Friday, July 1, 2016

Bradley Leighton - Back To The Funk

Styles: Flute Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 52:45
Size: 84,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:32)  1. Runaway
(5:08)  2. Flow
(4:29)  3. Back To The Funk
(4:30)  4. Midnight Affairs
(5:56)  5. Clear Blue Skies
(4:42)  6. Special Lady
(3:43)  7. Sunday In San Diego
(3:59)  8. Make It With You
(4:53)  9. Ready For You
(4:53) 10. Soul Moon
(4:53) 11. Love Light In Flight

Back to the Funk is an intentional throwback to early-'70s funky jazz, the type of music performed by flutist Herbie Mann and a little later by saxophonist Grover Washington, Jr. The R&B-ish grooves are catchy if predictable and the backup band is solid, with flutist Bradley Leighton in the lead nearly all of the time. Nothing unusual happens, but Leighton plays well over the vamps, sounding enthusiastic and reasonably creative within the genre. While eight of the 11 selections are recent originals, this could very easily be an album from 1972. Fans of that era's funky music will want to pick this one up. https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/back-to-the-funk/id91059200

Personnel: Bradley Leighton (alto flute); Scott "Tempo" Kyle, Scott Kyle (trombone); Allan Phillips (piano, keyboards, percussion, drum programming); Cecil McBee Jr. Back to the Funk songs (bass instrument); Evan Marks (guitar); John Rekevics (alto saxophone, tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone); Brad Steinwehe (trumpet); Duncan Moore (drums).

Back To The Funk

Glenn Miller Orchestra - The Very Best Of Swing

Styles: Jazz, Big Band, Swing
Year: 2008
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 44:37
Size: 74,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:43)  1. Let's All Sing Together
(3:34)  2. Begin The Beguine
(2:35)  3. Leroy Brown
(2:11)  4. Let's Dance
(3:12)  5. Baby, It's Cold Outside
(2:29)  6. You Are The Sunshine Of My Life
(3:22)  7. Harlem Nocturn
(3:05)  8. New York, New York
(3:07)  9. Blueberry Hill
(2:37) 10. 'S Wonderful
(5:38) 11. Miller Meets Kaempfert-Medley
(2:44) 12. A Cabana In Havanna
(3:05) 13. Bouncing In Bavaria
(1:51) 14. When You're Smiling
(2:17) 15. Seventy-Six Trombones

Shortly after the beginning of the 20th century, in a small rural Southwestern Iowa town, a boy was born to Elmer and Mattie Lou Miller. The date was March 1, 1904 and the town was Clarinda. The boy that was born that night was named Alton Glen Miller (later changed to Glenn) and when he uttered his first cry, Clarinda heard Glenn Miller’s first “moonlight serenade.” Glenn’s first serenade was not particularly unique as it had been sung by children for centuries and was barely heard across South 16th Street. However, his second Moonlight Serenade was a composition he wrote while studying music under Dr. Schillinger in New York City. Glenn’s second Moonlight Serenade was unique, becoming the theme song of his number one Big Band and heard literally all around the world. Glenn’s paternal grandparents were a part of the westward movement of people during the 1800’s and moved permanently to the Clarinda area in 1870 (Glenn’s grandfather Robert had lived in Page County prior to the Civil War, returned to Ohio after the war, then moved his family to Page County in 1870). Their son Elmer, who was three years old when the family settled in Clarinda, grew up in Page County and married a local girl, Mattie Lou Cavender in 1898. Mattie Lou (she also went by Lulu and Lou) was born in Page County, and grew up to become a well respected teacher in Clarinda. In 1902,  Elmer and Lou Miller purchased the home at 601 S. 16th St. from C.H. Howard. Here, on March 1, 1904, the future big band leader was born. Their first son Elmer “Deane” had been born in a different home in Clarinda in 1901.

The Millers lived in the house from 1902 – 1906, when they sold their home on 16th St for $1,275 and moved to Tryon, Nebraska to homestead 640 acres under the Kincaid Act of 1904. While homesteading in Tryon, they lived in a sod house. In the evenings, Glenn’s mother, Mattie Lou, would play a simple pump organ which helped ease the lonesome existence on the flatlands of Nebraska. Mattie Lou started a school called Happy Hollow and her children would sing songs as they rode in a wagon on their way to school. The soothing music of his mother in their sod house and the uplifting songs on the way to school must have given Glenn a greater meaning and appreciation for music. Life in a sod house was replaced by life in town when Elmer moved the family to North Platte, Nebraska. Mattie Lou gave birth to a third son, John Herbert “Herb”, in 1913 and a daughter Emma “Irene” in 1916, while living in North Platte.Circa 1917, Glenn’s family moved to Grant City, Missouri where he went to grade school. A businessman in town, John Mosbarger, was also the community band director and wanted Glenn to join older bother Deane in the community band. Glenn, however, has an old trombone. Mr. Mosbarger bought Glenn a new trombone so that he could join the community band and in exchange Glenn worked for Mr. Mosbarger, to pay off the new trombone.

In 1918, moved to Fort Morgan, Colorado where Glenn went to high school. During his senior year, Glenn decided to try the game of football, and by the end of the season, he was chosen by the Colorado High School Sports Association as “the best left end in Colorado.” Football wasn’t Glenn’s only interest, however, as he had become very interested in a new sound called dance band music. Glenn enjoyed this music so much that he and some classmates decided to start their own band. In fact, Glenn was so excited about this new music that when it came time for his graduation in 1921, he decided to skip his graduation ceremonies and instead traveled to Laramie, Wyoming to play in a band. Meanwhile, back home, Glenn’s mother had to accept his diploma and the principal commented, “Maybe you’re the one who should get it anyway; you probably worked harder on it than he did!” By now, Glenn had made the decision that he was going to be a professional musician. His first professional contract was signed with a Dixieland group called Senter’s Sentapeeds. To most people it sounds like something you would step on rather than listen to. Then another opportunity opened up where Glenn could play in the Holly Moyer Orchestra in Boulder and earn enough money to attend the University of Colorado. This lasted for two years, but in 1924, Glenn’s musical ambition, and a new job with the Tommy Watkins Orchestra, caused him to discontinue his college education so that he could spend full time playing and arranging music. Glenn eventually headed for Los Angeles, where he had heard there were numerous band opportunities. He soon got the chance to join the Ben Pollack Orchestra, a band noted for finding talented musicians. While playing with Pollack’s band, Glenn roomed with another rising star, a clarinetist from Chicago named Benny Goodman.

In 1928, after working in Los Angeles and Chicago, Glenn moved on to New York City where he worked with bands of Ben Pollack, Red Nichols and Paul Ash as a trombonist and arranger. In 1932, Glenn organized the Smith Ballew Band, and worked two years as manager, arranger and trombonist. In 1934, he helped the Dorsey brothers to organize their first full-time Big Band and in 1935, he organized Ray Noble’s American band. Finally, in 1937, Glenn decided to fulfill his dream and organize his own band. This first band soon ran into financial difficulties and had to disband, but Glenn was not one to give up and he tried again in 1938. This time was different, and in March of 1939, his band was chosen to play the summer season at the prestigious Glen Island Casino, in New Rochelle, New York. This big break led to another important engagement at Meadowbrook, New Jersey in the spring of the same year. Both places offered frequent radio broadcasts, and by mid-summer, the Miller Orchestra had developed a nationwide following. In the fall of 1939, it began a series of radio broadcasts for Chesterfield cigarettes which increased its already great popularity. Thereafter, the band was in constant demand for recording sessions and appeared in two films; Sun Valley Serenade in 1941and Orchestra Wives in 1942.

In 1942, at the peak of his civilian career, Glenn decided he could better serve those in uniform by putting one on himself. By doing this, the band gave up a $20,000 weekly income. Too old to be drafted at age 38, Glenn first volunteered for the Navy but was told that they didn’t need his services. Not giving up, Glenn wrote to the Army’s Brigadier General Charles Young on August 12, 1942. Miller persuaded the Army to accept him so he could in his own words, “put a little more spring into the feet of our marching men and a little more joy into their hearts and to be placed in charge of a modernized army band.” After being accepted in the Army, Glenn’s civilian band played their last concert in Passaic, New Jersey on September 27th, 1942. It was such a sad event that the band couldn’t finish playing the closing theme song, Moonlight Serenade. Glenn soon became part of the Army Specialists Corps with the rank of captain. For the next year and a half, besides arranging music, Glenn created and directed his own 50-member band. Captain Miller’s mission was morale building, bringing a touch of home to the troops and modernizing military music. Glenn was also a talented fund raiser, and raised millions of dollars in war bond drives. He also attracted Air Corps recruits through his I Sustain the Wingsweekly radio broadcasts.

Still wanting to do more, Glenn arranged for overseas duty for the band. Arriving in London, the band was quartered at 25 Sloane Street, an area in constant barrage by German V-1 buzz bombs. Glenn was immediately concerned for the band and made arrangements for the unit to move to new quarters in Bedford, England. The band moved on July 2, 1944, and the very next day a buzz bomb landed in front of their old quarters, destroying the building and killing 100 people. The Glenn Miller Army Air Force Band was extremely busy and Glenn wrote home that in one month they played at 35 different bases, while performing 40 radio broadcasts in their spare time.  Finally, on December 15, 1944, Glenn boarded a single engine C-64 Norseman aircraft to travel to Paris, France where he was to make arrangements for a Christmas broadcast. Tragically, the plane never reached France and was never found. The band, without Miller, performed the scheduled Christmas concert under the direction of Jerry Gray and continued to perform, playing their last concert on November 13, 1945 at the National Press Club dinner for President Truman in Washington, D.C. At that time, General Dwight Eisenhower and General Hap Arnold thanked the band for a job well done.Glenn Miller will be remembered for many things; his musical style, showmanship, hard work, perseverance, and much more. But his patriotism in giving up his number one civilian band to enlist in the United States Army Air Corps, his pioneering efforts to modernize military bands and his supreme sacrifice for his country have caused him to be remembered as Clarinda’s and America’s favorite musical patriot.Glenn Miller’s life cannot easily be summed up in a few words. He put more in his short life of 40 years than most people do in a longer lifetime. http://glennmiller.org/glenn-miller-history

The Very Best Of Swing

Lee Ritenour & Larry Carlton - Larry & Lee

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:35
Size: 140,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:02)  1. Crosstown Kids
(6:25)  2. Low Steppin'
(5:48)  3. L.A. Underground
(5:01)  4. Closed Door Jam
(4:45)  5. After the Rain
(4:48)  6. Remembering J.P.
(5:24)  7. Fun in the Dark
(6:16)  8. Lots about Nothin'
(4:55)  9. Take That
(6:12) 10. Up and Adam
(5:54) 11. Reflection of a Guitar Player

Larry Carlton and Lee Ritenour have had parallel careers, but this CD is their first joint meeting on record. The two guitarists complement each other well and there are hints of Wes Montgomery along with a tribute to Joe Pass ("Remembering J.P."), but the songs (all of them their originals) are little more than rhythmic grooves most of the time with the usual fadeouts. The consistently lightweight music is reasonably pleasing but never too stimulating.~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/larry-lee-mw0000172045

Personnel:  Lee Ritenour (organ, synthesizer, guitar, bass, programming), Larry Carlton (keyboards, guitar), Larry Williams (tenor saxophone, synthesizer), Jerry Hey, Gary Grant (trumpet, flugelhorn), Bill Reichenbach (trombone), Greg Phillinganes, Dave Witham, Rick Jackson (keyboards), Melvin Davis (bass), Omar Hakim, Harvey Mason (drums), Cassio Duarte (percussion).

Larry & Lee

Thursday, June 30, 2016

Nancy Wilson - Save Your Love For Me: Nancy Wilson Sings The Great Blues Ballads

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:24
Size: 94.8 MB
Styles: R&B, Jazz vocals
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[2:45] 1. Save Your Love For Me
[2:35] 2. In The Dark
[2:48] 3. Don't Go To Strangers
[2:28] 4. This Bitter Earth
[3:17] 5. Willow Weep For Me
[3:03] 6. All Night Long
[2:25] 7. Gee Baby Ain't I Good To You
[2:32] 8. Please Send Me Someone To Love
[2:31] 9. Just For A Thrill
[2:12] 10. Born To Be Blue
[2:17] 11. I Want To Be Loved
[2:49] 12. Make Me A Present Of You
[2:53] 13. Blue Prelude
[3:09] 14. Since I Fell For You
[3:31] 15. Don't Take Your Love From Me

Excelling at the art of blues balladry demands that a musician possess great feeling but also great control. No surprise then, that one of its greatest practitioners, Nancy Wilson, has both traits in abundance. Save Your Love for Me: Nancy Wilson Sings the Great Blues Ballads is one in a loose series of three Capitol compilations to compile her late-'50s and early-'60s prime, the others focusing on the Great American Songbook and the torch song. The title track leads off the set, as it should, considering that Wilson's co-billed collaborative LP with Cannonball Adderley's quintet is the highlight of her career, and no single performance proves it more than this one (both Cannonball's alto and brother Nat's cornet echo her weary yet hopeful tone). The rest of the songs involve a larger band -- excepting two tracks from her only other major quintet collaboration, The Swingin's Mutual! with George Shearing -- but Wilson preserves the late-night feel (helped greatly by the sympathetic charts of Billy May and Mike Melvoin's organ). Throughout her career Nancy Wilson proved her talents in many fields -- jazz singing, ballads, pop music, crossovers -- but she never sounded better than when she was given an unhurried arrangement to stretch out on a slow blues, and any listener who wanted to concentrate only on the essence of Nancy Wilson could hardly do better than purchase this collection. ~John Bush

Save Your Love For Me: Nancy Wilson Sings The Great Blues Ballads

Chamberlain Brass - Cocktail Hour

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:34
Size: 113.5 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[2:53] 1. Four
[3:43] 2. Blue Bossa
[2:09] 3. Ribbon In The Sky
[4:27] 4. Black Orpheus
[2:37] 5. Mo' Better Blues
[3:10] 6. So What
[3:27] 7. Girl From Ipanema
[2:13] 8. L-O-V-E
[2:29] 9. Beyond The Sea
[2:45] 10. Wonderful World
[3:08] 11. Somewhere Over The Rainbow
[2:44] 12. Come Fly With My
[2:59] 13. Unforgettable
[2:37] 14. April Showers
[1:45] 15. A Thousand Years
[3:55] 16. Moonlight Serenade
[2:25] 17. Besame Mucho

Franco Finstad - Leader, Trumpet; Terry Szor - Trumpet; Patty Schmitt - French Horn; Jayan Nandagopan - trombone; Kyle Turner - Tuba.

The Chamberlain Brass debut album, “Cocktail Hour”, explores jazz, Latin, pop and soul with a unique approach - a swinging brass quintet backing up a heavy weight jazz soloist. Utilizing the virtuosic improvisation of internationally renowned trumpeter Terell Stafford, and new original arrangements by rising New York arranger Jayan Nandagopan, the new genre of “the jazz brass quintet” has arrived. Existing recordings of jazz by standard classical brass groups often lack swing and feel and are usually an add-on to the group’s usual classical approach. By combining jazz musicians and fresh, new repertoire, Chamberlain Brass have created something exciting and different: a purely jazz brass quintet.

Cocktail Hour

Paula Morelenbaum - Berimbaum

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:01
Size: 98.5 MB
Styles: Latin jazz, Bossa Nova
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[4:01] 1. Tomara
[3:57] 2. Consolação
[4:30] 3. Berimbau
[4:36] 4. Canto De Ossanha
[3:53] 5. Insensatez
[4:15] 6. Medo De Amar (Vire Essa Folha Do Livro)
[3:23] 7. Brigas Nunca Mais
[3:31] 8. Você E Eu
[3:38] 9. Seule
[3:54] 10. Primavera
[3:18] 11. O Nosso Amor

A veteran of the Brazilian samba scene, Morelenbaum has an impeccable pedigree in the music. But for this album, she's chosen as a common thread songs by the great Vinicius DeMoraes, whether as sole or co-composer. It makes for a great theme, with so much quality work to choose from. What makes this so fascinating are the arrangements used to frame the pieces, like the light Brazilian funk used on "Tomara" and "Berimbau," for example, which both float, lighter than air, over truly imaginative drum programming and instrumental performances. Morelenbaum's glorious voice sets the standard throughout, breathy but gloriously melodic (she also deserves great credit for her production work here). Even brass sounds feather-light, gliding by the songs. And yet it retains a real groove, a toe-tapping funk that's irresistible and does full justice to the songs themselves. Even a bossa ballad like "Insensetaz" is given quirky little touches, like the irresistible cello line by Morelenbaum's husband, Jacques. It's an album of details and quirks in the melodies and rhythms, gentle and lulling, but still constantly pushing forward, and rewarding no matter how many times you listen to it. ~Chris Nickson

Berimbaum

Cannonball Adderley - Ballads

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:39
Size: 125.1 MB
Styles: Bop, Soul jazz, Saxophone jazz
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[ 4:03] 1. Dancing In The Dark
[ 4:54] 2. I Can't Get Started
[ 5:33] 3. Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out To Dry
[ 4:07] 4. Now I Have Everything
[ 4:19] 5. Easy Living
[ 6:12] 6. I Worship You
[ 2:23] 7. Yvette
[ 7:45] 8. O Amor Em Paz
[15:20] 9. The Song My Lady Sings

Ballads is a lovely collection of Cannonball Adderley's work on Blue Note from the late '50s to the mid-'60s. Since the nine selections have been taken from nine different albums, the personnel varies widely. The overall mood and approach, however, remain uniform. On "Now I Have Everything" flutist Charles Lloyd, pianist Joe Zawinul, and cornet player Nat Adderley join in for a short, impressionistic lullaby; on "Easy Living" pianist Barry Harris, bassist Sam Jones, and drummer Louis Hayes lend their talents to a soulful take on a favorite standard. Adderley's alto paints in broad, expressionistic colors, wringing just a little more feeling from each note of "I Worship You" and "I Can't Get Started." The mood of pieces like "Dancing in the Dark" reminds one of a rainy night in a film noir classic, with the lights reflecting against the wet city streets at three a.m. The last cut, the 15-minute "The Song My Lady Sings," caps off 55 minutes of quiet, reflective jazz. This low-key exit quietly ebbs and flows as the band fills it with atmosphere to spare. For the unfamiliar, Ballads will serve as relaxed introduction into Adderley's stunning work; for all others, Ballads will serve as the perfect disc for late-night listening. ~Ronnie D. Lankford Jr

Ballads

Jeremy Monteiro - Homecoming

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:24
Size: 127,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:22)  1. Jazzybelle's Shuffle
(4:21)  2. Samba Appasionata (In Memory of Edmond Branson Jr.)
(7:53)  3. The Bubala Dance
(4:48)  4. Life Goes On
(8:24)  5. Inner Voice
(3:31)  6. Homecoming
(8:01)  7. Remember (Another Time)
(4:14)  8. Lorna's Kitchen
(9:45)  9. Blues for Ray (In Memory of Ray Charles)

Jeremy Monteiro has recorded around twenty albums in two decades, yet surprisingly this is the pianist's first offering of entirely original compositions in fourteen years. They confirm, however, what anyone who has seen him in concert already knows: firstly, that he writes sensitive, well-crafted tunes, and secondly, that as a pianist he is at the top of the tree. Ably supported by his regular trio members, Syracuse, New York drummer Shawn Kelley and Melbourne bassist Belinda Moody, and augmented by the muscular tones of sax legend Ernie Watts, Monteiro leads the way through a wonderfully rich and varied set. The first two tracks feature Greg Fishman, who plays a jaunty tenor on the striding "Jazzybelle's Shuffle and flute on the Latin "Samba Apassionata. The latter track is dedicated to the late Edmond Branson, Jr., a leading drummer on the Singapore scene. The tempo remains upbeat on "The Bubala Dance, where Watts adds his fireworks to the proceedings. This is the first of two songs co-written by Monteiro and Watts, who first collaborated almost twenty years ago, and the affinity between them is apparent. The other Monteiro/Watts number, "Remember, is a soulful, meditative piece reminiscent of Wayne Shorter's "Infant Eyes. Belinda Moody, an original voice, shines through on a short yet tasteful bass solo.

One of the highlights is "Inner Voice, in which both Monteiro and Ernie Watts solo elegantly and powerfully. It is a fine study in the art of tension and release. The title track, "Homecoming, highlights the talents of drummer Shawn Kelley and soprano player Ernie Watts. This jubilant calypso is very much in the mould of Sonny Rollins' "St. Thomas and no less enjoyable. Monteiro succeeds in mixing up the pace and mood of the songs, and one of his strengths as a leader lies in the space he allows his partners. On "Lorna's Kitchen," co-written by bassist Eldee Young, each member of the trio takes his turn in the spotlight, racing along together at a rattling pace. The album closes with Monteiro and Moody's glorious, understated "Blues For Ray, dedicated to the late Ray Charles. The playing on this blues piece is almost respectful, with Monteiro and Moody soloing in beautifully restrained manner over Ron Feuer's Hammond C3 Organ. A burst of gospel-style piano at the end concludes a fine tribute to the great man. Some may have thought that when Claude Nobbs invited Jeremy Monteiro to play Montreux in 1988, the Singaporean pianist had had his day in the sun. On the evidence of this delightful album, maybe his day in the sun is yet to come.~Ian Patterson https://www.allaboutjazz.com/homecoming-jeremy-monteiro-jazznote-records-review-by-ian-patterson.php

Personnel: Jeremy Monteiro: piano; Belinda Moody: bass; Shawn Kelley:drums; Ernie Watts:tenor saxophone (3,5,7), soprano saxophone (6); Greg Fishman:tenor saxophone (1), flute (2); Mohamed Noor: Latin percussion (2,6); Ron Feuer:Hammond C3 organ (9).

Homecoming

Ryan Kisor Quintet - Live at Smalls

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:44
Size: 127,8 MB
Art: Front + Back

(11:54)  1. Cool and Hot
(13:26)  2. You Stepped out of a Dream
( 7:53)  3. Enigma
(11:42)  4. Con Alma
(10:46)  5. Blues for Worm

Post-bop alto saxophonist Sherman Irby was born and raised in Tuscaloosa, AL; encouraged by his family to learn music, he initially chose to play the viola, moving on to a series of instruments including guitar and piano before finally settling on the sax as a teen, soon becoming infatuated with jazz. While attending Clark-Atlanta University, Irby studied classical music, but also was a standout in the school's jazz orchestra. Despite graduating with a degree in music education, he refused to enter teaching, instead working a series of dead-end day jobs in order to devote his full energies to performing. After honing his skills playing behind Atlanta area musicians including ex-Art Blakey pianist Johnny O'Neal and trumpeter Eddie Adams, in 1994 Irby accepted a gig performing on a cruise ship; after close to three years of playing at sea, he relocated to New York City, where he made the after-hours jam session scene at the Greenwich Village club Smalls. In time he and his band pianist James Hurt, bassist Eric Revis, and drummer Dana Murray became Smalls regulars, and it was there that Irby was discovered by Blue Note; his first LP for the label, Full Circle, appeared in 1997. After backing the likes of Roy Hargrove, Wynton Marsalis, and Marcus Roberts, he cut his second solo effort, Big Mama's Biscuits, in 1998. Irby subsequently founded his own Black Warrior Records label, through which he released Black Warrior (2001), Faith (2004), and Organ Starter (2006). ~ Jason Ankeny https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/sherman-irby/id17266991#fullText

Personnel: Ryan Kisor (trumpet); Sherman Irby (alto saxophone); Peter Zak (piano); Ali Muhammed Jackson (drums).

Live at Smalls

Wynonna Judd - Sing Chapter 1

Styles: Vocal, Country
Year: 2009
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 46:16
Size: 74,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:05)  1. That's How Rhythm Was Born
(4:05)  2. I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry
(4:39)  3. Women Be Wise
(2:55)  4. I Hear You Knocking
(3:23)  5. Till I Get It Right
(4:49)  6. Are The Good Times Really Over
(2:33)  7. The House Is Rockin'
(3:19)  8. Ain't No Sunshine
(4:05)  9. I'm A Woman
(4:01) 10. Anyone Who Had A Heart
(4:17) 11. When I Fall In Love
(4:59) 12. Sing

Wynonna Judd's excellent 2003 outing What the World Needs Now Is Love was steeped in rock & roll and country tunes done in her inimitable fashion. It reflected Judd's uncanny ability to sing new music with the passion, style, and finesse of the old gems. Country and pop radio being what they are namely, paranoid frightened defective computers with human faces all but ignored it. The radio and video channel worlds reflect the very definition of insanity: doing the same thing repeatedly and expecting different results. Rather than trying something different by showcasing real quality and individualism, they become narrower and more paranoid with each passing year as they program recycled crap. Update 2009: Wynonna Judd is back with Sing: Chapter 1, a collection of standards and cover tunes that have inspired her throughout her life and career. And it's a stunner. Produced by Brent Maher and Don Potter, this set contains 12 tracks that range from country music standards to blues tunes, R&B nuggets, and American pop radio classics by the masters. The opener is a reading of the prewar 1932 finger-poppin' swinger "That's How Rhythm Was Born" (wherein Judd and Vicki Hampton do their own Andrews Sisters on the backing chorus). Judd delivers it effortlessly with all the good time verve and a smoking Stéphane Grappelli-inspired violin solo by Fats Kaplan the original contained, but with a bit more sass. She counters this with a gorgeous, deeply emotional, string-laden version of Hank Williams' "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry," that is as dramatic and darkly dreamy as ANYTHING k.d. lang ever attempted.

This is followed by a beautiful version of Sippie Wallace's "Women Be Wise," with all of its sassy natural inflections retained even as Judd updates the context, and then a version of Dave Bartholomew's New Orleans R&B stomper "I Hear You Knockin'" that gives the Dave Edmunds cover a run for its money  and comes damn close to Fats Domino's. Other country classics include Merle Haggard's "Are the Good Times Really Over for Good," Stevie Ray Vaughan's "The House Is Rockin'" (and here it really does), and a completely shocking, utterly bereft deep soul-blues reading of Bill Withers' "Ain't No Sunshine." Here, the simmering, smoldering eros in Judd's voice is tempered with genuine loneliness, accented by the nylon-string guitar and a convincing string arrangement. It's devastating. Add to this a shuffling bluesy rocker in Leiber & Stoller's "I'm a Woman," with some smoking Rhodes piano, and you have the uptempo part of the program covered. But add the three ballads that close the set the Bacharach/David "Anyone Who Had a Heart," the 1952 standard "When I Fall in Love," and the closing title track by Rodney Crowell and you have true classicism. This final track is a new pop country anthem; it underscores Judd's sheer individualism and style, and offers a complete illustration of her gifts as a singer. Sing: Chapter 1 is perfection in performance, material, production, and musical execution. Judd is reinventing herself AS herself: she is a country singer every bit the individual that Patsy Cline was, and is so iconoclastic with her phrasing, tension, shading, and drama that she is a truly unique stylist (a rarity in the 21st century). If you want to hear a singer's singer, one who can move you to the core of your being with her way of interpreting a song, Wynonna Judd's deeply moving, authentic Sing: Chapter 1 is a fine place to begin. This may be her finest hour.~Thom Jurek http://www.allmusic.com/album/sing-chapter-1-mw0000805828

Personnel:  Roy Agee – trombone;  Eddie Bayers – drums; Brian Beatty – background vocals;  Kerry Beatty – background vocals;  Bekka Bramlett – background vocals;  Bob Britt – electric guitar;  Elicia Brown – background vocals;  Jeremy Calloway – background vocals;  Spencer Campbell – bass guitar; Maurice Carter – background vocals; Bruce Dailey – piano;  Mark Douthit – tenor saxophone

Sing Chapter 1

Wednesday, June 29, 2016

George Cables Trio - Bluesology

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:45
Size: 157.4 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[6:45] 1. In Your Own Sweet Way
[6:37] 2. Easy Living
[5:37] 3. There Is No Greater Love
[5:08] 4. Voodoo Lady
[8:06] 5. Come Rain Or Come Shine
[7:56] 6. A Night In Tunisia
[7:19] 7. Hi-Fly
[7:30] 8. Bluesology
[8:58] 9. Ebony Moonbeams
[4:46] 10. How Deep Is The Ocean

George Cables- piano, Jay Anderson- bass, Billy Drummond- drums.

We don't get enough of George Cables these days. You know how it is; record for those little independent labels and somehow you just get lost in the major league shuffle. Look a little deeper and you'll find that Cables has made some great trio music in recent days, with two dates coming to my mind in particular, Night and Day on the Japanese DIW label and Cables' Fables from the pianist's SteepleChase oeuvre. Apparently the alliance with the latter concern has proven productive because there's been a great stream of trio discs to come as the product of that relationship, with Bluesology the most recent to get a Stateside release.

Taking nothing away from its predecessors, Bluesology is a distinguished Cables affair while also being just one damn good piano trio record. The focus is mainly on standards, but what this ensemble does with them is anything but standard fare. Just take the opening Brubeck classic, "In Your Own Sweet Way," which sports a catchy introductory vamp that also provides a launching pad for the solos. Cables' voicings are rich and robust (captured with great finesse by engineer Josiah Gluck), while his improvisational style gains much from a forward momentum, aided further by Billy Drummond's quicksilver drumming. The two Cables originals contained herein are both winners, leaving one with a desire to have had more of his blithe lines thrown into the mix. "Voodoo Lady," as the title might suggest, gets its energy from a rumba beat and thick two-handed block chords from Cables. The lengthier "Ebony Moonbeams" is built upon an eighth-note feel and has an extended form complete with creative periods of tension and release. Then, all of a sudden Drummond kicks into a sprightly samba beat for a spell, only to later find Cables' haunting refrain at the forefront. And yet these are just two highlights among many. Can you say "highly recommended?" ~C. Andrew Hovan

Bluesology

Alicia Varcoe - Since I Fell For You

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:40
Size: 106.8 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[4:11] 1. The Nearness Of You
[3:54] 2. Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me
[4:01] 3. Good Morning Heartache
[3:45] 4. Deed I Do
[4:51] 5. Since I Fell For You
[4:24] 6. He Loves And She Loves
[4:08] 7. I Could Write A Book
[4:51] 8. I Believe In You
[5:41] 9. Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out To Dry
[6:49] 10. Mad As Hell Blues

With a voice described by pianist Gene D’Andrea as “heartfelt” and “full of possibilities,” twenty-two-year old vocalist Alicia Varcoe is breaking into the jazz scene. Already, Alicia has performed for international audiences at such venues as the U.S. Consulate General in Hamburg, Germany, Roskilde Jazz Days in Denmark, and for an audience of over five thousand in The Hague, the Netherlands. She has shared the stage with jazz luminaries such as Ed Neumeister, Steve Abshire, John Brown, Bobby Muncy, Kevin Pace, and Jon Metzger, with whom she studies. Currently, she is the vocalist for the Elon University Jazz Ensemble in North Carolina. Alicia is also a talented pianist, and works as a freelance accompanist for vocalists and instrumentalists. Her debut album, Since I Fell For You premiered March 2013, and features new arrangements of jazz standards, as well as her own original compositions.

Since I Fell For You

Eddie Calvert - The Best Of Eddie Calvert: The EMI Years

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:34
Size: 124.9 MB
Styles: Easy Listening
Year: 1992
Art: Front

[2:44] 1. O Mein Papa
[1:38] 2. The Poor People Of Paris
[2:36] 3. Stranger In Paradise
[2:10] 4. April In Portugal
[2:35] 5. On A Slow Boat To China
[2:55] 6. Love Is A Many-Splendoured Thing
[3:42] 7. I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
[2:09] 8. Sucu Sucu
[2:40] 9. My Son, My Son
[3:13] 10. Il Silenzio
[2:21] 11. Cherry Pink And Apple Blossom White
[2:28] 12. Mandy
[2:45] 13. Around The World
[2:41] 14. Forgotten Dreams
[3:26] 15. My Yiddische Momme
[2:31] 16. Summertime
[3:00] 17. John And Julie
[3:01] 18. Little Serenade [piccolissima Serenata]
[3:10] 19. I Love Paris (Can Can)
[2:40] 20. Zambesi

Eddie Calvert, known as the man with the golden trumpet, was born in Preston, Lancashire on the 15th March 1922 as Albert Edward Calvert. As a child he was exposed to his family's love of brass band music and he learned to play many brass instruments but concentrated on the trumpet. He joined the Preston Town Silver Band at the age of 11 but the war interrupted his musical career and by the late 1940s he returned to play in various amateur brass bands, eventually moving to the professional circuit with the dance bands Geraldo and Billy Ternet. Going solo, he appeared on TV with the Stanley Black Orchestra. He signed to the Columbia label, part of the EMI group and released an instrumental trumpet version of the German song Oh Mein Papa which had most famously been covered in English as Oh My Papa by Eddie Fisher. Calvert's instrumental easily won the chart battle in the UK and it remained at no.1 for nine weeks at the beginning of 1954. Over a year later he was involved in another chart battle for supremacy with the song Cherry Pink And Apple Blossom White and this time it was much closer with both his and a very similar trumpet version by Perez Prado reaching no.1 in the Spring of 1955. Several other hits followed including a version of Stranger In Paradise, John And Julie and Mandy, while Little Serenade was his final hit in June 1958. When the 1960s provided no change of fortune, Calvert moved away to settle in South Africa where he lived out the remainder of his life, dying on the 7th of August 1978. ~bio by Sharon Mawer

The Best Of Eddie Calvert: The EMI Years

Clyde McPhatter - All Time Favorites

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 21:41
Size: 49.7 MB
Styles: R&B, Soul
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[2:05] 1. Little Bitty Pretty One
[2:35] 2. Rockin' Robin
[2:27] 3. Don't Let Go
[1:50] 4. I'm Movin' On
[2:43] 5. Money Honey
[2:27] 6. Oh Lonesome Me
[2:52] 7. Pretty Girls Everywhere
[2:08] 8. Sixty Minute Man
[2:31] 9. Such A Night

Clyde McPhatter (November 15, 1932 – June 13, 1972) was an influential African-American R&B singer, born in Durham, North Carolina. He was raised in a religious Baptist family, and formed a gospel group in 1945 after his family moved to New Jersey. They soon relocated to New York City, and McPhatter joined the Mount Lebanon Singers, a popular gospel group. In 1950, McPhatter joined Billy Ward & the Dominoes, and was present for the recording of "Sixty Minute Man", which was a huge hit in 1951, and was one of the earliest rock and roll records. After several more hits, McPhatter quit the group in 1953 because he made little money and gained virtually no fame, in spite of his voice being the lead on most of the group's songs. McPhatter then signed to Atlantic Records after forming a group, The Drifters. "Money Honey", "Such a Night", "Honey Love", "White Christmas" and "Whatcha Gonna Do" became huge hits.

In 1954, McPhatter was drafted but was assigned in the U.S., allowing him to continue recording. He soon left The Drifters and launched a solo career. His first solo hit occurred just after being discharged - "Love Has Joined Us Together" (with Ruth Brown). He released several R&B hits in the next few years, but only made one serious dent in the pop charts with the Brook Benton penned song "A Lovers Question", which made it to #6 in 1958. White groups usually covered his best compositions and achieved more widespread mainstream success. In spite of this, McPhatter became one of the most popular black musicians among white listeners. His 1956 recording of "Treasure of Love" saw him enjoy just one week in the UK singles chart. The lack of any subsequent entry gave him the unenviable tag there of being a one hit wonder McPhatter soon signed to MGM Records, and released several more hits. "I Told Myself a Lie" and "Think Me a Kiss" (1960) became minor pop hits, as was "Ta Ta", his first single for Mercury Records. "I Never Knew" and "Lover Please" (1962) became even bigger pop hits, but his career started suffering due to his alcoholism. Other black artists were following McPhatter's blueprint into pop audiences, including Rudy Lewis, Johnny Moore, Sam Cooke and an all new line-up of The Drifters. McPhatter's unreliability kept him from maintaining his career in the face of this competition. As the 1960s wore on, McPhatter's career kept falling in spite of a few minor hits.

In the early 1970s, McPhatter spent some time living in England, where he still had a significant audience, but this was short-lived. Back again in America, Clyde McPhatter died of a heart attack in 1972, at the age of 39. In 1987, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. His pioneering contribution to the genre has been recognized by the Rockabilly Hall of Fame.

All Time Favorites

Art Tatum - In Private

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:57
Size: 77.8 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2004/2010
Art: Front

[2:58] 1. Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams (And Dream Your Troubles Away)
[2:44] 2. Sittin' And A-Rockin'
[2:22] 3. You're Driving Me Crazy
[3:00] 4. Tenderly
[3:26] 5. Over The Rainbow
[3:18] 6. In A Sentimental Mood
[2:57] 7. You Took Advantage Of Me
[3:25] 8. It's The Talk Of The Town
[2:55] 9. She's Funny That Way
[3:21] 10. I'll Never Be The Same
[3:27] 11. Night And Day

According to legend, Art Tatum recorded a series of piano solos in the home of pianist Buddy Cole on state-of-the-art equipment for Cole's enjoyment, though the location of these dates has never been conclusively verified. Left to his own devices, with a superb, well-tuned piano and minus the noisy distractions he found in nightclubs, Tatum rolls out one gem after another. Fans will delight in his playful romp through "Sittin' and Rockin'," while the pianist can be heard humming quietly along during his inventive take of "You're Driving Me Crazy." Chime-like chords introduce Tatum's showstopping rendition of "Over the Rainbow," while "Night and Day" is filled with lots of the breathtaking runs that dazzled audiences (and other pianists) throughout his career. The sound quality exceeds Tatum's commercial recordings of the period (though he wasn't recording very much at the time). True Art Tatum fanatics will want to acquire this music, but the Storyville CD Complete Jazz Chronicle: Solo Sessions + is a better investment, as it adds eight alternate takes from these sessions, plus a previously unissued 1955 recording made in New York for Radio Sweden. ~Ken Dryden

In Private

Eric Alexander - Straight Up

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:34
Size: 148,0 MB
Art: Front + Back

(8:28)  1. Straight Up
(8:29)  2. What are you doing the rest of your life?
(7:54)  3. Be My Love
(8:00)  4. Blues Waltz
(8:06)  5. Laura
(7:25)  6. An Oscar For Treadwell
(8:12)  7. The End Of A Love Affair
(7:57)  8. Love Is a Many Splendored Thing

Tenor saxophonist Eric Alexander finished second in the 1991 Thelonious Monk sax competition, and shows why throughout these eight tracks. He has a full, bright, impressive tone, excellent facility and command of the instrument and is steadily developing a personal sound. While the tracks vary in quality, most are at worst competent and at best outstanding. Alexander is more interesting on uptempo tunes than ballads, where he concentrates more on melodic presentation than thematic exposition.~Ron Wynn http://www.allmusic.com/album/straight-up-mw0000621138

Personnel: Eric Alexander (tenor saxophone); Jim Rotondi (trumpet); Harold Mabern (piano); John Webber (bass); George Fludas (drums).

Straight Up

Silje Nergaard - Be Still My Heart - The Essential

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:13
Size: 157,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:03)  1. Be Still My Heart
(4:40)  2. We should be happier by now
(4:46)  3. Shame On You
(4:58)  4. Dance Me Love
(4:40)  5. I don`t wanna see you cry
(4:21)  6. If You Leave Me Now
(5:24)  7. On and on
(3:06)  8. Me Oh My
(4:12)  9. The Waltz
(5:00) 10. Tell Me Where You're Going
(5:35) 11. How am I supposed to see the stars
(3:46) 12. Keep On Backing Losers
(4:24) 13. Japanese Blue
(3:39) 14. Lullaby To Erle
(4:33) 15. Ga en annen vei

Silje Nergaard is an award-winning Norwegian jazz-pop singer/songwriter who peaked in popularity after the turn of the century with the chart-topping albums At First Light (2001) and Nightwatch (2003). Born on June 19, 1966, in Steinkjer, Norway, she cites influences that include Al Jarreau and Joni Mitchell. As a teenager she became something of a national sensation when she joined an impromptu jam session at the 1983 Molde Internasjonal Jazz Festival. In 1984 she made her solo recording debut with a 7" single, "One of These Mornings"/"My Funny Valentine," released on PolyGram. Several years later she signed a recording deal with Lifetime Records and made her full-length album debut with Tell Me Where You're Going (1990), the first of three English-language jazz-pop albums produced and co-written by Richard Niles. The highlights of these early albums, the others being Silje (1991) and Cow on the Highway (1995), were later compiled on the best-of collection The Lifetime Years (2005). After parting ways with Lifetime Records, Nergaard released a couple Norwegian-language albums on the label Kirkelig Kulturverksted: Brevet (1995) and Hjemmefra (1996). Upon signing a major-label recording deal with Universal Music, Nergaard broke through to mainstream success in 2000 with Port of Call, a full-length English-language effort comprised largely of cover material. Port of Call was a Top Ten hit on the Norwegian albums chart and set the stage for her chart-topping follow-up albums, At First Light (2001) and Nightwatch (2003). Like Port of Call, these two albums feature a quartet comprised of Tord Gustavsen (piano, Rhodes), Harald Johnsen (acoustic bass), and Jarle Vespestad (drums), in addition to Nergaard (vocals). Almost entirely self-composed, Nightwatch was especially successful, earning Nergaard a Spellemannprisen award for Musician of the Year. In the wake of this success, Be Still My Heart: The Essential (2005), a best-of collection also featuring some new material, was released, along with the aforementioned Lifetime compilation. Subsequent albums Darkness out of Blue (2007) and A Thousand True Stories (2009), both Top Five hits, feature an expanded band and arrangements by Vince Mendoza. ~ Jason Birchmeier https://itunes.apple.com/no/artist/silje-nergaard/id13493860#fullText

Be Still My Heart - The Essential

Lee Ritenour - This is Love

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:09
Size: 136,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:47)  1. This is Love
(4:41)  2. Mr. Papa
(5:21)  3. Can You Feel It?
(4:28)  4. Dream Away
(6:01)  5. Alfie's Theme
(5:18)  6. And You Know What ... I Love You
(4:53)  7. Baltimore
(3:50)  8. Ooh-Yeah
(7:35)  9. Street Runner
(5:26) 10. Dreamwalk
(6:45) 11. Pavane

Lee Ritenour's first solo album for his new i.e. music label is a good one, one of his best actually, whether staying in the strict jazz-lite format that marks a lot of his previous work or straying into the other idioms that pop up here. Whether emulating Wes Montgomery's octaves or curling around in single-string fashion, Ritenour's playing is irresistibly tasty and swinging, perhaps more so than ever, and the material has real melodic interest more so than anything his former group Fourplay was performing around this time. Among the most interesting swerves off the track are the title tune, which mixes reggae with Montgomery in a very appealing way, and a surprisingly effective closing take on Fauré's "Pavanne." There are extended samples from Sonny Rollins' Alfie score, with "Alfie's Theme" grooving away in a cool, soulful, organ-jazz seam and "Street Runner" tracking Rollins' recording, its quicksilver post-bop clip juxtaposed with repose. On both tracks, Ronnie Foster supplies authentic Hammond B-3 perhaps fulfilling a Jimmy Smith-meets-Wes Montgomery fantasy. Bill Evans and Ernie Watts take guest turns on tenor on a few cuts; Bob James chips on agreeably on Rhodes electric piano on "Can You Feel It?"; and Ritenour often takes matters into his own hands, programming electronic drums and performing on synthesizers. Hardcore jazzers who wrote Ritenour off as a lightweight ought to hear how he has grown as a mature jazz guitarist on this album. ~ Richard S.Ginell http://www.allmusic.com/album/this-is-love-mw0000039079

Personnel: Lee Ritenour (acoustic & electric guitars, synthesizer, bass, drum programming); Phil Perry, Lisa Fischer (vocals); Larry Williams (saxophone, flute, synthesizer, keyboards); Bill Evans (soprano & tenor saxophones); Ernie Watts (tenor saxophone); Jerry Hey (trumpet, flugelhorn); Gary Grant (trumpet); Bill Reichenbach (trombone); Ralph Morrison (violin); Alan Pasqua (piano, Fender Rhodes); Bob James (Fender Rhodes); Ronnie Foster (Hammond B-3 organ); Frank Becker (synthesizer, programming); James Genus (acoustic & electric basses); Melvin Davis (bass); Dave Weckl, Sonny Emory (drums); Paulinho Da Costa (timbales, percussion).

This is Love

Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Sandy Stewart - Sandy Stewart Sings The Songs Of Jerome Kern

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:07
Size: 149.1 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 1995/2015
Art: Front

[3:10] 1. Nobody Else But Me
[4:52] 2. Medley Bill Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man
[4:30] 3. They Didn't Believe Me
[3:54] 4. How'd You Like To Spoon With Me
[2:43] 5. All The Things You Are
[2:34] 6. I'm Old Fashioned
[6:03] 7. The Song Is You
[2:28] 8. All In Fun
[2:57] 9. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
[1:55] 10. Pick Yourself Up
[4:02] 11. Medley Can I Forget You Yesterdays
[4:29] 12. In Love In Vain
[2:43] 13. The Way To Look Tonight
[3:23] 14. Remind Me
[3:27] 15. Day Dreaming
[3:07] 16. You Couldn't Be Cuter
[5:21] 17. The Folks Who Live On The Hill
[3:21] 18. Medley Look For The Silver Lining Till The Clouds ..

THE MARRIAGE OF THE LYRICS TO THE MUSIC THAT KERN wrote is so perfectly realized and so easy to sing because there’s not a line or a note that doesn’t coincide with perfection, as far as I’m concerned. I’ve been singing his songs since I was a little girl. Moose [Charlap, Stewart’s late husband] said once that every jazz composer thinks of Kern’s “All the Things You Are” as the perfect song. It’s like the National Anthem but better. No offense to America—I’m very patriotic! As I get older, I find more creative things to do with the melody and the lyric itself, which hopefully you’ll notice in the show. You just can’t miss with a Kern song.

Kern is a giant. Everybody knows it, it’s common knowledge in America and across the world. I lived in a time in my youth when there was such magic in the theater and such total creativity, and it was not so much competition between the great composers as much as it was a wonderful time on Broadway.

I grew up. I got older. I learned about loss, great loss in my life, great joy in my life, and it’s a matter of using your life experiences and transferring them to your audience. When I sing a great song, I want the audience to know that these people took time and effort and joy and love to write these wonderful stories, and I want to tell it like it is and not just sing the song. How can I explain it? I know one of my great experiences was when I was singing one of the old ballads and after I finished, no one applauded. I thought everyone had left the room. I didn’t know what was going on. But then I realized what a great complement they were giving me, because I touched their hearts, and that’s something I love to do, because my heart was touched and I want to convey that experience to them. ~Theresa Anna

Sandy Stewart Sings The Songs Of Jerome Kern

Ignaz Dinne, Ron Carter - The Next Level

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:11
Size: 121.7 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[7:34] 1. The Next Level
[6:13] 2. Think Again
[4:22] 3. Three's A Crowd
[6:17] 4. Petes Place
[6:22] 5. Ask Me Now
[4:51] 6. I'll Be Seeing You
[6:59] 7. Pannonica
[5:40] 8. The Twisting Path
[4:48] 9. Come Sunday

Just past the threshold of his seventh decade, Ron Carter is an iconic bassist whose prolific heartbeat has stirred the lifeblood of jazz for nearly 50 years. Whether he's playing with fellow legends or lending credibility to a burgeoning young lion, his distinctive style and tone has been the underpinning for the 1000+ recordings on which he has appeared.

In contrast to his work on New York Reunion, Carter's playing is comparatively muted on young tenor Ignaz Dinne's The Next Level, steeped in the blues and the classical stylings upon which his technique and solo structures are based. Dinne's ballad "Think Again" includes vintage Carter, his pizzicato complementing feathery tenor and drummer Jochen Rueckert's whispering brushes perfectly. His rubato pushes Pete Rende's excellent piano on "Pete's Place" and his bass on "Ask Me Now" bursts with octaves and doubling of notes. Throughout The Next Level Carter thrives on manipulating the tempos and key signatures, strumming the strings and doubling the chords. Dinne blows with perfect solemnity on Ellington's "Come Sunday," with Carter's masterful pizzicato and Rende's pump organ underscoring the excellent arrangement. But throughout it seems that Carter is holding back, as if he didn't want to overshadow his young charge. ~Terrell Kent Holmes

The Next Level