Tuesday, December 6, 2016

Claus Ogerman & His Orchestra - Watusi Trumpets

Styles: Big Band, Jazz-Funk  
Year: 1965
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 28:07
Size: 66,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:19)  1. It's Not Unusual
(2:35)  2. Stingray
(2:19)  3. Watusi Trumpets
(2:28)  4. El Watusi
(2:20)  5. Downtown
(2:25)  6. Right Now
(2:32)  7. Harlem Watusi
(2:05)  8. One Step Above
(1:56)  9. The Joker
(2:34) 10. Poinciana
(2:21) 11. La Bamba
(2:05) 12. Land of 1000 Dances

Now that we’re in the full swing of the summer season, it seemed logical to go for an album this month with a sunny disposition. So let me make the disclaimer that the music on this LP will not change your life and I make no claims for innovation or anything earth shattering. But with your hi-fi setup close to the pool or deck, a libation of your choice in hand, and possibly a dance partner, you might find Watusi Trumpets to be a sunny finger popping disc. While many are most likely aware of arranger Claus Ogerman through his work on such sublime classics as Antonio Carlos Jobim’s Wave , Bill Evans With Symphony Orchestra , and possibly his own late ‘70s/early ‘80s albums Gate of Dreams and Cityscape , fewer still have probably seen or heard Watusi Trumpets. Cut in 1965 for RCA Victor, Ogerman is heard just a few years shy of hooking up with producer Creed Taylor who would keep him busy over the next decade arranging a variety of projects for Verve and CTI Records.

This set is obviously in line with similar concept albums of the time that lent jazz sensibilities to popular dance moves such as the twist. Pop hits abound here including “Downtown,” “It’s Not Unusual,” “The Joker,” “La Bamba,” and “Land of 1000 Dances.” Ogerman approaches the material with taste even if the actual harmonic and melodic content of some of the tunes is limited. “La Bamba” actually seems far removed from its more popular incarnation, with bright flute work and harmonious trombones carrying the lead. A bit more of a Tin Pan Alley chestnut, “Poinciana” is almost unrecognizable until B3 organ steps in with the familiar melody, complimented by a dazzling trumpet fanfare on the bridge. Aside from the pop ditties, Ogerman pens a few of his own originals, along with Herbie Mann’s “Right Now,” Ray Barretto’s “El Watusi,” and Joe Zawinul’s “One Step Above.” The last of these sets the routine for most of the tracks, with B3 organ taking the lead and contrasting bursts from the trumpet and trombone sections. Aside from a flute solo here or there the emphasis is mostly on “the groove” for these tracks that rarely exceed two and a half minutes in length. Standing apart from even his other commercially-oriented RCA sets, Ogerman’s Watusi Trumpets is certainly an oddity and a one-off affair that offers little in the way of jazz improvisation but much in the way of ‘60s high fidelity, not to mention its appeal to those who dig “Space Age Pop” or “Bachelor Pad” music.~ C.Andrew Hovan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/claus-ogerman-orchestra-watusi-trumpets-by-c-andrew-hovan.php

Watusi Trumpets

Monday, December 5, 2016

Bob Greene, Bobby Gordon & Howard Alden - All I Ask Is Love

Size: 166,2 MB
Time: 70:18
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2010
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. All That I Ask Is Love #2 (1:58)
02. (I'm) Confessin' (3:20)
03. After You've Gone #1 (4:18)
04. Someday Sweetheart (3:04)
05. Stardust #1 (6:48)
06. I Ain't Got Nobody (5:00)
07. You Tell Me Your Dreams (3:46)
08. Singin' The Blues (3:35)
09. Diane (1:49)
10. In My Solitude (3:30)
11. Just A Closer Walk With Thee (4:10)
12. Buddy Bolden's Blues (2:33)
13. Mamie's Blues (1:57)
14. After You've Gone #3 (4:06)
15. I'm Confessin' Trio (4:31)
16. Tiger Rag (4:02)
17. Stardust #5 (3:07)
18. Christy Blues (3:18)
19. Why (3:16)
20. All That I Ask Is Love #1 (1:58)

Pianist Bob Greene, clarinetist Bobby Gordon and guitarist Howard Alden recorded this trio date in Febuary, 2010 in California.

All I Ask Is Love

Heather Bambrick - You'll Never Know

Size: 157,7 MB
Time: 68:07
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. I Only Have Eyes For You (4:27)
02. Lovers In A Dangerous Time (5:50)
03. I Can't See For Lookin' (4:38)
04. Never Never Land (4:54)
05. How Does It Feel (5:09)
06. Get Happy (4:35)
07. Far From The Home I Love (6:02)
08. Dedicated To You (5:37)
09. I Don't Mind A Bit (2:52)
10. You'll Never Know (4:47)
11. Surrey With The Fringe On Top (4:15)
12. A Time For Love (5:45)
13. My Ship (3:34)
14. Petty Harbour Bait Skiff (5:33)

It’s been 10 years since she’s released her last solo recording, and now award-winning vocalist Heather Bambrick is back with an all-new collection of songs that reflect her development as an artist and musician … featuring a stellar band, including Mark Kieswetter (piano), Ross MacIntyre (bass), Davide DiRenzo (drums, percussion), Rob Piltch (guitar), Chase Sanborn (trumpet, flugelhorn), John Johnson (saxophones), and special guest Guido Basso (flugelhorn).

Heather Bambrick has been wearing many hats for many years – and all of them fit her well! She’s an award-winning vocalist, voice actor, broadcaster, and educator, working with some of the best in the business.

Heather has performed internationally collaborating with artists such as Phil Nimmons, Fred Hirsch, Gene DiNovi, Guido Basso, Lea Delaria, Anne Hampton Callaway, Carol Welsman, Jackie Richardson, Ian Shaw, as well as the late Rob McConnell and Peter Appleyard. She is a founding member of the Beehive Singers (1994 – 2001) and Broadsway, a Jazz / Cabaret ensemble with whom she is currently actively recording and touring. Heather has been a guest performer with various Jazz ensembles, as well as with the Newfoundland Symphony Orchestra, the Cathedral Bluffs Orchestra, and the Windsor Symphony Orchestra. She will make her debut with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra in 2017.

You'll Never Know

Bett Butler - Winter Lullaby: Songs For The Christmas Child

Size: 127,0 MB
Time: 53:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals, Xmas
Art: Front

01. Angels We Have Heard On High (5:22)
02. Are You Alone For Christmas Day (3:56)
03. No Place Like Home For Christmas (4:49)
04. Pat-A-Pan (4:37)
05. Gesu Bambino (6:13)
06. Cantique De Noel (O Holy Night) (4:44)
07. Someone’s Child (2:53)
08. La Virgen Fue Lavandera (4:51)
09. Un Flambeau (Bring A Torch), Jeanette Isabella (4:22)
10. El Noi De La Mare (4:31)
11. Shine (3:37)
12. Winter Lullaby (3:57)

In her eclectic fourth album, Bett Butler mixes originals with beloved holiday standards in multiple languages, many with her own English translations. Her bouncy bossa nova “Are You Alone for Christmas Day” recalls Astrid Gilberto and Stan Getz, with an elegant sax solo by Rene Saenz; and in “No Place Like Home for Christmas,” also featuring Saenz, Coltrane meets Clooney (Rosemary, not George). “Pat-a-Pan” veers firmly into Klezmer territory, and Butler’s four-octave range becomes a boys’ choir on “Gesu Bambino.” “O Holy Night” and “Bring a Torch, Jeanette, Isabella” blend classical and jazz in intimate, lively chamber ensembles. Producer/arranger Joël Dilley sets the album’s title song “Winter Lullaby” in the kind of rhythmic and ethereal landscape familiar to fans of his Mandala Meditation Series, lushly underpinning the chorus: “Even angels have to sleep sometime, but they’re never far away.”

Writes Austin music critic Michael Corcoran: “A true artist....Her forte is creating rich story songs…we have to call jazz because the right word hasn’t been invented.” In historic and culturally rich San Antonio, Texas, she co-owns Mandala Music Production with bassist/composer/ producer Joël Dilley, where they play fetch with their boxer Mingus and create music licensed for use on HBO, Discovery Channel, Cooking, Travel, and Playboy Channels, and more.

Winter Lullaby

Christian Rover Group - Live In Concert (Feat. Rhoda Scott)

Size: 159,1 MB
Time: 68:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1998
Styles: Jazz: Hammond Organ
Art: Front

01. Easter Blue (10:15)
02. We'll Be Together Again (10:53)
03. In A Mellow Tone (11:25)
04. Mack The Knife ( 6:35)
05. Stay With Me Lord ( 7:21)
06. Toccate - Impressions (13:26)
07. Splanky ( 8:54)

After a long stint in the USA, Christian Rover is making a name for himself on the international music scene. A summa cum laude graduate of Berklee College Of Music in Boston, Massachusetts, Rover captured first prize at DOWNBEAT'S "Music Fest USA" and was awarded the Joe Zawinul Award for outstanding achievements in music synthesis. His own CDs and numerous other recordings demonstrate his unique musical talent, both as a solo artist and a sideman. Rover has toured and given concerts in the USA, Israel, China, Japan and throughout Europe.

Rover has performed and recorded with such jazz greats as Rhoda Scott, Pee Wee Ellis, Houston Person, George Garzone, John Zorn, Matt Garrisson, Jim Black, Dan Rieser, John Stowell, Skuli Sverrisson, Cesar Olguin, Enzo Zirilli, Alberto Marsico, Raetus Flisch, Piotr Barron, Jaromir Honzak, Gildas and Jean-Batiste Boclé, Emil Mangelsdorf, Wolfgang Engstfeld and Peter Weiss among many others. He enjoys being active in many styles of music from contemporary to popular, ethnic to all shades of jazz. The settings that he has worked in range from solo performances to unique band projects to leading a Japanese/East German Big Band ("Far East Far Out Orchestra”). A skilled composer Rover likes the challenge of writing in contemporary as well as classical context such as arranging and performing the Goldberg Variations on three electric guitars for the International Bachfestival.

Christian Rover is also in great demand as a teacher. He has worked as a professor at the University of Graz (Austria), the Conservatory of Music in Weimar and Leipzig (Germany) and has taught at Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachuessetts (USA). He has given countless lectures at conservatories such as the Sibelius Academy (Finland), in Zurich and Basel (Switzerland) as well as workshops in Gdansk (Poland), Prague (Czech Republic) and many other institutions around the globe. For many years he has been a contributing writer to major publications such as Gitarre & Bass, Musiker and Fachblatt.

Live In Concert

Carminho - Carminho Canta Tom Jobim

Size: 106,1 MB
Time: 45:21
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Bossa Nova, Samba, Fado
Art: Front

01. A Felicidade (3:53)
02. O Que Tinha De Ser (2:59)
03. Estrada Do Sol (Feat. Marisa Monte) (4:03)
04. Meditaçao (3:10)
05. Luiza (2:34)
06. Falando De Amor (Feat. Chico Buarque) (3:32)
07. Wave (3:10)
08. Sabia (3:36)
09. O Grande Amor (3:22)
10. Retrato Em Branco E Preto (2:46)
11. Inutil Paisagem (3:24)
12. Triste (2:57)
13. Modinha (Feat.Maria Bethania) (3:18)
14. Don't Ever Go Away (2:31)

"I might not know who you are, but I know who I am.”

And things could be no different, when someone who sings these words is someone who has always perceived Fado to be her destiny, but who was only able to openly admit it after she truly understood who she was.
In 2009, Carminho sang "Fado". This was her fado, the one she owned since an early age, when she listened to her parents’ records, when she witnessed the gathering of fado singers in her own house and when, still a teenager, she began to sing in the Taverna do Embuçado. This "Fado" was the title of her first album, which was one of the most awaited albums in the new generation of fado singers: for those who had already heard Carminho, her talent was obvious, but they had to wait – until she finished her graduation, until she travelled the world, until she knew who she really was.

And her "Fado" became one of the most acclaimed albums in 2009. It went Platinum – an enviable outcome for a debut album. With "Fado", Portugal surrendered to Carminho’s voice and the doors of the world opened to her talent. It was considered best album 2011 by Songlines magazine, she had shows in European capital cities, in Womex 2011 (Copenhagen) and in the UNESCO headquarters, in Paris, within the scope of Fado as World Heritage candidate. Then came the invitation to participate in Pablo Alborán’s album, which became a phenomenon of popularity in both Portugal and Spain.
It was about time that “Fado” had a worthy successor. And it's just around the corner. On 5th March, Carminho reveals her "Alma" (Portuguese word for soul) with 15 new songs, an album again produced and directed by Diogo Clemente, again wisely combining cover versions and originals (in the special edition, the album has 17 songs and a DVD with Carminho live in concertin May 2011 at Lux Frágil, Lisbon.

The cover versions are less evident. Some not so well known songs by Amália ("Cabeça de Vento"), Dina do Carmo ("À Beira do Cais") or Fernanda Maria ("As Pedras da Minha Rua"), but also from Chico Buarque ("Meu Namorado", de "O Grande Circo Místico") or Vinicius de Moraes ("Saudades do Brasil em Portugal"). The original songs are by Diogo Clemente ("Bom Dia, Amor", about poet Fernando Pessoa), Mário Pacheco ("Talvez", lyrics by Vasco Graça Moura), and Vitorino ("Fado Adeus"). And there are also some new lyrics for traditional fado tunes – one of them, "Folha", written by Carminho herself, and another one, "Impressão Digital", a poem by António Gedeão.

And it is this mixture of past and present that allows us to unveil the future of Fado, in the unrivalled voice of Carminho. A voice which, in her second album, sustains all that Carminho sings in "Talvez": "I might not know who you are, but I know who I am”.

Carminho Canta Tom Jobim

Mal Waldron - Left Alone

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1960
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:30
Size: 88,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:06)  1. Left Alone
(6:56)  2. Cat Walk
(5:52)  3. You Don't Know What Love Is
(8:14)  4. Minor Pulsation
(7:11)  5. Airegin
(4:09)  6. Mal Waldron: The Way He Remembers Billie Holiday

This obscure CD reissue has the wrong date listed (it is from February 24, 1959, not November 1957) and fails to mention that altoist Jackie McLean sits in with pianist Mal Waldron's trio (which includes bassist Julian Euell and drummer Al Dreares) on the title cut, a number co-written by Waldron and Billie Holiday. Although Waldron dedicated the album to Lady Day and talks about her a bit on the last track in a short interview with vibraphonist Teddy Charles (which was recorded a bit later), he actually only performs one song from her repertoire: "You Don't Know What Love Is." Otherwise this rather brief CD has the title cut, two other typically brooding Waldron originals plus Sonny Rollins' "Airegin." McLean's emotional alto is such a strong asset on the title cut that one wishes he were on the rest of this worthwhile set. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/left-alone-mw0000651178

Personnel: Mal Waldron (piano); Jackie McLean (alto saxophone); Julian Euell (bass); Al Dreares (drums).

Left Alone

Marilyn Scott - Avenues of Love

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:34
Size: 124,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:47)  1. Starting to Fall
(5:02)  2. I Like to Dance
(4:27)  3. Avenida Del Sol
(5:38)  4. The Look of Love
(5:54)  5. Heaven's Design
(4:30)  6. Love is  a Powerful Thing
(5:34)  7. Hold You Up
(6:16)  8. Hey Love
(5:45)  9. Get Home
(3:37) 10. The Last Day

A top-notch adult contemporary vocalist still awaiting a well-deserved crossover commercial breakthrough, Marilyn Scott adds powerful fuel to her cause on Avenues of Love by helping herself with a well-balanced array of production and songwriting talent. George Duke surrounds her with party voices and a kneejerking Latin groove on a playful list of dance steps on "I Like to Dance," then surrounds her clear, sensuous voice with airy, billowing synth cushioning on the Bacharach-David classic "The Look of Love." Scott and bassist Jimmy Haslip reroute to Memphis on Michael Ruff's Wilson Pickett-like pick me up, "Love Is a Powerful Thing," engaging a two-piece horn section that sounds even larger. The Yellowjacket touch is in full effect on the picturesque "Avenida del Sol," which approximates an update of the gentle Astrud Gilberto sound; the tune was written by Scott and Bob Mintzer, and produced by Scott, Haslip, and Russell Ferrante. Scott's greatest gift here is her sense of modulation; she belts like crazy on the funk pieces, but recognizes the emotional power of restraint on the ballads. ~ Jonathan Widran http://www.allmusic.com/album/avenues-of-love-mw0000034777

Personnel : Marilyn Scott (vocals); Ray Fuller, Michael Landau, Paul Jackson, Jr., Mike Miller (guitar); Steve Allen, Brandon Fields (saxophone); Ralph Rickert (trumpet); Bob Mintzer, Walt Fowler (horns); George Duke (piano, synthesizer, keyboards, bass); Michael Ruff (keyboards, background vocals); Russell Ferrante (keyboards); Jimmy Haslip, Fred D. Washington (bass); Joseph Heredia, Will Kennedy (drums); Rafael Padilla, Paulinho Da Costa (percussion); Take 6, Lori Perry, Sharon Perry, Carolyn Perry, Darlene Perry, Jim Gilstrap, Lynn Davis, Alvin Chea, David Thomas, Maxayne Lewis (background vocals).

Avenues of Love

Jed Levy - Good people

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1987
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:10
Size: 122,1 MB
Art: Front

( 6:08)  1. Just In Time
( 8:19)  2. Good People
( 6:58)  3. Red Lipstick
( 4:01)  4. Second Avenue Blues
(11:27)  5. Jenkuja
( 5:38)  6. Windows On The World
( 6:00)  7. Daydream
( 4:35)  8. The Zealots

Saxophonist Jed Levy has been a mainstay on the New York jazz scene for over 20 years. In addition to performing and recording as a leader, he has had long standing working relationships with such jazz luminaries as Jaki Byard (a musical mentor, 3 recordings and countless performances), Don Patterson, Jack McDuff (valuable road experience), Ron McClure (2 CDs and ongoing performances), and Headhunters drummer Mike Clark (2 CD's and new projects in the works.)  He has also been fortunate to have worked with, Junior Mance, Eddie Henderson, Jack Walrath,The Vanguard Jazz Orchestra, Shirley Scott, Kevin Mahogany, Gene Bertoncini,Don Friedman,Cedar Walton, Curtis Fuller, Chico O'Farrill, Attilla Zollar, Groove Holmes, Tom Harrell, and many others. Levy has toured Japan as a leader and appeared at several international jazz festivals as well as leading bands at such New York venues as Sweet Basil, Blue Note, Birdland, Visiones and Zinno. Diversity has been the key to Levy's success on the New York scene. A recent week found him moving from a concert with the Cab Calloway Orchestra to a night with Mike Clark and Charley Hunter at the Knitting Factory, to the Apollo Theater with the Temptations and the Four Tops, to Birdland with Chico O'Farill's Afro Cuban Orchestra. In his presentations as a leader, as well as in his compositions, Levy tries to incorporate these varied musical experiences. His compositions have been recorded by such artists as the Headhunters, Don Friedman, Eddie Henderson, and Mike Clark.http://www.jedlevy.com/
              
Personnel:  Jed Levy (tenor saxophone);  Peter Leitch (guitar); Peter Madsen (piano); Rufus Reid (bass); Billy Hart (drums).

Good people

George Cables - Beyond Forever

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1992
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 65:24
Size: 106,5 MB
Art: Front

( 7:07)  1. Lost Dreams
( 4:13)  2. 'Round Midnight
( 7:04)  3. The Phantom Of The Islands
( 8:36)  4. Beyond Forever
( 7:26)  5. I Fall In Love Too Easily
( 7:03)  6. Thermo
(10:07)  7. Love Song
( 7:58)  8. Evidence
( 5:46)  9. Little B's Poem

Equally skilled as a leader or as a sideman, George Cables helped to define modern mainstream jazz piano of the 1980s and '90s. When he was 18 and at Mannes College, he formed the Jazz Samaritans with Steve Grossman and Billy Cobham. Cables gained recognition during his stints with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers, Sonny Rollins (both in 1969), Joe Henderson (1969-1971), and Freddie Hubbard (1971-1976). He was with Dexter Gordon (1976-1978) during the tenor's successful return to the United States, and became known as Art Pepper's favorite pianist (1979-1982). In addition to his occasional work with Bebop and Beyond (starting in 1984), Cables appeared in a countless number of situations through the years, and has recorded frequently as a leader, most notably for Contemporary (including the 1979 classic Cables Vision), Concord, and SteepleChase. ~ Scott Yanow https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/beyond-forever/id160753449

Personnel: George Cables (piano); Joe Locke (vibraphone); Santi Debriano (bass); Victor Lewis (drums).

Beyond Forever

Courtney Pine - Closer to Home

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:42
Size: 118,8 MB
Art: Front

(0:55)  1. Opus 1 (Intro)
(4:11)  2. Get Busy
(4:03)  3. Blue Tide
(3:28)  4. I Don't Care
(0:24)  5. Dancehall (Interlude)
(3:52)  6. Kingston
(0:32)  7. Marcus (Interlude)
(4:30)  8. Be Mine Tonight
(5:09)  9. I'm Still Waiting
(1:06) 10. Closer (Interlude)
(3:53) 11. Closer to Home
(4:32) 12. Never Be Lonely
(1:10) 13. Garvey (Interlude)
(3:50) 14. In Time (All Will Know)
(0:35) 15. Dancehall 2 (Interlude)
(2:41) 16. Home Song
(0:53) 17. Opus 1 (Outro)
(5:49) 18. Courtney Blows (Live)

A '92 release by British saxophonist Courtney Pine, who with each album moves more toward the musical center. He's working with pop, rock, and reggae compositions and musicians, but at the same time still playing forceful, frequently dynamic tenor and soprano solos. It's not really fusion, nor is it the kind of uncompromising jazz that he once championed. ~ Ron Wynn http://www.allmusic.com/album/closer-to-home-mw0000280135

Personnel: Courtney Pine (saxophone, keyboards, alto flute, bass synthesizer, drums, computer programming); Dean Fraser (baritone saxophone); Delroy Donaldson, Tony Gad (keyboards, bass); Robbie Lynn (keyboards); Pierre (guitar synthesizer); Stanley (guitar); Danny Browne (bass); Cameron Cleavie, Sly Dunbar (drums, percussion); Drummie (percussion);

Closer to Home

Sunday, December 4, 2016

Art Tatum - The Tatum Group Masterpieces, Vol. 8

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:15
Size: 132,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:48)  1. Gone With The Wind
(7:15)  2. All The Things You Are
(4:49)  3. Have You Met Miss Jones?
(6:15)  4. My One And Only Love
(5:31)  5. Night And Day
(7:18)  6. My Ideal
(6:28)  7. Where Or When
(4:53)  8. Gone With The Wind [alternate take 1]
(4:51)  9. Gone With The Wind [alternate take 2]
(5:02) 10. Have You Met Miss Jones? [alternate take]

The final volume in this very worthy series is a comparatively relaxed affair, a quartet set with tenor-saxophonist Ben Webster. Webster lets Tatum fill the background with an infinite number of notes while emphasizing his warm tenor tone in the forefront on a variety of melodic ballads and standards. The combination works very well. 
~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-tatum-group-masterpieces-vol-8-mw0000614266

Personnel: Art Tatum (piano); Ben Webster (tenor saxophone); Red Callender (bass); Bill Douglass (drums).

The Tatum Group Masterpieces Vol. 8

Malene Mortensen - Date With a Dream

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:20
Size: 113,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:28)  1. I've Got a Date With a Dream
(3:58)  2. All I Want
(5:44)  3. Egyptian Moonlight
(5:31)  4. Blur
(4:11)  5. At Last
(5:26)  6. Take Five
(3:50)  7. Mystery Man
(3:28)  8. Giving You The Best That I've Got
(3:41)  9. Off The Beat
(3:16) 10. Gone Before We Know
(5:45) 11. Crashed

Malene Mortensen emerged on the Danish jazz scene with her 2003 recording debut as a leader for Universal in Europe, following it up with this release for Stunt. With her fresh, engaging vocals and the potential to establish a following in both jazz and pop like Norah Jones, Mortenson isn't really an improviser, but she works with top-notch musicians who create fresh arrangements of standards, while she also proves herself to be a capable composer. Of particular interest are her interpretations of standards, including the sensuous, slowly savored "I've Got a Date with a Dream" (where she's backed by her trio plus strings and a lap steel player) and a heartfelt "At Last" (backed by pianist Kasper Villaume and soprano saxophonist Claus Waidtlow). She soars in Villaume's imaginative post-bop arrangement of "Take Five," displaying her soulful side. Mortenson's originals are more pop-oriented, though still catchy and entertaining, especially her infectious "Off the Beat."~ Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/date-with-a-dream-mw0000512052

Date With a Dream

Jazz Crusaders - Happy Again

Styles: Jazz Funk
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:54
Size: 151,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:36)  1. Lock It Down
(5:59)  2. When You're So Far Away
(4:33)  3. Elephant Walk
(6:46)  4. Top Of The World
(3:39)  5. Fools Rush In
(5:37)  6. Are You Part Of Me
(5:44)  7. Slyzappit
(5:19)  8. Rock Slide
(5:55)  9. La luz Del Dia
(3:46) 10. Jamaica
(5:25) 11. Travelin' Inside Your Love
(3:19) 12. Young Tabbits
(5:11) 13. Uh-huh! Oh-yeah!

When trombonist/producer Wayne Henderson, pianist/keyboardist Joe Sample, sax-man Wilton Felder, and drummer Stix Hooper changed their name from the Jazz Crusaders to the Crusaders back in 1971, it signaled a more R&B-minded direction for the group they were always funky, but in the '70s, they became even funkier. And so, the names the Crusaders and the Jazz Crusaders came to stand for two different things if the Jazz Crusaders were synonymous with a funky yet acoustic-oriented approach to hard bop (à la Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers), the Crusaders were about electric-oriented jazz-funk and fusion. In 1995, Henderson (who left the Crusaders in 1975) resurrected the name the Jazz Crusaders and produced Happy Again for the small, Los Angeles-based Sin-drome Records. Sample objected to Henderson's use of the name the Jazz Crusaders, although Sample and Felder were still part of the Crusaders. Confused? Suffice to say that different improvisers used the two names on different projects in the '90s. On Happy Again, Henderson oversees a lineup that includes Felder as well as trumpeter Donald Byrd, guitarist Larry Carlton, keyboardist Bobby Lyle, vibist Roy Ayers, flutist Hubert Laws, and percussionist Poncho Sanchez (among others). With such an impressive cast, Happy Again should have been exceptional; it isn't, although Henderson does give a generally decent album of electric jazz-funk and pop-jazz. Some might argue that if Henderson was going to resurrect the name the Jazz Crusaders, this album should have been more straight-ahead and bop-oriented and that tracks like "When You're So Far Away" and "Elephant Walk" are too pop-influenced to be called Jazz Crusaders recordings. But while Happy Again is hardly the work of a bop purist, it's still a pleasant, if imperfect, outing, and in 1995 it was nice to hear Henderson taking some trombone solos again.~ Alex Henserson http://www.allmusic.com/album/happy-again-mw0000646561

The Jazz Crusaders includes: Bobby Caldwell (vocals); Wayne Henderson, Wilton Felder, Bobby Lyle, N'Dugu Chancler, Larry Kimpel, Craig T.

Happy Again

Jed Levy - The Italian Suite

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 70:15
Size: 128,9 MB
Art: Front

(7:04)  1. The Road to Rome
(8:30)  2. Ligurian Sea
(6:05)  3. The Models of Milan
(6:57)  4. Dado's Visit
(8:17)  5. Daniela
(7:20)  6. Giuseppe's Borgo
(7:01)  7. Toscana
(4:56)  8. Bari Blues
(8:44)  9. Palermo
(5:17) 10. Dogs of War

On this his seventh SteepleChase release, Jed Levy the composer takes centre stage and presents an album-length suite, with each section relating to Jed's impression of Italy where he has made numerous trips and has given concerts.For the past two decades saxophonist Jed Levy has been a stalwart of the New York jazz scene, leading his own group or performing with such luminaries as Jaki Byard, Junior Mance, Eddie Henderson, Jack Walrath, Kevin Mahogany and Tom Harrell, among others. "Very Impressive and about as inventive a departure from the standard tenor-and-rhythm conventions as one can hope for...a first-class session."

Personnel: Jed Levy (tenor saxophone), Misha Tsiganov (piano), Thomson Kneeland (bass), Alvester Garnett (drums)

The Italian Suite

Garrison Fewell - City Of Dreams

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:16
Size: 128,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:23)  1. City Of Dreams
(4:56)  2. Girl With The Groovy Hips
(7:15)  3. Naima
(5:40)  4. Blues For No Reason
(7:05)  5. Afternoon At The Souk
(8:18)  6. Soul Eyes
(7:19)  7. Waltz For The Lonely One
(8:15)  8. Theme For Doris

"Smooth" is not a word most people like to associate with "jazz." Call it a failure of overzealous marketing. (They've changed terms by now anyway, so we're safe to use it as a compliment.) Guitarist Garrison Fewell has the maturity to appreciate the importance of connecting the dots: fitting ideas together and making them work. His smooth, easygoing style on City of Dreams masks a sophisticated understanding of the jazz vocabulary and ensemble sound. While he mostly steers clear of technical demonstrations, it's clear that he has the skills to get around on the guitar. And when he plays a note, even slurred with three others, you have the sense that he chose it carefully. Fewell's quintet, assembled pretty much on-the-spot for this recording, have a remarkably intuitive sense of cohesion. They take these tunes five Fewell originals and three standards and glide effortlessly from heads to solos and back. The moods vary from the tender lyricism of "Soul Eyes," to the off-kilter Eastern sway of "Afternoon at the Souk," to the cocky strut of "Blues for No Reason." In every situation, pianist George Cables works with the guitarist to help define the group's harmony without crowding out the middle ground. Saxophonist Tino Tracanna delivers solos which craftily embody themes within a shifting cascade of sound. Drummer Jeff Williams can lay back and swing, maintain a delicate simmering bossa nova, or leap in and spur the group onward with a few well-placed hits. But this quintet recording is all about the group sound, connecting the dots, and allowing intuition to guide the flow. Smooth indeed. And that's a good thing. ~ AAJ Staff https://www.allaboutjazz.com/city-of-dreams-garrison-fewell-splasch-records-review-by-aaj-staff.php
 
Personnel: Garrison Fewell: guitar;  Tino Tracanna: soprano and tenor saxophone;  George Cables: piano;  Steve LaSpina: bass;  Jeff Williams: drums.

City Of Dreams

Saturday, December 3, 2016

Rich Perry & Harold Danko - Rhapsody

Styles: Saxophone And Piano Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:52
Size: 151,2 MB
Art:

(7:13)  1. I Hear a Rhapsody
(6:42)  2. Soul Trane
(9:41)  3. Come Rain or Come Shine
(6:31)  4. Beautiful Love
(5:42)  5. Yesterdays
(7:33)  6. Autumn Leaves
(7:04)  7. Star Eyes
(6:57)  8. Like Somone in Love
(8:26)  9. Central Park West

Tenor saxophonist Rich Perry, who has been active on the jazz scene for several decades in a variety of settings, is the common factor between these two top shelf recordings. The first is a duo date with veteran pianist Harold Danko; the latter features Perry as a member of drummer Christian Finger's international band. Rhapsody is a very appropriate title for the duo meeting of Perry and Danko. The two men, who first played together in the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Orchestra and have since worked together on many small group recording sessions - typically quartet or duo dates - have no qualms about working their magic on seven of the most frequently played standards. There is no showboating at all, just imaginative yet restrained improvisations upon these familiar themes that never venture too far from the original melodies, even songs like "Star Eyes that all too often seem to be played on autopilot. No matter who is in the lead, the backing musician provides the perfect accompaniment. 

Perry's mature tone, while it may not be easily recognizable to many listeners in a blindfold test, is not overly influenced by any one tenor saxophone great. Danko has never sounded better as an accompanist, finding just the right chords behind Perry every time. They also add two familiar (if less frequently performed) compositions: a soft, moving take of Tadd Dameron's "Soultrane and a lush, subdued finale of John Coltrane's "Central Park West that suggests a quiet Manhattan evening after everyone has turned in for the night. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allaboutjazz.com/rich-perry-rhapsody-and-merge-into-beauty-by-ken-dryden.php

Personnel: Rich Perry: tenor sax; Harold Danko; piano.

Rhapsody

Molly Johnson - If You Know Love

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:40
Size: 119,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:47)  1. If You Know Love
(4:29)  2. Let's Waste Some Time
(3:39)  3. Tristes Souvenirs
(4:44)  4. Let's Do it
(4:20)  5. Sticks and Stones
(4:01)  6. Rain
(3:17)  7. Streets of Philadelphia
(3:48)  8. Sunday
(3:36)  9. Messin' Around
(3:18) 10. Tonight
(3:25) 11. But Not for Me
(4:45) 12. Northern Star
(3:25) 13. Avignon Blues

Heavily influenced by Billie Holiday, If You Know Love is the French edition of bohemian retro-jazz vocalist Molly Johnson's third studio album, Messin' Around. The 2007 release includes 11 of the twelve original tracks (her cover of Prince's "Tangerine" is omitted), while two previously unreleased songs, a cover of Cole Porter's "Let's Do It" and "Avignon Blues" appear in its place. The Toronto singer's follow-up to Another Day also features a reworking of Bruce Springsteen's "Streets of Philadelphia" alongside several original compositions co-written with Steven MacKinnon, including the lead single, "Rain."~ Jon O’Brien http://www.allmusic.com/album/if-you-know-love-mw0001539401

If You Know Love

Jed Levy - Rain

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:36
Size: 162,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:07)  1. Stomp In F Sharp Minor
(7:15)  2. Step Waltz
(5:47)  3. Make Someone Happy
(9:34)  4. Rain
(6:47)  5. Cry Me A River
(6:29)  6. The Producer
(8:13)  7. Reflections
(6:02)  8. The Q
(9:18)  9. Fran Dance
(5:58) 10. P.T. Blues

Saxophonist Jed Levy has been a mainstay on the New York jazz scene for over 20 years. In addition to performing and recording as a leader, he has had long standing working relationships with such jazz luminaries as Jaki Byard (a musical mentor, 3 recordings and countless performances), Don Patterson, Jack McDuff (valuable road experience), Ron McClure (2 CDs and ongoing performances), and Headhunters drummer Mike Clark (2 CD's and new projects in the works.)  He has also been fortunate to have worked with, Junior Mance, Eddie Henderson, Jack Walrath,The Vanguard Jazz Orchestra, Shirley Scott, Kevin Mahogany, Gene Bertoncini,Don Friedman,Cedar Walton, Curtis Fuller, Chico O'Farrill, Attilla Zollar, Groove Holmes, Tom Harrell, and many others. Levy has toured Japan as a leader and appeared at several international jazz festivals as well as leading bands at such New York venues as Sweet Basil, Blue Note, Birdland, Visiones and Zinno. Diversity has been the key to Levy's success on the New York scene. A recent week found him moving from a concert with the Cab Calloway Orchestra to a night with Mike Clark and Charley Hunter at the Knitting Factory, to the Apollo Theater with the Temptations and the Four Tops, to Birdland with Chico O'Farill's Afro Cuban Orchestra. In his presentations as a leader, as well as in his compositions, Levy tries to incorporate these varied musical experiences. His compositions have been recorded by such artists as the Headhunters, Don Friedman, Eddie Henderson, and Mike Clark. His CD's "Mood Ellington", "Gateway" and "Evans Explorations " on Steeplechase are receiving critical acclaim. http://www.jedlevy.com/

What critics say of Jed Levy
-from the All About Jazz review of "Evans Explorations"Jed Levy has set for himself in his explorations of a piece of the Evans digest using his tenor trio is a daunting one. Levy succeeds remarkably well through his own impressionistic gentle touch, Francois Moutin's up-in-the-mix yet perceptively sensitive bass and the drumming of Evans grad Eliot Zigmund.

-from the All About Jazz review of "Gateway" Jed Levy, as demonstrated on the most attractive Gateway, lives in the mainstream world, but one that is filled with unexpected twists and turns while bringing together musicians who had never played together as a quartet.

-from the Jazz Times.com review of "Mood Ellington":  Tenorist/flutist Jed Levy's Mood Ellington can be both admired and enjoyed for its imaginative reworkings of some lesser-known Duke Ellington compositions, all performed with skill and affection by a stellar quintet.

-from the Montreal Mirror Review of "Mood Ellington" 10/10:  Tenorman Levy comes up with one of the greatest Ellington CDs in recent memory, including compositions like "Neo Hip Hot Cool Kiddies Community" from Duke's suite "The River?" and "Circle of Fourths," inspired by the Bard. It's also a great introduction to pianist Bill Mays.

-from Penguin Guide to Jazz, a review of "Round and Round":  "Jed's playing, though, is again tremendous.  He powers through themes and solos in a way which ought to seem bland, in terms of the steely confidence of the execution, yet its nothing but full-throated enjoyment.  The sort of record which empowers the jazz-repertory tradition without troubling to make any statements at all. 
  
- from Jazz Review  review of "Round and Round": "The first thing to notice about this fine album is what a lot of sax playing you get for your money.  Jed Levy's tenor is unstoppable: the music flow out the horn in torrents."  

-from the Penguin Guide to Jazz's review of "Sleight of Hand": "Very impressive and about as inventive a departure from the standard tenor-and-rhythm conventions as one can hope for.  Levy's broad-shouldered tone and confident delivery give him the kind of full-on swing one associates with an earlier generation, but he's soaked in bebop and hard-bop practice."   

Personnel:   Jed Levy (ts);  George Colligan (p);  Ron McClure (b); Adam Nusbaum(ds).

Rain

The Claus Ogerman Orchestra - Gate of Dreams

Styles: Big Band, Jazz-Funk 
Year: 1977
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:07
Size: 85,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:10)  1. Time Passed Autumn (Part I)
(2:48)  2. Time Passed Autumn (Interlude and Part II)
(4:52)  3. Time Passed Autumn (Part III)
(4:48)  4. Caprice
(2:58)  5. Air Antique
(8:14)  6. Night Will Fall
(2:32)  7. Night Will Fall (Interlude and Conclusion)
(6:42)  8. A Sketch of Eden

Pictured on the back of the album dragging on what looks like a small cigar deep in thought, the moment captured above, that’s where the listener is too, the shimmering strings of ‘Time Passed Autumn’ still and contemplative at the beginning: in a Gil Evans-like domain, the modal progressions moving along quite deliciously but gently until a kind of a light funky jazz rock guitar solo jolts you out of your reverie. Gate of Dreams can and does overegg the pudding in terms of what might almost be jazz-rock symphonic flourishes or what now seems generic movie score touches, but it’s hard not to get sucked in to mondo Ogerman the composer an expert at narrative development via his captivating arranging style. The orchestra also includes some extraordinary players, Michael Brecker and John Guerin among them, heard in a different context to the jazz-rock and funk of the day. It’s interesting that this year has seen the reissue of Keith Jarrett’s Arbour Zena recorded in 1975. Listen to ‘Runes’ and then the beginning of ‘Time Passed Autumn Part 1’ and there’s a striking continuum in the strings at least although Arbour Zena eventually develops along more experimental chamber jazz lines and Gate of Dreams is a warmer sound certainly tonally. On balance the ‘Time Passed’ sequence is where the best moments are to be found; the later ‘Night Will Fall’ sections are maybe just that bit too corny for complete enjoyment. SG  http://www.marlbank.net/reviews/1670-the-claus-ogerman-orchestra-gate-of-dreams-warner-bros.html

Gate of Dreams