Friday, January 15, 2016

Duke Jordan - Tivoli Two

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:05
Size: 117.0 MB
Styles: Bop, Piano jazz
Year: 1985/1995
Art: Front

[10:43] 1. No Problem
[ 6:37] 2. How Deep Is The Ocean
[ 6:49] 3. All The Things You Are
[ 6:21] 4. Jealous Blues
[ 5:29] 5. I Cover The Waterfront
[13:10] 6. A Night In Tunisia
[ 1:53] 7. Jordu

The second of two recordings, this set also finds the classic bop pianist Duke Jordan being joined by bassist Wilbur Little and drummer Dannie Richmond, live from the Tivoli Gardens in Copehnagen. This time around Jordan interprets three originals (a lengthy "No Problem," a blues and "Jordu" which functions functions as a closing theme) along with three standards. Jordan is heard at the top of his game during these swinging and probing performances. ~Scott Yanow

Tivoli Two

Ingrid Lucia & The Flying Neutrinos - I'd Rather Be In New Orleans

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:37
Size: 150.2 MB
Styles: New Orleans jazz, Retro swing
Year: 1999/2010
Art: Front

[6:01] 1. Delta Bound
[6:48] 2. Barbarin's Second Line
[4:35] 3. Streelight
[4:44] 4. The Passion Song
[5:17] 5. Swimming Pool Blue
[4:27] 6. Marie Laveau
[4:33] 7. Bei Mir Bist Du Schön
[5:50] 8. I Want A Little Girl
[7:50] 9. New Dog Blues
[5:47] 10. Alone In This House
[5:24] 11. I'm In A Hole
[4:16] 12. I'd Rather Be In New Orleans

At first, the Flying Neutrinos come across like a New Orleans variation of the Squirrel Nut Zippers -- which, admittedly, is a clever concept. In all of the swing-revival mania of the late '90s, there wasn't a single band that decided to get loose and bluesy by following swing's cousin, New Orleans jazz and R&B. The New York-based Flying Neautrinos do that, complete with a sultry, Billie Holiday-influenced lead singer, Ingrid Lucia. The difference is, their debut album I'd Rather Be In New Orleans is played completely straight-faced and sober. Apart from a Shel Silverstein tune, there's very little of the novelty that characterizes the swing revolution, which may make the album more enjoyable for some purists. But like their swinging cousins, the Flying Neutrinos appear on record as if they would be a better proposition in a live arena. True, I'd Rather Be in New Orleans is an entertaining album, but it's a bit too mannered -- which is especially frustrating since the best moments suggest that they're a good live band who can be truly captivating in a live setting. On record, they sound a little constrained, especially since they rarely take any risks in their solos, but they never fall into stodginess like many trad-jazz groups. There's enough swing, style and tunes on I'd Rather Be in New Orleans to keep it entertaining, and even if the group never quite transcends its own reverence for the past or develops a signature sound, it's refreshing to hear a younger band play classic New Orleans music after years of rehashed swing. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

I'd Rather Be In New Orleans

Dave Bennett - Celebrates 100 Years Of Benny

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:25
Size: 142.9 MB
Styles: Clarinet jazz
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[ 8:11] 1. Benny's Bugle
[ 4:17] 2. In A Sentimental Mood
[ 4:20] 3. If I Had You
[ 2:23] 4. My Funny Valentine
[ 4:14] 5. That's A Plenty
[ 4:47] 6. Stompin' At The Savoy
[ 4:11] 7. Moonlight In Vermont
[12:05] 8. I Got Rhythm
[ 4:52] 9. Poor Butterfly
[13:01] 10. Sing, Sing, Sing

Dave Bennett's debut as a leader celebrates the centennial of the birth of Benny Goodman, who left an extensive record legacy during his long career. The danger in doing such a tribute is overtly copying Goodman's style, which Bennett manages to avoid. He also helps himself by utilizing a variety of groups: a trio with veteran pianist Dick Hyman (a former Goodman sideman) and drummer Ed Metz, Jr., a pianoless trio with Bucky Pizzarelli (another Goodman sideman) and bassist Jerry Bruno, along with live tracks featuring a sextet with (vibraphonist Jim Cooper, guitarist Hugh Leal, bassist Paul Keller, drummer Pete Siers, and pianist Bill Meyers) and one quartet track omitting Keller and Leal. Bennett has plenty of chops on his instrument but doesn't hog the program (like Goodman sometimes did), generously featuring his sidemen. The trio tracks stand out, especially the rousing "Sing, Sing, Sing!" with Hyman and Metz and the lush treatment of "In a Sentimental Mood" with Pizzarelli (a consummate, lyrical accompanist) and Bruno. The sextet performance of "Stompin' at the Savoy" is also a crowd pleaser. Expect to hear more from Dave Bennett. ~Ken Dryden

Celebrates 100 Years Of Benny

Harvey Mandel - Cristo Redentor

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:07
Size: 103.3 MB
Styles: Psychedelic blues-rock-jazz guitar
Year: 1968/2014
Art: Front

[7:47] 1. Wade In The Water
[4:50] 2. Lights Out
[3:15] 3. Bradley's Barn
[4:17] 4. You Can't Tell Me
[3:36] 5. Nashville 1 A.M
[3:45] 6. Cristo Redentor
[6:27] 7. Before Six
[4:37] 8. The Lark
[3:46] 9. Snake
[2:43] 10. Long Wait

Mandel's debut remains his best early work, introducing an accomplished blues-rock guitarist capable of producing smooth, fluid lines and a variety of tasteful distortion and buzzing via an assortment of tone pedals and customized amplifiers. He augmented his flash with an adventurous appetite for orchestrated, quasi-classical strings (especially in the eerie symphonic title cut), jazz-blues-rock fusion in the mold of The Electric Flag (as on "Before Six"), and even a bit of country in the presence of top steel guitarist Pete Drake. Available in its entirety on the reissue compilation The Mercury Years. ~Richie Unterberger

Cristo Redentor

The Tony Corbiscello Big Band - In Full Swing

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:35
Size: 95.2 MB
Styles: Big band, Swing
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[2:31] 1. Close As Pages In A Book
[2:42] 2. That Old Feeling
[2:19] 3. I'll Never Say Never Again Again
[2:06] 4. Saturday Night (Is The Loneliest Night Of The Week)
[3:41] 5. But Not For Me
[4:18] 6. Dream
[2:31] 7. Margie
[3:56] 8. When The Sun Comes Out
[2:25] 9. Bikini Bossa
[2:40] 10. Have You Met Miss Jones
[2:14] 11. Johnnie's Theme
[2:45] 12. Lady Of Spain
[2:59] 13. Lover
[4:21] 14. Around Town

Chosen as the orchestra to open at all the stops on Frank Sinatra's final tour, Tony Corbiscello's 16-piece big band pulls out the stops on a play list of 14 tunes. There are also three originals by Marion Evans who also did the arrangements that are not only tasteful but diverse; for example, they don't all sound the same. Stocked with players from the New York area and driven by leader Corbiscello's drums, this album is replete with well-drilled ensemble playing as well as refreshing and timely solos. The session is further enhanced by the presence of A-one guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli on "Lover," "Dream," "Around Town," and, especially, "But Not for Me" played jam session style. The latter track is one of the highlights of the session opening with Corbiscello's brushes playing behind the subtle piano of veteran Ben Aronov fading to the ensemble with Corbiscello's drums still hanging on. Pizzarelli comes in to take a couple of choruses followed by an unidentified trombone player. That's a major failing with this CD, the failure to identify those responsible for the excellent solo work. The band can play sweet without sounding maudlin as shown on "Dream," which opens with a trumpet with a mixture of Harry James and Charlie Spivak licks. "When the Sun Comes Out" borrows from Stan Kenton, including the trombone figures Kenton occasionally used to end his tunes. While Evans' arrangements are pleasant and varied, if not imaginative, his original material sounds somewhat dated, lacking vibrancy. The best of the bunch is "Bikini Bossa" featuring Aronov's piano. The barnburner on this set is, not surprisingly, the Richard Rodgers/Larry Hart classic "Lover" replete with the Maynard Ferguson-like screaming trumpet and Pizzarelli hot jazz guitar within a Les Brown-type arrangement. Ordinarily just providing a bit more than 40 minutes of music is a cause for complaint. In this case, more might have been overkill from this high-powered aggregation. In Full Swing is recommended. ~Dave Nathan

In Full Swing

Bob Brookmeyer - The Street Swingers

Styles: Piano Jazz, Post-Bop
Year: 1957
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:39
Size: 181,9 MB
Art: Front

(7:00)  1. Arrowhead
(6:21)  2. Street Swingers
(6:04)  3. Hot Buttered Noodling
(8:51)  4. Musicale De Jour
(5:26)  5. Raney Day
(5:07)  6. Jupiter
(4:40)  7. Rocky Scotch
(5:07)  8. Under The Lilacs
(5:49)  9. They Say It's Wonderful
(4:49) 10. Potrezebie
(5:46) 11. Revelation
(4:29) 12. Star Eyes
(4:25) 13. Nobody's Heart
(4:38) 14. Loup-Garou

Valve trombonist Bob Brookmeyer (who also plays some piano on this long out-of-print Pacific Jazz LP) teams up with guitarists Jim Hall and Jimmy Raney, bassist Bill Crow and drummer Osie Johnson for six group originals. The tunes are fairly basic and all of the cool-toned musicians are up-to-par on the lightly swinging material. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/street-swingers-mw0000868935

Personnel: Bob Brookmeyer (piano), Jim Hall, Jimmy Raney (guitar), Bill Crow (bass), Osie Johnson (drums)

The Street Swingers

Charmaine Clamor - Searching For The Soul

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:19
Size: 124,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:20)  1. Come Sunday
(4:02)  2. My Romance
(4:45)  3. Since I Fell For You
(4:01)  4. I'm In The Mood For Love
(4:45)  5. The Very Thought Of You/Tenderly
(5:12)  6. Neither One Of Us
(3:43)  7. It Don't Mean A Thing
(4:10)  8. I Live To Love You
(3:27)  9. Remember
(2:07) 10. You And I
(3:44) 11. You'll Never Know
(4:54) 12. Please Send Me Someone To Love
(5:02) 13. The Nearness Of You

"Charmaine literally 'breathes love' into old standards. She makes you want to be in love if you're not already." ~  R. LaRue, Jazz News

"When Charmaine Clamor's warm, luscious contralto slips into a rhythmically seductive version of "I'm in the Mood for Love" or purrs through the tender lyrics of "The Very Thought of You," there's no doubt that a first-rate jazz talent is present. Her first album, "Searching for the Soul" (2005), announced the arrival of an impressive new vocal artist who worked her magic with material including Duke Ellington's "Come Sunday," Percy Mayfield's "Please Send Me Someone to Love," Rodgers and Hart's "My Romance" and Gordon and Warren's "You'll Never Know." ~ Don Heckman, Los Angeles Times

"Blessed with a 'bedroom eyes' voice, Charmaine Clamor has put out a lovely and eclectic collection...Clamor proves she is able to handle the standards with aplomb. The jewels of 'Searching for the Soul,' however, are the originals. Charmaine Clamor could shake the world with originals like these. In a musical world filled with canaries, we beg Clamor for more new material." ~  George Harris, All About Jazz
Editorial Reviews  
http://www.amazon.com/Searching-Soul-Charmaine-Clamor/dp/B000BZ4VV8

Searching For The Soul

Bill Evans, Don Elliott - Tenderly - An Informal Session

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1957
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:08
Size: 133,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:43)  1. Tenderly
(4:21)  2. I'll Take Romance
(7:14)  3. Laura
(5:09)  4. Blues # 1
(4:12)  5. I'll Know
(1:41)  6. Like Someone In Love
(0:59)  7. Love Letters
(1:45)  8. Thou Swell
(5:49)  9. Airegin
(5:26) 10. Everything Happens To Me
(8:15) 11. Blues # 2
(2:24) 12. Stella By Starlight
(3:03) 13. Funkallero

Subtitled ‘An Informal Session’ this mid-1950s meeting between Evans and Elliott transpired in the latter’s home studio. Never intended for release, listeners expecting a tightly cropped and polished studio date are likely to be disappointed. Fortunately Fantasy producer Eric Miller opted to leave those extraneous noises that did not directly compromise the music in the mix. The result is voyeuristic snapshot of two musicians playing purely for their own enjoyment, working out tunes on the spot and tinkering expressively with standard and blues building blocks.

Subtitled ‘An Informal Session’ this mid-1950s meeting between Evans and Elliott transpired in the latter’s home studio. Never intended for release, listeners expecting a tightly cropped and polished studio date are likely to be disappointed. Fortunately Fantasy producer Eric Miller opted to leave those extraneous noises that did not directly compromise the music in the mix. The result is voyeuristic snapshot of two musicians playing purely for their own enjoyment, working out tunes on the spot and tinkering expressively with standard and blues building blocks.

Numerous standards from Evans evolving songbook are on display, starting with a choppy, but spirited reading of “Tenderly.” Elliott joins in for the first several minutes on vibes, but soon drops out leaving the pianist to explore the melody in isolation. Several false starts marked by luminous washes of melodic color from Elliott preface “Laura” and the vibraphonist takes the initial lead before relinquishing control again to Evans dancing chords. He returns later in the piece voicing some intriguing vocal percussion effects that simulate the sounds of high hat clip clops and staccato rim shots. Evans answers in between with a series of angular fills and at times Elliott’s pedal sustain tests the sonic edges of the session microphones creating brittle echo that contrasts nicely with the pianist’s more lyrical passages. Later explorations follow an analogous pattern with one man getting the ball rolling and the other joining soon after to keep the inertial flow free from obstacles with mixed success. Evans runs a solitary race on a handful pieces too such as the lovely “Everything Happens to Me” and a series of fragmentary renderings starting with “Like Someone In Love” and ending with “Thou Swell.”

Numerous standards from Evans evolving songbook are on display, starting with a choppy, but spirited reading of “Tenderly.” Elliott joins in for the first several minutes on vibes, but soon drops out leaving the pianist to explore the melody in isolation. Several false starts marked by luminous washes of melodic color from Elliott preface “Laura” and the vibraphonist takes the initial lead before relinquishing control again to Evans dancing chords. He returns later in the piece voicing some intriguing vocal percussion effects that simulate the sounds of high hat clip clops and staccato rim shots. 

Evans answers in between with a series of angular fills and at times Elliott’s pedal sustain tests the sonic edges of the session microphones creating brittle echo that contrasts nicely with the pianist’s more lyrical passages. Later explorations follow an analogous pattern with one man getting the ball rolling and the other joining soon after to keep the inertial flow free from obstacles with mixed success. Evans runs a solitary race on a handful pieces too such as the lovely “Everything Happens to Me” and a series of fragmentary renderings starting with “Like Someone In Love” and ending with “Thou Swell.” ~ Derek Taylor  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/tenderly-bill-evans-fantasy-jazz-review-by-derek-taylor.php

Personnel: Bill Evans- piano; Don Elliott- vibes, percussion.

Tenderly - An Informal Session

Bud Freeman - Satin Doll

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1980
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:57
Size: 96,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:26)  1. Here's That Rainy Day
(5:22)  2. The Man I love
(5:34)  3. Bewitched
(5:24)  4. But Not For Me
(5:11)  5. Satin Doll
(4:32)  6. Easy to Love
(6:08)  7. I Cover the Waterfront
(4:17)  8. Please

When Bud Freeman first matured, his was the only strong alternative approach on the tenor to the harder-toned style of Coleman Hawkins and he was an inspiration for Lester Young. Freeman, one of the top tenors of the 1930s, was also one of the few saxophonists (along with the slightly later Eddie Miller) to be accepted in the Dixieland world, and his oddly angular but consistently swinging solos were an asset to a countless number of hot sessions.

Freeman, excited (as were the other members of the Austin High School Gang in Chicago) by the music of the New Orleans Rhythm Kings, took up the C-melody sax in 1923, switching to tenor two years later. It took him time to develop his playing, which was still pretty primitive in 1927 when he made his recording debut with the McKenzie-Condon Chicagoans. Freeman moved to New York later that year and worked with Red Nichols' Five Pennies, Roger Wolfe Kahn, Ben Pollack, Joe Venuti, Gene Kardos, and others. 

He starred on Eddie Condon's memorable 1933 recording "The Eel." After stints with Joe Haymes and Ray Noble, Freeman was a star with Tommy Dorsey's Orchestra and Clambake Seven (1936-1938) before having a short unhappy stint with Benny Goodman (1938). He led his short-lived but legendary Summe Cum Laude Orchestra (1939-1940) which was actually an octet, spent two years in the military, and then from 1945 on, alternated between being a bandleader and working with Eddie Condon's freewheeling Chicago jazz groups. Freeman traveled the world, made scores of fine recordings, and stuck to the same basic style that he had developed by the mid-'30s (untouched by a brief period spent studying with Lennie Tristano). Bud Freeman was with the World's Greatest Jazz Band (1968-1971), lived in London in the late '70s, and ended up back where he started, in Chicago. He was active into his eighties, and a strong sampling of his recordings are currently available on CD. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/artist/bud-freeman-mn0000533843/biography

Personnel:  Bud Freeman (saxophone);  Georges Arvanitas (organ);  George Collier (drums);  Pierre Michelot (bass).

Satin Doll

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Atsuko Hashimoto Organ Trio & Voices - Songs We Love

Size: 161,6 MB
Time: 69:07
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2005
Styles: Jazz/Blues: Hammond Organ, Vocals
Art: Front

01. Ladybug (6:22)
02. Bye Bye Blackbird (4:25)
03. My Ship (5:21)
04. You Don't Know What Love Is (4:02)
05. Misty (5:21)
06. The Song Is You (4:46)
07. Nature Boy (7:30)
08. Ruggin' The Blues (4:37)
09. What's Going On (4:50)
10. The More I See You (6:33)
11. Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow (3:47)
12. God Bless The Child (5:56)
13. Stormy Monday (5:31)

Personnel:
Atsuko Hashimoto: B3 Hammond Organ
Yutaka Hashimoto: Guitar
Juasa Kanoh: Drums

Voices:
Elijah Levi
Harvey Thompson
Toni Scruggs

'Songs We Love' is a fitting title for a project that brings together Osaka's finest husband and wife jazz team with three outstanding vocalists from the U.S. Songs abound on this recording, but the operative word here is love. The love the Hashimoto's inspire, reflected in the reverent yet playful way they approach their craft, goes a long way toward explaining why others are so eager to share their talents in creating music with them.

Atsuko began to explore the B3 at an early age starting with popular songs and cutting her teeth on such jazz classics as Duke Ellington's Take the A Train. She studied classical music for several years before choosing to dedicate herself to jazz music and the jazz organ.

At age 18 she started working for Hammond Japan, giving live organ demonstrations and instructing as a Hammond-certified teacher. She quickly developed a reputation for her skills at the B3, creating complex melodic and harmonic compositions over a consistent, inventive and hard-swinging bass-line.

Atsuko brings a freshness to the jazz repertory and the Hammond B3 through her innovative approach to the instrument. She has played with jazz greats before large audiences, her joy in music, sense of play and abundant personal warmth shining through her mastery of the idiom while exercising the full range of voices and dynamics available to the Hammond/Leslie combo.

Songs We Love 

Jimmy Gourley - The Jazz Trio

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:10
Size: 126.3 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 1983/2006
Art: Front

[5:25] 1. Montagne Madness
[5:38] 2. Shameful Roger
[5:27] 3. Orgy Valley (Orgeval)
[6:11] 4. You Go To My Head
[5:25] 5. Ladybird
[4:57] 6. Wrong Man Blues
[6:03] 7. I Thought About You
[5:27] 8. Day By Day
[5:27] 9. Orgy Valley (Alternate Take)
[5:06] 10. Ladybird

A bebopping guitarist with a solid enough rhythmic edge for R&B, Jimmy Gourley came from a family background that more than just leaned toward conservatory training. Gourley's father actually founded the Monarch Conservatory of Music itself, located in Hammond, IN. Gourley was still popping pimples when he began bumping up against would-be boppers: one of the guitarist's high-school mates was none other than Lee Konitz, a wizard on the alto saxophone but at that point toting a tenor to high-school band class.

Heading south, Gourley went on his first tours in commercial outfits combing the territory of Louisiana and Arkansas. From 1944 through 1946 he shipped out with the Navy. When he returned he picked up a job in Chicago replacing the equally fine guitarist Jimmy Raney in a combo led by the somewhat obscure Jay Burkhart. In the late '40s Gourley was still keeping Windy City company but the names became more prominent, including singers Anita O'Day and the duo of Jackie Cain and Roy Kral.

The '50s would be best described as the guitarist's French period. Basing himself out of Paris, Gourley was associated mostly with Henri Renaud as well as his own house band stints at various clubs. Excellent recording sessions during this period present the guitarist in the company of tenor saxophonist Zoot Sims, alto saxophonist Gigi Gryce, trumpeter Clifford Brown, drummer Roy Haynes, and trombonist Bob Brookmeyer, not to mention homeboy Konitz. There was a dash back to Chicago during this decade but Gourley primarily spent his time in Paris, a long run as one of the local accompanists at the Blue Note allowing him the opportunity to continue associating with the cream of the jazz crop.

Gourley shows up on in one classic film on jazz, the noted 'Round Midnight, his featured number perhaps asking a question directly about his career, "How Long Has This Been Goin' On?" About a decade later, his own liner notes described him as "still searching, still stumbling" in a session involving his regular trio with drummer Philippe Combelle and bassist Dominique Lemerle. The guitarist is considered one of the most accomplished members of the jazz expatriate community. ~ Eugene Chadbourne

The Jazz Trio

Bennie Green - Come Sunrise

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:24
Size: 179.5 MB
Styles: Bop, Trombone jazz
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[5:15] 1. You're Mine You
[5:32] 2. Can't We Be Friends
[5:32] 3. All I Do Is Dream Of You
[5:31] 4. Melba's Mood
[8:58] 5. See See Rider
[6:49] 6. Congo Lament
[4:26] 7. Encore
[6:24] 8. That's All
[5:43] 9. Green Leaves
[5:24] 10. Bye Bye Blackbird
[6:00] 11. Lullaby Of The Doomed
[6:43] 12. This Love Of Mine
[6:01] 13. I Love You

Bennie Green was one of the few trombonists of the 1950s who played in a style not influenced by J.J. Johnson (Bill Harris was another). His witty sound and full tone looked backwards to the swing era yet was open to the influence of R&B. After playing locally in Chicago, he was with the Earl Hines Orchestra during 1942-1948 (except for two years in the military). Green gained some fame for his work with Charlie Ventura (1948-1950) before joining Earl Hines' small group (1951-1953). He then led his own group throughout the 1950s and '60s, using such sidemen as Cliff Smalls, Charlie Rouse, Eric Dixon, Paul Chambers, Louis Hayes, Sonny Clark, Gildo Mahones, and Jimmy Forrest. Green recorded regularly as a leader for Prestige, Decca, Blue Note, Vee-Jay, Time, Bethlehem, and Jazzland during 1951-1961, although only one further session (a matchup with Sonny Stitt on Cadet in 1964) took place. Bennie Green was with Duke Ellington for a few months in 1968-1969 and then moved to Las Vegas, where he spent his last years working in hotel bands, although he did emerge to play quite well at the 1972 Newport Jazz Festival and in New York jam sessions. ~bio by Scott Yanow

Come Sunrise

Beady Belle - Belvedere

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:58
Size: 89.2 MB
Styles: Neo-soul, Contemporary R&B, Vocal jazz
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[4:38] 1. Apron Strings
[5:05] 2. A Touch Of Paradise
[4:51] 3. Tower Of Lament
[4:18] 4. Self-Fulfilling
[4:23] 5. Tranquil Flight
[3:35] 6. Intermission Music
[3:41] 7. Viscous Ocean
[4:28] 8. Boiling Milk
[3:55] 9. Two-Faced

Beady Belle is one of the favorite bands of the jazz star Jamie Cullum. That's why he sings on Beady Belle's new album, on the duet "Intermission music". * Also the the American soul star, India. Arie, is one of Beady Belle's biggest fans. She also sings on "Belvedere", on the duet "Self-fulfilling". Beady Belle has played over 180 concerts in over 100 cities in over 20 countries.

Belvedere

Benny Goodman - Easy Does It!

Styles: Clarinet Jazz
Year: 1952
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 24:15
Size: 78,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:44)  1. Henderson Stomp
(3:09)  2. Makin' Whoopee
(2:52)  3. Sweet Georgia Brown
(2:58)  4. Behave Yourself
(3:06)  5. I Never Knew
(3:03)  6. Puttin' On The Ritz
(3:17)  7. I Can't Get Started
(3:04)  8. That's A Plenty

For a kid who liked jazz, Chicago was a great town to grow up in. Musicians had begun working their way north from New Orleans about the turn of the century, and by the early 1920s giants like "Jellyroll" Morton, Sidney Bechet, "King" Oliver and Louis Armstrong were playing in Chicago and making history. Kids who paid attention to this development were going to make history themselves in a few more years - Bud Freeman, Davie Tough, Eddie Condon, Milt Mesirow (Mezz Mezzrow), Gene Krupa, "Muggsy" Spanier, Jimmy McPartland, Jess Stacy - and a kid in short pants who played the clarinet. Benny Goodman was only 10 when he first picked up a clarinet. Only a year or so later he was doing Ted Lewis imitations for pocket money. At 14 he was in a band that featured the legendary Bix Beiderbecke. By the time he was 16 he was recognized as a "comer" as far away as the west coast and was asked to join a California-based band led by another Chicago boy, Ben Pollack. Goodman played with Pollack's band for the next four years. His earliest recording was made with Pollack, but he was also recording under his own name in Chicago and New York, where the band had migrated from the west coast. In 1929, when he was just 20, Benny struck out on his own to become a typical New York freelance musician, playing studio dates, leading a pit orchestra, making himself a seasoned professional. 

By 1934 he was seasoned enough to be ready for his first big break. He heard that Billy Rose needed a band for his new theatre restaurant, the Music Hall, and he got together a group of musicians who shared his enthusiasm for jazz. They auditioned and got the job. Then Benny heard that NBC was looking for three bands to rotate on a new Saturday night broadcast to be called "Let's Dance," a phrase that has been associated with the Goodman band ever since. One band on the show was to be sweet, one Latin, and the third hot. The Goodman band was hot enough to get the job, but not hot enough to satisfy Benny. He brought in Gene Krupa on drums. Fletcher Henderson began writing the arrangements - arrangements that still sound fresh more than a half century later. And the band rehearsed endlessly to achieve the precise tempos, section playing and phrasing that ushered in a new era in American music. There was only one word that could describe this band's style adequately: Swing. After six months of broadcasting coast to coast the band was ready for a cross-country tour. The band was ready but the country was not. The tour was a disaster until its last date in August, 1935, at the Palomar Ballroom in Los Angeles. The only plausible explanation for what happened there is that "Let's Dance" was aired three hours earlier on the west coast than in the east. The kids in Los Angeles had been listening, and thousands of them turned out to hear the band in person at the Palomar. They hadn't even come to dance; instead they crowded around the bandstand just to listen. It was a new kind of music with a new kind of audience, and their meeting at the Palomar made national headlines.

When the band headed east again, after nearly two months at the Palomar, they were famous. They played for seven months at the Congress Hotel in Chicago, where Teddy Wilson joined them to complete the Benny Goodman Trio. Back in New York Lionel Hampton made it the Benny Goodman Quartet, and the band was a sensation at the Hotel Pennsylvania's Madhattan Room. The band made it even bigger at the Paramount Theatre, where lines began forming at breakfast time and continued through the last daily show. It was grueling for the kids who waited for hours to dance in the aisles. It was more grueling for the band; they returned each night to the Madhattan Room for still more swing. At the age of 28 Benny Goodman had reached what seemed to be the pinnacle of success. The new radio program, "The Camel Caravan," was scheduled in prime time, and the whole nation listened not only to the band itself but to the intelligent commentary by some of the most influential critics of the day, including Clifton Fadiman and Robert Benchley. But it was not quite the pinnacle. On January 16, 1938, Sol Hurok, the most prestigious impresario in America, booked the Benny Goodman band into Carnegie Hall. For generations Carnegie Hall had been the nation's greatest temple of musical art, home of the New York Philharmonic and scene of every important artist's debut (even if they had played in a hundred other concert halls first).

So this was a debut not only for Benny Goodman but for jazz. Though many others followed him to Carnegie Hall, there has never been another concert with such an impact. It even made his "classical" Carnegie Hall debut more newsworthy a few years later when Benny returned there to launch his second career, as a soloist with major symphony orchestras and chamber groups. Benny Goodman was indisputably the King of Swing - the title was invented by Gene Krupa - and he reigned as such thereafter until his death in 1986 at age 77. Over the years he played with the greatest figures in jazz: Bix Beiderbecke, Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, Count Basie, Mildred Bailey, Bessie Smith and countless others. Many of those who played with him as sidemen later achieved fame as leaders of their own bands, as soloists, or even as movie or TV actors - Harry James, Ziggy Elman, Gene Krupa and Lionel Hampton to name a few. 

A list of Benny's hits would fill a book. In fact it filled several books by his devoted discographer/biographer Russ Connor. That crowded career, spanning more than six decades, had an almost unparalleled impact on popular music and the importance of the clarinet in both jazz and classical music. Thousands of youngsters throughout the world were influenced to play the clarinet through listening to Benny Goodman's recordings and live performances, and the style of those who turned to jazz was universally patterned after what they heard Benny play, whether or not they realized it. The popularity of the "big band" format is another of the legacies of this musical giant. http://www.bennygoodman.com/about/biography.html

Personnel: Benny Goodman - clarinet & bandleader; Mel Powell, James Rowles, Jess Stacy – piano;  Tom Romersa, Bill Douglass – drums;  Artie Shapiro, Harry Babasin – bass;  Allan Reuss, Al Hendrickson – guitar;  Red Norvo – vibes;  Jake Porter – trumpet;  Ernie Felice - accordion

Easy Does It!

Gerald Wilson - Detroit

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:51
Size: 144,2 MB
Art: Front

( 5:30)  1. Blues on Belle Isle
( 8:47)  2. Cass Tech
( 6:40)  3. Detroit
( 7:07)  4. Miss Gretchen
( 7:12)  5. Before Motown
( 8:47)  6. The Detroit River
(12:32)  7. Everywhere
( 6:12)  8. Aram

Commissioned by the Detroit International Jazz Festival and premiered on the occasion of the composer's 91st birthday, Gerald Wilson's six-movement "Detroit Suite" demonstrates that after nearly seven decades in the music business, the nonagenarian composer and arranger still has a great deal to offer in terms of musical creativity. Wilson spent the latter part of his teen years in the Motor City, where he studied trumpet, piano, percussion, and composition at Cass Technical High School from 1934-39, and he still regards Detroit as a "hometown." 

The opening "Blues on Belle Isle," which is named for a park on a island in the Detroit River, features the alto sax of Randall Willis, trumpeter Sean Jones, violinist Yvette Devereaux (following in the footsteps of the young Jean-Luc Ponty, who occupied this chair in the Wilson ensemble four decades ago), and guitarist and Gerald's son Anthony Wilson, who has been a mainstay of the Diana Krall quartet for the past several years. "Cass Tech," Wilson's paean to his alma mater, is a variation on Benny Golson's "Along Came Betty" in much the same fashion as Bill Holman's take on "Stompin' at the Savoy" for Stan Kenton over a half-century ago. The ballad "Detroit" spotlights Willis on flute, Jones on fluegelhorn, and the tenor sax of Kamasi Washington (Jones and Washington appear on both the Los Angeles and New York sessions). Based on the chord changes of Billy Strayhorn's "Chelsea Bridge," "Miss Gretchen" salutes Mack Avenue founder and president Gretchen Valade with solos from pianist Brian O'Rourke and the Harmon-muted trumpet of Winston Byrd, plus Devereaux (adapting the classic Ben Webster solo from the release to her violin) and Anthony Wilson. Latin rhythms a la Wilson's "Carlos" and "Viva Tirado" predominate in "Before Motown" (which bears absolutely no connection with the musical genre of that name), with Bobby Rodriguez's trumpet, Les Benedict's trombone, and the tenors of Washington and Louis Van Taylor all capturing attention. "The Detroit River," on the other hand, resembles Count Basie on steroids, as trumpeter/contractor Ron Barrows, veteran soprano saxophonist Jackie Kelso, trombonist Eric Jorgensen, Devereaux, Van Taylor, O'Rourke, and Anthony Wilson all contribute to this hyper-charged swinger.

The two remaining tracks, "Everywhere" (a remake of the title cut from a 1968 Pacific Jazz LP by Wilson) and "Aram," are from the same sessions as Wilson's 2005 New York, New Sound (his Mack Avenue debut) and feature the New York ensemble. Flute legend Hubert Laws highlights the modal "Everywhere," while "Aram" (possibly named for the Soviet-era Armenian composer Aram Khachaturian) offers frequent rhythmic shifts between jazz-waltz and straight-ahead 4/4 tempi supporting powerful solos by trumpeter Terell Stafford (Director of Jazz Studies of the Boyer College of Music at Philadelphia's Temple University, and a member of NYC's celebrated Vanguard Jazz Orchestra) and altoist Antonio Hart. ~ Robert J.Robbins  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/detroit-gerald-wilson-mack-avenue-records-review-by-robert-j-robbins.php

Gerald Wilson – Conductor;  Ron Barrows - Contractor, Trumpet;  Brian O'Rourke – Piano;  Mel Lee – Drums;  Trey Henry – Bass;  Carl Randall - Tenor Sax;  Jackie Kelso - Alto & Soprano Sax;  Kamasi Washington - Tenor Sax;  Louis Van Taylor - Baritone & Tenor Sax;  Randall Willis - Alto Sax & Flute;  Terry Landry - Baritone Sax;  Bobby Rodriguez – Trumpet;  Rick Baptist – Trumpet; Winston Byrd – Trumpet;  Eric Jorgensen – Trombone;  Les Benedict – Trombone;  Mike Wimberly – Trombone;  Shaunte Palmer – Trombone;  Yvette Devereaux – Violin;  Sean Jones - Trumpet, Flugelhorn;  Anthony Wilson - Guitar

Detroit

Eight To The Bar - Superhero Swinger Undercover

Styles: Swing, Big band
Year: 2003
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 48:14
Size: 89,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:40)  1. Superhero Swinger Undercover
(3:15)  2. My Boogie Woogie Hand
(2:46)  3. It's A Groove
(4:19)  4. Maybe Someday
(3:58)  5. Sugar High
(4:53)  6. My Old Flame
(3:39)  7. Reptile Man
(2:58)  8. The Shelf
(4:21)  9. Troubles Drift Away
(4:24) 10. Romeo
(3:55) 11. Skeleton Key
(2:24) 12. I'm My Own Grandpaw
(3:38) 13. Set You Free

Listening to Eight to the Bar is a lot like driving along a time-warped highway precisely halfway between Count Basie's Kansas City and Fats Waller's Harlem, where the car radio picks up everything from "Take the A Train" to "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy of Company B". Their original material, like their outlandish wardrobes and onstage choreo, is a colorful mix of forties jive and fifties jump blues. With their female vocals, saxophone, guitar, bass, keyboards, and drums, this unique sextet pack a musical and visual wollop not seen in New England since the group's inception in 1975. http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/ettb11

Superhero Swinger Undercover

Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Various - Argentine Hot Jazz Vol. 1

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:16
Size: 133.4 MB
Styles: Latin rhythms, Big band
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[2:39] 1. Feliciano Brunelli Y Su Orquestra - Vitamina B
[2:29] 2. Feliciano Brunelli Y Su Orquestra - Boogie Del Burrito
[3:13] 3. Feliciano Brunelli Y Su Orquestra - Boogie De Los Patitos
[2:54] 4. Feliciano Brunelli Y Su Orquestra - El Expresso A Buguilandia
[2:54] 5. Orquestra Jazz Casino - Boogie Casino
[2:55] 6. Feliciano Brunelli Y Su Orquestra - Guin Guin Gun
[2:46] 7. Barry Moral Y Su Orquestra De Jazz - Cortaron El Viejo Manzano
[2:50] 8. Feliciano Brunelli Y Su Orquestra - Superdixieland
[2:37] 9. Barry Moral Y Su Orquestra De Jazz - Los Muchachos Vuelven
[2:44] 10. Barry Moral Y Su Orquestra De Jazz - Boogie Tropical
[2:34] 11. Feliciano Brunelli Y Su Orquestra - Los Monitos Bailan Boogie
[2:42] 12. Hector - El Boogie Boogie Llego Al Pueblo
[2:54] 13. Mario Cesari Conjunto De Jazz - El Vaquero Smith
[3:00] 14. Eduardo Armani Y Su Orquestra - Mama Lavame Con Ritmo
[3:03] 15. Ahmed Ratip Y Sus Cotton Pickers - Yo Se Que Tu Sabes
[3:16] 16. Orquestra Jazz Casino - El Jazz Me Entristece
[2:38] 17. Washington Bertolin Y Su Sexteto De Jazz - El Tercer Hombre
[2:30] 18. Feliciano Brunelli Y Su Orquestra - Yanquele
[2:35] 19. Feliciano Brunelli Y Su Orquestra - Juancho El Vendedor
[2:21] 20. Feliciano Brunelli Y Su Orquestra - El Boogie Woogie Del Amor
[2:33] 21. Varela-Varelita - Marcianita

Argentine Hot Jazz Vol. 1

Frances Faye - I'm Wild Again

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:08
Size: 75.9 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 1955/2014
Art: Front

[2:30] 1. Toredor
[2:43] 2. They Can't Take That Away From Me
[2:24] 3. He's Funny That Way
[3:06] 4. I've Got You Under My Skin
[1:50] 5. My Heart Sings
[2:23] 6. Somebody Loves Me
[3:02] 7. September In The Rain
[3:12] 8. These Foolish Things Remind Me Of You
[2:44] 9. Love For Sale
[5:39] 10. Medley: Little Girl Blue/Where Or When/Embraceable You/Exactly Like You
[3:30] 11. Out Of This World

Herbie Harper, Tommy Pederson, Maynard Ferguson, Frank Rosolino (Trombones); Al Hendrickson (Guitar); Jerry Wiggins (Piano); Red Mitchell (Bass); & Chico Hamilton (Drums).

In the late 1930s, Faye co-starred in the Bing Crosby and Martha Raye vehicle Double or Nothing; Faye played the sister of Raye, and they perform a nightclub act together. A musical highlight is the performance of "After You," with both gals plus Crosby. As a singer, Faye was considered to be on the level of a Dinah Washington, in terms of power and not at all of the cutesy-cutesy female pop singer variety. When she played her own keyboard accompaniment, club owners sometimes complained that she had pounded the piano so hard that all that remained of parts were sawdust. Faye could do the type of romantic material that more commercial performers such as the bubbly Doris Day were known for, but also included obscure songwriting gems in her repertoire as well as funky, naughty rhythm & blues numbers. ~Excerpt from the bio by Eugene Chadbourne

I'm Wild Again

The Hilltoppers - S/T

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:23
Size: 69.6 MB
Styles: Vocal group
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[1:56] 1. Maybe You'll Be There
[2:50] 2. Why Baby
[2:14] 3. That Old Feeling
[2:48] 4. I Can't Get Started
[2:45] 5. The Gypsy
[2:39] 6. Whispering Grass
[2:11] 7. With Every Breath I Take
[2:10] 8. I'm Glad For Your Sake
[2:34] 9. Faded Rose
[2:11] 10. Into Each Life Some Rain Must Fall
[2:04] 11. Trouble In Mind
[2:20] 12. So Tired
[1:36] 13. I Can't Give You Anything But Love

Perhaps the greatest male vocal group of the Interlude Era, The Hilltoppers, had a very inauspicious beginning. They began as a vocal trio with the members being Jimmy Sacca, Seymour Spiegelman, and Donald McGuire who were students at Western Kentucky University in the town of Bowling Green. One of Sacca's acquaintances was a pianist in a territory band in the area named Billy Vaughn. A song written by Vaughn was given a run through by the trio, and through various rehearsals Vaughn himself was added to the vocal mix and the trio was now a quartet. As the story goes, the guys gathered around a piano in the corner of the campus auditorium at something like one a.m. on a spring night in 1952 and tape recorded the new song called "Trying". The tape was then given to a local radio deejay who liked the tune and soon got in touch with Randy Wood the head of Dot Records in suburban Nashville, Tennessee. Wood listened to the tape and was duly impressed and signed the quartet to his label. The group then took their name from the Western Kentucky University athletic teams nickname, The Hilltoppers.

The Hilltoppers

Ruby Braff, Dick Hyman - Music From My Fair Lady

Styles: Cornet And Piano Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:09
Size: 123,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:54)  1. Wouldn't It Be Loverly
(3:54)  2. With A Little Bit Of Luck (slow)
(2:29)  3. With A Little Bit Of Luck (fast)
(4:11)  4. I'm An Ordinary Man
(6:16)  5. The Rain In Spain
(4:46)  6. I Could Have Danced All Night
(4:06)  7. Ascot Gavotte
(5:06)  8. On The Street Where You Live
(3:53)  9. Show Me
(5:14) 10. Get Me To The Church On Time
(3:14) 11. Without You
(4:00) 12. I've Grown Accustomed To Her Face

The many Lerner & Loewe songs written for the play My Fair Lady have long been rightfully acclaimed. Even with several decades of fine recordings, this duet set by cornetist Ruby Braff and pianist Dick Hyman is one of the finest interpretations of the famous music. Braff and Hyman come up with new ideas during melodic versions of such songs as "Wouldn't It Be Loverly," "I Could Have Danced All Night," "On the Street Where You Live," and "Get Me to the Church on Time," among others. Every Braff-Hyman collaboration is well worth getting, and this set is no exception. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/music-from-my-fair-lady-mw0000202744

Personnel: Ruby Braff (cornet); Dick Hyman (piano).

Music From My Fair Lady