Monday, October 17, 2016

Marc Copland, John Abercrombie, Kenny Wheeler - That's for Sure

Styles: Piano, Guitar And Trumpet Jazz 
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:22
Size: 134,2 MB
Art: Front

(8:14)  1. When We Met
(7:49)  2. That's for Sure
(6:49)  3. Kind Folk
(6:08)  4. Soundtrack
(6:21)  5. Played Straight
(8:05)  6. Dark Territory
(6:46)  7. How Deep Is the Ocean
(5:13)  8. # 114
(2:54)  9. Neba

The Netherlands-based Challenge label has brought together three masters of the art of harmonious jazz. While overall the album leans toward the avant-garde side of the genre, these e three protagonists are wise enough to make their music sufficiently accessible so that the regular run of the mill jazz fan, as well as those more advanced, can get equal pleasure from it. Kenny Wheeler's "Neba" for example, is a lovely ballad where the trumpet plays slightly off center adding a little more bite to the ballad. John Abercrombie's pensive sometimes moody guitar adds a dark hue to those cuts he is prominent on. In some cases, Marc Copland plays a foil to that mood with his sprightly piano playing, a role he assumes on other tracks as well, like the sun breaking if not through the clouds, then through the haze. This contrast in temperament is apparent on the title tune, "That's for Sure". All but one of the items on the play list are originals written by one of the members of the trio. The other is Irving Berlin's "How Deep Is the Ocean". Throughout, the players create a musical vignette with each tune. Sometimes the depiction is meditative as on "Kind Folk" and there's probably no player around who is able to create a trumpet sound as Wheeler is able to do. Other places it's a bit, but not much more, lively such as on "Soundtrack". The bottom line with this album to write this is almost apostasy these days when attractive is considered passe this is very pretty music beautifully played by three highly skilled and sensitive musicians. Recommended. ~ Dave Nathan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/thats-for-sure-challenge-records-review-by-dave-nathan.php 
 
Personnel: Marc Copland - Piano; John Abercrombie - Guitar; Kenny Wheeler - Trumpet/Flugelhorn

That's for Sure

Steve LaSpina - New Horizon

Styles: Jazz, Post-Bop
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:20
Size: 136,4 MB
Art: Front

(1:07)  1. Folksong
(6:05)  2. You Can't Go Back
(8:50)  3. Socks
(4:01)  4. Behind You
(7:13)  5. Reunion
(4:36)  6. Vicki's Dream
(4:54)  7. Morning Run
(8:49)  8. Don't Ask
(6:19)  9. New Horizon
(7:21) 10. Folksong

Born Steven Frank LaSpina, 24 March 1954, Wichita Falls, Texas, USA. As a child LaSpina studied with his bass playing father although he had to wait until he was tall enough before he had the reach for the upright acoustic instrument. He subsequently studied at university and in Chicago with bass master, Rufus Reid. It was in Chicago that he first played professionally, working from the age of 15 with musicians such as Bunky Green and Larry Novak. In the mid- to late 70s LaSpina was a member of Chet Baker’s band, worked with Red Norvo, and also appeared with Marian McPartland, a collaboration that extended into the mid-80s and included recordings such as Personal Choice. Based in New York City from the end of the 70s, LaSpina also played with Mel Lewis’ big band, Stan Getz, and at different times with guitarists Jim Hall, Mary Osborne, Jack Wilkins, and Vic Juris. He also worked with Andy LaVerne, Dave Liebman, Al Cohn, Zoot Sims, Benny Carter, and Bob Brookmeyer, among many. LaSpina has worked with numerous singers over the years, among them Bill Henderson, Mark Murphy, Susannah McCorkle, Michael Feinstein, and Carol Sloane. 

For several years LaSpina taught bass and improvisation at New York University and other seats of learning. LaSpina is an accomplished composer and his recording sessions as leader feature much of his own relaxed and tuneful music. On these dates, the band is usually a quartet with regular members being Billy Drewes (saxophone), Marc Copland or Jim McNeely (piano), and Jeff Hirshfield (drums). In addition to playing the upright acoustic bass LaSpina also plays electric bass, both fretted and fretless. His playing is fluid, technically assured, and provides lift and drive to the bands in which he plays. http://www.allmusic.com/artist/steve-laspina-mn0000036650/biography

Personnel:  Steve LaSpina - bass;  Billy Drewes - sax;  Marc Copland - piano; Jeff Hirshfield  - drums

New Horizon

Dida Pelled - Plays And Sings

Styles: Vocal And Guitar Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:09
Size: 145,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:31)  1. Our Love Is Here To Stay
(4:47)  2. After You've Gone
(6:51)  3. Fried Pies
(3:49)  4. There's A Lull In My Life
(5:33)  5. Can't Take My Eyes Off You
(4:28)  6. It's A Sad City
(5:45)  7. Three Coins In The Fountain
(6:12)  8. More Than You Know
(6:09)  9. Stompin' At The Savoy
(6:58) 10. Calcutta Cutie
(2:47) 11. That's All
(5:16) 12. Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most

While no "one size fits all" prescription exists for molding and educating unique artists, some schools seem to have an exceptional track record. A large segment of the who's who of jazz greats from Detroit went through Cass Technical High School and more than a few Texas jazz titans received their education at Booker T. Washington High School For The Performing And Visual Arts. Another, less likely source The Thelma Yellin High School Of The Arts in Tel Aviv, Israel wasn't really on anybody's radar twenty years ago, but has become the ultimate hotbed for Israeli jazz activity. Bassist Omer Avital, the Cohen siblings (Anat Cohen, Avishai Cohen - Trumpet and Yuval Cohen), and pianists Omer Klein and Shimrit Shoshan all blossomed in this artistic incubator. Now, guitarist/vocalist Dida Pelled deserves to be added to the list. Pelled has taken the prescribed course for Israeli jazz hopefuls, graduating from Thelma Yellin and honing her skills during her service in the Israeli Army, but she's no cookie-cutter performer. Pelled's warm voice possesses an emotive quality that's simultaneously soothing and intoxicating, and her guitar playing, which is built on her round sound, strong comping skills and soulful single note solo lines, places her in a category all her own.

On Plays And Sings, the young guitarist proves to be an old soul, capable of crafting timeless, yet modern, interpretations of classic fare. While the core trio of Pelled, bassist Tal Ronen and drummer Gregory Hutchinson, are responsible for delivering these charming and swinging performances, a pair of guest trumpeters occasionally join in the music-making. Roy Hargrove provides little asides and some strong solo work on "Our Love Is Here To Stay," revels in the grooving atmosphere of Wes Montgomery's "Fried Pies," and follows the changes in mood on a Four Seasons favorite ("Can't Take My Eyes Off You"), while Fabio Morgera's pair of appearances feature his clean-toned trumpet work ("Three Coins In The Fountain") and muted obbligato ("More Than You Know"). While both men are welcome additions to the program, their appearances are a bonus, not a necessity. Pelled's guitar playing, which can be pleasantly dreamy ("More Than You Know"), quaint ("Stompin At The Savoy") and rhythmically engaging ("Fried Pies"), is of greater importance than any guest spots. When accompanying herself, she creates a mesh of warmth that perfectly matches her vocal style, but when she removes her voice from the equation, things can go in another direction. Her lines are often informed by a laid-back, Grant Green-influenced style of playing that touches on the blues in a soulful manner, but she also brings her background into play. Horace Silver's "Calcutta Cutie" might have originally contained allusions of India, but Pelled's angular lines and Ronen's exotic bass riff turn it into a musical caravan across the Negev desert.  Plays And Sings doesn't present a singer that also plays a little guitar or a guitarist who occasionally picks up a microphone. Dida Pelled sings and plays with equal skill, and her one of kind sound steeped in tradition while residing deep in a dream mark her as an artist deserving greater attention. ~ Dan Bilawsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/plays-and-sings-dida-pelled-red-records-review-by-dan-bilawsky.php

Personnel: Dida Pelled: guitar, voice; Tal Ronen: bass; Gregory Hutchinson: drums; Roy Hargrove: trumpet (1, 3, 5); Fabio Morgera: trumpet (7-8).

Plays And Sings

Sunday, October 16, 2016

The Dave Brubeck Quartet - At Carnegie Hall

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1963
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 104:15
Size: 240,9 MB
Art: Front

(11:54)  1. St. Louis Blues
( 7:22)  2. Bossa Nova U.S.A.
( 9:38)  3. For All We Know
(10:17)  4. Pennies From Heaven
( 7:14)  5. Southern Scene
( 6:37)  6. Three To Get Ready
( 3:45)  7. Eleven Four
( 6:15)  8. King for a Day
(14:14)  9. Castilian Drums
( 6:48) 10. It's A Raggy Waltz
(12:43) 11. Blue Rondo A La Turk
( 7:23) 12. Take Five

For all those who have a big axe to grind with Brubeck, for all those who claim the band was only successful because they were predominantly white, or played pop-jazz, or catered to the exotica craze, or any of that, you are invited to have all of your preconceptions, tepid arguments, and false impressions hopelessly torn to shreds by one of the great live jazz albums of the 1960s. The Dave Brubeck Quartet at Carnegie Hall is a date that showcases the finest elements of the storied Brubeck Quartet, which featured, alongside Brubeck's piano, alto innovator Paul Desmond, bassist Eugene Wright, and Joe Morello on drums. On this February night in 1963 either the 21 or 22nd depending on which side of the cover you believe  W.C. Handy's "St. Louis Blues" was given a knotty rhythmic workout it had never seen on Basin or Bourbon Street. Time signatures moved and shifted all over the tune for 12 minutes as Brubeck and Desmond exchanged cross-contrapuntal solos and melodic inventions back and forth. Movement, and plenty of it, was the identity this old nugget took on, with Brubeck taking Wright's cue and moving the blues into unheard-of harmonic spaces and intervals. At one point, with 16/4 time forcing itself onto the front line, Desmond makes his move quickly with one scalular interval to the top of the meter and stops. It's enough, he seems to be saying, that it gets brought back to a humane tempo before clamoring from a samba back into the blues before winding it out. And that's just for openers! 

The quartet move through all their hits and their new instincts gained from traveling abroad for the better part of six years. With cuts like "Bossa Nova U.S.A" and "Blue Rondo a la Turk," the quartet breathes new fire both melodically and tonally into its material, while other standards such as "Pennies from Heaven" were literally harmonically reinvented by the intense counterpoint, double and even triple, that went on between Desmond and Brubeck. And that's what this set is a reflection of: the Brubeck band would have loved to be recorded live every night they played. They hated the studio because there was nothing to compete against and no energy but their own to glean from. Check out "Eleven Four" and see where the audience in stuffy old Carnegie Hall is transformed into a hooting mob as Desmond solos his head off. When Brubeck pulls Ravel out of his back pocket and Wright accommodates him, setting a samba tempo for him to play against, the crowd may not know what they are hearing, but they flip just the same; they know something's happening and they're right there to experience his past harmonic indulgence mixed with the contrapuntal bop syntax from Desmond. It's no surprise that "Take Five" would take the set out, but given what has been played over two LPs, it's almost a comfort. There are fewer surprises here, it's true, but then, the tune's a groover anyway, and they grease it to the point of making it funky thanks to Wright's slapping at his bass in the middle section. This LP is perhaps the one essential Brubeck live album. While Take Five is rightfully a classic in that it changed everything, At Carnegie Hall reveals the band at the epitome of its musical harmonic, rhythmic, melodic, improvisational strength with near telepathic communication. It swings like a mother and offers an entirely new dimension to the definition of "melodic improvisation." ~ Thom Jurek http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-dave-brubeck-quartet-at-carnegie-hall-mw0000001437

Personnel: Dave Brubeck- piano; Paul Desmond- alto saxophone; Eugene Wright- bass; Joe Morello- drums.

At Carnegie Hall

Elvira Nikolaisen & Mathias Eick - I Concentrate On You


Styles: Vocal And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:03
Size: 92,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:55)  1. What’s New
(4:15)  2. I Concentrate on You
(3:35)  3. Don’t Smoke in Bed
(3:29)  4. Time After Time
(4:13)  5. For All We Know
(2:58)  6. I’ll Be Seeing You
(4:39)  7. You Can Have Him
(3:42)  8. Come Rain or Come Shine
(5:47)  9. Little Girl Blue
(3:24) 10. Answer Me

Elvira Nikolaisen (born 16 July 1980 in Moi) is a Norwegian singer-songwriter signed for Sony BMG. She released her debut single Love I Can't Defend in December 2005, it reached the number 3 spot on the Norwegian singles list. She followed up the hit with her first album, Quiet Exit, and a second single, Egypt Song, in March 2006. The album peaked at #2 in the Norwegian chart.  Nikolaisen is from a musical family, her father is a church organist and her brother Emil is the vocalist and guitarist for Serena Maneesh, and her sister Hilma is the bassist for the same band. Her brother Ivar is lead singer of the Norwegian punk band Silver. In 1998, Nikolaisen with her brother Emil fronted the independent band Royal. The band released one album titled My Dear on Soulscape Records and distributed through Tooth and Nail Records. While she's from a very religious family, Nikolaisen rejected her Christian beliefs at the age of eighteen. Some of her lyrics reflect the impact of this change on her life.  

Nikolaisen released her second album, Indian Summer in April 2008. However, she failed to repeat the success of the debut album, Quiet Exit. On the latest album I Concentrate on You (2013) Nikolaisen in collaboration with the Jaga Jazzist trumpeter Mathias Eick, moves into American popular music, fulfilling her old dream to go into the great American songbook. Other contributors on this album are Ola Kvernberg (violin, viola & bass-violin), Andreas Ulvo (piano, cembalo, celesta) and Gard Nilssen (drums). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elvira_Nikolaisen

Personnel:  Mathias Eick - bass, trumpet, backing vocals, vibraphone; Gard Nilssen – percussion;  Andreas Ulvo - piano, celesta, harpsichard;  Elvira Nikolaisen – vocals;  Ola Kvernberg - violin, viola

I Concentrate On You

David Friesen, Glen Moore - Returning

Styles: Jazz, Post-Bop 
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:27
Size: 186,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:26)  1. My Funny Valentine
(4:49)  2. Reserve
(4:32)  3. Let´s Pretend
(4:11)  4. Free Bowing
(2:45)  5. Free One
(4:13)  6. Stride La Congo
(3:57)  7. I´m Old Fashioned
(2:38)  8. Past Finding Out
(2:24)  9. On the Road with Jazz
(2:36) 10. Free Two
(4:56) 11. Sweet Georgia
(3:19) 12. Last Time Through
(1:54) 13. Free Three
(3:04) 14. Toby and Tina
(6:18) 15. Blue in Green
(2:16) 16. Bongo Bass
(1:40) 17. Dancing with My Daughter
(5:29) 18. Return
(1:53) 19. Amazing Grace

Returning is the collaboration of two renowned jazz bassists, both from Portland. Glen Moore, a member of the jazz and world music group Oregon, has collaborated with artists such as Rabih Abou-Khalil, Nancy King, and Larry Karush. David Friesen was listed on a recent Jazz Bass Survey by jazz educators as one of the 24 most influential bassists in the history of jazz. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Returning-Friesen/dp/B000003BMF

Personnel: David Friesen (upright bass); Glen Moore (piano, upright bass).

Returning

Jazz Incorporated - Live At Smalls

Styles: Jazz, Hard-Bop
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:21
Size: 134,9 MB
Art: Front

( 8:11)  1. Punsu
( 8:33)  2. Is That So?
( 7:37)  3. Woody 'n You
(10:32)  4. We Kiss in a Shadow
(10:50)  5. Hey Jimmy
(12:36)  6. Shout!

Jazz Incorporated is a collective ensemble co-led by Jazz drum legend Louis Hayes and trumpet player Jeremy Pelt. This contemporary hard-bop quartet plays repertoire from the legacy of their drummer as well as standards and originals. The energy during these sets was electric and the house was packed. Louis Hayes demonstrates the authoritative swing that has established his legend. He has been the driving force behind bands led by Cannonball Adderly, Horace Silver and Freddie Hubbard. Jeremy Pelt plays with an effortless majesty and true jazz conviction to each phrase. Pianist Anthony Wonsey delivers impeccable accompaniment and some sparkling solos. Dezron Douglas makes his second SmallsLIVE appearance proving why he is rapidly becoming the first call bassman for the top-shelf groups. The music is exciting, accessible and full of life. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Jazz-Incorporated-Live-at-Smalls/dp/B004NWHVLC

Personnel: Jeremy Pelt (trumpet); Anthony Wonsey (piano); Louis Hayes (drums).

Live At Smalls

Dida Pelled - Modern Love Songs

Styles: Vocal, Guitar, Folk
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 25:04
Size: 58,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:22)  1. Apology
(3:08)  2. Jack Nice
(3:08)  3. I Get Along Without You Very Well (except sometimes)
(3:13)  4. Love Song (gone wrong)
(3:15)  5. Healing Hands of Time
(3:17)  6. Dida's Blues (A.K.A Blossom's Blues)
(3:36)  7. Spring Time Slumber
(3:02)  8. Losing You

When it comes to music, Dida Pelled doesn't discriminate. This young guitarist-vocalist a doe-eyed ingénue in appearance, a mature artist in reality has proven to be an inimitable double-threat who's more concerned with serving a song and doing justice to the music than fitting into a neat little stylistic box. She's equally comfortable playing straight-up jazz at Smalls in Greenwich Village, interpreting pop, jazz, and/or country classics at intimate Manhattan spots like Lelabar or Antibes Bistro, writing her own tuneful material, or joining the Diva Jazz Orchestra for a program of Johnny Mandel tunes at Dizzy's Club Coca Cola. In 2009, at twenty-one years of age, Pelled moved to New York from her native Israel, and she quickly made her presence known. She attracted the attention of trumpeter Fabio Morgera, who helped to broker her first record deal. He went on to produce Pelled's Plays And Sings (Red Records, 2010)a debut that focused mostly on standards and songbook favorites, painting Pelled as a cultivated, in-the-tradition guitarist and a one-of-a-kind vocalist, capable of instantly capturing the ear's attention with her dreamy cooing and wooing. For that outing, she teamed up with bassist Tal Ronen, a close friend and musical ally, and drummer Gregory Hutchinson, an A-list jazz drummer if ever there was one. Morgera and trumpeter Roy Hargrove sweetened the deal, each making notable guest appearances and complementing the work of the core trio. But it was Pelled, not the bigger names, who made the biggest impression. She worked her way through gems like Horace Silver's "Calcutta Cutie," Wes Montgomery's "Fried Pies," and George and Ira Gershwin's "Our Love Is Here To Stay" like a seasoned jazz veteran with nothing to prove and lots to offer. Her sophomore release Modern Love Songs (Self Produced, 2015) turned out to be something altogether different. It's a concise collection of music that focuses on her singer-songwriter side and pruning skills, with spare readings of songs from the likes of Randy Newman and Willie Nelson mixed in with original material, a rechristened version of Blossom Dearie's namesake blues now called "Dida's Blues" and Hoagy Carmichael's "I Get Along Very Well Without You (Except Sometimes)."

Both records speak directly to Pelled's musical interests and influences, yet she readily acknowledges the differences in the way they each present themselves and in the way they came into being: her debut was quickly assembled when an opportunity arose and the follow-up slowly took shape over a long period of time as a DIY labor of love. "[For Plays And Sings], it was one day in the studio, one day of mixing, and that was it," she notes. With Modern Love Songs, it was much different, as the album grew out of Pelled's experiences playing gigs over the course of several years after Plays And Sings was released. "I played a lot with [bassist] Tal Ronen," she remarks, "and together, we continued playing standards like you can hear on the debut album. But we also combined that type of material with some of our other [musical] influences, bringing both to our gigs. We started playing Bob Dylan songs, and Nirvana covers, and whatever else we felt like playing. We just kept learning songs, trying them out, and putting our own little spin on them." In addition, Pelled and Ronen started writing some songs, both individually and as a team, and mixing them into the sets at their gigs. They built up an impressive and diverse repertoire that would ultimately feed into Modern Love Songs, an album that, in contrast to her debut, took a year-and-a-half to make from start to finish. Part of the reason that Modern Love Songs took so long to come into being had to do with the normal details surrounding the creation of any album, but Pelled's slow walk along the path of discovery as an independent artist also contributed to the lengthy process. "I had to figure out how to do a lot of things by myself. A lot of simple things," she states, "like how to decide if it would be eight songs or fourteen songs, or how to decide who's going to mix it. Every decision took longer than it should have...but it was wonderful. We learned so much and we had the time of our lives. [Co-producer] Yuval [Vilner] and I were like best friends [during the process]. We did everything together, and I guess that's how you learn." In figuring out all of the details, Pelled managed to grow, both as an artist and as a person, coming to fully appreciate the benefits and understand the downside connected to artistic self-sufficiency. "Sometimes it's nice to be spoiled and not have to deal with all the little things. But when you have to deal with them, you learn a lot," she shares. "It's more complicated. But then it feels more like your baby, and it's more exciting in a way to put it out, so there are a lot of good things about it. On bad days, you think, 'I have to do all these things and I don't even like this anymore,' but on good days, when you're doing everything, you're the engine...and it gives back to you. And it gives you an opportunity to be more creative because you have more control." And with that control came opportunities to branch out.

While Modern Love Songs is narrower than its predecessor in some respects, focusing completely on the art of the three-minute, vocal-centered song, it's also broader in many respects. Pelled taps into a larger pooler of instrumental collaborators and colors here, bringing out incredibly small and rich details in the music; she pulls together an incredibly diverse assortment of songs and stories to get her point(s) across; and she branches out into other forms of media, using music videos as another way to express herself. All of it pays off, as Modern Love Songs has tremendous staying power and impact despite its short running time about twenty-five minutes and modest sound(s). The album opens with "Apology" one of two selections on the record with music and lyrics by Ronen. It's a piece that's somewhat grim and heavy, as life and death hang in the balance in the lyrics, but sensitive string quartet backing and Pelled's weightless vocals keep things from getting too gloomy. "The original title," notes Pelled, "was 'Apology To A Mouse In A Glue Trap,'" but it was shortened so listeners could draw their own conclusions and meaning from the song without excessive direction. "I called it "Apology" on the album because I wanted it to be more open," she explains. "It's actually a song about a mouse that died...but it's a song about many other things as well. [It's also about] being the mouse yourself [and] being trapped in a glue trap. I think the most important phrase or sentence is, 'You know I'm just like you / For all my thoughts of freedom / My feet are trapped in glue.'" It's that openness to a dual viewpoint, the empathy that comes with it, and the possibility of other personalized takeaways that makes the song interesting on so many different levels.

From there, Modern Love Songs moves on to the Dylan-esque "Jack Knife" a number that Pelled co-wrote with Ronen and classifies as "a little Spaghetti Western song" and the aforementioned "I Get Along Very Well Without You (Except Sometimes)," a Hoagy Carmichael number dressed here with a Harry Nilsson-type veneer. The latter proves to be one of the places where it's tempting to try to suss out an explicit jazz connection, but Pelled doesn't provide that expected link. "I really don't look at it like, 'now we're doing a jazz song.' I think you can hear that on 'I Get Along Very Well Without You (Except Sometimes),'" she explains. "We don't play it, arrange it, or produce it in a 'jazz standard' way. We look at it as a song, as much as we looked at 'Apology' and 'Jack Nice' [as songs]. We treated this one the same way." Ultimately, it's that style-blind sense of open-mindedness, where the personalization of a song trumps the perceived need to kowtow to the genre police, that comes to define Modern Love Songs. Pelled echoes that notion in concisely explaining the vision of the album: "[I wanted] to pick my favorite songs and try to make them sound the way I imagine them. Not looking at specific genres, but just doing what's best for the songs." She lives up to that ideal on numbers like Ronen's Paul Simon-ish "Love Song (Gone Wrong)," Willie Nelson's "Healing Hands Of Time," Randy Newman's "Losing You," and the kittenish "Dida's Blues." On virtually every number on Modern Love Songs, Pelled's guitar work is downplayed while her vocals are front and center. It's a change of pace and an evolutionary step in her artistry that shouldn't really seem odd, but it might be surprising to some, given the fact that she was a late bloomer as a vocalist. As a teenager attending Israel's prestigious Thelma Yellin High School of the Arts, Pelled was an instrumentalist only, focused on playing as many gigs as she could, improving as a guitarist, and getting a firm grasp on bebop. But that was all to change as she slowly moved toward the microphone in the next stage of her life: the period of time she spent in the Israeli Army. "I played in an army band," she notes, "and that's actually when I started to sing a little bit. My band had two classical singers, but you don't really play classical music or jazz in the army. You play popular Israeli songs, because that's what the soldiers want to hear. So we traveled all around Israel and played popular music. And I sang a little background, and then there was one song I was featured on. I really, really enjoyed it, and that's how I started singing," she fondly recalls.

Unfortunately, insecurity and a sense of comfort in her role as an instrumentalist kept Pelled from doggedly pursuing singing while she remained in Israel. She needed to wipe the slate clean in order to really pursue that course and, in a way, reinvent herself. "I had to move to New York to start singing at gigs because I felt weird [doing it in Israel]," she explains. "When you work with people all the time, and they know you [solely] as a guitarist, it's a little weird to say, 'hey, I'm going to sing the next song.' I also felt like I wasn't good enough [back] then, but [I knew that] you can't get good unless you start doing it. So New York was a nice place to start. It was easier. I could call a bassist who doesn't know me and say, 'Ok, we're going to play a song, and I'm singing.'" And Pelled did just that once she arrived. She began to find some steady work at various venues throughout the city, allowing her to put her guitar skills to good use while also giving her a chance to explore her newfound passion for singing. At the same time, she was also furthering herself through her studies at The New School. In that respect, she followed in the footsteps of the many other Thelma Yellin graduates who carved out a similar Israel-to-NYC, student-to-professional musician path for her. Israel remains a land of inspiration and rejuvenation for Pelled, who's gone back to visit on several occasions every year since moving to The Big Apple, but she's put down musical roots in New York and she doesn't plan on leaving. Her two albums serve as attractive calling cards of different sorts, her gigging calendar is slowly but surely getting full(er), and the promise of more recorded music has been confirmed. She already recorded another date for Red Records an organ trio album that finds her playing (and singing, on one track) with drummer Rodney Green and organist Luke Carlos O'Reilly and she hopes to put together another record on her own, finding the perfect balance between her instrumental and vocal sides. In the meantime, Dida Pelled is content to simply practice guitar, write some music, and "find a song and tell the story that it wants to tell." ~ Dan Bilawsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/dida-pelled-telling-stories-and-serving-songs-dida-pelled-by-dan-bilawsky.php?page=1

Modern Love Songs

Saturday, October 15, 2016

Jason Palmer - Here Today

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:47
Size: 70,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:03)  1. Here Today, Gone Yesterday
(5:24)  2. Abu Abed
(2:59)  3. 3rd Shift
(4:20)  4. Takes Courage To Be Happy
(3:40)  5. Skylark/I Can't Help It
(4:26)  6. 3 Point Turn
(3:51)  7. Capricorn


Thank you all for supporting this project and this label! I’m excited to present this project of mostly original material with this NY based band (with all the members having musical ties to Boston/Cambridge). It’s indeed an all-star cast and I don’t think I could have picked a better group for the tunes that I selected for the session. It was one of the smoothest sessions that I’ve ever been a part of music wise, but at the same time, it was one that I was extremely nervous about because we didn’t rehearse and I was worried that everyone on the session would not have had time to check out the music ahead of time. As it turned out, they played the tunes like they wrote them themselves. Every song was recorded in two takes and in most cases we kept the first one. I’m really thankful for that. ~ Jason Palmer https://jasonpalmerjazz.wordpress.com/2011/09/14/here-today-liners-for-all-of-you-that-purchase-digitally/

Personnel:  Jason Palmer, trumpet;  Mark Turner, tenor saxophone;  Nir Felder, guitar;  Edward Perez, bass;  Kendrick Scott, drums

Here Today

Jacqui Dankworth - Detour Ahead

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:56
Size: 124,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:07)  1. Detour Ahead
(5:11)  2. But Beautiful
(4:56)  3. On The Street Where You Live
(1:38)  4. My Romance
(5:00)  5. The Island
(5:47)  6. Time Takes Its Time
(4:03)  7. Strange Woman
(5:32)  8. Gentle Rain
(3:57)  9. I Can't Make You Love Me
(5:07) 10. Train In The Distance
(4:30) 11. Not Like This
(3:03) 12. Come Home Baby

Great Britain's finest jazz vocalist, Jacqui is the daughter of the legendary John Dankworth and Cleo Laine. The talented Miss Dankworth first ventured onto the stage as a successful actress with the Royal Shakespeare Company and National Theatre. Complimenting her impressive vocal range (exhibited on 'Detour Ahead' and 'Strange Woman') Jacqui has crafted a personal sense of time and space. Feeling is something Miss Dankworth has in abundance as she lives the lyrics, bending notes and caressing words to stunning effect - try 'But Beautiful', for the definitive Dankworth! ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Detour-Ahead-JACQUI-DANKWORTH/dp/B00028DOIK

Personnel: Jacqueline Dankworth (vocals); Linley Hamilton (trumpet); Malcolm Edmonstone Trio (piano, Fender Rhodes piano); David Gordon (piano); Dominic Seldis, Alec Dankworth, Tim Harries (bass guitar); Mike Outram (acoustic guitar, electric guitar); James Pearson (piano); Roy Dodds (drums, percussion).

Detour Ahead

Rich Perry - Beautiful Love

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:01
Size: 167,2 MB
Art: Front

(10:28)  1. In Love in Vain
( 9:19)  2. Prisoner of Love
(10:38)  3. All the Things You Are
( 8:07)  4. I Fall in Love Too Easily
(10:13)  5. But Not for Me
( 8:32)  6. Beautiful Love
( 6:26)  7. I Can't Get Started
( 9:16)  8. Will You Still Be Mine?

A fine young veteran tenor player, Rich Perry went on the road in 1975 with the Glenn Miller ghost band. In 1976, he moved to New York and joined the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis orchestra. He went on to play with a wide variety of top players including Chet Baker, Machito, Bob Moses, Jack McDuff, Billy Hart, Eddie Gomez, Tom Harrell, the Mel Lewis big band, and Harold Danko. Rich Perry first recorded as a leader in 1993 for SteepleChase. ~ Scott Yanow https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/rich-perry/id81007264#fullText

Personnel:  Rich Perry (tenor sax);  Jay Anderson (bass);  Victor Lewis (drums)

Beautiful Love

Paul Desmond, Gerry Mulligan - Two of A Mind

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1962
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:48
Size: 93,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:52)  1. All The Things You Are
(8:24)  2. Stardust
(5:47)  3. Two Of A Mind
(6:36)  4. Blight Of The Fumble Bee
(7:23)  5. The Way You Look Tonight
(6:43)  6. Out Of Nowhere

Paul Desmond and Gerry Mulligan helped to define the cool school with their light, almost vibratoless tones--Desmond's alto luminous and airy, Mulligan's baritone woolly and quietly gruff. They also shared a fondness for improvised counterpoint, and that's the defining characteristic of these 1962 sessions, from the theme statement of "All the Things You Are" with Mulligan echoing Desmond's lead. Like Mulligan's famous group with trumpeter Chet Baker, this is a pianoless quartet, and the open harmonic atmosphere casts the saxophonists' interplay in high relief. Desmond's title tune and Mulligan's "Blight of the Fumble Bee" lead to extended passages of collective improvisation, while Mulligan often supplies Desmond with restrained counterlines. On "The Way You Look Tonight," the theme gradually emerges out of Desmond's part in an almost fuguelike improvisation. The LP-length recording took a surprising three sessions to produce, and there's a revolving door for rhythm sections. Drummer Connie Kay from the Modern Jazz Quartet appears on two tracks with bassist Wendell Marshall and one with John Beal. Drummer Mel Lewis teams with bassist Joe Benjamin on the other three. Despite that, there's nothing lacking in the quality of the support: the two saxophonists sound consistently if quietly inspired. ~ Stuart Broomer https://www.amazon.com/Two-Mind-Paul-Desmond/dp/B000003G3J

Personnel: Paul Desmond (alto saxophone); Gerry Mulligan (baritone saxophone); John Beal, Wendell Marshall, Joe Benjamin (bass); Connie Kay, Mel Lewis (drums).

Two of A Mind

David Friesen - Amber Skies

Styles: Jazz, Post-Bop 
Year: 1983
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:44
Size: 123,3 MB
Art: Front

( 8:14)  1. Amber Skies
(10:20)  2. Blue and Green
( 5:58)  3. Underlying
( 4:43)  4. Jenelle Number Four
( 8:55)  5. In the Place of Calling
( 6:16)  6. Sitka in the Woods
( 9:14)  7. Voices

One of bassist David Friesen's better jazz sessions as a leader, this set (which has been reissued by other labels on CD) has some excellent playing by tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson on "Amber Skies" and "Underlying," a rare opportunity for flutist Paul Horn to take a solo in a straight-ahead setting ("Blue and Green"), and was the first opportunity that pianist Chick Corea and drummer Paul Motian had to work together; percussionist Airto completes the sextet. The diverse originals, all by Friesen, feature each of the players quite favorably, and the overall results are stimulating. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/amber-skies-mw0000119934

Personnel: David Friesen (acoustic bass); Paul Horn (flute); Chick Corea (piano); Paul Motian (drums); Airto Moreira (percussion)

Amber Skies

Friday, October 14, 2016

Larry Coryell - Barefoot Man: Sanpaku

Size: 120,7 MB
Time: 51:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Sanpaku (10:39)
02. Back To Russia ( 6:09)
03. If Miles Were Here ( 6:55)
04. Improv On 97 ( 5:03)
05. Penultimate ( 6:28)
06. Manteca ( 8:21)
07. Blue Your Mind ( 8:22)

Much to the excitement of music aficionados worldwide, Jazz guitar icon Larry Coryell, one of the most respected and celebrated guitarists of his generation, offers a brand new album of seven original compositions titled Barefoot Man: Sanpaku.

Says Larry, “I was inspired by John Lappen's suggestion that I do a recording similar to one that I did in the '70s that had a lot of energy. Using that as a template I carved out several compositions that I felt would be appropriate. The result was better than I expected; I had a great rhythm section in John Lee and Lee Pierson, and the soloists from Florida, Lynne Arriale and Dan Jordan, played on a world class level. Michael Franklin's production was hands off except for a few relevant suggestions that really helped round out the project.”

In addition to Coryell's signature guitar playing, this album features the talents of award-winning pianist Lynne Arriale, longtime Coryell collaborator John Lee on bass, Dan Jordan on saxophone and flute, and drummer Lee Pierson!

Barefoot Man

Jane Bunnett & Maqueque - Oddara

Size: 125,2 MB
Time: 53:30
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Afro-Cuban, Latin Jazz, World, Country
Art: Front

01. Little Feet (4:15)
02. Dream (4:32)
03. El Chivo (5:56)
04. New Moves (4:03)
05. Songs For You (5:40)
06. Power Of Two (Ibeyi) (4:58)
07. La Flamenca Maria (6:54)
08. Eulogy (4:35)
09. Tres Golpes (3:36)
10. Chagui Guaso (4:16)
11. Cafe Pillon (4:41)

Four-time JUNO Award winner, two-time Grammy nominee, and Officer of the Order of Canada, soprano saxophonist/flautist Jane Bunnett & Maqueque is set to release “Oddara”.

Jane Bunnett’s continuing quest to seek out and present musical talent untapped and unheard beyond the confines of the island nohas led her down many roads, and it was during a trip 30 years ago to Havana, Cuba she discovered then-unknown musicians and formed the all-star ensemble Maqueque (pronounced “Mah-Keh-Keh”, meaning “the energy of a young girl’s spirit.”) Their 2014 self-titled debut CD was awarded a much-deserved Juno Award for Best Group Jazz Album of the Year.

Jane Bunnett’s assembly of all-star Cuban musicians, the sextet which includes herself and five extraordinary young females, ensured a spotlight for their fluid, seamless music. “Everything I’ve done,” Jane says with pride, “has led up to this group, which is the perfect vehicle for now.” Maqueque currently includes Yissy Garcia on drums, Dánae Olano on piano, Magdelys Savigne on batá drums and congas, Elizabeth Rodriguez on violin and vocals and Celia Jiménez on bass. Maqueque often features guest stars Melvis Santa on percussion and vocals, as well as Dayme Arocena assisting vocals.

Oddara

George Cables - The George Cables Songbook

Size: 168,3 MB
Time: 72:53
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Traveling Lady (6:22)
02. Aka Reggie (7:26)
03. The Dark The Light (6:49)
04. For Honey Lulu (5:49)
05. Melodious Funk (6:27)
06. Face The Consequences (5:20)
07. Colors Of Light (8:43)
08. Think On Me (5:55)
09. The Mystery Of Monifa Brown (7:55)
10. Baby Steps (6:19)
11. Suite For Sweet Rita (5:43)

In the 1970s and '80s, George Cables was the pianist of choice for saxophonists Dexter Gordon and Art Pepper and he also recorded a lot with jazz stars Joe Henderson, Freddie Hubbard, Bobby Hutcherson and Frank Morgan. On Cables' own new album, it's all personal. He's a terrific pianist, but his new album illuminates his gifts as a composer as much as his skill at the keyboard. Cables' student and outstanding vocalist in her own right, Sarah Elizabeth Charles has written lyrics for a number of Cables' instrumental numbers and she appears on the album to deliver them with a real sense of swing, style and sensitivity. Reedman Craig Handy is also featured as is percussionist Steve Kroon, adding some extra subtle color to the proceedings. But the dominant leitmotif throughout it all is Cables and his piano playing which, with all its ease of execution and non-flashy excellence, is always present to give good taste a good name.

The George Cables Songbook

The Pasadena Roof Orchestra - Live From London

Size: 141,2 MB
Time: 60:14
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz: Swing Jazz
Art: Front

01. Let Yourself Go (Live) (3:01)
02. Zing Went The Strings Of My Heart (Live) (3:01)
03. Top Hat White Tie And Tails (Live) (2:52)
04. Sophisticated Lady (Live) (3:46)
05. Cheek To Cheek (Live) (3:31)
06. High Society (Live) (4:12)
07. A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square (Live) (4:27)
08. You Couldn't Be Cuter (Live) (2:54)
09. Paddlin' Madelin' Home (Live) (2:07)
10. Drummin Man (Live) (4:34)
11. East St. Louis Toodle-Oo (Live) (3:35)
12. Tiger Rag (Live) (3:57)
13. Over My Shoulder Goes One Care (Live) (2:36)
14. I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues (Live) (3:26)
15. Diga Diga Doo (Live) (3:01)
16. My Blue Heaven - Singing In The Rain (Live) (3:39)
17. As Time Goes By (Live) (3:38)
18. Home In Pasadena (Live) (1:48)

The Pasadena Roof Orchestra is a world class, unique formation which was created over 40 years ago. It has successfully appeared at major concert houses in London, New York, Dubai, Berlin Hong Kong to Kuala Lumpar. It has recorded more than forty albums. The Orchestra has provided music for films, such as the ‘Comedian Harmonists’ (Josef Vilsmaier,) and completed a soundtrack for ‘Just a Gigolo’ 1980 with David Bowie and Marlene Dietrich (her last film). It has appeared at Buckingham Palace (Christmas party 2010), and its soundtracks have been used in numerous advertising campaigns. The musicians have twice toured the USA to critical acclaim.

It is probably no longer accurate to list the Orchestra nostalgia, as this seems more applicable to the recent phenomenon of tribute bands. The Orchestra has become an established name, in its own right, in a similar way to the great dance bands that inspired it.

The music is a form of modern classic. It stands on the shoulders of giants like George Gershwin, Cole Porter, Irving Berlin, Jerome kern, Ray Noble, Hoagy Carmichael. These were Composers who wrote unforgettable melodies, and sophisticated romantic lyrics. Our tunes are still the all-time standards, the towering achievements of the song-writers art.

Like the great bands of Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, Ray Noble, Fletcher Henderson and Jack Hylton, ours are the sound of their era. The music was the back-drop to events of world shattering significance. Take a listen to the sounds that grew out of New York, New Orleans, Paris and Berlin in the 1920’s. Hear to the growling trumpet, the muted trombone, the wailing clarinet glissando over the steady throb of the rhythm section, as the smoky shaft of spotlight picks out the white tux and red carnation of the singer.

When it comes to authentic Dance band/ early swing music, the Pasadena Roof Orchestra has no equal. It has always had access to the finest arrangements, the best musicians, and under the directorship of Band-leader and singer, DuncanGalloway, produces an immaculately presented show, full of fun, rhythm and laughter.

Live From London

Rich Perry - Nocturne

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:28
Size: 141,0 MB
Art: Front

(7:24)  1. Autumn Nocturne
(7:35)  2. Cherokee
(8:07)  3. Never Let Me Go
(8:54)  4. Old Folks
(8:48)  5. I've Never Been In Love Before
(6:37)  6. My Little Suede Shoes
(6:44)  7. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
(7:17)  8. Lotus Blossom

When, if ever, does loyalty to a record label become a liability for a musician? I posed the question in rhetorical fashion in a recent review of the latest release by saxophonist Ari Ambrose for Steeplechase. It’s a query that’s even more apposite in the context of labelmate Rich Perry. Nocturne marks Perry’s 21st disc for the Danish imprint, and curiously enough, like Ambrose’s album, it’s the tenorist’s first in the configuration of a conventional jazz quartet in which a guitar replaces a piano. Unlike the Ambrose disc, all of the tracks on Nocturne are standards dating from bebop and backward, and one of the participants, drummer Jeff Hirshfield, has been in Perry’s professional orbit since the saxophonist’s debut date way back in 1993. So the question stands: What can Perry possibly say that he probably hasn’t said in some shape or form before given the consistent circumstances of his output over several decades? The answer is a subjective one, but to these ears Perry’s situation exemplifies one of the fundamental advantages of jazz as a means of creative expression. In the right hands, even the most threadbare standard can be made to hold emotional and artistic weight. And nearly all of Perry’s picks for the session have seen their share of excessive use over the years.

“Cherokee,” which falls second in the program pecking order, has recorded renderings numbering well into the quadruple digits. Perry approaches it with little fanfare and not a hint of trepidation, decelerating the tempo from a customary bop gallop to lustrous crawl, his tone corpulent but his phrasing still airy and agile. Bassist John Hebert is especially helpful in this setting, planting a fat, strutting line in pace with the gentle glide of Hirschfield’s swishing brushes. Guitarist Nate Radley comps in the cracks, and Perry’s winding, aerated line receives just the right degree of support for the duration. The other tracks advance at speeds ranging from medium to gradual with the exceptions coming with a variable speed, behind the beat “Never Let Me Go” and the closing version of Kenny Dorham’s “Lotus Blossom.” These pieces almost sound like émigrés from another album, with Perry hinting at free playing in places and improvising with a vigor unmatched elsewhere in the set. While my preference would be for more blowing of this sort, it’s hard to fault the path of lesser resistance Perry and his colleagues choose instead. This is standards-centered jazz of the best sort. It’s the kind that mines the beauty in the melodies without being beholden to this history of their forms and it answers the aforementioned question of potential artistic stasis to my mind without equivocation. ~ Derek Taylor http://dustedmagazine.tumblr.com/post/76439049084/rich-perry-nocturne-steeplechase

Personnel:  Rich Perry, tenor sax;  Nate Radley, guitar;  John Hebert, bass;  Jeff Hirshfield, drums

Nocturne

Conrad Herwig & Andy LaVerne - Shades of Light

Styles: Trombone And Piano Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:31
Size: 143,8 MB
Art: Front

(7:41)  1. Three Flowers
(5:45)  2. Tones for Joan's Bones
(6:15)  3. Crystal Silence
(8:24)  4. Bessie's Blues
(4:31)  5. If You Never Come to Me
(6:07)  6. Shades of Light
(5:33)  7. Black Narcissus
(5:25)  8. Think on Me
(5:19)  9. African Flower
(7:26) 10. In Your Own Sweet Way

Trombonist Conrad Herwig and pianist Andy LaVerne picked some beautiful, modern tunes for this duo session. In addition to music by McCoy Tyner, Chick Corea, Joe Henderson, John Coltrane, Hubert Laws, and George Cables, they tangle with Brubeck's "In Your Own Sweet Way," Ellington's "African Flower," and Jobim's "If You Never Come to Me." (Corea's "Crystal Silence," famously played by its author and Gary Burton as a piano/vibes duet, is a particularly good choice.) Few besides Herwig can get the ungainly trombone to sing and turn corners like this; his rapport with LaVerne, one of Steeplechase's most sophisticated and prolific artists, is often breathtaking. This record came out around the same time as Wycliffe Gordon and Eric Reed's We, and makes for an interesting comparison. ~ David R.Adler http://www.allmusic.com/album/shades-of-light-mw0001032591

Personnel: Conrad Herwig (trombone), Andy LaVerne (piano)

Shades of Light

Enrico Pieranunzi, Marc Johnson, Joey Baron - As Never Before

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:33
Size: 135,5 MB
Art: Front

(6:52)  1. Soundings
(3:16)  2. Improheart
(6:45)  3. A Nameless Gate
(7:50)  4. As Never Before
(9:12)  5. Many Moons Ago
(3:18)  6. Impromind
(6:52)  7. Song For Kenny
(7:03)  8. Time's Passage
(7:20)  9. Winter Moon

Pianist Enrico Pieranunzi isn't the only artist influenced by Kenny Wheeler's classic Gnu High. It's a safe bet that the trumpeter's 1976 debut as a leader for ECM, featuring the perfect line-up of pianist Keith Jarrett, bassist Dave Holland and drummer Jack DeJohnette, has been one of small group jazz's most influential albums of the past thirty years; as remarkable for Wheeler's inimitable writing as its unparalleled performances. Few, however, get the opportunity to recruit Wheeler in the same quartet context for an album perhaps lacking the "classic" stamp of Gnu High, but coming darn close. With seven Pieranunzi compositions and two group improvisations of complete spontaneity but equally immediate compositional focus, the pianist augments his existing trio of bassist Marc Johnson and drummer Joey Baron with Wheeler, making As Never Before an appropriately titled disc that actually manages to surpass Pieranunzi's career-defining Live in Japan (Cam Jazz, 2007).  Pieranunzi, Johnson and Baron may not have the cachet of Jarrett, Holland and DeJohnette. Still, over the past quarter century they've established themselves individually as comfortable in a variety of environments and, now early into its third decade, a trio capable of musical empathy akin to that Johnson experienced with his first major employer, the late legend Bill Evans. Pieranunzi, like most modern pianists, owes much to Evans, but he's long since transcended Evans as an overt reference point. If there's any pianist with whom he shares much these days it's John Taylor, who has worked regularly with Wheeler for five decades, making the Pieranunzi/Wheeler pairing an equally winning combination. Nor is this Pieranunzi's first recorded encounter with Wheeler. FelliniJazz (Cam Jazz, 2004) also brought the two together, but on a set of music culled largely from soundtracks to films of the great Frederico Fellini, and with a line-up possessing its own strength but lacking the simpatico inherent in a group that's worked together for twenty-five years. 

FelliniJazz's strength was in how its players found common ground to interpret non-original music with their own voices; written with this line-up in mind, As Never Before even more successfully speaks to the players' individual strengths. And what strengths. Baron, beginning as a vivacious and raucous player on the downtown New York scene, has evolved into a drummer of great nuance, swinging lightly alongside Johnson on "Time's Passage" while energetically punctuating without losing sight of the song's evocative resonance. Johnson, a most elegant and lyrical bassist, is the litmus test for perfection in instantaneous choice, balancing rhythm section responsibilities with a conversational approach that feeds Pieranunzi's own thematic disposition to solo building. And what of Wheeler? Approaching eighty, his peerless technique shows no signs of weakening, with every solo combining his unmistakable melancholy melodism with a nearly unequaled ability to deliver perfection, take after take. Quintessential modern mainstream jazz, As Never Before blends traditional elements with European classicism and, like its players, is as unassuming as it is stellar; as honest, committed and selfless as intimate, small group jazz gets. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/as-never-before-enrico-pieranunzi-cam-jazz-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Enrico Pieranunzi: piano; Marc Johnson: bass: Joey Baron: drums; Kenny Wheeler: trumpet, flugelhorn.

As Never Before