3:24)
05. Improvisations On Sarabande (Live) (5:46)
06. The Restful Mind (Live) (3:53)
07. Gratitude (Live) (5:06)
08. Bouquet (Live) (5:23)
09. Rene's Theme (Live) (2:24)
10. Ain't It Is (Live) (7:18)
11. St. Gallen (Live) (9:30)
12. Spain (Live) (6:44)

CD 3: San Jose Jazz Festival, San Jose, CA Aug. 11, 2002
01. Trinkle Tinkle (Live) (10:32)
02. In A Sentimental Mood (Live) ( 6:11)
03. Bumpin' On Sunset (Live) ( 7:05)
04. Manha De Carnaval (Theme To Black Orpheus) (Live) ( 6:07)
05. Spaces Revisited, Part One (Live) ( 9:16)
06. Spaces Revisited, Part Two (Live) (10:14)
07. The Dragon Gate (Excerpt) (Live) ( 2:08)

One of the most respected and celebrated jazz fusion guitarists of his generation, Larry Coryell presents a brand new triple disc box set of unreleased live performances. Titled Aurora Coryellis, this captivating collection highlights Coryell’s prodigious talents in a multitude of settings, from a full band performance in 1972 at the Jazz Wokshop in Boston to a solo acoustic show in 1976 at Clark University (Worchester, MA) plus a more recent appearance in 2002 at the San Jose Jazz Fest with his talented trio featuring award winning drummer Paul Wertico and bassist Jeff Chambers!

Reflecting on this collection, Coryell states, “I have fond memories of the high integrity of the students in Worcester, MA; it was always a special place. Of course, The Jazz Workshop Boston was kind of a ‘home base’ from where we developed our music in the ‘70s, when we were trying to create something that respected the basics of jazz but was still a new form of music. Club manager, Freddie Taylor, was our number one booster as we ventured into uncharted territory. And what can I say about beautiful San Jose! A great city with great people and an absolutely beautiful outdoor park in the center of town. Playing with Jeff Chambers and Paul Wertico was an exhilarating journey into the essence of jazz!”

Born in Texas, Larry Coryell began his ascent to the upper echelons of jazz virtuosos in the mid ‘60s when he joined the quintet of famed drummer Chico Hamilton in New York. That gig led to several other stints as a sideman for Gary Burton, Herbie Mann, and Randy Brecker among others. In 1968, he released his debut album Lady Coryell at the young age of 25, which then lead to subsequent solo album and the formation of his own group The Eleventh House. Through these releases, Coryell earned international acclaim for his daring compositions and interpretations as well as his inspired improvisations. He continues to perform shows and release new albums regularly. For those unfamiliar with this living legend, Aurora Coryellis is the perfect place to start!

Aurora Coryellis CD 1
Aurora Coryellis CD 2
Aurora Coryellis CD 3

Monica Lewis - Never Let Me Go

Size: 101,6 MB
Time: 43:24
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2004
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. Down Here On The Ground (4:55)
02. Close Enough For Love (4:20)
03. Better To Know (4:01)
04. Hey, Magic Man (3:11)
05. Return To Forever (4:35)
06. Gotta Believe (6:31)
07. The Hungry Years (4:21)
08. Let Mama Know (3:37)
09. The World Of Slow (3:21)
10. Never Let Me Go (4:27)

b. 5 May 1922, Chicago, Illinois, USA. Lewis was born into a musical family, a career in showbusiness was virtually inevitable. Her father, Leon Lewis, was a symphonic composer and pianist, her mother, Jessica, sang with the Chicago Opera Company and became one of the country’s leading vocal coaches. Her sister, Barbara Lewis Golub, became an accomplished concert pianist; while her brother, Marlo Lewis, was the producer of the original Ed Sullivan television show, The Toast Of The Town. Lewis first studied voice with her mother and left college at 17 to begin a career as a vocalist on radio. While still in her teens, she had her own programme, Monica Makes Music, on WMCA in New York. This early radio success led to a prestigious engagement at the Stork Club, and appearances with Benny Goodman’s orchestra. After appearing on radio with Frank Sinatra, Dick Powell, and Morton Gould, Lewis had recording sessions with Signature Records and Decca Records. She had a number of successes, including ‘A Tree In A Meadow’ and ‘Autumn Leaves’.

Alongside her appearances on radio and records, for more than a decade, Lewis provided the voice for the ‘Chiquita Banana’ character in cartoons and commercials. She had appeared on the first of Sullivan’s television shows, in 1948, and then came to the attention of Hollywood. She was signed by MGM where she was groomed as a dramatic actress and the studio’s answer to popular star Lana Turner. Among the movies Lewis made was The Strip (1951), which starred Mickey Rooney as a jazz drummer with the featured band of Louis Armstrong. She continued to play roles in films, and also provided an on and off screen singing voice, including Everything I Have Is Yours (1952), in which she sang the title song and danced with star Gower Champion. She also appeared frequently on television, working with Bob Hope, Milton Berle, and Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis, sharing top-billing with the latter pair for a New York club engagement. She also toured with USO shows, appearing in Korea with Danny Kaye.

Although at the height of her popularity, and headlining at leading hotels and clubs in Las Vegas, New York, San Francisco and elsewhere, Lewis, now married to movie executive Jennings Lang, retired. However, the call was too strong for a permanent absence and in the 60s, 70s and 80s she appeared in numerous television shows, including Wagon Train, Peter Gunn, Ironside, Quincy, Falcon Crest and Remington Steele. She also made occasional movie appearances, including Charley Varrick (1973), Airport ’77 (1977) and The Sting II (1983). In the mid- and late 80s, Lewis returned to the recording studio, releasing the highly praised Never Let Me Go. The success of this album resulted in the re-release of her 50s recordings.

A fluent interpreter of standards and the great show tunes, Lewis’ singing voice is clear and true. Her warm sound, allied as it is to a subtle vibrato and underlying power, allows her to bring a distinctive touch to a wide range of material. Her son Mike Lang is a noted studio musician and composer who has played piano with several leading jazz artists. He accompanied Lewis on some of her later recordings, which he also produced. ~AMG

Never Let Me Go

Kenny Drew - Undercurrent

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1961
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:40
Size: 91,2 MB
Art: Front

(7:19)  1. Undercurrent
(8:28)  2. Funk-Cosity
(4:54)  3. Lion's Den
(6:06)  4. The Pot's On
(6:20)  5. Groovin' The Blues
(5:30)  6. Ballade

The only Blue Note recording under pianist Kenny Drew's leadership and the last to be released under his name for a thirteen-year period, during which time the pianist would relocate to Europe, Undercurrent is a strong outing by the gifted pianist, composer and session leader. In the latter capacity, his job is greatly facilitated by a frontline of saxophonist Hank Mobley and trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, whose instant compatibility had been established just weeks earlier on Mobley's sterling Roll Call (Blue Note, 1960). Moreover, the rhythm team of bassist Sam Jones and drummer Louis Hayes had become one of the more efficient power plants in jazz because of its nightly duties with the Cannonball Adderley Quintet during the same year as its best-selling At the Lighthouse (Riverside, 1960), which included the hit single "Sack O' Woe." Undercurrent has nothing as viscerally infectious as the Adderley tune but is an admirable program of Drew originals, ranging from the modal, streaming title piece to the self-descriptive "Funk- Cosity," a sort of fleshed-out variation on Bobby Timmons' "Moanin'." 

"Lion's Den" is a welcome change of mood and pace, moving to a major key and an alternating pedal tone/straight-ahead harmonic-rhythmic pattern. Next is the beboppish "The Pot's On," an elliptical melody that yields to the reassuringly warm inventiveness at which Mobley has few if any peers. "Groovin' the Blues," an ordinary but appealing line, would be an engaging finger-popper were it not such a close twin of "Funk-Cosity," and the closer, "Ballade," is a once-through set piece, an appealing romantic melody stated with formal grace and simplicity.

If none of the tunes is strikingly original or memorable, the same might be said of Drew's otherwise superlative post-Powell piano work. Certainly among the highlights is the opening title tune, set up by an electrifying 38-second introduction: drums and bass walk off eight bars at a flaming tempo, Drew adds a running baroque figure for the next eight, tenor and trumpet harmonize in thirds for the next sixteen then play in unison over a pedal tone for eight more, finally re-harmonizing in thirds for the last eight before Mobley's tenor is suddenly ejected into the jet stream for the first solo. The latter player is simply wondrous on this and each of his solo turns, as consistently rewarding as he is risk-taking, and clearly in command during the same year that produced his masterpiece, Soul Station (Blue Note, 1960). Hubbard, the comparative newcomer, isn't as fluent as Mobley but complements his frontline companion with a more aggressive, even puckish approach, alternating between repeated percussive motifs and a soaring, passionate lyricism. Given the size of the ensemble, the quality of the musicians and the blowing room for each of the soloists, it's perhaps small wonder that Undercurrent falls just short of a personal triumph for the leader (though arguably essential to any Mobley fan). But as a democratic and exemplary Blue Note session with strong hands vigorously played by five proven winners, this RVG remaster deserves a place alongside more heralded recordings during a truly golden age in the music. ~ Samuel Chell http://www.allaboutjazz.com/undercurrent-kenny-drew-blue-note-records-review-by-samuel-chell.php

Personnel: Kenny Drew: piano; Freddie Hubbard: trumpet; Hank Mobley: tenor saxophone; Sam Jones: bass; Louis Hayes: drums.

Undercurrent

Keith Andrew - Adventurous Soul

Styles: Guitar Jazz, Fusion
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:18
Size: 129,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:48)  1. Work to Do
(4:48)  2. Adventurous Soul
(4:11)  3. Love You More
(4:04)  4. Milk Shake
(4:52)  5. Samba Dulce
(4:03)  6. All About Love
(5:13)  7. Namaste Dance
(4:32)  8. Crunch Time
(3:42)  9. Hallie's Day
(4:12) 10. 6Am
(4:22) 11. Pass the Peas
(4:21) 12. Everyday
(4:04) 13. Dreamy Wing

Guitarist Keith Andrew popped on to my radar screen with his 2011 release Blue Funky Blue. There, he demonstrated strong, competent skills, a really cool guitar touch, and a firm hold on the very concept of smooth. Here with his latest endeavor called Adventurous Soul, he again treats us to a hefty dose of that smooth and a lot of catchy melodies and hooks. Joined here by saxman Eric Marienthal, the lovely saxtress Jessy J, the classy trumpeter/vocalist Johnny Britt, keys guru Jeff Lorber, and fellow guitarist/co-producer Nils who also wrote or co-wrote a few of these solid tracks and the late great drummer Ricky Lawson, Andrew surely started off with the idea of making this a high-flying project.

Kicking it off with one of only two covers offered on the album, The Isley Brothers’ “Work to Do,” Andrew does the tune justice and sets the tone for the remainder of the album, which includes such melodic offerings as the suave “Love You More,” the catchy mid-tempo “Milk Shake” featuring Marienthal and Lawson, the light and cozy island-flavored “Samba Dulce,” and a funky up-tempo groove called “All About Love” with vocals from the guitarist himself. Providing even more gusto than that track is the high kickin’ “Namaste Dance Mix,” again featuring vocals from Andrew. The guitarist closes the album with a nice and easy groove called “Dreamy Wing,” carrying a sort of riding-off-into-the-sunset, see-you-next-time vibe with Johnny Britt doing the honors on trumpet and flugelhorn. Nice way to tie it all up.All in all, Adventurous Soul has many bright spots and, if you enjoy Andrew’s effective and laid-back way of groovin’, you’ll definitely enjoy this one. ~ Ronald Jackson http://www.thesmoothjazzride.com/keith-andrew-adventurous-soul/

Adventurous Soul

Bill Evans Trio, Lee Konitz, Warne Marsh - Crosscurrents

Styles: Piano And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1977
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:46
Size: 116,6 MB
Art: Front

(8:21)  1. Eiderdown
(3:31)  2. Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye
(5:39)  3. Pensativa
(6:34)  4. Speak Low
(4:18)  5. When I Fall in Love
(6:06)  6. Night and Day
(5:38)  7. Eiderdown (take 9)
(3:30)  8. Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye (take 7)
(7:05)  9. Night and Day (take 9)

This superior set was a logical idea. One of pianist Bill Evans' earlier influences was Lennie Tristano so on the date Evans' trio (with bassist Eddie Gomez and drummer Eliot Zigmund) was teamed with Tristano's two top "students": altoist Lee Konitz and tenor saxophonist Warne Marsh. The quintet performs four standards (all of which fit easily into Evans' repertoire) plus "Pensativa" and Steve Swallow's "Eiderdown." Konitz and Marsh always worked very well together and their cool-toned improvising makes this outing by Bill Evans something special. The CD reissue adds three alternate takes to the original program. Recommended. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/cross-currents-mw0000267568

Personnel: Bill Evans (piano); Lee Konitz (alto saxophone); Warne Marsh (tenor saxophone); Eliot Zigmund (drums).

Crosscurrents

Novecento (feat. Stanley Jordan) - Dreams Of Peace

Styles: Jazz Pop
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:28
Size: 102,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:41)  1. Tell Me Something
(5:54)  2. Flying On The Sky
(5:46)  3. Too Close To The Sun
(4:11)  4. Sky Flower
(4:28)  5. Destination Of My Heart
(4:45)  6. Spring
(5:34)  7. Dreams Of Peace
(4:52)  8. Easy Love
(4:14)  9. I Can Show You Something

Novecento's recording Dreams of Peace featuring guitarist Stanley Jordan is a lush production that often melts into smooth jazz grooves, but the level of musicianship and the setails that are added keep this from being a soulless snoozefest. Novecento is comprised of the Nicolosi siblings Dona (vocals), Lino (rhythm guitar), Rosanna (bass), and Pino (keyboards). Along with Jordan, who plays lead guitar on the entire album, the Nicolosis recorded and mixed Dreams of Peace at their studio in Milan, with some additional sessions done in California. The opening song, Tell Me Something, is nothing like the average smooth jazz or AOR track. Its grandeur resembles the progressive rock of Yes or the symphonic folk rock of Renaissance, or perhaps Enya without all the vocal overdubs. It s an intriguing piece, but ultimately sinks a bit under its own weight. Flying on the Sky gets us solidly into a smooth groove as Jordan and trumpeter Guy barker play the melody together. It s alike a cross between George Benson and Herb Alpert. So far the score is average, and the fluffy, wordless background vocals don t help. 

Jordan does some nice soloing, but the track is too light to be memorable. Too Close to the Sun finds a better groove and some nice details in the keyboard work of Pino Nicolosi as well as a solid horn arrangement. Barker tosses in a nice flugelhorn solo and Jordan gets some sparks flying with his guitar work. It s the details the Nicolosi s productions adds, like Marco Fadda s percussion work, that help lift Dreams of Peace above the run of the mill smooth release. Sky Flower has a good energy level, with a techno beat played live by drummer Mimmo Campanale and great guitar fills from Jordan. The overall sound and feel is like an outtake from a late seventies/early eighties Santana album. Vocal work by Gregg Brown of the band Osibisa is well done on this track, as well as on the final track, I Can Show You Something. 

Destination of My Heart features a Dave Liebman sax solo that lifts the track out of the ordinary. In all honesty, the music on this disc is infections and actually bears repeated listening, again because of the care and attention to detail demonstrated by both the musicians and the producers. Heading into the disc s second half Spring is somewhere between 70s fusion and electric free jazz. Jordan lets loose with some high volume guitar shredding while guest Danny Gottlieb unfurls a salvo of free wheeling drum work that recalls Tony Williams at times. Then, orver a wash of synth chords Randy Brecker steps in with a fully swinging jazz solo. The following track, Dreams of Peace is a showcase for Jordan, who rises to the occasion with some of his finest solo work of the album. The final two tracks return to a more predictable smooth format, with Brown returning for vocals on the closer, I Can Show You Something. ~ Jazzitude.com – Editorial Reviews http://www.amazon.com/Dreams-Peace-Novecento/dp/B0002IQKGS

Personnel:  Stanley Jordan - lead guitar; Gregg Brown and Dora Nichols - vocals; Lino Nichols - rhythm guitar; Randy Brecker - trumpet; Guy Barker - trumpet and flugelhorn; Dave Liebman - tenor saxophone; Rossanna Nicolisi - bass; Pino Nicolisi - keyboards; Mimmo Campanale - drums; Danny Gottlieb - drums; Marco Fadda - percussion; Leonardo Govin - trombone; Trio Solista & Friends - strings.

Dreams Of Peace

Carol Welsman - Alone Together

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:58
Size: 115,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:44)  1. Day By Day
(5:10)  2. It Might As Well Be Spring
(3:31)  3. Sand In My Shoes
(5:31)  4. My Ship
(4:14)  5. Alone Together
(3:35)  6. Disappointed
(4:42)  7. If The Moon Turns Green
(5:45)  8. You Taught My Heart To Sing
(4:37)  9. The Blues Are Out Of Town
(4:30) 10. I Didn't Know About You
(3:33) 11. Killing Time

“In Alone Together, her eleventh album, the briskly rhythmic swing of Carol’s piano playing, the warm, embracing sound of her voice, combined with her irresistible way with a lyric, brightly illuminate her rising ascendency to the upper levels of the contemporary jazz vocal world.” ~ Don Heckman - International Review of Music  http://carolwelsman.com/

Alone Together