Thursday, June 2, 2016

Lisa Bassenge Trio - Three

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:02
Size: 114.6 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[4:12] 1. I Got You (I Feel Good)
[1:05] 2. You Don't Have A Name
[3:33] 3. If I Could See The World Through The Eyes Of A Child
[3:01] 4. Everything I Love
[3:15] 5. Love Me Tender Tender
[3:40] 6. Fall
[0:43] 7. Tell The Rain..
[3:13] 8. Weisst Du Wieviel Sternlein Stehen Wooden Moon
[2:30] 9. Down In The Meadow
[3:01] 10. Drifting
[3:13] 11. Wir Machen Musik
[1:39] 12. My Belongings
[3:47] 13. Elllie
[3:37] 14. There Must Be An Angel
[3:47] 15. Nancy With The Laughing Face Remember
[0:29] 16. Your Quiet Eyes
[3:18] 17. Stay Awake
[1:51] 18. Time To Go Sandmann

Three ist das dritte Album von Lisa Bassenge, und es gehört ganz nach oben in die Rangliste aktueller Vocal-Jazz-Aufnahmen. Das Berliner Trio plus Gastmusiker präsentiert originelle Kunststücke (eigene und Coverversionen) auf höchstem Niveau. Ihre Musik ist anspruchsvoll, lyrisch, sinnlich, elegant und treffsicher: die exzellenten Arrangements von Pianist Andreas Schmidt zielen stets in den Kern einer genau durchdachten Atmosphäre. "I Feel Good" von James Brown verführt mit intimem, kammermusikalischem Flair; schlicht, relaxed, bluesy: eine herrliche Interpretation. "Love Me Tender" (Elvis Presley) wird mit einem klassisch modernen Streichersatz eingeleitet; ähnlich zeitgenössisch klingt es bei "Weißt du wieviel Sternlein stehen" - anmutig, kirchenmusikalisch haben sie es angelegt. Der Annie Lenox-Hit "There Must Be An Angel" hingegen fliegt vor Leichtigkeit davon: warm, sonnig, poppig und ungeheuer Charmant.

Three

Gerry Mulligan - The Age Of Steam

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1971
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:31
Size: 89,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:15)  1. One to Ten In Ohio
(5:10)  2. K-4 Pacific
(4:25)  3. Grand Tour
(8:38)  4. Over the Hill and Out of the Woods
(3:10)  5. Country Beaver
(4:16)  6. A Weed In Disneyland
(4:16)  7. Golden Notebooks
(4:17)  8. Maytag

During the 1952-65 period baritonist Gerry Mulligan was one of the most famous musicians in jazz but he spent the following five years at a lower profile, recording relatively little and not leading any significant bands. Age of Steam was a comeback record of sorts (although he had never declined), giving Jeru the opportunity to lead a big band again. The ensemble performs eight of his recent originals (the best known is "K4 Pacific"), featuring solos by Mulligan (who was now doubling on soprano), Tom Scott on tenor and soprano, Bud Shank on alto and flute, valve trombonist Bob Brookmeyer and trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison. The highly enjoyable music (last available on this A&M CD in 1988) still sounds fresh and spirited.~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-age-of-steam-mw0000201568

Personnel:  Gerry Mulligan (baritone saxophone, soprano saxophone, piano); Harry “Sweets” Edison, Roger Bobo (trumpet); Bob Brookmeyer (valve trombone); Jimmy Cleveland (trombone); Ken Shroyer (bass trombone); Bud Shank (alto saxophone, flute); Tom Scott (tenor & soprano saxophone); Ernie Watts (tenor saxophone); Roger Kellaway (electric piano); Howard Roberts (guitar); Emil Richards (vibraphone); Chuck Domanico (bass); John Guerin (drums); Joe Porcaro (percussion, drums)

The Age Of Steam

Frances Faye - No Reservations

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 1953
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 29:33
Size: 68,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:38)  1. Drunk With Love
(2:48)  2. Summertime
(2:11)  3. Mad About The Boy
(2:13)  4. Miss Otis Regrets
(2:12)  5. Sometimes I'm Happy
(2:34)  6. I Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate
(2:36)  7. The Man I Love
(2:46)  8. You're Heavenly
(2:06)  9. I Can't Give You Anything But Love
(2:53) 10. A Hundred Years From Today
(2:12) 11. Night And Day
(2:19) 12. Tweet Tweet Tweetheart

Despite her Fifth Avenue looks, Frances Faye exploded the stereotype of the standards singer they type of vocalist apt to reverently croon a Cole Porter song as though she were a rector bowing her head while reciting from the Book of Common Prayer. Granted, No Reservations is indeed packed with Cafe Society standards, but Faye was a garrulous singer, and rarely so entertainingly indelicate as she is here. She opens on a high note, "Drunk with Love" "Rotten liquor, mostly gin, in all the clubs that I stagger in, and 'round and 'round because I've found, he loves me drunk...with love." And she rarely received arrangements as sympathetic as what Dave Cavanaugh brings here, whether it's the reinvention of the hoary "Summertime" as swing-meets-R&B with Latin percussion and tearing sax or a warhorse like "Miss Otis Regrets" getting a rewrite as a loose '50s swinger. [A DRG reissue from 2007 added 11 bonus tracks from various '50s sessions, including Leiber & Stoller's obscure "Hey, Mister" and a previously unreleased "When Love Comes Knocking." By the way, virtually all of the material here appears on the multi-disc set No Regrets from Jasmine.]~John Bush http://www.allmusic.com/album/no-reservations-mw00005620

No Reservations

Bobby Hutcherson - Cruisin' The 'Bird

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 1988
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:34
Size: 121,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:50)  1. All Or Nothing At All
(6:12)  2. Cruisin' The 'Bird
(8:36)  3. Sierra
(6:47)  4. If You Do
(6:44)  5. Imminent Treasures
(5:10)  6. Chelsea Bridge
(6:15)  7. Come Rain Or Come Shine
(5:55)  8. On The Delta

Throughout his career, vibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson has recorded one rewarding set after another, always being quite consistent. This date (which as usual can be considered advanced hard bop) finds Hutcherson (who doubles on marimba) interacting with saxophonist Ralph Moore (heard on tenor and soprano), pianist Buddy Montgomery, bassist Rufus Reid and drummer Victor Lewis. Together they perform four of Hutcherson's unpredictable originals plus a trio of standards (including "Come Rain or Come Shine"). Fine music.~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/cruisin-the-bird-mw0000202511

Personnel: Bobby Hutcherson (vibraphone), Ralph Moore (tenor saxophone), Buddy Montgomery (piano), Rufus Reid (bass), Victor Lewis (drums).

Cruisin' The 'Bird

Jacob Young - Glow

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:21
Size: 129,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:14)  1. Mr. Cosmopolitan
(7:51)  2. Up In Smoke
(5:49)  3. Aftermath
(5:05)  4. Glow
(3:28)  5. Blue, Yellow And Green
(6:09)  6. Cartoons
(5:46)  7. Music For A Film
(3:35)  8. Matchbox
(3:41)  9. Entrance To The Stars
(6:28) 10. Endings
(3:11) 11. I'll Be Seing You

Jacob Young was born in 1970 in Lillehammer, Norway, and currently resides in Oslo. He began studying guitar on his own at the age of 12 after being introduced to jazz by his father, an American. He studied music at the University of Oslo and received a scholarship to the New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music in New York City. While in New York, he studied the jazz repertoire as a gateway to harmonic improvisation. His primary instructor was the legendary guitarist Jim Hall, who influenced his tone. Young studied with Hall privately as well as in ensemble settings. He also took private instruction from guitarist John Abercrombie, one of the mainstays of ECM Records. In addition to studying his chosen instrument, Young studied jazz composition as well with pianist Richie Beierach and Kenny Werner. He graduated in 1993 and spent time freelancing and apprenticing in the city with notables Rashied Ali, Marc Copeland, Junior Mance, Larry Goldings, and Arnie Lawrence. Young eventually returned to Norway and recorded three titles for local labels with musicians such as Nils Petter Molvaer, Trygve Seim, Arve Henricksen, and Jarle Vespestad. While gigging in Norway with Seim's band, Young garnered the attention of Norwegian vocalist Karin Krog. The pair recorded a duet album, Where Flamingoes Fly, on the Grappa label, produced by John Surman. The duo did a world tour behind the album. ECM Records' impresario Manfred Eicher heard Young playing with Seim's band and eventually signed him. Jacob Young's debut for ECM, Evening Falls, features his own compositions and a two-year-old band containing three generations of Norwegian musicians including veteran drummer Jon Christensen, who has been part of the ECM roster since the '70s; maverick trumpeter Mathias Eick, bass clarinetist and saxophonist Vidar Johansen, and bassist Mats Eilertsen. He was the guitarist in the experimental jazz-rock-eletronics outfit Interstatic and played on their self-titled debut in 2007. His own effort, Sideways, followed in 2008; recorded with the same band that cut his first album, it appeared in 2008. In 2009, Young was the guitarist in drummer Manu Katché's band for Third Round, which was issued in 2010. He spent the next three years playing live in Europe on his own and backing others. He re-entered an Oslo studio as a bandleader in 2013 with saxophonist Trygve Seim and pianist Marcin Wasilewski's trio on Forever Young, issued in the early summer of 2014. ~ Thom Jurek https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/jacob-young/id77140670#fullText

Personnel  Jacob Young electric & accoustic guitar;  Arve Henriksen trumpet;  Trygve Seim tenor & soprano saxophone;  Mats Eilertsen accoustic bass;  Jarle Vespestad drums;  Reidar Skår samples, programming;  Bendik Hofseth tenor saxophone;  Knut Reiersrud resophonic / lap steel guitar; Audun Erlien bass;  Håkon Kornstad tenor saxophone;  Øyvind Brække trombone;  Vigleik Storaas grand piano;  Christian Wallumrød fender rhodes piano

Glow

Wednesday, June 1, 2016

Dave Stryker - Blue To The Bone

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:50
Size: 141.6 MB
Styles: Jazz/Blues guitar
Year: 1996
Art: Front

[6:22] 1. Blues Revisited
[8:59] 2. Messenger
[6:16] 3. Blue To The Bone
[7:41] 4. Swamp Thing
[9:54] 5. Bayou Blues
[6:38] 6. Tchoupitoulas St
[7:26] 7. Muddy Waters
[8:30] 8. One For Mogie

Dave Stryker – Guitar; Brian Lynch – Trumpet; Conrad Herwig – Trombone; Rich Perry – Tenor Saxophone; Bob Parsons – Baritone Saxophone; Bruce Barth – Piano, organ; Jay Anderson – Bass; Billy Drummond – Drums.

Whether you’ve heard guitarist Dave Stryker leading his own group (with 26 CD’s as a leader to date), co-leading The Stryker/Slagle Band, or as a featured sideman with Stanley Turrentine, Jack McDuff, and many others, you know why the Village Voice calls him “one of the most distinctive guitarists to come along in recent years.”

Dave is the Adjunct Professor of Jazz guitar at Jacobs School of Music at Indiana University, and at the John J. Cali School of Music at Montclair State University. He is passing along his experience by teaching privately and at The Aebersold Summer Jazz Workshop, The Litchfield Jazz Camp, and the Jazzhouse Kids Workshop in Montclair, NJ.

Blue To The Bone

Benny Golson - Three Little Words

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:46
Size: 182.6 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[ 0:24] 1. Introduction
[12:49] 2. Where Or When
[ 7:13] 3. Stablemates
[ 8:56] 4. My Foolish Heart
[10:50] 5. Quiet Stars Of Quiet Nights
[10:34] 6. Just In Time
[18:51] 7. Stella By Starlight
[10:06] 8. Three Little Words

Benny Golson (born January 25, 1929) is an American bebop/hard bop jazz tenor saxophonist, composer, and arranger.

In October 2007 Golson received the Mellon Living Legend Legacy Award presented by the Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation at a ceremony at the Kennedy Center. Additionally, during the same month, he won the University of Pittsburgh International Academy of Jazz Outstanding Lifetime Achievement Award at the university's 37th Annual Jazz Concert in the Carnegie Music Hall. In November 2009, Benny was inducted into the International Academy of Jazz Hall of Fame during a performance at the University of Pittsburgh's annual jazz seminar and concert. The Howard University Jazz Studies program created a prestigious award in his honor called the "Benny Golson Jazz Master Award" in 1996. Several distinguished jazz artists have received this award.

Three Little Words

Booker Ervin - Poinciana

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:12
Size: 98.9 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1960/2006
Art: Front

[ 8:00] 1. Poinciana
[ 7:12] 2. Speak Low
[ 7:57] 3. Mojo
[ 4:29] 4. Boo
[ 4:33] 5. Uranus
[10:59] 6. Booker's Blues

A very distinctive tenor with a hard, passionate tone and an emotional style that was still tied to chordal improvisation, Booker Ervin was a true original. He was originally a trombonist, but taught himself tenor while in the Air Force (1950-1953). After studying music in Boston for two years, he made his recording debut with Ernie Fields' R&B band (1956). Ervin gained fame while playing with Charles Mingus (off and on during 1956-1962), holding his own with the volatile bassist and Eric Dolphy. He also led his own quartet, worked with Randy Weston on a few occasions in the '60s, and spent much of 1964-1966 in Europe before dying much too young from kidney disease. Ervin, who is on several notable Charles Mingus records, made dates of his own for Bethlehem, Savoy, and Candid during 1960-1961, along with later sets for Pacific Jazz and Blue Note. His nine Prestige sessions of 1963-1966 (including The Freedom Book, The Song Book, The Blues Book, and The Space Book) are among the high points of his career. ~bio by Scott Yanow

Poinciana

Lee Konitz & The Brazilian Band - Brazilian Rhapsody

Styles: Saxophone Jazz, Brazilian Jazz
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:54
Size: 114,8 MB
Art: Front

(7:28)  1. Samba Triste
(7:26)  2. Berimbau
(6:10)  3. Menina Moca
(6:05)  4. Triste
(6:26)  5. A Felicidade
(5:58)  6. Lunasea
(4:07)  7. Manhã De Carnaval
(6:11)  8. Insensatez

This CD focuses primarily on Brazilian standards performed by the Konitz sextet, except for the Brazilian-flavored "Lunasea," written by Peggy Stern, which features her high school choir. "Berimbau" is swinging and percussive, while the well-known "Insensatez" takes many unexpected turns. "Triste" is also a familiar theme played with relish. Vocalist Adela Dalto makes a strong impression with her guest spot on "A Felicidade." Konitz's duet with the phenomenal acoustic guitarist Romero Lubambo on "Manha De Carnaval" is breathtaking.~Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/brazilian-rhapsody-mw0000186085

Personnel:  Lee Konitz (soprano & alto saxophones); Adela Dalto (vocals); Peggy Stern (piano); Romero Lubambo (acoustic guitar); Dave Finck (bass); Duduka Dafonseca (drums); Waltinho Anastacio (percussion).

Brazilian Rhapsody

Stan Getz - My Foolish Heart - 'Live' At The Left Bank

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1975
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:09
Size: 129,7 MB
Art: Front

( 6:23)  1. Invitation
(10:58)  2. [Untitled]
( 5:43)  3. Spring Is Here
(11:13)  4. Litha
( 9:38)  5. Lucifer's Fall
( 5:54)  6. My Foolish Heart
( 6:16)  7. Fiesta

Last month Label M released the first two albums from its series “Live” at the Left Bank. Sessions by Sonny Stitt and Stan Getz were recorded by members of the Left Bank Jazz Society in 1971 and 1975, respectively, at the Famous Ballroom in Baltimore, Maryland. Other artists in the series of weekly live performances include Freddie Hubbard, Jimmy Heath and Cedar Walton, whose albums will be released this month. With the promise of many more albums to come from this delightful series, Label M’s action appears to provide an opportunity for collectors and devotees to pick up those “rare items” we’ve been looking for all these years. The sound captured from Stan Getz’ live club date is superb. Dave Holland, Jack DeJohnette and Richie Beirach work together with the saxophonist as if they were all born into the same family. Every move, every nuance, every inflection is created to suit the leader’s mood. From slow, cool ballads to fast, hot burners, the quartet swings with overt expression. Getz is at his best, leading with high spirits. The exciting program includes two modern mainstream anthems by Chick Corea, a powerfully-built saga by Ralph Towner, several standards, and an 11-minute untitled piece that we investigators will probably figure out eventually. With a high-flying start, Label M has inaugurated its ”Live” at the Left Bank series with a winner.~Jim Santella https://www.allaboutjazz.com/my-foolish-heart-stan-getz-label-m-review-by-jim-santella.php
 
Personnel: Stan Getz- tenor saxophone; Richie Beirach- piano; Dave Holland- bass; Jack DeJohnette- drums.

My Foolish Heart - 'Live' At The Left Bank

Perla Batalla - Perla Batalla

Styles: Vocal, Folk
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:04
Size: 130,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:03)  1. I've Been Gone Too Long
(5:04)  2. If You Only Knew
(4:59)  3. Crazy Love
(4:51)  4. Make It Simple
(3:16)  5. China Doll
(5:23)  6. This Too Shall Pass
(5:12)  7. Seems So Long Ago Nancy
(5:11)  8. Tengo Fe
(4:18)  9. Sixteen Tons
(3:43) 10. I See You
(4:58) 11. Cu Cu Rru Cu Cu Paloma
(6:00) 12. Innocence

Vocalist, composer, and arranger Perla Batalla was born in Los Angeles, CA. Her father was a musician and owned a popular record store. There were very few forms of music that Batalla didn't get a chance to experience early in her childhood in that busy family store. She found she loved most kinds. Batalla won a scholarship to study at the Lee Strasberg Theater Institute. Her voice was impressive enough to land her vocal roles in both film and television. After a while she became a background singer for Leonard Cohen and K. D. Lang. By 1993, Batalla was making her first attempts at a solo career. In a year's time, she had recorded a self-titled debut solo album under the Discovery Records label. It took four years before she did a sophomore recording, Mestiza. In 2000, she added a third album to her list of accompaniments, Heaven and Earth: The Mestiza Voyage. Some of the tracks from her albums are "First Time I Felt Rain," "Making Up for Lost Time," "Burning," "Out of the Labyrinth," and "Heaven and Earth." In between time in the recording studio, Batalla performs at festivals and clubs and composes new material. She has worked with numerous artists, including cellist Peggy Baldwin, flutist John Zeretzke, percussionist Michael Faue, guitarist David Batteau, bassist Simeon Pillich, and many others.~Charlotte Dillon http://www.allmusic.com/artist/perla-batalla-mn0000314507/biography

Perla Batalla

Gerry Mulligan - What Is There To Say?

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:34
Size: 97,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:17)  1. What Is There To Say?
(4:23)  2. Just In Time
(5:19)  3. News From Blueport
(6:31)  4. Festive Minor
(4:06)  5. As Catch Can
(4:16)  6. My Funny Valentine
(9:05)  7. Blueport
(4:34)  8. Utter Chaos

The last of the pianoless quartet albums that Gerry Mulligan recorded in the 1950s is one of the best, featuring the complementary trumpet of Art Farmer, bassist Bill Crow, and drummer Dave Bailey along with the baritonist/leader. This recording is a little skimpy on playing time but makes every moment count. 

Virtually every selection is memorable, with "What Is There to Say," "Just in Time," "Festive Minor," "My Funny Valentine," and "Utter Chaos" being the high points. Highly recommended both to Mulligan collectors and to jazz listeners who are just discovering the great baritonist.~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/what-is-there-to-say-mw0000110341

Personnel:  Gerry Mulligan - Baritone saxophone;  Art Farmer – Trumpet;  Bill Crow – Bass;  Dave Bailey - Drums

What Is There To Say?

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Kevin Golden Trio - Pelham Parkway (Feat. Akiko Tsuruga & Peter Grant)

Size: 100,4 MB
Time: 40:02
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz: Hard Bop, Hammond Organ
Art: Front

01. Market Square (7:03)
02. Let's Do This (6:42)
03. JJ's Smove Groove (5:12)
04. Pelham Parkway (4:31)
05. Where Are They Now (4:32)
06. Let's Make The Time (6:08)
07. Cherry Pie (5:51)

Pelham Parkway captures the Kevin Golden Trio performing 7 originals penned by Kevin Golden in the tradition of the guitar/organ trio reminiscent of the style of the legendary Grant Green. Kevin Golden is on guitar, along with Akiko Tsuruga on organ, and Peter Grant on drums. The session was recorded at the legendary Tedesco Studios in Paramus, NJ, by Tommy Tedesco in February 2016.

Golden is a long time journeyman of the NYC and Hudson Valley NY jazz scene and has been playing jazz for over 27 years in the Hudson Valley and greater NYC area. He often plays with the Steve Kaiser Quartet in the NYC club scene. Guitarist Golden style is influenced by Grant Green, Rene Thomas, and Joshua Breakstone. Golden is also the guitarist for Michael’s Jazz Quartet on the recording "Woody-n-Me" released in 2007 and is co-author of song "Golden Opportunity", 2nd place winner in 2008 Independent Music Awards for Jazz Song of the Year. Golden also wrote "Say What You Mean", which was chosen as an All About Jazz website "Download of the Day", and is currently available online under the Steve Kaiser Quartet.

Akiko Tsuruga (aka "Queen of the Jazz Organ") has been a mainstay on the New York jazz scene since 2001. Akiko has released five albums in Japan and four in the U.S. Both of her first two US releases, “Sweet and Funky” and “Oriental Express” (18th & Vine Records), have ranked within top 20 on the national jazz radio charts.

Akiko has been regular on the DownBeat magazine critics poll since 2008. In 2012, she placed 6th in the Rising Star category of the magazine along with ranking in the readers poll. DownBeat Magazine and Keyboard Magazine have featured articles on Akiko. Her third US album, “Sakura” released in 2012 scored 7th on the national Jazz radio chart. Her latest album, “Commencement”, released on August 20th, 2014 both in the U.S. and in Japan, ranked 4th in the Jazz Week Chart.

Drummer Peter Grant was born and raised in New York City and studied at the Manhattan School of Music. Peter is a creative and versatile musician who has been in demand in the New York recording studios and clubs for 35 years. He has performed in venues ranging from Carnegie Hall to the Blue Note to Royal Albert Hall, the Mount Fuji Jazz Festival in Japan, the Monterey Jazz Festival and the White House.

Grant has played on over 40 recordings with such artists as Gerry Mulligan , Peggy Lee , New York Voices , Harvie Swartz and Rodney Jones. Live performance credits include gigs with Astrud Gilberto, Peter Cincotti, Ben E. King, Dave Samuels and European tours with Bob Dorough and Linda Hopkins.

Pelham Parkway 

Pat Kelley - Sing Me Back Home

Size: 101,5 MB
Time: 38:43
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Guitar Jazz, Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. Hearts And Bones (Feat. Annie Ellicott) (5:31)
02. Overjoyed (Feat. Sarah Maud) (4:27)
03. Skylark (Feat. Stephanie Oliver) (3:48)
04. Jardin D'hiver (Feat. Olivia Duhon) (3:24)
05. Midnight Sun (Feat. Annie Ellicott) (5:00)
06. All Blues (Feat. Pam Crosby) (3:43)
07. Do You Know The Way To San Jose (Feat. Stephanie Oliver) (3:29)
08. Dindi (Feat. Olivia Duhon) (3:37)
09. Are You Lonesome Tonight (Feat. Sarah Maud) (2:48)
10. Softly As In A Morning Sunrise (Feat. Pam Crosby) (2:52)

Los Angeles jazz and studio guitarist Pat Kelley has produced a unique collection of songs that feature five vocalists from Tulsa, Oklahoma. Most of the recording was done at Artsong Studios in Los Angeles. The vocals, fiddle, flugelhorn, and flute were recorded at Drapp Studios in Tulsa.

There is excitement about Tulsa’s musical future in the air. Tulsa has always been a vibrant music community with great musicians and singers, and that is certainly true today. Home to the Woody Guthrie Museum, Tulsa will soon open the Bob Dylan Museum that will house more than six thousand Bob Dylan artifacts. Live music is alive and well.

Enjoy Annie Ellicott, Sarah Maud, Stephanie Oliver, Olivia Duhon, and Pam Crosby, five wonderful voices that you are sure to love.

Sing Me Back Home

Ed Calle - 360

Size: 134,6 MB
Time: 57:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz: Saxophone Jazz, Latin Jazz
Art: Front

01. 360 (4:08)
02. Dancing On A Cloud (5:21)
03. Monk's Mode (5:46)
04. Waltz For Sydney (5:13)
05. Half Turn (4:06)
06. La La Land (4:10)
07. Until The End Of Never (3:35)
08. One For JJ (4:17)
09. 3 (Plus Minus 3) (5:30)
10. Pooch Patrol (5:26)
11. Hammocks Hoedown (4:49)
12. Pooch Patrol (Alternate Take) (5:26)

Born in Caracas, Venezuela to Spanish parents – father Joaquin Calle from Madrid and mother Maria Begoña Calle from Barcelona – it was obvious from the very start that Ed was a gifted musician whose energetic, passionate, and distinct sound captured the attention of audiences and musicians alike. His teachers and schoolmates often suggested that Calle’s sound is actually part of his DNA. Now, Calle can be heard on more than 1,200 albums, almost 9,000 singles, and countless movie and television soundtracks both as a soloist, sideman, composer, arranger, conductor, and producer. He appears on Grammy®-award-winning albums by Frank Sinatra, Juan Luis Guerra, Arturo Sandoval, Juanes, Vicky Carr, Gloria Estefan, and Jon Secada. Calle has also recorded and performed around the world with music royalty including Phil Ramone, Tom Dowd, Carlos Santana, Eddie Money, Greg Allman, Emilio Estefan, Chick Corea, Michael and Randy Brecker, Tito Puente, Celia Cruz, Poncho Sanchez, Willy Chirino, John Patitucci, Steve Gadd, Anthony Jackson, Donna Summer, the Bee Gees, Natalie Cole, Smokey Robinson, Shakira, The Temptations, The Four Tops, The Spinners, Armando Manzanero, Barry Gibb, Oscar D’Leon, Dave Valentine, Lenny Kravitz, K.C. & the Sunshine Band, Gloria Estefan, Diego Torres, Julio Iglesias, David Bisbal, Michael Bolton, Will to Power, Luis Enrique, Bob James, Bobby Caldwell, Franco de Vita, Frankie Valli, Rihanna, Idina Menzel, Extreme, the Pet Shop Boys, George Clinton, Albita, Placido Domingo, Roberto Carlos, Ricky Martin, Busta Rhyme, JLo, Chayanne, and Vanessa Williams just to name a few. Calle's television work includes an almost decade-long stint as saxophonist in the Sabado Gigante orchestra and appearances as a soloist with various artists on theTonight Show with Johnny Carson and Jay Leno, Late Night with David Letterman, the Grammy® Awards, and a host of international, national, and regional television programs and specials.

Dr. Ed Calle is a Latin Grammy® Award winner for Best Instrumental Album (2015) with Dr. Ed Calle Presents Mamblue and a five-time Grammy® nominee. In addition to earning the 2015 Best Instrumental Album Latin Grammy® for Dr. Ed Calle Presents Mamblue, Calle also garnered a 2014 Latin Grammy® nomination and 2015 Grammy® nomination as a member of the Afro-Cuban Funk Super group PALO for their album PALO! Live. Among his many solo recordings, Ed Calle Plays Santana earned a Latin Grammy® nomination in 2005. In the Zone features original jazz compositions and jazz standards and earned a Latin Grammy nomination in 2007. His 2015 Latin Grammy® winning solo release Dr. Ed Calle Presents Mamblue, is an Afro-Cuban jazz orchestral spectacular featuring more than 115 of the most influential jazz and studio musicians in the history of South Florida. The first studio record by the World Music 5, America, features chamber jazz orchestrations of original and classic music from the Americas with an all-star quintet that includes Negroni's Trio and violinist Federico Britos. Exploring the duo realm with his longtime friend and colleague Jose Negroni, Calle is also featured on the Latin Grammy® Award nominated 2015 Sony Records release Negroni +9.

360

Richard Rodney Bennett - Take Love Easy / The Lyrics Of John Latouche

Size: 121,0 MB
Time: 51:25
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. All Of A Sudden It's You (Feat. Linc Millman) (2:22)
02. It's The Going Home Together (Feat. Linc Millman) (3:56)
03. Not A Care In The World (Feat. Dick Sarpola & Tony Tedesco) (2:46)
04. Day Dream (Feat. Dick Sarpola & Tony Tedesco) (4:23)
05. A Nickel To My Name (Feat. Linc Millman) (2:18)
06. She Makes Me Believe She's Mine (Feat. Dick Sarpola & Tony Tedesco) (4:29)
07. You Took Me By Surprise (Feat. Dick Sarpola & Tony Tedesco) (2:48)
08. Lazy Afternoon (Feat. Dick Sarpola & Tony Tedesco) (5:25)
09. Taking A Chance On Love (Feat. Dick Sarpola & Tony Tedesco) (2:58)
10. Strange (Feat. Linc Millman) (3:03)
11. Cabin In The Sky (Feat. Dick Sarpola & Tony Tedesco) (3:01)
12. Take Love Easy (Feat. Dick Sarpola & Tony Tedesco) (3:28)
13. Love Turned The Light Out (Feat. Dick Sarpola & Tony Tedesco) (3:40)
14. I've Got Me (Feat. Linc Millman) (3:12)
15. The Next Time I Care (Feat. Dick Sarpola & Tony Tedesco) (3:28)

A remarkably prolific composer and versatile pianist, Richard Rodney Bennett divided his attention among three primary musical interests: film music in an often Romantic style, concert music owing much to serialism, and jazz and cabaret music. Bennett began following all of these avenues by the 1950s, but he never allowed the paths to intersect. Each pursuit maintained its own integrity and in no way could he be considered a crossover artist. He was writing music even as he was learning to read, and produced three string quartets by the time he was 18. Bennett enrolled in the Royal Academy of Music in 1953, studying composition with Howard Ferguson and Lennox Berkeley. He graduated in 1956, then spent 1957 - 1959 as a scholarship student in Paris with Pierre Boulez. Here, Bennett was thoroughly indoctrinated in Boulez's technique of total serialism and the German avant-garde, but his only surviving work from this period is Cycle II for Paul Jacobs. Bennett almost immediately took a highly personal approach to serialism, focusing on the melodic possibilities of a tone row and readily exploring its harmonic potential. A turning point came in 1981 with his ballet Noctuary, which fused the tonality of the Scott Joplin piece on which it was based with Bennett's usual atonal serialism. After this, Bennett's techniques became much freer; while still atonal, his highly expressive music shook off the strictest controls of serialism and often indulged in quotation of earlier composers. Bennett's catalog includes four string quartets, three symphonies, concertos for almost all the principal instruments (including harpsichord), and a great deal of chamber music. He frequently wrote for woodwinds throughout his career, but began to focus more intently on them in the late '80s upon befriending many wind players in his capacity as a piano accompanist. Since 1956, Bennett had also been writing film scores in a much more conservative style. He became a favorite composer of Joseph Losey, among other directors, and among his some 50 cinematic efforts are scores for such popular movies as Far from the Madding Crowd, Nicholas and Alexandra, Murder on the Orient Express, and Four Weddings and a Funeral. It was also in the 1950s that Bennett became interested in jazz, particularly as a pianist. He kept this fascination largely to himself until the 1990s, when he began touring the world with a solo cabaret act, singing and playing jazz pieces and torch songs. ~by James Reel

Take Love Easy / The Lyrics Of John Latouche

Margrete Grarup & Mads Vinding - Walk With Me

Size: 148,1 MB
Time: 63:39
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. The Wish ( 7:10)
02. Walk With Me ( 6:24)
03. Salme Ved Vejs Ende ( 6:00)
04. Nature Boy ( 9:10)
05. On The Sunny Side Of The Street ( 2:20)
06. Georgia On My Mind ( 5:11)
07. Strange Fruit - Summertime (10:11)
08. My Funny Valentine ( 3:24)
09. Blame It On My Youth ( 6:03)
10. Everyday I Have The Blues ( 4:20)
11. What A Wonderful World ( 3:20)

Walk With Me, from Storyville Records, features prominent Danish jazz musicians Mads Vinding (Bass) and Carsten Dahl (Piano) with Margrete Grarup (Vocal) and Marilyn Mazur (Percussion).

This CD is a continuous journey through a landscape constantly changing. Along the way, your ears will encounter simplicity, fragility, ferocity, sensitivity and a special sense of greatness in the smallest of details. From beautiful ballads of stormy moods to swinging jazz - everything beautifully executed by Margrete Grarup’s unique and expressive voice. Each track has an identity of its own - still, they all come together and make a whole.

Walk With Me includes new, wondrous takes on classics such as “Georgia on My Mind”, “Strange Fruit” and “My Funny Valentine” along with some of the musician’s own compositions which in combination creates a soulfully meditative and with every turn delightfully unknown journey to be experienced. Margrete Grarup is an educated soloist from Nordjysk Musikkonservatorium and knows how to balance the power of her voice with delicate nuances and a certain humility.

Personnel:
Margrete Grarup (Vocal)
Mads Vinding (Bass)
Carsten Dahl (Piano)
Marilyn Mazur (Percussion)
Poul Halberg (Guitar)
Peter Weniger (Saxophones)
Rasmus Stenholm (Hammond Organ)

Walk With Me

Paul Desmond - Take Five: The Best Of Cool Saxophone

Styles: Cool jazz, Mainstream Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:50
Size: 138,7 MB
Art: Front

( 2:58)  1. Take Five'59
( 9:39)  2. Romance De Amour'73
( 5:20)  3. Skylark'73
( 6:07)  4. Take Ten'73
( 3:35)  5. Audrey54
(19:18)  6. Concerto De Aranjuez'75
( 3:06)  7. Koto Song'64
( 6:43)  8. Music For A White'73

Paul Desmond is widely recognized for his genius as a melodic improviser and as the benchmark of cool jazz sax players. His warm, elegant tone was one that he admittedly tried to make sound like a dry martini. He and Art Pepper were virtually the only alto players of their generation not directly influenced by Charlie Parker. Desmond was influenced by Lester Young, but took it further, into melodic and harmonic worlds never before traveled by reedmen especially in the upper registers. Desmond is best known for his years with the Dave Brubeck Quartet (1959-1967) and his well-known composition "Take Five." He met Brubeck in the late '40s and played with his Octet. The Quartet formed toward the end of 1950 and took final shape with Eugene Wright and Joe Morello a few years later. Jazz at Oberlin and Take Five were considered essential purchases by college students of the era, but Jazz Impressions of Japan was its most innovative recording. Desmond played his loping, slow, ordered, and intricate solos in direct contrast to the pianist's obsession with large chords, creating a myriad of textures for melodic and rhythmic counterpoint unlike any heard in jazz. His witty quotations from musicals, classical pieces, and folk songs were also a watermark of his artistry. When the Quartet split in 1967, Desmond began an intermittent yet satisfying recording career. It included dates with Gerry Mulligan for Verve, various sessions with Jim Hall, and a concert with the the Modern Jazz Quartet. He played his last gigs with the Brubeck Quartet at reunions before dying of lung cancer. Desmond's recordings for RCA have gotten box-set treatment and Mosaic issued one of the complete sessions with Hall. There are also reissues from A&M and CTI, though recordings on Artist House and Finesse remain regrettably out of print.~Thom Jurek http://www.allmusic.com/artist/paul-desmond-mn0000069348/biography

Take Five

Emily Remler - Firefly

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1981
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:16
Size: 92,6 MB
Art: Front + Back

(5:34)  1. Strollin'
(5:27)  2. Look To The Sky
(4:10)  3. Perk's Blues
(4:10)  4. The Firefly
(5:35)  5. Movin' Along
(2:14)  6. A Taste Of Honey
(5:13)  7. Inception
(7:49)  8. In A Sentimental Mood

It sounds very clichéd to say that many of music's best and brightest have lived fast and died young, but it is so true. From Jimi Hendrix to Charlie Parker to Patsy Cline, the 20th century was full of talented artists whose lives were cut short by their self-destructive ways. In an ideal world, Emily Remler would have had a very long career and made it to seventy or eighty; instead, the guitarist used heroin and died of a heart attack at 32. Firefly was Remler's first album as a leader, and it is a promising debut. Joined by pianist Hank Jones, bassist Bob Maize, and drummer Jake Hanna, a 24-year-old Remler delivers an enjoyable hard bop date. The album isn't groundbreaking by early-'80s standards although Firefly was recorded in 1981, it sounds like it could have been recorded in 1961. But there is no law stating that every young jazz musician who comes along has to reinvent the wheel, and Remler (whose influences include Wes Montgomery and Herb Ellis) brings a lot of potential to lively, swinging performances of Horace Silver's "Strollin'," McCoy Tyner's "Inception," and Montgomery's "Movin' Along." The New Jersey native also provides two original tunes ("Perk's Blues" and "The Firefly") and pleasantly surprises listeners by unearthing a pretty but lesser-known Antonio Carlos Jobim song titled "Look to the Sky." Unlike "The Girl From Ipanema," "Corcovado," or "One Note Samba," "Look to the Sky" is far from a standard; however, Remler's heartfelt interpretation demonstrates that the Jobim melody deserves to be much better known. With Firefly, Remler's recording career was off to an appealing start a career that should have been much, much longer.~Alex Henderson http://www.allmusic.com/album/firefly-mw0000076149

Personnel: Emily Remler (guitar), Hank Jones (piano), Bob Maize (bass), Jake Hanna (drums).

Firefly

Don Cherry,Dewey Redman,Charlie Haden,Ed Blackwell - Old And New Dreams

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1976
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:02
Size: 102,2 MB
Art: Front

( 6:57)  1. Handwoven
( 5:57)  2. Dewey's Tune
( 7:39)  3. Chairman Mao
( 6:48)  4. Next To The Quiet Stream
(10:12)  5. Augmented
( 6:27)  6. Old And New Dreams

The first album from this key group of Ornette Coleman alums an all-star combo that features work from Don Cherry on pocket trumpet, Dewey Redman on tenor, Charlie Haden on bass, and Ed Blackwell on drums! The sound here is quite Ornette-inspired at times with a definite late 70s harmelodic groove but given the organic, acoustic nature of the lineup, the sound is almost more faithful to Coleman's vision than Ornette's records of the time. Haden and Blackwell are great together, as always driving the tunes with a rhythmic force that Cherry and Redman can't help but carry through. Titles include "Handwoven", "Dewey's Tune", "Chairman Mao", "Next To The Quiet Stream", "Augmented", and "Old & New Dreams". © 1996-2016, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/78320

Personnel: Don Cherry ( Trumpet );  Dewey Redman ( Tenor Sax, Musette );  Charlie Haden ( Bass );  Ed Blackwell ( Drums )

Old And New Dreams