Wednesday, March 16, 2016

The Hep Chaps - Swingin' On Nothing

Size: 115,3 MB
Time: 49:08
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2008
Styles: Jazz: Retro Swing, Jive, Vocals
Art: Front

01. Swingin' On Nothing (3:39)
02. Tickle Toe (2:45)
03. Cherokee (4:17)
04. S'wonderful (3:13)
05. The Lady Is A Tramp (3:29)
06. One For Press (3:23)
07. Easy To Dance With (3:01)
08. The D.I.Y. Song (3:35)
09. Summertime (3:59)
10. Cape Cod (3:45)
11. Into It (3:29)
12. Lady Be Good (3:31)
13. Spook's Holiday (2:55)
14. Hit That Jive Jack (4:00)

In incredible six-piece band formed by David Howarth and John Wallace, delivering punchy Swing Rhythms via original songs with zany lyrics and reworking favorites from the original Swing era. Rock'n'Roll fans will know John Wallace as a member of The Stargazers, and David Howarth from his roles in the stage musicals "Buddy" and "Good Rockin' Tonight". The Hep Chaps line-up also features guitar-ace Zac Zdravkovic, leader of British Rock'n'Roll favorites The Jive Romeros.

A fantastic album with boasts catchy swinging tunes, both new and old performed by the finest musicians the Swing Scene has to offer - and great vocals too!

Swingin' On Nothing

Earl Hines - Up To Date With Earl Hines

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1965
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:31
Size: 93,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:09)  1. Linger Awhile
(2:22)  2. Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams
(2:48)  3. It's A Pity To Say Goodnight
(3:26)  4. I've Got The World On A String
(2:04)  5. Sunday
(6:57)  6. It Had To Be You
(3:25)  7. A Cottage For Sale
(2:55)  8. Father's Freeway
(3:42)  9. The Man With The Horn
(2:25) 10. But Not For Me
(2:19) 11. Everything Depends On You
(3:54) 12. The Hour Of Parting

A brilliant keyboard virtuoso, Earl “Fatha” Hines was one of the first great piano soloists in jazz, and one of the very few musicians who could hold his own with Louis Armstrong. His so-called 'trumpet' style used doubled octaves in the right hand to produce a clear melodic line that stood out over the sound of a whole band, but he also had a magnificent technical command of the entire range of the keyboard. Earl Kenneth Hines was born into a musical family in Duquesne, Pennsylvania, on December 28, 1905. His father worked as a foreman at the local coal docks and played cornet with the Eureka Brass Band, a group that performed at picnics and dances. His mother, played organ and gave him his first piano lessons. Hines's sister, Nancy, also played organ, and his brother, Boots, played piano; his aunt sang light opera and his uncle played a variety of brass instruments. At age nine Hines started taking piano lessons, but he soon outgrew his teacher. He then studied classical technique under Von Holz, a teacher who introduced him to exercise books, and began to dream of becoming a concert pianist. In his teens Hines moved to Pittsburgh, where he attended Schenley High School and continued to study music. His musical direction changed abruptly when family members took Hines to the Liederhouse, a club featuring jazz, and he fell in love with the rhythm-filled music. After discovering the burgeoning jazz scene, he abandoned his plans to play classical music and immersed himself in jazz. At age 15 he formed a group with a violinist and drummer, and soon the trio was performing at high school functions, nightclubs, and church socials. Because Hines worked many late-night engagements, he decided to leave school when he was 16.

In 1922 Hines went to work with singer/band leader Lois B. Deppe at the Liederhouse, where he earned $15 a week. The band made forays into West Virginia, Ohio, and New York City, and in 1923 the young pianist traveled to Richmond, Indiana, where he attended his first recording session. In 1924 Hines led his own band for a short time and then, following the advice of pianist Eubie Blake, he moved to Chicago. In Chicago he met a cadre of first-class musicians, including Louis Armstrong, Jelly Roll Morton, and Benny Goodman, who were beginning to re-write the rules of jazz. In 1927 he joined with Armstrong and Zutty Singleton, and the trio performed a regular gig at the Café Sunset, an establishment that catered to gangsters and other high-dollar rollers. When the club temporarily closed in 1927, the band broke up and Hines joined clarinetist Jimmy Noone's band at the Apex Club. Armstrong, however, would soon call again, and together the old friends would make jazz history. In 1928 Hines rejoined Louis Armstrong on the Hot Five and Hot Seven recording sessions, playing on the classic “West End Blues”, “Fireworks”, “Basin Street Blues” and composing “ A Monday Date”, the young pianist was transformed from a local talent with potential into a jazz innovator to be emulated. Hines played with drummer Singleton, banjoist Mancy Cara, trombonist Fred Robinson, and clarinetist Jimmy Strong, and the group broke new ground, opening up a range of new musical possibilities for jazz players. Hines, was Armstrong's match, and the two traded solos and ideas, taking one another to new heights. No one had ever played the piano like that. He fashioned complex, irregular single- note patterns in the right hand, octave chords with brief tremolos that suggested a vibrato, stark single notes, and big flatted chords. The same year, Hines recorded as a soloist. He went into the studio in and recorded his first ten piano solos including versions of “A Monday Date,” “Blues in Third”, and “57 Varieties”.

On December 28, 1928, Hines's birthday, he began leading his own big band at the Grand Terrace Ballroom, a luxurious Chicago nightspot partly owned by Al Capone. “The Grand Terrace was the Cotton Club of Chicago,” Hines said, “and we were a show band as much as a dance band and a jazz band.” Hines and his orchestra worked seven days a week, performing three shows a night on weekdays and four shows on Saturdays. A national broadcast popularized the band outside Chicago, and the group spent two to three months of each year touring. The band also became one of the first African-American groups to travel widely in the South during the 1930s. Hines earned his nickname during this period. After he had given a radio announcer a “fatherly” lecture about his immoderate drinking, the announcer began introducing the pianist as “Father” Hines. The Grand Terrace band recorded frequently, and throughout the 1930s scored a number of hits, including “G.T. Stomp,” “Harlem Laments,” and “You Can Depend on Me.” Hines remained at the Grand Terrace for 11 years and then, believing he was underpaid, left with his band in 1940.

Hines held his band together for the next eight years, and they continued to perform such popular hits as “Jelly Jelly,” “Boogie-Woogie on the St. Louis Blues,” and “Stormy Monday Blues.”. Billy Eckstine became the band's popular singer and in 1943 both Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker were added. In 1946 Hines suffered an injury in an automobile accident that caused him to curtail his touring; by 1948, due to a decline in the popularity of big bands, he broke up the 24-member group. Later in 1948 Hines reverted to sideman status and rejoined his old friend Armstrong. Louis Armstrong's All Stars toured Europe in 1948-49, and attended the 1948 jazz festival at Nice, France. In 1951 Hines left Armstrong to work in a number of smaller settings. In September of 1955, Hines settled into a regular job at the Hangover Club in San Francisco, one of the last bastions for more traditional forms of jazz. Although he toured annually, traveling to Canada, England, and the European continent, the Hangover Club was his mainstay during the late 1950s and early 1960s. In 1963 Hines opened his own club in Oakland, but the venture was short-lived. In 1964 he abandoned his low profile by playing a successful series of dates at the Little Theatre in New York, and the pianist was once more in great demand. In 1966 Hines joined the State Department's jazz combo and traveled to Russia as a goodwill ambassador. During the 1970s he continued to tour the United States and the world with his quartet, and recorded prolifically during this period, turning out classics like “Tour De Force” and “Quintessential Continued” with natural ease.

Although Hines disliked his nickname, critics have pointed out that it is an appropriate one: he is indeed the father of modern jazz piano. Before him, most jazz pianists were either blues performers, or stride pianists, Hines filled the space between these approaches with an almost hornlike style. Today jazz aficionados accept the piano as a mainstay of jazz, thanks to Hines's seminal work with Armstrong and his work as a soloist in 1928. Unlike some early jazz performers, he continued to embrace new music over his 50-year career, and his personal style continued to grow in complexity. Even at the late stage of his career, Hines constantly took chances and came up with surprising and consistently fresh ideas. Despite heart problems and arthritis, Hines performed until a week before his death in Oakland, California, on April 22, 1983 Aptly referred to as “the first modern jazz pianist,” Earl Hines differed from the stride pianists of the 1920s by breaking up the stride rhythms with unusual accents from his left hand. While his right hand often played octaves so as to ring clearly over ensembles, Hines had the trickiest left hand in the business, often suspending time recklessly but without ever losing the beat. Earl “Fatha” Hines left a discography of well over one hundred albums alone, not counting the early sides, and hundreds of sessions as accompanist and sideman. http://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/earlhines

Personnel:  Bass – Aaron Bell;  Drums – Jimmy Crawford;  Piano – Earl Hines;  Tenor Saxophone – Budd Johnson;  Violin, Cornet – Ray Nance

Up To Date With Earl Hines

Peggy Lee & Quincy Jones - Blues Cross Country + If You Go (CD 1/2)

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:51
Size: 175,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:29)  1. Kansas City
(3:04)  2. Basin Steet Blues
(2:38)  3. Los Angeles Blues
(2:53)  4. I Left My Sugar (In Salt Lake City)
(1:52)  5. The Grain Belt Blues
(3:21)  6. New York City Blues
(2:37)  7. Goin' To Chicago Blues
(2:37)  8. San Francisco Blues
(3:11)  9. Fisherman's Wharf
(2:05) 10. Boston Beans
(2:42) 11. The Train Blues
(2:15) 12. St. Louios Blues
(1:53) 13. Hey! Look Me Over
(2:52) 14. As Time Goes By
(2:43) 15. If You Go
(2:37) 16. Oh Love Hast Thou Forsaken Me
(2:58) 17. Say It Isn't So
(2:49) 18. I Wish I Didn't Love You So
(2:04) 19. Maybe It's Because
(2:48) 20. I'm Gonna Laugh You Out Of My Life
(2:49) 21. I Get Along With You Very Well
(2:30) 22. Gipsy Soul
(3:16) 23. When I Was A Child
(2:50) 24. Here Is Rthat Rainy Day
(2:21) 25. Smile
(2:57) 26. Deep Purple
(3:08) 27. Farewell To Arms
(3:19) 28. Fever

This two-fer from Fresh Sound features a pair of out of print Peggy Lee LP's, If You Go and Blues Cross Country originally issued on Capitol in 1961 and 1962 respectively. The albums highlight 28 songs including "Basin Street Blues," "Goin' to Chicago Blues," "As Time Goes By," and "Here's That Rainy Day." 

This is great material but is geared more toward the collector. Casual listeners would be better served by the one of the many Peggy Lee compilations. ~ Al Campbell http://www.allmusic.com/album/blue-cross-country-if-you-go-mw0002325291

Featuring: Peggy Lee (vcl), with Quincy Jones (arr, cond). Orchestras includes Jack Sheldon, Pete Candoli (tp), Frank Rosolino (tb), Benny Carter, Buddy Collette, Plas Johnson, Bill Perkins (saxes), Jimmy Rowles (p), Dennis Budimir (g), Shelly Manne (d)

Blues Cross Country + If You Go (CD 1/2)

Tal Farlow - The Swinging Guitar Of Tal Farlow

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:15
Size: 145,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:47)  1. Taking a Chance on Love
(5:19)  2. Yardbird Suite
(5:43)  3. You Stepped Out of a Dream
(5:46)  4. The Can't Take That Away From Me
(6:42)  5. Like Someone in Love
(6:39)  6. Meteor
(5:48)  7. I Love You
(6:48)  8. Gone With the Wind
(5:10)  9. Taking a Chance on Love (alternative take)
(5:04) 10. Yardbird Suite (alternative take)
(5:26) 11. Gone With the Wind (alternative take)

The Swinging Guitar of Tal Farlow not only presents Farlow at his swinging best but also features the brilliant pianist Eddie Costa in one of his too few recordings. In many ways this is a duet recording with Farlow and Costa playing off of each other above a traditional bass accompaniment. In this case "play" is no casual adjective, the chemistry between Farlow and Costa is extraordinary with lively intertwining solos and double voicings demonstrating their intuitive rapport. Bassist Vinnie Burke is also capable of impressive solo work as demonstrated on "They Can't Take That Away From Me" in which he rises out of his supportive role to dominate the stage with a long, imaginative solo. Burke usually plays with a deep, walking bass solidity which contrasts with the often fleet, ringing guitar lines of Farlow; both crucial contributions to the success of this trio's unique "sound." Eddie Costa, who died six years later at the age of 32, was already a complete pianist at the time of this recording. He provides Farlow and Burke with sensitive and challenging comping while his solo work is always quirky and interesting revealing a percussive quality that suggests the indirect influence of his other instrument the vibes. 

Tal Farlow has never played more fluidly, displaying a rhythmic ease and agility that is sometimes startling. In this mix of swing and boppish tunes, his solo on "Yardbird Suite" is "evidence enough that at his best he belongs with Charlie Christian and Chuck Wayne as one of the early masters of the be-bop guitar. Farlow, Costa, and Burke - this was quite a trio, an exciting jazz trio that knew what playing together was all about. ~ Mike Neely  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-swinging-guitar-of-tal-farlow-tal-farlow-verve-music-group-review-by-mike-neely.php

Personnel: Tal Farlow, guitar; Eddie Costa, piano; and Vinnie Burke, bass.

The Swinging Guitar Of Tal Farlow

Eric Legnini Trio - Miss Soul

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:36
Size: 127,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:26)  1. The Memphis Dude
(3:46)  2. Sugar Ray
(4:00)  3. Home Sweet Soul
(4:49)  4. For all we know
(4:44)  5. Joga
(4:02)  6. Horace Vorace
(5:28)  7. La Strada
(3:56)  8. Miss Soul
(3:32)  9. Daahoud
(5:42) 10. Prelude to a kiss
(4:28) 11. Back Home
(7:41) 12. Lisbon Stomp

Eric Trio Legnigni Soul Miss a Cd that sounds black, the first sense of soul and groove high dose blown. Anchored in jazz blue notes issued by a trio in a deliberately swing angle: admit that today in the orbit of a jazz label Europeanized, keyboard particular issue, we had more or less lost the habit . Belgian pianist revealed in the orchestra of Stefano Di Battista, known as accompanist especially, has just recorded the first album released under his name in the hexagon. The opportunity to prove an undeniable expertise on square binary constructions in the manner of a Horace Silver (Home Sweet Soul). Yet the choice of themes between past and standard song today (Joga Bjork revamped) used as the basis (a delicate touch on innervated ballads blues) indicate a true adaptation talent and a sharpened sense of arrangement (he has already demonstrated with Claude Nougaro particular), Eric Legnini makes reference to both Eroll Garner as Herbie Hanckok pays tribute to Phineas Newborn (Sugar Ray and tasty bluesy version of Back Home). Pianistic personality should therefore be to understand all facets and a European trio first way (belgofranco-Italian) which has a maximum cohesion and a beautiful ensemble sound. If one believes the title Legnini chose to play on the soul spirit distilled in his female attire, with an elegance so-called swing better.

Right balance between groovy and evocations of the most introspective moments without the rhythmic vivacity is neglected. Legnini leads his listener's trio mates to a live jazz, lively, which was dated to be more relevant than the number of projects pioneering --The World There are more than listening to this album fly high once again and discover new shimmering ~ Classica Directory http://www.amazon.fr/Miss-Soul-Eric-Legnini-Trio/dp/B00DSYR5BC

Personnel:  Double Bass – Matthias Allamane (tracks: 1, 2, 12), Rosario Bonaccorso;  Drums – Franck Agulhon;  Piano – Eric Legnini

Miss Soul

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Derek Smith - To Love Again

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:47
Size: 126,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:45)  1. To Love Again
(3:26)  2. When Your Lover Has Gone
(3:54)  3. The Bad And The Beautiful
(4:42)  4. Last Night When We Were Young
(4:24)  5. Moon Light Sonata Yesterday
(3:47)  6. Too Late Now
(3:58)  7. A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square
(3:04)  8. Waltz
(3:02)  9. Darn That Dream
(3:35) 10. Elvira Madigan
(3:32) 11. Glad To Be Unhappy
(4:22) 12. We'll Be Together Again
(3:04) 13. September Song
(3:42) 14. I Get Along Without You Very Well
(3:28) 15. Sweet Lorraine

A jazz pianist noted for his versatility and elegance, Derek Smith was born August 17, 1931, in London, England. After taking up the piano in early childhood, he began his professional career at the age of just 14, and by the early '50s was a staple on the U.K. jazz scene, regularly performing with the likes of Kenny Graham, John Dankworth, and Kenny Baker. In the mid-'50s, Smith relocated to New York City, where he became a session musician in much demand by studio orchestras and other recording units; he also continued pursuing his jazz aspirations in the company of Benny Goodman and Connie Kay.

Smith continued moving back and forth from studio work to live jazz dates for years to come, and at the end of the 1960s added to his workload piano duties in Doc Severinsen's Tonight Show Orchestra. In the 1970s, he reunited frequently with Goodman, and in 1978 finally led his own recording date, Love for Sale. The Man I Love followed later that same year, and in the decades to come, Smith's presence on the jazz landscape increased considerably; in addition to solo performances, he also regularly played in a trio with Milt Hinton and Bobby Rosengarden. ~ Jason Ankeny  https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/derek-smith/id81820237#fullText

To Love Again

Ralph Bowen - Keep The Change

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:51
Size: 165,0 MB
Art: Front

(8:00)  1. Boy For Sale
(7:35)  2. Who Will Buy
(8:58)  3. Elevation
(6:44)  4. For You
(8:55)  5. Thru Traffic
(7:45)  6. For D.E.
(8:09)  7. In The Good Old Summertime
(9:17)  8. Gordon
(6:25)  9. Keep The Change

Keep the Change is the third session by tenor saxophonist Ralph Bowen for the Criss Cross label. Bowen assembled an impressive quintet of in-demand New York musicians including trumpeter Ryan Kisor, pianist Orrin Evans, bassist Reuben Rogers, and drummer Gregory Hutchinson. 

Bowen and company stay away from rehashing the same old standards, the exception being a brisk stroll through "In the Good Old Summertime" with a nine-track set of neo-bop, including the disc's high point: Bowen's composition "Elevation," which originally appeared on Orrin Evans' 2002 release Meant to Shine. While this may not be a groundbreaking session, fans of modern bop should definitely check it out. ~ Al Campbell  http://www.allmusic.com/album/keep-the-change-mw0000334445

Personnel: Ralph Bowen (tenor saxophone); Ryan Kisor (trumpet); Orrin Evans (piano); Reuben Rogers (bass); Gregory Hutchinson (drums).

Keep The Change

George Robert & Kenny Barron - Peace

Styles: Saxophone And Piano Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:12
Size: 159,1 MB
Art: Front

( 2:36)  1. Peace
( 7:28)  2. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
( 8:17)  3. Softly As In A Morning Sunrise
( 9:19)  4. Soul Eyes
(10:48)  5. Tristeza
( 6:50)  6. Blue Monk
( 8:09)  7. Round Midnight
( 7:44)  8. A Day In Paris
( 7:58)  9. Song For Abdullah

Swiss saxophonist George Robert is one of the top players of his generation, though he seems appreciated far more in Europe and Asia than in the U.S., probably because few of his recordings as a leader have been made for American labels. Known primarily for his brilliant work on alto sax, he opens this live duo date on soprano sax, with the phenomenal pianist Kenny Barron as his sole accompanist. The haunting ballad "Peace" is a superb opener, followed by a dancing "I Didn't Know What Time It Was." Barron launches the furious post-bop interpretation of "Softly, As in a Morning Sunrise," with Robert switching back to alto. The shimmering rendition of Mal Waldron's "Soul Eyes" is absolutely breathtaking. Barron has long been one of the most effective interpreters of the works ofThelonious Monk; both his playful approach to "Blue Monk" and his long introduction to "'Round Midnight" uncover new ground in each of these popular songs. The disc wraps with Barron's thoughtful ballad "Song for Abdullah," which Robert sits out. The brilliant sound of this DIW CD gives one the feeling of having a front row seat in the Geneva concert hall where it took place. ~ Ken Dryden  http://www.allmusic.com/album/peace-mw0000027608

Personnel:  Piano – Kenny Barron;  Saxophone [Alto, Soprano] – George Robert

Peace

Monday, March 14, 2016

Susie Arioli - Spring

Size: 108,0 MB
Time: 45:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Loverboy (3:51)
02. Mean To Me (4:19)
03. Dearest Darling (3:50)
04. Can't Say No (3:22)
05. Evenin' (3:37)
06. Those Lonely, Lonely Nights (3:11)
07. I'm The Caring Kind (3:30)
08. Me, Myself And I (4:08)
09. Spring (2:37)
10. Someone Else (4:54)
11. Travelin' Light (3:53)
12. After You're Gone (4:42)

Canadian Jazz singer from Montreal and multiple Juno-Award nominee Susie Arioli, presents another spectacular rhythm-based recording on Spring, a spectacular blues and soul-influenced vocal project combining four fresh originals with a selection of vibrant standards for a very spicy and rousing good time. Under the direction of multi-instrumentalist/arranger and multiple Juno-Award winner Don Thompson, Arioli fronts a nine-piece ensemble that, on various occasions, sounds like a big band machine. With this superb support, the songstress delivers warm ballads, moving blues and soul-infused rhythms along with an array of swinging orchestrations.

The rousing original "Loverboy" opens the date in swinging style as the vocalist leads the music with the able assistance of a five-piece horn section consisting of tenor saxophonist Phil Dwyer, altoist Andy Ballantyne, baritone saxophonist Shirantha Beddage, trombonist Kelsley Grant and featured trumpeter Kevin Turcotte, who provides a hot solo here with nice guitar work in the background by Reg Schwager. The Turk/Ahlert jazz standard "Mean to Me" follows with Arioli voicing the lyrics against the backdrop of drummer Terry Clarke's splashing cymbal accents accompanying Thompson's piano lines and vibraphone solo work marking this tune, one of the best of the disc. Incidentally, Thompson and Clarke have a long history of collaborating together on musical projects.

The soulful and bluesy elements of the album come into play on such tracks as "Dearest Darling," "Can't Say No," "Evenin' "and on Earl King's "Those Lonely, Lonely Nights." The original title track is a beautiful soft number which demonstrates the singer's talents as a writer. The Johnny Mercer/Trummy Young standard "Travelin' Light," allows Arioli an opportunity to showcase her vocal treatment of ballads with her original "Someone Else" displaying the light sounds of Brasil on a gorgeous bossa nova featuring Thompson on a sweet vibe solo.

The singer turns on the charm and gets back into the swing on such lively pieces as "I'm the Caring Kind," "Me, Myself and I" and the sizzling finale "After You're Gone," completing another attention-deserving recording certain to make Susie Arioli's Spring, a jazz vocals album for all seasons that lovers of the style and jazz audiences in general, are bound to enjoy and spin often. ~by Edward Blanco

Personnel: Susie Arioli: vocals; Don Thompson: piano, vibraphone; Terry Clarke: drums; Neil Swainson: bass; Reg Schwager: guitar; Phil Dwyer: tenor saxophone; Kevin Turcotte: trumpet; Andy Ballantyne: alto saxophone; Shirantha Beddage: baritone saxophone; Kelsley Grant: trombone.

Spring

Dave Dwyer & The L.A. Cruisers - LA Groovin'

Size: 100,6 MB
Time: 39:50
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz/Blues
Art: Front

01. La Groovin' (4:41)
02. Fretzel Logic (6:09)
03. Bayridge Blues (4:31)
04. Santa Monica Sunset (4:46)
05. A Storm Is Coming (5:40)
06. Sittin' On The Beach (3:54)
07. Skunk's Skank (4:31)
08. One Final Word (5:33)

LA Groovin’ is a “Concept Album”, born out of my time spent in both Los Angeles and New York during the mid 1990’s.

After my Band 1927 decided to take a 1 Year hiatus, I decided to move to the US to explore other musical avenues and was lucky enough to be able to live and work with my good friend Jeff Baxter (Doobie Brothers, Steely Dan) in Bel Air, and soak up the sights and sounds of the West Coast American music culture that had influenced much of my Career.

This Album is a celebration of my time in America, all the sights and sounds, and the many wonderful people that I met, and the fabulous musicians that I worked with during that 6 month period.

The title track LA Groovin’ was inspired by the excitement a young Aussie guitar player felt at first landing in Los Angeles, and the closing track One Final Word encapsulates my feelings of leaving my musical “Promised Land”. The rest are the stories in between.

I hope you enjoy LA Groovin’ as much as I did living my American Musical Dream. ~Dave Dwyer

LA Groovin'

Candy Dulfer - Crazy

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:16
Size: 129,6 MB
Art: Front

(0:52)  1. Stop All That Noise
(4:07)  2. Crazy
(4:00)  3. Hey Now
(4:21)  4. Flame
(4:03)  5. Good Music
(3:30)  6. Complic8ed Lives
(0:35)  7. Calling Next Door
(4:14)  8. Electric Blue
(4:14)  9. In Or Out
(4:04) 10. I Do
(4:07) 11. Rocket Rocket
(5:38) 12. No End
(0:26) 13. Open Up
(4:50) 14. Please Don't Stop
(6:08) 15. Too Close

Candy pushes the whole musical experience to the edge once again on her new recording, Crazy. The 15-song set includes numerous tracks co-written and produced by multi-instrumentalist Printz Board whose mile-long list of credits includes musical director for the Black Eyed Peas for more than a decade, as well as work with a broad range of artists: Macy Gray, Mariah Carey, Sergio Mendes Gomez, Katy Perry,Burt Bacharach and dozens more. When saxophonist Candy Dulfer steps onto the stage or into the studio, everything is immediately up for grabs and anything can happen. 

This sexy, high-energy vibe seemingly out-of-control, yet always carefully calculated is a direct result of her consistently hot and sweet confection of jazz, funk, R&B, soul, pop, techno and more. It's a no-holds-barred recipe that has served her and her worldwide fan base well since her earliest recordings at the start of the 1990s. ~ Editorial Reviews  http://www.amazon.com/Crazy-Candy-Dulfer/dp/B006GVNIDI

Personnel: Candy Dulfer (vocals, alto saxophone).

Crazy

Carmen Bradford - With Respect

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:15
Size: 122,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:52)  1. Even Steven
(4:08)  2. You'll Have To Swing It (Mr. Paganini)
(4:58)  3. Look Who's Mine
(5:10)  4. High Wire
(4:47)  5. Finally
(3:52)  6. Maybe Now
(4:12)  7. Little Esther
(4:43)  8. Ain't No Use
(4:43)  9. Was I In Love Alone
(5:53) 10. He comes to Me for Comfort
(5:53) 11. Nature Boy

Carmen Bradford is a belter, a singer not afraid to show off her emotions or to occasionally go over the top. She toured with Count Basie's Orchestra for nine years but somehow never achieved much fame, only recording on a very irregular basis as a singer despite her strong musicality and powerful pipes. This set is a fine all-around showcase, featuring her with a variety of small groups including ensembles with either Cedar Walton or Donald Brown on piano. Among the other prominent players are vibraphonist Steve Nelson, guitarist Dori Caymmi, saxophonist Charles Owens, and (on a closing duet version of "Nature Boy") guitarist Michael O'Neill. Although it probably was not the best idea to perform "You'll Have to Swing It (Mr. Paganini)" (since Ella owns it), Bradford sounds particularly strong on the more recent and obscure material, including Chick Corea's "High Wire," Cedar Walton's "Even Steven," and Red Mitchell's "Finally." Since she has not recorded all that often since this period, With Respect is still Carmen Bradford's definitive recording. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/with-respect-mw0000174309

Personnel:  Vocals – Carmen Bradford;  Bass – James Leary, Robert Hurst;  Drums – Ralph Penland;  Flute, Saxophone – Charles Owens;  Guitar – Dori Caymmi , Michael O'Neill, Wali Ali;  Percussion – Bill Summers;  Piano – Cedar Walton, Donald Brown;  Vibraphone – Steve Nelson

With Respect

Tal Farlow - Autumn In New York

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1954
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:44
Size: 82,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:12)  1. I Like To Recognize The Tune
(3:29)  2. Strike Up The Band
(5:06)  3. Autumn In New York
(4:25)  4. And She Remembers Me
(3:25)  5. Little Girl Blue
(4:59)  6. Have You Met Miss Jones
(5:13)  7. Tal's Blues
(4:50)  8. Cherokee

A generally relaxed date (only "Cherokee" is uptempo), Tal Farlow's pretty tone and tasteful improvising style are the main reasons to search for this disc. Pianist Gerry Wiggins, bassist Ray Brown, and drummer Chico Hamilton offer quiet and swinging support of the great guitarist, who performs two originals ("And She Remembers Me" and "Tal's Blues"), plus six superior standards. All of Farlow's Verve releases of the '50s are recommended. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/autumn-in-new-york-mw0000347284

Personnel:  Tal Farlow – guitar;  Gerry Wiggins – piano;  Ray Brown – bass;  Chico Hamilton – drums

Autumn In New York

Kenny Barron - Book Of Intuition

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:10
Size: 138,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:54)  1. Magic Dance
(5:30)  2. Bud Like
(6:02)  3. Cook's Bay
(6:34)  4. In the Slow Lane
(6:55)  5. Shuffle Boil
(4:09)  6. Light Blue
(5:09)  7. Lunacy
(5:59)  8. Dreams
(4:43)  9. Prayer
(7:11) 10. Nightfall

Kenny Barron, the 72-year-old Philadelphia-born virtuoso, is the kind of jazz pianist whose resources are familiar and much-covered by mainstream swing players, but whose joyfully extravagant execution is a rarity today. That quality transforms this trio set from being a canter through a smooth-jazzy assortment of soft ballads, Latin smoochers and glossy swing. Barron has absorbed an encyclopaedia of jazz methods from a life on the road with legends such as Ella Fitzgerald and Stan Getz, and it pours out in these tracks. Magic Dance, with its glistening chords and Latin-jazz tick, sounds smooth at first but unleashes an impulsive torrent. Ballads such as In the Slow Lane display his impeccably light touch and Thelonious Monk’s Shuffle Boil isn’t Monkishly lateral but swings furiously. The jangling Lunacy is a collective bustle prodded by bassist Kiyoshi Kitagawa and drummer Johnathan Blake, while Nightfall is delicate drift through slow chords. There might be too many notes for some on this record, but it’s almost all affectingly musical just the same.  http://www.theguardian.com/music/2016/mar/03/kenny-barron-trio-book-of-intuition-review-joyful-extravagance-of-execution

If you have been vaguely wondering what happened to wholehearted, outgoing jazz piano in the grand manner, just listen to this album’s opening track, Magic Dance. It has everything – attractive melody, unbuttoned swing, virtuosity and enough rhythmic sleight-of-hand to keep you wide awake. Among the dozen or so most admired pianists in jazz today, Kenny Barron strikes me as the one who wears his mastery most comfortably. From a languid piece such as Dreams, to Thelonious Monk’s fiendishly tricky Shuffle-Boil, there’s a gentle firmness to his playing. In some mysterious way he makes the piano sound bigger too. Bassist Kiyoshi Kitagawa and drummer Johnathan Blake follow every move with seamless subtlety. http://www.theguardian.com/music/2016/mar/06/kenny-barron-trio-book-of-intuition-review

Personnel:  Kenny Barron – Piano;  Kiyoshi Kitagawa – Bass;  Johnathan Blake – Drums.

Book Of Intuition

Sunday, March 13, 2016

Shirley Scott - Queen Of The Organ

Styles: Jazz, Hard Bop
Year: 1964
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:03
Size: 164,0 MB
Art: Front

(7:34)  1. Just In Time
(9:59)  2. Squeeze Me (But Don't Tease Me)
(9:39)  3. Mean, Angry, Nasty, And Low Down
(9:11)  4. Can't Buy Me Love
(8:52)  5. Like Blue
(8:16)  6. Cute
(8:28)  7. Rapid Shave
(7:50)  8. That's For Me
(1:08)  9. The Theme

This CD reissue brings back all of the music previously put out on the two-LP set The Great Live Sessions with the exception of one number ("Shirley's Shuffle") left out due to lack of space; with over 70 minutes of music, one cannot complain too much about the omission. Overall, this is a pretty definitive live set featuring organist Shirley Scott, tenor saxophonist Stanley Turrentine, bassist Bob Cranshaw and drummer Otis "Candy" Finch, one of the great soul-jazz combos of the 1960s. In addition to a swinging "Just In Time" and Duke Ellington's "Squeeze Me, But Please Don't Tease Me," the set mostly features obscurities and originals, plus a surprisingly effective version of the Beatles' "Can't Buy Me Love." The musicians sound quite heated and consistently inspired. Highly recommended. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/queen-of-the-organ-mw0000617897

Personnel: Shirley Scott (organ), Stanley Turrentine (tenor saxophone), Bob Cranshaw (bass), Otis "Candy" Finch (drums).

Queen Of The Organ

Ernestine Anderson - Big City

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 1983
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 39:43
Size: 64,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:36)  1. All I Need Is You
(4:31)  2. Street Of Dreams
(4:07)  3. Spring Is Here
(3:33)  4. The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin' Groovy)
(4:28)  5. I'll Never Pass This Way Again
(4:40)  6. Big City
(4:44)  7. All Blues
(4:58)  8. Welcome To The Club
(5:03)  9. I Didn't Know What Time It Was

This well-rounded set features vocalist Ernestine Anderson on a few classics (including "Street of Dreams," "All Blues" and "I Didn't Know What Time It Was"), plus some newer material (including a surprisingly successful version of "The 59th Street Bridge Song"). She is accompanied by pianist Hank Jones, bassist Monty Budwig and drummer Jeff Hamilton, giving listeners a strong example of her singing. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/big-city-mw0000653934

Personnel: Ernestine Anderson (vocals); Hank Jones (piano); Jeff Hamilton (drums)

Big City    

Enrico Rava - Chanson

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:49
Size: 131,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:18)  1. Diva
(3:03)  2. Could Be a Tango
(1:51)  3. Bellflower
(2:22)  4. Balls
(4:26)  5. Autoritratto
(2:17)  6. Que Reste -T-Il De Nos Amours
(1:57)  7. Palami D'Amore Mariu'
(3:28)  8. What's New
(2:08)  9. My Crazy Valentine
(3:20) 10. Blue in Green
(4:40) 11. The Door Without the Door
(3:18) 12. Question
(5:14) 13. Giselle
(2:58) 14. Feuiles D'Automne
(3:31) 15. Parks
(7:49) 16. Spleen

This hugely popular trumpet player (born in Trieste, Italy in 1939) almost single-handedly brought Italian jazz to international attention. He began playing Dixieland trombone in Turin, but after hearing Miles Davis, switched instruments and embraced the modern style. Other key meetings were with Gato Barbieri, with whom he recorded movie soundtracks in 1962, and Chet Baker. He began to play with Steve Lacy; he also teamed up with South African expatriates Louis Moholo and John Dyani and recorded The Forest and the Zoo (ESP) live in Argentina. In 1967, he moved to New York, playing with Roswell Rudd, Marion Brown, Rashied Ali, Cecil Taylor, and Charlie Haden. In a brief return to Europe, Rava recorded with Lee Konitz (Stereokonitz, RCA) and Manfred Schoof (European Echoes, FMP). From 1969 to 1976, he was back in New York, recording Escalator Over the Hill with Carla Bley's Jazz Composers' Orchestra. After his first album as a leader, Il Giro del Giorno in 80 Mondi (Black Saint), he began to lead his own pianoless quartets and quintets. His recorded output numbers 100 records, 30 as a leader.

ECM has reissued some of his essential recordings of the '70s, like The Pilgrim and the Stars, The Plot, and Enrico Rava Quartet, while Soul Note and Label Bleu published CDs by his innovative Electric Five (in reality a sextet, as he always excludes himself from the count), which includes two electric guitars. With keyboard master Franco D'Andrea and trumpeter Paolo Fresu, Rava recorded Bix and Pop (Philology) and Shades of Chet, tributes to Bix Beiderbecke and Armstrong, and to Chet Baker, respectively. Also of note are Rava, L'opera Va and Carmen, gorgeous readings of opera arias. In 2001, he created a new quintet with young talents Gianluca Petrella, Stefano Bollani, Rosario Bonaccorso, and Roberto Gatto, and toured with old friends Roswell Rudd and Gato Barbieri, releasing Easy Living with them in 2004 on ECM. Three years later, after Bollani, who had struck out as a solo player, was replaced by Andrea Pozza, The Words and the Days came out. In 2007, Rava and pianist Stefano Bollani released The Third Man on ECM. Rava followed the released in 2009 with New York Days, a collection of moody originals with a film noir tinge, backed by a band that included Bollani, tenor saxophonist Mark Turner, bassist Larry Grenadier, and drummer Paul Motian. Rava broke in a new all-Italian quintet for Tribe, which was issued by ECM in the fall of 2011. Its members included trombonist Gianluca Petrella, pianist Giovanni Guidi, bassist Gabriele Evangelista, and drummer Fabrizio Sferra. Guitarist Giacomo Ancillotto also guested on the set, expanding the lineup on various selections. Rava made a wide left turn for 2012's On the Dance Floor. Amazingly, the trumpeter only became aware of pop singer Michael Jackson's music after his death, and he became obsessed with it. The album, his tribute to what he considers the late singer's contribution to 20th century music, was recorded with Parco della Musica Jazz Lab at the Rome Auditorium; it is entirely comprised of Jackson's material. http://www.allmusic.com/artist/enrico-rava-mn0000182392/biography

Chanson

Saturday, March 12, 2016

Enrico Rava & Paolo Fresu - Shades of Chet

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:47
Size: 134,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:28)  1. Doodlin'
(9:55)  2. My funny Valentine
(5:18)  3. Anthropology
(7:27)  4. Retrato em branco e preto
(7:03)  5. Doxy
(7:34)  6. You can't go home again
(7:15)  7. Line for Lyons
(3:29)  8. Strike up the band
(5:14)  9. Donna

Trumpeter and composer Enrico Rava is one of the Italian musicians even more internationally acclaimed jazz. Born in Trieste in 1939, Rava has learned to play by himself under the influence of Miles Davis and Chet Baker. In the 60s he moved first to Rome, where he began playing with musicians as Gato Barbieri and Steve Lacy, and then in Buenos Aires and New York. During his long career Rava has collaborated with major names in jazz (John Abercrombie, Lee Konitz, Pat Metheny) and pop music (Gino Paoli, Ornella Vanoni) and has also published numerous discs of their group leader. 
~ Mariano Prunes  https://itunes.apple.com/it/artist/enrico-rava/id6473819#fullText

Personnel: Enrico Rava - trumpet, fluegelhorn;  Paolo Fresu - trumpet, fluegelhorn;  Stefano Bollani – piano;  Enzo Pietropaoli - double bass;  Roberto Gatto - drums

Shades of Chet

Marilyn Scott - Innocent Of Nothing

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:48
Size: 133,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:57)  1. Round & Round
(6:13)  2. 'Round Midnight
(4:44)  3. Icebox
(5:40)  4. Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most
(4:22)  5. Moods
(5:30)  6. It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)
(5:54)  7. Share It
(5:34)  8. The Wilderness
(4:49)  9. A Flame
(5:08) 10. A Change
(4:53) 11. Walking With Stranges (Bonus Track)

Throughout her career, singer Marilyn Scott has straddled a line between traditional jazz vocals and the poppier side of fusion. Innocent of Nothing tilts slightly toward the latter, with catchy R&B-based tunes like "Icebox" and "Round and Round" alongside an oddly overwrought version of Bob Dylan's "It's Alright Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)" that brings Scott Walker's melodramatics to mind. However, Scott's jazz side reasserts itself on her challenging take on the Thelonious Monk standard "Round Midnight," which Scott approaches with the rhythmic fearlessness of Jeanne Lee or indeed Monk himself. Throughout, producer and bandleader George Duke keeps the emphasis on Scott's vocals, using the tropes of contemporary smooth jazz (lots of fretless bass and electric piano, that sort of thing) while never letting the album devolve into soulless background music prettiness, even on lightweight tunes like "A Flame." In terms of Scott's vocal technique, Innocent of Nothing is something of a step back from 2004's Nightcap, a masterful collection of standards that features some of Scott's finest singing, but as a whole, this album shows that interesting work can still be done in the oft-maligned field of jazz-pop. ~ Stewart Mason  http://www.allmusic.com/album/innocent-of-nothing-mw0000529680

Personnel: Marilyn Scott (vocals); George Duke, John Beasley, Patrice Rushen, Russell Ferrante (keyboards); Jimmy Haslip, Brian Bromberg (bass instrument); Vinnie Colaiuta (drums).

Innocent Of Nothing

Maynard Ferguson - In Jazz We Trust

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 116:47
Size: 268,5 MB
Art: Front

( 3:11)  1. Easy to Love
( 3:30)  2. Pork Pie
( 3:47)  3. Dancing Nitely
( 3:46)  4. Moonlight in Vermont
( 2:41)  5. Love Me or Leave Me
( 3:30)  6. Never You Mind
( 2:54)  7. Dream Boat
( 3:02)  8. Maiden Voyage
(15:44)  9. Somebody Loves Me
( 2:58) 10. The Way You Look Tonight
(16:06) 11. Our Love Is Here to Stay
( 3:26) 12. The Lamp Is Low
( 2:37) 13. Hymn to Her
(14:08) 14. Night Letter
( 3:13) 15. Wildman
( 3:55) 16. Egad, Martha
(16:51) 17. Air Conditioned
( 3:15) 18. King's Riff
( 4:56) 19. Can't We Talk It over?
( 3:07) 20. Willie Nillie

When he debuted with Stan Kenton's Orchestra in 1950, Maynard Ferguson could play higher than any other trumpeter up to that point in jazz history, and he was accurate. Somehow he kept most of that range through his career and since the 1970s has been one of the most famous musicians in jazz. Never known for his exquisite taste (some of his more commercial efforts are unlistenable), Ferguson nevertheless led some important bands and definitely made an impact with his trumpet playing. After heading his own big band in Montreal, Ferguson came to the United States in 1949 with hopes of joining Kenton's orchestra, but that ensemble had just recently broke up. So instead, Ferguson gained experience playing with the big bands of Boyd Raeburn, Jimmy Dorsey, and Charlie Barnet. In 1950, with the formation of Kenton's Innovations Orchestra, Ferguson became a star, playing ridiculous high notes with ease. In 1953, he left Kenton to work in the studios of Los Angeles and three years later led the all-star "Birdland Dreamband." In 1957, he put together a regular big band that lasted until 1965, recorded regularly for Roulette (all of the band's recordings with that label are on a massive Mosaic box set) and performed some of the finest music of Ferguson's career. Such players as Slide Hampton, Don Ellis, Don Sebesky, Willie Maiden, John Bunch, Joe Zawinul, Joe Farrell, Jaki Byard, Lanny Morgan, Rufus Jones, Bill Berry, and Don Menza were among the more notable sidemen.

After economics forced him to give up the impressive band, Ferguson had a few years in which he was only semi-active in music, spending time in India and eventually forming a new band in England. After moving back to the U.S., Ferguson in 1974 drifted quickly into commercialism. Young trumpeters in high school and colleges were amazed by his high notes, but jazz fans were dismayed by the tasteless recordings that resulted in hit versions of such songs as the themes from Star Wars and Rocky and much worse. After cutting back on his huge orchestra in the early '80s, Ferguson recorded some bop in a 1983 session, led a funk band called High Voltage during 1987-1988, and then returned to jazz with his "Big Bop Nouveau Band," a medium-sized outfit with which he toured the world up until his death from kidney and liver failure on August 23, 2006. http://www.allmusic.com/artist/maynard-ferguson-mn0000397042/biography

In Jazz We Trust