Tuesday, June 27, 2017

Amos Garrett Jazz Trio - Jazzblues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:53
Size: 116.5 MB
Styles: Jazz-blues
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[ 3:44] 1. Freddy Freeloader
[ 6:27] 2. Misterioso
[ 3:57] 3. Blue Monk
[ 6:24] 4. Cocktails For Two
[10:16] 5. Little Sunflower
[ 8:42] 6. Bob Erlendson Medley
[ 7:10] 7. All Blues
[ 4:08] 8. Skylark

In addition to recording blues and roots music solo albums for Stony Plain, Amos has been leading his Jazz Trio for several years. The band's motto is "bringing blues back to jazz." The Trio's debut album reminds us all that blues was once a major part of the jazz world. Best known as a legendary first call session guitar player (Bonnie Raitt, Elvin Bishop, Emmylou Harris, etc.), Amos was also a member of Paul Butterfield's Better Days and Maria Muldaur's bandleader. Amos has appeared on more then 150 artists' recordings in all genres of music.

Jazzblues

Dave Ratajczak - Almost Grown

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:04
Size: 181.0 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[4:50] 1. I'm Always Chasing Rainbows
[5:59] 2. Broadway
[5:05] 3. Fancifree
[3:34] 4. 'round Midnight
[3:05] 5. Almost Grown
[5:42] 6. Moten Swing
[6:03] 7. Sultry Serenade
[4:46] 8. I Love You, Samatha
[3:55] 9. When It's Sleepy Down South
[5:24] 10. If I Only Had A Brain
[6:03] 11. In A Mellow Tone
[3:53] 12. It's All Right With Me
[5:31] 13. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
[6:49] 14. Move
[3:34] 15. Rosetta
[4:45] 16. Bye, Bye Blackbird

Dave Ratajczak is a full time percussionist in the New York metropolitan area. A highly versatile performer, some of the artists Mr. Ratajczak has performed and recorded with include The Woody Herman Orchestra, Gerry Mulligan, Audra McDonald, Rosemary Clooney, Eddie Daniels, Gerry Niewood, Grady Tate, Milt Hinton and Kenny Rankin. One of Mr. Ratajczak's career highlights involved recreating the role of jazz drumming great Gene Krupa with Bob Wilbur's orchestra in a Carnegie Hall performance celebrating the 50th anniversary of Benny Goodman's historic 1938 jazz concert.

As a studio musician, his wide range of recording experience includes movie soundtracks (Dead Man Walking, Cradle Will Rock, Wolf, The Pelican Brief, Object of My Affection, It Could Be You, Miller's Crossing, Brighton Beach Memoirs and Biloxi Blues), television commercials and radio jingles.

On Broadway he has performed in the orchestras of such Tony award winning shows as Titanic, City Of Angels and Crazy For You. In the Spring of 2000, Mr. Ratajczak will be performing in a new production of the Broadway classic Music Man

A graduate of the Eastman School of Music, Dave is also in the music education field. In addition to Hofstra University, he is currently a member of the NYU and New Jersey University Music Department faculties, and has performed master classes and clinics at Michigan State, the Eastman School of Music, Hartt College, Rowen College, the University of Connecticut at Storrs, as well as numerous clinics while with Woody Herman's Orchestra.

Almost Grown

Marvin Gaye - Vulnerable

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 28:23
Size: 65.0 MB
Styles: Soul, R&B
Year: 1997
Art: Front

[2:38] 1. Why Did I Choose You
[3:26] 2. She Needs Me
[2:43] 3. Funny, Not Much
[2:53] 4. This Will Make You Laugh
[3:07] 5. The Shadow Of Your Smile
[2:34] 6. I Wish I Didn't Love You So
[2:53] 7. I Won't Cry Anymore
[2:37] 8. Why Did I Choose You (Alt. Take)
[2:35] 9. I Wish I Didn't Love You So (Alt. Take)
[2:53] 10. I Won't Cry Anymore (Alt. Take)

Vulnerable is the end result of a project entitled The Ballads that Marvin Gaye began in 1966. Gaye intended the project as a showcase for his crooning, as well as a way to pay tribute to the pop and jazz standards he loved. It was a labor of love that took him 12 years to complete, and even after it was finished, the record wasn't released until 1997. Was it worth the wait? For dedicated fans, it certainly was, since Gaye's voice is as beautiful and soulful as ever. However, anyone who is not a dedicated fan will find Vulnerable intriguing but significantly flawed, especially since several of the songs seem ill-suited for Gaye's seductive vocals. Which means that even though Vulnerable is a nice addendum to his catalog, it's little more than a curiosity. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Vulnerable

Bill Heid - Asian Persuasion

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:05
Size: 135.2 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[6:18] 1. Kirai
[7:09] 2. Minor Glide
[7:30] 3. MacDuff Type Thang
[6:29] 4. Kimchi Bop
[5:18] 5. Hustle Bustle (Fan Hua)
[7:51] 6. Asian Persuasion
[6:33] 7. Crumb Cake
[7:31] 8. The Dinh Dynasty
[4:21] 9. It's A Living

Keyboardist/vocalist Bill Heid was born August 11, 1948, in Pittsburgh, PA. A natural and virtuosic musician who was inspired to play jazz and blues by listening to the radio, he played in both piano and organ groups. His brother is the well-respected drummer and producer George Heid. Originally influenced by Jimmy Smith and Don Patterson, Heid heard the chitlin' circuit greats at the Hurricane Bar, including Smith and Patterson, Jack McDuff, Jimmy McGriff, and Dr. Lonnie Smith. Down the street at the Crawford Grill were the jazz bands led by Freddie Hubbard, Max Roach, Gene Harris, Bobby Timmons, and Wynton Kelly.

On occasion he would sit in with some of these groups and pester them for information. Spending time in Chicago and later in New York, he met and hung out with his mentor, Larry Young, often visiting the family-owned Newark Club in Young's hometown of Newark, NJ. He was also privy to playing with the best organ drummers like Joe Dukes and Billy James. And he heard the local contingent of jazz greats like Ahmad Jamal, Art Blakey, Erroll Garner, George Benson, Eddie Jefferson, Mary Lou Williams, and Stanley Turrentine.

His quest for musical knowledge found him on the road when in 1963, in search of rare 78-rpm rhythm & blues records, he began a journey/career of hitchhiking. He did this in the contiguous 48 states of the U.S.; through Canada, Mexico, the Philippines, Japan, Korea, and China; and to the Thailand/Cambodia border. His over 400,000 documented miles of thumbing a ride gained Heid a spot in The Guinness Book of World Records. Some of his journeys led him to the so-called chicken houses and organ rooms of major cities, where he interned with Jimmy Witherspoon, Jimmy Ponder, Sonny Stitt, Grant Green, David "Fathead" Newman, Ira Sullivan, and Mickey Roker, and was a pianist with Don Patterson.

A move to Chicago brought him closer to the urban blues as he worked or recorded with Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, and especially Son Seals, Koko Taylor, Fenton Robinson, and Roy Buchanan. He also did two LPs and played in the bands of contemporary jazz guitarist Henry Johnson. Moving to Detroit, he spent two decades there playing in his own groups; helping to revive the career of a local legend of blues guitar and vocals, Johnnie Bassett, as the music director of his Blues Insurgents; and backing the veteran singer Alberta Adams. During and since his time in Detroit, Heid could be found making music soundtracks for adult films in Los Angeles, then touring worldwide for the U.S. State Department as a jazz ambassador, particularly on tours of Japan and Vietnam. In August 2003, Heid played more of the Pacific Rim in Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore.

Upon moving back to the Eastern United States, he could be heard on organ and piano engagements at various venues in the Washington, D.C., area. Of his mindset, Heid was quoted as saying "I can't live a day without playing 1-4-5s," incorporating those standard blues changes with cool McCoy Tyner minor riffs, vicious funk songs in Japanese, and what he calls Talifunk. "I approach this thing like total war and have been lucky to have avoided a day job." His hip vernacular, unique vocal language, and risqué sense of humor, melded with his passion for baseball, have made him an entertainer nonpareil. ~ Michael G. Nastos

Asian Persuasion

Denis Solee, The Beegie Adair Trio - Sinatra On Sax

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:22
Size: 124.5 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[3:37] 1. Come Fly With Me
[4:29] 2. You Make Me Feel So Young
[3:24] 3. Strangers In The Night
[4:07] 4. The Way You Look Tonight
[4:15] 5. All The Way
[3:50] 6. New York, New York
[3:23] 7. The Lady Is A Tramp
[3:12] 8. I've Got The World On A String
[4:21] 9. Young At Heart
[3:01] 10. In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning
[4:44] 11. Witchcraft
[4:13] 12. Summer Wind
[3:48] 13. I've Got You Under My Skin
[3:52] 14. One For My Baby

Beegie Adair has shared the stage with some of the biggest names in Jazz. She has interviewed them too, when she hosted her own radio show, "Improvised Thoughts" in the 1990's - and her own star continues to rise. Her extensive collection of songwriter series CD's are critically acclaimed and her international releases have made her a sensation.

Denis Solee has lived in Nashville since 1974 and his superb playing on saxophone, clarinet, and flute has been heard and recorded in virtually every style of music. Denis has played in military bands, symphony orchestras, Broadway shows, big bands, and small groups. He has appeared on radio, TV, films, and recordings for artists from Ray Stevens to Ray Charles; Mel Tillis to Mel Torme; Louis Bellson, Sammy Davis, Jr., Sarah Vaughn, Amy Grant, Liberace, Aretha Franklin.... and the list goes on. Denis has released four CD's as a leader, including 2007's "Sinatra on Sax" with the Beegie Adair Trio.

Sinatra On Sax

John Lewis - Grand Encounter: 2 Degrees East-3 Degrees West

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:10
Size: 83,2 MB
Art: Front

(8:23)  1. Love Me Or Leave Me
(3:36)  2. I Can't Get Started
(4:19)  3. Easy Living
(6:12)  4. 2 Degrees East - 3 Degrees West
(3:10)  5. Skylark
(9:28)  6. Almost Like Being In Love

Also reissued as 2 Degrees East, 3 Degrees West and occasionally listed under tenor saxophonist Bill Perkins' name, this classic session is the ultimate in cool jazz. Perkins' mellow tone matches quite well with the quiet but inwardly passionate playing of pianist John Lewis, guitarist Jim Hall, bassist Percy Heath, and drummer Chico Hamilton. Lewis is featured with the rhythm section on "I Can't Get Started," Hall is added for "Skylark," and the full group plays three standards plus Lewis' memorable (and atmospheric) "2 Degrees East, 3 Degrees West."~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/grand-encounter-2-degrees-east-3-degrees-west-mw0000194407

Personnel:  John Lewis – piano;  Bill Perkins - tenor saxophone;  Jim Hall – guitar;  Percy Heath – bass;  Chico Hamilton - drums

Grand Encounter: 2 Degrees East-3 Degrees West

Pamela Rose - On The Jazzy Side Of Blues

Styles: Vocal Jazz, Swing 
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:34
Size: 114,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:19)  1. Three-Handed Woman
(2:41)  2. Ain't-Cha Glad?
(2:37)  3. Oh Grandpa
(2:08)  4. No Moon At All
(3:55)  5. I Was Just Hoping You'd Have Me Again
(4:17)  6. Is You Is (Or Is You Ain't My Baby)
(3:59)  7. Slipper
(3:49)  8. Take Me Back
(5:05)  9. Please Don't Do It Again
(2:43) 10. A Chicken Ain't Nothing But A Bird
(3:58) 11. The Tender Trap
(3:01) 12. A Little Better Soon
(4:10) 13. Say It
(2:46) 14. On The Jazzy Side Of Blue


Joined by the Nate Ginsberg Trio, augmented on some tracks by horns, vocalist Pamela Rose tackles a program of original compositions plus some modern blues pieces. Despite her self assessment that she "is a blues singer who loves jazz," the amount of the blues present depends a lot on the song. "Three-Handed Woman" gets that down-and-dirty treatment with a bit of the torch with Jeff Ervin's salty tenor in the background. Other cuts, such as "No Moon at All," are delivered with a loose and easy exuberance. On "Slippery," Rose shows off her swinging qualifications as she moves sprightly through this tune backed by the clarinet of Kent Cohea. Everyone has a lot fun with the novelty tune "A Chicken Ain't Nothin' but a Bird," with Nate Ginsberg kicking things along with his barrelhouse piano. Then there's some singalong on an upbeat and another fun tune, "Take Me Back," where Rose calls off a laundry list of promises if she can come home. Of the Rose/Ginsberg-composed material, "Say It" stands above the rest with some of the blues inflection promised by the album's title. Here, Rose is joined not only by Ginsberg's trio, but by the horns that help put her singular trademark on this piece. Rose is a talented singer blessed with a unique vocal timbre (a little from both Kay Starr and Dinah Washington, perhaps), excellent diction, and a feel for the music. As this, her inaugural album, demonstrates, she is at home with any type of tune played with any kind of tempo. A singer with panache and flair, this album is recommended. ~ Dave Nathan http://www.allmusic.com/album/on-the-jazzy-side-of-blue-mw0000586917

On The Jazzy Side Of Blues

Nicole Mitchell's Black Earth Ensemble - Black Unstoppable

Styles: Flute Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:37
Size: 181,8 MB
Art: Front

( 7:04)  1. Cause and Effect
( 7:24)  2. Black Unstoppable
( 5:42)  3. February
( 8:51)  4. Love Has No Boundaries
( 7:57)  5. Sun Cycles
(12:46)  6. The Creator Has Other Plans For Me
( 9:07)  7. Life Wants You To Love
( 4:05)  8. Navigator
( 8:37)  9. Thanking the Universe

Co-President of the AACM (Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians) and voted Down Beat Magazine's # 1 Rising Star Flutist for the past two years, Nicole Mitchell is the most significant jazz flutist of her generation. A former student of flutist James Newton, Mitchell is a peerless improviser, having fully absorbed the extended vocal techniques pioneered by Rahsaan Roland Kirk and the abstruse verticality of Eric Dolphy. Bolstering emotionally direct lyricism with edgy phrasing and expressive vocalisms without abandoning structure or form, she consistently maintains thematic focus, even in uncharted territory. Reminiscent of the halcyon days of the Loft Era, Mitchell's writing balances inside and outside aesthetics gracefully, vacillating between extremes of freedom and structure with ease. Skillfully weaving circuitous lines of bracing angularity with accessible, buoyant harmonies that recall the glory days of hard bop, Mitchell's tunes both challenge and entertain. Mitchell's flagship group, the Black Earth Ensemble, epitomizes the AACM's credo Great Black Music, Ancient to the Future." Trafficking in advanced post-bop structures, free-form improvisation, stirring blues, passionate soul, simmering funk and even Afro-Beat, the Black Earth Ensemble offers a kaleidoscopic array of the finest African-American musical traditions. 

Their fourth album, but first for Delmark, Black Unstoppable follows Vision Quest (2001), Afrika Rising (2002), and Hope, Future and Destiny (2004), all on Dreamtime Records. Available as a studio recorded CD and a live performance DVD, both editions of Black Unstoppable catch the band up close and personal, in brilliant sonic detail. The Black Earth Ensemble features a stellar line-up of some of Chicago's finest improvisers. Ubiquitous guitarist Jeff Parker (Tortoise, New Horizons) displays boundless creativity, ranging from supple, linear introspection to acerbic, EFX-laden abstraction. Stalwart bassist Josh Abrams serves alongside cellist Tomeka Reid, a rising presence on the Windy City's vibrant jazz scene. Lesser known, but no less accomplished, saxophonist David Boykin and trumpeter David Young form a dynamic front line with Mitchell. Boykin's turbulent tenor tantrums and Young's highly vocalized mute work add a broad sense of stylistic diversity to the group. Rounding out the ensemble are drummer Marcus Evans, playing with subtle restraint throughout; and pianist Justin Dillard, who guests on three tunes. Singer Ugochi Nwaogwugwu contributes soulful vocals, engaging in a robust blues duet with David Young on "Love Has No Boundaries," and soaring over the infectious Afro-Beat groove of "Life Wants You to Love." With rousing soul power, she leads "Thanking the Universe," spurring the instrumentalists onward and upward. An enthralling blend of styles and genres unified by an organic sensibility, Black Unstoppable is a definitive statement from the new face of the AACM, and a tribute to the organization's longevity.~ Troy Collins https://www.allaboutjazz.com/black-unstoppable-nicole-mitchell-delmark-records-review-by-troy-collins.php

Personnel: Nicole Mitchell: flute, alto flute, piccolo; David Boykin: tenor saxophone, percussion; David Young: trumpet, flugelhorn, vocal (4); Jeff Parker: guitar; Justin Dillard: piano (4, 5, 8); Tomeka Reid: cello, shakere; Josh Abrams: bass; Marcus Evans: drums; Ugochi Nwaogwugwu: vocals (4, 7, 9).

Black Unstoppable

Gil Mellé - Primitive Modern/Quadrama

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1957
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:10
Size: 156,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:58)  1. Dominica
(4:00)  2. Ironworks
(6:49)  3. Ballet Time
(6:02)  4. Adventure Swing
(4:45)  5. Dedicatory Piece to the Geophysical Year of 1957
(4:51)  6. Mark One
(5:17)  7. Full House
(3:36)  8. Quadrama
(4:50)  9. In a Sentimental Mood
(3:25) 10. Walter Ego
(6:53) 11. Rush Hour in Hong Kong
(5:20) 12. Jacqueline
(6:18) 13. It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)

This two-fer is an odd mix of jazz arrangements and pseudo-classical third-stream compositions, with the presence of musicians like Shadow Wilson, not usually found in such settings. It is ultimately a mixed message, for Melle fans only. ~ Ron Wynn http://www.allmusic.com/album/primitive-modern-quadrama-mw0000676148

Personnel:  Baritone Saxophone – Gil Mellé;  Bass – Billy Phillips, George Duvivier;  Drums – Edmund Thigpen, Shadow Wilson;  Guitar – Joe Cindrella

Primitive Modern/Quadrama

Gigi Gryce - The Rat Race Blues

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1960
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:32
Size: 93,2 MB
Art: Front

( 6:38)  1. The Rat Race Blues
( 7:49)  2. Strange Feelin'
( 7:03)  3. Boxer's Blues
( 7:48)  4. Blues In Bloom
(11:12)  5. Monday Through Sunday

Altoist Gigi Gryce's next to last album before permanently dropping out of jazz has been reissued on this CD. With trumpeter Richard Williams, pianist Richard Wyands, bassist Julian Euell, and drummer Mickey Roker also part of what was a working quintet, Gryce (underrated as a soloist and a particularly strong composer) had one of his finest bands. The group swings its way through two of Gryce's lesser-known originals and three then-recent obscurities. Interesting and generally fresh straight-ahead jazz. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-rat-race-blues-mw0000263253

Personnel:  Gigi Gryce - alto saxophone;  Richard Williams – trumpet;  Richard Wyands – piano;  Julian Euell – bass;  Mickey Roker - drums

The Rat Race Blues

Monday, June 26, 2017

Ron Levy's Wild Kingdom - Green Eyed Soul

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:03
Size: 144.3 MB
Styles: B3 Organ Jazz/Soul/Blues/Funk
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[7:22] 1. Always Outnumbered
[7:18] 2. The Soulside
[6:18] 3. Like, Like Dope
[5:25] 4. Lovin' You Again
[7:44] 5. Green Eyed Soul
[7:18] 6. Silver Plated
[5:11] 7. Soulard Soul Stew
[7:12] 8. Yo Bro Youssel
[9:11] 9. El Fuego De Lowell

A tasty bit of organ jazz from Ron Levy -- an unsung hero of the Hammond, and one of the leading lights of the Northeast scene! Ron's playing is steeped in the classic styles of the 60s -- some nice Jack McDuff touches on the keys at times, but overall with a heavier approach to the funk that reminds us more of some of the heavy-hitters in the Prestige jazz funk early 70s years -- like Leon Spencer or Groove Holmes. The album's got a surprisingly classic feel -- no gimmicks, no "jam too much" playing -- just tight, right, and outta site funky jazz -- played in a style that really appreciates the classics, but which gives it the kind of energy that we first heard getting pumped back into the music from the Desco/Daptone crew!

Green Eyed Soul

Gene Ammons - A Stranger In Town

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:51
Size: 155.3 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[9:41] 1. The Song Is You
[3:59] 2. Light'n Up
[3:32] 3. Short Stop
[3:58] 4. They Say You're Laughing At Me
[4:13] 5. Salome's Tune
[4:10] 6. Blue Coolade
[5:58] 7. A Stranger In Town
[5:32] 8. Scam
[4:24] 9. Count Your Blessings
[3:07] 10. Cara Mia
[5:18] 11. Night Lights
[5:41] 12. Calypso Blues
[8:11] 13. Nature Boy

Alto Saxophone – Oliver Nelson;Baritone Saxophone – Gene Easton, Robert Ashton; Bass – George Duvivier, Wendell Marshall; Congas – Henry Pucho Brown, Ray Barretto; Drums – Billy English, Ed Thigpen, George Brown, Rudy Collins, Walter Perkins; Piano – John Houston, Mal Waldron, Patti Brown, Richard Wyands, Wynton Kelly; Tenor Saxophone – Gene Ammons, George Barrow, Red Holloway; Trombone – Henderson Chambers; Trumpet – Clark Terry, Hobart Dotson, Nate Woodward.

More so than other independent jazz labels such as Blue Note and Riverside, the powers to be at Prestige seemed to take great liberties in producing albums that would often contain cuts from multiple sessions, a discographical nightmare at its most basic. But even more troubling, this often made for a lack of coherence that could be disconcerting at times. What then made all of this worse was that the practice was often used with some of the label’s most important and visible artists.

The forgoing will hopefully put into perspective the circumstances surrounding the strange mélange that makes up the Gene Ammons compilation A Stranger In Town. Taken from no less than five recording sessions that span from 1954 to 1970, the 13 tracks assembled here originally appeared on the albums Velvet Soul, Sock!, and Night Lights. That’s the easy part; and then it gets confusing as you try to keep up with the rotating cast of characters on hand. A boisterous “The Song Is You” gets us started with some great small group charts provided by Oliver Nelson, only to give way to a spate of quartet performances that while solid are not particularly all that revelatory. The closing three tracks, particularly a tasty “Calypso Blues,” are the cream of the crop as Ammons' blustery attack gets bluesy support from the ubiquitous Wynton Kelly. ~C. Andrew Hovan

A Stranger In Town

Katrine Madsen - You Are So Beautiful

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:48
Size: 127.7 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1999/2013
Art: Front

[5:18] 1. Early In The Autumn
[4:29] 2. You Are So Beautiful To Me
[5:34] 3. When Nightbirds Sing
[5:25] 4. You Must Believe In Spring
[3:31] 5. They Can't Take That Away From Me
[5:14] 6. I Lost Myself To You
[4:15] 7. Let There Be Love
[5:44] 8. Shadow Woman
[2:51] 9. Isn't It A Pity
[3:09] 10. Let Me Love You
[5:33] 11. Speak Low
[4:40] 12. Everything Must Change

Bass – Jesper Bodilsen; Drums – Ed Thigpen; Piano – Carsten Dahl; Vocals – Katrine Madsen, Svante Thuresson.

You Are So Beautiful is a 1999 music album with Danish jazz singer Katrine Madsen. On two of the tracks she sings duet with Svante Thuresson.

You Are So Beautiful

Mal Waldron Quintet - Mal-1

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:07
Size: 88,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:55)  1. Stablemates
(7:50)  2. Yesterdays
(7:19)  3. Transfiguration
(5:52)  4. Bud Study
(7:02)  5. Dee's Dilemma
(5:07)  6. Shome

Mal Waldron's recording debut as a leader presents the pianist with his many gifts already well developed. For the 1956 quartet date, he takes charge to strike a balance between the sound of a blowing session and the refinement of a more polished date. The spontaneity is there, but the set also benefits from Waldron's thoughtful charts. At this stage of his development, Waldron was a distinctive bop pianist whose occasional sputtering, knotty phrasing revealed the acknowledged influence of Thelonious Monk, as well as similarities with contemporaries Al Haig and Bud Powell. For this set, though, the focus is not on Waldron's playing, but on his ability to lead from the piano bench. The horn players top-flight boppers Idrees Sulieman on trumpet and Gigi Gryce on alto sax contribute hot solos played with class and authority, and disciplined ensemble work supports the overall structure of Waldron's charts. Some of the arrangements seem written with a larger ensemble in mind, but they also work in the quartet setting, with Waldron's effective use of staggered horn entries, dynamics, interesting harmonies, and occasional countermelodies adding color and variety to the performances. 

The tracks comprise a bright, focused performance of Benny Golson's "Stablemates," a sparse, bluesy take of the standard "Yesterdays," a pair of good Waldron originals and one from Sulieman, along with Lee Sears' "Transfiguration." Bassist Julian Euell and drummer Arthur Edgehill supply a strong and reliable bop pulse. ~ Jim Todd http://www.allmusic.com/album/mal-1-mw0000188794

Personnel: Mal Waldron (piano); Gigi Gryce (alto saxophone); Idrees Sulieman (trumpet); Julian Euell (bass); Arthur Edgehill (drums).

Mal-1

Tiziana Ghiglioni - I'll be Around

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:22
Size: 90,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:15)  1. Am I Blue
(5:14)  2. They Can't Take that Away from Me
(7:18)  3. You Don't Know what Love Is
(3:21)  4. All or Nothing at All
(5:16)  5. Glad to Be Unhappy
(2:48)  6. I'll Be Around
(2:22)  7. Yesterdays
(4:16)  8. Where Are You?
(0:20)  9. Darn that Dream
(2:08) 10. But not for Me

Tiziana Ghiglioni began his musical training in the seventies, attending the seminars of the pianist and composer Giorgio Gaslini and studying vocal technique with the soprano Gabriella Ravazzi. Among the first professional experience is the theater tour with the Shakespeare / Ellington show with the same Giorgio Gaslini and Giorgio Albertazzi .In the early eighties he began his career as a jazz singer and bandleader immediately obtaining the attention of audiences and critics thanks to the reviews of the journalist and jazz historian Arrigo Polillo who commented very positively both his first public performances is his first album ( "Lonely Woman" of 1981 ) engraved with certain emerging young among them Piero Leveratto and Luigi Bonafede .The reception of the first disc is such that in the second etching ( "Sounds of Love" of 1983 ) the singer is joined by internationally renowned musicians like Kenny Drew on piano and Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen on bass. In subsequent years Ghiglioni affirms its leading role in the Italian jazz working with some of the most famous national jazz musicians (including Luca Flores , Enrico Pieranunzi , Paolo Fresu , Franco D'Andrea , Gianluigi Trovesi and Enrico Rava ) and international ( including Chet Baker , Steve Lacy , Mal Waldron , Paul Bley and Lee Konitz ).

Despite being very appreciated for its executions of the traditional jazz repertoire, Ghiglioni shows a particular predilection for the free jazz and for contamination. She herself said that her passion for jazz was born after listening saxophonist Archie Shepp , one of the protagonists of the movement free. No coincidence that in his first incision is deeply involved with a piece by Ornette Coleman "Lonely Woman", which also became the title of the album. This interest in the avant-garde is witnessed, among others, from the album "SONB" of 1992 , which earned her second place in the ranking of the best albums of the magazine Musica Jazz and the nickname "First Lady" of Italian jazz (for by the then director of Pino Candini magazine). Among the most recent experiments you can cite the disc "Rotella Variations", signed together with the violinist Emanuele Parrini : an ambitious attempt to carry into music by the contemporary suggestions Mimmo Rotella .

In 2009 she was President of the Artistic Committee of the 3rd edition of the Italian Jazz Awards - Luca Flores. He currently resides between Genoa and Milan. He is professor of jazz singing teacher at the conservatory of Rovigo. On 23 and 24 June 2012 was the guest of honor at the end of essay academy year cultural musician "La Fenice" in Gioia del Colle. He sang with the children of the school who have also received from her a certificate of "Master Class". Translate by Google  https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiziana_Ghiglioni

Personnel: Vocals – Tiziana Ghiglioni; Piano – Mal Waldron; Trumpet – Enrico Rava

I'll be Around

Hiromi - Brain

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:31
Size: 143,3 MB
Art: Front

( 6:53)  1. Kung-Fu World Champion
( 7:11)  2. If...
( 5:43)  3. Wind Song
( 9:05)  4. Brain
( 7:08)  5. Desert on the Moon
( 4:38)  6. Green Tea Farm
(10:02)  7. Keytalk
(10:47)  8. Legend of the Purple Valley

Japanese pianist and composer Hiromi Uehara dazzled the jazz world with her 2003 debut, Another Mind. Its mash of keyboard pyrotechnics and range of compositional styles was multiplied exponentially by her irrepressible energy. On that set she used variously sized ensembles to articulate her compositions. On Brain, Hiromi strips it back to a trio and offers a more intimate look at her wide musical universe, utilizing drummer Martin Valihora, bassist Tony Grey (both fellow Berklee College of Music alums), and alternately bassist Anthony Jackson. The album opens with the wacky "Kung-Fu World Champion" with its mélange of sequenced keyboards. It's a fusion tune to be sure, but it's so kooky and funky that it transcends the label despite its reliance on staggering time signatures and stop-on-air turnarounds and changes. It's a careening tour de force where electronic keyboards and pianos are layered over a scattershot rhythm that pulls and pushes the deep pocket funk and strafes it with a post-bop sensibility. Grey's bassing here is so choice, so utterly fluid and physical. But it's back to jazz on "If..." with Jackson taking the bass chair. It's a strolling soul-jazz figure, bubbling over a series of chromatically arranged ostinati. Its beauty is crystalline despite all the activity. "Wind Song" is a mid-tempo ballad with beautiful ringing lines in the middle register. 

Its repetitive figure shifts and shapes an alternate melodic line in the solo.The knottiness of the title track offers a close, scrutinizing view of Hiromi's mad muse; using her piano to articulate a figure she creates a warped and angular counterpoint with electronic keyboards keeping the rhythm section striating in between, with precise interstitial motifs before the entire cut gives way to a blessed out of minor key prelude on the piano and her rhythm section dancing around the changes in hushed tones. The centerpiece of the set is a stunningly beautiful tune called "Green Tea Farm." A solo piece, it is pastoral. In sum, Hiromi has built upon her previous effort by stripping down her band and showcasing the less physical but no less ambitious side of her improvisational and compositional flair. Her sound might still be confounding to the purists, but who cares? Hiromi is a jazz pianist for the new century, one whose "yes" to the wealth of musical styles that are available to her is only eclipsed by her ability to work them into a unique whole that bears her signature. ~ Thom Jurek http://www.allmusic.com/album/brain-mw0000220366

Personnel: Hiromi Uehara (piano); Anthony Jackson, Tony Grey (bass); Martin Valihora (drums).

Brain

Ernie Watts - Reaching Up

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:58
Size: 158,0 MB
Art: Front

( 7:50)  1. Reaching Up
( 8:53)  2. Mr. Syms
( 5:55)  3. I Hear A Rhapsody
( 6:14)  4. Transparent Sea
( 5:21)  5. The High Road
( 5:38)  6. Inward Glance
( 6:54)  7. You Leave Me Breathless
( 4:51)  8. Sweet Lucy
(10:21)  9. Angel's Flight
( 3:56) 10. Sweet Solitude

For this quartet set with pianist Mulgrew Miller, bassist Charles Fambrough, and drummer Jack DeJohnette, Ernie Watts definitely came to play. Virtually all of his solos are high powered and even his ballad statements are filled with clusters of passionate notes. Trumpeter Arturo Sandval has two appearances and makes the music even more hyper. In addition, the rhythm section keeps the proceedings consistently stimulating. The main focus on these standards and originals is generally on Watts' tenor, and even though there isn't all that much variety, this CD is a strong example of his jazz talents. 
~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/reaching-up-mw0000108870

Personnel: Ernie Watts (saxophone); Arturo Sandoval (trumpet); Mulgrew Miller (piano); Charles Fambrough (acoustic bass); Jack DeJohnette (drums).

Reaching Up

Bert Kaempfert - Strangers In The Night

Styles: Jazz, Big band
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:46
Size: 146,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:22)  1. Strangers In The Night
(3:06)  2. I'm Beginning To See The Light
(3:20)  3. It's Only A Paper Moon
(2:58)  4. You turned my world around
(2:11)  5. You Are There
(3:33)  6. Stardust
(2:43)  7. Something
(2:48)  8. When You're Smiling
(3:11)  9. Out Of Nowhere
(2:43) 10. My way of life
(4:27) 11. Moonlight Serenade
(3:39) 12. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
(3:21) 13. Didn't we
(3:31) 14. The World We Knew (Over And Over)
(3:35) 15. My Blue Heaven
(2:50) 16. Lover
(2:20) 17. The good life
(3:08) 18. The Continental
(2:55) 19. My melancholy baby
(3:56) 20. My Way

In 1965, Bert Kaempfert was commissioned by the American film company Universal Pictures to compose the music for “A Man Could Get Killed” a comedy film about a gang of crooks. Set in Portugal’s capital Lisbon, the film’s main ingredients were a diamond robbery, secret agents and a romance; two of the leading roles were taken by Melina Mercouri and James Garner. The present disc, recorded in 1966, includes the two main themes from the film: But Not Today, heard during the Main Title, and, of course, Strangers In The Night, the love theme, which was entitled Beddy-Bye in the film score. But Not Today is proof enough that Bert Kaempfert was not only capable of writing a lovely film melody but that he also knew how to capture a Spanish-Portuguese touch, even adding a dash of Greece as a tribute to the unforgotten Melina Mercouri. In those days Bert Kaempfert could scarcely have foreseen that his love theme Strangers In The Night would become an international Super-hit within an amazingly short time and that it would, to this day, take its place among those songs which have received the most awards. Bert Kaempfert’s publisher, Hal Fein, instinctively knew the true value of this song which he offered to Frank Sinatra, who immediately recorded it and thus made his great comeback. After only a few weeks, Frankieboy’s vocal and Bert Kaempfert’s orchestral versions took the charts by the storm and even ousted the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and the Beach Boys from their places at the top of the international hit parade. In Germany alone Fremde in der Nacht was available contemporaneously in four different vocal versions, and in 1967 this composition was named the “Hit of the Year” by the German copyright society GEMA.

Over the years Bert Kaempfert not only received numerous gold discs for Strangers In The Night but was showered with other prizes, such as the “Golden Globe”. As recently as 1990 the evergreen was honored with a fourth “BMI Award”. The press commented: “Bert Kaempfert’s songs are still record-breakers! The American copyright society BMI has registered four million radio performances of Strangers In The Night, which constitutes non-stop broadcasting for 22.8 years!” But it is not only these two film melodies that are worth a mention. I Can’t Give You Anything But Love, Mexican Shuffle and Tijuana Taxi were also enormously successful; Bert Kaempfert’s Milica, also known as Sweet Maria, was also a huge hit, particularly in the USA; and finally his Two Can Live On Love Alone was chosen by the Anita Kerr Singers for their album entitled Bert Kaempfert Turns Us On. http://kaempfert.de/en/album/strangers-in-the-night/

Strangers In The Night

Sunday, June 25, 2017

Margie Anderson - The Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:56
Size: 82.3 MB
Styles: Jazz/blues vocals
Year: 1959/2011
Art: Front

[4:41] 1. My Funny Valentine
[2:54] 2. Ca, C'est L'amour
[4:44] 3. The Thrill Is Gone
[4:13] 4. Come Rain Or Come Shine
[2:37] 5. A Foggy Day
[2:42] 6. Paris Blues
[2:31] 7. Haiti Blues
[3:12] 8. By Myself
[2:13] 9. Hong Kong Sentinel
[2:42] 10. London Blues
[3:22] 11. Follow That Girl

Margie Anderson is a Boston-based singer who still lives in Boston, although she is no longer active as a singer. She has been a close friend of mine for many years. The CD is her own reissue of a session recorded in the late 1950's. The material was issued on a variety of budget labels. I gave up years ago trying to sort out who's backing her on this session, although she does remember that the band was led by pianist Bob Freedman. Margie also recorded for Columbia in the early 1950's. There is some information about her (and from her) in the book about Gigi Gryce by Noal Cohen and Mike Fitzgerald. She had known Gigi in his Boston days (early 1950's). ~Funkateer

The Blues

Delfeayo Marsalis - The Last Southern Gentlemen

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:34
Size: 161.6 MB
Styles: Trombone jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[5:37] 1. The Secret Love Affair
[6:00] 2. Autumn Leaves
[3:12] 3. She's Funny That Way
[5:43] 4. Can You Tell Me How To Get To
[5:35] 5. I'm Confessin'
[6:59] 6. But Beautiful
[7:45] 7. Speak Low
[5:52] 8. Nancy
[4:20] 9. The Man With 2 Left Feet
[5:17] 10. That Old Feeling
[3:46] 11. My Romance
[4:49] 12. If I Were A Bell
[5:33] 13. I Cover The Waterfront

Bass – John Clayton; Drums – Marvin "Smitty" Smith; Piano – Ellis Marsalis; Trombone – Delfeayo Marsalis.

The Last Southern Gentlemen is a landmark recording for Delfeayo Marsalis, pairing father Ellis Marsalis, Jr. with son on a collaborative album for the first time. Marsalis' finest outing to date, the superb recording quality and meticulous production showcase his brilliant, classically trained tone as it swings effortlessly through standards and original compositions. The music is relaxed, thoughtful and provocative, acknowledging the love and respect of all people shared by Louis Armstrong and most early jazz entertainers. This sense of humanity and humility is at the center of the Southern lifestyle that birthed the original American music. Built on the intimacy of American ballads and the trombone's expressive mimicry of the human voice, The Last Southern Gentlemen is a firm acknowledgement of the existence and importance of these sweet, gentle sounds.

The Last Southern Gentlemen