Thursday, September 22, 2016

Rotem Sivan Trio - A New Dance

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:27
Size: 104,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:35)  1. A New Dance
(1:03)  2. Sun & Stars
(4:51)  3. Angel Eyes
(3:55)  4. One for Aba
(4:06)  5. Yam
(5:22)  6. I Wish You Were Here
(6:52)  7. In Walked Bud
(2:13)  8. Almond Tree
(4:09)  9. Fingerprints
(7:18) 10. I Fall in Love Too Easily

You can only imagine the hurricane-like storm of hyperbole that accompanies every new release by every single fresh young jazz artist on today's scene. We are promised, every time, that the artist in question (...always immensely-talented) is a "musical genius" and "true innovator" who is going to "transform the jazz world as we know it." The only thing such purple prose engenders in me is a healthy sense of skepticism. You hear such stuff once, twice, a million times and when you get the goods, the disappointment instantly sets in. But, hey, the hype might start a conversation, or it may make one wax philosophical, or it may simply sell CDs. What the hype machine cannot consider is that some young artists may appear on the scene as fully-formed musical giants, while others may need a few albums under their belt to hit their stride. Still others might need a formative experience as a sideman under the wings of an established artist, and others might simply slip quietly into lives that don't involve being the next big thing in the jazz world.  All of this is worth mentioning because the release of For Emotional Use Only (Fresh Sound New Talent, 2014), the second album by Israeli-born guitarist Rotem Sivan, was accompanied by the usual intensely glowing corona of hype; a sure sign that somewhere, a publicist was sleeping soundly at night. And that album was quite good, a bit derivative perhaps, but Sivan seemed to be a name to watch. Fleet-fingered, harmonically-rich, and with a "pure jazz" guitar concept derived from the likes of John Abercrombie, Jim Hall, and Tal Farlow, Sivan had just enough left-field stuff going on to stand out a bit from the hoi polloi.

Sivan's convictions come to far greater fruition on A New Dance; an album with a hype-fulfilling surfeit of passion, individualism, charm, and unadulterated jazz sweat. A New Dance succeeds, in part, on sheer group chemistry. Sivan wisely retained the services of the gifted young Israeli bassist Haggai Cohen Milo. Their sparkling, inventive and energetic interactions with new drummer Colin Stranahan are catalytic; taking Sivan's music to a whole 'nother level. The proof is in the trio's work with the standard repertoire. "Angel Eyes" a bluesy ballad traditionally given a slow-burn. late-night vibe is convincingly cast in a completely different light. Cohen-Milo takes the melody over Sivan's rapidly strummed chords as Stranahan's cymbals ease in. The focus abruptly shifts, and the energy level goes way up, as Sivan takes the lead and Stranahan prods and pokes with off- centered fills and accents that increase the tension and swing like hell. The trio take Thelonious Monk's classic "In Walked Bud" to new places as well. Here, Sivan's understated spontaneity seems almost childlike as the trio slowly immerses itself into Monk's world. Again, Sivan swaps leads with Cohen- Milo, but the result is an intense trio conversation that invites the listener to lean forward and anticipate the next change. Most startling of all is Oded Tzur's impossibly breathy saxophone intro to "I Fall In Love Too Easily." It took me a full minute to figure out what was going on. What follows is pure jazz ballad lushness.

Sivan's excellent originals comprise the bulk of this album and, while they draw on a surprisingly diverse musical palette, their focus is unswervingly jazz-oriented. Both "One for Aba" and "Yam" are lovely lead sheet-type tunes that draw on the ethnic music of Sivan's native land. The title track is restlessly inventive and sunny in the vein of Pat Metheny's Bright Size Life (ECM Records, 1976), while "I Wish You Were Here" is an effortless ballad that frames a dark, woody solo by the immensely-talented Cohen-Milo. The biggest departure is the set's lone vocal number, "Almond Tree," an easygoing slice of the singer-songwriter pie that seems incongruous couched amongst Sivan's brainy, highly detailed jazz guitar creations. Singer Daniel Wright, firmly in the mellow, reflective style of Michael Franks and Kenny Rankin, acquits himself quite well. "Fingerprints," by contrast, is a fast-paced tune that could be classified as a "burner" if it wasn't rife with a dizzying variety of modulations, twists, turns and pauses. Here, Stranahan carries the day: his playing is virtuosic yet preserves that magical happy-go-lucky spirit of fun. Jazz is fun!  So, yeah, the hype may be right on the money regarding Rotem Sivan. 
~ Dave Wayne https://www.allaboutjazz.com/a-new-dance-rotem-sivan-fresh-sound-new-talent-review-by-dave-wayne.php
 
Personnel: Rotem Sivan: guitar; Colin Stranahan: drums; Haggai Cohen-Milo: bass; Daniel Wright: voice (8); Oded Tzur: tenor saxophone (10).

A New Dance

Joshua Redman & Brad Mehldau - Nearness

Styles: Saxophone And Piano Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:32
Size: 168,4 MB
Art: Front

( 8:38)  1. Ornithology
(10:55)  2. Always August
( 9:56)  3. In Walked Bud
(12:36)  4. Mehlsancholy Mode
(16:44)  5. The Nearness of You
(14:40)  6. Old West

Nearness finds acclaimed jazz saxophonist Joshua Redman and pianist Brad Mehldau teaming up for a set of loose yet heartfelt duo performances. Collaborators since they first began playing together in Redman's quartet in the early '90s, Mehldau and Redman have forged their own distinct solo careers. While they have continued to work together in various settings, the duo put a spotlight on their creative friendship with their 2011 tour. Nearness features live performances captured during the European leg of that tour, including tapings in Spain, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Germany, and Norway. These are dazzlingly collaborative performances that reveal Redman and Mehldau to be a highly intuitive and harmonically adroit team. While there are a handful of original compositions here, the pair also tackle several jazz standards, including a brisk, kinetic reading of Charlie Parker's "Ornithology" and a laid-back if no less invigorating take on Thelonious Monk's "In Walked Bud." Elsewhere, they take a similarly inventive approach on several originals, including Redman's warmly burnished "Mehlsancholy Mode" and Mehldau's skipping, bluesy "Old West." What makes these recordings so engaging is the way Mehldau and Redman play off each other, dancing around the melody, weaving in and out of the harmony like rambunctious birds sparring over scattered seed. It's a conversational style that comes off as both a game of hot potato and let's finish each other's sentences. Sometimes, as on "Ornithology," it almost sounds as if Redman starts a song one way and then Mehldau switches up the conversation, taking them down a wholly alternate route. Other times, as in Mehldau's poignantly rendered "Always August," they build a detailed musical architecture, their nuanced improvisational lines forming ascending and descending stairways, grandly domed halls, and hidden dulcet nooks. ~ Matt Collar http://www.allmusic.com/album/nearness-mw0002959309

Personnel:  Joshua Redman (saxophone)  Brad Mehldau (piano)

Nearness

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Aretha Franklin - The Great American Songbook

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:02
Size: 130.6 MB
Styles: R&B, Soul, Traditional pop
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[3:16] 1. Little Brown Book
[2:54] 2. Trouble In Mind
[3:13] 3. Try A Little Tenderness
[2:50] 4. It Ain't Necessarily So
[2:46] 5. How Deep Is The Ocean
[4:34] 6. Cold, Cold Heart
[2:29] 7. Love For Sale
[2:30] 8. How Glad I Am
[2:50] 9. Skylark
[4:33] 10. This Bitter Earth
[2:14] 11. Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive
[3:29] 12. What A Difference A Day Made
[4:51] 13. Only The Lonely
[2:21] 14. Rock A Bye Your Baby With A Dixie Melody
[3:01] 15. God Bless The Child
[3:06] 16. Say It Isn't So
[2:39] 17. Are You Sure
[3:17] 18. That Lucky Old Sun (Just Rolls Around Heaven All Day)

Legacy released this 18-track disc less than two months prior to the 11-CD/one-DVD Take a Look: Aretha Franklin Complete on Columbia. In a sense, The Great American Songbook is nothing more than a box-set sampler, but it shall remain an excellent overview of Franklin’s overlooked (or willfully ignored) early-‘60s releases, which were heavy on interpretations of songs written by the likes of Hoagy Carmichael and Johnny Mercer, George and Ira Gershwin, Jimmy Van Heusen and Sammy Cahn, and Irving Berlin. While she had not fully blossomed and was years away from the gutsier material of her commercial peak -- only “Rock-a-Bye Your Baby with a Dixie Melody” scratched the Top 40 -- her voice was nonetheless supremely expressive, rooted in her gospel upbringing and drenched in soul. She was no mere stylist; when she sings “Ooh, honey, I’d like to really melt your cold, cold heart,” there is as much fire as there is in any given line of “(You Make Me Feel Like A) Natural Woman.” Even the earliest cuts here, taken from late 1960 and early 1961 sessions with the Ray Bryant Combo, are soul through and through. (Note for fanatics: the mixes of "Trouble in Mind" and "Love for Sale" eliminate the fabricated crowd noise heard on Yeah!!!.) ~Andy Kellman

The Great American Songbook

Dick Sisto - Soul Searching

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:44
Size: 125.3 MB
Styles: Vibraphone jazz
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[4:29] 1. Boppy
[5:10] 2. Like A Mist
[6:22] 3. Earth Lament
[4:21] 4. 12 Steps
[1:53] 5. The Path
[6:57] 6. La Mesha
[4:48] 7. Love Grows Deep
[3:19] 8. Summer Of Love
[6:38] 9. Work
[3:40] 10. Protest Four Freedom
[2:45] 11. Chance
[4:18] 12. New Water

Dick Sisto - Vibraphone; Bobby Broom - Guitar on Trks. 1,2,3,4,6,7,9; Barry Ries - Trumpet on Trks. 5,8,10,12; Dennis Irwin - Bass on Trks. 1,2,3,4,6,7,9,11; Jim Anderson - Bass on Trks. 8,10,12; Mike Hyman - Drums on Trks. 1,2,3,4,6,7,8,9,10,12.

"Soul Searching" is an extremely well conceived and performed CD, marked by an interesting set of compositions that merit close attention. It is an excellent showcase for Sisto's sensitivity and harmonic awareness. Solos are flawlessly paced, and delivered without a hint of waste. A spirited and remarkably inventive unit." ~Dick La Palm (The Jazz Lobbyist)

Soul Searching     

Various - Relaxing Bossa Lounge Vol 1

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:56
Size: 121.2 MB
Styles: Bossa Nova, Easy Listening
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[3:02] 1. Marcela Mangabeira - You're Beautiful
[2:09] 2. Monique Kessous - With A Little Help From My Friends
[2:38] 3. Maria Augusta - All Of Me
[2:50] 4. Maria Creuza - Insensatez (Senseless)
[4:21] 5. Luís Carlos Vinhas - Samba Da Benção
[4:00] 6. Maria Augusta - Speak Low
[3:45] 7. Marcos Valle - Summer Samba (Samba De Verão)
[2:36] 8. Monique Kessous - A Hard Day's Night
[3:18] 9. Cris Delanno - Isn't She Lovely
[3:21] 10. Maria Augusta - Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
[4:01] 11. Bob Tostes - I've Got You Under My Skin
[3:32] 12. Dudu Braga - You Are The Sunshine Of My Life
[4:04] 13. Marcela Mangabeira - September
[3:09] 14. Taryn Szpilman - I Say A Little Prayer For You
[2:17] 15. Monique Kessous - If I Fell
[3:45] 16. Wanda Sá - Love Is In The Air

Relaxing Bossa Lounge                

Jimmy Giuffre - The Music Man

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:06
Size: 91.8 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[4:20] 1. Iowa Stubborn
[3:02] 2. Goodnight My Someone
[3:24] 3. Seventy-Six Trombones
[2:55] 4. Marian The Librarian
[3:54] 5. My White Knight
[4:29] 6. The Wells Fargo Wagon
[3:54] 7. It's You
[3:07] 8. Shipoopi
[3:53] 9. Lida Rose (Will I Ever Tell You)
[3:13] 10. Gary, Indiana
[3:49] 11. Til There Was You

Controversial, misunderstood, and underappreciated, Jimmy Giuffre was an unlikely candidate to break as much ground as he did in the art of free improvisation. A swing orchestra veteran, Giuffre made his name as part of the West Coast school of cool jazz, but his restless creative spirit drove him to push the boundaries of texture, dynamic shading, counterpoint, and improvisational freedom in surprisingly avant-garde ways, despite maintaining a cool, cerebral exterior. Born in Dallas in 1921, Giuffre studied music at North Texas College and subsequently played tenor sax in an Army band; upon his discharge, he took jobs with orchestra leaders like Boyd Raeburn, Jimmy Dorsey, and Buddy Rich. In 1949, he joined up with Woody Herman, for whom he'd penned the classic composition "Four Brothers" two years earlier. He then moved to the West Coast, where he learned clarinet and baritone sax, and played with groups like Howard Rumsey's Lighthouse All-Stars and Shorty Rogers' Giants. Giuffre began leading his own sessions in 1954, with groundbreaking albums like Four Brothers and Tangents in Jazz exploring bluesy folk-jazz and third stream fusions. In 1956, he formed the first version of the Jimmy Giuffre 3, which featured guitarist Jim Hall and bassist Ralph Pena; in 1958, the bassist was replaced by trombonist Bob Brookmeyer, resulting in the highly unorthodox-sounding albums Trav'lin' Light, Four Brothers Sound, and Western Suite, as well as a classic version of Giuffre's hit "The Train and the River" in the Newport film Jazz on a Summer's Day. In 1961, Giuffre formed a new trio featuring pianist Paul Bley and bassist Steve Swallow; it was with this group, on the albums Fusion, Thesis, and the 1962 landmark Free Fall, that Giuffre really began to explore the subtler, more spacious side of free improvisation (mostly on clarinet). Unfortunately, the trio's music was too advanced to gain much of a reception, and they disbanded in 1962. Giuffre became an educator, and recorded off and on during the '70s; he experimented with electric instruments in the '80s, reunited his 1961-1962 trio in 1992, and continued to record for several avant-garde-oriented labels, most frequently Soul Note. In his later years Giuffre suffered from Parkinson's disease and no longer performed or recorded; he died of pneumonia in Pittsfield, Massachusetts in 2008 at the age of 86. ~ bio by Steve Huey

The Music Man

Melody Gardot - Currency Of Man

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:43
Size: 111.5 MB
Styles: R&B, Retro Soul, Jazz vocals
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[5:23] 1. It Gonna Come
[4:29] 2. Preacherman
[5:03] 3. Morning Sun
[4:59] 4. Same To You
[4:14] 5. Don't Misunderstand
[4:17] 6. Don't Talk
[6:50] 7. If Ever I Recall Your Face
[4:38] 8. Bad News
[3:56] 9. She Don't Know
[4:48] 10. Once I Was Loved

On 2012's The Absence, Melody Gardot made her first shift away from the jazz-tinged ballads that drew such heavy comparisons to Norah Jones and Madeleine Peyroux. Lushly orchestrated, it was chock-full of songs inspired by Brazilian, Latin, and French forms. On Currency of Man, Gardot takes on a rootsier sound, embracing West Coast soul, funk, gospel, and pop from the early '70s as the backdrop for these songs. It is not only different musically, but lyrically. This is a less "personal" record; its songs were deeply influenced by the people she encountered in L.A., many of them street denizens. She tells their stories and reflects on themes of social justice. It's wide angle. Produced by Larry Klein, the cast includes members of her band, crack session players -- guitarist Dean Parks, drummer Vinnie Colaiuta, Larry Goldings, the Waters Sisters, et al. -- and strings and horns. The title track is a funky blues with a rumbling bassline, dramatic strings (à la Motown) and fat horns. Gardot uses the lens of Sam Cooke to testify to the inevitability of change: "We all hopin’ for the day that the powers see abdication and run/Said it gonna come…." First single "Preacherman" is similar, employing a wrangling, smoldering blues that indicts racism in the 20st century by referring to the violent death of Emmett Till, a catalyst in the then-emergent Civil Rights movement. A driving B-3, saxophone, and menacing lead guitar ratchet up the tension to explosive. A gospel chorus mournfully affirms Gardot's vocal as a harmonica moans in the background. "Morning Sun" and closer "Once I Was Loved" are tender ballads that emerge from simple, hymn-like themes and quietly resonant with conviction. "Same to You" evokes the spirit of Dusty Springfield atop the punchy horns from her Memphis period, albeit with a West Coast sheen. The nylon-string guitar in "Don't Misunderstand" recalls Bill Withers' earthy funkiness. The song's a groover, but it's also a warning to a possessive lover. "Don't Talk" uses spooky polyrhythms (à la Tom Waits) as brooding, spacy slide guitars, B-3, and backing singers slice through forbidding blues under Gardot's voice. "If Ever I Recall Your Face" is jazzier, a 21st century take on the film noir ballad with glorious strings arranged by Clément Ducol that rise above a ghostly piano. "Bad News" simultaneously looks back at L.A.'s Central Avenue and burlesque scenes. It's a jazz-blues with a sauntering horn section, snaky electric guitar, and squawking saxophone solo. Vocally, Gardot is stronger than ever here, her instrument is bigger and fuller yet it retains that spectral smokiness that is her trademark. Currency of Man is a further step away from the lithe, winsome pop-jazz that garnered her notice initially, and it's a welcome one. ~Thom Jurek

Currency Of Man

Red Holloway - Coast to Coast

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:05
Size: 121,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:02)  1. Still Groovin'
(8:04)  2. Avalon
(5:10)  3. 3 steps up clark
(4:07)  4. Indian summer
(6:43)  5. Struttin' with Julie
(8:13)  6. Water jug
(4:53)  7. Million Dollar Secret
(9:48)  8. Good to Go

With all the accolades and attention paid to acts like Soulive and Medeski, Martin and Wood, the true progenitors of their music often get lost in the shuffle. Milestone has been righting such wrongs for years by signing evergreen Soul Jazz talent to its ranks. This new entry by Red Holloway serves as the latest notice that the venerable voices of the idiom are still alive and kicking. Holloway, who first gained acclaim as a member of Jack McDuff’s outfit in the early 1960s and waxed a string of popular Prestige sides on his own, has a horn sound custom-suited to the groove. Basie alum Frank Wess adds a compatible hard swing element to the band sound palpable from the opening legato riffing of “Still Groovin’.” Plectrist Melvin Sparks and Dr. Lonnie Smith, also known under his whirling dervish moniker The Turbanator, bring decades of soul and funk experience to the session alongside the two lead horns. Paul Humphrey mans the drum kit and stokes a driving beat that never oversteps his partner’s fluid movements. These chaps might be older, grayer and in Holloway’s case, balder, but they still no how to conjure up and contain a propulsive groove.

Holloway projects no illusions as to the purpose of the music or the session. This is first and foremost an opportunity for the principals to have a good time and celebrate a shared lineage that is now over four decades strong. He keeps running time down to a modest fifty-three minutes over the span of eight cuts. There’s enough space for everyone to stretch, but not too much room to meander or falter. The succinct nature of the set results in substantial replay dividends, just as the uncluttered arrangements set feet to tapping and the fingers to popping. Holloway’s alto even shows up on the ballad “Indian Summer” synching gracefully with the fulsome flutter of Wess’ tenor. The two saxophonists dance a slow waltz atop the molasses throb of Smith’s thick tonal sustains. Just about the only stumble is Holloway’s decision for a vocal turn on the Helen Humes vehicle “Million Dollar Secret.” His pipes have neither the bite of a leathery voiced bluesman nor the convincing swagger of cocktail crooner and come off as desultory despite the fine backing by the band. The slow sizzling closer, “Good to Go,” regains lost ground with some greasy interplay between Sparks and Smith. The tenors slip and slide across the lubricious chordal terrain and Holloway wisely prolongs the tune past the nine-minute mark. As the icing on the sonic cupcake, the entire session was recorded in the warm acoustics of Rudy Van Gelder’s studio, the site of countless earlier groove conclaves. ~ Derek Taylor https://www.allaboutjazz.com/coast-to-coast-red-holloway-fantasy-jazz-review-by-derek-taylor.php

Personnel: Red Holloway- tenor & alto saxophones, flute; Frank Wess- tenor saxophone; Dr. Lonnie Smith- organ; Melvin Sparks- guitar; Paul Humphrey- drums.

Coast to Coast

Karen Gallinger - Remembering Bill Evans

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:43
Size: 141,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:37)  1. Turn Out The Stars
(4:00)  2. In April ( For Nenette)
(4:20)  3. Catch The Wind
(5:22)  4. Waltz For Debbie
(4:52)  5. Five
(3:36)  6. My Bells
(3:58)  7. Funkallero
(3:49)  8. We Will Meet Again
(5:32)  9. Only Child
(4:40) 10. Remembering The Rain
(7:06) 11. Dawn Preludes ( Time Remembered)
(7:39) 12. Interplay
(2:05) 13. I Remember Bill

For her fourth album, Karen Gallinger has taken on the not insignificant undertaking of devoting a program virtually entirely to the compositions of a singularly inventive jazz pianist, Bill Evans. Evans' musical structures can be difficult to deal with just as instrumentals, never mind when lyrics have been added. His music can be jagged and quirky and was usually composed without any idea of accommodating the needs of a lyricist. In addition to being technically intimidating, his music can be brooding, pensive, and introspective reflecting the personal difficulties he faced throughout his far too short life. The obstacles notwithstanding, vocalist Karen Gallinger and her talented cohorts pull off this undertaking with facility and aplomb making Remembering Bill Evans a notable event. 

Their success was aided and abetted by Evans' widow, Nenette Evans, who provided material giving the performers unique insights on the music. This results in not only excellent interpretations of some of Evans' better-known compositions like "Turn out the Stars" and the jazz classic "Waltz for Debbie" tour de force performances, but lesser-known works like "My Bells" and "Only Child" are made memorable occasions as well. With her dark, deep voice, restrained scatting, and her unusual ability to transform her voice into a stringed instrument like a bass or cello, this becomes Gallinger's finest album to date. Her supporting cast is excellent. Tom Zink's piano, which shows the influence of Evans, along with Larry Steen's lyrical bass and Chris Wabich's restrained drums provide the foundation upon which this session is built. Larry Koonse is on just four tracks, but on those his guitar work is sterling. In addition to her singing, Gallinger also wrote the lyrics to some of the songs. This is a fine tribute album and is recommended. ~ Dave Nathan http://www.allmusic.com/album/remembering-bill-evans-mw0000112556

Personnel: Karen Gallinger (vocals); Larry Koonse, Gannin Arnold (guitar); Tom Zink (piano); Chris Wabich (drums).

Remembering Bill Evans

Joshua Douglas Smith - Major Incident

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 67:03
Size: 127,5 MB
Art: Front

( 6:48)  1. Orphan
( 7:45)  2. Thursday Thoughts
( 6:09)  3. The Awakener
( 3:46)  4. Poohbear
( 8:20)  5. Right Coast
( 8:41)  6. My Offering
(11:32)  7. Major Incident
( 7:51)  8. Turn The Page
( 6:06)  9. Napoleon Complex

Introducing a new talent has always been a major and satisfying incident for SteepleChase. The list of artists whose debut albums it produced includes Doug Raney, Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen, Andy LaVerne, Hilton Ruiz, Joe Locke, Kevin Hays, Larry Willis, Rick Margitza, Rich Perry just to mention a few. The latest addition, saxophonist Joshua Douglas Smith is just turning 21 and studying jazz and economics at New York University. Joshua and his fellow NYC students formed this group and within a short time they began to display extraordinary levels of creativity.

“ Joshua Douglas Smith and his three contemporaries…make an impressive debut here and in doing so indicate a bright and optimistic future for jazz .” (Mark Gardner)

Personnel: Joshua Douglas Smith (soprano & tenor saxophones); Adam Fernandez (piano); Justin Marx (bass); David Christian (drums).

Major Incident

Gregory Tardy - Jam Session, Vol. 21

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:17
Size: 145,7 MB
Art: Front

( 8:57)  1. I Remember April
( 9:53)  2. Impressions
( 4:43)  3. Misty Thursday
( 3:23)  4. Self Portrait In Three Colors
( 5:20)  5. Crazy Love
(10:59)  6. What Is This Thing Called Love
(11:10)  7. On Green Dolphin Street
( 8:47)  8. Au Privave

Born. c. 1964, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA. Tardy studied classical clarinet as a child, encouraged by his parents, both of whom were opera singers. His mother, Jo Anne Tardy, after singing classical music became a gospel-influenced jazz singer. After switching to tenor saxophone, Tardy played with funk bands in Milwaukee before his brother urged him to listen to jazz, after which he was especially influenced by John Coltrane’s recordings. He studied at the Wisconsin Conservatory of Music and at the University of New Orleans, along the way encountering Ellis Marsalis who became tutor and mentor. Resident in New York City from 1992, Tardy became deeply involved in the contemporary jazz and improvised music scenes. Among musicians with whom he has played are Rashied Ali, Omer Avitel, Jonathan Blake, Betty Carter, Steve Coleman, George Colligan, Ravi Coltrane, Sean Conly, Xavier Davis, Dave Douglas, Bill Frisell, Aaron Goldberg, Russell Gunn, Eric Harland, Tom Harrell, Antonio Hart, Andrew Hill, Elvin Jones, Joe Lovano, Ellis Marsalis, Jason Marsalis, Wynton Marsalis, Jay McShann, Mulgrew Miller, James Moody, John Patitucci, Nicholas Payton, Chris Potter, Dewy Redman, David Schumacher, Mark Turner and Bobby Watson, the latter being cited as an especially important influence.

Tardy customarily leads his own quintet but is also a regular member of other bands, including a cooperative quartet, the Knoxville Jazz Orchestra, recording 2007’s Blues Man From Memphis released by Blue Canoe Records. Others in this quartet are John Clayton, Stefon Harris and Donald Brown. Although primarily playing tenor saxophone, Tardy has also latterly returned to the clarinet for some sessions. He has regularly returned to New Orleans, playing usually with contemporary bands, including the Young Olympians. On his 2007 recording Steps Of Faith, Tardy’s mother sings on one track, ‘Great Is Thy Faithfulness’. A distinctive and forceful player, Tardy has rapidly built a reputation not only for his playing but also for his interesting compositions, which form the core of his repertoire. http://www.allmusic.com/artist/gregory-tardy-mn0000162540
 
Personnel: Christian Winther, Gregory Tardy, Wayne Escoffery (tenor saxophone); Billy Drummond (drums).

Jam Session, Vol. 21

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Raphael Wressnig - True Blue

Size: 116,7 MB
Time: 50:13
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2011
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Little Sheri (5:02)
02. The Jody Grind (4:45)
03. Angel Eyes (7:08)
04. Minor Chant (3:13)
05. That's Enough (4:48)
06. The Party (7:17)
07. I Can't Take It No Mo' (6:48)
08. Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child (6:08)
09. One Mo' Blues (5:00)

Raphael Wressnig, based in Austria but frequently on the road, is not your ordinary B-3 organ player. He’s actually one of a kind: a young master of the imposing, large instrument who is expansive in his breadth of expertise. He’s technically fluent in the blues, in jazz, in soul, and in funk, and he concocts exciting mixed-genre music from his fervid imagination. Versatile Wressnig doesn’t flaunt his virtuosic talent for the sake of spectacle but rather backs up his every movement on the keyboards, the drawbar and the bass pedal boards with a fierce emotional commitment. Influenced by royal predecessors like Jimmy Smith, Shirley Scott, Booker T. Jones and Joe Zawinul, Wressnig has taken his music throughout Europe and all over the world, from North Africa and Asia to the Middle East to the United States, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, and the Caribbean. This self-effacing musician, a native of Graz in southeast Austria, has recorded at least 16 feature albums and appeared as a guest on about 30 others. In 2013, 2015 & 2016, he was honored with a nomination for best organ player of the year in Downbeat Magazine.

True Blue

Inga Swearingen - Let Me Call This Home

Size: 120,0 MB
Time: 51:46
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz/Folk Vocals
Art: Front

01. Message In A Bottle (5:41)
02. Edge Of Town (5:15)
03. Find My Way (4:36)
04. This City Never Sleeps (6:26)
05. Blossom Blue (4:43)
06. Edie (5:32)
07. Wood And Steel (5:07)
08. New (5:14)
09. I Don't Need No Doctor (4:31)
10. Short Trip Home (4:33)

Inga Swearingen's highly anticipated fourth album, Let Me Call This Home speaks of the yin and yang pull of home, having a longing for it, and wanting to leave it to ultimately come home again.

“Sometimes home is a place, other times it's a person. You can long for it, or want to leave it. And songs can take you home or take you far away," says Swearingen. "There is a constant to my sense of home, and it's also ever changing. I love the people I love, and no matter where I am, I carry them with me and I am home. But I also must leave to be able to come back. The songs on this album express this pull and yearning."

Swearingen compares the building of this album to building a house. Pouring a good foundation musically translates into putting down solid grooves on which the songs are built. The album easily interchanges time signatures and feels, giving the arrangements sophistication and intrigue, but always serving the mood and message of the song. Continuing the analogy, walls are then built with rich harmony that is sometimes complex and dissonant and other times simple and nostalgic. These song structures support well-crafted melodies that are the roofs over houses where loved ones gather and experience the many facets of life. It all comes together to create a space that invites you to kick off your shoes and stay awhile in this house of jazz, folk and blues.

The fullness of the album, six original tracks, is the collaboration between Swearingen and Jeff Miley, an imaginative, provocative LA based guitarist who co-wrote, produced and mixed much of the album. Tracks Edge of Town and Wood and Steel uncover the paradox of being away from home to really appreciate it. Swearingen’s own Find My Way Home is a melodic testament to taking what life gives her and handling it beautifully. The song is enhanced with Inga’s signature scatting and the beautiful backing vocals of Moira Smiley. The album mixes in the compelling renditions of 80’s pop hits Message in a Bottle by The Police and This City Never Sleeps by the Eurythmics, connecting the listener to the shared experience of isolation. Ray Charles' I Don’t Need No Doctor delights with a front-porch blues romp featuring the brilliant harmonica playing of multiple Grammy-Award Winner Howard Levy. The last track Short Trip Home with music by Edgar Meyer and lyrics by Swearingen speaks to home by simply closing ones eyes to be with that person that is one's own solace. Altogether, the album is about love, longing and finding your way home.

Let Me Call This Home Instrumentation
Inga Swearingen - Vocals, acoustic guitar, resophonic guitar
Britta Swearingen - Cajon, vocals
Jeff Miley - Acoustic steel string and nylon string guitars, electric guitars, banjo, vocals
Dylan Johnson - Bass
Brian Kilgore - Percussion
Zac Mathews - Bass on "Edge of Town", "Edie" and "I Don't Need No Doctor"
Joel Alpers - Drums on "Edge of Town", "Edie" and "I Don't Need No Doctor"
Special Guests - Char Rothschild - Trumpet on "This City Never Sleeps"
Howard Levy - Harmonica on "I Don't Need No Doctor"
Guy Budd - Guitar solo on "I Don't Need No Doctor"
Moira Smiley - Vocals on "Find My Way"
Bob Liepman - Cello on "Short Trip Home"
Aaron Wolf - Alto sax on "Short Trip Home"

Let Me Call This Home

Torun Eriksen - Grand White Silk

Size: 100,9 MB
Time: 39:17
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. The Opening (3:52)
02. More (3:12)
03. Take My Time (3:40)
04. Downhill (4:18)
05. Compromise (3:27)
06. Right Here (4:10)
07. Winter Today (4:24)
08. Darkness (2:54)
09. I´ve Been Thinking (4:09)
10. Grand White Silk (5:06)

Torun Eriksen presents Grand White Silk. Few songwriters can perform their material with such unobtrusive self-awareness as Torun Eriksen: she possesses many strengths as a lyricist, as a composer, as a singer. On Grand White Silk, she has pulled off the rare feat of playing to all of these enviable strengths with equal vitality and conviction. When you have set standards as high as Torun already has, all that remains to be done is aim higher: her aim has proven true, with a set of songs and performances that crown her work to date. Lyrically, the album draws on the place of the everyday amid the universal - those "little things we begin not to notice, that are important to us, yet we are blind to them through familiarity." Love; shame; self-acceptance; connections physical, emotional and electronic; contradictory feelings common to the modern world; the ability to simply breathe and accept a passing moment for what it is without question; the brief and frail existence of any individual within a universe without a visible, tangible beginning or end; all of this informs Grand White Silk, and it is delivered with images rich, poignant, sometimes seeming quotidian, at other times fragile and ethereal. Whether amid a lush arrangement with vast dynamic sweep, or against a sparse solo piano accompaniment, or against a juggernaut beat that seems close to unstoppable, Torun's sensitivity to her lyrical content is revealed time and time again by measured performances that are emotionally charged without melodrama, philosophical without cold intellectualism, meditative without haziness. Her distinctive tone, perfect phrasing and sensual delivery has few peers. Grand White Silk sets a new high-water mark for an already impressive career. Features: David Wallumrød on keys, André Berg on guitar, Kjetil Dalland on bass and Andreas Bye on drums.

Grand White Silk

Judy Roderick - Ain't Nothin' But The Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:22
Size: 78.7 MB
Styles: Blues vocals
Year: 1964/1990
Art: Front

[2:20] 1. Wild Women Don't Sing The Blues
[2:38] 2. Come Back Baby
[3:35] 3. Brother, Can You Spare A Dime
[2:48] 4. Mamma Goes Where Pappa Goes
[2:33] 5. Baltimore Oriole
[2:25] 6. Miss Brown To You
[2:03] 7. He Was A Friend Of Mine
[3:21] 8. Blues On My Ceiling
[2:31] 9. I'm Going To Live The Life I Sing About In My Song
[3:20] 10. Things About Going My Way
[3:17] 11. Don't Let The Sun Catch You Crying
[3:26] 12. Moanin' Low

Harmonica – John Hammond, Jr.; Piano, Organ, Conductor – Bobby Scott; Trombone – Lou McGarity; Trumpet – Sidney DeParis; Vocals, Guitar – Judy Roderick.

Roderick's first album, produced by Bobby Scott and featuring John Hammond Jr. on harmonica. Columbia seemed at a loss as to how to present this young woman who belted and moaned in the style and tradition of Bessie Smith and Memphis Minnie. Arrangements vary from large to intimate. A few jewels here, including inspired readings of "He was a Friend of Mine," "Brother Can You Spare a Dime" and Hoagy Carmichael's "Baltimore Oriole." ~William Ashford

Ain't Nothin' But The Blues

Tal Farlow - Trilogy

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:39
Size: 122.8 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 1981/2009
Art: Front

[5:59] 1. My Shining Hour
[5:12] 2. I Hear A Rhapsody
[7:05] 3. Falling In Love With Love
[4:18] 4. If I Should Lose You
[3:58] 5. Flamingo
[4:24] 6. Angel Eyes
[6:38] 7. There Is No Greater Love
[6:06] 8. But Not For Me
[5:55] 9. The Wolf And The Lamb
[4:00] 10. Funk Among The Keys

Bass – Lyn Christie; Guitar – Tal Farlow; Piano – Mike Nock, Drums - Bob Jaspe.

This lesser-known LP was originally released by Japanese Columbia, was made available domestically by Inner City in 1981 and then went out of print when the label folded. The music is typically excellent (Tal Farlow has yet to record an unworthy date), with the very fluent bop guitarist jamming on seven standards and two originals with pianist Mike Nock, bassist Lynn Christie and (on just one song) drummer Bob Jaspe. Pick this one up if you see it. ~Scott Yanow

Trilogy

Marcus Goldhaber - The Moment After

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:09
Size: 124.0 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[6:41] 1. Honeysuckle Rose
[4:48] 2. Like Someone In Love
[3:17] 3. Walking My Baby Back Home
[3:47] 4. Be Careful It's My Heart
[4:09] 5. That Old Feeling
[3:25] 6. Keepin' Out Of Mischief Now
[5:08] 7. Old Cape Cod
[5:44] 8. The One I Love Belongs To Somebody Else
[3:37] 9. I'm Gonna Sit Right Down And Write Myself A Letter
[3:27] 10. You're Gonna Hear From Me
[4:37] 11. Lulu's Back In Town
[5:22] 12. Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams

Marcus Goldhaber: vocals; Jon Davis: piano; Paul Gabrielson: bass; Kyle Struve: drums; Will Terrill: drums (4,7,9,12).

Jazz vocalist Marcus Goldhaber's debut album, The Moment After, reveals quite an interesting family history. Goldhaber's love of the Great American Songbook stems from the many times his mother would gather all around the 1928 Ivers & Pond upright piano and call out to young Marcus, "This one, you should know"—in the same manner that her parents had done when she was the same age as him. In a sense, this Buffalo, New York griot (forgive me, Goldhabers) was passing along an aural tradition that worked wonders, insofar as instilling the respect and familiarity with the great tunes of the Twentieth Century. I'm sorry that the album wasn't titled "This One, You Should Know"!

Listening to The Moment After, I'm tempted to say that Marcus Goldhaber sounds like someone else. The press sheet suggests that Goldhaber will remind you of John Pizzarelli, Harry Connick, Jr., Chet Baker, Michael Bublé and a young Frank Sinatra, and I have the distinct feeling that he is being marketed as someone worthy of joining the above circle of male vocalists. Goldhaber does indeed bear lots of similarities, especially to Pizzarelli and Baker, and that is to his credit. His voice, however, is not quite as distinctive as either's, but let's give him points for trying.

Always looking to judge a new jazz vocalist by his material and delivery, I was impressed. Goldhaber inserts rarely heard verses that work quite well, dramatically. The opener, the Waller/Rasaf "Honeysuckle Rose," is a good example. The balladic verse opens up into a swinging refrain, and during the instrumental break, pianist Jon Davis turns this number into a hand-clapper. Likewise on the Turk/Ablert piece "Walking My Baby Back Home," another Pizzarelli staple, Goldhaber makes use of the same sense of mid-tempo swing that the guitarist/singer has employed so successfully. Other intriguing use of verses occur on "Be Careful, It's My Heart," from the pen of Irving Berlin, and the Waller/Rasaf tune "Keepin' Out Of Mischief Now." On the ballads, Goldhaber uses more of his upper register, suggesting the attitude and style of Chet Baker, as on his performance of the Van Heusen/Burke piece "Like Someone in Love" or the Brown/Fain standard "That Old Feeling." I don't believe that Goldhaber is purposefully invoking the styles of Baker or Pizzarelli—rather, he seems to gravitate towards that style as a personal preference, and for that reason, I consider him much more of a jazz vocalist than someone like Michael Bublé. The selections continue with additional pleasantries including a version of the hard-to-find showstopper "You're Gonna Hear From Me," which was an Andre and Dory Previn song written for the mid-1960s film Inside Daisy Clover. At one time, every vocalist worth their salt was trying out that tune, but it has now virtually disappeared. ~Michael P. Gladstone

The Moment After

Ronnie Laws - Mr. Nice Guy

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:05
Size: 82.6 MB
Styles: Jazz/Funk/Soul
Year: 1983/2010
Art: Front

[4:09] 1. Can't Save Tomorrow
[3:44] 2. Mr. Nice Guy
[3:33] 3. In The Groove
[4:57] 4. Third Hour
[4:07] 5. You
[4:23] 6. Big Stars
[3:54] 7. Rolling
[3:12] 8. What Does It Take (To Win Your Love)
[4:01] 9. Off And On Again

The music Ronnie Laws created in the 80's has always tended to be miscatagorized under the name of jazz. And such as with his previous album Solid Ground this recording contains very little that resembles even jazz FUSION let alone acoustic music. What you get in both cases is wonderfully crafted modern funky pop/R&B with some pop-jazz references. Overall the music here is closer to being that of an 80's era Jr.Walker (a fact not betrayed by the fact his classic hit "What Does It Take" is covered almost by wrote here). As for this album taken on it's own Ronnie Laws has taken the slick elements he began adding as far back as 1979's Every Generation and updated them with more mid 80's elements such as lightly gated drums and hand claps. The odd chords on the excellent shuffling album opener "Can't Save Tomorrow" are innovative and like so much music of this era contains a strong inspiration from Stevie Wonder's compositional style. The same use of chords shows up on the eerie near instrumental "Rolling". In between that the album emphasizes nothing but uptempo tunes of which the bouncy title track,"In The Groove","You" and "Off And On Again" offer in abundance. Ronnie takes a few more little creative soujourns on "Third Hour" and "Big Stars" but generally keeps the sound intact and the material consistant. Those people who have been collecting Ronnie Laws recordings all along will find this yet another in a string of solid consistant recordings he's made since 1975. And for reference purposes I actually like Ronnie's smooth soul singing on these songs and never had a problem with it at all; don't many believe as me that in the case of Laws,Norman Connors and Michael Henderson that vocals actually enhance their music? Either way this is a must have for any Ronnie Laws fan.~Andrew S. Grindl

Mr. Nice Guy

Ranee Lee, Oliver Jones - Just You, Just Me

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:33
Size: 150.1 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[4:17] 1. Just You, Just Me
[5:11] 2. Traveling Man
[6:03] 3. Stardust
[3:59] 4. Sister Sadie
[4:18] 5. There's Nothing Left
[4:33] 6. This Is It
[5:00] 7. Images
[6:22] 8. Sad Young Men
[4:16] 9. Until I Was Loved
[6:34] 10. Guess Who
[5:41] 11. Going Home
[5:34] 12. Autumn Leaves
[3:39] 13. Just You, Just Me (Duet)

Ranee Lee is considered one of Canada's top vocalists and Oliver Jones has long been one of that country's major pianists. Although they had known each other since the early '80s, Lee and Jones had only recorded one previous full-length album together before Just You, Just Me. This quartet outing has seven standards (including quartet and duo versions of "Just You, Just Me") and five of the singer's originals. While Jones (who was coaxed out of retirement by Lee) takes many fine solos along the way, the focus is mostly on Lee, who particularly excels on the ballads, six of which are duets. Her interpretations are straightforward yet quite expressive, showing off the beauty of both her voice and the lyrics that she interprets. ~Scott Yanow

Just You, Just Me

Cal Tjader - Latin Jazz With Cal Tjader

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:24
Size: 179.5 MB
Styles: Latin jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[1:34] 1. Coit Tower
[3:37] 2. The Last Luff
[4:35] 3. Lucero
[3:16] 4. Mood For Milt
[2:31] 5. Raccoon Straits
[3:21] 6. Running Out
[5:59] 7. Triplet Blues
[3:49] 8. Viva Cepeda
[3:45] 9. The Continental
[3:13] 10. Star Eyes
[7:28] 11. The Grant Avenue Suite
[2:17] 12. Ode To A Beat Generation
[4:20] 13. Union Square
[4:37] 14. Sigmund Stern Groove
[3:43] 15. Skyline Waltz
[3:06] 16. Martha
[4:47] 17. Mi Guaguanco
[4:08] 18. Cubano Chant
[4:58] 19. Tu Crees Que
[3:13] 20. Stella By Starlight

Callen Radcliffe Tjader, Jr. (/ˈtʃeɪ.dər/ CHAY-der; July 16, 1925 – May 5, 1982), known as Cal Tjader, was an American Latin jazz musician, known as the most successful non-Latino Latin musician. He also explored various other jazz idioms but never abandoned the music of Cuba, the Caribbean, and Latin America, performing it until his death.

Tjader primarily played the vibraphone. He was accomplished on the drums, bongos, congas, timpani, and the piano. He worked with numerous musicians from several cultures. He is often linked to the development of Latin rock and acid jazz. Although fusing jazz with Latin music is often categorized as "Latin jazz" (or, earlier, "Afro-Cuban jazz"), Tjader's output swung freely between both styles. He won a Grammy in 1980 for his album La Onda Va Bien, capping off a career that spanned over forty years.

Latin Jazz With Cal Tjader