Monday, February 6, 2017

Susanne Abbuehl - Compass

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:40
Size: 123,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:46)  1. Bathyal
(4:21)  2. Black Is The Color...
(4:58)  3. Where Flamingos Fly
(3:45)  4. Lo Fiolairé
(4:20)  5. Sea, Sea!
(4:02)  6. Don't Set Sail
(5:30)  7. The Twilight Turns From Amethyst
(5:16)  8. Primrose
(4:42)  9. Bright Cap And Streamers
(4:46) 10. A Call For All Demons
(3:04) 11. Children's Song No.1
(3:03) 12. In The Dark Pine-Wood

Anyone fortunate enough to have heard Susanne Abbuehl's out-of-print first record, I Am Rose (Evoke, 1997), knows that while the singer's musical direction was already developing, it was not until her 2001 ECM debut, April, that it became fully realized. Compass is a logical evolution, but it manages a few surprises, finding Abbuehl and her unorthodox trio becoming even more integrated, intuitive and introspective. Abbuehl continues to defy convention. In contrast to jazz singers who search for new ways to portray an overworked Great American Songbook, she has chosen a different path. Alongside her own writings are adaptations of poetry by writers like James Joyce and William Carlos Williams, set to music from artists as diverse as Chick Corea and Sun Ra. All too many singers approach their material with overbearing melisma; Abbuehl's delivery remains so understated that it takes time to fully appreciate the finer nuances that are the trademark of her deeply interpretive approach. Additionally, Abbuehl shapes her music with a trio that may be unusual in its makeup but, with its clear allegiance to space as an equal component, creates a compelling orchestration for her pure and nearly vibrato-less voice. Newcomer Lucas Niggli's textural approach to percussion with the rare exception of songs like "Sea, Sea!," there's rarely a pulse to be found meshes perfectly with longtime musical collaborators Wolfert Brederode (piano) and Christof May (clarinets). 

Though it's hard to believe such a thing would be possible, Compass is even more rarefied than April. Abbuehl's take on Sun Ra's "A Call for All Demons" is an abstruse mix of staccato low notes on piano, gentle but clangy percussion, and a bass clarinet that seems to shadow her every move a far cry from Ra's more extroverted approach on Sun Song (Delmark, 1956). On the traditional "Black is the Color" and "Lo Fiolairé" both based on Luciano Berio's "Folk Songs" Abbuehl is accompanied solely by May and guest clarinetist Michel Portal. The fact that two clarinets can blend together to create such a warm foundation for Abbuehl's delicate and vulnerable delivery is just as remarkable as the blurred line they draw between form and freedom. While improvisation is a clear aspect of the music, Brederode, May and Niggli mesh so seamlessly that the melancholy pedal tone of the ever-so-slightly bluesy "Where Flamingos Fly" feels both spontaneous and clearly conceptualized at the same time. May's tone is soft and often remains in a lower register that perfectly complements Abbuehl's range, while Brederode's sparse approach often suggests more than it explicitly states.  But at the end of the day, it's Abbuehl's ability to express the beauty or bittersweet of a lyric with the slightest turn of phrase that makes Compass so rewarding. It takes a good singer to get to the core of a song; it takes a great one to do it so in a way that puts the song first and ego second. Dark, mysterious and sensual in the most insidious of ways, the appeal of Compass is its breadth of emotion, beautifully delivered without a trace of excess. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/compass-susanne-abbuehl-ecm-records-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Susanne Abbuehl: vocals; Wolfert Brederode: piano, harmonium; Christof May: clarinet; Lucas Niggli: percussion; Michel Portal: clarinet (2,4).

Compass

Harold Danko - This Isn't Maybe

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:46
Size: 151,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:58)  1. Whatever Possessed Me
(7:00)  2. I Thought About You
(4:22)  3. I Fall In Love Too Easily
(5:42)  4. Gnid
(6:17)  5. Deep In A Dream
(4:01)  6. The Touch Of Your Lips
(3:58)  7. D's Dilemma
(5:21)  8. These Foolish Things
(6:06)  9. When She Smiles
(4:22) 10. Way To Go
(6:49) 11. Gone With The Wind
(5:45) 12. This Is Always

It's a dilemma that has been common to jazz for decades now. It involves those players who might accurately be called "the middle children." You know how it works, players who can't get the same attention from the major labels like the young lions are able to nor are old enough to be referred to as elder statesmen. The transcendent and always appealing pianist Harold Danko falls into this trap. He should clearly be better known than what he is, yet he fulfills a valuable role as educator at the Eastman School in Rochester and also has in Nils Winter the support of a very congenial producer. Following up on his 1994 solo piano tribute to John Coltrane, After the Rain, Danko puts forward another solo set dedicated to the spirit of the late trumpeter/vocalist Chet Baker. The pianist, of course, is uniquely suited for this endeavor considering that he spent time in the '70s and '80s working with Baker. Some familiar standards and a few rare lines from Jimmy Heath and Phil Urso make up this recital that clocks in at over an hour. Detailed commentary seems superfluous, as Danko plays with the kind of finesse and heartfelt emotion that has always marked his work. Bravo! ~ C.Andrew Hovan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/this-isnt-maybe-harold-danko-steeplechase-records-review-by-c-andrew-hovan.php
 
Personnel: Harold Danko (solo piano)

This Isn't Maybe

Rodney Jones - Soul Manifesto

Styles: Guitar, Funk
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:09
Size: 156,9 MB
Art: Front

( 5:25)  1. Groovebone, Part 1
( 6:48)  2. Soul Makossa/Wake Up Call  (Interlude)
(10:17) 3. Soul Manifesto/Roll Call (Interlude) 
( 5:41)  4. One Turnip Green
( 4:23)  5. Ain't No Sunshine
( 7:40)  6. Mobius 3
( 8:17)  7. Soup Bone
( 8:13)  8. Soul Eyes
(11:22)  9. Groovebone, Part 2/Last Call (Interlude) 

You've got to funkafize... Guitarist Rodney Jones departs from the mainstream fare of his most recent recordings ( The Undiscovered Few, Blue Note 96902, 1999 and My Funny Valentine, Timeless 162, 2000) and testifies his funk philosophy on Soul Manifesto. Joined by Funk/R&B specialists Maceo Parker, Arthur Blythe, and Dr. Lonnie Smith, Jones weaves a hypnotic tapestry with a limbic collection of originals and standards so funky the listener might have to leave the room or succumb to the groove. The foundation of Jones's Soul philosophy is grounded in Gospel, Funk, and the Blues. He began playing guitar at age 6, beginning formal lessons age 8. He saturated himself with the Funk-forefront of the day: Jimi Hendrix, Sly Stone, and the formidable James Brown. "You have soul that was created by God, and you have soul created by James Brown. I've always been fascinated by that connection," says Jones. Jones joined the James Brown Mythology when he linked up with Brown alto saxophonist Maceo Parker for Parker's breakthrough Roots Revisited (Verve 843 751, 1992). Jones went on to work with the funkmeister for five years (and that definitely shows on this recording). Jones bookends this recording with the original "Groove Bone, Parts 1 and 2." He establishes the mood of the recording with these pieces while jamming through the other funky tone orgies "Soul Makossa," "Mobius 3," and "One Turnip Green." Standards include a soulful "Ain't No Sunshine" and "Soul Eyes." The band was well chosen, particularly Maceo Parker and Arthur Blythe. They truly reveal the soulfulness of the alto saxophone. Makes one wish King Curtis was on hand for the tenor chair. Is this Jazz? Quoting Mark Corroto in his primer on funk, "As the tee-shirt sez, 'F*** Art, Let's Dance." ~ C.Michael Bailey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/soul-manifesto-rodney-jones-blue-note-records-review-by-c-michael-bailey.php

Personnel: Rodney Jones: Guitars;  Maceo Parker: Alto Saxophone;  Arthur Blythe: Alto Saxophone;  Dr. Lonnie Smith: Hammond B-3 Organ;  Lonnie Plaxico: Bass;  Idris Muhammad: Drums.


Harry James and his Music Makers - Trumpet Blues

Styles:  Jazz, Big Band
Year: 1953
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:18
Size: 102,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:35)  1. Trumpet blues
(2:50)  2. Serenade in blue
(3:12)  3. Cherry
(2:33)  4. Autumn leaves
(2:53)  5. Roll'em
(2:42)  6. Cherry pink and apple blossom white
(3:25)  7. You made me love you
(3:10)  8. Don't be that way
(3:27)  9. Stealin' apples
(3:10) 10. Sleepy lagoon
(4:14) 11. Ultra
(3:11) 12. Jealousie
(3:08) 13. Two o'clock jump
(3:43) 14. Back beat boogie

Harry James was one of the most outstanding instrumentalists of the swing era, employing a bravura playing style that made his trumpet work instantly identifiable. He was also one of the most popular bandleaders of the first half of the 1940s, and he continued to lead his band until just before his death, 40 years later. James was the child of circus performers. His father, Everette Robert James, was the bandleader and trumpet player in the orchestra for the Mighty Haag Circus, and his mother, Maybelle Stewart Clark James, was an aerialist. Growing up in the circus, James became a performer himself as early as the age of four, when he began working as a contortionist. He soon turned to music, however, first playing the snare drum in the band from about the age of six and taking trumpet lessons from his father. At 12, he took over leadership of the second band in the Christy Brothers Circus, for which his family was then working. He attended grade school in Beaumont, Texas, where the circus spent the winter, and when he was 14 he won a state music contest as a trumpeter. That inspired him to turn professional and begin playing in local bands. James' first job with a national band came in 1935 when he was hired by Ben Pollack. In May 1935, he married singer Louise Tobin, with whom he had two children and from whom he was divorced in June 1943. He made his first recordings as a member of the Pollack band in September 1936. Not long after, he was tapped by Benny Goodman, then leading one of the country's most popular bands, and he began working for Goodman by the end of 1936. He rapidly gained notice in the Goodman band, and by December 1937 he had begun to make recordings under his own name for Brunswick Records (later absorbed by Columbia Records).

In early 1939, he left Goodman and launched his own orchestra, premiering it in Philadelphia in February. That spring, he heard the then-unknown Frank Sinatra on a radio broadcast and hired him. The band struggled, however, and when the more successful bandleader Tommy Dorsey made Sinatra an offer at the end of 1939, James did not stand in his way. Around the same time, he was dropped by Columbia and switched to the tiny Varsity Records label. After two years of difficulties in maintaining his band, James changed musical direction in early 1941. He added strings and turned to a sweeter, more melodic style, meanwhile re-signing to Columbia Records. The results were not long in coming. In April 1941, he first reached the Top Ten with the self-written instrumental "Music Makers." (His band was sometimes billed as Harry James and His Music Makers.) A second Top Ten hit, "Lament to Love," featuring Dick Haymes on vocals, followed in August, and late in the year James reached the Top Five with an instrumental treatment of the 1913 song "You Made Me Love You (I Didn't Want to Do It)." This was the record that established him as a star. But with its sweet style and what was frequently described as James' "schmaltzy" trumpet playing, it was also, according to jazz critic Dan Morgenstern (as quoted in the 1999 biography Trumpet Blues: The Life of Harry James by Peter J. Levinson), "the record that the jazz critics never forgave Harry for recording."  James was second only to Glenn Miller as the most successful recording artist of 1942. During the year, seven of his recordings peaked in the Top Ten: the Top Five "I Don't Want to Walk Without You," with vocals by Helen Forrest; the number one instrumental "Sleepy Lagoon"; the Top Five "One Dozen Roses," with vocals by Jimmy Saunders; the Top Five instrumental "Strictly Instrumental"; "He's My Guy"; the Top Five "Mister Five by Five"; and "Manhattan Serenade," the last three with vocals by Helen Forrest. In September, when Miller went into the armed forces and gave up his radio show, Chesterfield Time, he handed it over to James, a symbolic transference of the title of top bandleader in the country. (James was ineligible for military service due to a back injury.) Meanwhile, wartime travel restrictions and the recording ban called by the musicians union, which took effect in August 1942, had limited James' touring and recording activities, but another avenue had opened up. He began appearing in movies, starting with Syncopation in May 1942 and continuing with Private Buckaroo in June and Springtime in the Rockies in November. His next hit, "I Had the Craziest Dream," with vocals by Helen Forrest, was featured in Springtime in the Rockies; it hit number one in February 1943. The movie is also memorable for having starred Betty Grable, whom James married in July 1943; they had two children and divorced in October 1965.

"I Had the Craziest Dream" was succeeded at number one in March 1943 by another James record with a Helen Forrest vocal, "I've Heard That Song Before." "Velvet Moon," an instrumental, followed and did almost as well, but with that Columbia's stockpile of James recordings made just before the start of the recording ban was almost exhausted. The label went into its vaults and began reissuing older James recordings. Frank Sinatra had recently emerged as a solo star, and in the spring of 1943, Columbia reissued "All or Nothing at All," a song he had recorded as James' vocalist in 1939; the song reached the Top Five. Next, Columbia released "I Heard You Cried Last Night," a year-old recording with a Helen Forrest vocal; it too reached the Top Five. Once again, James ranked as the second most successful recording artist of the year, just behind Bing Crosby. Meanwhile, James was based in New York, doing his three-times-a-week radio show and appearing at major venues such as the Paramount Theatre and on the Astor Hotel Roof. He also appeared in the June 1943 film release Best Foot Forward. Decca Records settled with the musicians' union in 1943, which gave its recording stars an advantage, but while Bing Crosby, the Andrews Sisters, and Jimmy Dorsey (all on Decca) were the top recording artists of 1944, James came in fourth without ever stepping into a recording studio. His instrumental "Cherry," recorded in 1942, became a Top Five hit early in the year; "I'll Get By (As Long as I Have You)," recorded in 1941 with Dick Haymes on vocals, hit number one in June; and he had eight other chart records during the year. He also continued with his radio show through March and had two films, Two Girls and a Sailor and Bathing Beauty, in release in June. The two remaining major labels, Columbia and RCA Victor, came to terms with the musicians' union in November 1944, freeing James to return to the recording studio. This resulted in seven Top Ten hits in 1945: the number one "I'm Beginning to See the Light"; "I Don't Care Who Knows It"; "If I Loved You"; "11:60 P.M."; the Top Five "I'll Buy That Dream"; "It's Been a Long, Long Time"; and "Waitin' for the Train to Come In." "If I Loved You" had vocals by Buddy DiVito; all the rest had vocals by Kitty Kallen. That was enough to make him the third most successful recording artist of 1945, behind only Bing Crosby and Sammy Kaye.

Meanwhile, he and his band became regulars on the Danny Kaye Show radio series in January 1945, and he hosted its summer replacement program from June to September. James scored two Top Ten hits in early 1946 -- the Top Five "I Can't Begin to Tell You," which featured a pseudonymous vocal by his wife Betty Grable, and "I'm Always Chasing Rainbows," with a vocal by Buddy DiVito -- but then his recording success began to decline, though he managed one more Top Ten hit, "This Is Always," with Buddy DiVito on vocals, in the fall. Having appeared in a number of films, he formally signed a movie contract with 20th Century Fox, resulting in bigger parts in Do You Love Me?, released in May, and If I'm Lucky, out in September. He also took to the road for the first time since the end of the war. The declining popularity of the big bands led many to break up in December 1946, James' orchestra among them. But in January 1947, his All Time Favorites collection was at the top of the album charts, indicating he was still broadly popular, and within months he had reorganized his band, reducing the number of strings (and soon eliminating them entirely), and taking a more jazz-oriented approach. He scored only one Top Ten hit in 1947, "Heartaches," with vocals by Marion Morgan. And he appeared in the film Carnegie Hall in May. James appeared in the film A Miracle Can Happen (aka On Our Merry Way) in February 1948, the same month he became a regular on the radio show Call for Music, which ran until June. He was not much visible in 1949, but in February 1950, his trumpet playing was heard in the film Young Man with a Horn, though the man fingering the trumpet onscreen was Kirk Douglas.

The Young Man with a Horn soundtrack, credited to James with Doris Day, hit number one in May 1950. Repeating that pairing, Columbia teamed James with Day for "Would I Love You (Love You, Love You)," which hit the charts in March 1951 and reached the Top Ten. Similar success was achieved with "Castle Rock," which paired James with Frank Sinatra and reached the charts in September. Meanwhile, James had his own TV series, The Harry James Show, which ran on a Los Angeles station for the first six months of 1951. From this point on, James maintained his band as a touring unit, though he was less frequently glimpsed in the media. He played himself in the film biography The Benny Goodman Story in 1955, the same year that, having moved to Capitol Records, he released Harry James in Hi-Fi, an album of re-recordings of his hits that reached the Top Ten in November. (The 1999 compilation Trumpet Blues: The Best of Harry James combines tracks from this album and its follow-up, More Harry James in Hi-Fi.) 

By now, he was deliberately trying to make his band sound like Count Basie's. He was back onscreen in November 1956 in the film The Opposite Sex. He made his first major tour of Europe in October 1957, and in ensuing years he alternated national and international tours with lengthy engagements at Las Vegas hotels. There were two more film appearances, The Big Beat (June 1958) and The Ladies Man (July 1961). James performed regularly through the early '80s. He was diagnosed with lymphatic cancer in 1983, but continued to play, making his last appearance only nine days before his death at 67. Led by trumpeter Art Depew, his band continued to perform. No one questioned James' talent as a jazz trumpeter, though after his commercial ascendance in 1941 many jazz critics dismissed him. After his period of greatest success, he turned back to a more jazz-oriented style, which failed to change the overall impression of him, if only because he was no longer as much in the public eye. Nevertheless, his swing hits remain among the most popular music of the era. In addition to the Columbia recordings from his heyday, there are numerous other titles in his discography, notably many airchecks, though his recordings of the '50s are also worth seeking out. ~ William Ruhlmann http://www.allmusic.com/artist/harry-james-mn0000950571/biography

Trumpet Blues

Sunday, February 5, 2017

Abbey Lincoln - It's Me

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:23
Size: 119.9 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[5:21] 1. Skylark
[3:59] 2. Love Is Made
[4:35] 3. Chateaux De Joux
[3:40] 4. It's Me O'lord
[5:12] 5. They Call It Jazz
[4:29] 6. Through The Years
[3:50] 7. Runnin' Wild
[5:23] 8. The Maestro
[5:29] 9. The Search
[4:42] 10. Yellow Bird
[5:38] 11. Can You Dig It

Alto Saxophone – James Spaulding; Bass – Ray Drummond; Drums – Jaz Sawyer; Flute – James Spaulding; Piano – Kenny Barron; Soprano Saxophone – Julien Lourau; Tenor Saxophone – Julien Lourau; Vocals – Abbey Lincoln. Recorded on November, 2002 and February, 2003 in New York City.

In a return to the orchestrated settings that she had explored nearly a decade earlier on A Turtle's Dream, Lincoln performs a set rich in variety, with plenty of original tunes that more than hold their own amidst a scattering of classic standards. Whether working with or without strings, she maintains a sophisticated and intimate tunefulness; her adherence to melody, and to subtle phrasing as an alternative to showy improvisation, has always earned comparisons to the work of Billie Holiday, though in this case Lincoln more than matches and arguably surpasses much of the legendary singer's work. Her husky timbre, extraordinary sense of swing at any tempo, and sometimes surprising range make each of these tracks a masterwork of interpretation. Though she has always sought the best accompanists, Lincoln strikes gold here with Kenny Barron, who negotiates the complex melodic structure and chord changes of Cedar Walton's "The Maestro" as if he'd been playing it for years, while on the title track, a duet, he follows and leads her with a dignified medium-tempo gospel feel. Aside from the gimmicky flute chirps on "Yellow Bird," every moment of It's Me, down to the title itself, supports a clear answer to the question "Who is the outstanding jazz chanteuse of our time?" ~Robert L. Doerschuk

It's Me 

Various - La La Land OST

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:55
Size: 105.2 MB
Styles: Soundtrack
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[3:47] 1. Cast - Another Day Of Sun
[4:19] 2. Emma Stone - Someone In The Crowd
[1:38] 3. Justin Hurwitz - Mia & Sebastian’s Theme
[3:56] 4. Ryan Gosling - A Lovely Night
[1:51] 5. Justin Hurwitz - Herman’s Habit
[1:51] 6. Ryan Gosling - City Of Stars
[4:17] 7. Justin Hurwitz - Planetarium
[2:04] 8. Justin Hurwitz - Summer Montage Madeline
[2:30] 9. Ryan Gosling - City of Stars
[3:12] 10. John Legend - Start A Fire
[1:27] 11. Justin Hurwitz - Engagement Party
[3:48] 12. Emma Stone - Audition (The Fools Who Dream)
[7:39] 13. Justin Hurwitz - Epilogue
[0:46] 14. Justin Hurwitz - The End
[2:41] 15. Justin Hurwitz - City Of Stars (Humming)

Falling in love has always worked better with a soundtrack. What would Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s prance through the streets in (500) Days of Summer have mattered without the bounce of Hall & Oates “You Make My Dreams”? Lord knows we only tolerate Ben Affleck awkwardly trotting animal crackers up Liv Tyler’s stomach in Armageddon because it’s paired with Aerosmith’s “Don’t Wanna Miss a Thing”. Ever since talkies found the value of song, the silver screen has had a penchant for pairing bursting hearts with the perfect tune. The same formula might’ve worked just fine for La La Land, the sophomore film from writer-director Damien Chazelle (Whiplash). It would’ve been easy to back scenes of moonlit tap-dancing and dark theater hand-holding with the work of Adele and Ella Fitzgerald. Instead, Chazelle and composer Justin Hurwitz have created a soundtrack of original songs that stand toe to toe with the great movie musicals of the past.

La La Land stars Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling as Angelenos longing to realize their dreams. For Stone’s Mia, that means becoming an actress, while Gosling’s Sebastian is a jazzman who longs to open a club of his own. La La Land isn’t a musical in the traditional sense; rather than being sung-through, the film sports plenty of dialogue between numbers. But by saving the songs for key moments and linking them together through Hurwitz’s opulent score, the results are a stunning elixir of golden age romance and timeless melodies. In the film, a massive production accompanies the song, as traffic-jammed drivers on a Los Angeles freeway abandon their cars to dance and sing. Those who have seen the film will understand the long, sweeping musical interludes of building strings that soundtrack the more elaborate choreography. While warm and sweet on its surface, “Another Day of Sun” also fills the pivotal opening role of laying out the crux of the story. Yes, these are excited dreamers with a song in their hearts, but they’re also stuck on the freeway, going nowhere fast.

Chazelle and Hurwitz revel in being clever with La La Land’s music, but never to its detriment. In “A Lovely Night”, they channel the classic conceit of having two people who are clearly meant to be together singing about how wrong they are for each other. Sebastian sets the tone when he muses, “A silver shine that stretches to the sea/ We’ve stumbled on a view that’s tailor-made for two/ What a shame those two are you and me.” The chorus of the song (“What a waste of a lovely night”) is a perfect wink back to something Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers might have crooned to one another. It’s only to fair to note that while Gosling and Stone do admirable work as singers, neither has an especially strong voice. In particular, Gosling manages to mask his deficiencies by speak-singing on occasion, but there’s a certain charm that comes with casting “amateur” voices in a musical. In a way, it provides the listener with a more direct route to empathy, allowing you to imagine it might actually be you who is suddenly compelled to burst into song. ~Zack Ruskin

La La Land OST

Kimber Manning - Eventually

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:36
Size: 88.4 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[2:16] 1. It Had To Be You
[4:17] 2. Blue Skies
[3:49] 3. Eventually
[2:44] 4. Recipe For Love
[3:41] 5. Beyond The Sea
[3:56] 6. At Last
[2:37] 7. Walkin' After Midnight
[2:01] 8. You're Nobody Till Somebody Loves You
[4:39] 9. When I Fall In Love
[3:10] 10. All Of Me
[5:21] 11. What A Wonderful World

In 2006, Kimber released her debut CD "Eventually", a collection of standards brilliantly reworked in her unique jazz stylings. "...Jazz covers the keyboard", she says adding, "Every note that's out there you hear it in Jazz music." Asked to describe her style, she says, "My own." and it's clear from listening to "Eventually" that she has an incomparable gift for not just singing a song but living it and making her listener live it right along with her.

Kimber counts among her influences, Take 6, especially Claude McKnight and the late Eva Cassidy about whom she says, "Gone way too soon, her lovely voice still inspires me." Others include Judy Garland, Anita Baker, Lanelle Harris, Sandi Patty and Allison Durham Speer.

Eventually

Asleep At The Wheel - Still The King: Celebrating The Music Of Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:09
Size: 160.6 MB
Styles: Country, Western Swing
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[1:11] 1. Texas Playboy Theme (Feat. Leon Rausch)
[3:29] 2. I Hear Ya Talkin' (Feat. Amos Lee)
[2:29] 3. The Girl I Left Behind Me (Feat. The Avett Brothers)
[4:05] 4. Trouble In Mind (Feat. Lyle Lovett)
[3:30] 5. Keeper Of My Heart (Feat. Merle Haggard & Emily Gimble
[3:17] 6. I Can't Give You Anything But Love (Feat. Kat Edmonson & Ray Benson)
[2:54] 7. Tiger Rag (Feat. Old Crow Medicine Show)
[3:05] 8. What's The Matter With The Mill (Feat. Pokey Lafarge)
[3:04] 9. Navajo Trail (Feat. Willie Nelson & The Quebe Sisters)
[3:25] 10. Silver Dew On The Bluegrass Tonight
[4:18] 11. Faded Love (Feat. The Time Jumpers)
[4:14] 12. South Of The Border (Down Mexico Way) [feat. George Strait]
[2:43] 13. I Had Someone Else Before I Had You (Feat. Elizabeth Cook)
[2:30] 14. My Window Faces The South (Feat. Brad Paisley)
[3:35] 15. Time Changes Everything (Feat. Buddy Miller)
[2:35] 16. A Good Man Is Hard To Find (Feat. Carrie Rodriguez & Emily Gimble)
[3:23] 17. Ding Dong Daddy From Dumas (Feat. Robert Earl Keen & Ray Benson)
[4:18] 18. Brain Cloudy Blues (Feat. Jamey Johnson & Ray Benson)
[2:39] 19. Bubbles In My Beer
[2:52] 20. It's All Your Fault (Feat. Katie Shore)
[4:01] 21. Twin Guitar Special (Feat. Tommy Emmanuel, Brent Mason, & Billy Briggs)
[2:23] 22. Bob Wills Is Still The King

Technically, it's been 16 years since Asleep at the Wheel last saluted Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys -- with 1999's Ride with Bob, recorded for the short-lived DreamWorks Records -- but it's never like Ray Benson's ensemble ever strayed far from Western Swing. Their first album in 1973 was chock-full of Wills standards and their last, 2010's It's a Good Day, showcased former Texas Playboy Leon Rausch, so Still the King: Celebrating the Music of Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys is squarely in the group's comfort zone. Fortunately, Asleep at the Wheel never sound too comfortable on this generous 22-track tribute. Part of that is down to the decision of Benson and company to construct Still the King as an outright party, inviting old and new friends to sit in and sing both classics and nuggets from the deep Wills songbook. Having star after star take the center stage keeps things lively, particularly because the guest list is sharply balanced between old friends like Merle Haggard, George Strait, and Lyle Lovett -- fellow disciples of Wills, one and all -- with newer roots acts like the Avett Brothers, the Old Crow Medicine Show, Kat Edmonson, the Time Jumpers, and Elizabeth Cook. Everybody is welcome, no matter if it's Jamey Johnson slurring his way through "Brain Cloudy Blues" or Brad Paisley running roughshod across "My Window Faces the South," or Carrie Rodriguez and Emily Gimble joshing through "A Good Man Is Hard to Find," and it's fun to hear Asleep at the Wheel accommodating each of their styles. This casual versatility points out who the real star of the show is, though: it remains Benson's group, whose way with Western Swing has only grown more soulful over the years. Clearly, Asleep at the Wheel draw sustenance from the music of the Texas Playboys, finding life within these old songs, and their love remains infectious and palpable after all these years. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Still The King

Phil Woods - The Thrill Is Gone

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:54
Size: 123.4 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[8:21] 1. And When We're Young
[4:54] 2. I Get Along Without You Very Well
[5:25] 3. You Go To My Head
[8:53] 4. It Never Entered My Mind
[4:47] 5. The Thrill Is Gone
[4:15] 6. Easy To Love
[5:53] 7. The Nearness Of You
[5:35] 8. If I Should Lose You
[5:48] 9. Solitude

Phil Woods is right at home during these 2002 sessions at Red Rock Recording Studio near his home in Delaware Water Gap, Pennsylvania. With his regular group (Bill Charlap, Steve Gilmore, and Bill Goodwin) minus trumpeter Brian Lynch, Woods adds strings conducted by his old friend Eric Doney on this collection of ballads. "And When We're Young" is the alto saxophonist's tribute to the late Senator Robert F. Kennedy, who was assassinated around the time it was written. The leader's lush alto gives way to a brisk Latin-flavored passage featuring powerful solos by violinist Andy Stein and Charlap on piano, while Woods humorously detours into "Nature Boy" upon his return. The strings introduce a lively arrangement of "It Never Entered My Mind," and another favorite of the alto saxophonist, "If I Should Lose You." Unlike many jazz recordings with strings, they complement rather than overwhelm the musicians. But it is almost impossible for a Phil Woods-led date to turn out less than excellent. ~Ken Dryden

The Thrill Is Gone

Frank Wess - Jazz for Playboys

Styles: Flute And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1957
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:18
Size: 108,5 MB
Art: Front

( 5:27)  1. Playboy
( 9:40)  2. Miss Blues
( 4:16)  3. Baubles, Bangles and Beads
( 5:02)  4. Low Life
( 4:07)  5. Pin Up
(11:01)  6. Blues For A Playmate
( 7:42)  7. Southern Exposure

This CD reissue has three songs apiece from two similar sessions. One half of the set features Frank Wess (doubling on flute and tenor) accompanied by both Kenny Burrell and Freddy Green on guitars, bassist Eddie Jones and drummer Gus Johnson; the other three titles add trumpeter Joe Newman and have Ed Thigpen in Johnson's place. The music is essentially cool-toned swing/bop very much in a Count Basie vein and is easily recommended to straightahead jazz fans despite the so-so packaging and LP-length playing time. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/jazz-for-playboys-mw0000100271

Personnel:  Frank Wess (flute, saxophone), Joe Newman (trumpet), Kenny Burrell, Freddie Green (guitar), Eddie Jones (bass), Ed Thigpen, Gus Johnson (drums).

Jazz for Playboys

Roy Eldridge, Dizzy Gillespie, Clark Terry - The Trumpet Kings At Montreux

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:01
Size: 153,6 MB
Art: Front

(13:25)  1. Montreux Blues
(13:25)  2. (There Is) No Greater Love
(11:29)  3. Lullaby Of The Leaves
(11:36)  4. On The Alamo
( 8:00)  5. Blues For Norman
( 9:03)  6. Indiana (Back Home Again In Indiana)

When it came to Roy Eldridge, Dizzy Gillespie had no greater love. "Little Jazz" was his early idol and role model, the next great brass stylist in jazz history after Louis Armstrong. At the inception of modern jazz, during the early days at Minton's and Monroe's in Harlem, Eldridge and Gillespie used to regularly engage in torrid cutting contests at competitive after hours jam sessions. Gillespie soon moved beyond Eldridge, and thanks to Charlie Parker, found his own voice on the trumpet. But the warm friendship and competitive edge between master and student continued on a number of Norman Granz inspired sessions. This throwdown at The Montreux Jazz Festival in 1975, featuring the innovative trumpet stylist Clark Terry and a swinging Oscar Peterson-Niels Pedersen-Louis Bellson rhythm section, has all the fire and elegance you could ask for. In the spirit of Norman Granz's famous Jazz At The Philharmonic jams, the blues is a major component of the fun. On their concluding flagwaver "Indiana (Back Home Again In Indiana)" the contrasts between each brass master are telling: Terry, smooth and silky; Eldridge, raw and combative; Gillespie, serpentine and stinging. And when they hook up for a three-way conversation, as they do at the conclusion to the funky "Blues For Norman," look out. http://www.cduniverse.com/productinfo.asp?pid=1036160&style=music&fulldesc=T

Personnel: Roy Eldridge, Dizzy Gillespie, Clark Terry (trumpet); Oscar Peterson (piano); Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen (bass); Louis Bellson (drums).

The Trumpet Kings At Montreux

Orrin Evans' Captain Black Big Band - Mother's Touch

Styles: Piano Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:12
Size: 115,9 MB
Art: Front

(7:16)  1. In My Soul
(4:30)  2. Explain It to Me
(2:07)  3. Mother's Touch Pt. I
(7:35)  4. Dita
(4:05)  5. Tickle
(7:44)  6. Maestra
(6:55)  7. Water Babies
(1:56)  8. Mother's Touch Pt. II
(7:58)  9. Prayer for Columbine

The studio-versus-stage argument will forever rage on in music, but it really shouldn't. Each setting has its advantages and disadvantages. The jazz community has forever favored the stage, as many feel that jazz is meant to be experienced and created in the moment, with artist(s) feeding off the room and creating here-and-gone sounds. That preference is completely understandable, but the studio has its advantages; clarity, balance, and the right working conditions can often only be found there. The first two releases from pianist Orrin Evans' Captain Black Big Band both speak in similar fashion, but they're a study in contrasts between the studio and the stage. Neither one suffers from the disadvantages connected to either setting, but Mother's Touch certainly benefits from the sonic focus that can only be attained in a studio. The band's thrilling eponymous debut had the spark that comes with music recorded live, and most of that music was two-dimensional, with focus shifting between soloist and ensemble. Mother's Touch, in contrast, is multidimensional and far more nuanced in its presentation. Every single voice in every single section speaks with clarity, helping the ear to experience the brilliant juxtapositions that take place.  "Dita" is as good a tune as any to illustrate how the studio serves this music. In a live setting, listeners might be taken by the soloists and the pristine-and-gorgeous horn voicings on this song, only to have the moment ruined by a mediocre sound system, noisy-and-disinterested patrons, clinking silverware, or an overzealous bartender with ice to dole out. Thankfully, no such thing can happen here.

Mother's Touch presents six Evans originals along with one tune apiece from drummer Donald Edwards ("Tickle"), bassist Eric Revis ("Maestra"), and iconic saxophonist-composer Wayne Shorter ("Water Babies"). Evans and company wade in spiritual waters during "In My Soul," and they make quick shifts in feel and style during "Explain It To Me," which has a quirky piano introduction, straight sections, swing sections, and passages constructed of three bars of 7/8 and one bar of 4/4. The brief title tracks "Mother's Touch Part I" and "Mother's Touch Part II" pass quickly and contain solo escapades atop rubato rumblings. The aforementioned "Dita," however, stays with the listener; Evans and alto saxophonist Todd Bashore shoot straight for the heart on that breathtaking tune. The second half of the album starts with the raging "Tickle," which takes flight with saxophone runs and band punctuations. An understated funkiness carries "Maestra" along, "Water Babies" alternately simmers and smokes, and "Prayer For Columbine" surprises with its resolute spirit. Instead of dwelling on the tragedy that took place, Evans focuses on the we-shall-carry-on spirit that often follows horrific events. It's the perfect way to end this album. ~ Dan Bilawsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/mothers-touch-orrin-evans-posi-tone-records-review-by-dan-bilawsky.php
 
Personnel: Tanya Darby: trumpet; Duane Eubanks: trumpet; Tatum Greenblatt: trumpet; Brian Kilpatrick: trumpet; Fabio Morgera: trumpet; Mark Allen: saxophone; Todd Bashore: saxophone; Dog Dehays: saxophone; Stacy Dillard: saxophone; Tim Green: saxophone; Victor North: saxophone; Marcus Strickland: saxophone; David Gibson: trombone; Conrad Herwig: trombone; Andy Hunter: trombone; Stafford Hunter: trombone; Brent White: trombone; Orrin Evans: piano; Zaccai Curtis: piano (3,8); Luques Curtis: bass; Anwar Marshall: drums; Ralph Peterson: drums (2). Additional arrangements by: Todd Bashore, Todd Marcus, David Gibson, and Gianluca Renzi.

Mother's Touch

Peter Zak - Seed Of Sin

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 67:10
Size: 108,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:20)  1. All Day Long
(4:12)  2. Minor Apprehension
(9:47)  3. Propinquity
(8:22)  4. Poor People's March
(7:18)  5. Horace's Dream
(6:38)  6. Shala
(4:23)  7. Perhaps
(5:08)  8. Seed Of Sin
(7:05)  9. Memories Of You
(7:53) 10. King Cobra

Peter Zak's fourth release for Steeplechase finds him returning to a trio, with his regular bassist Paul Gill and Quincy Davis taking over on drums. Zak covers a number of jazz styles during this wide-ranging session. His buoyant, swinging treatment of Billy Strayhorn's lesser known "All Day Long" and lyrical setting of Eubie Blake's "Memories of You" have great appeal. Gill is featured extensively in the opening to Charlie Parker's "Perhaps," accompanied sparsely by Davis' brushes with minimal backing by the leader until he takes over. The trio devours Jackie McLean's intense hard bop vehicle "Minor Apprehension," showcasing Davis extensively early on. Harold Land's "Poor People's March" is another lost gem polished by the trio, a driving post-bop vehicle. Zak dives head first into Herbie Hancock's intriguing, constantly evolving "King Cobra." The pianist's compositions are just as strong. "Horace's Dream" quickly reveals its inspiration with the catchy rhythm favored by Horace Silver. The brisk bossa nova "Propinquity" and the melodic"Shala" (the latter introduced with a bit of free improvisation) are also signs of Peter Zak's gifts as a composer. ~ Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/seed-of-sin-mw0001441360
Personnel: Peter Zak (piano); Quincy Davis (drums); Paul Gill (bass).

Seed Of Sin

Saturday, February 4, 2017

Lena Horne - Greatest Hits

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:40
Size: 95.4 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[2:49] 1. I Got Rhythm
[3:11] 2. Someone To Watch Over Me
[2:40] 3. It's All Right With Me
[3:20] 4. Stormy Weather
[2:38] 5. What Is This Thing Called Love
[2:23] 6. Get Out Of Town
[3:33] 7. The Rules Of The Road
[2:39] 8. Darn That Dream
[2:38] 9. At Long Last Love
[3:13] 10. You're My Thrill
[3:16] 11. Let Me Love You
[2:48] 12. Come On Strong
[3:05] 13. Mad About The Boy
[3:19] 14. One For My Baby (And One More For The Road)

Lena Horne had three separate stays on RCA Victor Records: The first in the 1940s, the second lasting from the mid- '50s into the early '60s, and the third in the mid- '70s. During these stints, she scored only one hit single, "Love Me or Leave Me" in 1955 -- a recording not included on this compilation. In 1943, she appeared in the film Stormy Weather, and for the rest of her career that 1933 hit was identified as her signature song. Actually, she had recorded it for RCA two years before she sang it on film, and that recording is included here. Otherwise, this is a sampler of her RCA recordings stretching over the '40s, '50s, and '60s, most of them standards from the pens of George and Ira Gershwin, Cole Porter, Harold Arlen, and others. There is even one track from Horne's brief period as singer with Charlie Barnet & His Orchestra in early 1941. But the disc does not justify the title "Greatest Hits," and it is not a comprehensive collection of the highlights of Horne's RCA work. Rather, it is a discount-priced, 42-minute survey of that work that contains many excellent performances. But there's plenty more where this came from. ~William Ruhlmann

Greatest Hits

Grady Tate - Windmills Of My Mind

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:21
Size: 85.5 MB
Styles: Bop, Soul-jazz
Year: 1968/2012
Art: Front

[4:14] 1. Windmills Of Your Mind
[4:50] 2. And I Love Her
[2:50] 3. Sack Full Of Dreams
[5:08] 4. Would You Believe
[6:39] 5. Work Song
[3:54] 6. A Little At A Time
[3:59] 7. TNT
[2:20] 8. Don't Fence Me In
[3:24] 9. All Around The World

Bass – Bob Cranshaw, Chuck Rainey; Drums – Bernie Purdie, Bob Thomas; Guitar – Billy Butler, Eric Gale; Organ – Herbie Hancock; Piano – Paul Griffin; Vocals – Grady Tate.

Mention Grady Tate's name to most bop lovers, and his excellent drumming is the thing that immediately pops into their minds. His singing isn't the first thing they think of, which is regrettable because he really is a fine singer. One of the impressive vocal albums he did was Windmills of My Mind, a jazz/R&B release recorded when he was 36. This album (which DCC reissued on CD in 1998) underscores the fact that Tate was never a radical or abstract type of singer; the smooth, elegant crooner heard on "And I Love Her," "The Windmills of Your Mind" and "A Little at a Time" has a lot more in common with Johnny Hartman, Arthur Prysock and even Johnny Mathis (up to a point) than hardcore beboppers like Jon Hendricks, Babs Gonzales and Eddie Jefferson. Although Tate's backing group includes pianist Herbie Hancock and bassist Bob Cranshaw, much of Windmills isn't jazz -- "Don't Fence Me In" and "Would You Believe," in fact, are pure '60s soul music. One of the best tunes on the album is "Work Song," a riveting account of life on a chain gang. The disappointing thing about the CD reissue of Windmills isn't the material, but the sound quality. An abundance of pops, clicks and crackling make the CD sound like a vinyl LP that's been played too often -- one would expect an audiophile label like DCC Compact Classics to do a much better job of digitally remastering a 1968 recording. Nonetheless, this is an album that both jazz and R&B enthusiasts should hear. ~Alex Henderson

Windmills Of My Mind

Fats Navarro - Fat's Star Vol 1

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:51
Size: 118.7 MB
Styles: Bop, Trumpet jazz
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[3:12] 1. Groovin' High
[2:36] 2. Be-Bop Romp
[3:08] 3. Boperation
[4:04] 4. Our Delight
[3:03] 5. The Skunk
[3:10] 6. Gone With The Wind
[3:01] 7. Dameronia
[2:54] 8. Jahbero
[5:49] 9. Good Bait, No. 1
[4:31] 10. Tadd Walk
[2:51] 11. Lady Bird
[3:41] 12. Anthropology
[2:38] 13. Barry's Bop
[4:09] 14. Symphonette
[2:54] 15. Goin' To Minton's

Theodore "Fats" Navarro (September 24, 1923 – July 6, 1950) was an American jazz trumpet player. He was a pioneer of the bebop style of jazz improvisation in the 1940s. He had a strong stylistic influence on many other players, most notably Clifford Brown.

Navarro was born in Key West, Florida, of Cuban-Black-Chinese parentage. He began playing piano at age six, but did not become serious about music until he began playing trumpet at the age of thirteen. He was a childhood friend of drummer Al Dreares. By the time he graduated from Douglass high school he wanted to be away from Key West and joined a dance band headed for the midwest.

Tiring of the road life after touring with many bands and gaining valuable experience, including influencing a young J. J. Johnson when they were together in Snookum Russell's territory band, Navarro settled in New York City in 1946, where his career took off. He met and played with, among others, Charlie Parker, one of the greatest musical innovators of modern jazz improvisation. But Navarro was in a position to demand a high salary and did not join one of Parker's regular groups. He also developed a heroin addiction, tuberculosis, and a weight problem (he was nicknamed "Fat Girl"). These afflictions led to a slow decline in his health and death at the age of twenty-six. Navarro was hospitalized on July 1 and died in the evening of July 6, 1950. His last performance was with Charlie Parker on July 1 at Birdland.

Fat's Star Vol 1

Donald Brown, Charles Thomas, Harold Mabern, Roy Drummond, Alan Dawson - A Season Of Ballads

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:14
Size: 147.0 MB
Styles: Bop
Year: 1992
Art: Front

[8:16] 1. Harlem Nocturne
[4:21] 2. The View From Here
[6:35] 3. Give Me The Simple Life
[5:15] 4. The Midnight Sun Will Never Set
[6:45] 5. When You Look Into Your Eyes
[4:10] 6. Welcome To My World
[4:18] 7. Come Sunday
[4:44] 8. I'm Old Fashioned
[5:53] 9. Your Name Is Love
[5:10] 10. Brownie's Eyes
[3:55] 11. Raintree
[4:46] 12. Love Wise

This James Williams-produced date actually features each of the three Memphis pianists separately with bassist Ray Drummond and the late drummer Alan Dawson (on one of his last recordings) in an all-ballad CD. Brown starts off with a funky "Harlem Nocturne" followed by his melancholy original "The View From Here." Charles Thomas is a veteran who hasn't ventured into the studio much but is highly respected by his peers. He offers a lyrical take of "When You Look Into Your Eyes," a full-bodied gospel-flavored arrangement of Duke Ellington's "Come Sunday," and a richly textured "I'm Old Fashioned."

Mabern is the big surprise with his choice of four lesser known songs; his waltzing take of "Your Name Is Love," the bright version of Quincy Jones' "Brownie's Eyes," and his exuberant playing on "Raintree" show his willingness to take chances. It's too bad there wasn't time or room for producer Williams to take his turn at the piano, too; maybe next time. ~Ken Dryden

A Season Of Ballads

Ida Landsberg, Francesco Moraca - Jazz Moments

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:39
Size: 88.5 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[2:18] 1. Blue Moon
[3:50] 2. Moon River
[4:28] 3. Cheek To Cheek
[4:30] 4. Over The Rainbow
[2:56] 5. Fly Me To The Moon
[2:12] 6. Alice In Wonderland
[2:30] 7. Beautiful Love
[2:40] 8. Polka Dots And Moonbeams
[2:34] 9. Here's That Rainy Day
[4:16] 10. I Wish You Love
[3:06] 11. Bewitched, Bothered And Bewildered
[3:13] 12. Time Remembered

Music is in my life since I can think. In my case music always had been present but for a long time it wasn’t at the centre of my thinking and activities yet. It was more an accompaniment of every of my daily actions, an accessory, an atmosphere, a song to sing or an open ear for sounds and noises. I always had a very sensible ear that hated rumors and couldn’t tolerate notes that weren’t perfectly clean. Who loved high and clear voices and memorized melodies quickly.

I didn’t grow up in an artist environment even though my grand-grandmother, from which I had my name Ida, was a sculpturist and lived surrounded by famous 19th Century painters in Kleinmachnow just outside Berlin. One of her friends were Max Liebermann. I know her only from my father’s tellings. In my earliest childhood, I sang on my grandmother’s balcony and the neighbors listened to me. At the age of 6 I started to play piano, to sing in a church choir and to be part of a children dance theatre.

After a long and intense 70s musical rebel period in my adolescence at the sound of the The Doors, Janis Joplin and the Beach Boys, I discovered jazz music which would have been my strongest passion. Charlie Parker and Dave Brubeck had become my new heroes, Nina Simone and Ella Fitzgerald my idols. Soon the desire of letting music be a central part of my life became concrete. I had the pleasure to collaborate with many wonderful musicians. Music is my aim and ambition, my continuous research and look to the future. No day passes without having some idea or project to realize, something new to create or experience, some unexperienced music style to live. Some notes left to write or to sing. Music for me is not a passion. It is a necessity.

Jazz Moments

Johnny Griffin, Horace Parlan - Close Your Eyes

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:48
Size: 134.6 MB
Styles: Piano/Saxophone jazz
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[ 6:34] 1. I'll Close My Eyes
[ 9:28] 2. Pannonica
[ 5:57] 3. I Hear A Rhapsody
[ 8:23] 4. My One And Only Love
[ 5:48] 5. Someone To Watch Over Me
[10:36] 6. My Little Brown Book
[ 5:19] 7. The Jampfs Are Coming
[ 6:40] 8. You're My Everything

Piano – Horace Parlan; Saxophone [Tenor] – Johnny Griffin. Recorded at Gag Studios, Hamburg in February 2000.

Chicago has long been famous for big-toned tenor men, and when jazz enthusiasts are discussing hard bop tenor giants who have lived in the Windy City, Johnny Griffin's name inevitably comes up, along with the likes of Gene Ammons (who died of cancer in 1974), and Ira Sullivan (who also plays several other wind instruments, including alto and soprano sax, trumpet, and flugelhorn). Griffin was 71 when, in February 2000, he visited Hamburg, Germany and recorded Close Your Eyes, an album of tenor/piano duets with pianist Horace Parlan (who was 69 at the time). Neither bass nor drums are employed on this German release -- strictly sax and acoustic piano -- and this intimate setting works well for the veteran jazzmen, who enjoy a consistently strong rapport throughout the album. Clearly, neither musician has lost anything in the chops department; both are very much on top of their game. Over the years, Griffin has had no problem with the fiercely competitive, hell-bent-for-chops approach -- there's a reason why his admirers used to describe him as "the world's fastest tenor" -- but Close Your Eyes isn't about competition. It's about dialogue, intimacy, and lyricism, and Griffin's lyrical side serves him nicely on standards like "My One and Only Love," "Someone to Watch Over Me," "I Hear a Rhapsody," and Thelonious Monk's "Pannonica". Yes, many of the songs on this CD are warhorses that have been beaten to death over the years, but when the tenor in question is a 71-year-old bop survivor who has spent more than half-a-century in the trenches, one tends to be forgiving of the warhorse factor. Close Your Eyes falls short of essential, but it's a respectable, solid addition to Griffin's sizable catalog. ~Alex Henderson

Close Your Eyes

Buck Clayton - Passport To Paradise

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1961
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:36
Size: 99,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:49)  1. My Funny Valentine
(4:06)  2. I Cover The Waterfront
(4:26)  3. Please Be Kind
(3:17)  4. Sleepy Time Gal
(3:40)  5. Baby Won't You Please Come Home
(3:08)  6. I Cried For You
(2:51)  7. Passport To Paradise
(2:46)  8. I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues
(2:41)  9. Ma Gigolette
(3:51) 10. Tangerine
(4:25) 11. Body And Soul
(3:30) 12. Green Eyes

Trumpeter Buck Clayton was in Paris at the time of this tasteful and typically melodic quintet date. Joined by a four-piece rhythm section that features pianist Sir Charles Thompson and guitarist Jean Bonal, Clayton (who generally states the opening melody muted and then closes the piece with an open horn) never really cuts loose but is quite pleasing to hear on these standards. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/passport-to-paradise-mw0000909591

Personnel:  Buck Clayton – trumpet;  Sir Charles Thompson – piano;  Jean Bonal – guitar;  Gene Ramey – double bass;  Oliver Jackson - drums

Passport To Paradise