Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Grant Stewart - Estate

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:55
Size: 141.7 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[8:55] 1. Systems
[6:52] 2. Soul Station
[6:12] 3. Rain Check
[6:28] 4. Estate
[5:26] 5. Carving The Rock
[7:01] 6. 3 For Carson
[5:48] 7. Jacqueline
[8:09] 8. Cool Struttin'
[7:01] 9. Felicidade

Grant Stewart's 2005 session for the Japanese Video Arts label features several musicians of his generation, including the highly regarded guitarist Joe Cohn and seasoned bassist Joel Forbes, drummer Phil Stewart, and the twenty-ish rising pianist Ehud Asherie. The tenor saxophonist's program mixes hard bop, Brazilian pop hits from the '60s, and originals in an enticing program. His performances of overlooked hard bop gems include Sonny Clark's "Cool Struttin'," Hank Mobley's breezy "Soul Station," and the Elmo Hope/Sonny Rollins collaboration "Carving the Rock," all interpreted with strong solos throughout. Stewart recalls the big-toned boppers of the '50s with his brisk setting of Billy Strayhorn's "Raincheck." His breezy take of "Felicidade" and the rhapsodic treatment of the bittersweet "Estate" also merit praise. Fellow tenor saxophonist Eric Alexander is an added guest for two of the leader's originals. ~Ken Dryden

Estate

Eddie Cano - Eddie Cano At PJ's

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:21
Size: 80.9 MB
Styles: Latin jazz
Year: 1964/1998
Art: Front

[2:09] 1. PJ's
[4:57] 2. Laura
[1:47] 3. Panchita
[2:14] 4. First One
[3:40] 5. A Taste Of Honey
[3:14] 6. Hello, Young Lovers
[2:27] 7. Cotton Candy
[2:58] 8. Cal's Pals
[2:37] 9. Oye Corazon
[2:44] 10. Watusi Walk
[2:45] 11. Maha
[3:44] 12. The Trolley Song

Pianist Eddie Cano spent most of his career connecting the dots between jazz and Latin styles. He found an appreciative audience for a series of albums under his own name released in the '50s and '60s by labels such as Atco, Reprise, and RCA, his following similar to that of vibraphonist Cal Tjader and bandleader Les Baxter. Cano also drew on dance crazes such as the cha cha and the Watusi to promote his efforts. His family was rich musically, Cano's father a bass guitarist, his grandfather a member of the Mexico City Symphony. Cano studied bass with his grandfather and private teachers, also studied piano and trombone, spent two years in the Army beginning in 1945, and then began hitting stages in a group led by Miguelito Valdés.

He soon made a connection with Herb Jeffries, a singer whose forte was balladry and with whom Cano would collaborate off and on over the next decade. The pianist had his own bands going as early as 1948, but continued working with Jeffries, Bobby Ramos, and Tony Martinez. As a composer, Cano came up with a large repertoire, including the tasty "Algo Sabroso," the friendly "Cal's Pals," the wiggly "Watusi Walk," and the thrilling "Ecstasy" -- not to mention "Honey Do," which could be a cross-genre answer song to Carl Perkins' popular "Honey Don't." While many of his peers concentrated on the peerless thrust of Latin rhythms, Cano hardly ignored this component but seemed equally intent on emphasizing the kind of complex, provocative harmonic and melodic structures associated with modern jazz. ~bio by Eugene Chadbourne

Eddie Cano At PJ's

Karin Krog - Jazz Moments

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:47
Size: 109.4 MB
Styles: Post bop, Vocal jazz
Year: 1966/2006
Art: Front

[5:20] 1. I've Got Your Number
[6:08] 2. Old Folks
[5:08] 3. All Of You
[6:05] 4. Baby Want't You Please Come Home
[3:00] 5. Dearly Beloved 1
[5:19] 6. Glad To Be Unhappy
[4:50] 7. I Can't Get Started
[3:28] 8. Just In Time
[4:43] 9. Body And Soul
[3:41] 10. Dearly Beloved 2

Bass – Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen (tracks: Niels Henning Ørsted Pedersen); Drums – Jon Christensen; Piano – Kenny Drew; Tenor Saxophone – Jan Garbarek; Vocals – Karin Krog. Recorded in Copenhagen, Denmark, 1966.

Incredible early work from vocalist Karin Krog – a mid 60s session, but one that already shows that she was thinking farther than most other singers of the time! The timings on the tunes are quite unusual – a bit like those used by Sheila Jordan in the 60s, but often even more personally pointed – in a way that makes even familiar tunes come across as if they're spontaneous expressions by Krog. Karin's working here with beautiful small combo backing from a quartet that includes Jan Garbarek on tenor, Kenny Drew on piano, Niels Henning Orsted Pedersen on bass, and Jon Christensen on drums – but the album's also arranged in a wonderful way that often has the vocals hanging out there alone, beautifully unsupported. Titles include "Body & Soul", "All Of You", "Dearly Beloved", "I Got Your Number", "Old Folks", "I Can't Get Started", and "Glad To Be Unhappy". CD also fetaures a bonus alternate of "Dearly Beloved".

Jazz Moments

Earl Bostic - The EP Collection

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:31
Size: 161.5 MB
Styles: Jump blues, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[2:39] 1. Flamingo
[3:10] 2. Sleep
[2:19] 3. Harlem Nocturne
[2:51] 4. The Moon Is Low
[3:05] 5. Linger Awhile
[2:26] 6. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
[2:55] 7. Always
[2:57] 8. Steam Whistle Jump
[2:58] 9. Serenade
[2:54] 10. Smoke Rings
[2:36] 11. Wrap It Up
[2:52] 12. Velvet Sunset
[2:37] 13. East Of The Sun
[2:54] 14. I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
[2:25] 15. Ain't Misbehavin'
[2:47] 16. Off Shore
[2:38] 17. Moonglow
[2:16] 18. For You
[2:35] 19. The Very Thought Of You
[2:56] 20. Avalon
[2:31] 21. C Jam Blues
[2:43] 22. Sweet Lorraine
[2:37] 23. Cracked Ice
[2:30] 24. Mambostic
[2:34] 25. Mambolino
[2:36] 26. Stairway To The Stars

British label See for Miles continues its high-quality EP Collection series with a fine look at smooth jump blues star Earl Bostic's prime material. Focusing on the alto saxophonist's circa-1950 work, the 26-track mix includes several complete EP sets with plenty of hits ("Flamingo," "Cherokee") and "B-side" nuggets ("Wrap It Up," "Cracked Ice"). These primarily were released by R&B indie King and feature such contemporary and future jazz stars as Blue Mitchell, Benny Golson, Teddy Edwards, and Jimmy Cobb. Whether sweet ballad or honking swinger, Bostic is all tempered power and polished blowing on this essential release. ~Stephen Cook

The EP Collection

Blossom Dearie - S/T

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:52
Size: 107.3 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz, Standards
Year: 1959/1989
Art: Front

[2:10] 1. 'deed I Do
[2:44] 2. Lover Man
[2:26] 3. Ev'rything I've Got
[2:09] 4. Comment Allez-Vous
[3:25] 5. More Than You Know
[2:58] 6. Thou Swell
[3:08] 7. It Might As Well Be Spring
[2:21] 8. Tout Doucement
[2:13] 9. You For Me
[3:19] 10. Now At Last
[2:04] 11. I Hear Music
[3:19] 12. Wait Till You See Her
[2:43] 13. I Won't Dance
[3:04] 14. A Fine Spring Morning
[3:22] 15. They Say It's Spring
[2:10] 16. Johnny One Note
[3:09] 17. Blossom's Blues

Other than a pair of sessions for the French Barclay label during 1955-1956, this set (which has been reissued on CD) has pianist-vocalist Blossom Dearie's first recordings as a leader. Teamed up with bassist Ray Brown and drummer Jo Jones, Dearie is heard in her early prime. Although her voice has always been an acquired taste, its sincerity and sense of swing wins one over after a few songs and Dearie's piano playing is first class. In addition to the 14 original selections (mostly swing-era standards plus a couple of French songs), there are three previously unreleased numbers including "Blossom's Blues," which dates from 1959. This CD is the perfect introduction for listeners to the unique sound of Blossom Dearie. ~Scott Yanow

Blossom Dearie

Dave Pike - Bossa Nova Carnival

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 1962
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:49
Size: 86,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:41)  1. Samba Lero
(5:36)  2. Sono
(5:14)  3. Serenidade
(4:27)  4. Carnival Samba
(5:18)  5. Philumba
(4:02)  6. Melvalita
(3:56)  7. Ginha
(4:30)  8. Sausalito

One of Dave Pike's finest accomplishments came in September 1962, when the vibist/marimba player recorded the Brazilian-oriented Bossa Nova Carnival for Prestige's New Jazz label. Thanks to the innovations of Stan Getz and João Gilberto, bossa nova was huge at the time and many musicians were jumping on the bossa bandwagon in the hope of making a quick buck. But for Pike, Bossa Nova Carnival wasn't an exercise in knee-jerk, insincere bandwagon jumping. Pike wanted to make a meaningful, individualistic contribution to Brazilian jazz. 

So instead of doing exactly what Getz, Gilberto, and Charlie Byrd were doing and performing a lot of Jobim songs, he enlisted Brazilian composer João Donato. Everything on this excellent vinyl LP was written by Donato, who provides sensuous, caressing melodies that Pike and his sidemen (who include Kenny Burrell on guitar and Clark Terry on flügelhorn) bring a lot of warmth and sensitivity to. The music swings, but it does so in a subtle, mellow, consistently melodic fashion. Undeniably one of Pike's most essential albums, Bossa Nova Carnival had been out of print for many years when, in 2000, Fantasy reissued it on Carnavals, a CD that also contains his Limbo Carnival session of December 1962. ~ Alex Henderson  http://www.allmusic.com/album/bossa-nova-carnival-mw0000903310
Personnel:   Dave Pike - vibraphone, marimba;  Clark Terry - flugelhorn (tracks 2, 4, 5 & 7);  Kenny Burrell – guitar;  Chris White – bass;  Rudy Collins – drums;  Jose Paulo - cabasa, bandero

Bossa Nova Carnival

Al Casey - Buck Jumpin'

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1960
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:10
Size: 110,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:14)  1. Buck Jumpin'
(6:40)  2. Casey'S Blues
(5:49)  3. Don't Blame Me
(5:19)  4. Body And Soul
(5:45)  5. Rosetta
(4:43)  6. Ain't Misbehavin'
(5:32)  7. Honeysuckle Rose
(3:04)  8. Got Soul
(5:01)  9. I'm Gonna Sit Right Down And Write Myself A Letter

Al Casey, who will always be best known as Fats Waller's guitarist, makes one of his few appearances as a bandleader on the CD reissue of his Swingville album. Casey, in a quintet with Rudy Powell (who doubles on alto and clarinet) and pianist Herman Foster, sticks to blues and standards, with several of the latter taken from Waller's songbook. The music consistently swings and it is a rare pleasure to hear Casey getting the opportunity to stretch out on acoustic guitar. Two previously unreleased numbers ("Gut Soul" and "I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter") augment the original program. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/buck-jumpin-mw0000677607

Personnel: Al Casey (guitar), Rudy Powell (alto saxophone, clarinet), Herman Foster (piano), Jimmy Lewis (bass) and Belton Evans (drums).

Buck Jumpin'

Art Tatum & Buddy DeFranco - The Art Tatum-Buddy DeFranco Quartet

Styles: Piano And Clarinet Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:52
Size: 165,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:49)  1. Deep Night
(4:40)  2. This Can't Be Love
(7:12)  3. Memories Of You
(5:15)  4. Once In A While
(3:26)  5. A Foggy Day
(3:36)  6. Makin' Whoopee
(7:03)  7. You're Mine You
(6:40)  8. Lover Man
(5:52)  9. Deep Night [alt. take] (bonus track)
(4:31) 10. This Can't Be Love [alt. take] (bonus track)
(5:07) 11. Once In A While [alt. take] (bonus track)
(2:40) 12. This Can't Be Love (bonus track)
(5:03) 13. Memories Of You (bonus track)
(4:51) 14. You're Mine You (bonus track)

This release contains the complete original quartet session showcasing the brilliant Art Tatum with clarinet player Buddy DeFranco, plus Red Callender on bass, and Bill Douglass on drums. It was the only collaborative recording date by Tatum and DeFranco. The master takes were originally issued as The Art Tatum-Buddy DeFranco Quartet on Verve MGV-8213. For this edition, it was added all three existing alternate takes, as well as unaccompanied piano versions by Tatum of three of the album's tunes. This music constitutes one of the various pairings of Tatum with other jazz greats produced by Norman Granz in the last years of the pianist's life. Tatum was seriously ill at that time and neglected by record companies due to stylistic changes in the music industry. 

He would die on November 5, 1956 at the age of 47.  http://www.jazzmessengers.com/en/69207/art-tatum/art-tatum-buddy-defranco-quartet-6-bonus

Personnel:  Art Tatum (piano);  Buddy DeFranco (clarinet);  Red Callender (bass);  Bill Douglass (drums)

The Art Tatum-Buddy DeFranco Quartet

Stacey Kent - Tenderly

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:48
Size: 98,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:38)  1. Only Trust Your Heart
(2:10)  2. Tangerine
(4:32)  3. The Very Thought Of You
(3:40)  4. Embraceable You
(4:00)  5. There Will Never Be Another You
(3:44)  6. Tenderly
(2:54)  7. No Moon At All
(3:26)  8. If I m Lucky
(4:22)  9. Agarradinhos
(3:26) 10. In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning
(3:57) 11. That s All
(2:53) 12. If I Had You

Tenderly marks, for Stacey Kent, a return to the Great American Songbook for which she first became known. The performances on Tenderly are clearly on another level to those of her earlier standards albums. There is a natural ease and confidence in the minimalist approach that she has honed over the years. Not a single extraneous note or gesture disturbs her daringly exposed performances. The pure and quiet intensity of these interpretations reveals both the song and the artist with astonishing vividness. Along with the title song, the album features such classics as Tangerine, That s All and Gershwin s Embraceable You.

American singer, Stacey Kent, is an artist who is so hard to categorize, she almost deserves a category to herself. A sublime interpreter of the Great American Songbook, Chanson and Bossa Nova, whose repertoire extends well beyond her jazz roots, fluent in French and Portuguese, she doesn t so much transcend genre as much as render the idea redundant. Each element of her personal sound is so perfectly integrated that one never feels as if she is crossing any boundaries of genre. Her 2007 album, Breakfast on the Morning Tram, achieved platinum status and was nominated for a Grammy Award. She s won countless other awards including Jazz Vocalist of the Year at the 2001 BBC Jazz Awards and French Chevalier Dans L Ordre Des Arts et Des Lettres in 2010. http://www.cduniverse.com/productinfo.asp?pid=10096664&style=music&fulldesc=T

Personnel: Stacey Kent (vocals); Roberto Menescal (guitar); Jim Tomlinson (alto flute, tenor saxophone); Jeremy Brown (double bass).

Tenderly

Monday, February 8, 2016

Sonny Clark - My Conception

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:51
Size: 139.3 MB
Styles: Bop, Piano jazz
Year: 1959/2003
Art: Front

[7:26] 1. Junka
[7:13] 2. Blues Blue
[6:43] 3. Minor Meeting
[6:57] 4. Royal Flush
[6:15] 5. Some Clark Bars
[4:41] 6. My Conception
[6:51] 7. Minor Meeting
[8:11] 8. Eastern Incident
[6:30] 9. Little Sonny

Sonny Clark's conception of modern jazz is not far removed from his peer group of the late '50s, in that advanced melodic and harmonic ideas override the basic precepts of swing and simplicity. What sets Clark apart from other jazz pianists lies in his conception of democracy to allow his bandmates to steam straight ahead on compositions he has written with them in mind. Though the bulk of this session features the marvelous trumpet/tenor tandem of Donald Byrd and Hank Mobley, it is drummer Art Blakey whose demonstrative presence is heard in full force. He's kicking the band in his own distinctive, inimitable way, rambling through the opener "Junka," based on the changes of "You Go to My Head" with his brand of bomb drops, hard accents, and indefatigable swing. Simply put, this is hard bop at its very best. Several of Clark's very best works are present and accounted for, including two takes of the definitive "Minor Meeting." The second version with Byrd and Mobley has a wonderfully subtle, Asian flavored ascending and descending melody, but the so-called initial recording includes guitarist Kenny Burrell, tenor saxophonist Clifford Jordan, and drummer Pete LaRoca, and sounds quite different. A calypso intro from the drummer yields a different palate, as Burrell in particular takes charge. "Eastern Incident" with the Burrell-Jordan tandem also takes a Far East tack, a completely relaxed line with Jordan smoother than Mobley. "Royal Flush" is also one of Clark's all-time keepers, a true beauty in Latin dress with slight harmonic inferences. This is for the most part a hard swinging date, the exceptions being the cute, sweet, basic shuffle "Blues Blue," a dramatic two-chord progression on "Some Clark Bars," and the third track featuring a Grant Green styled Burrell for the fleet "Little Sonny." Kudos to the great bassist Paul Chambers who plays on all of these cuts with Clark, and is unquestionably in his prime. Except the extraordinary Leapin' and Lopin, this album of contrasts, depth, and spirit showcases Clark's dual concepts brilliantly, and is only a half step below his best. ~Michael G. Nastos

My Conception

The Spitfire Band - Big Time

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:19
Size: 90.0 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 1997
Art: Front

[2:38] 1. Just in Time
[3:04] 2. Time After Time
[3:20] 3. I've Heard That Song Before
[3:29] 4. New York, New York
[2:11] 5. It's Been a Long, Long Time
[3:02] 6. Baubles, Bangles and Beads
[2:04] 7. The More I See You
[3:27] 8. As Time Goes By
[2:39] 9. Witchcraft
[4:53] 10. Hey There
[4:22] 11. What Kind of Fool Am I
[4:06] 12. Serenade in Blue

Jackie Rae (vocals); Dave Caldwell (saxophone, trumpet); Jack Zaza, Bob DeAngelis, Bill Ruttle (saxophone); Arnie Chycoski, Dave Woods, Micky Erbe, John MacLeod, Mike Malone (trumpet); Bob Hamper, Bob Livingston, Dave McMurdo, Laurie Bower (trombone); Gary Gross (piano); John Summer, John Sumner (drums).

When I picked up this album, I had a nagging feeling that I had seen it before. A check of my data base indicated that it's a reissue of a disc that the Canadian based Spitfire Band did for Columbia Records several years ago called In Flight. A call to the album's producer, Bill Lawrence confirmed this. It's a bit misleading not to include this information on the back cover of the album so that prospective purchasers are aware they are in a sense buying a used car. Also, it's really a partial reissue since not all the tunes from the original release have been included resulting in a relatively meager under 40 minutes worth of music. Moreover, the liner notes also don't identify the personnel from this fine Canadian band..The personnel appearing below are from the liner notes of the earlier release and I think it's safe to assume they are the same.

The good news is that Alanna Records, as it has done with other Spitfire Band releases, has remastered the album and the sound is wonderfully clear and crisp, just right for big band music. And the music is all familiar, as are the arrangements. Charlie Barnet is honored with "Skyliner", Xavier Cugat with "Brazil", Tommy Dorsey with "Marie", although the trombone solo here is not nearly as smooth as Dorsey's. There's also a vocal solo, with the band helping out, as they did when Jack Leonard sang the original. And the train still pulls out of the station as it did on Glenn Miller's "Chattanooga Choo Choo" which reached number 1 on the pop charts in 1941. But there's no Tex Beneke and the Modernaires vocal like there was way back then. Not all cuts are from the 1940's big band era. The Count Basie 1966 arrangement of "Days of Wine and Roses" is given a reworking.

This album is like instant replay. If you heard the original, nothing's changed. But the Spitfire Band is made up of excellent musicians, several of whom are also part of Rob McConnell's Boss Brass aggregation. This is a neat album to play in the car while on a trip and you need something to keep the adrenalin flowing so you don't fall asleep or to drown out the kids. ~Dave Nathan

Big Time

Jane McDonald - The Singer Of Your Song (Deluxe Edition)

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:40
Size: 157.2 MB
Styles: Easy Listening
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[3:18] 1. The Rose
[3:18] 2. Here Comes The Sun
[3:22] 3. We've Got Tonight
[4:55] 4. The Singer Of Your Song
[4:01] 5. Betcha By Golly Wow
[4:51] 6. When I Look At You
[4:16] 7. I've Never Been To Me
[3:48] 8. Love Is All
[3:47] 9. If You Go Away
[3:15] 10. Yesterday When I Was Young
[2:53] 11. God Only Knows
[2:46] 12. Guess Who I Saw Today
[4:13] 13. When October Goes
[4:17] 14. You've Made Me So Very Happy
[2:44] 15. At Last
[4:27] 16. Going Out Of My Head
[3:45] 17. From This Moment On
[4:35] 18. I'll Be There

Jane rocketed to stardom in 1998 when she first appeared on our screens in the BBC 1 docusoap The Cruise, as top of the bill on board the ship 'The Galaxy'. The series attracted 13 million viewers and Jane McDonald emerged as a star and household name, an incredible 13 years later her career continues to take her to amazing heights.

Jane’s first album outsold her nearest rivals by four to one and gained Jane a place in the Guinness Book Of Records. It remained at Number One for three weeks and achieved platinum status staying in the Top 10 for 8 weeks. Each of Jane’s subsequent 4 major albums have all reached gold and silver status. 2009 saw the first album release under her own label. Simply titled Jane the CD entered the Official UK Album Chart at Number 7 and achieved silver status within 6 weeks.

Jane oversees everything to do with her own company Jane McDonald Ltd. She puts her heart and soul into her sell out performances, produces her own albums on her own label, is executive producer on her latest CD/DVD, Live at the London Palladium and works along side her Musical Director on arrangements and recordings. She has her own design label, The Jane McDonald Collection where she works closely with her own designer on all her couture gowns featured in her concert tours. For almost 14 years Jane has built up a phenomenal theatre audience, performing incredible live concerts across the United Kingdom and Southern Ireland. During that time selling out the Royal Albert Hall, and the London Palladium twice. Jane has also played to a sold out audience at the MGM Grand, Las Vegas.

The Singer Of Your Song (Deluxe Edition)

Count Basie & His Orchestra - April In Paris

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:26
Size: 154.4 MB
Styles: Swing, Big band
Year: 1956/2014
Art: Front

[3:46] 1. April In Paris
[5:14] 2. Corner Pocket
[4:42] 3. Didn't You
[3:57] 4. Sweetie Cakes
[3:05] 5. Magic
[5:13] 6. Shiny Stockings
[3:18] 7. What Am I Here For
[3:12] 8. Midgets
[3:22] 9. Mambo Inn
[3:05] 10. Dinner With Friends
[3:47] 11. April In Paris
[5:00] 12. Corner Pocket
[4:49] 13. Didn't You
[3:43] 14. Magic
[3:49] 15. Magic
[4:05] 16. What Am I Here For
[3:12] 17. Midgets

One of the staples in the Count Basie discography, April in Paris is one of those rare albums that makes its mark as an almost instant classic in the jazz pantheon. April in Paris represents the reassembly of the original Count Basie orchestra that define swing in the 1930s and 1940s. The title track has come to define elegance in orchestral jazz. Though only ten tracks in its original release, seven alternate takes have now been incorporated into Verve's re-release of the original session tapes. Recorded in 1955 and 1956, April in Paris proved Count Basie's ability to grow through modern jazz changes while keeping the traditional jazz orchestra vital and alive. ~Christopher Fielder

April In Paris

Jeff Golub - The Vault

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:14
Size: 108.1 MB
Styles: Crossover jazz, Guitar jazz
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[3:46] 1. Funky As Funky Does
[3:48] 2. One More Excuse To Play The Blues
[3:29] 3. Open Up
[4:32] 4. Gimmie Some
[4:15] 5. Swagster
[4:13] 6. Keep The Ball Rolling
[4:43] 7. Jeff's Blues
[3:51] 8. Groanin'
[5:01] 9. Atlanta Nights
[9:32] 10. Naked City

The posthumously released all-star Jeff Golub benefit album, The Vault, brings together reworked and previously unreleased versions of songs the guitarist recorded prior to being diagnosed with the rare brain disease progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) in 2014. A debilitating condition, PSP robbed Golub of his eyesight and left the adept, genre-bending blues and jazz musician unable to play his guitar. Tragically, complications from the disease also led to his death in January 2015. Prior to his passing, however, several of Golub's longtime friends and collaborators, including trumpeter Rick Braun, music executive Bud Harner, and producer/engineer Steven Miller, assisted Golub in compiling these tracks. Golub then handpicked many of his favorite artists to add their own contemporary style to the recordings and create something fresh. Although many of the songs on The Vault, such as "Funky Is as Funky Does," off 1994's Avenue Blue and "Groanin'," off 1999's Out of the Blue, will be familiar to Golub's longtime fans, these are not the same tracks featured on the original albums. On the contrary, these are alternate versions reworked with newly recorded additions from such artists as Dave Koz, Mindi Abair, Kirk Whalum, Boney James, Jeff Lorber, Gerald Albright, Peter White, Richard Elliot, and others. ~Matt collar

The Vault

Dick Hyman & John Sheridan - Forgotten Dreams: Archives of Novelty Piano 1920's-1930's

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:14
Size: 141,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:50)  1. Echo of Spring
(2:54)  2. Concentratin'
(2:53)  3. Morning Air
(2:55)  4. Finger Buster
(3:09)  5. In the Dark
(3:47)  6. Soliloquy
(4:14)  7. Spring Fever
(3:12)  8. Southern Charms
(2:54)  9. Aunt Jemima's Birthday
(3:20) 10. Dancing Tamourine
(3:46) 11. Midsummer's Nightmare
(2:27) 12. Nickel in the Slot
(3:59) 13. Grandfather's Clock
(2:55) 14. My Pet
(2:17) 15. Lace Embroidery
(4:06) 16. Southern Exposure
(2:39) 17. Hobson Street Blues
(2:43) 18. Eye Opener
(3:05) 19. The Legend Of Lonesome Lake

When I first got into Jazz, I considered anything written and produced before, say, 1999 to be "Novelty" Jazz. So, it was with more than a little surprise that I popped Forgeotten Dreams into the CD player and was amazed to not hear Kenny G covers, but the style of music that had brought me into the Jazz realm. A fantastic album of songs penned by such greats as Zez Confrey, Willie "the Lion" Smith and Rube Bloom. All 19 cuts on this collection of hauntingly beautiful pieces is masterfully performed by the two men Sheridan and Hyman. 

Both men, performing on identical pianos for this recording, have shown that their 15+ years playing together has really created a unified flow to what they do. There are times when the two pianos are panned seperately into the speakers, so that one can distinguish the parts being play. There are times, particularly in "Finger Buster" when the two parts though panned are indistinguishable in a collision of sonic fury. An absolutely perfect companion for reading and/or writing, this album is certain to please any avid fan of Novelty Piano. ~ AAJ Staff  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/forgotten-dreams-archives-of-novelty-piano-1920s-1930s-dick-hyman-arbors-records-review-by-aaj-staff.php 
 
Personnel: Dick Hyman-Piano; John Sheridan-Piano

Forgotten Dreams: Archives of Novelty Piano   1920's-1930's

Dinah Washington - After Hours With Miss D

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2006
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 51:03
Size: 100,5 MB
Art: Front

( 7:52)  1. Blue skies (edited version)
( 6:58)  2. Bye bye blues
( 3:14)  3. Am i blue
( 2:31)  4. Our love is here to stay
( 7:59)  5. A foggy day
( 7:02)  6. I let a song go out of my heart
( 2:17)  7. Pennies from heaven
( 2:12)  8. Love for sale
(10:54)  9. Blue skies (unedited version)

Any self-respecting jazz musician would leap at the chance to record an afterhours session with Dinah Washington. One of the finest musician's singers, Washington demanded respect from her band and paid in return by giving her fellow players plenty of room for solos, on record or in concert. Her Dinah Jams LP from 1954 isn't just one of the finest jazz-meets-vocals dates, it's one of the best jam sessions ever released. One year earlier, she began recording the songs heard on After Hours With Miss D, a date sparked (as the original liner notes explained) by her enjoyment of the time after a standard recording date, those late hours when she could sing what she wanted, stretch out and treasure her notes while her musicians relaxed the rhythm. (The record also helped feed the appetite of many record-buyers, who would only after the fact hear tales of unmissable sessions at neglected clubs.) Listeners expecting a record of narcoleptic torch songs, however, may well be shocked by the dynamic range of this date, comprising ebullient stormers as well as slow blues. (Just because the band relaxes the rhythm certainly doesn't mean they have to slow it down.) 

The results of three sessions recorded one year apart, After Hours With Miss D featured a hand-picked band including Clark Terry on trumpet and Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis or Paul Quinichette on tenor, plus Washington's rock-solid rhythm section of bassist Keter Betts, drummer Ed Thigpen, and usually pianist Junior Mance (who made his debut with Dinah on the first of these dates). The first two selections are the best, the opener "Blue Skies" a studied introduction for all the principals (each of them heard in extended form on the eight-minute track), and the second a runaway train with Clark Terry's hyper-inflated trumpet as the conductor and the rest of the band carried along for the ride. Organist Jackie Davis leads the group into traditional afterhours territory, setting into a bluesy groove for "Am I Blue?" and "Pennies From Heaven." Washington meanwhile is at her interpretive best, whether tormented ("Love for Sale") or reflective ("A Foggy Day") or tranquil ("Pennies From Heaven"). Everyone gets to solo, as it should be, and the controlled environment makes this session a tighter display of finesse than the live-in-the-studio, completely frenetic Dinah Jams LP. ~ John Bush  http://www.allmusic.com/album/after-hours-with-miss-d-mw0000324908

Personnel: Dinah Washington (vocals); Rick Henderson (alto saxophone); Eddie Chamblee, Eddie" Lockjaw" Davis, Paul Quinichette (tenor saxophone); Clark Terry (trumpet); Gus Chappell (trombone); Clarence "Sleepy" Anderson, Junior Mance (piano); Jackie Davis (organ); Keter Betts (bass); Candido Camero (conga); Ed Thigpen (drums).

After Hours With Miss D

Laurindo Almeida - Guitar from Ipanema

Styles: Guitar Jazz, Brazilian Jazz
Year: 1964
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:07
Size: 69,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:20)  1. Girl from Ipanema
(3:10)  2. Manhã de Carnaval
(2:08)  3. Sarah's Samba
(2:59)  4. Winter Moon
(2:34)  5. Izabella
(2:49)  6. Choro for People in Love
(2:43)  7. Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars
(3:51)  8. Old Guitaron
(2:13)  9. Um Abraço No Bonfa
(3:04) 10. Twilight in Rio
(2:10) 11. The Fiddler's Wolf Whistle

It is a bit ironic that guitarist Laurindo Almeida found himself in the 1960's jumping on the bossa-nova bandwagon a bit late for he had actually pioneered the movement a decade earlier. The Brazilian guitarist plays well enough on the 11 bossa tunes included on this out-of-print Lp (mostly originals plus covers of "The Girl From Ipanema," "Manha De Carnaval" and "Quiet Nights Of Quiet Stars") but the arrangements (which sometimes utilize the whistling of Jack Marshall, George Field's harmonica and flutist Harry Klee among others) are commercial and overly concise; all but two of the songs are under three minutes. Irene Kral's two vocals (quite early in her career) are a plus and the music is quite pleasing but there are no surprises. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/guitar-from-ipanema-mw0000573855

Personnel: Laurindo Almeida (guitar); Irene Kral (vocals); Jack Marshall (whistling, guitar); Al Hendrickson (guitar); Fafá Lemos (violin); Harry Klee (flute); George Fields (harmonica); Djalma Ferreira (organ).

Guitar from Ipanema    

David Reinhardt - Spiritual Project

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:48
Size: 125,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:07)  1. Deux anges
(2:23)  2. There Is a Quiet Place
(4:31)  3. Paix sur terre
(5:32)  4. Conversion
(4:26)  5. Gloire et honneur
(6:29)  6. Nouvelle naissance
(6:16)  7. Jean 3.16
(4:04)  8. Tu Palabra
(5:00)  9. Je veux etre pret
(4:05) 10. Geneza
(3:59) 11. Who Would Imagine a King
(3:50) 12. Oh Happy Day

"This new album is born following an upheaval in my personal life. I asked myself many questions about life, death ... and I had a great need for spirituality. So I made a U-turn on myself and changed direction. This has inevitably been felt on my music. I wanted to convey these experiences but how? With words it's so hard! So I started composing. First "Conversion" and "New Birth." Then appeared in me the desire to start a band with musicians who share these values and want to convey a message of peace and love. 

It was then that I composed "Peace on Earth". For this album, I wanted a real sound group, each of the musicians put to music service, and "Glory and honor" who returns to duty .... I wanted to add to the original compositions masterpieces gospel directory such that "There is a quiet place" arranged by the group that my father introduced me to when I was three. This is my first memory of music " ~ David Reinhardt http://davidreinhardt.fr/spiritual-project/

Spiritual Project

Sunday, February 7, 2016

Joey DeFrancesco - Live: The Authorized Bootleg (Feat. George Coleman)

Size: 148,5 MB
Time: 64:10
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2007
Styles: Jazz: Modern Jazz, Hammond Organ
Art: Front & Back

01. Introduction ( 0:45)
02. Cherokee ( 9:17)
03. Ceora (Feat. Colleen McNabb) (13:50)
04. I'm In The Mood For Love ( 6:36)
05. On Green Dolphin Street (10:47)
06. Little Girl Blue (11:48)
07. Autumn Leaves (11:04)

Organist Joey DeFrancesco deserves credit for showcasing some comparatively neglected voices on the music scene, like tenor saxophonist Houston Person and clarinetist Mort Weiss. George Coleman, the featured guest on this outing, came up playing alto (Lee Morgan, City Lights, Blue Note 1957), though he would soon shift exclusively to tenor while retaining much of the smaller horn's high-register emphasis. A recently-issued 1963 Miles Davis concert with Coleman (Live at Monterey, Concord 2007) is so spellbinding it might lead to questions about Davis' judgment in replacing him with Wayne Shorter. Shorter chose abstract musical paths and, later, fusion, while Coleman remained close to the beleaguered center, continuing to fan the flames of hard bop in NYC Village quintets with frontline partner Danny Moore (whatever happened to this gifted trumpeter?) and New York power pianist Harold Mabern.

Always an imposing physical specimen, Coleman appears to have kept himself in shape musically as well. His favoring of the treble register of the horn is in evidence throughout, though of late he's introduced a degree of overcompensating support to his tones, which once bore a striking resemblance to the effortless altissimo of John Coltrane. Still, one could argue that the extra rawness makes him a better complement to the explosive rhetoric of DeFrancesco's B3. Whereas formerly the beauty of Coleman's playing frequently lay, like Davis' minimalism, in what was implied, his playing on this date, as DeFrancesco acknowledges during the program, is that of a man who "means business." The tones are frequently impassioned cries, the altissimos played not merely to the back row at Yoshi's but entering a sonic field ringing of quantum mechanical physics as much as tough-tenor testifying.

The program opens with a fearlessly flying "Cherokee" and adheres throughout to a mainstream melodic/harmonic line. Rather than attempt to run the changes and keep up with the rapid-fire articulations that a bop-minded player, or younger Coleman, might find hard to resist, the mature player opportunistically chooses his spots, frequently finding his way to the outer spatial regions of his horn's reach, occasionally adding an extra wallop to his phrases with a "phase-shifting," alternate-fingered climactic top tone. The approach is arguably problematic on Lee Morgan's artfully-constructed "Ceora," which simply refuses to cooperate with excessive tampering let alone bullying. Attempts to overpower its intricate melody or disturb its delicate harmonies can easily come off as unnecessary roughness. Also, recalling the inspired musical marriages of vocalists and tenor giants (Billie Holiday and Lester Young, Etta Jones and either Houston Person or Gene Ammons), where is Coleman during Colleen McNabb's time on the bandstand?

These quibbles aside, the combative veteran stands up to both the heavy-duty machine invented by Mr. Hammond and the indomitable playing by its present-day master as though the outcome were a foregone conclusion: as anyone should know, the man who "means business" seems to be saying, if you plan on having a musical street fight, and one of the pair is brandishing a Hammond B3, never bet against the guy with a Selmer Mark VI. ~by Samuel Chell

Personnel: Joey DeFrancesco: organ; George Coleman: tenor saxophone; Jake Langley: guitar; Byron Landham: drums; Colleen McNabb: vocal (on "I'm in the Mood for Love").

Live: The Authorized Bootleg

Ernestine Anderson - Live In New Orleans

Size: 127,0 MB
Time: 54:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Soul Blues, Jazzy Blues, Vocals
Art: Front

01. Autumn Leaves (11:08)
02. All I Need Is You (Live) ( 3:51)
03. All Blues (Live) ( 7:44)
04. I'm Walking (Live) ( 4:04)
05. What's New (Live) ( 5:34)
06. Sunny (Live) ( 6:04)
07. Please Send Me Someone To Love (Live) ( 4:06)
08. Thought About You (Live) ( 6:09)
09. Never Make Your Move Too Soon (Live) ( 6:16)

Scatting, talking along, singing, Ernestine Anderson wraps herself around a tune. Emerging in the ‘50’s with a hit album in 1956, she was hailed among the best, just behind Ella Fitzgerald and Sarah Vaughan. Recorded here in the ‘80’s, she’s in stride, in tune, her rich voice pulled along by the beat. Playing with her on this program, taped at Dukes Place atop the Monteleone Hotel in New Orleans French Quarter, are Terry Gibbs (vibes), Buddy DeFranco (Clarinet), Lou Levy (Piano), Bob Maize (bass) and Ray Mosca (drums). Her bluesed-up rendition of Fats Domino’s “I’m Walkin” is a real treat.

Live In New Orleans