Thursday, September 7, 2017

Magnus Lindgren - Souls

Styles: Flute Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:51
Size: 103,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:06)  1. Souls
(3:42)  2. Change All The Time
(4:29)  3. Creepin'
(3:42)  4. Rainy Day
(4:26)  5. Dreaming In New York
(4:00)  6. Barcelona
(4:15)  7. Small Stuff
(3:07)  8. Broken Heart
(4:17)  9. On A Sunday
(4:45) 10. Walk This Earth
(4:56) 11. Wrapped Around Your Finger

The Sweden Magnus Lindgren, saxophonist, flutist, clarinetist, composer and musical traveler will have his new album "Souls" out Nave: The recording took place in New York in collaboration with the voices of Gregory Porter, Ivan Lins and beautiful young Swedish jazz star Anna Christoffersson, among others. It highlights the talent of this artist / composer admired, among others, by Quincy Jones.

Personnel:  Magnus Lindgren - tenor sax, flute, alto flute, clarinet, bass clarinet, Rhodes, Wulitzer, vocals;  Leonardo Amuedo – guitars;  Ira Coleman – bass;  Rhani Krija – percussion;  Gregory Porter - vocals on track 1, 7, 8;  Rigmor Gustafsson - vocals on track 5;  Anna Christoffersson - vocals on tracks 1, 2, 4, 7, 8;  Marie Fredriksson - vocals on track 9;  Mark Reilly - vocals on track 4;  Ivan Lins - vocals on track 10

Souls

Alma Micic - That Old Feeling

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:29
Size: 82,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:47)  1. That Old Feeling
(4:09)  2. Harvest Moon
(3:13)  3. Moonglow
(4:32)  4. Cry Me A River
(4:24)  5. Honeysuckle Rose
(2:35)  6. Ne zaboravi me
(4:04)  7. Estate
(3:55)  8. Blue Moon
(4:45)  9. Solnishko

Alma was born and raised in Belgrade, Serbia. She started performing with a local quartet at a time in which jazz was making a big comeback in Belgrade: it was 1992, and somehow, jazz clubs bloomed all across town like mushrooms. Alma was singing three nights a week then, while attending high school in the morning. At 17, she started performing and touring regularly with the Radio Big Band, then entered Law School a year later. However, in 1995, with great help and support from her parents and family, she applied and was awarded a generous scholarship to attend the prestigious Berklee College of Music in Boston, MA. Alma began her studies as a voice major in 1996, and graduated in 1999 with a BM in Jazz Performance. It was at Berklee that she started leading her own quartet and performing at various clubs such as Scullers, Jazz Standard as well as appearing at various festivals throughout East Coast and Europe. In 2000, Alma Micic relocated to New York City. While making her mark on the jazz scene, she met current members of her quartet.  She leads a cohesive, intuitive group that includes bassist Sean Conly, drummer Gregory Hutchinson, and pianist Brandon McCune. “Introducing Alma”, the first solo effort of this extraordinary new jazz vocalist received great critical acclaim. Featured articles included publications such as Jazzman (France), Swing Journal (Japan), All About Jazz (US), Il manifesto (Italy). Alma’s singing is steeped in tradition, her writing and lyrics completely fresh and original. It is described by Bob Young of the Boston Herald as “music that nods to the past and looks to the future.” Alma’s upcoming release “The Hours” features her originals, new takes on spirituals and a loving dedication to her ethnic heritage. https://www.last.fm/music/Alma+Micic/+wiki

That Old Feeling

Wednesday, September 6, 2017

Billy Vera - Big Band Jazz

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:21
Size: 83.2 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[2:23] 1. If I Could Be With You (One Hour Tonight)
[3:51] 2. Since I Fell For You
[2:52] 3. Cherry
[3:50] 4. When It's Sleepytime Down South
[2:37] 5. I Want To Be Loved (But Only By You)
[3:15] 6. My Little Brown Book
[3:11] 7. Just A-Sittin' And A-Rockin'
[3:00] 8. Blue And Sentimental
[3:27] 9. I'll Never Be Free
[4:08] 10. Room With A View
[3:42] 11. At This Moment

Veteran blue-eyed soul singer Billy Vera has really found a style with Big Band Jazz! Instead of the typical overworked, clichéd standards on other artists’ albums, Billy digs deep in the well he knows better than anybody: The Great Black American Songbook. Every song here was written by one of the greats of black show business. Duke Ellington, Billy Straynorn, Count Basie, Buddy and James P. Johnson. No tired, corny tunes for Mr. Vera; the best-known item on this CD is “Since I Fell For You.” As usual, Billy Vera makes the hippest choices, and sweet surprises like Strayhorn’s “My Little Brown Book.”

Recorded at Hollywood’s historic Capitol Studio A, home of Sinatra, Dino and Nat Cole, the sound is perfection. The band, arranged by Chris Walden, swings like Basie. On “Blue And Sentimental,” you’d swear the Count was leading the band! Satchmo’s “When It’s Sleepytime Down South” will break your heart from its sheer beauty. You can tell these guys love and respect Billy; the solos they play for him are spectacular. Replacing Vera’s old partner, the late Judy Clay, is young Tamela D’Amico, who duets on “I’ll Never Be Free.” This girl has a future.

The album closes with two Vera-penned classics: a reinvented “Room With A View,” written with blues legend Lowell Fulson, and a big band version of his signature song, “At This Moment,” with a solo by the soulful Jerry Peterson, who played on the original hit. Enjoy!

Big Band Jazz

Anita O'Day - Incomparable!

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:06
Size: 84.9 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1960/2002
Art: Front

[2:37] 1. It Could Happen To You
[2:35] 2. Blue Champagne
[2:10] 3. Avalon
[3:00] 4. Old Devil Moon
[3:09] 5. The Party's Over
[3:06] 6. Why Shouldn't I
[3:17] 7. Easy Living
[2:14] 8. Can't We Be Friends
[5:49] 9. Slaughter on Tenth Avenue
[2:48] 10. If I Love Again
[3:01] 11. Speak Low
[3:14] 12. Indian Summer

Alto Saxophone – Charlie Kennedy, Joe Maini; Baritone Saxophone – Jack Nimitz; Bass – Joe Mondragon; Bass Trombone – Kenny Shroyer; Drums – Mel Lewis; Guitar – Al Hendrickson; Piano – Lou Levy; Tenor Saxophone – Bill Perkins, Richie Kamuca; Trombone – Bob Edmonson, Frank Rosolino, Lew McCreary; Trumpet – Al Porcino, Conte Candoli, Ray Triscari, Stu Williamson; Vocals – Anita O'Day. Recorded 1960 at Radio Recorders, Hollywood: tracks 1-3 on August 16; tracks 4-6 on August 18; tracks 7-12 on August 23.

Anita started the "cool" school of jazz singing - her vocalese & scatting is always musically right, and not just showing off. This album had a strange sound to it when first pressed on LP, but this CD transfer has corrected the flat sound that was inherent. Bill Holman's inventive arrangements propel Anita in one of the most creative sessions that she had for Verve. Anita was always miles ahead of her imitators, and always, the hippest chick in Jazz. And dig that groovy ice-blue eyeliner! ~Allen Bardin

Incomparable!

Greg Skaff - Soulmation

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:17
Size: 126.6 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[5:33] 1. Conjure
[6:48] 2. Genmaicha
[4:19] 3. Soulmation
[3:49] 4. Mother Root
[3:39] 5. Smoke In The Sun
[3:49] 6. Bottom Feeder
[3:59] 7. Fleurette Africaine
[4:41] 8. Porcupine Hat
[4:44] 9. Talisman
[4:22] 10. Juke
[4:36] 11. Snake Oil
[4:54] 12. Somewhere In The Middle East

Greg Skaff: guitar; Fima Ephron: electric bass; Pat Bianchi: organ; Jonathan Barber: drums; Charley Drayton: drums (1, 2, 9, 10).

Guitarist Greg Skaff is all about the grease, grit, and grooves on Soulmation. It's a logical extension of his previous work—guitar-fronted organ group dates like East Harlem Skyline (Zoho Music, 2009) and 116th & Park (Zoho Music, 2012)—but it's a tad heavier, raunchier, and funkier than anything Skaff threw us on those records. His approach here is equal parts soul jazz, jam band, and unadulterated rock, nodding toward everybody from Grant Green to Lenny Kravitz to Jimi Hendrix.

Skaff wastes no time getting down to business on this one. He kicks things off with a funky gem ("Conjure") that calls to mind the music that Medeski, Martin & Wood produced with John Scofield. It's a performance that's indicative of the attitude surrounding the album, yet the sound of that song doesn't define the record. No single track could. Skaff is far too cagey to be pigeonholed, altering his direction in slight and not-so-subtle ways from song to song. One number might present like a meeting of Stevie Wonder, Grand Funk Railroad, and Delbert McClinton ("Soulmation"), the next may slam and shred with controlled abandon ("Mother Root"), and the one after that may appear as waltzing jazz poetry riding on a psychedelic fusion flow (Jan Hammer's "Smoke In The Sun").

Everything is on the table here, and it's quite a spread to take in. Skaff and company ably construct Jeff Beck-meets-Living Colour hybrids ("Bottom Feeder"), manufacture slinky-and-dreamy tastes of Ellingtonia ("Fleurette Africaine"), shoot out sizzling swingers ("Porcupine Hat"), and engage in jams that marry roadhouse aesthetics to more advanced harmonic language ("Talisman"). Virtually nothing is left unexplored across these tracks.

If there's a single idea at the heart of this album, it's that a musician unbound is like a musician heretofore unheard. Whether discussing the leader, his regular on-record collaborators like organist Pat Bianchi and drummer Charley Drayton, or Skaff album newbies like bassist Fima Ephron and drummer Jonathan Barber, that thought rings true. One can never really know the full weight of an artist's thoughts and skills until they're unleashed, so no truer picture of this guitarist (and his friends) may exist. Soulmation is truly a summation of what Greg Skaff is all about. ~Dan Bilawsky

Soulmation

Mose Allison - V-8 Ford Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:27
Size: 85.8 MB
Styles: Vocal & Piano jazz
Year: 1961/1994
Art: Front

[2:10] 1. V-8 Ford Blues
[1:26] 2. Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone
[2:32] 3. Baby, Please Don't Go
[1:40] 4. Hey, Good Lookin'
[2:23] 5. I Love The Life I Live
[1:49] 6. I Ain't Got Nobody (And Nobody Cares For Me)
[1:53] 7. Back On The Corner
[2:43] 8. Life Is Suicide
[1:54] 9. 'deed I Do
[2:31] 10. Ask Me Nice
[2:10] 11. You're A Sweatheart
[2:11] 12. Mad With You
[4:47] 13. High Jinks
[3:52] 14. So Rare
[3:21] 15. The Hills

Besides cool playing and his uniquely smoky singing, Mose has great taste in material. "Hey Good Lookin'" fits right in with revisited versions of "I Love the Life I Live," "I Ain't Got Nobody" and "Baby Please Don't Go," complete with what the singer himself calls his distinctive "involuntary groan" during the piano solo. Teo Macero's intimate production makes it feel like you're right there in the studio. This album was released with two others in a delightful 1994 collection called High Jinks. ~Mark Allen

V-8 Ford Blues

Dexter Gordon - Gotham City

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:05
Size: 130.7 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1981/2012
Art: Front

[9:34] 1. Hi Fly
[7:13] 2. A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square
[8:19] 3. The Blues Walk (Loose Walk)
[9:19] 4. Gotham City
[5:54] 5. A Conversation With Dexter Gordon
[7:04] 6. Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas
[9:40] 7. Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas (Long Version)

Tenor saxophonist Dexter Gordon was still in pretty good form at the time of this later recording. The veteran great is joined by an all-star rhythm section (pianist Cedar Walton, bassist Percy Heath and drummer Art Blakey) along with guest appearances from trumpeter Woody Shaw and guitarist George Benson. Although this boppish set is rather brief, just four songs (3 additional tracks were added on the CD reissue), the quality of the solos is quite high. ~Scott Yanow

Gotham City

Joe Chambers & Yishiaki Masuo - New York Concerto

Styles: Guitar Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1981
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:04
Size: 119,5 MB
Art: Front

( 6:33)  1. Irina
( 3:34)  2. Two Hearts
( 6:10)  3. Like Sonny
( 5:54)  4. Visions
( 5:08)  5. A Night Has a Thousand Eyes
(15:15)  6. Concierto de Aranjuez
( 2:53)  7. Dhabihu
( 6:34)  8. Autumn in New York

Joe Chambers is an extremely versatile and tasteful master of all post-bop idioms. Chambers drives an ensemble with a light hand; his time is excellent and his grasp of dynamics superb. He's not a flashy drummer by any means, but he's a generous collaborator who makes any group of which he's a part as good as it can possibly be. Chambers worked around Washington, D.C., in his late teens. After moving to New York in 1963, he played with Eric Dolphy, Freddie Hubbard, Jimmy Giuffre, and Andrew Hill. In the mid-'60s, Chambers played with a number of the more progressively inclined musicians associated with the Blue Note label, such as vibist Bobby Hutcherson and saxophonists Joe Henderson, Wayne Shorter, and Sam Rivers. In 1970, Chambers joined Max Roach's percussion ensemble, M'Boom, as an original member. During the '70s, Chambers played with a great many of jazz's most prominent elder statesmen, including Sonny Rollins, Tommy Flanagan, Charles Mingus, and Art Farmer. With Flanagan and bassist Reggie Workman, Chambers formed the Super Jazz Trio. In the late '70s, he co-led a band with organist Larry Young. Chambers recorded with bands led by trumpeter Chet Baker and percussionist Ray Mantilla in the early '80s. He also maintained his association with Roach into the '90s. As a solo artist, Chambers has released a tidy number of albums including Almoravid (1973) with trumpeter Woody Shaw, New World (1976), New York Concerto (1981), Phantom of the City (1992), Mirrors (1998), and Urban Grooves (2002). Beginning with 2006's Outlaw, Chambers released a steady stream of albums for Savant Records with Horace to Max (2010), Joe Chambers Moving Pictures Orchestra (2012), and Landscapes (2016), featuring bassist Ira Coleman and pianist Rick Germanson. ~ Chris Kelsey http://www.allmusic.com/artist/joe-chambers-mn0000122897/biography

Born in Tokyo, Japan on October 12 1946 as a son of a jazz band leader and pianist, Yoshiaki Masuo grew up surrounded by jazz music, although he never had any formal musical training. At the age of 15, he started playing the guitar on his own. Prominent among his early influences were Wes Montgomery and Grant Green. While in Waseda University Jazz Club, Masuo was discovered by alto saxophonist Sadao Watanabe, and joined his group at the end of 1967. Masuo thus started his professional career on top as a regular of Japan's leading jazz group. He was in the group for three years, and experienced tours outside of Japan with Sadao, playing at Montreux and Newport jazz festivals. He was 1970's number one guitarist in the readers' poll of Swing Journal, Japan's most popular jazz magazine. He won the readers poll in the following years even after leaving Japan, five times in total. Masuo moved to New York City on June 13, 1971. There he played with Teruo Nakamura, Lenny White, Michael Brecker, Chick Corea, drummer Elvin Jones (Masuo took part in the recording of Merry Go Round) . He also played as a regular of Ashford and Simpson. In 1972, he was a member of Lee Konitz's group. In the spring of 1973, he joined the Sonny Rollins group. 

He was with Sonny three years the first time and three more years from 1982. He toured with the group all over the United States as well as Japan and Europe. He participated in recordings of four Rollins' albums including The Cutting Edge (of the five, one is released in Japan). One of the albums "Reel Life" contains a composition by Masuo "Sonny side up" being played by Rollins' band.  Between the two periods of his playing with Sonny Rollins, Masuo toured with drummer Elvin Jones in Europe, played with organist Larry Young, and formed his own electric fusion group. He recorded his fourth leader album in 1977 for the newly-established Electric Bird label (King Records of Tokyo). Released the next year as the label's first issue, this album turned out to be a remarkable success. He continued to make fine jazz fusion albums one after another over the following several years, winning new fans. He made tours with his own band in Japan and on the West Coast of the U.S., as well as appearing sometimes in NYC night clubs including Seventh Avenue South and Mikell's. On one tour in Japan, Jan Hammer played with him as a special guest. After the second period with Sonny Rollins group in the mid 80s, Masuo acquired his own studio in SoHo in NYC, and there he began experimenting with electronic instruments to create sound all by himself. This took shape as an album titled "Masuo," on which he not only played but also did the roles of composer, arranger, engineer and mixer. This was released in May, 1989. A couple of years before this release, his owning a studio happened to make him get involved as a producer of recordings for JazzCity (and later JazzCity Spirit) for a Japanese record company. He produced dozens of albums over the next ten years. As he got deeply into production, his career as a musician was virtually put on hold. He struggled to get back to playing, and released his album "Are You Happy Now" in Japan in December 1998 and then in the U. S. A. and Europe a year later. But still he was in record production until he closed The Studio in New York at the end of Jan, 2008. Determined to come back as a full-time guitar player, Masuo released his new album "Life is Good" in Aug, 2008 from his newly set-up Sunshine Ave. Label. The following year, 2009, his subsequent album "I'm Glad There is You" has come out. https://www.last.fm/music/Yoshiaki+Masuo/+wiki

Personnel:  Joe Chambers – Drums; Yishiaki Masuo – Guitar.

New York Concerto

Richard 'Groove' Holmes - After Hours

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1962
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:55
Size: 149,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:36)  1. Sweatin'
(2:56)  2. Jeannine
(4:13)  3. Minor Surgery
(4:08)  4. This Here
(5:16)  5. It Might as Well Be Spring
(5:21)  6. Moose the Mooche
(6:46)  7. Groove's Bag
(2:33)  8. Hallelujah, I Love her So
(5:25)  9. After Hours
(4:34) 10. Later
(5:01) 11. Do It My Way
(6:44) 12. Secret Love
(3:16) 13. Denise

Richard "Groove" Holmes was one of the first jazz organists to emerge after the rise of Jimmy Smith (who would remain a lifelong influence). Holmes had a lighter tone on the more up-tempo pieces, but on the ballads (such as "Denise" on this set) his organ could give the impression of weighing a ton. This CD reissue combines together most of the music from Holmes' two early albums: After Hours and Tell It like It 'Tis. 

These trio renditions (with either Joe Pass or Gene Edwards on guitar and Larance Marable or Leroy Henderson on drums) give one a strong sampling of the organist's talents on a variety of blues, bop standards, and obscure originals. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/after-hours-mw0000184447

Personnel: Richard Groove Holmes (organ); Joe Pass, Gene Edwards (guitar); Larance Marable, Leroy Henderson (drums).

After Hours

Phil Woods - Real Life

Styles: Saxophone And Clarinet Jazz
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:54
Size: 160,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:32)  1. Real Life
(9:52)  2. Quill
(5:52)  3. Idols
(8:44)  4. Loose Change
(6:30)  5. Waltz for Harry
(5:05)  6. Sail Away
(8:39)  7. Laddy Buck
(6:59)  8. Bouquet
(6:22)  9. Viable Blues
(3:17) 10. How's Your Mama!

During a major portion of his career, Phil Woods predominately led a quartet or quintet, so the opportunity to work with his Little Big Band gave him a special pleasure, by expanding both the brass and reeds to an octet. His third release to feature the octet includes his working quintet at the time, including trombonist Hal Crook, pianist Jim McNeely, plus his longtime rhythm section, bassist Steve Gilmore and drummer Bill Goodwin. Guests include Woods' former sideman trumpeter/flugelhornist Tom Harrell, alto and baritone saxophonist Nick Brignola, plus alto and tenor saxophonist Nelson Hill. Although the economics of touring with a band this size made it impossible to tour, the musicians dove into the difficult arrangements with plenty of gusto and end up sounding as if they had been playing them in concert for months. McNeely's challenging "Real Life" is especially inspired, while Woods is joined by both Brignola and Hill on alto saxes for a bluesy rendition of "Quill," a tribute to Woods' former partner, Gene Quill. The leader switches to clarinet for the powerful "Waltz for Harry," written in memory of Woods' former guitarist, Harry Leahey; Harrell's warm flugelhorn and McNeely's piano solo are also featured. Harrell's "Sail Away," one of his most important compositions, is arranged by Woods to feature Crook's potent trombone. The program ends with a boisterous rendition of Woods' usual set closer, including snatches of several pieces, among themDizzy Gillespie's famous introduction to "All the Things You Are," a blistering bit of "52nd Street Theme," plus the closing tags of "Salt Peanuts" and "Harlem Nocturne." Sadly, this would be the final recording of this octet, as the death of Nick Brignola in 2002 prevented a reunion of this particular lineup of jazz all-stars. ~ Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/real-life-mw0000265141

Personnel: Phil Woods (alto saxophone, clarinet),  Nelson Hill (tenor & alto saxophone),  Nick Brignola (alto & baritone saxophone),  Tom Harrell (trumpet),  Hal Crook (trombone),  Jim McNeely (piano), Steve Gilmore (bass), Bill Goodwin (drums).

Real Life

Stanton Moore - Groove Alchemy

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:13
Size: 124,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:32)  1. Squash Blossom
(4:48)  2. Pie-Eyed Manc
(4:35)  3. Pot Licker
(4:46)  4. Root Cellar
(5:22)  5. Keep on Gwine
(6:17)  6. Neeps and Tatties
(3:57)  7. Up To Here
(5:09)  8. Knocker
(5:11)  9. Shiftless
(4:12) 10. Cleanse This House
(2:09) 11. Aletta
(3:09) 12. He Stopped Loving Her Today

Those expecting anything revolutionary or particularly new from Stanton Moore's trio with guitarist Will Bernard and Robert Walter on B-3 on Groove Alchemy will either be wonderfully relieved or woefully disappointed -- there isn’t. The CD is aural evidence of the trio doing what it does best: being funky and playing in a relaxed, open style that keeps the grooves tight and the musicianship at a maximum. And it's enough.Check out the guitar and organ solos in “Squash Bottom,” the first of these dozen tracks. The popping vamps create the vibe and give way naturally thanks to Moore’s deadly breaks to Bernard’s multi-string chord solo and the percussive organ flow Walter is so famous for. Things get downright Meters-esque on “Pie-Eyed Manic,” with stuttering breaks and two sets of riffs answering one another after four bars apiece. And on it goes, though “Pot Licker” is the funkiest Walter has ever sounded on the B-3. Bernard pushes his chords and leads right through the melody to let the left-hand organ bassline stick out front. Moore just rolls through and develops his grooves as he plays. There is a cover of James Booker's “Keep on Gwine” on which Walter plays piano. 

Though he does so beautifully, it’s more about Moore’s ability to let his Crescent City, second-line swing develop and carry the tune. There’s a longish cover of “Neeps and Tatties” that becomes an outright rhythm brawl between Walter and Moore, as Bernard just eases into the flow and lets the knottier side of his guitar style get into the fray all without letting the groove lilt. The real curve ball on this set is in its final track, a cover of the George Jones’ country vehicle “He Stopped Loving Her Today.” Bernard leads the way with his guitar on the melody, and Moore plays doubles on the front side rather than the backbeat. It’s still a ballad, but one that carries a distinctly New Orleans feel as it swells toward the end. Groove Alchemy is simply a good-time funky record, full of great beats, killer guitar, and nasty organ by a trio that knows how not to mess up a good thing. ~ Thom Jurek http://www.allmusic.com/album/groove-alchemy-mw0001969510

Personnel: Stanton Moore (drums); Will Bernard (guitar); Robert Walter (piano, Hammond b-3 organ)

Groove Alchemy

Lyambiko - Love Letters

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:59
Size: 132,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:08)  1. Star Eyes
(4:47)  2. Things Are Looking Up Again
(3:54)  3. Some Day My Price Will Come
(4:46)  4. Home
(2:57)  5. Love In Letters
(5:30)  6. There Is No Greater Love
(3:04)  7. Till There Was You
(3:54)  8. Summer Morning
(4:51)  9. Close Your Eyes
(3:49) 10. Answer Me
(5:04) 11. Under A Blanket Of Blue
(3:55) 12. When You're Not There
(5:15) 13. Stardust

The singer Lyambiko was born in the German state of Thuringia and grew up in a musically active family. Her grandfather was already a member of a jazz combo back in the 1930's, and her father sang in both a church choir and in jazz and world-music bands in his native Tanzania. As a child, Lyambiko took lessons on the saxophone and the clarinet and in classical singing, and played the tenor sax in her music school's big band. She was only 17 when she founded her first band as a singer (folk, pop and blues), and was the youngest entrant in a band contest where she won her first studio recording. After a longer break from making music, Lyambiko moved to Berlin in 1999. As part of her preparations for the entrance exam for that city's College of Music she took singing and piano lessons, and rehearsed a small repertoire of jazz standards. Concerts in Berlin jazz clubs followed with different ensembles, and a regular spot in a guitar duo entitled "Lyambiko  Strange Fruit". Thanks to a recommendation from the singer Mark Murphy, Lyambiko had the chance to appear in the well-known club A-Trane in April 2000.

In April 2001 Lyambiko first gave her name to the successful quartet with which she then extended her concert activities to the rest of Germany, and later on to other European countries and to the USA. In 2003 the Boston Globe described Lyambiko as "the most promising vocalist jazz has seen in a long, long time". Two acclaimed Cd's were released by Nagel/Heyer before the quartet signed with Sony BMG in 2005. These first two albums stayed in the top ten of the jazz charts for several weeks at a time, and after her move to the major label Lyambiko released her self-named Cd, a "collection of beautiful jazz standards" and then with Love... and then "a sugar-free contemporary reflection on love" (Berliner Zeitung). Each of these two productions was awarded in Germany with the Jazz Award. In February 2007 Sony BMG released Lyambiko's next album, Inner Sense, to which the singer contributed two songs from her own pen for the first time. Apart from two pop/rock covers, the album features solely original compositions, and was positively received by the press as a successful step towards musical independence: "Lyambiko exudes more charisma on 'Inner Sense' than ever before" (Jazzthing). In addition to her jazz projects, the singer with Tanzanian roots worked on a program of African music together with a youth choir for the first time in 2007. February 2008 sees the release of her new Cd Saffronia (Sony BMG). After five albums, Lyambiko now feels ready to bring out a tribute to Nina Simone, who inspired her in 2000 to embark on a career as a jazz singer. After her tribute to Nina Simone, "Saffronia“ (2008), which aroused the first substantial interest in the artist in France as well, Sony Music releases Lyambiko’s new album "Something Like Reality" in June 2010. http://www.lyambiko.com/eng/index.php?page=543713372&f=1&i=543713372

Love Letters

Tuesday, September 5, 2017

Jay McShann - The Band That Jumps The Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:33
Size: 76.8 MB
Styles: Bllues-Jazz, Swing
Year: 1973/2011
Art: Front

[2:31] 1. Hot Biscuits
[3:03] 2. Slow Drag Blues
[2:27] 3. M. R. Boogie
[2:37] 4. Buttermilk
[3:44] 5. Skidrow Blues
[2:35] 6. Soft Winds
[2:59] 7. No Name Boogie
[2:41] 8. Thinking About My Baby
[2:24] 9. Geronimo
[2:54] 10. Twelve O'Clock Whistle
[2:31] 11. Mellodrag
[3:01] 12. Eatin' Watermelon

This collector's LP from the British Black Lion label features pianist Jay McShann during his post-war period, when he was often based in Los Angeles and recording for Swingtime. McShann backs singer Jimmy Witherspoon on "Skid Row Blues" (the alternate take is the one included), and vocalist Crown Prince Waterford is on one number. Otherwise, McShann heads medium-size bands from 1948-49 that mostly lack any big names, although the young trumpeter Art Farmer and tenor saxophonist Maxwell Davis make appearances. There are a few vocals by Lois Booker and Maxine Reed, but the emphasis is on ensemble work and concise solos that fall between swing and early R&B. Spirited music, most of which has not been fully reissued on CD yet. ~Scott Yanow

The Band That Jumps The Blues

Kay Starr - Movin'!

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 29:49
Size: 68.3 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1959/2011
Art: Front

[1:52] 1. On A Slow Boat To China
[3:09] 2. I Cover The Waterfront
[1:53] 3. Around The World
[2:38] 4. Sentimental Journey
[2:46] 5. Night Train
[2:09] 6. Riders In The Sky (A Cowboy Legend)
[3:39] 7. Goin' To Chicago Blues
[2:14] 8. Indiana (Back Home Again...)
[2:23] 9. Song Of The Wanderer
[2:16] 10. Swingin' Down The Lane
[2:21] 11. Lazy River
[2:24] 12. Movin'

Movin' marked Kay Starr's return to Capitol after a four-year spell with RCA. RCA had Starr cut "Rock & Roll Waltz" and the Rockin' with Kay album, but Capitol sought to "reaffirm her status as a great jazz vocalist," as the Movin' liner notes say. The dozen songs are mostly jazz and pop standards arranged by Dave Cavanaugh with Van Alexander for a big band on most selections. A few others feature arrangements for five trombones and a rhythm section, reminiscent of the Four Freshmen's 1956 album Four Freshmen and 5 Trombones, another Capitol product. The album's emphasis on rhythm may have hinted at rock & roll, but Movin' delivers pure big band and traditional pop music with a swingin beat and Starr's soulful phrasing. Only the cowboy tale "Riders in the Sky" strays from the album's pure pop and jazz trajectory, although even that enjoyed wide currency in pop circles. Movin' yielded no hits, and one suspects that Capitol may have wooed Starr back by letting her record more of the music she liked. ~Greg Adams

Movin'

Deodato - Somewhere Out There

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:57
Size: 91.5 MB
Styles: Jazz, R&B, Pop
Year: 1989
Art: Front

[4:19] 1. Everybody Wants My Girl
[4:28] 2. The Best Lovers (Are The Best Friends)
[4:35] 3. In This World
[3:54] 4. I Believe In This Love
[3:22] 5. Where Can You Run
[4:32] 6. When A Lover Says Goodbye
[5:30] 7. Forever For You
[4:31] 8. Stay With Me
[4:42] 9. Somewhere Out There

In between all those arranging gigs for everyone from Jobim and Astrud Gilberto to Sinatra, Wes Montgomery and Earth, Wind & Fire, Deodato made many of his own albums for lots of labels from the '60s to the '80s. He does dance-pop with style on this 1989 Atlantic LP: Everybody Wants My Girl; Somewhere out There; In This World , and more!

Somewhere Out There

Anne Chris - Tomorrow Is Today

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:33
Size: 129.5 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[3:17] 1. Tomorrow Is Today
[5:53] 2. Long Years
[4:29] 3. New Worlds
[3:51] 4. Let's Stay Together
[4:16] 5. Wandering
[4:18] 6. Empty Road
[5:23] 7. Visions
[5:09] 8. This Is Always
[3:53] 9. You're Everything
[6:09] 10. The Thrill Is Gone
[3:41] 11. Sabia
[6:08] 12. This Is For Me

Singer & composer Anne Chris graduated from the Conservatory of Amsterdam in 2001. She then went on to take postgraduate studies at the same conservatory, during which she specialised in writing her own compositions. In 2003 she concluded her training at the conservatory with a performance in het Bimhuis in Amsterdam during the Graduation Jazz Festival. In July of the same year she performed with her band at the North Sea Jazz Festival.

In March 2004 Anne Chris recorded her debut CD, entitled 'Tomorrow is today', which was released by the Jazz Impuls Foundation. On this cd she sang different styles; in addition to jazz standards, she also recorded a Brazilian song and her own compositions.

Tomorrow Is Today

Scott Henderson, Jeff Berlin, Dennis Chambers - HBC

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:28
Size: 136,7 MB
Art: Front

(10:16)  1. Actual Proof
( 6:58)  2. Mysterious Traveller
( 8:45)  3. Footprints
(11:57)  4. D Flat Waltz
( 3:25)  5. The Orphan
( 5:18)  6. Sightseeing
( 4:21)  7. Wayward Son Of Devil Boy
( 3:09)  8. Threedom
( 5:15)  9. Stratus

Not simply a super-group, but more like a jazz-fusion superpower as this formidable trio melds classic fusion works amid a few originals on its debut release, although the artists have crossed paths over the years. Bios and resumes would transcend the limitations of a review or analysis. So, it's the in-your-face attitude, creative impetus, and the respective musicians' gargantuan chops that account for a passionate exposition. Guitarist Scott Henderson's enviable technique as a monumental blues-rock soloist shines on his "Wayward Son of Devil Boy," inflicting pain on his axe via some serious shedding and molding a blues-with-a-vengeance stance with blazing fills, detuned extended notes and wailing choruses. But the preponderance of the album offers an abundance of cunning insights and spins on pieces such as drummer Billy Cobham's jazz-fusion anthem "Stratus." Then again it would be a sacrilege to ignore this trend-setting classic. Here, all-universe session drummer Dennis Chambers slams the backbeat into overdrive in concert with bass great Jeff Berlin's sinuous fretless bass lines. Owing to the original recording, Henderson abides by late guitarist Tommy Bolin's tension and release buildup, and then goes off the radar with stratospheric licks, leading to the heavy metal-like finale.

Henderson morphs polytonal chord voicings to execute a translation of pianist Herbie Hancock's funkified "Actual Proof," where Berlin unleashes a mindboggling solo, awash with twirling notes and breakneck linear runs. Henderson injects some spacey electronic treatments and spatial attributes into saxophonist Wayne Shorter's title track from Weather Report's Mysterious Traveler (Columbia, 1974), raising the bar with edgy and distorted crunch chords while reshaping and reconfiguring the primary theme, tinted with a rather ominous rite of passage.  HBC also integrates a pure jazz element into Shorter's "Sightseeing," offset by the artists' expressive solo spots and streaming background effects, all the while prepping for the kill towards the coda as Berlin thumps and plucks his bass strings into submission. Sure, he's all over the place, but lessons learned will dictate that he makes every note count, marked by his lyrical thematic statements and a technique to die for. Other than the instrumentalists' technical mastery, these works' construction lend to a refreshing glimpse of the proverbial roads previously traveled. From a holistic perspective of the jazz-fusion genre, it doesn't get a whole lot better.~ Glenn Astarita https://www.allaboutjazz.com/hbc-scott-henderson-tone-center-review-by-glenn-astarita.php

Personnel: Scott Henderson: guitar; Jeff Berlin: bass; Dennis Chambers: drums.

HBC

Awa Ly - Five and a feather

Styles: Vocal, Soul, R&B
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:52
Size: 97,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:34)  1. Storyteller
(3:30)  2. Let you down
(3:41)  3. Let me love you
(3:44)  4. Help you out
(3:33)  5. Here
(4:30)  6. Friendship
(3:37)  7. Sunflowers
(3:29)  8. You will be mine
(4:22)  9. Stranger
(3:56) 10. Wide open
(3:51) 11. I'll be gone (bonus track)

One night, Awa had a dream ... The atmosphere was enchanted, as mystic, nimbed in a scenography summoning the moon, the Earth and the elements. An ancestral mixture between the Indians of America and Africa, the shaman was there, expressing himself in an unknown tongue, telling real or fantasized stories. These accounts, she received others, appropriated them, impregnated them, shared their joy, relieved pain or contained sadness. Upon awakening, the shamanic narrator had fainted but her presence was still palpable, Awa made the storyteller of this new album: Five and a Feather. This album was directed by Jean Lamoot and Pascal Danaé (Victory of the Music 2015, category music of the world with their group Rivière Noire Collaborations with Black Désir, Bashung, Salif Keita, Gainsbourg, Giberto Gil, Peter Gabriel, Ayo, Mayra Andrade ) with the participation of Faada Freddy, Paco Sery, Ballake Sissoko, Greg Cohen and Slow Joe. https://www.amazon.fr/Five-Feather-Awa-Ly/dp/B01BESGO1A

Five and a feather

Magnus Lindgren - Batucada Jazz

Styles: Flute Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:28
Size: 148,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:51)  1. Alligator
(5:45)  2. Elbow Style
(4:18)  3. Rio Shadow
(4:08)  4. Copaflat
(6:25)  5. Soofa
(3:29)  6. Farofa
(6:19)  7. Flutish
(4:38)  8. Dalodrum
(3:37)  9. Djungeldance
(6:32) 10. Batacuda Jazz
(3:27) 11. Never Let Go
(6:55) 12. No More Words

Magnus Lindgren is a young Swedish jazz sax and flute player, arranger, composer and bandleader who is rapidly becoming a top name in Europe working with many of the most famous jazz artists. This album which features all original songs composed and arranged by Magnus was recorded in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and features several outstanding Brazilian and European musicians. The result is a remarkable album with very strong influences of Brazilian music and rhythms but also with a definite jazz quality throughout. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Batucada-Jazz-Magnus-Lindgren/dp/B00280NYN0

Personnel: Magnus Lindgren (vocals, guitar, flute, clarinet, reeds, tenor saxophone, percussion); Pirulito, Armando Marçal (vocals, percussion); Leonardo Amuedo (guitar); Kiko Continentino (piano); Magnus Persson (drums); Sebastian Notini, Robert Ikiz (percussion)

Batucada Jazz

Ron Carter - Live At Theaterstübchen Kassel

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:03
Size: 177,2 MB
Art: Front

(12:16)  1. Laverne Walk
( 6:47)  2. Candle Light
( 7:46)  3. Golden Striker
( 7:20)  4. Samba de Orfeu
( 9:14)  5. Eddie's Theme
( 7:26)  6. A Nice Song
(10:44)  7. My Funny Valentine
( 6:26)  8. Cedar Tree (Bonus Track)

The epitome of class and elegance without the stuffiness, Ron Carter has been a world-class bassist and cellist since the '60s. He's among the greatest accompanists of all time, and has made many albums exhibiting his prodigious technique. He's a brilliant rhythmic and melodic player, who uses everything in the bass and cello arsenal; walking lines, thick, full, prominent notes and tones, drones and strumming effects, and melody snippets. His bowed solos are almost as impressive as those done with his fingers. Carter has been featured in clothing, instrument, and pipe advertisements; he's close to being the bass equivalent of a Duke Ellington in his mix of musical and extra-musical interests. Carter's nearly as accomplished in classical music as jazz, and has performed with symphony orchestras all over the world. He's almost exclusively an acoustic player; he did play electric for a short time in the late '60s and early '70s, but he didn't used it for many, many years. Carter began playing cello at ten. But when his family moved from Ferndale, Michigan to Detroit, Carter ran into problems with racial stereotypes regarding the cello and switched to bass. He played in the Eastman School's Philharmonic Orchestra, and gained his degree in 1959. He moved to New York and played in Chico Hamilton's quintet with Eric Dolphy, while also enrolling at the Manhattan School of Music. Carter earned his Master's degree in 1961. After Hamilton returned to the West Coast in 1960, Carter stayed in New York and played with Dolphy and Don Ellis, cutting his first records with them. He worked with Randy Weston and Thelonious Monk, while playing and recording with Jaki Byard in the early '60s. Carter also toured and recorded with Bobby Timmons' trio, and played with Cannonball Adderley. He joined Art Farmer's group for a short time in 1963 before he was tapped to become a member of Miles Davis' band.

Carter remained with Davis until 1968, appearing on every crucial mid-'60s recording and teaming with Herbie Hancock and Tony Williams to craft a new, freer rhythm section sound. The high-profile job led to the reputation that's seen Carter become possibly the most recorded bassist in jazz history. He's been heard on an unprecedented number of recordings; some sources claim 500, others have estimated it to be as many as 1,000. The list of people he's played with is simply too great to be accurately and completely cited. Carter's been a member of New York Jazz Sextet and New York Jazz Quartet, V.S.O.P. Tour, and Milestone Jazzstars, and was in one of the groups featured in the film Round Midnight in 1986. He's led his own bands at various intervals since 1972, using a second bassist to keep time and establish harmony so he's free to provide solos. Carter even invented his own instrument, a piccolo bass. He's contributed many arrangements and compositions to both his groups and other bands, and made duo recordings with either Cedar Walton or Jim Hall. He's recorded for Embryo/Atlantic, CTI, Milestone, Timeless, EmArcy, Galaxy, Elektra, and Concord, and eventually landed at Blue Note for LPs including 1997's The Bass and I, 1998's So What, and 1999's Orfeu. At the dawn of the new millennium, Carter remained an active, in-demand artist, releasing a steady stream of albums and keeping a busy live schedule. 

When Skies Are Grey surfaced in early 2001, followed in 2002 by Stardust, Carter's tribute to the late bassist Oscar Pettiford. That same year, he joined saxophonist Houston Person for the duo's third album of standards, Dialogues. In 2006, another tribute album was released, Dear Miles, dedicated to Miles Davis, also on Blue Note. Several more small group solo albums followed including 2007's Japan-only It's the Time and 2008's Jazz and Bossa. In 2011, Carter delivered his first effort with big-band music, Ron Carter's Great Big Band featuring arrangements by conductor Robert M. Freedman and a bevy of name players including pianist Mulgrew Miller and drummer Lewis Nash. He then joined drummer Gerry Gibbs for two albums with 2013's Thrasher Dream Trio and 2014's We're Back. Also in 2014, Carter was backed by the WDR Big Band on My Personal Songbook. In 2016, the bassist once again paired with saxophonist Person for the duo album Chemistry. ~ Ron Wynn  https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/golden-striker-live-at-theaterst%C3%BCbchen-kassel-donald/id1226020388

Personnel:  Ron Carter – bass;  Donald Vega – piano; Russell Malone – guitar.

Live At Theaterstübchen Kassel