Saturday, October 28, 2017

Sonny Stitt, Zoot Sims - Inter-Action

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:09
Size: 80.5 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1965/2006
Art: Front

[8:00] 1. My Blue Heaven
[3:03] 2. The Saber
[6:51] 3. Katea
[5:29] 4. Fools Rush In
[7:17] 5. Look Down That Lonesome Road
[4:26] 6. I Want To Go Home

Finding this album serendipitously was a little like my going to Chicago's Plugged Nickel one Sunday in the '70s to hear Sonny Stitt and finding Sonny had managed to include on the date--contrary to my wildest expectations--Zoot Sims! In college I had soon been made aware of the West Coast vs. East Coast, cool bop vs. hard bop, Pacific Jazz vs. Blue Note, white vs. black cultural wars. Among saxophonists, Zoot Sims along with Getz, Cohn, Desmond, Konitz, etc. were roundly dismissed and out of favor whereas Trane, Rollins, Dexter, Ammons and Stitt were, according to the influential jazz "authorities" (who were from Chicago rather than a place like my esoteric N. Wisconsin village), the only guys worth listening to. Had they any idea that Stitt had recorded not only with Zoot but with, horrors! Jimmy Giuffre, I have little doubt their closed little worlds could not have withstood the shock.

Granted, Sonny is a more competitive player than Zoot, never meeting a conclave of tenor (or alto) players he wasn't eager to do battle with. At the Plugged Nickel, I recall that he remained standing on the stage while Zoot was content (or required) to stand on the floor, somewhat beneath Sonny on his left side. Moreover, Sonny was still using his Varitone device, which not only doubled his tones but amplified them, giving him a considerable advantage over the unmiked Zoot. But after the first set it became easy to ignore these disparities in favor of the swinging and inventive lines that Zoot was playing during each of his turns. Unlike Sonny (along with numerous other beboppers who, admittedly, often played for the "sport" of it), Zoot seemed to zone in exclusively on the tunes, the rhythm section, the opportunities to contribute to a whole and satisfying result.

Much the same can be heard on this recording. In fact, Zoot's approach seems to affect Sonny's playing for the better, making him less of a competitor than a "team player." Whoever came up with the title for this encounter must have listened carefully to the master tapes first. ~Samuel C.

Inter-Action

Jesse Cook - The Rumba Foundation

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:10
Size: 98.8 MB
Styles: Gypsy jazz, Flamenco
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[3:06] 1. Bogota By Bus
[3:49] 2. Santa Marta
[4:00] 3. Tuesday's Child
[3:31] 4. Manolo
[0:27] 5. Improv # 1
[3:37] 6. La Rumba D'el Jefe
[0:16] 7. Improv # 2
[4:45] 8. Gaita
[3:28] 9. Rain Day
[4:19] 10. Bombay Diner
[3:17] 11. Afternoon At Satie's
[3:46] 12. Cecilia
[4:43] 13. Homebound

The Rumba Foundation is Jesse Cook's eighth studio album in 14 years, a feat for any artist. With this album the Toronto-based Nuevo Flamenco guitarist found Canadian radio success, thanks to a collaboration with Canadian singer/songwriter Jeremy Fisher entitled "Cecilia," a collaboration that brought Cook's smooth skills to the masses in a way never before imagined. ~Matthew Chisling

The Rumba Foundation

The Andrew Scott Quintet - Blue Mercer

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:14
Size: 140.2 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[6:31] 1. Too Marvellous For Words
[5:19] 2. My Shining Hour
[4:49] 3. Tangerine
[6:27] 4. Lullaby For Mason
[4:49] 5. Day In, Day Out
[4:53] 6. Blue Mercer
[8:13] 7. Have A Heart
[7:27] 8. The Days Of Wine And Roses
[5:35] 9. Dream
[7:06] 10. This Time The Dream's On Me

Blue Mercer is Andrew Scott's tribute to Johnny Mercer, the legendary lyric writer who's feeling for jazz is evident in all of his collaborations with such gifted composers as Harold Arlen, Rube Bloom, Henry Mancini, and Richard Whiting. Pianist Gene DiNovi, in his perceptive observations of this music, states that "from the first note the music sounds and feels good while being interesting, intelligent and technically fine. I think Andrew sensed that J.M. was not only the most musical of lyricists, but he was also a good singer. This somehow comes through in all the melodies that wed his words. J.M.'s songs all possess a memorable title. They all tell a story. And they all swing."

Blue Mercer

Johnnie Ray - 16 Most Requested Songs

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:59
Size: 96.1 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 1991
Art: Front

[3:01] 1. Cry
[2:20] 2. Walkin' My Baby Back Home
[2:07] 3. All Of Me
[2:42] 4. Whiskey And Gin
[2:36] 5. Let's Walk That-A-Way
[2:22] 6. Don't Blame Me
[2:14] 7. The Little White Cloud That Cried
[2:37] 8. Just Walkin' In The Rain
[2:47] 9. (Here Am I) Broken Hearted
[2:38] 10. Tell The Lady I Said Goodbye
[2:58] 11. Why Should I Be Sorry
[2:15] 12. Glad Rag Doll
[2:52] 13. Hey There
[2:57] 14. Please, Mr. Sun
[2:13] 15. Such A Night
[3:12] 16. As Time Goes By (From Casablanca )

Johnny Ray's cultural significance -- which was only slightly less substantial than that of Elvis Presley -- can be summed up with this 45-minute compilation of his hits from 1951 through 1956. The singles are an amazing array of jazz and blues-inflected performances by a white singer, not unheard of at the time, but seldom spoken of as a desirable trait in the pop field in those days. Among those tracks, "All of Me," "Whiskey and Gin," "Walkin' My Baby Back Home," "Don't Blame Me," and "As Time Go By" are worth the price of the CD. There's also a good deal of pop music here, including the duet "Let's Walk That-A-Way" with Doris Day, which, unfortunately, fits easily into her '50s pop music output, and the pop choruses backing him on "Just Walkin' in the Rain" break the spell created by his most interesting vocal performances, but this CD is still a vivid portrait of a singer who broke lots of barriers -- and annoyed a lot of critics while doing it -- while Elvis Presley was still in high school. The sound is excellent, incidentally, and the notes by Will Friedwald are thorough, though one wishes there were recording and release dates attached to each song. ~Bruce Eder

16 Most Requested Songs

Hubert Laws - Land of Passion

Styles: Flute Jazz
Year: 1978
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:55
Size: 93,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:22)  1. Music Forever
(5:56)  2. Land of Passion
(7:16)  3. We're in Ecstasy
(6:47)  4. Heartbeats
(7:09)  5. The Key
(4:56)  6. We Will Be
(3:25)  7. Land of Passion (Single Edit)

When Columbia released Land of Passion in 1979, the album received scathing reviews from jazz critics. They knew Hubert Laws for his work as a jazz instrumentalist, and for the most part, Land of Passion isn't instrumental jazz  it isn't hard bop, post-bop, or even fusion. The main focus of this LP is mellow, mildly jazzy R&B/pop (with the occasional instrumental). So serious jazz standards shouldn't be applied. Unfortunately, the critics who trashed Land of Passion did apply serious jazz standards, which is sort of like a food critic lambasting an Italian restaurant because it doesn't provide Vietnamese or Cambodian cuisine. Land of Passion needs to be judged by R&B/pop and quiet storm standards, and when those standards are applied, one has to say that this record is likable but not mind-blowing. Laws was obviously going after the quiet storm crowd when he recorded gentle tunes like "Music Forever" and "We're in Ecstasy." Arguably, quiet storm music falls into two main categories: R&B/pop vocals (Luther Vandross, Phyllis Hyman, Anita Baker) and R&B-minded crossover jazz (Grover Washington, Jr., David Sanborn, Lonnie Liston Smith). For the most part, this LP (which had yet to be reissued on CD when the 21st century arrived) falls into the former category, although it does contain two gently funky instrumentals: "We Will Be" and "Heartbeats." Neither are masterpieces, but they have a lot more substance and integrity than the sort of elevator Muzak that Kenny G and Richard Elliot were known for in the 1980s and 1990s. Not one of Laws' essential releases, Land of Passion must be taken for what it is: a pleasant but unremarkable collection of mood music. ~ Alex Henderson https://www.allmusic.com/album/land-of-passion-mw0000875877

Personnel: Hubert Laws (alto, flute); Debra Laws, Eloise Laws, Blanch Laws, Johnny Laws (vocals); Roland Bautista (guitar); Dorothy Wade, Marcia Van Dyke, Janice Dower, Robert Sushel, Sandy Seymour, Arnold Belnick, Bonnie Douglas, Paul Shure, Endre Granat (violin, strings); Ron Cooper, Raymond Kelly, Nils Oliver (cello); Ronnie Laws (saxophone); Garnett Brown, Benny Powell, Maurice Spears (trombone); Raymond Brown, Oscar Brashear, Snooky Young, Bobby Bryant (brass); Patrice Rushen (piano); Larry Dunn (synthesizer); Leon "Ndugu" Chancler (drums); Victor Feldman (percussion).

Land of Passion

Liane Carroll - Up and Down

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:51
Size: 128,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:02)  1. Buy and Sell
(3:01)  2. What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life
(4:29)  3. Moanin'
(3:29)  4. Take Me Home
(6:11)  5. What Now My Love
(6:46)  6. Turn Out the Stars
(3:58)  7. Some Children See Him
(2:45)  8. Witchcraft
(5:33)  9. My Funny Valentine
(4:54) 10. Old Devil Moon / Killer Joe
(7:56) 11. Make Someone Happy
(2:41) 12. I Can Let Go Now

Liane Carroll is a much-admired British singer and pianist, winner of accolades including Musician Of The Year at the 2008 Parliamentary Jazz Awards. She has worked with musicians as varied as Sir Paul McCartney and Charlie Haden, while on this album her invited guests include tenor saxophonists Kirk Whalum and Julian Siegel, and Kenny Wheeler on flugelhorn. She already has a strong body of work to her name, but Up And Down might just be her finest album to date. Carroll's voice is superb bluesy, smooth, ballsy, cheeky, romantic, heartbreaking, and never less than honest. This combination makes Carroll eminently capable of performances of tremendous emotional intensity when the songs are upbeat and positive this results in moments of intense joy, when the songs are sad this intensity can be hard to bear. Aided by producer and horn player James McMillan and a roll-call of top British jazz musicians, Carroll draws out the full impact of these songs in some unexpected ways. The most surprising is her approach to "What Now My Love?" The opening Carroll singing over Mark Edwards' gospel-style organ with Whalum adding brief tenor phrases is in keeping with the song's usual sentiment, but everything moves up a few notches with the entry of Mark Hodgson's rock solid bass beat. As Whalum and Edwards add some funky and fiery riffs it's no longer a torch song, a cry of pain from a spurned lover. Now it seems from Carroll's bluesy but almost triumphant tone that she's engineered her lover's departure all along. "What now my love? A nice gin and tonic and a sit down I think. And good riddance."

"Buy and Sell" opens with the sounds of children at play, features electric guitar with an Ernie Isley vibe courtesy of Mark Jaimes and an electric piano solo from Edwards, and adds a vocal chorus courtesy of Carroll's multi-tracked voice. The result gives a fittingly late-60s feel to this beautiful Laura Nyro song. Wheeler guests on Bill Evans' "Turn Out The Stars," adding a starkly emotive solo to Carroll's poignant vocal. Carroll's singing on Tom Waits' "Take Me Home" and Rodgers and Hart's "My Funny Valentine" are two of her finest vocals. The emotional engagement of both performances is staggering. On Waits' ballad Carroll, playing some delicate and graceful piano phrases, makes a heartfelt plea to her lover that would melt all but the hardest of hearts. On "My Funny Valentine," Carroll, Edwards on piano and McMillan on flugelhorn give one of the album's most powerful performances: superbly stark and raw, it reaches into the song's heart to draw out the full poignancy of the words. Up And Down is beautiful. The song choices and arrangements are inspired, and the musicians are uniformly superb. Carroll is a singer of superb style, capable of projecting every nuance and subtlety of a lyric. What more is there to say? This is one of the finest vocal jazz albums to appear for many a moon. ~ Bruce Lindsay https://www.allaboutjazz.com/up-and-down-liane-carroll-quietmoney-recordings-review-by-bruce-lindsay.php

Personnel: Liane Carroll: vocals, piano (1, 2, 4, 8, 12); James McMillan: trumpet (1), flugelhorn (1, 2, 7, 9), celesta (2); Mark Bassey: trombone (2, 4, 7); Rob Leake: flute (2); Mark Edwards: piano (3, 6, 9, 10), Hammond organ (3, 5), electric piano (1); Simon Purcell: piano (11); Mark Jaimes: guitar (1, 12); Roger Carey: bass (4, 6, 8, 10); Mark Hodgson: bass (2, 3, 5); Steve Pearce: bass (1); Mark Fletcher: drums; Julian Siegel; tenor saxophone (11); Kirk Whalum: tenor saxophone (3, 5); Kenny Wheeler: flugelhorn (6).

Up and Down

Eliot Zigmund - Breeze

Styles: Jazz, Post-Bop 
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:30
Size: 131,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:49)  1. School Night
(8:00)  2. Homeland
(6:35)  3. I Wish I Knew
(7:24)  4. After
(6:21)  5. Breeze
(4:23)  6. From the Bottom Up
(4:22)  7. For Scott
(9:09)  8. Mathew, In Three
(4:23)  9. Where are you Now?

Recently I've been listening to Breeze, drummer Eliot Zigmund's 2008 release on the SteepleChase label. In part my interest in the recording stems from catching a couple of Zigmund's sideman gigs at The Turning Point Café in Piermont, NY. On those occasions I couldn't get a handle on all of the things that felt right about his playing. And describing some of the highlights in a live performance review didn't come close to capturing the essence of his style. The elements that initially intrigued me about Zigumnd's drumming came into clearer focus on three of the record's nine tracks, "School Night," "Homeland" and "Mathew, In Three." Zigmund is a refreshing change from the ever-growing number of trapsters who rule with an iron fist. There's a shadowy, indirect side to his playing that makes for an interesting contrast to his more assertive, straightforward traits. He functions very well at low dynamic levels, utilizes a minimum of strokes, avoids clutter, and often implies rather than explicitly states the beat.

Zigumud's style encompasses grace and grit you often hear both qualities in the course of just a few bars. He excels at listening, responding to and complementing tenor and soprano saxophonist Mike Lee, pianist Gary Versace and bassist Phil Palombi. Aside from playing a supportive role his drumming makes sense on its own terms. When Zigmund is at his best, you rarely notice his technique and execution. Instead, you feel his effect on the music and realize that he projects a distinct personality in ways that don't necessarily draw a lot of attention.The head of Mike Lee's composition, "School Night," the disc's opening track, is a prime example of Zigmund's resourcefulness. Utilizing every component of the drum set, he steps up and takes his place alongside Lee's tenor, yet never sounds particularly busy. Throughout the course of the swinging, thirty-two bar tune, Zigmund delineates time, plays substantial portions of the melody by way of accents on the snare, toms, bass drum and cymbal, and offers a number of stimulating comments. On the bridge his repetitive two and three stroke fills to the snare and tom-toms blithely bounce away from the melody and create a shuffle-like feel.

Zigmund's comping during Lee's solo actively shapes the music. Snare accents some nimble, others chomping interact with and work their way around Lee's somewhat deliberate lines. In the instances when the saxophonist becomes verbose, the drummer's commentary all but disappears. Working at a dynamic level below Palombi's bass line, in the early stages of Versace's improvisation Zigmund's snare tap dances and his cymbal sizzles. He then handles the pianist's brief upheavals in different ways. During one of Versace's adamant passages the drummer offers firm snare strokes in near unison and tops them off with a brief, scrambled fill. Another eruption elicits light, carefully placed snare accents followed by the broad hiss of the cymbal and stout hits to the snare and bass drums. During Versace's slow, dream-like introduction to his composition "Homeland," Zigmund deftly executes neat pecks to the cymbals, brief buzz rolls, and single strokes to the snare. All are played at a very low volume. 

He's not just accompanying the pianist; there's an element of independence which makes the music a little larger and a little more certain. Offering only a hint of a steady pulse, his drumming is neither random nor schematic. It's all the more effective for what's left unsaid. Any more strokes would be too busy; any less would run the risk of sounding disjointed or haphazard. At times during Lee's solo on his "Mathew, In Three," Zigmund is a model of restraint, gently patting the cymbal and adding the occasional well-placed accent. Often several bars go by in which he barely makes a ripple. In other instances Zigmund transforms the lovely waltz into something a lot more vigorous. Rim shots sound like a nail gun; the kick drum resembles a boot stomping on a wood floor. There's more than one fill in which impudent strokes are jammed into tight spaces. During these periods, the insistent, somewhat stiff quality of his drumming always swings. ~ David A.Orthmann https://www.allaboutjazz.com/eliot-zigmund-eliot-zigmund-by-david-a-orthmann.php

Personnel: Eliot Zigmund (drums); Mike Lee (tenor sax; Gary Versace (piano); Phil Palombi (bass)

Breeze

Junior Mance - Live At The Top

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1968
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:17
Size: 84,3 MB
Art: Front

(9:33)  1. Before This Time Another Year
(9:39)  2. I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free
(9:12)  3. That's All
(7:51)  4. Turning Point

This recording comes from three live gigs Junior Mance played at one of New York's better jazz watering holes, the room at the top of The Gate, during September 1968. The four cuts on the album were selected from ten tunes actually taped, but which never made it to the final release. If any of the six that ended up on the cutting-room floor came close to these performances, then some awfully good jazz was wasted. Right from the first track, it's clear this is going to be a top-quality and high-energy outing. With David "Fathead" Newman on flute in lieu of his usual tenor sax, "Turning Point" combines the drive of bop with the flowing lines of the flute, giving a very unique aural experience. Never forgetting his musical base, jazz-soul, Mance is joined by Wilbur Little on bass and Paul Gusman on drums for a high-speed version of "Before This Time Next Year," with Mance's special way of handling the rhythmic and harmonic settings coming to the fore. This track features some quite amazing ebb-and-flow bass by Little and clearly was a favorite with the audience. Mance's zealous interpretation of Billy Taylor's "I Wish I Knew How It Would Be to Be Free" takes on gospel proportions, with the audience getting caught up in the fervor of it all. Newman returns, this time on tenor for his take on the melody line of "That's All." This is another satisfying session by Mance, who never received the attention and credit he merited for his playing. ~ Dave Nathan https://www.allmusic.com/album/live-at-the-top-of-the-gate-mw0000898070

Personnel:  Junior Mance - piano;  David Newman - flute, tenor saxophone;  Wilbur Little - bass;  Rudy Collins, Paul Gusman - drums.

Live At The Top

Monty Alexander Quintet - Island Grooves: Ivory & Steel And Jamboree Disc 1 And Disc 2

Album: Island Grooves:  Ivory & Steel   Disc 1

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1988
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:08
Size: 113,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:49)  1. Happy Lypso
(4:01)  2. Cavatina
(5:40)  3. Montevideo
(4:55)  4. S. K. J.
(4:16)  5. That's The Way It Is
(6:29)  6. Work Song
(3:48)  7. Medley: Impressions/So What
(7:25)  8. Stella By Starlight
(3:41)  9. Street Life

I don't often review reissues, but here's a particular noteworthy re-release of two albums that somehow escaped my attention in the 80s, especially being the steel drum lover that I am. Concord has launched a reissue series which pairs two similar albums by an artist on a specially-priced 2-CD set. In this case, it's Jamaican-born pianist Monty Alexander's collaborations with steel drum virtuoso Othello Molineaux, 1980'sIvory & Steeland 1988'sJamboree. These discs will be immensely satisfying both to lovers of straight-ahead jazz and lovers of Caribbean music. The first disc,Ivory & Steel, is a blend of Alexander originals and jazz standards. Most tunes are fast, upbeat, and happy. Alexander and Molineaux are amazing both in terms of their fleet-fingered dexterity and for their intelligent, well-crafted improvizations, especially on Richard Evans' "Montevideo" and the medley of Coltrane's "Impressions" and Miles' "So What." "Cavatina" provides a break with it's gentle, almost crying balladry, as does the blues-drenched "That's the Way It Is." The first disc closes with an unexpected choice, Joe Sample and Will Jennings' "Street Life" - but the Crusaders' vocal R&B hit is adapted to this setting nicely as a duet with only Alexander's piano buoyed by Robert Thomas, Jr.'s percussion. The second disc,Jamboree, features a higher proportion of Alexander originals (great tunes), plus a couple Jamaican folk songs. The musical emphasis here is less on straight-ahead jazz and more on Caribbean music and adapted pop tunes (Vincent Ford's "No Woman No Cry" and Joni Mitchell's "Big Yellow Taxi"), but the end result is every bit as musically satisfying. Also on board is a second steel drummer, Len "Boogsie" Sharpe. On some occasions, the songs are enhanced by the rich sonorities of lower-pitched pans. An uncredited vocalist (probably Alexander) enlivens the two Jamaican folk songs, the opener "Sly Mongoose" and the closer "Linstead Market" - both tunes are fun and add to the Caribbean flavor and authenticity of the program. (Concord Picante CCD2-4940) ~ Dave Huges https://www.allaboutjazz.com/island-grooves-monty-alexander-concord-music-group-review-by-dave-hughes.php

Personnel: Monty Alexander - piano; Othello Molineaux, Len "Boogsie" Sharpe - steel drums; Robert Thomas, Jr. - percussion; Frank Gant, Marvin "Smitty" Smith - drums; Gerald Wiggins, Marshall Wood - bass; Bernard Montgomery - electric bass.


Album: Island Grooves: Jamboree   Disc 2

Year: 1988
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:08
Size: 123,3 MB

(4:01)  1. Sly Mongoose
(6:35)  2. Think Twice
(3:56)  3. No Woman No Cry
(5:08)  4. Look Up
(4:57)  5. Accompong
(5:22)  6. You Can See
(4:24)  7. Big Yellow Taxi
(4:07)  8. Reggae Later
(6:15)  9. Crying
(4:18) 10. Linstead Market


Friday, October 27, 2017

Bill Evans - A Simple Matter Of Conviction

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:23
Size: 85.6 MB
Styles: Post bop, Piano jazz
Year: 1967/2016
Art: Front

[3:18] 1. A Simple Matter Of Conviction
[4:09] 2. Stella By Starlight
[3:40] 3. Orbit (Unless It's You)
[4:17] 4. Laura
[5:13] 5. My Melancholy Baby
[4:10] 6. I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
[4:56] 7. Star Eyes
[4:02] 8. Only Child
[3:33] 9. These Things Called Changes

What separated this from the average good Bill Evans date was the inclusion of Shelly Manne on drums, who inventively pushed and took unexpected chances. This was, I believe, Eddie Gomez' (bass) debut release with Evans (piano) and it was quite impressive. There were numerous takes at this session and judging from Chuck Briefer's liners it might be interesting to hear them released. ~Bob Rusch

A Simple Matter Of Conviction

Jessica Molaskey - Portraits Of Joni

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:30
Size: 127.1 MB
Styles: Folk
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[3:23] 1. Help Me
[3:40] 2. Dreamland/Carey
[5:12] 3. A Case Of You
[2:41] 4. The Dry Cleaner From Des Moines
[3:59] 5. Marcie
[3:48] 6. In France They Kiss On Main Street
[3:46] 7. The Last Time I Saw Richard
[3:17] 8. Raised On Robbery
[3:06] 9. Little Green
[4:09] 10. Circle Game/Waters Of March
[6:09] 11. All I Want/Blue
[5:17] 12. Chelsea Morning/Aquelas Coisas Todas
[4:06] 13. Both Sides Now
[2:50] 14. Big Yellow Taxi

Extremely well done. Captures the frankness of Mitchell’s lyrics and songs with a distinctive edge and facility of her own. A terrific match of singer and Song Book. Molaskey respects the lyrics, as usual, and understands the irony, wit, or pain under the melodies in the lyrics. This also represents a big step for Ms. Molaskey away from pop/theatre songs to contemporary “art” songs from the troubadours, such as Carole King, being honored these days. The shifting rhythm, keys, language of Joni Mitchell’s songs are forthright and this set delivers the integrity it deserves. ~Addisson DeWitt

Portraits Of Joni

The Danny Moss Quartet - Steampower!

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:41
Size: 177.8 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[7:24] 1. Shiny Stockings
[6:28] 2. Doggin' Around
[5:25] 3. Limehouse Blues
[5:55] 4. This Is Always
[5:41] 5. Robin Hood
[4:50] 6. Day By Day
[5:55] 7. I'm Beginning To See The Light
[5:33] 8. Falling In Love Is Wonderful
[6:00] 9. Robbin's Nest
[7:23] 10. But Beautiful
[5:07] 11. The Surrey With The Fringe On Top
[5:42] 12. This Can't Be Love
[6:13] 13. Take The A Train

Dennis Moss MBE (16 August 1927 – 28 May 2008) was a British jazz tenor saxophonist. He was known for playing with most of the high-profile figures of British jazz, including Vic Lewis, Ted Heath, Johnny Dankworth, Alex Welsh, and Humphrey Lyttelton.

The son of a toolmaker, Moss was born in Redhill, Surrey in 1927. At the age of thirteen, he saw a jazz band appear briefly in a Bowery Boys film on a family cinema visit, and was so inspired by the clarinet playing that he swapped his most valued possession, his ice skates, for a second-hand instrument of his own. Self-taught on both this and the tenor saxophone, which he took up at school, he started playing professionally after leaving at the age of sixteen.

A spell of National Service at the age of eighteen saw Moss performing for three years in a Royal Air Force regional band. After leaving the forces he joined the Vic Lewis Orchestra, and in the next few years moved around various bands, especially ones with the potential for a soloist. In 1952, he joined Ted Heath's band, a well-paid role which he described as "the prestige job of all time". Soon, however, Moss found the group's focus on novelty numbers and faithful musical reproductions, including that of solos, to be limiting to his skills as an improviser, and he left after three years. In 1957 Moss joined John Dankworth's orchestra. Here, with the band's encouragement, he began to develop his characteristic saxophone sound, eschewing the contemporary focus on light tone and fast phrasing in favour of a thicker and more spacious sound informed by American pioneers such as Coleman Hawkins and Ben Webster. When the Dankworth band visited America, Moss' style was singled out for compliment by Count Basie, who declared his playing "real Texas tenor... the way it should sound!" He left Dankworth's band in 1962, as the band itself was winding down. From here, he joined Humphrey Lyttelton's group, where he continued to hone his style for another two years.

He then married jazz singer Jeanie Lambe, and the two moved from London to Sussex at her suggestion. Here, he formed his own quartet, playing a mix of club gigs, festival appearances and radio broadcasts for the BBC. He continued to tour with this quartet throughout the 1970s and 1980s, also playing and recording with high-profile singers like Tony Bennett, Ella Fitzgerald, Bing Crosby, Sarah Vaughan and Rosemary Clooney, and appearing as a guest soloist with American musicians such as Buck Clayton in the mid-'60s and Louis Armstrong on his last British tour. Moss also co-founded British jazz "supergroup" Pizza Express All-Stars in 1980, playing with them until the end of the 1980s.

Moss and Lambe moved to Perth, Western Australia in 1989, although Moss continued to play regularly in Europe; indeed, his distance from Europe only seemed to increase the level of demand for his performances there. Moss was appointed MBE in 1990.

Steampower!

Bryan Ferry - Another Time, Another Place

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:03
Size: 96.3 MB
Styles: Contemporary pop/rock
Year: 1974/1999
Art: Front

[4:36] 1. The 'in' Crowd
[2:54] 2. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
[4:44] 3. Walk A Mile In My Shoes
[3:32] 4. Funny How Time Slips Away
[6:46] 5. You Are My Sunshine
[2:54] 6. (What A) Wonderful World
[3:57] 7. It Ain't Me Babe
[3:34] 8. Fingerpoppin'
[4:15] 9. Help Me Make It Through The Night
[4:45] 10. Another Time, Another Place

Another Time, Another Place isn't as immediately thrilling as Ferry's solo debut, but still is a great listen. The same core band that backed Ferry up on the earlier record stays more or less in place here. If, like Roxy over the years, this collection is a touch less frenetic at points in comparison to Ferry's earlier solo stab, the opening blast through "The 'In' Crowd" doesn't show it. Porter's guitar rips along as intensely as Phil Manzanera's can, and the whole thing makes Dobie Gray's original take seem pretty tame. Beyond that, things will be familiar to anyone who's heard These Foolish Things -- same general atmosphere, same overall approach of Ferry taking classic originals and putting his own proto-lounge-lizard stamp on them, mixing energetic versions with far calmer ones. A very intriguing development is his inclusion of efforts from up-and-coming country writers and singers -- thus, a loud and groovy cover of "Funny How Time Slips Away" by Willie Nelson and another of Kris Kristofferson's "Help Me Make It Through the Night." Other country atmospheres slip in here and there via another nod to Elvis ("Walk a Mile in My Shoes," originally by Joe South), while other classics get tapped with versions of "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" and Sam Cooke's "(What A) Wonderful World." The album as a whole feels a touch more formal than its predecessor, but Ferry and company, plus various brass and string sections, turn on the showiness enough to make it all fun. A harbringer of solo albums to come appears at end -- the title track, a Ferry original. ~Ned Raggett

Another Time, Another Place

Jan Lundgren Trio - Plays The Music Of Jule Styne

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:43
Size: 152.7 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[4:20] 1. You Say You Care
[4:26] 2. People
[7:45] 3. Make Someone Happy
[6:54] 4. What Makes The Sunset
[7:48] 5. It's You Or No-One
[5:09] 6. Dance Only With Me
[7:22] 7. The Things We Did Last Summer
[6:39] 8. The Party's Over
[5:54] 9. Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out To Dry
[5:22] 10. Time After Time
[5:00] 11. I Fall In Love Too Easily

Jan Lundgren, piano; Mattias Svensson, bass; Morten Lund, drums. Special guests -- Eric Alexander, tenor saxophone; Mark Murphy.

In reviewing an earlier album by Swedish pianist Jan Lundgren ( Bird of Passage, Four Leaf Clover), I wrote that "he has, among other things, exquisite taste, marvelous touch, flawless technique, an attentive ear, power to spare... and a bounteous wellspring of creative ideas." Listeners should be pleased to learn that nothing has changed.

Well, one thing has changed—the music itself. Rather than playing mostly his own compositions, as he did on Passage and the more recent For Listeners Only (Sittel 9273), or Swedish folk music, as on Landscapes (Sittel 9297), Lundgren has chosen to reprise songs by the renowned Broadway/Hollywood tunesmith Jule Styne whose body of work includes such memorable themes as "Make Someone Happy," "People," "The Party's Over," "Time After Time" and many others. Lundgren has also enlarged the trio on half a dozen numbers, inviting vocalists Cæcelie Norby ("Make Someone Happy," "The Party's Over") and Mark Murphy ("What Makes the Sunset," "The Things We Did Last Summer") and tenor saxophonist Eric Alexander ("It's You or No One," "Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out to Dry") to help enliven the session. Why he found it necessary to do so is anyone's guess, but Alexander's fiery commentary is welcome in any framework, no questions asked, and he burns some serious rubber on "It's You or No One."

The trio sans guests opens with "You Say You Care" and "People," closes with "Time After Time" and "I Fall in Love Too Easily" and is heard as well on "Dance Only with Me." Lundgren, bassist Mattias Svensson and drummer Morten Lund are fastened at the hips, Lundgren solos astutely on every number, and Svensson and Lund respond emphatically whenever their names are called. While Norby and Murphy are, to me, the shaky links in the chain, those who appreciate vocals more than I may see that quite differently.

In any event, Lundgren, his capable colleagues and Alexander's impassioned tenor make the album well worth one's consideration, as do the wonderful songs by the great Jule Styne. ~Jack Bowers

Plays The Music Of Jule Styne

Walt Dickerson - To My Queen

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:26
Size: 74.3 MB
Styles: Post bop, Vibraphone jazz
Year: 1962/1996
Art: Front

[17:30] 1. To My Queen
[11:01] 2. How Deep Is The Ocean
[ 3:54] 3. God Bless The Child



To My Queen is Walt Dickerson's crowning achievement, a perfect balance between his intellectually advanced concepts and deeply felt passion. Dickerson had always displayed a fertile imagination, but there hadn't been much indication that his vision could be as expansive as it was on To My Queen. Never before had he attempted such extended, freely structured performances, which makes the album's consistency and focus all the more impressive. Like the foreground of a canvas, the listener's attention naturally falls on the title cut, a side-long, 17-and-a-half-minute opus (written in tribute to his wife, Elizabeth) that became Dickerson's signature piece. It's deliberate, spare, and tender, with the soloists accompanied by either a gentle swing or the barest hints of support. Dickerson's shimmering opening statements are followed by thoughtful explorations from pianist Andrew Hill and bassist George Tucker, while drummer Andrew Cyrille offers subtle, whisper-quiet shadings, save for occasional drum rolls that come off like momentarily swelling passions amidst all the introspection. The second half of the album maintains the mood set by the first, featuring an 11-minute version of "How Deep Is the Ocean" and a vibes/bass duet on "God Bless the Child" that trumps Dickerson's earlier effort in the same vein. This is arguably the finest quartet Dickerson ever led, not just because of the advanced musicianship and sympathetic interplay, but also because each member serves the material with taste and care. The whole album is swathed in a gauzy glow that speaks even more eloquently than its creator's conceptual ambition; this is music from the heart as well as the mind. ~Steve Huey

To My Queen

Buddy DeFranco & Oscar Peterson - Buddy DeFranco Meets The Oscar Peterson Quartet - Hark

Styles: Clarinet Jazz 
Year: 1985
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:46
Size: 115,8 MB
Art: Front

( 7:00)  1. All Too Soon
( 5:04)  2. Summer Me, Winter Me
(11:09)  3. Llovisna (Light Rain)
( 5:13)  4. By Myself
( 5:23)  5. Joy Spring
( 5:08)  6. This Is All I Ask
( 6:31)  7. Hark
( 4:18)  8. Why Am I

This CD reissue of a Pablo date by clarinetist Buddy DeFranco teams him with pianist Oscar Peterson, guitarist Joe Pass, bassist Niels Pedersen and drummer Martin Drew. They perform a few obscure originals plus Duke Ellington's "All Too Soon," "By Myself" and Clifford Brown's "Joy Spring." DeFranco has been very consistent throughout his long recording career but the presence of Peterson and Pass clearly inspired him to play even better than usual. Recommended. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/hark-mw0000201630

Personnel: Buddy DeFranco (clarinet); Oscar Peterson (piano); Joe Pass (guitar); Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen (bass); Martin Drew (drums)                

Buddy DeFranco Meets The Oscar Peterson Quartet - Hark

Lannie Garrett - Comes Love

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:01
Size: 126,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:12)  1. Easy Street
(2:34)  2. You're A Sweetheart
(5:13)  3. Detour Ahead
(3:53)  4. I Don't Know Enough About You
(4:06)  5. Invitation To The Blues
(3:41)  6. You're Lookin' At Me
(4:54)  7. I Wonder
(3:15)  8. You Can Be Replaced
(4:56)  9. Easy Living
(4:14) 10. Comes Love
(3:42) 11. Pickin' Up After You
(4:19) 12. Falling Back In Love With You
(4:15) 13. Time After Time
(1:42) 14. Go Slow

With a play list featuring, but not limited to, torch songs, Lannie Garrett's third album zeros in on her versatility in delivering a set of 14 tunes cutting across different styles of music. Garrett's home base is Denver, CO, where she was named "Favorite Female Vocalist" six years in a row by the Denver Post. Along the way, she has appeared with such luminaries as Bob Hope and Bill Cosby and opened for her idol Ray Charles. On this album, Garrett is joined by a cluster of very good musicians with the trio of Eric Gunnison, Mike Marlier, and Kenny Walker augmented by other musicians on various tracks. Prominent jazz-pop sax player Nelson Rangell shows up on several as saxophonist, flutist, and whistler! He whistles well, but he is no Elmo Tanner. Rangell's soulful tenor saxophone on "I Didn't Know Enough About You" helps to create a depressing mood that seems to be proper for this not-so-happy tune. Rangell turns whistler on "I Wonder," which Garrett leans on to construct a chilling picture of a dark, rainy street scene as she works through this tune. His tenor returns taking on a funky tone as Garrett goes vamp on the not oft recorded "You Can Be Replaced." Things get a bit brighter on "Comes Love" as Kevin Bollinger's muted trumpet figures beneath Garrett's voice and around Eric Gunnison's piano. Mitch Chmara's electric guitar makes significant contributions on this track. One of the highlights of the album is a vocal duet rendition of "Pickin' Up After You" as Garrett is joined by Tommy Malone from the the Subdudes. Together they fashion a colorful blend of Motown and country, with Kevin Bollinger's trumpet providing the bulk of the instrumental support. Contrast this with the other vocal duet on the set where Garrett and Chris Daniels of the Kings blend for a medium tempo, bouncy straightforward interpretation of Bobby Troup's "You're Lookin' at Me."This album amply demonstrates that Garrett is comfortable with any number of vocal styles, straight-ahead singing, R&B, country, and the blues. Although her vocal skills are not extraordinary, she certainly puts everything she has into each song she delivers, making her effort very credible as well as entertaining. This album is a set of good performances from a well-rounded entertainer and is recommended. ~ Dave Nathan https://www.allmusic.com/album/comes-love-mw0000238877  

?Personnel: Lannie Garrett (vocals); Chris Daniels (vocals, acoustic guitar); Tommy Malone (vocals); Kip Kuepper (strings); Nelson Rangell (saxophone, flute, whistle); Kevin Bollinger (trumpet); Eric Gunnison (piano); Mitch Chmara (guitar); Kenny Walker (bass); Mike Marler (drums).             

Comes Love

Joshua Redman Quartet - MoodSwing

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:58
Size: 160,7 MB
Art: Front

( 8:43)  1. Sweet Sorrow
( 7:43)  2. Chill
(11:12)  3. Rejoice
( 4:33)  4. Faith
( 5:05)  5. Alone In The Morning
( 5:50)  6. Mischief
( 5:43)  7. Dialogue
( 5:12)  8. The Oneness Of Two (In Three)
( 4:53)  9. Past In The Present
( 6:54) 10. Obsession
( 4:05) 11. Headin' Home

In the extensive liner notes of this CD, tenor saxophonist Joshua Redman writes that the main problem with jazz at the time was not the music but the public perception of it as forbidding and overly intellectual; that in reality jazz is quite fun and emotional. Those descriptions can certainly be applied to Redman's music, which, while pulling at the boundaries of modern hard bop, is also fairly easy to grab on to. Joined by his regular bandmembers of the period (pianist Brad Mehldau, bassist Christian McBride and drummer Brian Blade), Redman performs a full set of originals which, although not derivative, do fit into the straight-ahead tradition. At this point in time, Redman was growing from album to album, having already started at a high level. A fine outing. 
~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/moodswing-mw0000117047

Joshua Redman Quartet: Joshua Redman (tenor & soprano saxophone); Brad Mehldau (piano); Christian McBride (acoustic bass); Brian Blade (drums).   

MoodSwing

Jeremy Steig - Something Else

Styles: Flute Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:09
Size: 160,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:40)  1. Home
(4:52)  2. Cakes
(4:12)  3. Swamp Carol
(4:15)  4. Down Strech
(6:52)  5. Give Me Some
(8:02)  6. Come With Me
(2:22)  7. Dance Of The Mind
(5:23)  8. Up Tempo Thing
(5:55)  9. Elefant Hump
(3:03) 10. Rock # 6
(6:32) 11. Slow Blues
(5:52) 12. Rock # 9
(7:04) 13. Something Else

One of the early pioneers of fusion, flutist Jeremy Steig often gets a bit overlooked in jazz history books because he did not record much for major labels. This particular CD reissue, which was originally titled "Fusion," is an excellent showcase for this artist, who is heard on the regular flute, an alto flute, a bass flute, and a piccolo. He is joined by keyboardist Jan Hammer, electric bassist Gene Perla (replaced by Eddie Gomez on two numbers), and drummer/percussionist Don Alias. They perform 12 diverse Steig originals (some of which were co-written with Hammer) and one tune by the keyboardist, music that straddle the boundaries between early fusion, post-bop, blues, and swinging jazz. Steig is heard throughout in prime form on this somewhat scarce budget release of material originally cut for the Groove Merchant label. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/something-else-mw0000194566

Personnel: Jeremey Steig (flute, alto & bass flutes, alto piccolo); Jan Hammer (electric piano, Chinese gong); Eddie Gomez, Gene Perla (bass); Don Alias (drums, congas, clap drums, percussion)        

Something Else

Jonathan Butler - Do You Love Me?

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:59
Size: 121,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:10)  1. Song for Elizabeth
(4:34)  2. Do You Love Me?
(4:33)  3. The Other Side of the World
(4:43)  4. Life After You
(4:05)  5. New Life
(4:16)  6. Dancing on the Shore
(4:29)  7. You Don't Belong To Me
(3:54)  8. The Way You Look Tonight
(4:18)  9. Amen
(4:01) 10. A Kiss
(5:26) 11. Lost to Love
(4:23) 12. My Only Joy

On Jonathan Butler's N2K Encoded Music debut, Do You Love Me, he continues his jack-of-two-trades approach, balancing R&B-based vocal tunes with easy, acoustic guitar-based instrumentals. While it's a friendly enough listen, Butler here doesn't display a powerful enough mastery of either format. His guttural, heartfelt vocal style reminiscent of Jon Secada can make even the most Lionel Richie-esque lyric seem deeper than it is (even a new song with a title like "The Way You Look Tonight"), but few of the adult-oriented vocal tunes here are as memorable or hooky as his best-known hit, "Sarah Sarah." "Do You Love Me?," for instance, should be a deep, emotional moment, but comes off as a pleasant, easily dismissed conversation. Fortunately, "You Don't Belong to Me" has more lyrical bite, nicely underscored with a percussive guitar line underneath his angry tone. Butler should put more of that pointed energy into his play-it-safe instrumentals, which generally gallop along smoothly without building much steam. The best one can do with this sort of album is like Butler a lot. ~ Jonathan Widran https://www.allmusic.com/album/do-you-love-me-mw0000595283

Personnel: Jonathan Butler (vocals, guitar, programming); Tom Scott (soprano saxophone, synthesizer); Kirk Whalum (tenor saxophone); Dave Grusin (Fender Rhodes); Larry Kimpel (bass, fretless bass, background vocals); Portia Griffin, Yvonne Williams, Earl Buffington (background vocals).           

Do You Love Me?