Monday, February 1, 2016

Johnny Summers - Piano Sessions Vol. 1 (Deluxe Editon)

Size: 131,7 MB
Time: 56:37
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. I Wonder (Feat. Chris Andrew) (3:41)
02. She Thinks I Still Care (Feat. Chris Andrew) (5:50)
03. Maybe This Time (Feat. Chris Andrew) (5:35)
04. Dream A Little Dream Of Me (Feat. Chris Andrew) (3:20)
05. Folsom Prison Blues (Feat. Chris Andrew) (3:52)
06. My Baby Just Cares For Me (Feat. Chris Andrew) (3:14)
07. Simple Song (Feat. Chris Andrew) (4:19)
08. Exactly Like You (Feat. Chris Andrew) (2:39)
09. You Don't Know Me (Feat. Chris Andrew) (5:50)
10. I'm An Errand Boy For Rhythm (Feat. Chris Andrew) (4:08)
11. Going Home (Feat. Chris Andrew) (4:30)
12. Look For The Silver Lining (Feat. Chris Andrew) (3:41)
13. This Time The Dreams On Me (Feat. Chris Andrew) (5:52)

Johnny Summers is a triple threat musician – trumpet player, singer, and song writer/arranger. He’s from Calgary, Alberta, Canada. In addition to having played and sung at various venues, he founded the Calgary Jazz Orchestra, the first permanent repertory large jazz ensemble in Canada. It was formed ten years ago and is still going strong.

On his Piano Sessions, Volume 1 CD, Summers collaborated with pianist Chris Andrew for an intimate, smoky bar album that is mellow in all the right ways. Various guest artists are imported for some of the tracks but the overall idea of intimacy is preserved throughout. That said and the fact that are no drums, might fool you into thinking there’s no rhythm; but Andrew provides plenty of it, helped by Sheldon Valleau’s mandolin playing on two tracks.

Interestingly enough, the album is not all jazz standards, since there are country & western tunes and one Broadway song via Hollywood. That latter piece is “Maybe this Time” from the film version of Cabaret, such a success that it’s now incorporated into many stage productions of the show. The country & western songs are quite different from one another. One is “She Still Thinks I Care,” the other one is “You Don’t Know Me.” The former is given a barroom flavor by the piano, the latter is accorded pop anthem treatment. Both are sung and played by just Summers and Andrew, which doesn’t ever seem like a deficiency of forces.

The albums quieter moments are among the best. The disc ends with a poignant rendition of “Going Home,” which proves that you don’t have to play fast and loud to make a point. Summers puts down the trumpet to sing his own composition, “Simple Song.” I think it’s the best thing on this disc, a very appealing love song that is kept, as the title implies, plain and simple, direct and moving. I can hear other singers covering it in my mind, which doesn’t mean Summers doesn’t give it a good reading, just that it’s a good enough song that others should want it in their playbooks. As a performer, Summers’ trumpet playing is beyond reproach but his singing could use a little polish.

The recorded sound is also simple and direct. Vocals and instrumentals are presented realistically, with just the right warmth so the clarity is never in doubt. ~Rad Bennett

Piano Sessions Vol. 1

Marc Ferrer Trio - 3 Coffees

Size: 134,9 MB
Time: 57:51
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Blues
Art: Front

01. 3 Coffees (4:16)
02. Down By The Riverside (5:10)
03. The World Is In Your Hands (4:17)
04. Night Train (5:11)
05. Fat Morning (3:56)
06. Masquefa (4:57)
07. La Bella Y La Bestia De Su Madre (3:26)
08. Barcelona In Blues (5:04)
09. 7 Roses (4:19)
10. The Watergate Blues (4:12)
11. Shot (3:49)
12. Mare (4:20)
13. Miriam's Song (4:50)

Personnel:
Marc Ferrer: Piano
Pep Rius: Upright bass
Olivier Rocque: Drums

He began playing piano at 5 years and are studying piano and music theory at the Conservatory of Barcelona. From an early age begin to show interest in Blues and Jazz. After being in several bands, in 1996 he joined the group & the Hot Wheels Chevy, now recreated as The Big Jamboree, with two discs edited.

Also part of The Big 3, released an album with Velvet Candles, Big5 and has collaborated with musicians like Big Dani Perez released three albums, Augustine Burriel, Pablo Ruiz, Eugenio Muriel, Alba Pujol and international artists such as Dale Hawkins (composer of the legendary song "Suzy Q"), Barrence Whitefield, Roddy Jackson, The Extraordinaires and JD McPherson.

He has performed in several rooms at La Boîte highlight the Jamboree, Belluno Jazz Club Milano Cocktail Bar, Marula, Casa Fuster, El Sol (Madrid) ...

He has also performed at various festivals highlight the Festival of Barcelona Blues Festival Cerdanyola Blues, Jazz Festival Escaldes Engordany (Andorra), Santa Blues de Tenerife, Crossroads Gijon, Jingle Bell Rock (Alicante), R & R Festival Paris Toulouse Country Rock, Rock & Roll Festival Attignat (FANCI), Jazz Cittaducale (Rome), Moondog (Ravenna) Hemsby (UK), Rhythm 'Riot (UK) and Blues Festival Benicássim. ~automatic translation.

3 Coffees

Takako Uemura - Common Ground

Size: 107,6 MB
Time: 46:01
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Common Ground Intro (0:30)
02. Common Ground (3:28)
03. I've Never Been In Love Before (4:25)
04. Once I Had A Sweetheart (3:39)
05. Some Other Time (6:02)
06. That Old Feeling (2:56)
07. Waltz For Debby (4:29)
08. Reach Out For Me (4:06)
09. They Can't Take That Away From Me (3:05)
10. Lazy Afternoon (5:14)
11. Moonglow (4:05)
12. We'll Be Together Again (3:57)

Born and raised on the Japanese island of Hokkaido.Takako's debut CD " Common Ground" was produced by world renowned drummer Peter Erskine. The CD also includes Vadan Ovsepian on piano, Joshua Davis on bass, Bob Shepperd on saxophone, Mitchell Long on guitar, Mike Mainieri on vibes, Judd Miller on synthesizer and Peter Erskine on drums bring out unique sound that evokes a nostalgic of exotic worldliness.

Common Ground

Mel Lewis - Live In Montreux: Mel Lewis & The Jazz Orchestra Play The Compositions Of Herbie Hancock

Size: 113,9 MB
Time: 49:15
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1982/2016
Styles: Jazz: Big Band, Bop, Post Bop
Art: Front

01. One Finger Snap ( 8:50)
02. Dolphin Dance ( 9:40)
03. Wiggle Waggle ( 8:01)
04. Speak Like A Child (10:47)
05. Eye Of The Hurricane (11:55)

Personnel:
Alto Saxophone – Dick Oatts, Steve Coleman
Baritone Saxophone – Gary Pribek
Bass – John Lockwood
Bass Clarinet – Gary Pribek
Bass Trombone – Doug Purviance, Earl McIntyre
Clarinet – Dick Oatts, Joe Lovano, Richard Perry, Steve Coleman
Drums – Mel Lewis
Flugelhorn – Earl Gardner, Joe Mosello, John Marshall, Simo Salminen
Flute – Dick Oatts, Joe Lovano, Richard Perry, Steve Coleman
French Horn – Stephanie Fauber
Piano – Jim McNeely
Soprano Saxophone – Dick Oatts, Steve Coleman
Tenor Saxophone – Joe Lovano, Richard Perry
Trombone – John Mosca, Lee Robertson
Trumpet – Earl Gardner, Joe Mosello, John Marshall, Simo Salminen

The 1980 version of the Mel Lewis Jazz Orchestra performs five Herbie Hancock tunes arranged by Bob Mintzer, quite an assignment for the young tenor saxophonist, who was not even a member of the big band. Mintzer's reworkings of such tunes as "Dolphin Dance" and "Speak Like a Child" are fresh and unpredictable. Such soloists are featured as pianist Jim McNeely, altoist Dick Oatts, future tenor great Joe Lovano (heard on "Eye of the Hurricane"), and trumpeter Earl Gardner; also in the band at the time (but not featured) is altoist Steve Coleman. It is a pity that this music (originally put out on the European MPS label and made available domestically by the now-defunct Pausa label) is difficult to find. ~by Scott Yanow

Live In Montreux

The Nola Jazz Band - Vol. 1 Genesis: Live From The Ark

Size: 153,7 MB
Time: 65:36
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: New Orleans Jazz/Blues, Vocals
Art: Front

01. Livery Stable Blues (Live) (5:02)
02. I'm Checkin' Out Goombye (Live) (2:51)
03. Horn Man Blues (Live) (6:34)
04. Tin Roof Blues (Live) (6:08)
05. Don't Let Your Love Go Wrong (Live) (5:13)
06. Lucky Devil (Live) (4:26)
07. Si Tu Vois Ma Mere (Live) (4:04)
08. Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans (Live) (5:02)
09. Bring It Back (Live) (3:57)
10. So Is The Day (Live) (4:48)
11. Rattlin' Bones (Live) (3:04)
12. Yellow Moon (Live) (3:04)
13. Queen Of Your Dreams (Live) (2:56)
14. All About The Bass (Live) (3:56)
15. Farewell Blues (Live) (4:24)

The NOLA Jazz Band has been together for a few years and is taking the country by storm. All band members have a common love for the sound and “feel” of both traditional and current New Orleans based music – real, gutsy, raw, heartfelt, and entertaining. They enjoy playing off the energy of their audiences, and truly have fun playing together. Their regular monthly gig at the jazz club "The Basement" is standing room only or sold out each month since starting in March, 2015.

They are scheduled to play five festivals the summer of 2016 and are in continued demand as they build their reputation across the US. Band members have played with, and alongside a number of well-known traditional jazz groups including Davina Sowers of Davina & the Vagabonds, and other famous musicians in the US, and abroad including Delfeayo Marsalis, and Kurt Elling to name just a few.

Fans have been heard to say "I don't like jazz, but I LOVE this group", "They are fun and entertaining, I can't classify them", "Their singer is awesome!", "fun, lively, and entertaining". Download for yourself and see what everyone is talking about.

Vol. 1 Genesis: Live From The Ark

Jenny Maybee & Nick Phillips - Haiku (Feat. Paul Eastburn)

Size: 137,4 MB
Time: 59:08
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Haiku (6:55)
02. You (6:29)
03. Interstellar (5:14)
04. The Meaning Of The Blues (5:28)
05. Blue Monk (4:51)
06. The Setting Sun (3:57)
07. Autumn Moon (2:13)
08. Winter Butterflies (5:52)
09. Heaven (5:08)
10. Idyll Surreal (6:10)
11. Now And Then (6:47)

The collaboration between pianist/vocalist/songwriter/arranger Jenny Maybee and trumpet player/producer/songwriter/arranger Nick Phillips began with a chance meeting at the 2014 West Coast Songwriter’s conference. They discovered a shared love for music arising from a place of stillness, inspired and framed by silence, and conveying frequencies of appreciation, awe, and love. Focusing their shared musical exploration on the experience of the sound and creating a space for relaxed improvisation, the duo developed original compositions and reimagined favorite standards, for the pure joy of making music together.

Opportunity knocked when esteemed audiophile recording engineer, Cookie Marenco, approached Phillips about recording his next project project at her legendary OTR Studios.

The result is the mesmerizing Jenny Maybee & Nick Phillips album, Haiku.

Haiku

Jay McShann, Jimmy Witherspoon - Jay McShann Meets J. Witherspoon

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:44
Size: 171.1 MB
Styles: Jazz-blues, R&B
Year: 1958/2009
Art: Front

[2:41] 1. Spoon Calls Hootie
[2:29] 2. Bar Fly Blues
[3:03] 3. Roll On Katy
[2:53] 4. Please Stop Playing Those Blues, Boy
[2:39] 5. Gone With The Blues
[2:56] 6. In The Evening
[5:57] 7. Ain't Nobody's Business
[2:57] 8. Christmas Bells
[3:06] 9. Backwater Blues
[2:30] 10. Sweet Lovin' Baby
[2:09] 11. Doctor Knows His Business
[2:43] 12. Good Jumping
[2:39] 13. Love My Baby
[2:23] 14. I'm Just A Lady's Man
[2:38] 15. Thelma Lee Blues
[2:15] 16. Baby Baby
[2:23] 17. Geneva Blues Aka Evil Woman
[2:59] 18. I'm Just A Country Boy
[2:54] 19. There Ain't Nothing Better
[3:07] 20. Love And Friendship
[2:57] 21. Slow Your Speed
[2:42] 22. Rain, Rain, Rain
[2:45] 23. Frog-I-More
[2:46] 24. Cain River Blues
[2:48] 25. The Duke And The Brute
[3:13] 26. When I've Been Drinking

This 1958 LP was just a random — and short — roundup of ten tracks from 1949-1951 singles Jimmy Witherspoon had done for Modern. With four national R&B hits, it does supply a fragmentary overview of Witherspoon's early career, in which he — like so many R&B singers — was purveying a brand of West Coast blues that could both swing and croon. It's not up there with the singer's best recordings, as it doesn't have the most forceful of the jazz-blues fusions he'd make. It's respectable early R&B, however, with a bunch of sides recorded in concert with a spontaneous rawness unusual even by the standards of this earlier, more rudimentary era. "Jump Children" (aka "Good Jumpin'") is a pretty transparent imitation of "Good Rockin' Tonight," however. The CD reissue on Ace adds a lot of value, tacking on eight bonus tracks from other 1948-1951 singles.

The great veteran pianist Jay McShann (also known as Hootie) enjoyed a long career and it is unfair to primarily think of him as merely the leader of an orchestra that featured a young Charlie Parker. He was mostly self-taught as a pianist, worked with Don Byas as early as 1931 and played throughout the Midwest before settling in Kansas City in 1936.

Jay McShann Meets J. Witherspoon

Bud Powell - The Scene Changes

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:52
Size: 102.7 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 1958/2007
Art: Front

[4:20] 1. Cleopatra's Dream
[5:05] 2. Moose The Mooche
[3:58] 3. Bud On Bach
[3:41] 4. John's Abbey
[1:57] 5. Buster Rides Again
[3:28] 6. Sub City
[7:54] 7. Don't Blame Me
[5:01] 8. Sub City
[3:59] 9. The Scene Changes
[5:24] 10. Idaho

"The Scene Changes" is a classic jazz trio album by one of the great jazz pianists of all time. While Bud Powell's best recordings for Blue Note are from the late 40s and early 50s in my opinion (captured on the two volumes of "The Amazing Bud Powell"), this is one of three sessions he made for the label in 1957-58. (The other two are "Bud!" and "Time Waits," and while the former is hard to find as a single issue, all of the above sessions are available as part of "Bud Powell - The Complete Blue Note and Roost Recordings.") The hallmark of Bud's second stint at Blue Note for me is the wonderful sound of these recordings. It might just be the difference between the mono recordings of five and ten years earlier, and the distinct stereo sound of the late 50s, but it makes the music come to life. You can even pick out Bud's trademark moans during his solos (which sometimes get a little old, but they are endearing nonetheless). Sure, his playing wasn't quite what was back in the day, but they are terrific nonetheless. Anyone interested in great piano trio jazz should be thankful that "The Scene Changes" is back in print courtesy of the RVG Edition series. ~ Michael Brad Richman

The Scene Changes

Polly Bergen - All Alone By The Telephone

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:17
Size: 73.9 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 1961/2010
Art: Front

[2:55] 1. All Alone
[2:22] 2. Something Wonderful
[3:00] 3. Glad To Be Unhappy
[2:35] 4. Too Late Now
[2:11] 5. He Didn't Call
[2:33] 6. Spring Is Here
[2:45] 7. By Myself
[2:42] 8. When The Wind Was Green
[3:24] 9. It's Easy To Remember
[2:37] 10. Not Like Me
[2:52] 11. I'm Always Chasing Rainbows
[2:16] 12. I'm Glad There Is You

All Alone by the Telephone pairs Polly Bergen with arranger Luther Henderson to create a deeply melancholy song cycle that explores romantic estrangement and isolation from a refreshingly adult perspective. Bergen's dusky, world-weary vocals never resort to histrionics, finding their mode of expression in restraint, not release -- her thoughtful interpretations of material like "Glad to Be Unhappy," "Too Late Now," and "By Myself" strip the songs to their core, articulating their themes of loss with hard-fought maturity. Henderson's sympathetic, meticulous arrangements are no less essential to the album's uncommon sophistication. ~Jason Ankeny

All Alone By The Telephone

Oscar Peterson - The Sound Of The Trio

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:28
Size: 175.0 MB
Styles: Piano jazz, Bop
Year: 1961/2000
Art: Front

[11:06] 1. Tricrotism
[ 8:51] 2. On Green Dolphin Street
[ 5:39] 3. Thag's Dance
[ 5:32] 4. Ill Wind
[11:06] 5. Kadota's Blues
[ 9:29] 6. Scrapple From The Apple
[ 9:13] 7. Jim
[ 7:47] 8. Band Call
[ 5:05] 9. The Night We Called It A Day
[ 2:34] 10. Billy Boy

Those who consider themselves Oscar Peterson completists should be aware of The London House Sessions, a generous five-CD set that focuses exclusively on the Peterson Trio's 1961 engagement at Chicago's London House. However, completists are the only ones who would want to invest in this collection; others would be better off with individual CDs of the pianist's London House performances. One such CD is the Verve Master Edition of The Sound of the Trio, which was recorded in July 1961 and contains everything from the original LP (including performances of "Tricotism," "On Green Dolphin Street," "III Wind,") as well as five bonus tracks. Although not among Peterson's essential recordings -- you won't find a lot of surprises on this reissue -- the material is consistently enjoyable. Peterson, bassist Ray Brown, and drummer Ed Thigpen, clearly enjoy a strong rapport, and the trio never fails to swing. Cheers to Doug Ramsey for his interesting liner notes -- while some jazz journalists would have tried to bore readers to death with overly technical descriptions of the performances, Ramsey provides some amusing anecdotes about the overly talkative audiences at the London House. ~Alex Henderson

The Sound Of The Trio

Grant Stewart - Live At Smalls

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:34
Size: 157,4 MB
Art: Front

( 9:08)  1. Make Someone Happy
( 6:56)  2. Mr. Lucky
( 9:46)  3. Meaning Of The Blues
( 9:25)  4. Somewhere In The Night
( 8:19)  5. Reflections
( 7:57)  6. Tea For Two
( 6:28)  7. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
(10:30)  8. Get Out Of Town

Grant Stewart continues to be one of my favorite modern tenor saxophonists. He has a huge sound, he's nimble and knows when to turn on the speed, and he loves showing-off on standards. I'm old school jazz to me is about showing your stuff, competing hard, and having respect for the music's grand tradition. Grant hits all of these hot buttons. Grant is up on his Sonny Stitt, Gene Ammons, Don Byas and Jimmy Forrest. Way back when, leaders understood the need for suspense and wowing the listener. An artist like Ammons might start a run, pause ever so briefly to let the line sink in, and then pick up where he left off as though hitting pause on a DVD remote and hitting play a few seconds later. It was a crafty way to build drama and let the cool set in momentarily before resuming the heat.  On Live at Smalls, recorded back in April, Grant was joined by a superb rhythm section: Tardo Hammer [pictured above] on piano, David Wong on bass and brother Phil Stewart on drums. Tardo is a swinging, technical monster who also knows his history, David hits the upright's strings with huge authority, and Phil is a master of delicate intimidation.

In each case, Grant adds a twist. Tea for Two is taken about twice as fast as most versions, as is Mr. Lucky and Somewhere in the Night, which gives them a more urgent coloration. Get Out of Town and Make Someone Happy also are uptempo, requiring Grant to make improvising choices on the superfly, demonstrating yet again why he's a standout. And his ballad work on Meaning of the Blues will knock you out. Best of all, Grant never slides into cliches but instead makes all of these battles personal as it should be. ~ Marc Myers http://www.jazzwax.com/2012/12/grant-stewart-live-at-smalls.html

Personnel:  Grant Stewart, tenor sax;  Tardo Hammer, piano;  David Wong, bass;  Phil Stewart, drums.

Live At Smalls

Jeremy Pelt - Water and Earth

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:15
Size: 131,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:52)  1. Reimagine the World
(6:21)  2. Mystique
(5:31)  3. In Dreams
(8:22)  4. Boom Bishop
(4:23)  5. Meditations on a Conversation
(3:40)  6. Stay
(8:10)  7. Pieces of a Dream
(7:21)  8. Prior Convictions
(8:30)  9. Butterfly Dreams

On 2012's outstanding Soul, trumpeter Jeremy Pelt showcased the fruit of his ensemble's six-plus years working together, gelling into a seamlessly cohesive, intuitive unit who knew how to push one another in the studio as well as on the bandstand. But all things change. On Water and Earth, Pelt's fourth date on HighNote, he showcases an entirely different band, playing a very different music. The lineup features seasoned veterans including bassist Burniss Earl Travis and percussionist Jeffrey Haynes, alongside somewhat younger players such as pianist David Bryant, saxophonist Roxy Cross, and drummer Dana Hawkins. The music on Water and Earth is a study in contrasts, using post-bop and circular rhythms together, adding in electric elements and more open spaces. Opener "Reimagine the World" is a laid-back, shuffling groove fueled mainly by Pelt's limpid horn and Bryant's tight chord voicings, before Angela Roberts and Fabiana Masili add their chorus of wordless voices which surprise near the exit. "Mystique" is a loosely composed melody offered by Cross' soprano atop Hawkins and Haynes before being joined by Travis, Bryant's Rhodes, and Pelt pushing over the top.

The intro to "Boom Bishop" is all percussive fire with an incendiary, furious head shared by Pelt and Cross" tenor. She solos first, double-timed by Hawkins and Haynes offering a fluid series of breaks and driving accents. Pelt follows using a wah-wah pedal in his own solo. Bryant's punchy Rhodes and Travis' acoustic and electric bass set up a circular rhythmic interplay that locks the tune in. Other than on the lovely, straight-ahead ballad "Meditations on a Conversation We Had," Pelt uses effects on all following tracks. 

His attempt at a spacy R&B on "Stay," with Ra-Ra Valverde on vocals, simply doesn't work. "Pieces of a Dream" is a knottier post-bop tune, albeit one played with electric instruments, and it features excellent solo work by Bryant. In addition, the interplay between Travis, Hawkins, and Haynes is killer. The closer "Butterfly Dreams" is a floating ballad and among the most beautiful tunes on the set, with lovely restrained work from Pelt and Bryant, as well as gorgeous layers of brushed cymbals. On Water and Earth, the trumpeter is surely reaching for something new. At its best it is compelling, noteworthy; elsewhere, his search proves mercurial and elusive. ~ Thom Jurek  http://www.allmusic.com/album/water-and-earth-mw0002466948

Personnel: Jeremy Pelt: trumpet;  David Bryant: fender rhodes, clarinet;  Burniss Earl Travis: acoustic bass, electric bass & effects;  Dana Hawkins: drums;  Jeffrey Hayes: percussion;  Roxy Cross: tenor sax; Frank LoCrasto: keyboards, fender rhodes & prophet, effects;  Ra-Re Valverde: vocals.

Water and Earth

Wendy Pedersen - Under The Influence

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:45
Size: 141,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:28)  1. Cheek To Cheek
(5:46)  2. Close Your Eyes
(6:43)  3. It Never Entered My Mind
(4:38)  4. Take Out Queen
(6:01)  5. Inutil Paisagem (If You Never Come To Me)
(4:57)  6. As Long As I Live
(5:45)  7. Cry Me A River
(3:01)  8. 24 Hours A Day
(5:50)  9. Easy Living
(5:56) 10. It's All Right With Me
(3:52) 11. Nice Work If You Can Get It
(5:42) 12. How Deep Is The Ocean

Wendy Pedersen is one of South Florida’s favorite performers. Her high-energy vocal delivery, with deep, convincing emotion has been impacting audiences for many years. A graduate of the University of Miami’s Studio Music and Jazz Vocal program, Wendy began her singing career in high school. But her earliest memory is poring through her mom’s record collection, practically wearing out the vinyl on Elton John and Beatle’s records. Eventually, her heart found it’s way to jazz and it has felt like home ever since. Wendy has won many awards including the Southern Bell/Pace “Jazz Artist of the Year” and a Miami New Times “best vocalist”. Leonard Pitts of The Miami Herald said, “when she sings, her voice an elegant melismatic instrument, evokes the standard emotions, yes, but deeper longings and muted desires.” Doug Adrianson, also of The Miami Herald said, “..she can steam up your contact lenses from100 feet away.” The Miami New Times said, “Wendy can shake the rafters or break your heart...” 

Wendy Pedersen’s discography includes her debut CD, “Me + Three”; a Holiday CD, “Ho Ho Ho”; and her brand new release, “Under The Influence”, a tribute to the many women who inspired and influenced her. Wendy’s original song “Take Out Queen”, a steamy and funky blues a la Dinah Washington is already getting airplay on Love 94!  http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/wendypedersen

Under The Influence

Chris Potter - The Sirens

Styles: Clarinet And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:42
Size: 146,4 MB
Art: Front

(8:49)  1. Wine Dark Sea
(6:52)  2. Wayfinder
(7:26)  3. Dawn (With Her Rosy Fingers)
(8:39)  4. The Sirens
(7:16)  5. Penelope
(8:26)  6. Kalypso
(5:43)  7. Nausikaa
(8:15)  8. Stranger At The Gate
(2:12)  9. The Shades

The Sirens is Chris Potter's debut as a leader for ECM but he’s no stranger to the label. He recorded as a member of Dave Holland's band, and collaborated with Paul Motian and Jason Moran on Lost in a Dream. The saxophonist’s quintet here includes pianist Craig Taborn a member of Potter's electric ensemble Underground bassist Larry Grenadier, drummer Eric Harland, and the relatively unknown David Virelles, texturing the proceedings on prepared piano, celeste, and harmonium. Creating a concept album as your first offering for a new label is a brave endeavor, but Potter rises to it. The Sirens is inspired by his re-reading of Homer's The Odyssey; he was moved by the enduring qualities of humanity in that epic, and wrote the entire album in two weeks. Potter's inherent lyricism is evident from opener "Wine Dark Sea," that offers the feel of the first romantic, tentative steps when embarking on an adventure. After a brief intro, Grenadier sets a groove articulated by Taborn, whose painterly chords offer a palette for Harland.

When Potter commences the melody, that "sea" is wide open with possibility. His songlike quality is underscored by Taborn's beautiful fills and comps. Potter's tenor solo is warm, inviting, searching. "Dawn (With Her Rosy Fingers)" is introduced by Grenadier's melodic bassline and Taborn's tasteful coloration. When Potter enters, his lines become spidery, alternately inquisitive and emotionally expressive. On the title cut he plays both bass clarinet and tenor. Grenadier's bass is bowed and the sense of seductive foreboding is made plain, even as the lyric line remains mysterious and spare. The entire tune becomes a lament in revelation after the bassist's gorgeous argo solo. Potter's soprano soars in "Penelope," yet it remains, true to form, expressive of only what is necessary to communicate the music's dictates and not his considerable athleticism. The gentle sting provided by Harland and Taborn makes the tune irresistible. 

"Kalypso" is a taut post-bop tune with wonderful articulations from Harland, Taborn, and Grenadier locking it down even as they grow it out. The culmination of drama and sense of emotional homecoming expressed in "Stranger at the Gate" would have made it a fitting end piece were it not for the whispering duet between Virelles and Taborn on "The Shades" that gives the set its sense of rest and closure. Potter's vision and compositions on The Sirens never lose sight of his goal: portraying the eternal essence of humanity in the mythos of his subject; his poetic lyricism as a soloist, and his empathy as a bandleader are consummate. ~ Thom Jurek  http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-sirens-mw0002460494

Personnel: Chris Potter (bass clarinet, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Craig Taborn (piano); David Virelles (prepared piano, celesta, harmonium); Larry Grenadier (double bass); Eric Harland (drums).

The Sirens

Sunday, January 31, 2016

Terry Blaine, Mark Shane, Allan Vache - Swingin' The Benny Goodman Songbook

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:35
Size: 150.1 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[3:09] 1. After You've Gone
[4:11] 2. You Turned The Tables On Me
[3:17] 3. I Don't Know Why
[3:21] 4. Junk Man
[4:30] 5. Body And Soul
[3:08] 6. Would You Like To Take A Walk
[3:53] 7. Sweet Lelilani
[4:00] 8. More Than You Know
[3:06] 9. Miss Brown To You
[5:01] 10. I Wished On The Moon-Moonglow
[3:57] 11. Memories Of You
[2:48] 12. Lulu's Back In Town
[3:58] 13. Low Down
[4:50] 14. Time On My Hands
[3:37] 15. You Can't Stop Me From Loving You
[4:12] 16. Goodbye
[4:26] 17. On The Sunny Side Of The Street

Singer Terry Blaine, pianist Mark Shane, and clarinetist Allan Vaché had performed as a trio for several years at the Sacramento Jazz Jubilee before they decided to tour as a trio and perform music from the repertoire of Benny Goodman. It was a logical move for Vaché can closely emulate Goodman, Shane's main piano influence is Teddy Wilson, and Blaine is flexible enough to hint at Helen Ward, Martha Tilton, and Mildred Bailey while still sounding like herself. While most of these songs are familiar items played by Goodman regularly sometime during 1935-1939, there are a few ringers such as "I Don't Know Why," "Junk Man" (which Goodman recorded with Mildred Bailey in 1934), "Would You Like to Take a Walk," "Cause if Feel Lowdown," and "You Can't Stop Me From Loving You" plus a couple numbers that Goodman recorded with Billie Holiday. While most of the selections are taken as trios, "Sweet Leilani" and "Time on My Hands" are played as instrumentals and Vaché sits out on the duo rendition of "Cause I Feel Low Down." The music overall is quite delightful and would have been enjoyed by the King of Swing. This is one of Terry Blaine's finest recordings to date although all are quite worthwhile. ~Scott Yanow

Swingin' The Benny Goodman Songbook

Erroll Garner - The Complete Concert By The Sea (3-Disc Set)

There’s no way Erroll Garner could have foretold, from his perch at the piano on a Monday evening almost exactly 60 years ago, that he was creating one of the most popular albums in jazz history. He probably didn’t even know tape was rolling.

But as he led his trio in a converted school auditorium in Carmel-by-the-Sea, Calif., Garner, 34, locked into a high creative gear, captivating an audience that wasn’t shy about showing its approval. “Everybody was so beautiful,” he said after the concert, which stretched past an hour and a half. Had there been a way to go longer, he added, “I would have been glad to, sincerely, because they made me feel like playing.”

“The Complete Concert by the Sea,” a new three-CD boxed set from Sony Legacy and Octave Music Publishing, greatly expands and improves on the original album. Produced by Ms. Geri Allen and Steve Rosenthal, it includes 11 previously unissued tracks from the concert — doubling the amount of music — along with long introductions by the promoter, Jimmy Lyons, and that postgame interview by Thornbury. A windfall and in some ways a revelation, the boxed set is just the first sign of a major archival effort around Garner that seems likely to raise his stature in the jazz pantheon, and to reaffirm his place in the lineage of jazz pianists.

Album: The Complete Concert By The Sea (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:47
Size: 136.9 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2015

[0:37] 1. Announcement (Jimmy Lyons)
[5:04] 2. Night And Day
[5:13] 3. Spring Is Here
[4:23] 4. I'll Remember April
[4:45] 5. The Nearness Of You
[3:22] 6. Where Or When
[4:12] 7. Sweet And Lovely
[4:17] 8. Lullaby Of Birdland
[3:52] 9. Mambo Carmel
[3:48] 10. Teach Me Tonight
[3:56] 11. Will You Still Be Mine
[3:30] 12. I Cover The Waterfront
[4:37] 13. Bernie's Tune
[4:15] 14. How Could You Do A Thing Like That To Me
[3:49] 15. It's All Right With Me

The Complete Concert By The Sea (Disc 1)

Album: The Complete Concert By The Sea (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:05
Size: 94.1 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2015

[2:47] 1. 2nd Announcement (Jimmy Lyons)
[4:18] 2. They Can't Take That Away From Me
[6:40] 3. Autumn Leaves
[2:39] 4. S'wonderful
[6:03] 5. Laura
[3:28] 6. Red Top
[4:55] 7. April In Paris
[7:42] 8. Caravan
[2:29] 9. Erroll's Theme

The Complete Concert By The Sea (Disc 2)

Album: The Complete Concert By The Sea (Disc 3)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:58
Size: 132.7 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[ 4:22] 1. I'll Remember April
[ 3:42] 2. Teach Me Tonight
[ 3:54] 3. Mambo Carmel
[ 6:33] 4. Autumn Leaves
[ 3:31] 5. It's All Right With Me
[ 3:23] 6. Red Top
[ 4:55] 7. April In Paris
[ 4:15] 8. They Can't Take That Away From Me
[ 4:14] 9. How Could You Do A Thing Like That To Me
[ 3:11] 10. Where Or When
[ 1:45] 11. Erroll's Theme
[14:08] 12. Post Concert Interview

The Complete Concert By The Sea (Disc 3)

Art Pepper - Art in L.A. Cd 1 And Cd 2

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:46
Size: 117,1 MB
Art: Front

Cd 1
(6:59)  1. Whims of Chambers
(6:03)  2. Bijou The Poodle
(3:40)  3. Why Are We Afraid
(7:00)  4. Softly, As In A Morning Sunris
(7:19)  5. Rhythm-A-Ning
(5:07)  6. Diane
(6:58)  7. Gettin' Together
(6:37)  8. The Way You Look Tonight

Cd 2
Time: 36:59
Size: 87,8 MB

(3:39)  1. The Breeze And I
(7:45)  2. Without A Song
(4:14)  3. Long Ago And Far Away
(4:29)  4. Fascinatin' Rhythm
(5:48)  5. I Can't Believe That You're In
(4:40)  6. Webb City
(6:20)  7. Begin The Beguine


Despite a remarkably colorful and difficult life, Art Pepper was quite consistent in the recording studios; virtually every recording he made is well worth getting. In the 1950s he was one of the few altoists (along with Lee Konitz and Paul Desmond) that was able to develop his own sound despite the dominant influence of Charlie Parker. During his last years, Pepper seemed to put all of his life's experiences into his music and he played with startling emotional intensity.

After a brief stint with Gus Arnheim, Pepper played with mostly black groups on Central Avenue in Los Angeles. He spent a little time in the Benny Carter and Stan Kenton orchestras before serving time in the military (1944-1946). Some of Pepper's happiest days were during his years with Stan Kenton (1947-1952), although he became a heroin addict in that period. The 1950s found the altoist recording frequently both as a leader and a sideman, resulting in at least two classics (Plays Modern Jazz Classics and Meets the Rhythm Section), but he also spent two periods in jail due to drug offenses during 1953-1956. Pepper was in top form during his Contemporary recordings of 1957-1960, but the first half of his career ended abruptly with long prison sentences that dominated the 1960s. His occasional gigs between jail terms found him adopting a harder tone influenced by John Coltrane that disturbed some of his longtime followers.

He recorded with Buddy Rich in 1968 before getting seriously ill and rehabilitating at Synanon (1969-1971). Art Pepper began his serious comeback in 1975 and the unthinkable happened. Under the guidance and inspiration of his wife Laurie, Pepper not only recovered his former form but topped himself with intense solos that were quite unique; he also enjoyed occasionally playing clarinet. His recordings for Contemporary and Galaxy rank with the greatest work of his career. Pepper's autobiography Straight Life (written with his wife) is a brutally honest book that details his sometimes horrifying life. When Art Pepper died at the age of 56, he had attained his goal of becoming the world's great altoist. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/artist/art-pepper-mn0000505047/biography

Art in L.A. Cd 1 And Cd 2

Eric Alexander - Extra Innings

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:44
Size: 144,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:29)  1. Extra Innings
(6:18)  2. I Remember Britt
(7:03)  3. A Nightingale Sang In Berkley Square
(8:18)  4. Edward Lee
(8:21)  5. Sail Away
(7:24)  6. Easy Walker
(5:25)  7. You Leave Me Breathless
(6:06)  8. No Smoking
(7:17)  9. Come Sunday

A fine straight-ahead jazz saxophonist, Eric Alexander grew up in the state of Washington. He initially attended Indiana University, studying classical music as an altoist. However, he soon discovered jazz, switched to the tenor, and transferred to William Paterson College in New Jersey. After graduating, he moved to Chicago and gained important experience touring with Charles Earland while also becoming a fixture in local clubs. In 1991, Alexander placed second at the Thelonious Monk Institute's saxophone competition, finishing just behind Joshua Redman. In 1992, he relocated to New York and made his recording debut as a leader that year with a set for Criss Cross. Alexander was set to join Art Taylor's Wailers in 1995 when the drummer passed away. 

Influenced by Dexter Gordon and George Coleman, but gradually developing a more original sound, Alexander has also worked with Mel Rhyne, Cecil Payne, Kenny Barron, and Eddie Henderson, among others. Alexander recorded two additional sets as a leader for Criss Cross, was part of their Tenor Triangle session, and cut several heated CDs for Delmark, including one that he co-led with veteran tenor Lin Halliday. His 11th album, Man with a Horn, was licensed for U.S. release in 1999 by Milestone, which also issued the follow-up, The First Milestone, in 2000. 

Since that time, Alexander has kept busy releasing a steady slew of albums including Summit Meeting in 2002, Dead Center in 2004, Battle: Live at Smoke with alto saxophonist Vincent Herring, Temple of Olympic Zeus in 2007, Prime Time: In Concert in 2008, Revival of the Fittest in 2009, and Don't Follow the Crowd in 2011. In 2012, Alexander once again paired up with equally adept saxophonist Herring for the concert album Friendly Fire: Live at Smoke. Two years later, he paid homage to his adopted hometown of Chicago with the album Chicago Fire. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/artist/eric-alexander-mn0000184165/biography

Personnel:  Eric Alexander - Tenor Saxophone;  Harold Mabern – Piano;  Peter Washington – Bass;  Joe Farnsworth - Drums

Extra Innings

Lola Albright - Dreamsville

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:37
Size: 84,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:11)  1. Two Sleepy People
(3:23)  2. Dreamsville
(3:09)  3. We Kiss In A Shadow
(3:19)  4. Brief And Breezy
(2:47)  5. You're Driving Me Crazy !
(2:42)  6. They Didn't Believe Me
(2:39)  7. Soft Sounds
(2:33)  8. Slow And Easy
(3:53)  9. It's Always You
(2:51) 10. Straight To Baby
(3:06) 11. Just You, Just Me
(2:58) 12. Sorta Blue

Fans of Peter Gunn know Lola Albright as nightclub singer Edie Hart on that classic Blake Edwards TV series. This crossover album shows that Albright's considerable charm and talent were strong enough to merit her (sadly short-lived) recording career. Albright has a sexy, breathy, and jazz-inflected vocal style that is comparable to Peggy Lee and Julie London, and Henry Mancini's cool West Coast-style charts complement her low-key voice perfectly. One of the real pleasures of this album is hearing the vocal versions to so many of the songs from Mancini's hugely successful Peter Gunn instrumental album mixed in with the usual supper-club suspects. With the noted exception of the title track, none of these Mancini vocal versions went on to become widely recorded, which is probably explained by their beatnik eccentricity (molded to fit the black-turtleneck, bongos, and espresso style of Mancini's music). The most eccentric of these is saved for last, as Sammy Cahn's lyric for "Sorta Blue" casts Albright as a depressive cooing about how her melancholia is so deep that even booze and drugs can't lift her dashed spirits. This album is a time capsule for sure, but it's a great one and it deserves to be reissued on CD, just as Lola Albright's acting career merits a second look. ~ Nick Dedina  http://www.allmusic.com/album/dreamsville-mw0000897077

Dreamsville

Laurindo Almeida - The Look of Love

Styles: Guitar Jazz, Latin Jazz
Year: 1968
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:12
Size: 69,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:28)  1. Windy
(3:06)  2. Angel Eyes
(2:26)  3. I Love You
(2:36)  4. Up, Up and Away
(3:12)  5. Don't Sleep in the Subway
(2:27)  6. The Look of Love
(3:13)  7. When I Look in Your Eyes
(2:54)  8. Alfie
(2:47)  9. A Beautiful Friendship
(2:26) 10. Simplicidade
(2:33) 11. My Own True Love

During a long and uncommonly productive career, Brazilian guitarist Laurindo Almeida achieved a ubiquity in popular music that has yet to be fully recognized. Largely responsible for the Brazilian/North American "samba jazz" that would eventually catch on in the form of a musical trend known as bossa nova, he played behind dozens of well-known pop vocalists and improved the overall texture of many a studio production ensemble. One credible estimate states that Almeida contributed to no less than 800 film soundtracks (among them The Old Man and the Sea, How the West Was Won, and Breakfast at Tiffany's), as well as countless TV scores. He also authored a series of guitar instruction books that are still in use worldwide. A master improviser and a skilled arranger as well as a brilliant interpreter of classical repertoire, he left for posterity superb recordings of works by J.S. Bach, Fryderyk Chopin, Claude Debussy, and Joaquín Rodrigo as well as a host of Brazilian composers including Heitor Villa-Lobos, Radamés Gnattali, and Alfredo Vianna. Almeida's own chamber compositions include a concerto for guitar and orchestra.

Laurindo Jose de Araujo Almeida Nobrega Neto was born in the village of Prainha near the Port of Santos in the state of São Paulo, Brazil, on September 2, 1917. He received his first musical instruction from his mother, a classically trained pianist, and credited her fondness for the music of Fryderyk Chopin as a primary influence. After observing his sister being given guitar lessons, "Lindo" borrowed her instrument and retreated to a barn where he taught himself to play entirely by ear, transferring what he'd heard his mother play on the piano to the strings of the guitar. Many years later he would declare his preference for the direct intimacy of the guitar as opposed to the more percussive piano. By the age of nine he had become uncommonly skilled and was well on the way to becoming a guitar virtuoso; it was then that he lost his father to typhoid fever. At 12 he relocated to São Paulo with his brother. He joined the Revolutionary Army at 15 and was wounded in a civil conflagration. While recuperating in a hospital he met Garoto, a nationally respected guitarist who was visiting to perform for the patients. Within a few years, Almeida would perform and record extensively with Garoto.

In 1935 Almeida moved to Rio de Janeiro, where he teamed up with singer and tenor guitarist Nestor Amaral and began working in radio while becoming active as a songwriter, arranger, and multi-instrumentalist and performing regularly at the Casino da Urea. He composed folk songs, fox trots, sambas, choros, waltzes, and comedic airs, and worked with a broad range of artists including choro master Pixinguinha. He also collected 78-rpm jazz records, and was especially fond of the way Fats Waller played the piano. In 1936, at the age of 19, he got a job (playing banjo for the most part so as to be heard) for half a year on the Cuyaba, a cruise ship that docked in every country along the coast of Europe from Spain to Germany. While visiting Paris he was able to hear Django Reinhardt and Stéphane Grappelli in person. In 1941 he played the Casino Copacabana, and switched over to the Casino Balneario da Urca the following year. It was there that he met a Portuguese ballerina named Natalia (Maria Miguelina Ferreira Ribeiro) in 1944 and married her shortly afterwards. More... ~ arwulf arwulf  http://www.allmusic.com/artist/laurindo-almeida-mn0000761478/biography

The Look of Love