Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Pat Martino - Remember: A Tribute To Wes Montgomery

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:39
Size: 150.3 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[5:59] 1. Four On Six
[5:51] 2. Groove Yard
[7:00] 3. Full House
[6:49] 4. Heart Strings
[5:11] 5. Twisted Blues
[7:04] 6. Road Song
[7:15] 7. West Coast Blues
[7:06] 8. S.K.J
[7:40] 9. If I Should Lose You
[5:40] 10. Unit Seven

Pat Martino: guitar; David Kikoski: piano; John Patitucci: bass; Scott Allan Robinson: drums; Daniel Sadownick: percussion.

Guitarist Pat Martino has overcome far more than his share of obstacles. Emerging in the mid-1960s, he released a string of acclaimed albums starting with the classic El Hombre (Prestige, 1967) and ending with the overlooked fusion classic Joyous Lake (Warner Bros., 1977). Then a brain aneurysm literally stole his identity and for the next decade he struggled to regain who he was, both as a person and as a musician.

Since then Martino's dark-toned and rapid-fire but always swinging approach has not just returned, but surpassed itself on recent albums like the energetic fusion disc Stone Blue (Blue Note, 1998) and the outstanding organ trio Live at Yoshi's (Blue Note, 2001). Regardless of context, Martino's reverence for a jazz guitar history that he's now an integral part of has never swayed, making Remember: A Tribute to Wes Montgomery an especially compelling album, given Montgomery's clear influence during Martino's formative years. Or at least it should be.

The playing is never less than stellar. Martino has surrounded himself with a sympathetic group of younger players: pianist David Kikoski, bassist John Patitucci, drummer Scott Allan Robinson and percussionist Daniel Sadownick. Martino's understanding of Montgomery's style runs deep, but this is no mere imitative homage. Martino pays the greatest tribute possible by managing to get right inside Montgomery's appealing style comfortably incorporating his trademark octaves, imaginative chord voicings and lithe linear phrasing without losing sight of the advanced chromatic approach that has defined Martino's style since nearly the beginning.

Martino culled the music from Montgomery's superior pre-A&M discography, avoiding the more commercial music that, sadly, became a less-than-fitting end to the icon's career when he died suddenly in 1968. From up-tempo burners like Montgomery's "Four on Six and aptly-titled "Twisted Blues to the more soulful "Road Song and mid-tempo "West Coast Blues, Martino filters his own distinctive voice through Montgomery's. There are also some thrilling moments from Kikoski, who's a mainstream player to be sure, but unafraid to push the limits. The ubiquitous Patitucci works hand-in-glove with Robinson, making the challengingly slow tempos of "Heartstrings and "If I Should Lose You swing in their own gentle way.

But what makes Remember a good album instead of a great one is the sound quality. Martino has always favored a dark tone, but the entire recording is muddy and distant. The guitarist sometimes gets lost in the mix; Patitucci's normally well-defined tone is thumpy, Robinson's kit muffled and Kikoski's piano far away. The recording sounds like a bad seat in a club with poor acoustics. The sound just sits there amorphously, neither drawing you in nor jumping out at you.

And that's a shame, because the playing is so clearly full of life. Musically speaking, Remember is highly recommended it's one of Martino's strongest efforts since his 1987 comeback, in fact, a modern master paying respect to a past legend and acknowledging an unequivocal debt. But it's a challenge to get past the substandard sound in order to appreciate just how fine this record is. ~John Kelman

Remember Tribute To Wes Montgomery                

Jeremy Pelt - Close To My Heart

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:37
Size: 120,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:24)  1. Weird Nightmare
(6:24)  2. Excerent
(4:35)  3. Take Me In Your Arms
(7:27)  4. 502 Blues (Drinkin' & Drivin')
(3:53)  5. All My Life
(2:54)  6. Don't Y Know I Care 
(5:05)  7. Pioggia Di Perugia
(4:45)  8. It's A Beautiful Evening
(5:35)  9. This Is The Moment
(3:42) 10. Why Try To Change Me Now?
(2:48) 11. In Your Eyes

Jeremy Pelt has the most beautiful trumpet tone exercised today. One needs to listen no further than his cover of Mingus' "Weird Nightmare," where one cannot distinguish his trumpet from his flugelhorn, save for a period in the middle section. On this piece, Mr. Pelt's tone is round and buttery warm in the first and third sections and simmering in the middle. Backed by a string quartet on several pieces, a "with strings" connotation would not have been off base. In fact, this disc would be comparable to Chet Baker with Strings had Baker had a modicum of Pelt's creative sense. 

Pelt modulates between these two provocative personalities for the remainder of the disc. Pepper Adams' "Excerent" is a low key quartet stroll, with Mulgrew Miller providing impeccable hard bop accompaniment. Peter Washington and Lewis Nash provide the bass and drum parts of this fine rhythm section. Pelt's trumpet is fluid and soft, but by the time he takes on "Take Me in Your Arms" he has acquired a Freddie Hubbard edge to his tone that is at once demanding and authoritative."502 Blues" frames Pelt's perfectly round flugelhorn, as does his solo treatment of Ellington's "Don't You Know I Care." This formula continues to entertain throughout the remainder of this year-end-list disc.~ C.Michael Bailey  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/close-to-my-heart-jeremy-pelt-maxjazz-review-by-c-michael-bailey.php

Personnel: Jeremy Pelt: Trumpet, Flugelhorn; Mulgrew Miller: piano; Peter Washington: Bass; Lewis Nash: Drums; Meg Oruka: Violin; Joyce Hammann: Violin; Ron Lawrence: Viola; Dave Eggar: Cello; David O'Rourke: Guitar.

Close To My Heart

James Moody - Moody 4B

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:09
Size: 140,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:30)  1. Take the A Train
(9:11)  2. Hot House
(6:27)  3. Speak Low
(9:50)  4. Polka Dots & Moonbeams
(6:45)  5. I Love You
(5:18)  6. O.P. Update
(6:06)  7. Nikara's Song
(6:16)  8. Along Came Betty
(6:41)  9. But Not For Me

Each year since 1950, James Moody has played a concert at Carnegie Hall in New York. In 2010, the annual visit will be a little sweeter as Moody celebrates his 85th birthday, with a slice of cake on Seventh Avenue and a concert of greats. No doubt, the sprightly sax (and flute) master behind such classic tunes as "Moody's Mood for Love" is still playing strong. Moody 4A (IPO, 2009) featured a killer quartet with longtime partner in crime, pianist Kenny Barron, as well as the excellent pairing of drummer Lewis Nash and bassist Todd Coolman. The follow-up, Moody 4B, was recorded a day later and maintains the same mix of well-chosen standards, one or two originals, and a healthy dose of good swing by the best in the business. The album opens with a touch of solo ragtime from Barron, before the band launches into a cooking tempo with Moody at the helm of "Take the 'A' Train." His solo alludes to bebop past, before giving way to Barron's inspired piano solo. The equally inspired choice of "Polka Dots & Moonbeams" provides the requisite ballad to pluck at heartstrings, with lush tenor and piano playing a duo chorus before bass and drums enter and pull the tempo up. Nash's brushwork here is particularly excellent, and the tasteful chemistry generated by the rhythm section make the Latin-infused grooves on "Speak Low" and "I Love You" dig deep.

Moody sounds as good as ever. His tenor is husky and lilting in the low register, giving way to the occasional bluesy exultation up high. It often has the tender smoothness of an organ, a warm hum with very little vibrato, and the quartet wraps tight around this sound and style. Standards are again the bread and butter, with the notable exceptions of Barron's "Nikara's Song" and Coolman's "O.P. Update," both of which are sweet and catchy enough to fit seamlessly into the program. Familiar bop melodies, like Tadd Dameron's "Hot House" and Benny Golson's "Along Came Betty" serve as highlights. The former is eased down from the high haste of Charlie Parker's days, into a slow-churned swingfest, with each member of the quartet trotting out his best stuff. Nevertheless, Barron's solo would be worth most piano students' while to transcribe for its splendid melodic development.

To top it all off, the package comes with a full-length sampler disc culled from other recent IPO label releases. With selections from Sir Roland Hanna, Eddie Daniels, Benny Golson, Roger Kellaway, Stefon Harris, and the great Hank Jones, these tracks alone might be worth the price of admission. Yet there's much more. As on 4A, the quartet digs into the stuffing of cool, with an easy chemistry happening between the band as they tackle nine beautiful, classic melodies. This music simply sounds like good jazz should. 
~ Warren Allen  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/moody-4b-james-moody-ipo-recordings-review-by-warren-allen.php
 
Personnel: James Moody: tenor saxophone; Kenny Barron: piano; Todd Coolman: bass; Lewis Nash: drums.

Moody 4B

The Skyliners - Greatest Hits

Styles: Vocal, R&B, Doo Wop
Year: 1986
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:23
Size: 109,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:38)  1. Since I Don't Have You
(2:33)  2. This I Swear
(2:07)  3. I'll Be Seeing You
(2:23)  4. Stardust
(2:25)  5. If I Loved You
(2:37)  6. Warm
(2:14)  7. Blossoms In The Snow
(2:54)  8. Believe Me
(2:18)  9. Lonely Way
(2:24) 10. How Much
(1:48) 11. It Happened Today
(2:10) 12. Pennies From Heaven
(2:33) 13. Zing Went The Strings
(2:04) 14. Happy Time
(1:56) 15. One Night, One Night
(2:22) 16. Tomorrow
(2:29) 17. Lorraine From Spain
(2:19) 18. I Can Dream, Can't I
(2:24) 19. Tired Of Me
(2:35) 20. When I Fall In Love

The Skyliners were best known for their 1959 hit "Since I Don't Have You". Covers by the Four Seasons, Trini Lopez, Chuck Jackson, Don McLean, Guns N' Roses, The Brian Setzer Orchestra, Ronnie Milsap, Art Garfunkel and Buckaroo Banzai kept the song in the public consciousness. They also hit the Top 40 with "This I Swear" and "Pennies from Heaven". Other classics include "It Happened Today" (1959), "Close Your Eyes" (1961) and "Comes Love" (1962). The original group dissolved in 1963, but re-united eleven years later (without Jack Taylor), for what would become their last charted record, "Where Have They Gone?"

In 1965, Jimmy Beaumont recorded two notable singles for the Bang label: the first, "Tell Me"/"I Feel Like I'm Falling in Love", were medium-tempo soul-styled tracks. For his second Bang 45, "I Never Loved Her Anyway"/"You Got Too Much Going for You", Jimmy transformed into an impressive soul singer, sounding nothing like his previous more pop-styled efforts, leading some to question in later years, if it actually was his singing. These two tracks are now considered Northern Soul collectibles. The second 45 was also issued on UK London HLZ 10059 in 1966. Jack Taylor was drafted in 1965. In 1975 Wally Lester and Joe Versharen left the group; they were replaced by new members, Jimmie Ross and Bob Sholes.

In 1978, the Detroit based record producer Don Davis who produced Marilynn McCoo and Billy Davis Jr., Johnny Taylor, the Dramatics, and the Dells picked up one of his favorite groups (the Skyliners) to record in his United Sound Studios. They recorded the group's "comeback" album for the RCA subsidiary, Tortoise International Records. The songs "Oh, How Happy" and "The Love Bug" were included, as was a hefty re-make of Dan Schafer's original RCA Victor single, "A Day Without You, Dear".Janet Vogel committed suicide in 1980; Cathy Cooper joined the group as a replacement. She and Ross left two years later to form a duo; they were replaced by Rick Morris and Donna Groom.

Morris retired in 1993; Also in 1993, David Proch was singing with another group. At first listen the Skyliners' original lead singer, Jimmy Beaumont, invited Proch to join the group; Proch joined as a replacement. Also performing with the group at this time was Tom Sholes, brother of Bob Sholes. The two were local to the group; they attended St George High School in the Allentown neighborhood of Pittsburgh. The group became Beaumont, Groom, Proch, and Nick Pociask. David Proch (at age 44) the third person to sing first tenor for the Skyliners, died on October 19, 1998, in a car accident. His car collided with a truck hauling asphalt on U.S. Route 30 near Ligonier, PA, about 45 miles east of Pittsburgh. Proch's place was taken by Dick Muse, a former member of The Laurels. Rick Morris replaced Muse in 2011. Frank Czuri replaced Morris in 2013. Their longtime manager and producer Joe Rock, who also co-wrote "Since I Don't Have You", died on April 4, 2000, at age 63, after complications from quadruple bypass heart surgery. Three of the original members have died: Janet Vogel committed suicide on February 21, 1980, she was 37, Joe Verscharen died of cancer on November 2, 2007, he was 67,Wally Lester (b. Walter Paul Lester, Jr. on October 5, 1941 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) died of pancreatic cancer in Southport, North Carolina on April 21, 2015, he was 73.

Today, Jimmy Beaumont performs with The Skyliners in their current line-up of Nick Pociask, Frank Czuri, and Donna Groom (whose husband, Mark Groom, has been the group's drummer/conductor for more than 25 years). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Skyliners

Greatest Hits

Lisa Bassenge - Canyon Songs

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:51
Size: 105,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:07)  1. Riders on the Storm
(4:25)  2. Angeles
(3:56)  3. Aht Uh Mi Hed
(2:43)  4. All Stripped Down
(3:49)  5. For What It's Worth
(4:38)  6. The Last Chance Texaco
(3:41)  7. The Same Situation
(4:25)  8. Searching for a Heart
(5:39)  9. Her Town Too
(4:35) 10. I Just Wasn't Made for These Times
(2:49) 11. Blue Skies

Canyon songs, the new album, is a new step for the artist. It is the first publication of the Berlin singer for precious / MPS. Lisa Bassenge took eleven songs in Los Angeles, at the mixing desk sat Grammy winner Larry Klein, who stands out above all by its excellent productions for Till Brönner, Melody Gardot (My One And Only Thrill), or Madeleine Peyroux. Lisa interpreted classics such as Riders On The Storm by The Doors and For What It's Worth by Buffalo Springfield, I Just Was not Made For These Times of the Beach Boys, The Same situation of Joni Mitchell or Blue Skies by Tom Waits. In addition to pieces from the 60s and 70s, the golden era of Laurel Canyon artist, Lisa Bassenge has with Angeles Elliott Smith also a song from 1997's repertoire. In addition, Lisa is accompanied on your album is equal to 3 times of the sympathetic and successful trumpeter Till Bronner music. Translate by google ~ Editorial Reviews  http://www.amazon.de/Canyon-Songs-Lisa-Bassenge/dp/B00WYA9U1E

Canyon Songs

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Harvey Mandel - Righteous

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:11
Size: 94.3 MB
Styles: Blues/Rock/Jazz guitar
Year: 1969/2014
Art: Front

[3:41] 1. Righteous
[4:18] 2. Jive Samba
[7:32] 3. Love Of Life
[4:01] 4. Poontang
[4:49] 5. Just A Hair More
[3:23] 6. Summer Sequence
[6:05] 7. Short's Stuff
[3:17] 8. Boo-Bee-Doo
[3:59] 9. Campus Blues

Not as consistent as his debut, due to the presence of a few pedestrian blues-rock numbers. The better tracks, though, show Mandel continuing to expand his horizons with imagination, particularly on the cuts with string and horn arrangements by noted jazz arranger Shorty Rogers. Harvey's workout on Nat Adderley's "Jive Samba" is probably his best solo performance, and an obvious touchstone for the Latin-rock hybrid of Carlos Santana (whose own debut came out the same year); on the other side of the coin, "Boo-Bee-Doo" is one of his sharpest and snazziest straight blues-rockers. ~Richie Unterberger

Righteous

Lorraine Desmarais - Big Band

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:04
Size: 126.1 MB
Styles: Big band, Swing
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[5:28] 1. Puzzles
[4:34] 2. Ballade Pour Riki
[5:08] 3. Blues 12
[5:09] 4. And One For Chick
[6:40] 5. Bleu Silence
[4:25] 6. New Morning
[7:38] 7. Romanza
[5:23] 8. 5th Avenue
[4:43] 9. Bill
[5:51] 10. Samba

Lorraine Desmarais, piano and conductor; Frédéric Alarie, doublebass; Camil Bélisle, drum set. Saxophones: Jean-Pierre Zanella, alto & soprano (lead); David Bellemare, alto; André Leroux, tenor; Richard Beaudet, tenor; Jean Fréchette, baritone. Trumpets: Jocelyn Couture (solo/lead); Ron Di Lauro; Jocelyn Lapointe; Aron Doyle, flugelhorn. Trombones: Muhammad Al-Khabyyr (lead); Dave Grott; Richard Gagnon; Bob Ellis, bass.

Following appearances at the most prestigious jazz festivals and collaboration with the biggest names on the international stages, Lorraine Desmarais is coming back with this long awaited recording. Surrounded with top notch Montreal jazz musicians (Jean-Pierre Zanella, Ron Di Lauro, Muhammad Al-Khabyyr, Bob Ellis and many others), she is re-exploring the big band. A new gem on Lorraine Desmarais's crown.

"Until now all my recordings have been made with small jazz groups, trios, or quartets, with invited guests or solo piano. For my tenth album, I wanted to do something different. For a long time I had wanted to produce this disk with a big band and I have to admit that this project is surely one of the most ambitious of my career. The jazz trio (piano, double bass, percussion) being my basic unit, many of the works in the album were first composed for and performed by a small ensemble. The challenge of this big band project was to establish a perfect balance among the arranged sections, the development of the themes and the improvised sections. It is then in a completely different frame of mind that I approached this large jazz ensemble, by focusing on composition in its pure state and on the details that are closely linked to the instrumentation typical of big band. The numerous possibilities of performing for such an ensemble, added to the multiple textures that I was able to mine, allowed me to put the accent on the soloists and their magnificent playing, full of exceptional energy. It is therefore pleasant to note that thanks to a very intense group dynamic, the music speaks for itself… Each composition has a distinct colour, a very particular atmosphere, and it brings together styles as varied as swing, funk, ballad and pieces with Latin colours.

I feel quite fortunate to be able to share my music with this large ensemble and I am very glad to offer you this big band album." ~ Lorraine Desmarais

Big Band

Pee Wee Russell - Portrait Of Pee Wee

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:15
Size: 87.6 MB
Styles: Clarinet jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[4:16] 1. That Old Feeling
[4:25] 2. World On A String
[3:02] 3. Exactly Like You
[4:00] 4. It All Depends On You
[3:21] 5. If I Had You
[4:50] 6. Out Of Nowhere
[4:22] 7. Pee Wee's Blues
[5:02] 8. I Used To Love You
[4:52] 9. Oh No!

Pee Wee Russell: clarinet; Ruby Braff: trumpet; Bud Freeman: tenor saxophone; Vic Dickenson: Trombone; Karl Kiffe: drums; Charles Potter: bass; Nat Pierce: piano.

Pee Wee Russell was an early pioneer, a Dixieland veteran, and an inspired clarinetist with an unusual voice. No less than Gene Krupa once said that he had "the most fabulous musical mind... I've never run into anybody who had that much musical talent.

During the fifties, long after his style of music had fallen out of favor, he stayed at the top of his game by absorbing the new styles that had come along, recording Coleman tunes with a piano-less quartet for Impulse! and gigging with Thelonious Monk. However, Portrait of Pee Wee, a compilation of recordings from that decade, finds the clarinetist in the company of some of his peers playing the early swing music that they know so well, still with the same fire and verve that made them special in the first place. Fans will be delighted to find Ruby Braff, Bud Freeman, Vic Dickenson and Nat Pierce still at the top of their game, playing solos that are both hot and gentlemanly at the same time.

This isn't music that will quicken the pulse, but it mixes the New Orleans aesthetic with the grace of the ballroom floor on well known tunes like "Out Of Nowhere and "That Old Feeling. It's great to see these terrific musicians at the top of their game, but it's even better that someone was around to record them when this style of music was no longer fashionable. ~David Rickert

Portrait Of Pee Wee

Julie London - Sings The Choicest Of Cole Porter

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:44
Size: 111.6 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1991/2010
Art: Front

[4:33] 1. All Through The Night
[1:44] 2. What Is This Thing Called Love
[2:57] 3. Get Out Of Town
[2:40] 4. My Heart Belongs To Daddy
[4:07] 5. So In Love
[2:13] 6. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
[2:39] 7. In The Still Of The Night
[3:27] 8. At Long Last Love
[1:48] 9. I Love You
[3:02] 10. I've Got You Under My Skin
[2:37] 11. Love For Sale
[2:29] 12. Easy To Love
[2:28] 13. Make It Another Old-Fashioned, Please
[2:16] 14. You Do Something To Me
[2:46] 15. My Heart Belongs To Daddy
[2:29] 16. Always True To You In My Fashion
[4:22] 17. Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye

Julie London (vocals), Bud Shank (alto saxophone, flute), Barney Kessel, Al Viola, Joe Pass, Howard Roberts (guitar), Jimmy Rowles, Russ Freeman (piano), Emil Richards (vibraphone), Ray Leatherwood, Don Bagley, Red Mitchell, Monty Budwig (bass), Earl Palmer, Colin Bailey (drums).

In celebration of what would have been Cole Porter's 100th year, EMI collected all of Julie London's studio recordings of the master's work onto one compact disc. Ten of the 17 tracks come from 1965's exceptional All Through the Night, which finds the sultry vocalist proving her cool jazz mettle once again with a quintet led by Bud Shank. The other seven songs are culled from London's sessions with Barney Kessel, Jimmy Rowles, and various studio orchestras. If anyone doubts that London was a jazz-based singer at heart (and there are many doubters out there), listen to the two versions of "My Heart Belongs to Daddy" that are included here. London sticks to the melody in each but offers completely different emotional and musical interpretations that relate to the type of backing band. This was EMI's first Julie London CD reissue and it remains one of the best out. ~ Nick Dedina

Sings The Choicest Of Cole Porter

Doc Cheatham - Swinging Down In New Orleans

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:54
Size: 160.0 MB
Styles: Dixieland, Trumpet jazz
Year: 1994
Art: Front

[4:11] 1. Swinging Down In New Orleans
[4:51] 2. When I Grow Too Old To Dream
[6:18] 3. I Want A Little Girl
[3:27] 4. You're Lucky To Me
[3:06] 5. Never Swat A Fly
[3:32] 6. I Can't Believe That You're In Love With Me
[2:55] 7. Memories Of You
[2:42] 8. Avalon
[2:54] 9. Love Will Find A Way
[3:12] 10. What Can I Say After I Say I'm Sorry
[4:59] 11. Mandy
[4:51] 12. I Would Do Anything For You
[3:16] 13. My Ideal
[3:29] 14. World On A String
[3:28] 15. Swing That Music
[8:30] 16. Orignial Jelly Roll Blues
[4:04] 17. Strutting With Some Barbecue

Although it has not gotten the publicity that his Columbia and Verve CDs received, this is one of the finest of all Doc Cheatham albums. Age 88 at the time, Cheatham had not lost a thing and plays miraculously well. He is teamed up with clarinetist Brian O'Connell, pianist Butch Thompson, Les Muscutt (doubling on guitar and banjo), Bill Huntington (on bass and guitar), bassist Peter Badie and drummer Ernest Elly. Cheatham plays melodic, swinging and frequently exciting solos, taking personable and whispery vocals on such likeable numbers as "When I Grow Too Old to Dream," "You're Lucky to Me," "Never Swat a Fly," "I Would Do Anything for You" and "I've Got the World on a String." This somewhat overlooked CD is highly recommended. ~Scott Yanow

Swinging Down In New Orleans

Harry Allen, Randy Sandke - Turnstile: Music of the Trumpet Kings with the RIAS Big Band

Styles: Saxophone And Trumpet Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:14
Size: 136,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:13)  1. I Love Louis
(5:21)  2. Cloudy
(4:22)  3. Echoes of Harlem
(3:28)  4. Little Jazz Boogie
(4:31)  5. I Can't Get Started
(3:43)  6. Melancholy Rhapsody
(2:31)  7. Randy's Rolls Royce
(5:28)  8. Shaw'Nuff
(6:12)  9. All Blues
(3:08) 10. Turnstile
(6:17) 11. Relaxin' At Clifford's
(4:07) 12. The Moontrane
(4:47) 13. Birdlike

Most of the recordings put out by the German Nagel Heyer label are pre-bop, ranging from Dixieland to mainstream. This outing stretches the boundaries a little, for trumpeter Randy Sandke (who is joined by tenor saxophonist Harry Allen and a big band led by Jiggs Whigham) pays tribute to a variety of great trumpeters ranging from Louis Armstrong to Woody Shaw ("The Moontrane") and Freddie Hubbard ("Bird Like"). Sandke contributed a pair of originals, arranged all 13 pieces, and helped bring a forgotten (and only partly composed) Bix Beiderbecke composition ("Cloudy") to life. In addition to those mentioned, Sandke pays tribute to Cootie Williams, Roy Eldridge, Bunny Berigan, Harry James, Buck Clayton, Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis, Chet Baker, and Clifford Brown. He hints at their styles without actually copying them, and has a flexible enough approach to sound comfortable in all of the idioms. Recommended. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-music-of-the-trumpet-kings-mw0000732284

Personnel: Randy Sandke - (trumpet), Harry Allen - (tenor sax) with the RIAS Big Band Berlin led by Jiggs Whigham

Turnstile: Music of the Trumpet Kings with the RIAS Big Band

Donald Harrison & Christian Scott - Two Of A Kind

Styles: Saxophone And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:50
Size: 147,2 MB
Art: Front

(9:25)  1. Summertime
(6:08)  2. A Night In Tunisia
(8:40)  3. Twerk It
(5:38)  4. I'm Barred
(9:05)  5. The Hook Up
(5:17)  6. Cool Breeze
(4:02)  7. Two Of A Kind
(7:51)  8. Oriental Folk Song
(7:38)  9. Nouveau Swing

Donald Harrison, Jr. (who is also known as Big Chief Donald Harrison of Congo Nation) is a celebrated jazz saxophonist, composer, and educator who resides both in New Orleans and New York City. Born in New Orleans on June 23, 1960, Harrison is the son of the late Donald Harrison, Sr., a legendary New Orleans folklorist and, during his lifetime, the Big Chief of four different NOLA tribes. The younger Harrison began his education at the prestigious New Orleans Center for the Creative Arts and studied with Ellis Marsalis. After graduation, he attended the Berklee College of Music. Though he began playing as a professional while in high school, Harrison gained recognition for his tone and acumen on both alto and tenor horns, playing in the bands of Roy Haynes, Jack McDuff, and most famously, Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers; along with trumpeter and future musical partner, Terence Blanchard; they succeeded Wynton and Branford Marsalis. The pair left Blakey's band and began recording as the Terence Blanchard/Donald Harrison Quintet. Between 1983-1988, they issued five albums, including New York Second Line (1984) and Discernment (1986), both for Concord, and Nascence (1986), Crystal Stair (1987), and Black Pearl (1988) for Columbia. While with the unit, Harrison also took part in recording sessions in the jazz vanguard: in 1985, he played on the avant The Sixth Sense (Black Saint) with Bobby Battle, Olu Dara, and Fred Hopkins, and in 1986, recorded with Don Pullen. The Quintet split in 1989.

As a bandleader in his own right, Harrison issued the hard bop Blakey tribute album entitled For Art's Sake on Candid in 1991 and followed it with the historic Indian Blues. It was the first time that Harrison actively engaged his New Orleans musical heritage on a large scale. It wedded Mardis Gras Indian tunes and chanting (courtesy of the Guardians of the Flame Mardi Gras Indians with his father on vocals), to funky Crescent City rhythm & blues and modern jazz. The session featured Dr. John, Cyrus Chestnut, Carl Allen, Phil Bowler, Bruce Cox, and Howard Smiley Ricks. Harrison also recorded the smooth jazz date The Power of Cool, which was released in Germany in 1991, but not until 1994 in the States.In 1993, he signed to GRP/Impulse. His first album for that label was Nouveau Swing, the album and concept that gave Harrison his nickname "the King of Nouveau Swing." That set employed straight-ahead jazz concepts on half the set, and Caribbean rhythms on the remainder. His follow-up went even more afield, further establishing the nouveau swing concept by including Latin rhythms, more rhythm & blues, smooth jazz, and even hip-hop. In 1999, Harrison officially became a Big Chief and founded the Congo Nation Mardi Gras Indians to honor his father and further New Orleans African roots culture. To close out the century, he recorded The New Sounds of Mardi Gras, which merged New Orleans traditional music with hip-hop.

In 2000, Harrison issued the landmark Spirits of Congo Square album, recorded with his New Orleans Legacy Ensemble. The album featured parade rhythms and hard bop solos whether the tune was a traditional NOLA number or a jazz standard by a modern composer. In 2002, he issued his first collaboration with nephew, Christian Scott, in a quintet setting of newly arranged jazz standards called Kind of New. In 2003, he recorded a pair of albums for Nagel Heyer Records. The first, Free Style, may have been a thorough jazz date, but it was entirely inspired by hip-hop rhythms. The second, Heroes, with Ron Carter and Billy Cobham, was more conventionally post-bop, but offered extremely inspired playing by each of the trio's members. In 2004, Harrison also issued Paradise Found, his second quintet offering with his nephew. After Hurricane Katrina in 2005, Harrison began to immerse himself in New Orleans' life as an educator as well as a musician and Big Chief. He began employing high school students in his bands, and getting them dates with other professional musicians in order to foster the New Orleans musical heritage and give the younger players more professional exposure. Many musicians had left the city due to Katrina's aftermath, and Harrison saw it as his duty to keep the flame alive.

In 2006, he issued Survivor, a straight-ahead jazz date with Mulgrew Miller and others. He also released the first volume of a projected three-album series entitled 3D (one volume to showcase each of his playing styles). This first entry focused on the commercially viable side of Harrison's musical identity in smooth jazz, urban rhythm & blues, and funk. (Volumes Two and Three will be dedicated to straight-ahead jazz and hip-hop, respectively.) In 2008, he released The Chosen in Europe only. In 2009, he released three titles on Nagel Heyer: The Ballads, The Burners, and Two of a Kind with Christian Scott. In 2010, Harrison became an occasional member of the cast of the HBO television series Treme, playing himself. He reunited with Carter and Cobham for a live date entitled This Is Jazz: Live at the Blue Note, playing a program of originals and standards. It included a new Harrison composition entitled "Treme Swagger." ~ Thom Jurek, Rovi  http://www.billboard.com/artist/301152/donald-harrison/biography

Personnel:  Donald Harrison - alto sax;  Christian Scott – trumpet;  Mulgrew Miller – piano;  Eric Reed – piano;  Luques Curtis – bass;  John Lamkin - drums

Two Of A Kind

Jazzanova - Funkhouse Studio Sessions

Styles: Pop/Rock
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:35
Size: 176,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:12)  1. Let Me Show Ya
(4:30)  2. Theme From Belle Et Fou
(5:05)  3. I Human
(3:38)  4. Look What You're Doin' To Me
(4:39)  5. Lucky Girl
(5:00)  6. No Use
(2:48)  7. No Use, Pt. 2
(6:47)  8. Flashback
(6:17)  9. Believer
(6:38) 10. Little Bird
(5:26) 11. I Can See
(6:23) 12. Boom Clicky Boom Klack
(6:54) 13. Fedime's Flight
(6:10) 14. Let It Go

Berlin's Jazzanova collective have been actively building on their pioneering nu-jazz brand for nearly two decades. They've pursued it as a production team and with their Sonar Kollectiv label as well. In recent years, they've formed a live group for the purpose of touring. Funkhaus Studio Sessions showcases their road band a septet in a studio collaboration with Detroit vocalist Paul Randolph (aka Randolph of Lonely Eden fame). The program is a fine mix of redone classic tunes such as "The Fedime's Flight," and more recent fare such as 2008's "Look What You're Doin to Me," as well as new songs. The groove-consciousness in these 14 tracks is undeniable. Though this set doesn't pack the body punch that some of their live dates have, it's not meant to. With Randolph's wide range of vocal styles and expressions, the smoother approach is welcome. "I Human," with its old-school synth, popping funky bassline, and electric piano, touches on smooth, late-'70s-era, funky jazzy-soul (à la Norman Connors and Roy Ayers), all the while pushing the frame to include contemporary jazz tropes. 

"Believer" is a solid stepper with its rumbling samples and keyboards in the intro, while Randolph near scats in his phrasing as the groove builds to include breaking hi-hats, fat, warm, bubbling bass, and washes of ambient sound. The redone instrumental "La Belle et Fou," with its syncopated horn chart and hand percussion, touches on Latin as well as jazz funk. The mid-register trombone solo soars above the handclaps, silvery guitars, and keys. Randolph is the perfect foil for Jazzanova. He croons, growls, hovers, swoons, and gets gritty as the music dictates, becoming an instrument in the mix rather than just a frontman. Funkhaus Studio Sessions may not break much new ground, but who cares when the music is this well-played and presented? ~ Thom Jurek  http://www.allmusic.com/album/funkhaus-studio-sessions-mw0002328641

Personnel: Arne Jansen (electric guitar, 12-string guitar, nylon-string guitar); Sebastian Borkowski (flute, alto saxophone, tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone); Sebastian Studnitzky (trumpet, grand piano, electric piano, Fender Rhodes piano, Wurlitzer piano, harmonium, synthesizer); Stefan Ulrich (trombone); Paul Kleber (upright bass, electric bass, percussion); Carl-Michael Grabinger (drums); Stefan Leisering (congas, bongos, percussion); Axel Reinemer (percussion).

Funkhouse Studio Sessions

Lorraine Feather - Flirting With Disaster

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:02
Size: 139,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:33)  1. Flirting with Disaster
(4:46)  2. Feels Like Snow
(5:55)  3. I'd Be Down with That
(6:44)  4. Off-Center
(5:16)  5. Be My Muse
(5:04)  6. Later
(4:01)  7. The Last Wave
(4:27)  8. Disastrous Consequences
(6:26)  9. Big-Time
(5:26) 10. Wait for It
(6:18) 11. The Staircase

The release of a new Lorraine Feather recording consistently brings a sense of excitement and delicious anticipation. What does this gifted singer-lyricist who, like a figure-ground illustration simultaneously brilliant at both, have in store for us? More than likely, if she's true to her own Muse, I'd suppose it's going to be a sublime rendering of relationship-themed, thoughtfully poetic, yet sparkling verbiage that's delivered paired with highly stylized and impeccably-performed music. In the case of Flirting with Disaster the supposition is dead-on. Working once again with ace composers-collaborators Eddie Arkin, Russell Ferrante, Dave Grusin, Shelly Berg and a terrific rhythm section, Feather settles into eleven emotion-stimulating original renderings. There's no falling back on the faux security of GAS material for this high-wire artist. Like a Wallenda (would you believe she actually incorporates that surname in one line?), she works sans net, fearless and supremely confident about what she's offering, risks be damned.

Although there's an adequate mix, the fare is predominantly slower, thoughtful, and for the most part, artful and Impressionistic ("Feels Like Snow," "The Last Wave," "Wait for It"). The compositional elements are melodically unique and provide Feather ample opportunity to demo her extraordinary ability to color her lyrics. She has superior vocal chops, impeccable diction, and an innate poetic sense of phrasing. Even the hip-hoppity "I'd Be Down with That" demos her versatility. Her overdubbing is exact ("Be My Muse") and is incorporated judiciously. As lyricist, Feather is pure emotion and wit, splattering tons of "touches," "hands," "hearts" and more across her offerings. She can milk a phrase with a sly glee that tickles interest and provides a tease of what might be coming next. Her lines never disappoint. The team supporting this Feather are heavyweights indeed and in deed. Their playing is complementary perfection. Flirting with Disaster is no surprise in the most positive sense. It's Lorraine Feather at her best. I think that even Mr. Wallenda would even relish the fact that his surname might eventually become a noun as a result of this grand flirtation. ~ Nicholas F.Mondello  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/flirting-with-disaster-lorraine-feather-jazzed-media-review-by-nicholas-f-mondello.php
 
Personnel: Russell Ferrante: piano (1,2,3,4,6,7,8), arranger (2,3,8); Shelly Berg: piano (5,11), arranger (5,11); Dave Grusin: piano (9,10), arranger (9,10); Michael Valerio: bass (1,3,4,5,6,9,10); Grant Geissman: (1,9,10); Eddie Arkin: guitar (4,6), arranger (1,4,6,7); Michael Shapiro: drums/percussion (1,2,6,9,10); Gregg Field: drums (4,5); Carlos Del Rosario: percussion (10); Charles Bisharat: violin (1,4,5,8,11); Yutaka Yokokura: additional vocals (2).

Flirting With Disaster

Monday, October 19, 2015

Calvin Newborn - New Born

Size: 122,4 MB
Time: 52:44
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2005
Styles: Jazz Blues
Art: Front

01. When Kingdom Comes/Sho' Nuff (5:16)
02. The Streetwalker's Stroll (7:09)
03. Newborn Blues (8:37)
04. Spirit Trane/Omnifarious (6:06)
05. Lush Life (5:05)
06. Restorations (5:13)
07. After Hours Blues (8:19)
08. Blues & Beyond (6:55)

It’s fitting that Calvin Newborn recorded his latest album at the same Sam Phillips studio in Memphis where he did his first recording in 1950, backing B.B. King along with his talented father and brother, Finas and Phineas Newborn. In fact, it was B.B. who helped the young Calvin pick out his first guitar.

Now in his seventies, Calvin Newborn’s new disk features a seamless blend of eight jazz and blues originals, with his superlative guitar work shining through, especially on the third track, “Newborn Blues.”

Although the disk is basically jazz, there are enough bluesy riffs, and one song - the above-mentioned “Newborn Blues” - to make it work for all but the most ardent blues purist.

Accompanied by greats such as Donald Brown on piano, Herman Green on saxophone and flute, Charlie Wood on organ, and Scott Thompson on trumpet, and backed by London Branch on bass and Renardo Ward on drums, Newborn tries to give equal treatment to his dual lifework of blues and jazz. He is also joined by Ekpe Obioto a Memphis civil rights activist who channels ancient spirits with his “talking drums.”

Songs like “The Streetwalker’s Stroll,” and his mellow interpretation of the jazz standard “Lush Life,” reflect his pre-drug rehab days, while “Newborn Blues” and “After Hours Blues” show off the bluesy side of the Memphis scene.

His jazz lineage is also showcased in “Blues and Beyond” and “Spirit Trane/Omnifarious” - the latter an up-tempo shuffle with some wailing horns.

The new disk, appropriately called New Born, comes more than a decade after Calvin beat a drug habit that was spinning out of control, and after the 1989 death of his brother, a jazz legend in his own right who was eventually diagnosed with mental illness and ended his days living in a halfway house and a veterans’ hospital.

Their father, a drummer, dropped dead of a heart attack in 1965 after sitting in with Calvin’s band at a Los Angeles nightclub.

Calvin himself finally checked into a mental health facility in Memphis, got treatment for his drug problem, and then proceeded to write a book about his brother and cut his first record on his own Omnifarious label.

On this record, the songs “Restorations” and “When Kingdom Comes/Sho’ Nuff” seem to have emerged from his reformed outlook on life.

Besides the disk, which was recorded last year, Newborn is also working on a book about his friendship with Elvis Presley, and a documentary film about his fascinating family’s history.

Check out his outstanding work. It’s about time this unsung hero of Memphis blues and jazz got some recognition. ~by Karen Nugent

Thanks to Marc.

New Born  

Kim Hoorweg - The Boulevard Of Broken Dreams

Size: 102,8 MB
Time: 37:27
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals, Gipsy Jazz
Art: Front

01. Mood Indigo (2:56)
02. The Boulevard Of Broken Dreams (2:55)
03. If I Didn't Care (4:13)
04. Quiet Whiskey (Feat. Benjamin Herman) (2:54)
05. When You're Smiling (Feat. Sjoerd Dijkhuisen) (3:17)
06. Si Tu Vois Ma Mere (3:00)
07. Les Yeux Noirs (2:18)
08. I Ain't Got Nothing But The Blues (Feat. Benjamin Herman) (4:26)
09. It's A Sin To Tell A Lie (Feat. Benjamin Herman) (2:34)
10. Granada (3:22)
11. When You're Lover Has Gone (Feat. Benjamin Herman) (3:00)
12. Solitude (2:26)

Dutch jazz vocalist Kim Hoorweg (22) has adopted New York as her second home. She is known for her clever originals, her clear, warm and pleasant timbre and charming way of reinterpreting old forgotten songs.

She worked with top-notch musicians Trijntje Oosterhuis, Gino Vannelli, Candy Dulfer, Chance Howard (Prince) and Benjamin Herman. Signed with American record label Verve when she was only 14, frequently on Dutch television, performed twice at the North Sea Jazz Festival, worked with the famous Metropole Orchestra and was nominated for the most prestigious Dutch Music Award: the Edison. Now in 2015, she is working on a new record, in the USA with Raul Midón (collaborated with Stevie Wonder, Herbie Hancock and many more), widely known as an amazing songwriter, skilled vocalist and guitar virtuoso. Kim is also recording with gypsy-guitarist Robin Nolan to accompany their upcoming tour. You would almost forget that she is only 22 years old!

The Boulevard Of Broken Dreams

Johnny O'Neal - In Good Hands

Size: 135,8 MB
Time: 58:25
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2002
Styles: Jazz: Piano Jazz
Art: Front

01. In Good Hands (2:44)
02. Born To Be Blue (6:54)
03. What Is There To Say (4:55)
04. Tricotism (4:51)
05. Ghost Of A Chance (3:34)
06. Mornin' (5:09)
07. In A Mellow Tone (8:09)
08. My Ship (7:09)
09. Half Breed (5:50)
10. Alfie (4:32)
11. Next Spring (4:32)

A fine pianist influenced by Oscar Peterson, Johnny O'Neal actually started his career playing gospel piano in church while a teenager. Inspired by Peterson, Art Tatum, and Bud Powell, O'Neal started exploring jazz in 1976 and after impressing Ray Brown, found his way into Milt Jackson's group. Other important jobs followed (with Sonny Stitt, Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, and Buddy DeFranco), and in 1982, O'Neal moved to New York and soon recorded his debut with Concord. After playing regularly with Clark Terry, he was a member of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers (1982-1983) and has mostly led his own groups ever since. Johnny O'Neal has recorded as a leader for Concord, Parkwood, and Justin Time (1995), taking three effective vocals on the latter set. ~Scott Yanow

In Good Hands

Monica Borrfors - Hello Young Lovers

Size: 165,4 MB
Time: 71:05
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. It's Easy To Remember (2:35)
02. The Night Has A Thousand Eyes (5:22)
03. Nature Boy (3:35)
04. It Never Entered My Mind (4:59)
05. Whisper Not (3:33)
06. Darn That Dream (4:52)
07. Paint Your Pretty Picture (4:37)
08. 'Round Midnight (6:22)
09. I'm Glad There Is You (5:14)
10. Doxy (5:32)
11. The Boy Next Door (3:41)
12. I Didn't Know What Time It Was (4:46)
13. If You Could See Me Know (6:31)
14. Mr. Ugly (3:04)
15. Hello Young Lovers (4:59)
16. Epilogue After The Storm (1:15)

Personnel: Gosta Nilsson on piano, Filip Augustson on bass and Jesper Kviberg at the drums.
Guests: Trumpeter Anders Bergcrantz from Malmo and saxophonist Fredrik Lindborg.

Novelist Barry Eisler states, "Swedish vocalist I first heard in Bar Satoh in Osaka, the worlds best whiskey bar. Slowfox is a collection of songs in English, all rendered in Borrfor's warm, slightly husky, beautiful voice."

Monica was born May 14, 1954 in Brännkyrka Assembly, Stockholm. She came as number two in a family of five. Sister Elisabeth was then three years old. The family had just moved out from Wollmar Yxkullsgatan in Stockholm to the newly built south suburb Högdalen where they lived between 1954 and 1959, and where even the little brother Peter was born in 1955. My father was self-employed and the mother a housewife.

In high school, she had music as an optional subject and her teachers during the last two years was Gosta Nilsson. Monica was interested in singing and was for 20 years a member of Gosta Nilsson's youth choir and later the Chamber of Trångsunds and Skogås parish where he was organist and choirmaster in 1966.

Monica trained in health care with a view on a midwife and worked in the maternity care at Danderyd Hospital between 1973-1983.

Monica has worked alongside his quintet and as a soloist in many other contexts. With big bands in both Sweden and abroad, with choirs and small groups.

Hello Young Lovers

Pepper Adams - Any Day Now

Size: 178,6 MB
Time: 77:00
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Unforgettable (6:20)
02. Blackout Blues (4:55)
03. Freddie Froo (6:00)
04. Your Host (5:17)
05. You Turned The Table On Me (4:42)
06. High Step (8:38)
07. Cottontail (5:33)
08. Yourna (6:27)
09. Alone Together (5:47)
10. Baubles, Bangles And Beads (8:25)
11. My One And Only Love (3:50)
12. Afternoon In Paris (5:53)
13. You're My Thrill (5:06)

Pepper Adams was one of the all-time great baritonists, ranking at the top with Harry Carney, Serge Chaloff and Gerry Mulligan. But Mulligan overshadowed Adams throughout virtually his entire career, which is a little strange because Pepper had a much different sound (heavier and more intense) than the light-toned and playful Mulligan.Adams grew up in Rochester, NY, and when he was 16 he moved to Detroit where he became an important part of the very fertile local jazz scene. Other than a period in the military (1951-53), Adams was a major fixture in Detroit, playing with such up-and-coming musicians as Donald Byrd, Kenny Burrell, Tommy Flanagan, Barry Harris and Elvin Jones. Adams had opportunities to tour with Stan Kenton, Maynard Ferguson and Chet Baker and he moved to New York in 1958. In addition to recording both as a leader and a sideman, Adams played with Benny Goodman (1958-59) and Charles Mingus (off and on between 1959-63) and co-led a quintet with Donald Byrd (1958-62). He was a longtime member of the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra (1965-78) and a major stylist up until his death. ~Scott Yanow

Any Day Now

Maira Freitas - Piano E Batucada

Size: 106,1 MB
Time: 45:32
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: MPB
Art: Front

01. Eta (2:58)
02. Lembra De Que (2:57)
03. Gargalhada (3:42)
04. Cuidado Moça (2:58)
05. Pousa (4:21)
06. Volta (3:49)
07. Estranha Loucura (3:41)
08. Desavisado (3:25)
09. Danilo Dormindo (3:51)
10. Feeling Good (3:40)
11. Minha Festa (3:02)
12. Nua (4:06)
13. Nao Sei, Sei La (2:57)

Critically acclaimed, singer and pianist Maíra Freitas can’t remember not playing the piano. Daughter of legendary samba and MPB star Martinho da Vila, Maíra received her first instrument at age 6 – pink and adorned with Hello Kitty stickers the little piano was the first step towards a solid education as an instrumentalist and composer. After her classical training, Maira developed a strong taste for Brazilian popular music – MPB. She loves the music of Chico Buarque, Gonzaguinha, Nana Caymmi, Paulinho da Viola and, of course, her father Martinho da Vila, among many. Maira refined her popular piano skills with well-known masters such as Cristovão Bastos, Leandro Braga, Marcos Nimrichter and Sheila Zagury. For her self-titled maiden project, produced by her sister Mart’nália (famed singer/songwriter on her own), the young singer from Rio has surrounded herself with top-notch musicians building a personal and well thought-out repertoire of songs that reflect her personality. Maíra arrives with a veteran’s security, immediately imprinting her own personal Brazilian style which is both classic and popular, and experimenting new technologies on stage like samplers, loops, electronic.

Piano E Batucada