Friday, August 21, 2015

The Hi-Lo's - All Over The Place

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:38
Size: 74.7 MB
Styles: Vocal harmonies
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[3:01] 1. Bali Ha'i
[2:29] 2. My Little Grass Shack In Kealakekua, Hawaii
[2:37] 3. Sand In My Shoes
[3:16] 4. Autumn In New York
[2:43] 5. April In Fairbanks
[3:14] 6. How Are Things In Glocca Morra
[2:09] 7. Bounce
[2:09] 8. Massachusetts
[2:50] 9. Isle Of Capri
[3:09] 10. A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square
[2:36] 11. Dixie
[2:16] 12. Island Of The West Indies

The Hi-Lo's were a close-harmony vocal quartet of the 1950's and early 1960's who brought the arrangement and harmonics of popular song to a standard which has seldom been equalled and never surpassed. In their time, only the Four Freshmen have acquired a comparable reputation.

They were Gene Puerling, bass-baritone, arranger and leader of the group: Bob Strasen, baritone: Bob Morse, baritone and occasional soloist and Clark Burroughs, tenor. The group was formed in April, 1953 and took their name from the incredible vocal range they covered between them. It was also true that, while Puerling and Burroughs were five feet seven and five feet five respectively, Morse and Strasen topped six feet. They brought imagination, technical accomplishment, daring, determination and integrity to their artistry when the model for groups of their kind was a safe commercial blend. Their superiority in every department ofarranging, recording and performance was down to the genius of Gene Puerling who, in later years, went on to form Singers Unlimited with replacement Hi-Lo Don Shelton. After disbanding in the midst of the early-sixties British pop invasion of the United States and pursing their various projects, they reformed with great success in the late seventies to perform live and to produce two further outstanding albums.

All Over The Place

London Jazz Four - London Jazz Four Take Another Look At The Beatles

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:18
Size: 103.7 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[3:09] 1. I Feel Fine
[3:00] 2. Paperback Writer
[3:31] 3. Rain
[2:55] 4. Michelle
[3:52] 5. Yes It Is
[3:10] 6. Please Please Me
[2:49] 7. Things We Said Today
[5:21] 8. From Me To You
[2:59] 9. A Hard Day's Night
[4:04] 10. Ticket To Ride
[2:36] 11. Yellow Submarine
[2:45] 12. Norwegian Wood
[2:20] 13. It Strikes A Chord
[2:40] 14. Song For Hilary

This Brit quartet made the songs of the Fab Four their own, taking a lot of risk in reinterpreting many timeless classics but also approaching lesser-known Lennon-McCartney tunes (sadly, there are no Harrison compositions on the album). The result is a collection of songs on this disc (originally released in 1967) that sound almost if they were completely new. For instance, "I Feel Fine receives a Bach-like harpsichord riff that repeats itself throughout the track, the rest of the instruments basically improvising around the song's original melody.

John Lennon's Dylan-esque "Rain gives a lot of space for vibes player Ron Forbes and pianist Mike McNaught alternately to showcase their visions on each song. Gone is the song's original dark feel, which is replaced by a slow, peaceful one. The early tune "Yes It Is is barely recognizable, featuring percussion, finger cymbals, and a triangle as backdrop for the piano, which sounds as if McNaught's fingers had a hard time moving over the keys, giving an otherwise simple song an eerie, almost ghostly feel.

The quartet swings through "Please Please Me and "Things We Said Today, but the latter has more of a Latin jazz sound with some Afro undertones. "A Hard Day's Night turns out to be one of the best tracks on the CD. The song morphs into a jazz waltz, which is an interesting development. Also pay close attention to the playfulness and simplicity of the musicians' take on "Yellow Submarine. ~Ernest Barteldes

Len Clarke: drums; Ron Forbes: vibraphone; Mike McNaught: piano; Brian Moore: bass.

London Jazz Four Take Another Look At The Beatles

David Binney - Anacapa

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:03
Size: 163,4 MB
Art: Front

( 1:41)  1. She Loves, Introduction
( 5:25)  2. The Golden Zone
( 3:27)  3. Massive Humanity
(10:42)  4. Distant City
(10:10)  5. Anacapa
( 5:12)  6. Waiting for the Blast
(12:11)  7. Imagination Sets Us Free
( 9:13)  8. Heart Shaped Mind
(11:03)  9. Santo Spirito
( 1:53) 10. She Hates, Outro

Some artists move forward in great leaps and bounds, while others evolve more slowly, over longer periods of time. David Binney is one of those rare musicians who manage to do both. While a sampling of some of his recent albums, such as Bastion of Sanity (2005), Cities and Desire (2006) and Aliso (2010l, all on Criss Cross) paint a picture of the saxophonist as evolutionary, others, like 2009's Third Occasion and 2011's Graylen Epicenter (both on Binney's Mythology Records imprint) suggest he's capable of more revolutionary leaps forward as well. Even his most recent Criss Cross record, 2013's uncharacteristically unshackled Lifted Land, revealed hitherto unknown aspects of an artist whose ears and mind are always open. But nothing could prepare even for the most seasoned Binney fan for Anacapa, a massive statement for the saxophonist/composer. While it's easy to throw around accolades like "best album to date," every subsequent listen to this remarkable recording makes clear that if this isn't Binney's absolute best record, it's certainly a strong contender, right up there with albums that remain particularly definitive, such as South (ACT, 20011), Graylen Epicenter and Afinidad (Red Records, 2001), Binney's first of three recordings co-led with Venezuelan-born pianist Edward Simon.

Still, there are certain earmarks on Anacapa that identify it instantly as a Binney record, even as the opening, synth-driven "She Loves, Introduction" a through-composed miniature that, combines a four-on-the-floor electronic pulse with minimalist hints, synthesizers blazing otherworldly textures and close harmonies suggests something very different going on as well. The album is bookended with the similarly synth but this time also sequencer-driven "She Hates, Outro" in addition to its minimalist tendencies, also referencing the mitochondria of '70s electronic bands like Tangerine Dream buried somewhere deep in Binney's DNA...and, with his sparse saxophone line floating atop, some genetic coding of British saxophonist John Surman's solo excursions, such as Upon Reflection (ECM, 1980), as well. Still, while it's possible to delineate individual elements that prove even forward-thinking musicians like Binney don't emerge from a vacuum, it's the confluence of so many of these building blocks in such a deeply personal way that makes Ancapa such a remarkable and shocking album from someone whose discography has largely been defined by the sound of surprise.

Binney has worked with both Adam Rogers and Wayne Krantz in the past Rogers dating right back to Binney's early days with Lost Tribe, the group that, in addition to the saxophonist and guitarist, also introduced David Gilmore, Fima Ephron and Ben Perowsky to the world, while Krantz first collaborated with him on Balance (ACT, 2002) but, barring a few tracks on Balance, he's never worked with them together on the same record. And while Dan Weiss has been a regular Binney collaborator alone as well as together with other drummers, like Brian Blade on Graylen Epicenter Anacapa marks the first time the saxophonist has recruited up-and-comer Obed Calvaire; it's also the first time that he's relied on two drummers for most of an album, and the result is music of unbridled energy and sonic density, to a degree rarely before achieved by the saxophonist.

Between Krantz and Rogers, the saxophonist's own overdubbed horns this is the first time since Fiesta de Agosto (Red Records, 2005) that Binney has employed so many saxophones along with pianist John Escreet and, on some tracks, vocals from himself, Louis Cole and Nina Geiger, Binney has more potential for color and interweaving lines than ever before, with "The Golden Zone" an early example of Binney's making full use of complex counterpoint while, at the same time, retaining the touchstone lyricism that's defined his work as far back as 1995 and The Luxury of Guessing (Audioquest). And while there's considerable compositional structure on this five-minute piece, there's still room enough for Binney to stretch out on his main axe (alto) for a fiery solo made all the more so by Weiss and Calvaire's incendiary interplay, the whole thing held down by Matt Brewer's unshakable pulse here, as is the case throughout Anacapa, solely on electric bass. Elsewhere, Anacapa rocks and rocks hard. "Massive Humanity" is driven by a potent twin-drum back beat, a throbbing synth bass line and some massively overdriven guitar chords, leading to a series of shifting harmonies that act as a foundation for Weiss and Calvaire to solo in tandem...and pretty much blow the roof off the joint.

Half of Anacapa's five tracks Binney compositions, all range from nine to twelve minutes, providing ample room for soloing amidst some of Binney's most complex and epic writing to date. And if Lifted Land represented some of his flat-out freest work to date, despite Anacapa being far more rooted in composition, there are moments where Binney allows his extended group to dissolve into complete and utter free playing, as he does on "Imagination Sets Us Free." The album's most expansive track, it begins in visceral funk territory, with Rogers' lower-register, overdriven chord-based playing contrasting the grit of Krantz's upper register lines. A scorching solo from Binney leads to Escreet's most impressive solo of the set, blending McCoy Tyner-esque modality with more delicate phrasing as a lead-in to Krantz's turn, where things really begin to break down. As he opens up into the kind of oblique angularity upon which at least some of his career has been predicated, it first turns into a fiery exchange with Calvaire but then, with Weiss and everyone in the pool, into a period of reckless abandon from everyone, Binney once again taking the lead as the entire band seems to literally lift the energy and density until...suddenly...form reasserts itself with the composition's anthemic coda, driven by the lyrics upon which the song's title is based.

Binney's always been a master of the anthem, and has often incorporated diverse cultural influences, but always in ways that seem to fit his most specific aural universe. "Heart Shaped Mind" may begin as a percussion duo between pandeiro player Sergio Krakowski and Weiss, who moves from his kit to tabla an instrument long part of his musical and spiritual studies but there's nothing particularly eastern in the flavor of the writing. Instead, as one of Anacapa's least crowded compositions, it's an ambling piece reliant upon Binney's signature use of thematic unison lines to open up into a lengthy alto solo as much about the group's interpretive expressionism as it is Binney's. He may be the soloist, but there's a wealth of big-eared interaction going on all around him that's as exhilarating as it is intuitive, even as Binney winds down and passes the baton to Escreet.

Thanks to consistent placement in the mix, for those unfamiliar with some of the players it's possible to identify their styles: Krantz and Calvaire in the left channel, Rogers and Weiss in the right. But such practicalities aside, Anacapa is a creative high watermark for Binney on a number of fronts: compositionally, it's his most richly realized album to date while, at the same time, incorporating his relatively newfound leanings toward completely unfettered freedom; its twin-guitar/twin-drums lineup lends it a density and attendant excitement that's palpable, as Binney makes terrific use, at times, of as many as eight musicians at once to weave his intricate musical tapestries, while also allowing the music to breathe through breaking things down into smaller subsets; and, as strong a player and bandleader as Binney has been for many years, he's never managed to squeeze so much challenging music into so little time. Criss Cross sessions typically last a single day and if Binney did, indeed, record the 71-minute Anacapa in a single six-hour session then it's an even more remarkable feat than what it is for the music and performances alone. But however it was recorded, Anacapa represents Binney at his absolute best as a writer, as a performer, and as a bandleader who not only makes astute choices as to who is right for the music at hand, but in the freedom he affords them to lift the music off the written page and bring it to what is, on Anacapa, a vivid, full and creative life. ~ John Kelman http://www.allaboutjazz.com/david-binney-anacapa-by-john-kelman.php
Personnel: David Binney: alto, tenor and soprano saxophones, vocals, synths, bass; Wayne Krantz: guitar; Adam Rogers: guitar; John Escreet: piano, Fender Rhodes; Matt Brewer: electric bass; Obed Calvaire: drums; Dan Weiss: drums, tabla; Sergio Krakowski: pandeiro (8); Louis Cole: vocals (6); Nina Geiger: vocals (4).

Anacapa

Dusty Springfield - A Very Fine Love

Styles: Vocal, R&B
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:14
Size: 96,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:13)  1. Roll Away
(4:10)  2. Fine, Fine, Very Fine Day
(3:58)  3. Wherever Would I Be
(5:36)  4. Go Easy on Me
(4:16)  5. You are the Storm
(3:41)  6. I Can't Help the Way I Don't Feel
(3:48)  7. All I Have to Offer is Love
(3:42)  8. Lovin' Proof
(3:36)  9. Old Habits Die Hard
(4:11) 10. Where is a Woman to Go

In 1993, Dusty Springfield journeyed to Nashville and, working with producer Tom Shapiro, generated this jewel of an album, illuminated by as soulful and passionate a performance as the singer gave in her post-'60s incarnation. Indeed, the performances and the songs here stack up favorably next to, say, Brand New Me, her early-'70s intersection with Philly soul. One song here, "Where Would I Be?," which features a duet with Daryl Hall, got a little play for being in the movie While You Were Sleeping, but otherwise, sad to say, this album passed relatively unnoticed for most of the public. The sounds are fairly diverse, including relatively subdued songs such as "You Are the Storm," showing the softer side of her singing, but Springfield is at her best going full-out, backed by strings and a full band, as on "Roll Away" and "Lovin' Proof," which make this a very fine album, indeed. ~ Bruce Eder http://www.allmusic.com/album/a-very-fine-love-mw0000121488

Personnel: Dusty Springfield (vocals); Biff Watson (acoustic & electric guitars); Dann Huff (electric & classical guitars); Michael Thompson (guitar); Dan Dugmore (steel guitar); Jerry McPherson, George Cocchini (electric guitar); Steve Nathan (piano, B-3 organ, keyboards); Brian Tankersley, Walter Afanasieff (keyboards, synthesizer, programming); Carl Marsh (keyboards); Glenn Worf, Jimmie L. Sloas (bass); Lonnie Wilson (drums); Gary Cirimelli (programming, background vocals); Judson Spence, Guy Penrod, Kristina Clark, Audrey Wheeler, Kimberly Fleming, Chris Willis, Claytoven Richardson, Skyler Jett, Jeannie Tracy-Smith, Sandy Griffith, Conesha Owens, Ron Hemby, Dennis Wilson, John Wesley Ryles, Cindy Walker (background vocals).

A Very Fine Love

David Reinhardt Trio - Colombe

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:23
Size: 104,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:39)  1. Lady
(5:38)  2. XV
(5:04)  3. A Fool's Errand
(6:13)  4. Aparecida
(2:06)  5. Me Hermano Lp
(3:11)  6. Colombe
(4:24)  7. C
(2:49)  8. Love Theme
(3:39)  9. Melina's Theme
(1:25) 10. C (Orgue & Piano Solo)
(4:43) 11. Here's That Rainy Day
(1:26) 12. Love Theme (Guitare Solo)

Playing against expectations, given that his grandfather was the one and only Django Reinhardt, the 26-year-old guitarist David Reinhardt pursues a modern direction more informed by bebop, bossa nova, funk and fusion than by the Hot Club of France. With Hammond B3 organist Florent Gac and drummer Yoann Serra in tow, he opens with a gentle fingerstyle ballad, “Lady,” before segueing into the edgy B3 burner “XV,” which carries a hint of the original Tony Williams Lifetime trio. The relaxed swinger “A Fool’s Errand” features Reinhardt delivering warm, Wes Montgomery-style octaves, and he reserves his most lyrical playing for Ivan Lins’ mellow “Aparecida.” The title track, an uptempo swinger dedicated to Reinhardt’s grandmother, features his boldest hard-bop-fueled lines, and “Melina’s Theme” has him playing funky rhythm guitar à la Jimmy Nolen from James Brown’s band. Reinhardt also turns in a briskly swinging take on Jimmy Van Heusen’s “Here’s That Rainy Day” and an unaccompanied acoustic reading of the poignant “Love Theme From Spartacus.”~ Bill Milkowski http://jazztimes.com/articles/54417-colombe-david-reinhardt-trio

Personnel: David Reinhardt (guitar); Florent Gac (piano, Hammond b-3 organ); Yoann Serra (drums).

Colombe

Don Patterson, Booker Ervin, Houston Person - Just Friends - Legends of Acid Jazz

Styles: Hard Bop, Soul Jazz
Year: 1964
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:36
Size: 183,2 MB
Art: Front

(10:17)  1. Red Top
( 5:42)  2. Freddie Tooks Jr
( 3:58)  3. Last Train From Overbrook
( 9:24)  4. Embraceable You
( 4:46)  5. Sandu
( 4:57)  6. Sister Ruth
( 5:50)  7. Donald Duck
( 8:04)  8. Rosetta
( 3:03)  9. Under The Boardwalk
(11:00) 10. Sentimental Journey
( 6:36) 11. Theme For Dee
( 5:55) 12. Just Friends

Although this is a fine collection highlighting three unjustly overlooked players of the '60s, it doesn't really rate inclusion in Prestige's long-running Legends of Acid Jazz series. This isn't acid jazz, or even '60s-style soul-jazz, but straight-ahead hard bop. (The one exception is Don Patterson's Hammond organ-led take on a very faithful and brief rendition of the Drifters' pop hit "Under the Boardwalk," possibly an attempt at Ramsey Lewis-style crossover success.) The two tenors, the barrel-toned Houston Person and the much more aggressive, R&B-influenced honker Booker Ervin, are in control of this session, trading soloists with the intensity of an old-fashioned cutting contest. Patterson rarely takes the spotlight, but when he does, his warm, churchy tones are an inspired contrast to the hard bop blowing of the other two principals. A surprising highlight is an 11-minute take on that hoary old chestnut "Sentimental Journey," which features some simply outstanding solos by all three principals. ~ Stewart Mason http://www.allmusic.com/album/legends-of-acid-jazz-vol-2-just-friends-mw0000603317

Personnel : Don Patterson (Hammond B-3 organ); Booker Ervin, Houston Person (saxophone); Pat Martino (guitar); Billy James (drums).

Just Friends - Legends of Acid Jazz

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Milt Jackson - Bebop

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:53
Size: 116.5 MB
Styles: Vibraphone jazz
Year: 1988
Art: Front

[5:23] 1. Au Privave
[5:46] 2. Good Bait
[4:57] 3. Woody 'n You
[7:07] 4. Now's The Time
[5:28] 5. Ornithology
[5:53] 6. Groovin' High
[5:37] 7. Birks' Works
[5:52] 8. Salt Peanuts
[4:46] 9. I Waited For You

Fantastic bebop album from Milt. This one was released in 1988 forty years after the birth of bebop to tribute the genius of this music and of its creators Parker, Gillespie, Monk, Christian and Milt himself who was among the best of them all at the time. This album is simply superlative. The line up consists in Milt at the vibraharp, Jon Faddis, the Dizzie Gillespie alumn at the trumpet, JJ Johnson at the trombone, Jimmy heath tenor sx, Cedar Walton (the maestro!!) at the piano, John Clayton at the doublebass, Mickey Roker drums. The tunes are all fast bebop numbers from the era, Ornithology, Au privave, bebop blueses and anatolls from Parker's, Gillespie's, Dameron's pens. In the end of the selection the band play a stellar version of I" waited for you", a marvellous bebop ballad. It's simply pefect in the tune selection too. What can I say more? Uh, yes, the album is perfectly recorded .. it is a bebop album without the limits of the forties in the recording step. So it is a must have. The emphasis of the music is just right, just perfect. Solos are wonderful. ~Jazzcat

Bebop 

Joe Beck, Santi Dibriano, Thierry Arpino - Tri07

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:04
Size: 153.5 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[ 5:30] 1. Impressions
[ 8:33] 2. But Beautiful
[ 4:30] 3. Laura
[ 5:46] 4. My Romance
[10:03] 5. Alone Together
[ 9:19] 6. Cry Me A River
[ 3:41] 7. A Little Blue
[ 8:07] 8. Dancing To San Xavier
[ 4:43] 9. (I Don't Stand) A Ghost Of A Chance With You
[ 6:48] 10. You And The Night And The Music

Tri07 is a different type of release for Joe Beck. Which is a powerful statement, since this guitarists' guitarist has won the Most Valuable Player Award from the National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences (NARAS) five different times, and his career, which spans five decades, includes working with Miles Davis, Duke Ellington, Gil Evans, Antonio Carlos Jobim and other geniuses.

Tri07 delivers two distinct Beck flavors: Adventurous improvisational explorations that deconstruct and reassemble pieces such as "You and the Night and the Music" and John Coltrane's "Impressions," and reverential yet energetic reviews of numerous hallowed standards ("But Beautiful," "Laura," "My Romance," "Cry Me A River" and "(I Don't Stand) a Ghost of a Chance with You").

Beck can move so freely between these styles thanks to the energy and dexterity of his rhythm section: bassist Santi Dibriano, who has played with Larry Coryell, Pharoah Sanders, Sam Rivers, Sonny Fortune and Archie Shepp; and drummer Thierry Arpino, who most often plays with Jean-Luc Ponty. "We traveled together musically for two solid days of experimental sessions," wrote Dibriano in his notes; "This rhythm section is almost too good to be true," wrote Beck in reply.

This trio's opening "Impressions" of the Coltrane classic provides a clear path for the extrapolations and interpretations which follow. Arpino's firm beat grounds the ensemble, but Beck's guitar doesn't stay shackled to any uniform cadence for very long. Their ten-minute exploration takes "Alone Together" even farther out, and they wrestle new riffs and colors from the concluding "You and the Night and the Music," an abstract spacewalk through which Dibriano's fingers fly so quickly that his bass notes blur together into a continuous harmonic rumble, and Arpino's unaccompanied breaks fracture the brittle sound of Elvin Jones into brilliant marble pieces. Beck proves to be a ballad interpreter who allows the original melody to whisper through his own vision. "But Beautiful" retains that gorgeous, almost timeless melody over which Tony Bennett, for example, loves to linger, but within these eight minutes Beck finds time and space to beautifully improvise on its underlying chords, with perfect, literally perfect, rhythmic support. The trio unravels the chords of "(I Don't Stand) A Ghost of a Chance with You" into ribbons, and then neatly ties these ribbons back up into colorful knots and bows, while "Cry Me a River" suggests the soft strong touch of Barney Kessel.

Beck also contributes two of his own tunes. "A Little Blue" is precisely that, a loping blues shuffle where he sharpens his chords and attack, and shows off his Chet Atkins and George Benson chops. "Dancing to San Xavier" is evocative in both title and impact; Beck's guitar sort of hovers between clouds of airy melodic lines, while DiBriano and Arpino samba with only the loosest of gossamer connections between them, until everyone descends upon a spontaneous improvisational eruption of flowing, hot chords to close. ~Chris M. Slawecki

Joe Beck: guitar; Santi Dibriano: bass; Thierry Arpino: drums.

Tri07

Cecilia Dale - 2 albums: Standards In Bossa / Standards In Bossa II

Album: Standards In Bossa
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:12
Size: 108.1 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1999/2013
Art: Front

[3:30] 1. Night And Day
[3:38] 2. I'm In The Mood For Love
[3:51] 3. Cry Me A River
[4:02] 4. What's New?
[2:25] 5. Just One Of Those Things
[3:47] 6. Moonlight In Vermont
[3:44] 7. As Time Goes By
[2:45] 8. How High The Moon
[4:29] 9. Over The Rainbow
[2:58] 10. How About You
[3:36] 11. Bewitched
[2:13] 12. Makin' Whoopee
[2:54] 13. Smile
[3:15] 14. Tenderly

Standards In Bossa I

Album: Standards In Bossa II
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:09
Size: 108.0 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2006/2013
Art: Front

[2:17] 1. It Had To Be You
[3:32] 2. Manhattan
[2:33] 3. I Left My Heart In San Francisco
[3:34] 4. My Foolish Heart
[3:59] 5. That's All
[3:17] 6. Call Me Irresponsible
[5:26] 7. You Go To My Head
[2:23] 8. Dream
[2:59] 9. Fly Me To The Moon
[5:22] 10. My Funny Valentine
[2:30] 11. Our Love Is Here To Stay
[3:06] 12. Foggy Day
[3:08] 13. You Do Something To Me
[2:55] 14. All The Things You Are


Ted Hefko & The Thousandaires - Distillations Of The Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:44
Size: 107.0 MB
Styles: Jazz/blues
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[4:42] 1. Hesitation Blues
[4:21] 2. Sweat Upon My Brow
[5:07] 3. I Don't Feel Welcome Here
[3:35] 4. I've Got A Right To Carry On
[4:17] 5. One More Distillation Of The Blues
[4:00] 6. Champion Jack
[3:06] 7. Slippin' Slowly
[4:16] 8. Bad Kids
[4:01] 9. Adam And The Devil
[4:49] 10. Butterfly Dreamin'
[4:25] 11. When The Weather Breaks

Featuring guitarist Neil Flink of Toronto, Ontario, bassist Brian Vinson of Louisville, Kentucky, and Norman Edwards Jr. of West Hempstead, New York on drums, Ted Hefko and The Thousandaires bring original stories to life with the spontaneity of jazz, the bare-bones sensibility of early folk and the vibrancy of New Orleans. From a home base in Brooklyn, NY, Ted Hefko and The Thousandaires tour a wide swath of the country from New Orleans, Louisiana, to Thomas West Virginia, to Tulsa Oklahoma, and Nashville, Tennessee. Their 2009 release, Egyptland, and their 2011 release, If I Walked On Water, were both well received by the press.

Born in Madison, Wisconsin, Ted Hefko moved to New Orleans on a Greyhound Bus when he was 18 and fresh out of high school. He rode next to a Memphis call-girl, nearly twice his age, who entertained him with stories of the ins and outs of her business. Ted began writing song lyrics when he was in second grade and picked up the guitar a couple years later along with any instrument he could get his hands on, from violin to keyboard and banjo. Saxophone was offered in sixth grade band. As a young adult, Ted wanted to dig a little deeper into modern jazz at The University of New Orleans. There he chose saxophone over guitar as his primary instrument. That choice led to ten years of working as a free-lance horn player in New Orleans and New York, before song writing and the guitar began calling him back. His original act encompasses the full range of these experiences. Ted strums a guitar while he sings his lyrics before switching to tenor sax or clarinet for his solos.

Distillations Of The Blues

Renee Rosnes - Black Narcissus

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:43
Size: 123,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:07)  1. Black Narcissus
(6:09)  2. Without A Song
(5:59)  3. You Know I Care
(8:04)  4. Beatrice
(5:35)  5. Recorda Me
(4:29)  6. Chelsea Bridge
(4:45)  7. Isotope
(5:46)  8. What's New
(4:34)  9. Serenity
(4:09) 10. Night And Day

Beautiful trio work from pianist Renee Rosnes a set that sparkles with warmth and imagination, and which features wonderful support from drummer Lewis Nash and bassist Peter Washington! The trio's perfectly poised throughout, but never in staid ways just always open to a new groove, and a newly fluid line magically reforming themselves with a new sense of energy on each fresh track, and never failing to delight us as the set moves on! Renee's piano is as warm and lyrical as ever, but we're especially in love with the Washington/Nash rhythm team as they push a cool groove on the set, one that makes Rosnes sound better than we remember on other recent dates. Titles include "Black Narcissus", "Night & Day", "Serenity", "Beatrice", "Recorda Me", and "Isotope".https://www.dustygroove.com/item/609719

Personal: Renee Rosnes – piano;  Peter Washington – bass;  Lewis Nash - drums

Black Narcissus

Tessa Souter - Listen Love

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:26
Size: 102,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:46)  1. The Peacocks
(4:42)  2. Willow
(3:45)  3. Caravan
(4:03)  4. Listen Love
(4:43)  5. Fragile
(6:15)  6. You Don't Have To Believe
(3:50)  7. Daydream
(3:10)  8. Insensatez
(4:01)  9. Left Alone
(6:06) 10. The Creator Has A Master Plan

"On her amazing album Listen Love, [Tessa Souter] delivers powerful versions of nonstandards such as Pat Martino's "Willow" and Pharoah Sanders' complex "The Creator Has a Master Plan," in addition to her originals, all delivered in a crystal-clear voice with diamond-cut phrasing and a slight tinge of melancholy. She's a gem." (Phladelphia Inquirer) "Like Norma Winstone whose lyrics for Jimmy Rowles' "The Peacocks" she uses here Souter understands what is needed to deliver a song .... Souter's singing style feels natural and organic her rich, dark voice combines with her ability to see the shape of a tune and so the words seem to come from her soul." (All About Jazz-New York) ~ Editorial Reviews http://www.amazon.com/Listen-Love-Tessa-Souter/dp/B000CA35BE

"Musical sophistication ... extraordinary authenticity." ~ Los Angeles Times

"On her amazing album Listen Love, ... crystal-clear voice with diamond-cut phrasing and a slight tinge of melancholy. " ~ Philadelphia Inquirer

Listen Love

Stan Getz - Award Winner

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1957
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:40
Size: 169,3 MB
Art: Front

(7:08)  1. Where Or When
(7:03)  2. Woody 'N' You
(4:44)  3. Smiles
(6:55)  4. Three Little Words
(6:41)  5. Time After Time
(9:19)  6. This Can't Be Love
(7:42)  7. All God's Chillun Got Rhythm
(5:31)  8. But Beautiful
(7:10)  9. Woody 'N' You (Alternative Take)
(6:49) 10. Time After Time (Alternative Take)
(0:30) 11. All God's Chillun Got Rhythm (False Start)
(0:17) 12. Smiles (False Start)
(0:37) 13. Time After Time (False Starts)
(0:23) 14. Woody 'N' You (False Start)
(2:43) 15. Woody 'N' You (Inserts)

Award Winner reunites Stan Getz with his mid-'50s right-hand men pianist Lou Levy and bassist Leroy Vinnegar, plus drummer Stan Levey, who sat in with the trio on 1956's The Steamer. Not surprisingly, it's quite similar to that effort, as the quartet keeps thing alternately cool, swinging ballads, and simmering, low-key grooves. It's the sound that made Getz' reputation and brought him popularity, a fact alluded to in the set's title. In retrospect, that can make Award Winner seem like standard-issue Getz, since it is straight-up Stan, with no surprises. Still, that's a very good thing, since few other tenor saxophonists had such a deft touch with laid-back, sensual cool jazz. Each cut on the six-track album feels sensual, even when the tempo is fleet on the side-closers "Smiles" and "This Can't Be Love." Everyone involved sounds as if they're enjoying themselves, and that results in a solid record that may have a few outstanding moments here and there a nice turn of phrase by Getz, a good solo from Levy, supple support from Vinnegar and Levey but is more distinguished by its overall strength and consistency of mood.

Not necessarily a knockout, then, but certainly a record any true Getz fan would want in their collection. [Award Winner was released as a Verve Master Edition in 2000, containing nine bonus tracks, including four false starts and a track's worth of inserts. The real treat are the non-LP cuts from the same session, "All God's Chillun Got Rhythm" and "But Beautiful," which live up to the standard of the original LP, plus alternate takes of "Woody N You" and "Time after Time." All of this music is also available on the three-disc set, East of the Sun: The West Coast Sessions.] ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine http://www.allmusic.com/album/award-winner-stan-getz-mw0000055403

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

Award Winner

Chihiro Yamanaka - Syncopation Hazard

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:21
Size: 120,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:31)  1. Syncopation Hazard
(5:33)  2. The Entertainer / Ritual
(3:37)  3. Maple Leaf Rag
(5:31)  4. The Easy Winners
(5:10)  5. Dove
(5:15)  6. Reflection Rag
(5:35)  7. Sunflower Slow Drag / Ladies In Mercedes
(5:27)  8. New Rag
(5:23)  9. Heliotrope Bouquet
(2:54) 10. Uniformity Rag
(3:22) 11. Graceful Ghost Rag

Born Kiryu, Japan. Yamanaka played piano from the age of four, studying classical music and was eventually awarded the grand prize of Japan’s Gumma Fresh Talent competition. In the USA, she studied at the Berklee College Of Music, graduating in 2000. She was critically praised, winning DownBeat magazine’s award for Outstanding Performance and the IAJE (International Association of Jazz Educators) Sisters In Jazz competition, following which she toured Europe with other winners. Among many artists with whom she has performed are George Benson, Gary Burton, Terri Lyne Carrington, Curtis Fuller, George Russell and Ed Thigpen. In the early 00s she was a member of DIVA, the all-female big band led by drummer Sherrie Maricle, with which group she has played concerts and recorded. Yamanaka also played in the DIVA spin-off quintet, Five Play, with which group she played on Marlene VerPlanck’s 2003 album It’s How You Play The Game. Among musicians Yamanaka has used on her recording dates are bass players Ray Parker, Ben Street and Larry Grenadier and drummers Ben Perowsky, Rodney Green and Jeff Ballard. ~ Bio http://www.allmusic.com/artist/chihiro-yamanaka-mn0000283696/biography

Personnel:  Chihiro Yamanaka - Piano, Fender Rhodes; Yoshi Waki - Bass; John Davis - Drums.

Syncopation Hazard

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Al Casey - Jumpin' With Al

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:40
Size: 132.0 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 1974/2007
Art: Front

[5:41] 1. Rosetta
[7:13] 2. Willow Weep For Me
[5:39] 3. One Woman's Man
[4:20] 4. I'm Beginning To See The Light
[3:47] 5. Pousse-Café
[6:52] 6. Just You, Just Me
[9:42] 7. If You Ain't K
[6:33] 8. I Wish I Knew
[4:13] 9. I'm Beginning To See The Light
[3:36] 10. Pousse-Café (Take 2)

Best known as Fats Waller's guitarist in the 1930s, Al Casey has played for many decades since that time. On this reissue CD, Casey had his first opportunity to lead his own record date in 13 years. Seven performances (including a previously unreleased number and two new alternate takes) match Casey in a quartet with pianist Jay McShann, bassist Roland Lobligeois, and drummer Paul Gunther; "Rosetta" and two versions of "I'm Beginning to See the Light" are most memorable. The other three numbers (which include "Just You, Just Me" and "I Wish I Knew") have Casey, tenor saxophonist Arnett Cobb, pianist Milt Buckner, Lobligeois, and drummer Michael Silva joined by the tap dancing of Jimmy Slide. All in all, this set does jump a lot and is a fine example of 1940s-style small group swing that looks toward early R&B. ~Scott Yanow

Jumpin' With Al

Misa Malone - Awaited

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:44
Size: 95.6 MB
Styles: Soul
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[4:41] 1. He Awaits
[4:36] 2. Can't Get Enough
[4:09] 3. My Love
[4:15] 4. Confetti
[3:33] 5. Behind
[4:41] 6. Busted Love
[3:51] 7. That Bounce
[3:35] 8. Love Me Or Leave Me
[4:25] 9. This I Do
[3:55] 10. Still Wondering

Misa Malone's new album, Awaited, is a compilation of powerful songs that will take you from jumping and dancing to sighing in reflection of past heartbreak. Awaited, embodies "Smooth Soul" and presents it to the masses with a fierce and fiery musical collection.

Awaited

Mark Winkler - Sweet Spot

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:30
Size: 113.3 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[4:09] 1. Like Young
[4:51] 2. Catch Me If You Can
[4:00] 3. But Not For Me
[4:47] 4. Sweet Spot
[4:49] 5. This Side Of Loving
[3:46] 6. Somewhere In Brazil (East Coast)
[2:42] 7. After Hours
[4:43] 8. On Broadway
[3:58] 9. Jazz Is A Special Taste
[4:13] 10. Some Other Sunset
[3:31] 11. Their Hearts Were Full Of Spring
[3:56] 12. Somewhere In Brazil (East Coast)

For all of his musical bona fides, Mark Winkler is no more a jazz singer than Jim Caruso or Michael Buble. In spite of the fact that he attracted the best of the best in his sidemen—bassist Robert Hurst, pianist Billy Childs and drummer Gregory Hutchinson—for Sweet Spot, he remains something else. The point being, that whatever kind of singer Winker is, it is beside the point. Like Caruso's Swing Set (Yellow Sound Label, 2011), Sweet Spot captures the art of the cabaret singer, the suave stylist with wit and perfect intonation.

Perfect intonation or not, Winkler, like Caruso, possesses that most important vocal element for a singer—a distinctive voice. Winkler's sonics are less than perfect, his voice too refined to contain grit, possessing a rasp that makes it unique—and, more importantly, identifiable. Add this to his keen arranger's ear and Winkler turns a standard like "But Not for Me" on its ear.

Childs introduces the Gershwin classic with a quote from the Miles Davis songbook, using Red Garland's original introduction to Davis' 1956 Prestige recording of "If I Were a Bell," from Relaxin' With the Miles Davis Quintet. Winkler casts the song as originally sung by Judy Garland in Girl Crazy. This is not your mother's Chet Baker cover; Winkler means business, singing crisply with superb support. A splendid bass solo sums up the rendition that is as tasteful as it is creative and emotive. ~C. Michael Bailey

Mark Winkler: vocals; Eli Brueggemann: piano; Tim Emmons: bass; Steve Barnes: drums; Bob Sheppard: sax; Kim Richmond: sax; Grant Geissman: guitar; Billy Childs: piano; Greg Hutchinson: drums; Anthony Wilson; guitar; Nolan Shaheed: trumpet; Robert Hurst: bass; Luis Conte: percussion.

Sweet Spot

Dick Hyman & Ray Kennedy - What Is There To Say?

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:21
Size: 146,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:57)  1. Yes Sir, That's My Baby
(3:59)  2. What Is There To Say?
(4:39)  3. Idaho
(6:21)  4. These Foolish Things
(6:23)  5. Jumpin' With Symphony Sid
(6:45)  6. One Morning In May
(3:14)  7. Just A Skosh
(3:44)  8. It's The Talk Of The Town
(3:22)  9. For Dancers Only
(4:03) 10. Can't We Be Friends?
(3:32) 11. Waltzin' Without The 'G'
(5:49) 12. Clara, Clara
(2:59) 13. I Ain't Got Nobody
(3:27) 14. Goodbye

Recorded meetings of two pianists, once considered to be nothing but a novelty, gained greater acceptance after Marian McPartland invited many of the top jazz pianists to appear on her long-running radio series, but not every duo piano matchup is equally memorable. As Dick Hyman discusses in his liner notes to this session with Ray Kennedy (the pianist of the John Pizzarelli Trio), each musician must take turns playing solos and a supporting role, and feel that a meeting of minds is taking place.

Fortunately, that is the case, as this project is never a cutting contest but a joint effort that explores the possibilities of each song, most of which are standards. Among the many highlights are the dissonant arrangement of "These Foolish Things," a romp through "Jumpin' With Symphony Sid," "Clara, Clara," a moody obscurity from the Ira and George Gershwin, and a heartfelt take of the bittersweet ballad "Goodbye," which long served as Benny Goodman's sign-off piece. Each man offers an original as well. Kennedy brought "Just a Skosh," a rollicking tune that would have been right at home during the 1930s. Hyman revived "Waltzin' Without the G," a piece he wrote in 1973 for a televised beauty pageant; this shimmering gem seems as if it was conceived with two pianos in mind. With two inventive and musically intuitive pianists playing two magnificent pianos and a pair of engineers who are in tune with the artists' goals, the results achieved on this outstanding date should come as no surprise. ~ Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/what-is-there-to-say-mw0001011519

Personnel:  Dick Hyman – piano; Ray Kennedy – piano.

What Is There To Say?

Deborah J. Carter - Diggin' The Duke!

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:02
Size: 161,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:31)  1. Petite Fleur Africaine
(4:48)  2. Low and Light
(5:27)  3. Harlem Nocturne
(3:22)  4. The Gal From Joe’s
(4:32)  5. Do Nothing till you Hear From Me
(6:08)  6. Satin Doll
(5:00)  7. Prelude To A Kiss
(2:59)  8. Purple Gazelle
(3:43)  9. It Don’t Mean a Thing
(4:41) 10. Melancholia
(6:05) 11. Solitude
(4:34) 12. Music Is My Mistress
(4:26) 13. I Ain’t Got Nothin’ But The Blues
(3:49) 14. Don’t Get Around Much Anymore
(4:50) 15. The First Time I Heard Ellington

Diggin' The Duke is the exciting new release from vocal enchantress Deborah J. Carter. With this program Deborah shines a very new and personal light on known and unknown repertoire of Duke Ellington. Deborah, with Mark Zandveld and Leo Bouwmeester, rearranged from a contemporary perspective a selection of Ellington's compositions, and Deborah composed original lyrics to a few of his instrumentals. They use a variety of swing, Latin and fusion rhythms and adventurous harmonies. http://www.amazon.co.uk/Diggin-Duke-Deborah-J-Carter/dp/B00Y0JPB3S

Personnel:  Deborah J. Carter, Vocals & Flute | Leo Bouwmeester, Piano | Mark Zandveld, Bass | Gunnar Graafmans, Drums & Percussion | Efraim Trujillo, sax | Hermine Deurloo, Harmonica | Mateusz Pulawski, Guitar | Alex Simu, Clarinet d’amour | Emiel Wienholts, Sax

Diggin' The Duke!

Rich Perry - Organique

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:46
Size: 130,2 MB
Art: Front

( 9:59)  1. Toys
( 9:05)  2. I Didn’t Know What Time It Was
(10:04)  3. Afternoon In Paris
( 9:16)  4. Without a Song
(10:03)  5. Thad’s Pad
( 8:16)  6. Dance Of The Infidels

Tenorist Rich Perry holds an established track record of subverting expectations and embodying contradictions. He is reportedly a reluctant band leader in the studio, yet Organique registers as his twenty-second album for Steeplechase. Curiously, it’s his first fronting an organ trio, although he worked previously with Gary Versace on the organist’s debut for the Danish label over a decade ago. On that outing, guitarist John Abercrombie served as an additional harmonic foil and soloist. Here it’s just Versace and drummer Jeff Hirshfield supplying support and the lean format while quietly and consistently challenging yields a surprisingly sedate set of performances in sum. Count on Perry to zig and he’s more likely to zag.

As with the majority of his previous dates, Perry falls back on a program of standards and covers, but his distinctive bop-based phrasing stubbornly resists predictability. Versace fills a multi-purpose role very similar to the one he fielded as a member of saxophonist Ellery Eskelin’s New York Organ Trio around the same time, generating slippery leads, responsive comping and resonant, rippling bass lines with equal expertise. He bathes it all in a warm, enveloping tonal gloss that works as an instant relaxing agent on the ears and in the service a phraseology that repeatedly evades B-3 cliché.

A drowsy and melodious investigation of Herbie Hancock’s seminal “Toys” finds Perry and Versace plying the vertical spiraling theme and sandwiching a pair of searching solos in-between before a somewhat matter-of-fact finish.  “I Didn’t Know What Time It Was” follows an analogous path of least resistance with Perry blowing wistfully across plush, pulsing comping from the organist. The saxophonist’s lines resolve unexpectedly, once again mirroring a mind intent on making the familiar delightfully peculiar. As if to heighten contrast, Hirshfield traffics in skeletal, cymbal-driven time-keeping, taking care not to get in the way or shade outside the lines.

“Afternoon in Paris” and a Latin-tinged “Without a Song” spool out with comparable degrees of poise and measured poignancy, but once again the prevailing mood is even-tempered. Verace adds some off-kilter pedal effects to the front and back ends of the former and generates a voluminous, highly propulsive bass line on the latter. Perry fashions agile solo extemporizations on both, making the most of the upper registers of his horn. Hirshfield is still largely relegated to deferential tempo management and accents for better and worse, leaving the highwire work to his colleagues.

“Thad’s Pad” brings the blues, with a switch to brushes and another tumescent bass presence by Versace that snakes lasciviously around the organist’s lithe right hand variations. A vivacious, if somewhat viscous rendering of Bud Powell’s “Dance of the Infidels” clinches the set with more ambrosial interplay between tenor and Hammond B-3. Packed with plentiful slow smolder passages rather than outright brush fires, the disc holds much to recommend it as Perry’s first (and overdue) foray helming an organ outfit. ~ Derek Taylor http://dustedmagazine.tumblr.com/post/125774960201/rich-perry-organique-steeplechase

Musicians:  Rich Perry – Tenor Saxophone;  Gary Versace – Hammond B-3 Organ;  Jeff Hisrshfiled – Drums

Organique