Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 28:39
Size: 65.6 MB
Styles: New Orleans jazz
Year: 2009
Art: Front
[2:56] 1. Futuristic Rhythm
[2:58] 2. Out Where The Blues Begin
[2:45] 3. That's A-Plenty
[3:10] 4. Ballin' The Jack
[2:49] 5. I'm Walking Through Clover (I'm Happy In Love)
[3:10] 6. That Da Da Strain
[2:59] 7. Last Cent
[2:40] 8. Swanee
[2:22] 9. Meanest Kind O' Blues
[2:45] 10. I Have To Have You
It's All About Swing
Thursday, October 8, 2015
Benny Golson - Just As Much
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:24
Size: 179.5 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2015
Art: Front
[4:42] 1. Namely You
[5:23] 2. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
[3:35] 3. Little Karin
[7:30] 4. Alone Together
[5:55] 5. Whisper Not
[4:46] 6. I Fall In Love Too Easily
[4:17] 7. You're Mine, You
[6:14] 8. Another Git Together
[5:05] 9. April In Paris
[8:34] 10. Blues After Dark
[5:19] 11. Cry A Blue Tear
[5:15] 12. The Touch
[7:34] 13. Thursday's Theme
[4:10] 14. My Heart Belongs To Daddy
Just As Much
Time: 78:24
Size: 179.5 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2015
Art: Front
[4:42] 1. Namely You
[5:23] 2. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
[3:35] 3. Little Karin
[7:30] 4. Alone Together
[5:55] 5. Whisper Not
[4:46] 6. I Fall In Love Too Easily
[4:17] 7. You're Mine, You
[6:14] 8. Another Git Together
[5:05] 9. April In Paris
[8:34] 10. Blues After Dark
[5:19] 11. Cry A Blue Tear
[5:15] 12. The Touch
[7:34] 13. Thursday's Theme
[4:10] 14. My Heart Belongs To Daddy
Benny Golson is a talented composer/arranger whose tenor playing has continued to evolve with time. After attending Howard University (1947-1950) he worked in Philadelphia with Bull Moose Jackson's R&B band (1951) at a time when it included one of his writing influences, Tadd Dameron on piano. Golson played with Dameron for a period in 1953, followed by stints with Lionel Hampton (1953-1954), and Johnny Hodges and Earl Bostic (1954-1956). He came to prominence while with Dizzy Gillespie's globetrotting big band (1956-1958), as much for his writing as for his tenor playing (the latter was most influenced by Don Byas and Lucky Thompson). Golson wrote such standards as "I Remember Clifford" (for the late Clifford Brown), "Killer Joe," "Stablemates," "Whisper Not," "Along Came Betty," and "Blues March" during 1956-1960. His stay with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers (1958-1959) was significant, and during 1959-1962 he co-led the Jazztet with Art Farmer. From that point on Golson gradually drifted away from jazz and concentrated more on working in the studios and with orchestras including spending a couple of years in Europe (1964-1966). When Golson returned to active playing in 1977, his tone had hardened and sounded much closer to Archie Shepp than to Don Byas. Other than an unfortunate commercial effort for Columbia in 1977, Golson has recorded consistently rewarding albums (many for Japanese labels) since that time including a reunion with Art Farmer and Curtis Fuller in a new Jazztet. Through the years he has recorded as a leader for Contemporary, Riverside, United Artists, New Jazz, Argo, Mercury, and Dreyfus among others. Returning once again to the spirit of the original Jazztet, Golson released New Time, New 'Tet on Concord Records in 2009. ~ bio by Scott Yanow
Just As Much
Elizabeth Shepherd Trio - Start To Move
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:05
Size: 117.0 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2006
Art: Front
[4:52] 1. Start To Move
[3:43] 2. George's Dilemma
[6:29] 3. Roots
[2:57] 4. Four
[4:01] 5. Circles
[3:23] 6. Reversed
[6:35] 7. Melon
[5:42] 8. Ton Visage
[7:26] 9. Along The Way
[4:42] 10. Just Getting By
[1:09] 11. Price Is Right
Start To Move
Time: 51:05
Size: 117.0 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2006
Art: Front
[4:52] 1. Start To Move
[3:43] 2. George's Dilemma
[6:29] 3. Roots
[2:57] 4. Four
[4:01] 5. Circles
[3:23] 6. Reversed
[6:35] 7. Melon
[5:42] 8. Ton Visage
[7:26] 9. Along The Way
[4:42] 10. Just Getting By
[1:09] 11. Price Is Right
Imagine a cold winter night in Toronto, walking past a small jazz club, when you catch through the folds of your scarf the warm deep grooves of a jazz trio playing to an intimate crowd. Welcome to the scene a fresh new sound from Elizabeth Shepherd Trio.
There are times when something new comes along at once familiar and yet completely original. The album ‘Start to Move’ from the Elizabeth Shepherd Trio is just that. But what’s more she has added her own unique blend of jazz-funk, soul, blues, and samba to the fundamentals of Jazz – improvising a deep driving bass from Scott Kemp, the swinging beat of the drum from Colin Kingsmore, and Elizabeth’s playful piano and captivating voice to tie it all together. Recorded over the winter of 2005/2006, you can feel yourself with them, locked away in a small studio, protected from the cold winter night, pushing through track after track for that deep warm sound.
Elizabeth’s lyrics sing to us her struggle to find a place in a dynamic yet crowded jazz scene, as well as drawing on stories of love and life. From the jazz funk of ‘Reversed’ to the samba beats of ‘Melon’, the hip hop influenced ‘George’s Dilemma’ and the swinging modal of ‘Roots’, the Elizabeth Shepherd Trio has given us music that seems effortless in its perfection, displaying her talents and the remarkable chemistry she shares with her band to never compromise her style for those seeking tradition.
There are times when something new comes along at once familiar and yet completely original. The album ‘Start to Move’ from the Elizabeth Shepherd Trio is just that. But what’s more she has added her own unique blend of jazz-funk, soul, blues, and samba to the fundamentals of Jazz – improvising a deep driving bass from Scott Kemp, the swinging beat of the drum from Colin Kingsmore, and Elizabeth’s playful piano and captivating voice to tie it all together. Recorded over the winter of 2005/2006, you can feel yourself with them, locked away in a small studio, protected from the cold winter night, pushing through track after track for that deep warm sound.
Elizabeth’s lyrics sing to us her struggle to find a place in a dynamic yet crowded jazz scene, as well as drawing on stories of love and life. From the jazz funk of ‘Reversed’ to the samba beats of ‘Melon’, the hip hop influenced ‘George’s Dilemma’ and the swinging modal of ‘Roots’, the Elizabeth Shepherd Trio has given us music that seems effortless in its perfection, displaying her talents and the remarkable chemistry she shares with her band to never compromise her style for those seeking tradition.
Start To Move
Roy Haynes - Roy-Alty
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:42
Size: 150.4 MB
Styles: Post bop, Straight ahead jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front
[5:54] 1. Grand Street
[3:37] 2. They Call The Wind Mariah
[8:40] 3. Off Minor
[8:20] 4. These Foolish Things
[5:25] 5. Milestones
[8:40] 6. Tin Tin Deo
[7:40] 7. All The Bars Are Open
[3:49] 8. Pinky
[6:44] 9. Equipoise
[6:50] 10. Passion Dance
Roy-Alty
Time: 65:42
Size: 150.4 MB
Styles: Post bop, Straight ahead jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front
[5:54] 1. Grand Street
[3:37] 2. They Call The Wind Mariah
[8:40] 3. Off Minor
[8:20] 4. These Foolish Things
[5:25] 5. Milestones
[8:40] 6. Tin Tin Deo
[7:40] 7. All The Bars Are Open
[3:49] 8. Pinky
[6:44] 9. Equipoise
[6:50] 10. Passion Dance
Roy Haynes celebrated his 86th birthday on March 13, 2011. Had the veteran drummer retired from music 30 or 40 years earlier, he still would have gone down in history as someone with a long list of accomplishments. But thankfully, Haynes continued to perform well into his eighties. Recorded in early 2011 (when Haynes was still 85), Roy-Alty is a solid hard bop/post-bop outing that boasts well-known guests like Chick Corea (who is heard on acoustic piano) and trumpeter Roy Hargrove. Corea is featured on two selections: the dusky "All the Bars Are Open" and Thelonious Monk's "Off Minor," while Hargrove is heard on six of the ten tracks (including the insistent "Passion Dance," the standard "These Foolish Things," the Afro-Cuban favorite "Tin Tin Deo," and Miles Davis' "Milestones"). It should be noted that the "Milestones" that Haynes performs on Roy-Alty is the bop standard that Davis played with Charlie "Bird" Parker in 1947, not the modal standard he unveiled in 1958, and playing something with a Bird connection is quite appropriate, given that Haynes was a member of his quintet from 1949-1952 (when the drummer was in his twenties). Most of the songs on Roy-Alty find Haynes employing a group that he bills as the Fountain of Youth (alto saxophonist Jaleel Shaw, pianist Martin Bejerano, and bassist David Wong), and while the personnel can vary from track to track on this 66-minute CD, the constant is Haynes' skillful drumming. After all these years, Haynes hasn't lost his touch as either a drummer or a group leader, and his skills in both of those areas is evident on Roy-Alty, which falls short of essential but is nonetheless a pleasing addition to his catalog. ~Alex Henderson
Roy-Alty
Oscar Peterson - Perfect Peterson: Best of the Pablo & Telarc Recordings (Disc 1)
Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:21
Size: 168,5 MB
Art: Front
( 4:52) 1. Tenderly
( 3:20) 2. How High the Moon
( 8:01) 3. Nuages
( 5:21) 4. Blues Etude
( 6:57) 5. Caravan
( 7:17) 6. I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
( 4:26) 7. Summertime
(10:47) 8. If I Were a Bell
( 3:18) 9. (Back Home Again In) Indiana
( 4:47) 10. I'm Confessin' (That I Love You)
( 7:11) 11. Nigerian Marketplace
( 6:57) 12. On the Trail
Perfect Peterson: Best of the Pablo & Telarc Recordings (Disc 1)
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:21
Size: 168,5 MB
Art: Front
( 4:52) 1. Tenderly
( 3:20) 2. How High the Moon
( 8:01) 3. Nuages
( 5:21) 4. Blues Etude
( 6:57) 5. Caravan
( 7:17) 6. I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
( 4:26) 7. Summertime
(10:47) 8. If I Were a Bell
( 3:18) 9. (Back Home Again In) Indiana
( 4:47) 10. I'm Confessin' (That I Love You)
( 7:11) 11. Nigerian Marketplace
( 6:57) 12. On the Trail
While it's true that Oscar Peterson compilations appeared with regularity form the early '60s on, only a few of them as with most recording artists have any real merit. This two-disc collection from the Concord Music Group's Telarc label, is one of them. Appearing less than a year before his death, this compilation concentrates on recordings issued from the '50s through the middle of the '80s on Dizzy Gillespie's Pablo label, and those made for Telarc between 1990 and 2000. Many live dates are included here from both labels, including "Tenderly" with Herb Ellis and Ray Brown at the J.A.T.P. concerts in Japan; the trio dates at Zardi's in 1955 ("How High the Moon"), in Copenhagen with Joe Pass, Stéphane Grappelli, and Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen in 1979, and Mickey Roker in 1979 ("Nuages"). There's the beautiful duet reading of Juan Tizol's "Caravan" with Gillespie in the studio in 1974, as well as the title track form the Nigerian Marketplace album but recorded live in Japan in 1982.
The biggest complaint is that there isn't anything here actually from that classic album on this set. Disc two begins with the great reunion of the trio at the Blue Note in 1990, from which the historic set was taken with Bobby Durham on drums: "Honeysuckle Rose," "Kelly's Blues," and "Wheatland" all come from those sets. Other live cuts include "Reunion Blues," with Benny Green, Ellis, Brown, and drummer Lewis Nash from the Tribute to Oscar Peterson concert in New York, and "Night Time" from Oscar in Paris. There are a few studio numbers here as well including "In a Mellow Tone," with Brown, Nash, Benny Carter, Clark Terry, and Lorne Lofsky, and the stellar version of "Tin Tin Deo," with Roy Hargrove, Ørsted-Pedersen, and Ralph Moore was recorded in Canada for release on mid-'90s albums like The More I See You and Trail of Dreams: A Canadian Suite. With the exception of the aforementioned minor complaint, this is a fine overview of some of Peterson's most productive years. Included is an excellent liner essay by writer James Isaacs. ~ Thom Jurek http://www.allmusic.com/album/perfect-peterson-best-of-the-pablo-telarc-recordings-mw0000727150
Personnel: Oscar Peterson, Benny Green, Count Basie: piano; Herb Ellis, Lorne Lafsky, Ulf Wakenius, Joe Pass: guitar; Ray Brown, Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen, John Heard, David Young: bass; Bobby Durham, Lewis Nash, Martin Drew, Karriem Riggins, Mickey Roker, Louis Bellson: drums; Benny Carter: alto sax; Clark Terry: flugelhorn; Roy Hargrove, Dizzy Gillespie: trumpet; Ralph Moore, Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis: tenor sax; Milt Jackson: vibes; Michel Legrand: strings; Stephane Grappelli: violin.
The biggest complaint is that there isn't anything here actually from that classic album on this set. Disc two begins with the great reunion of the trio at the Blue Note in 1990, from which the historic set was taken with Bobby Durham on drums: "Honeysuckle Rose," "Kelly's Blues," and "Wheatland" all come from those sets. Other live cuts include "Reunion Blues," with Benny Green, Ellis, Brown, and drummer Lewis Nash from the Tribute to Oscar Peterson concert in New York, and "Night Time" from Oscar in Paris. There are a few studio numbers here as well including "In a Mellow Tone," with Brown, Nash, Benny Carter, Clark Terry, and Lorne Lofsky, and the stellar version of "Tin Tin Deo," with Roy Hargrove, Ørsted-Pedersen, and Ralph Moore was recorded in Canada for release on mid-'90s albums like The More I See You and Trail of Dreams: A Canadian Suite. With the exception of the aforementioned minor complaint, this is a fine overview of some of Peterson's most productive years. Included is an excellent liner essay by writer James Isaacs. ~ Thom Jurek http://www.allmusic.com/album/perfect-peterson-best-of-the-pablo-telarc-recordings-mw0000727150
Personnel: Oscar Peterson, Benny Green, Count Basie: piano; Herb Ellis, Lorne Lafsky, Ulf Wakenius, Joe Pass: guitar; Ray Brown, Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen, John Heard, David Young: bass; Bobby Durham, Lewis Nash, Martin Drew, Karriem Riggins, Mickey Roker, Louis Bellson: drums; Benny Carter: alto sax; Clark Terry: flugelhorn; Roy Hargrove, Dizzy Gillespie: trumpet; Ralph Moore, Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis: tenor sax; Milt Jackson: vibes; Michel Legrand: strings; Stephane Grappelli: violin.
Perfect Peterson: Best of the Pablo & Telarc Recordings (Disc 1)
Marcus Printup - The New Boogaloo
Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:12
Size: 131,3 MB
Art: Front
(5:49) 1. The Bullet Train
(5:29) 2. Sardinian Princess
(6:49) 3. The Weeping Prince
(6:57) 4. The New Boogaloo
(5:51) 5. Soul Waltz
(7:18) 6. In A Sentimental Mood
(5:38) 7. Printupian Prance
(6:37) 8. The Inception
(6:39) 9. Speak Low
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:12
Size: 131,3 MB
Art: Front
(5:49) 1. The Bullet Train
(5:29) 2. Sardinian Princess
(6:49) 3. The Weeping Prince
(6:57) 4. The New Boogaloo
(5:51) 5. Soul Waltz
(7:18) 6. In A Sentimental Mood
(5:38) 7. Printupian Prance
(6:37) 8. The Inception
(6:39) 9. Speak Low
Sweet, Intelligent tone in the new Lou Donaldson... The work "Boogaloo" makes me think of the Lou Donaldson soul jazz of the 1960s on Blue Note. Marcus Printup resurrects this term for his debut recording for the Nagel Heyer label and gives it a bit of a dusting off and updating. The New Boogaloo is not a blues blowing session in 4/4 meter. It is an intelligently conceived and deftly executed collection of originals with two standards thrown in, performed by the stars of the new generation of jazz. Mr. Printup, a 35-year-old converse, Georgia native was discovered in 1991 by then Wynton Marsalis pianist, Marcus Roberts. Roberts invited Printup to perform on his Blues for a New Millennium recording. Printup also did time with Marsalis as part of the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra, appearing on the Pulitzer Prizing winning Blood On The Fields and jazz ballet, Jump Start and Jazz. He has previously recorded for Capitol and Blue Note, through which he released the very fine Nocturnal Traces. Here, Printup has upped the ante with some smart composing and choices in sidemen. Wycliffe Gordon is always a safe bet as a sideman as there is nothing he cannot do on the trombone in any idiom. Walter Blanding sits in the tenor chair, while the piano chair is shared between Eric Lewis and George Colligan.
Do you detect a trend here? All sidemen are associated with Wynton Marsalis. And, as always, once they leave the nest, all former Marsalians are free to swing as hard as they wish, however they wish. Case in point, "Bullet Train" is a complex funky tome with a bit of a rock back beat that would not be found on a Marsalis recording. It rocks as does Printup on his opening solo. The title piece is much in the same vein, while the ballads like "Sardinian Princess" and "The Weeping Prince" are angular and dissonant in character. "Soul Waltz" is a beautiful dance with a melody that recalls the Swing era. "In a Sentimental Mood" and "Speak Low" are thoroughly investigated standards not smothered in the reverence that many of this generation are subject to. The New Boogaloo is a very fine release by the talented Marcus Printup, leaving this writer anticipating his next release. ~ C.Michael Bailey http://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-new-boogaloo-marcus-printup-nagel-heyer-records-review-by-c-michael-bailey.php
Personnel: Marcus Printup-- trumpet; George Colligan, Eric Lewis-- Piano; Vicente Archer-- bass; Donald Edwards-- drums; Walter Blanding-- tenor saxophone; Wycliffe Gordon-- trombone.
The New Boogaloo
Mel Tormé - It's A Blue World
Styles: Vocal
Year: 1955
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 42:31
Size: 68,7 MB
Art: Front
(3:23) 1. I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)
(2:55) 2. Till the Clouds Roll By
(3:41) 3. Isn't It Romantic
(3:50) 4. I Know Why (And So Do You)
(3:39) 5. All This and Heaven Too
(3:33) 6. How Long Has This Been Going On
(3:56) 7. Polka Dots and Moonbeams
(3:24) 8. You Leave Me Breathless
(3:43) 9. I Found a Million Dollar Baby
(3:17) 10. Wonderful One
(3:45) 11. It's a Blue World
(3:20) 12. Stay as Sweet as You Are
Mel Tormé had spent the first decade of his solo career being treated by record companies as a pop singer when Bethlehem offered to treat him as a jazz artist in 1955. The label requested that his first album be a collection of ballads, probably noting the recent success of Frank Sinatra's In the Wee Small Hours. But Tormé picked the songs, ranging from Jerome Kern and P.G. Wodehouse's "Till the Clouds Roll By" from 1917 to Duke Ellington and Paul Webster's "I've Got It Bad and That Ain't Good" from 1941. The 15-piece orchestra assembled by his accompanist Al Pellegrini backed the singer, and Pellegrini, Sandy Courage, Andre Previn, Marty Paich, and Russ Garcia wrote the arrangements Tormé sang with delicate precision, caressing the lyrics. Despite the album title, his interpretations had none of the darkness of Sinatra.
Year: 1955
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 42:31
Size: 68,7 MB
Art: Front
(3:23) 1. I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)
(2:55) 2. Till the Clouds Roll By
(3:41) 3. Isn't It Romantic
(3:50) 4. I Know Why (And So Do You)
(3:39) 5. All This and Heaven Too
(3:33) 6. How Long Has This Been Going On
(3:56) 7. Polka Dots and Moonbeams
(3:24) 8. You Leave Me Breathless
(3:43) 9. I Found a Million Dollar Baby
(3:17) 10. Wonderful One
(3:45) 11. It's a Blue World
(3:20) 12. Stay as Sweet as You Are
Mel Tormé had spent the first decade of his solo career being treated by record companies as a pop singer when Bethlehem offered to treat him as a jazz artist in 1955. The label requested that his first album be a collection of ballads, probably noting the recent success of Frank Sinatra's In the Wee Small Hours. But Tormé picked the songs, ranging from Jerome Kern and P.G. Wodehouse's "Till the Clouds Roll By" from 1917 to Duke Ellington and Paul Webster's "I've Got It Bad and That Ain't Good" from 1941. The 15-piece orchestra assembled by his accompanist Al Pellegrini backed the singer, and Pellegrini, Sandy Courage, Andre Previn, Marty Paich, and Russ Garcia wrote the arrangements Tormé sang with delicate precision, caressing the lyrics. Despite the album title, his interpretations had none of the darkness of Sinatra.
Rather, Tormé invested the songs with warmth and confidence. Recorded and released around the time he turned 30, It's a Blue World marked a turning point in Mel Tormé's recording career. ~ William Ruhlmann http://www.allmusic.com/album/its-a-blue-world-mw0000196852
It's A Blue World
Wednesday, October 7, 2015
Wild Bill Davis & His Orchestra - Dance The Madison!
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:29
Size: 79.0 MB
Styles: Soul-jazz, Organ jazz
Year: 1960/2009
Art: Front
[3:01] 1. The Madison Time (Part 1)
[4:06] 2. In A Mellow Tone
[2:50] 3. Smooth Sailing
[4:18] 4. Flying Home
[4:14] 5. Organ Grinder's Swing
[2:44] 6. The Madison Time (Part 2)
[2:12] 7. Blue Skies
[2:49] 8. Soft Winds
[4:11] 9. It's All Right With Me
[4:01] 10. Intermission Riff
Dance The Madison!
Time: 34:29
Size: 79.0 MB
Styles: Soul-jazz, Organ jazz
Year: 1960/2009
Art: Front
[3:01] 1. The Madison Time (Part 1)
[4:06] 2. In A Mellow Tone
[2:50] 3. Smooth Sailing
[4:18] 4. Flying Home
[4:14] 5. Organ Grinder's Swing
[2:44] 6. The Madison Time (Part 2)
[2:12] 7. Blue Skies
[2:49] 8. Soft Winds
[4:11] 9. It's All Right With Me
[4:01] 10. Intermission Riff
The great Wild Bill Davis was, like Jimmy Smith, who cited him as a primary influence, both an innovator and a popularizer of jazz organ. One of the very first to play the organ as the instrument it is and not like a piano which most practitioners did before him, Davis was the first to establish the classic organ trio format with guitar and drums eventually adding a tenor sax later on occasionally. These classic 1960 recordings feature Bill Jennings (guitar), Grady Tate (drums) and George Clark (tenor sax, flute). All selections newly remastered.
Dance The Madison!
Blossom Dearie - Jazz Masters 51
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:55
Size: 121.2 MB
Styles: Standards, Vocal jazz
Year: 1996
Art: Front
[3:39] 1. They Say It's Spring
[2:41] 2. Let Me Love You
[2:42] 3. Once Upon A Summertime
[3:39] 4. Little Jazz Bird
[3:20] 5. Bang Goes The Drum
[5:56] 6. Someone To Watch Over Me
[2:24] 7. L' Étang
[2:36] 8. Give Him The Ooh-La-La
[2:10] 9. Rhode Island Is Famous For You
[3:21] 10. Tea For Two
[4:15] 11. The Surrey With The Fringe On Top
[2:43] 12. I Won't Dance
[1:37] 13. Down With Love
[3:08] 14. Blossom's Blues
[4:14] 15. Manhattan
[4:22] 16. The Party's Over
Jazz Masters 51
Time: 52:55
Size: 121.2 MB
Styles: Standards, Vocal jazz
Year: 1996
Art: Front
[3:39] 1. They Say It's Spring
[2:41] 2. Let Me Love You
[2:42] 3. Once Upon A Summertime
[3:39] 4. Little Jazz Bird
[3:20] 5. Bang Goes The Drum
[5:56] 6. Someone To Watch Over Me
[2:24] 7. L' Étang
[2:36] 8. Give Him The Ooh-La-La
[2:10] 9. Rhode Island Is Famous For You
[3:21] 10. Tea For Two
[4:15] 11. The Surrey With The Fringe On Top
[2:43] 12. I Won't Dance
[1:37] 13. Down With Love
[3:08] 14. Blossom's Blues
[4:14] 15. Manhattan
[4:22] 16. The Party's Over
Long an icon among jazz musicians and fans alike, this album samples tunes from the six albums Blossom Dearie made for Norman Granz' Verve label during the period 1956 to 1960. Dearie doesn't have a particularly big voice, but, like a will-o-wisp, she skirts through her material in a whispery, smoky tone that demands and receives attention from her audience, whether that audience be in a club or concert, or listening to one of her many albums. She exudes a coy sexiness that adds an aura to her interpretations few other vocal artists have been able to match. This album is loaded with Dearie gems. Her classic rendition of "Once Upon a Summertime" with Mundel Lowe, Ray Brown, and Ed Thigpen typifies her ability to avoid the routine by turning the song she is performing into an intimate storytelling session. "Someone to Watch Over Me" comes across like a waif begging to be cuddled against the world's trials and tribulations, made even more endearing by the slight tremor in Dearie's voice. Her ability to get away with an unusual interpretation of a well-worn standard comes through on her slow, languorous rendition of "Tea for Two" with her piano inserting exclamation points at the right places, helping her to make her musical point. Her renowned ability to expand her interpretative ability by singing in French is shown off in "I Won't Dance." Dearie was also equally at home with less familiar material. In fact, she excels at delivering the lesser-performed tunes, infusing a life into them others seem unable to achieve. Along these lines, this album treats us to such melodies as "Little Jazz Bird" (which Dearie pretty much has made her own), "Bang Goes the Drum," and on her own "Dearie's Blues," showcasing her facility for combining wordless and regular singing the same line of lyric. All of the cuts but one on the album are small group sessions with the artist doing her own work on piano, thus avoiding the task of coming up with a good accompanist which most vocalists must cope with. The one cut with an orchestra, led by Russ Garcia, confirms that Dearie, with her light voice, is more effective with a small group.
For those who want to sample Dearie's work, this compilation should fill the bill. And for her dyed-in-the-wool fans, this album allows them to visit highlights of her work with Verve on a single CD. ~Dave Nathan
For those who want to sample Dearie's work, this compilation should fill the bill. And for her dyed-in-the-wool fans, this album allows them to visit highlights of her work with Verve on a single CD. ~Dave Nathan
Jazz Masters 51
James Chirillo - Sultry Serenade
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:15
Size: 163.1 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2000
Art: Front
[5:54] 1. When Lights Are Low
[4:45] 2. I Love You, Samantha
[6:03] 3. Sultry Serenade
[6:42] 4. Counterpoise #2 For Electric Guitar And Trumpet
[5:24] 5. If I Only Had A Brain
[6:49] 6. Move
[4:47] 7. Elend
[7:07] 8. Can't We Be Friends
[3:04] 9. Bourbon Street Parade
[5:33] 10. Lush Life
[4:49] 11. I'm Always Chasing Rainbows
[5:05] 12. Fancifree
[5:06] 13. Blues For Valerie
Sultry Serenade
Time: 71:15
Size: 163.1 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2000
Art: Front
[5:54] 1. When Lights Are Low
[4:45] 2. I Love You, Samantha
[6:03] 3. Sultry Serenade
[6:42] 4. Counterpoise #2 For Electric Guitar And Trumpet
[5:24] 5. If I Only Had A Brain
[6:49] 6. Move
[4:47] 7. Elend
[7:07] 8. Can't We Be Friends
[3:04] 9. Bourbon Street Parade
[5:33] 10. Lush Life
[4:49] 11. I'm Always Chasing Rainbows
[5:05] 12. Fancifree
[5:06] 13. Blues For Valerie
James Chirillo debuts as a leader with a superb guitar jazz disc. As soon as I would like to compare Mr. Chirillo to, say, a Joe Pass, a Herb Ellis, or a Charlie Byrd, I would just as soon say he was a Teddy Wilson on guitar. Urbane, that is how I would describe James Chirillo. He is more Oscar Peterson than Art Tatum and more Gene Harris than either. Chops to spare, Chirillo wastes no notes. He is precise, like Basie and Miles. His recital here, with various sized groups is an exercise in elegant restraint. No death defying arpeggios, only clear, clean playing.
There are the usual standards. "When The Lights Are Low" and "Lush Life" are well played standard fare. "If I Only Had a Brain", to my knowledge only covered by Tuck Andress, is grandly executed here. It is definitely not the standards that are most interesting here. It is the classical pieces. One is a tone poem composed by John "Israel" Carisi shortly before his death. "Counterpoise" is a moody duet for trumpet and guitar with Carisi himself providing the trumpet. "Elend", a tome by the 20thCentury Zemlinski, adds more to the reputation of these classical capabilities. Otherwise, this is a grand mainstream fare. Randy Sandke, a N-H regular, is on hand, adding his regular brand of panache and aplomb. As for Chirillo, he is superb, a talent awaiting the appropriate recognition. ~C. Michael Bailey
James Chirillo: Guitar; Alan Simon: Piano; Greg Cohen: Bass; Dave Ratajczak: Drums, Percussion; Randy Sandke: Trumpet; Scott Robinson: Tenor Saxophone, Bass Saxophone; Vera Mara: Vocals; John Carisi: Trumpet.
There are the usual standards. "When The Lights Are Low" and "Lush Life" are well played standard fare. "If I Only Had a Brain", to my knowledge only covered by Tuck Andress, is grandly executed here. It is definitely not the standards that are most interesting here. It is the classical pieces. One is a tone poem composed by John "Israel" Carisi shortly before his death. "Counterpoise" is a moody duet for trumpet and guitar with Carisi himself providing the trumpet. "Elend", a tome by the 20thCentury Zemlinski, adds more to the reputation of these classical capabilities. Otherwise, this is a grand mainstream fare. Randy Sandke, a N-H regular, is on hand, adding his regular brand of panache and aplomb. As for Chirillo, he is superb, a talent awaiting the appropriate recognition. ~C. Michael Bailey
James Chirillo: Guitar; Alan Simon: Piano; Greg Cohen: Bass; Dave Ratajczak: Drums, Percussion; Randy Sandke: Trumpet; Scott Robinson: Tenor Saxophone, Bass Saxophone; Vera Mara: Vocals; John Carisi: Trumpet.
Sultry Serenade
Dmitri Matheny - Grant & Matheny
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:22
Size: 122.2 MB
Styles: Chamber jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front
[4:23] 1. The Crucifixion
[1:47] 2. Think Of One
[9:08] 3. Around The World Suite
[5:53] 4. Bach To Brazil
[6:08] 5. Nature Boy Fragile
[3:12] 6. Boplicity
[6:30] 7. Fleurette Africaine
[4:15] 8. Country
[3:18] 9. Without A Song
[8:42] 10. Spirituals
Since their 1998 debut at New York's Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall, the classically-trained jazz duo of Darrell Grant (piano) and Dmitri Matheny (flugelhorn) has solidified their reputation as "pioneers and champions of the chamber jazz movement" (Public Radio International).
Exploring the lyricism, the swing, and the soul of songs, GRANT & MATHENY blend the intimate elegance of European chamber music with the playful, spontaneous spirit of American jazz. They perform a large and diverse repertoire with material drawn from many musical genres: classical works of Barber and Bach, jazz standards by Ellington and Monk, contemporary songs of Keith Jarrett and Sting, Negro spirituals, New Orleans second line, American Popular Song, Argentenian tango, ambient film music and more.
Spicing each show with personal stories, impromptu vocal riffs and warm camaraderie, Grant & Matheny are the modern day heirs to a legacy that reaches back to the days of vaudeville and early jazz. The duo appears on major concert stages and festivals around the country, following in the footsteps of legendary teams of touring entertainers who pioneered the art and craft of duo performance: Williams & Walker, Sissle & Blake, Mitchell & Ruff, Armstrong & Hines.
According to Stereophile, "Grant & Matheny are intense listeners, sometimes anticipating and instantly echoing ideas, yet always weaving one fabric." All About Jazz agrees: "Grant & Matheny have played together for years, and it shows: they share the lead; they finish each other's phrases. Both players have refined their instrumental technique to the essentials, giving the music a relaxed, uncomplicated sensibility that makes it fun to listen to. Not surprisingly, the audience loves them."
Exploring the lyricism, the swing, and the soul of songs, GRANT & MATHENY blend the intimate elegance of European chamber music with the playful, spontaneous spirit of American jazz. They perform a large and diverse repertoire with material drawn from many musical genres: classical works of Barber and Bach, jazz standards by Ellington and Monk, contemporary songs of Keith Jarrett and Sting, Negro spirituals, New Orleans second line, American Popular Song, Argentenian tango, ambient film music and more.
Spicing each show with personal stories, impromptu vocal riffs and warm camaraderie, Grant & Matheny are the modern day heirs to a legacy that reaches back to the days of vaudeville and early jazz. The duo appears on major concert stages and festivals around the country, following in the footsteps of legendary teams of touring entertainers who pioneered the art and craft of duo performance: Williams & Walker, Sissle & Blake, Mitchell & Ruff, Armstrong & Hines.
According to Stereophile, "Grant & Matheny are intense listeners, sometimes anticipating and instantly echoing ideas, yet always weaving one fabric." All About Jazz agrees: "Grant & Matheny have played together for years, and it shows: they share the lead; they finish each other's phrases. Both players have refined their instrumental technique to the essentials, giving the music a relaxed, uncomplicated sensibility that makes it fun to listen to. Not surprisingly, the audience loves them."
Grant & Matheny
Kenny Burrell - Sunup To Sundown
Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:10
Size: 128,9 MB
Art: Front
(5:14) 1. Out There
(7:59) 2. Sunup to Sundown
(6:32) 3. Roni's Decision
(6:59) 4. I'm Old Fashioned
(6:50) 5. Autumn Leaves
(5:52) 6. Smile
(5:23) 7. Love Dance
(6:06) 8. Speak Low
(5:12) 9. Lucky To Be Me
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:10
Size: 128,9 MB
Art: Front
(5:14) 1. Out There
(7:59) 2. Sunup to Sundown
(6:32) 3. Roni's Decision
(6:59) 4. I'm Old Fashioned
(6:50) 5. Autumn Leaves
(5:52) 6. Smile
(5:23) 7. Love Dance
(6:06) 8. Speak Low
(5:12) 9. Lucky To Be Me
Guitarist Kenny Burrell has a strong all-around showcase on this release from Contemporary. Assisted by pianist Cedar Walton, bassist Rufus Reid, drummer Lewis Nash and percussionist Ray Mantilla, Burrell swings harder than he usually does when paying tribute to the past, coming up with fresh statements on the varied material. Although there are a few standards in the program (such as "I'm Old Fashioned," "Autumn Leaves" and "Speak Low"), there are also such obscurities as "Out There" (a medium-uptempo blues), "Sunup to Sundown" and "Love Dance." This set serves as an excellent introduction to Kenny Burrell's enjoyable brand of straightahead playing.
~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/sunup-to-sundown-mw0000277509
Personnel: Kenny Burrel (acoustic & electric guitars); Cedar Walton (piano); Rufus Reid (bass); Lewis Nash (drums); Ray Mantilla (percussion).
Personnel: Kenny Burrel (acoustic & electric guitars); Cedar Walton (piano); Rufus Reid (bass); Lewis Nash (drums); Ray Mantilla (percussion).
Sunup To Sundown
Judy Kuhn - Rodgers, Rodgers & Guettel
Styles: Pop-Jazz Vocals
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:12
Size: 103,9 MB
Art: Front
(6:54) 1. Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin' / The Call
(2:43) 2. Am I?
(1:35) 3. This Can't Be Love
(2:58) 4. Dividing Day
(5:17) 5. Nobody's Heart / Hey, Love / Love to Me
(2:41) 6. If You Ask Me
(2:50) 7. Migratory V
(4:11) 8. We're Gonna Be All Right
(2:22) 9. Daybreak
(3:04) 10. Through the Mountain
(3:42) 11. Song of Love / A Wonderful Guy
(3:26) 12. Hello, Young Lovers
(3:22) 13. Hero and Leander
Rodgers, Rodgers & Guettel
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:12
Size: 103,9 MB
Art: Front
(6:54) 1. Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin' / The Call
(2:43) 2. Am I?
(1:35) 3. This Can't Be Love
(2:58) 4. Dividing Day
(5:17) 5. Nobody's Heart / Hey, Love / Love to Me
(2:41) 6. If You Ask Me
(2:50) 7. Migratory V
(4:11) 8. We're Gonna Be All Right
(2:22) 9. Daybreak
(3:04) 10. Through the Mountain
(3:42) 11. Song of Love / A Wonderful Guy
(3:26) 12. Hello, Young Lovers
(3:22) 13. Hero and Leander
The elder Rodgers's classic "Hello, Young Lovers" is followed by his grandson's luminous song of love at its purest "Hero and Leander"; pairing Oklahoma!'s "Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin'" alongside Floyd Collins's "The Call," Kuhn unearths an optimism - and a sound - common to both. And in a felicitous wedding of Richard Rodgers's "Nobody's Heart," Mary Rodgers's "Hey, Love" and Guettel's "Love to Me," Kuhn weaves a tale of love in its many guises: disillusion that gives way to expectation, yearning that culminates in joy and fulfillment. Rodgers, Rodgers & Guettel features music direction by Todd Almond and orchestrations by Joshua Clayton, plus guest appearances by Malcolm Gets and Shuler Hensley. But the spotlight remains focused on Kuhn, whom The New York Times, in reviewing the evening at Lincoln Center, hailed as "a top-of-the-line singer whose approach might be described as one of passionate restraint... conveying as much insight and empathy as more overtly dramatic singers without straining for a show-stopping theatricality; her delivery is refined but not prim, her intonation impeccable." http://www.amazon.co.uk/Rodgers-Guettel-Judy-Kuhn/dp/B00UIC53XO
Rodgers, Rodgers & Guettel
Hank Jones, Kenny Clarke, Wendell Marshall - The Trio
Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:48
Size: 130,6 MB
Art: Front
(4:07) 1. We're All Together
(4:31) 2. Odd Number
(4:50)3. We Could Make Such Beautiful Music Together
(3:29) 4. Now's the Time
(5:16) 5. Cyrano
(8:12) 6. There's a Small Hotel
(5:51) 7. My Funny Valentine
(4:15) 8. When the Hearts Are Young
(5:36) 9. Little Girl Blue
(5:09) 10. Alpha
(5:26) 11. Wine and Brandy
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:48
Size: 130,6 MB
Art: Front
(4:07) 1. We're All Together
(4:31) 2. Odd Number
(4:50)3. We Could Make Such Beautiful Music Together
(3:29) 4. Now's the Time
(5:16) 5. Cyrano
(8:12) 6. There's a Small Hotel
(5:51) 7. My Funny Valentine
(4:15) 8. When the Hearts Are Young
(5:36) 9. Little Girl Blue
(5:09) 10. Alpha
(5:26) 11. Wine and Brandy
This is a superb Hank Jones date; highly recommended for fans of piano trio music. In 1955, most jazz pianists were immersed in the school of Bud Powell. Jones is unique in that he developed his harmonic concept prior to Powell's ascendancy and the bebop revolution, but went on to fully assimilate the melodic vocabulary of bop. He has synthesized important elements from many great players into his own recognizable style.
His versatility is evident on these eight selections. Jones plays swinging bop lines on his original "We're All Together" and his blues head, "Odd Number," displays the Powell influence most clearly. Upon hearing the delicate touch and harmonic subtlety with which Jones plays ballads including "We Could Make Such Beautiful Music Together," "Cyrano," "There's a Small Hotel," and "My Funny Valentine" one can imagine that a young Bill Evans was quite familiar with this recording. Jones' mastery of block chords is particularly impressive. Occasionally reissued under drummer Kenny Clarke's name, this important Savoy session also includes bassist Wendell Marshall, who had spent the previous seven years with Duke Ellington's band.
https://itunes.apple.com/ca/album/the-trio/id537785260
Featuring: Hank Jones (p), Wendell Marshall (b), Kenny Clarke (d), and Jerome Richardson (fl, ts)
The Trio
Tuesday, October 6, 2015
Lisa Boray & Friends - Wow!
Size: 102,9 MB
Time: 43:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2005
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front
01. Feelings Too (2:29)
02. Language Of Love (4:18)
03. Fever (4:17)
04. Snowwhite Baby Seal (1:45)
05. How Do You Do It (3:22)
06. Papa Can You Hear Me (4:01)
07. Dance With The Angels (4:24)
08. Make Sure You're Sure (3:24)
09. Don't Be Too Careful (3:33)
10. Lover Come Back To Me (3:08)
11. Satisfaction (4:16)
12. Round Midnight (4:57)
Wow!
Time: 43:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2005
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front
01. Feelings Too (2:29)
02. Language Of Love (4:18)
03. Fever (4:17)
04. Snowwhite Baby Seal (1:45)
05. How Do You Do It (3:22)
06. Papa Can You Hear Me (4:01)
07. Dance With The Angels (4:24)
08. Make Sure You're Sure (3:24)
09. Don't Be Too Careful (3:33)
10. Lover Come Back To Me (3:08)
11. Satisfaction (4:16)
12. Round Midnight (4:57)
Lisa Boray, one of Dutch most versatile singers/composers. In addition to an active career as a singer and composer, Lisa is also the vocal coach of many famous Dutch singers.
"Lisa & Friends'is an important concept with great jazz music. Her 'Friends' are none other than Harry Emmery on bass, Hans Jansen on keyboards and Ton p 't Hof.
"Lisa & Friends'is an important concept with great jazz music. Her 'Friends' are none other than Harry Emmery on bass, Hans Jansen on keyboards and Ton p 't Hof.
Wow!
Terry Bartolotta Group - Slow Burn
Size: 134,5 MB
Time: 57:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz: Mainstream Jazz
Art: Front
01. Suspicious Character (7:16)
02. Out Of Nowhere (7:46)
03. Downtown Strut (5:41)
04. Rays (5:32)
05. Swagger (7:50)
06. Slow Burn (4:17)
07. Nocturne (4:40)
08. Skylark (7:17)
09. Blues For Horace (7:21)
Slow Burn
Time: 57:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz: Mainstream Jazz
Art: Front
01. Suspicious Character (7:16)
02. Out Of Nowhere (7:46)
03. Downtown Strut (5:41)
04. Rays (5:32)
05. Swagger (7:50)
06. Slow Burn (4:17)
07. Nocturne (4:40)
08. Skylark (7:17)
09. Blues For Horace (7:21)
Slow Burn is a collection of original songs and jazz standards that draw from the jazz tradition but are played with a contemporary interpretation. It was recorded at IV Labs Studio, and mixed and mastered at Schwab Studio in Chicago. TBG is comprised of James Davis on trumpet, Alex Beltran on tenor sax, Joel Kelsey on bass, Lucas Gillan on drums, and Terry Bartolotta on guitar.
Jazz guitarist, composer/arranger, and educator Terry Bartolotta has been teaching and performing in the Chicago area since 2006. Since starting guitar at the age of eleven, he has studied with a long list of guitarists and other musicians over the years including: Fareed Haque, Bobby Broom, Art Davis, Ron Perrillo, Don Tisch, Jim McPhedran, and Tom Matta. Bartolotta received his Bachelor's in Music from Northern Illinois Univ. in 2006, and his Master's in Music from DePaul Univ. in 2009. As a member of both the NIU Jazz Ensemble and the DePaul Jazz Ensemble, he has performed with masters like: Phil Woods, Jim McNeely, Charles McPherson, Claudio Roditi, and Rodney Whitaker.
Bartolotta has performed with acclaimed local musicians like: Rose Colella, Paul Marinaro, Elaine Dame, Abby Riccards, Art Davis, Chris White, Alex Beltran, Joe Policastro, and Chris Madsen. Also, he leads the Terry Bartolotta Group which has been performing original compositions and jazz standard songs at Andy's Jazz Club, the Green Mill Lounge, Uncommon Ground, and Jerry's in Chicago. In 2012, the group celebrated the release of their debut cd, Above the Clouds. Since then the album has been played on NPR's "All Things Considered" as well as many other regional stations such as: WDCB Glen Ellyn, Northwestern Univ. Radio, WHPK Univ of Chicago Radio. More recently, the group was featured at the 2014 Elkhart Indiana Jazz Festival.
In addition, Bartolotta freelances throughout the Chicago area as a teacher maintaining his own private guitar lesson studio in Chicago and the North Shore area. Also, he teaches private guitar lessons in Hinsdale as part of Learn to Make Music, and he is an adjunct music professor at Harold Washington College.
Jazz guitarist, composer/arranger, and educator Terry Bartolotta has been teaching and performing in the Chicago area since 2006. Since starting guitar at the age of eleven, he has studied with a long list of guitarists and other musicians over the years including: Fareed Haque, Bobby Broom, Art Davis, Ron Perrillo, Don Tisch, Jim McPhedran, and Tom Matta. Bartolotta received his Bachelor's in Music from Northern Illinois Univ. in 2006, and his Master's in Music from DePaul Univ. in 2009. As a member of both the NIU Jazz Ensemble and the DePaul Jazz Ensemble, he has performed with masters like: Phil Woods, Jim McNeely, Charles McPherson, Claudio Roditi, and Rodney Whitaker.
Bartolotta has performed with acclaimed local musicians like: Rose Colella, Paul Marinaro, Elaine Dame, Abby Riccards, Art Davis, Chris White, Alex Beltran, Joe Policastro, and Chris Madsen. Also, he leads the Terry Bartolotta Group which has been performing original compositions and jazz standard songs at Andy's Jazz Club, the Green Mill Lounge, Uncommon Ground, and Jerry's in Chicago. In 2012, the group celebrated the release of their debut cd, Above the Clouds. Since then the album has been played on NPR's "All Things Considered" as well as many other regional stations such as: WDCB Glen Ellyn, Northwestern Univ. Radio, WHPK Univ of Chicago Radio. More recently, the group was featured at the 2014 Elkhart Indiana Jazz Festival.
In addition, Bartolotta freelances throughout the Chicago area as a teacher maintaining his own private guitar lesson studio in Chicago and the North Shore area. Also, he teaches private guitar lessons in Hinsdale as part of Learn to Make Music, and he is an adjunct music professor at Harold Washington College.
Slow Burn
Sant Andreu Jazz Band - Jazzing 5
Size: 173,7 MB
Time: 73:54
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz: Big Band, Vocals
Art: Front
01. All Of Me (2:11)
02. Roseta (4:27)
03. Night And Day (3:54)
04. West Coast Blues (4:00)
05. Moody's Mood For Love (6:54)
06. Twenty For Hours A Day (3:08)
07. Close Your Eyes (3:12)
08. I Cant' Get Started (6:02)
09. Save Your Love For Me (5:46)
10. That's All (3:44)
11. Lush Life (4:58)
12. I Don't Mean A Thing (3:15)
13. Old Folks (4:59)
14. After You've Gone (5:45)
15. On A Sentimental Side (3:37)
16. Imagination (2:43)
17. Feeling Good (5:10)
Jazzing 5
Time: 73:54
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz: Big Band, Vocals
Art: Front
01. All Of Me (2:11)
02. Roseta (4:27)
03. Night And Day (3:54)
04. West Coast Blues (4:00)
05. Moody's Mood For Love (6:54)
06. Twenty For Hours A Day (3:08)
07. Close Your Eyes (3:12)
08. I Cant' Get Started (6:02)
09. Save Your Love For Me (5:46)
10. That's All (3:44)
11. Lush Life (4:58)
12. I Don't Mean A Thing (3:15)
13. Old Folks (4:59)
14. After You've Gone (5:45)
15. On A Sentimental Side (3:37)
16. Imagination (2:43)
17. Feeling Good (5:10)
Sant Andreu Jazz Band is a youth jazz band from Barcelona, featuring 7- to 20-year-old children and teenagers. The bandleader is Joan Chamorro.
The band was founded in 2006 at Escola Municipal de Música de Sant Andreu. The band has performed at numerous concerts and festivals in Catalonia and neighbouring countries. They released their first live CD/DVD Jazzing: Live at Casa Fuster in 2009, featuring alongside established jazz musicians, the precocious 14-year-old, Andrea Motis, among other young talents.
2010 was a breakthrough year for the band, with appearances on more than 20 festivals including Valls, Terrassa, Girona, Barcelona, Platja d'Aro, and legendary venues like el Jamboree, Palau de la Música Catalana, JazzSi, Hotel Casa Fuster, featuring international performers like Dick Oatts, Ken Peplowski, Bobby Gordon, Perico Sambeat, Ignasi Terraza, Matthew Simon, and Esteve Pi. The band also released their second recording Jazzing vol.2.
In 2012 the film director Ramón Tort made the documentary A film about kids and music based on the band's work and efforts. The film was awarded best feature film at the Lights. Camera. Help. festival in Austin, Texas, in 2013.
The band was founded in 2006 at Escola Municipal de Música de Sant Andreu. The band has performed at numerous concerts and festivals in Catalonia and neighbouring countries. They released their first live CD/DVD Jazzing: Live at Casa Fuster in 2009, featuring alongside established jazz musicians, the precocious 14-year-old, Andrea Motis, among other young talents.
2010 was a breakthrough year for the band, with appearances on more than 20 festivals including Valls, Terrassa, Girona, Barcelona, Platja d'Aro, and legendary venues like el Jamboree, Palau de la Música Catalana, JazzSi, Hotel Casa Fuster, featuring international performers like Dick Oatts, Ken Peplowski, Bobby Gordon, Perico Sambeat, Ignasi Terraza, Matthew Simon, and Esteve Pi. The band also released their second recording Jazzing vol.2.
In 2012 the film director Ramón Tort made the documentary A film about kids and music based on the band's work and efforts. The film was awarded best feature film at the Lights. Camera. Help. festival in Austin, Texas, in 2013.
Jazzing 5
Don Aliquo & The Beegie Adair Trio - Too Marvelous For Words
Size: 161,6 MB
Time: 69:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz: Bebop
Art: Front
01. Johnny Come Lately (6:23)
02. This Can’t Be Love (4:42)
03. Day Dream (7:32)
04. Bye-Ya (7:10)
05. Isfahan (8:42)
06. All Of Nothing At All (8:37)
07. I Hear A Rhapsody (7:01)
08. If You Could See Me Now (6:29)
09. Too Marvelous For Words (4:44)
10. It Never Entered My Mind (8:20)
Too Marvelous For Words
Time: 69:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz: Bebop
Art: Front
01. Johnny Come Lately (6:23)
02. This Can’t Be Love (4:42)
03. Day Dream (7:32)
04. Bye-Ya (7:10)
05. Isfahan (8:42)
06. All Of Nothing At All (8:37)
07. I Hear A Rhapsody (7:01)
08. If You Could See Me Now (6:29)
09. Too Marvelous For Words (4:44)
10. It Never Entered My Mind (8:20)
Personnel:
Don Aliquo: Saxophone
Beegie Adair: Piano
Roger Spencer: Bass
Chris Brown: Drums
If anyone doubts the timelessness of classic jazz, one listen to saxophonist Don Aliquo and pianist Beegie Adair’s Too Marvelous for Words will convince them otherwise. “We were visualizing vintage, mid-Fifties, Be-Bop feel” states Beegie – and they fully captured it. Sometimes that intent can create a somewhat nostalgic feel, losing the immediacy that is at the core of all great jazz. In the hands of these two masters, quite the opposite occurred. The listener is instead transported into the mindset of that spectacular era, complete with all of the excitement, urgency, and joy of adventurous discovery that were its hallmarks.
A key reason for this is the remarkable empathy among all the musicians, creating the synergy that is so essential for jazz at its highest levels. The outstanding bass and drums tandem of Roger Spencer and Chris Brown respectively are the regular members of Beegie’s trio, contributing greatly to the sense of seamless cohesiveness and unity of purpose that fuels this entire album. While Don has performed often with the two of them over the years, he had performed far less frequently with Beegie before this date. But their profound connection is simply stunning, sounding as if they’ve been playing together regularly for years. Their interplay is so symbiotic that it often seems like they are dancing.
Playing mostly tenor, along with two pieces on alto, Don’s sound on both instruments is full-bodied and robust. His sensational phrasing is so articulate and emphatic that the stories he tells are vividly hewn, fascinating tales. His sound is steeped in the vernacular of the powerhouse saxophonists, but utterly singular and with a completely modern flair. Beegie, internationally loved and renowned, is a marvelous pianist, with an understated but dynamic style and a consummate sense of unfettered and always inventive swing, whether soloing or in ensemble support. Spencer’s deeply resonant sound and inspired playing gives the music a full, but always buoyant bottom. Combined with Brown’s sensitive, subtly vigorous but never overpowering sense of drive and swing, their impeccable time and taste locks every piece into a perfect groove.
The repertoire is sublime, combining wonderful items from the Great American Songbook with classic works from four of the jazz legacy’s greatest composers. That all but one of these compositions were originally written between 1937 and 1952 (the exception being Isfahan, one of the final Strayhorn/Ellington collaborations in 1966) is further testimony to the aforementioned timelessness of this music. Without losing sight of the era they were trying to capture, the exceptional arrangements make every piece modern, vital, refreshing, exhilarating and completely of the moment. The ten pieces include seven lively swingers, ranging from gentle to surging, and three lovely ballads.
There are three items from the unparalleled Billy Strayhorn – another collaboration with Duke; and his own Johnny Come Lately, which opens the album in a loping groove with a staggered approach that creates a somewhat Monk-ish feel. Isfahan is an almost-ballad in soft swing that grows bouncier as it moves along; and the exquisite Day Dream is built on Beegie’s lushly rich piano with Aliquo playing tenor, evoking the heart-wrenching beauty that Johnny Hodges always brought to this piece on alto.
Don brings his own passionate alto styling to Tadd Dameron’s beautiful If You Could See Me Now, an emotive and heartfelt rendition with a deep tinge of blue. Don also plays alto – with Beegie in a splendid Red Garland-ish swing mode – on the playful and joyously up-tempo This Can’t Be Love, one of two Rodgers & Hart songs included here. The other, a poignant and deeply moving version of It Never Entered My Mind showcases Don’s sumptuous tenor sax balladry.
Captivating rhythmic approaches are at play on the richly syncopated Fragos, Baker and Gasparre hit song I Hear a Rhapsody, and the Latin-flavored, ostinato driven All or Nothing at All (Arthur Altman) that features a tour-de-force tenor solo – powerfully visceral and daring, but never losing its rich lyricism. Beegie lays down a deeply grooved and funky bounce on Thelonious Monk’s Bye-Ya, and provides terrific interplay with Don’s fluid and punchy tenor work.
While Nashville is far more famous for another form of music, with jazz artists like these four on its scene, country music may have to move over a bit and make some room.
Don Aliquo: Saxophone
Beegie Adair: Piano
Roger Spencer: Bass
Chris Brown: Drums
If anyone doubts the timelessness of classic jazz, one listen to saxophonist Don Aliquo and pianist Beegie Adair’s Too Marvelous for Words will convince them otherwise. “We were visualizing vintage, mid-Fifties, Be-Bop feel” states Beegie – and they fully captured it. Sometimes that intent can create a somewhat nostalgic feel, losing the immediacy that is at the core of all great jazz. In the hands of these two masters, quite the opposite occurred. The listener is instead transported into the mindset of that spectacular era, complete with all of the excitement, urgency, and joy of adventurous discovery that were its hallmarks.
A key reason for this is the remarkable empathy among all the musicians, creating the synergy that is so essential for jazz at its highest levels. The outstanding bass and drums tandem of Roger Spencer and Chris Brown respectively are the regular members of Beegie’s trio, contributing greatly to the sense of seamless cohesiveness and unity of purpose that fuels this entire album. While Don has performed often with the two of them over the years, he had performed far less frequently with Beegie before this date. But their profound connection is simply stunning, sounding as if they’ve been playing together regularly for years. Their interplay is so symbiotic that it often seems like they are dancing.
Playing mostly tenor, along with two pieces on alto, Don’s sound on both instruments is full-bodied and robust. His sensational phrasing is so articulate and emphatic that the stories he tells are vividly hewn, fascinating tales. His sound is steeped in the vernacular of the powerhouse saxophonists, but utterly singular and with a completely modern flair. Beegie, internationally loved and renowned, is a marvelous pianist, with an understated but dynamic style and a consummate sense of unfettered and always inventive swing, whether soloing or in ensemble support. Spencer’s deeply resonant sound and inspired playing gives the music a full, but always buoyant bottom. Combined with Brown’s sensitive, subtly vigorous but never overpowering sense of drive and swing, their impeccable time and taste locks every piece into a perfect groove.
The repertoire is sublime, combining wonderful items from the Great American Songbook with classic works from four of the jazz legacy’s greatest composers. That all but one of these compositions were originally written between 1937 and 1952 (the exception being Isfahan, one of the final Strayhorn/Ellington collaborations in 1966) is further testimony to the aforementioned timelessness of this music. Without losing sight of the era they were trying to capture, the exceptional arrangements make every piece modern, vital, refreshing, exhilarating and completely of the moment. The ten pieces include seven lively swingers, ranging from gentle to surging, and three lovely ballads.
There are three items from the unparalleled Billy Strayhorn – another collaboration with Duke; and his own Johnny Come Lately, which opens the album in a loping groove with a staggered approach that creates a somewhat Monk-ish feel. Isfahan is an almost-ballad in soft swing that grows bouncier as it moves along; and the exquisite Day Dream is built on Beegie’s lushly rich piano with Aliquo playing tenor, evoking the heart-wrenching beauty that Johnny Hodges always brought to this piece on alto.
Don brings his own passionate alto styling to Tadd Dameron’s beautiful If You Could See Me Now, an emotive and heartfelt rendition with a deep tinge of blue. Don also plays alto – with Beegie in a splendid Red Garland-ish swing mode – on the playful and joyously up-tempo This Can’t Be Love, one of two Rodgers & Hart songs included here. The other, a poignant and deeply moving version of It Never Entered My Mind showcases Don’s sumptuous tenor sax balladry.
Captivating rhythmic approaches are at play on the richly syncopated Fragos, Baker and Gasparre hit song I Hear a Rhapsody, and the Latin-flavored, ostinato driven All or Nothing at All (Arthur Altman) that features a tour-de-force tenor solo – powerfully visceral and daring, but never losing its rich lyricism. Beegie lays down a deeply grooved and funky bounce on Thelonious Monk’s Bye-Ya, and provides terrific interplay with Don’s fluid and punchy tenor work.
While Nashville is far more famous for another form of music, with jazz artists like these four on its scene, country music may have to move over a bit and make some room.
Too Marvelous For Words
Kenny Rogers - Once Again It's Christmas
Size: 102,9 MB
Time: 37:34
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Country Pop
Art: Front
01. Once Again It's Christmas (3:54)
02. There's A New Kid In Town (Feat. Winfield's Locket) (3:48)
03. Here It Is Christmas - Baby, It's Cold Outside (Feat. Jennifer Nettles) (2:53)
04. Little Drummer Boy (3:13)
05. Back To Bethlehem (3:33)
06. Winter Wonderland (3:39)
07. Some Children See Him (Feat. Alison Krauss) (1:26)
08. I'll Be Home For Christmas (2:43)
09. Children, Go Where I Send Thee (Feat. Home Free) (4:31)
10. That Silent Night (Feat. Jim Brickman) (3:40)
11. The Light (4:08)
Once Again It's Christmas
Time: 37:34
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Country Pop
Art: Front
01. Once Again It's Christmas (3:54)
02. There's A New Kid In Town (Feat. Winfield's Locket) (3:48)
03. Here It Is Christmas - Baby, It's Cold Outside (Feat. Jennifer Nettles) (2:53)
04. Little Drummer Boy (3:13)
05. Back To Bethlehem (3:33)
06. Winter Wonderland (3:39)
07. Some Children See Him (Feat. Alison Krauss) (1:26)
08. I'll Be Home For Christmas (2:43)
09. Children, Go Where I Send Thee (Feat. Home Free) (4:31)
10. That Silent Night (Feat. Jim Brickman) (3:40)
11. The Light (4:08)
Kenny Rogers knows we're already halfway to Christmas: the Country Music Hall of Famer has announced the release of his first new holiday album in 17 years. Due this fall, Once Again It's Christmas marks Rogers' sixth seasonal LP and his first since 1998's Christmas From the Heart.
Joining Rogers on the holiday project are Alison Krauss, who sang with the Gambler on his Number One single (with Billy Dean) "Buy Me a Rose," in 1999. Sugarland's Jennifer Nettles, who performed the iconic "Islands in the Stream" duet with Rogers at the 2013 CMA Awards, vocal group Home Free (who make their Grand Ole Opry debut this Friday, July 17th), pianist-songwriter Jim Brickman and sibling duo Winfield's Locket also appear on the album.
"I can't tell you how much fun it was recording a Christmas record again," Rogers says in a statement. "I'm excited for people to hear it. I feel like this is a special group of songs — both old and new — and I was particularly lucky to be joined by many talented guest artists and musicians who each have something unique to say."
Christmas has been an integral part of Rogers' life on the road since 1981, when he released his first-ever holiday-themed LP, simply titled Christmas, which surpassed sales of two million and earned double-platinum status. The singer's annual Christmas & Hits Tour is a 34-year tradition that will continue this winter. The concert trek, stretching across the U.S. and Canada, features Linda Davis and includes performances of holiday favorites along with some of the more than 20 Number One singles the country-pop crooner has enjoyed throughout his 50-plus-year career.
"Christmas is my favorite time of year," Rogers says. "It's a very important season for me, especially now that I have twin boys who just turned 11 years old. It's reminded me of how you see it through different eyes when you're a parent. It's wonderful."
Rogers' Christmas collections, including Once Upon a Christmas, the 1984 duet album with Dolly Parton – which also sold more than two million copies – account for some of the more than 120 million albums he has sold worldwide in the past seven decades. ~By Stephen L. Betts
Joining Rogers on the holiday project are Alison Krauss, who sang with the Gambler on his Number One single (with Billy Dean) "Buy Me a Rose," in 1999. Sugarland's Jennifer Nettles, who performed the iconic "Islands in the Stream" duet with Rogers at the 2013 CMA Awards, vocal group Home Free (who make their Grand Ole Opry debut this Friday, July 17th), pianist-songwriter Jim Brickman and sibling duo Winfield's Locket also appear on the album.
"I can't tell you how much fun it was recording a Christmas record again," Rogers says in a statement. "I'm excited for people to hear it. I feel like this is a special group of songs — both old and new — and I was particularly lucky to be joined by many talented guest artists and musicians who each have something unique to say."
Christmas has been an integral part of Rogers' life on the road since 1981, when he released his first-ever holiday-themed LP, simply titled Christmas, which surpassed sales of two million and earned double-platinum status. The singer's annual Christmas & Hits Tour is a 34-year tradition that will continue this winter. The concert trek, stretching across the U.S. and Canada, features Linda Davis and includes performances of holiday favorites along with some of the more than 20 Number One singles the country-pop crooner has enjoyed throughout his 50-plus-year career.
"Christmas is my favorite time of year," Rogers says. "It's a very important season for me, especially now that I have twin boys who just turned 11 years old. It's reminded me of how you see it through different eyes when you're a parent. It's wonderful."
Rogers' Christmas collections, including Once Upon a Christmas, the 1984 duet album with Dolly Parton – which also sold more than two million copies – account for some of the more than 120 million albums he has sold worldwide in the past seven decades. ~By Stephen L. Betts
Once Again It's Christmas
Phyllis Chapell - Naked World
Size: 106,8 MB
Time: 45:42
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz Vocals, World Fusion
Art: Front
01. I Only Have Eyes For You (5:17)
02. El Talisman (3:51)
03. Song To A Seagull (6:07)
04. Entrudo (4:58)
05. Water (A-E-I-O-U Reprise) (6:24)
06. Quand Tu Dors Pres De Moi (5:56)
07. So In Love (4:15)
08. Mi Ha-Ish (4:49)
09. This Moment (4:01)
Naked World
Time: 45:42
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz Vocals, World Fusion
Art: Front
01. I Only Have Eyes For You (5:17)
02. El Talisman (3:51)
03. Song To A Seagull (6:07)
04. Entrudo (4:58)
05. Water (A-E-I-O-U Reprise) (6:24)
06. Quand Tu Dors Pres De Moi (5:56)
07. So In Love (4:15)
08. Mi Ha-Ish (4:49)
09. This Moment (4:01)
Billie Holiday meets Joni Mitchell when multilingual vocalist Phyllis Chapell performs her soulful music. "Naked World" is the third solo release from Chapell, but the seventh if you include her time with the world-renowned jazz ensemble, Phyllis Chapell & SIORA. Named one of the best jazz vocalists of all time by Scott Yanow of Jazz Times, Downbeat, and All Music Guide, Phyllis has a voice that can only be described as “beautifully unique.”
After the death of her long-time musical partner in SIORA (Dan Kleiman), and her husband (Mark), Phyllis Chapell has reinvigorated her life and spirit and has embarked on a new musical journey with the help of Emmy-award winning producer/composer Rodney Whittenberg. The “Naked World” CD reflects
this new phase of her life--embracing the past, present and future with inspiration, joy and passion.
"Vocalist Phyllis Chapell has a voice to die for...If capuccino had a voice, it would be hers."
"Creating a soundscape that needs no translation...“ Straight No Chaser, UK
“The haunting quality of Phyllis Chapell’s voice, the range of her repertoire and her presence onstage, enthralled the audience ...” Paul Pines, Festival Organizer, Lake George Jazz Weekend, Lake George, NY
“Phyllis Chapell is an elegant singer who will steal your heart away if you let her....her music is tasteful, eclectic and real." West Chester Local
"SIORA delivers a repertoire of indigenous tunes, as well as original compositions, with assurance, insight and affection…Chapell goes beyond singing--extending lyrics into sonic possibilities." Jazz Review
After the death of her long-time musical partner in SIORA (Dan Kleiman), and her husband (Mark), Phyllis Chapell has reinvigorated her life and spirit and has embarked on a new musical journey with the help of Emmy-award winning producer/composer Rodney Whittenberg. The “Naked World” CD reflects
this new phase of her life--embracing the past, present and future with inspiration, joy and passion.
"Vocalist Phyllis Chapell has a voice to die for...If capuccino had a voice, it would be hers."
"Creating a soundscape that needs no translation...“ Straight No Chaser, UK
“The haunting quality of Phyllis Chapell’s voice, the range of her repertoire and her presence onstage, enthralled the audience ...” Paul Pines, Festival Organizer, Lake George Jazz Weekend, Lake George, NY
“Phyllis Chapell is an elegant singer who will steal your heart away if you let her....her music is tasteful, eclectic and real." West Chester Local
"SIORA delivers a repertoire of indigenous tunes, as well as original compositions, with assurance, insight and affection…Chapell goes beyond singing--extending lyrics into sonic possibilities." Jazz Review
Naked World
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