Monday, February 26, 2018

Bennie Moten's Kansas City Orchestra - The Best

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:15
Size: 87.6 MB
Styles: Big band, Early jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[3:01] 1. Get Low-Down Blues
[3:03] 2. Ill Natured Blues
[2:55] 3. Kansas City Breakdown
[2:50] 4. Kansas City Shuffle 1
[2:48] 5. Kansas City Shuffle 2
[2:31] 6. Kater Street Rag
[3:20] 7. Moten Swing
[2:59] 8. Moten's Stomp
[3:21] 9. Muscle Shoals Blues
[2:52] 10. Rumba Negro Spanish Stomp
[3:16] 11. Small Black
[2:43] 12. South 1
[2:31] 13. South 2

In the late 1920s, Bennie Moten's Kansas City Orchestra was the most sucessful Jazz band of the Midwest. The band toured all over the country and had a top selling recording in 1927 for Victor named "South". In 1929, the young Count Basie of The Blue Devils joined the band, and several other members of that band soon followed. Among them were bass player Walter Page, trumpeter Hot Lips Page, vocalist Jimmy Rushing and guitarist Eddie Durham (the first guitarist to experiment with proto-amplifiers, in the solo of Band Box Shuffle in October 1929). The acquisition of all these members of the Blue Devils caused the exodus of long-time Moten Band members Thamon Hayes and Harlan Leonard, who founded their own ensemble.

When Moten hired Ben Webster and Eddie Barefield in 1932, the modernization of the band was complete. Later that same year, Moten recorded Moten's Swing, one of the first recordings to use a riff, the foundation of Kansas City jazz. Count Basie took over the band after Moten's death in 1935.

The Best mc
The Best zippy

Airto Moreira - Homeless

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:23
Size: 115.3 MB
Styles: Latin, Brazilian rhythms
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[4:45] 1. Vira Poeira (Burning To Dust)
[4:44] 2. Come As You Are
[4:37] 3. 700 Years
[3:02] 4. After These Messages
[5:02] 5. Street Vendors (D'jmbo)
[4:14] 6. Wake Up Now
[6:17] 7. Homeless (Around The Fire)
[6:58] 8. Samba 4 Sale
[5:57] 9. Ginga Sem Fronteira
[4:41] 10. The Last One

Although Airto Moreira was never a jazz purist, most of his work has been jazz-oriented. From his years with Chick Corea's first Return to Forever lineup to his classic CTI dates of the 1970s to his work on wife Flora Purim's albums, the Brazilian drummer/vocalist has been known for combining jazz with Brazilian music, rock, and funk. No one could ever accuse Purim's husband of being someone who is only interested in showing the world how fast he can play John Coltrane's "Giant Steps," but it is safe to say that most of Moreira's work has been jazz-oriented even though it isn't straight-ahead bop. Homeless, however, is a Moreira project that has very little to do with jazz. This diverse, highly rhythmic CD draws on everything from pop, funk, hip-hop, and Afro-Brazilian tribal chanting to club and rave music, but jazz considerations aren't a priority. Although Homeless isn't the least bit predictable, there is something that ties all the material together: rhythm. Whether Moreira is embracing melodic Brazilian pop on the introspective "Wake Up Now" (which features his daughter, singer Diana Moreira Booker), getting into Afro-Brazilian tribal sounds on "The Last One" and "Come As You Are" (which are all rhythm and no melody), or getting into a moody yet funky rave/trance groove on "Vira Poeira (Burning to Dust)," the common denominator is Moreira's distinctively Brazilian sense of rhythm. The lead vocals are shared by Moreira and Booker; while Moreira sings in Portuguese, his daughter handles the English lyrics. Not surprisingly, Booker sounds somewhat like Purim, although she does have an appealing delivery of her own. This likable, if a bit uneven, CD isn't among Moreira's essential releases, but it's an intriguing addition to his catalog -- and he deserves credit for trying something a bit different. ~Alex Henderson

Homeless mc
Homeless zippy

Richie Cole - The Alto Sax Of Richie Cole

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:05
Size: 119.2 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[5:37] 1. There Will Never Be Another You
[4:35] 2. On Misty Mornings
[6:45] 3. House Of Jazz
[4:18] 4. Sister Sadie
[2:09] 5. Emily
[4:26] 6. I Love Lucy
[6:00] 7. Night In Tunisia
[7:06] 8. Satin Doll
[4:26] 9. Softly As In A Morning Sunrise
[5:58] 10. Waterhouse Blues
[0:40] 11. Stardust

Richie started playing alto saxophone when he was 10 years old in his home town of Trenton, New Jersey. Influenced by Sonny Rollins and Charlie Parker, Cole’s talent and dedication won him a full scholarship from Downbeat Magazine to the Berklee School of Music in Boston.

His professional career began in 1969 when he joined the Buddy Rich Big Band. And after stints with the Lionel Hampton Big Band and the Doc Severinsen Big Band, Cole formed his own quintet and toured worldwide, doing a great deal to popularize bebop and his own “Alto Madness” style in the 70’s and early 80’s.

Cole has performed and recorded with the great vocalese artist Eddie Jefferson, the Manhattan Transfer, Bobby Enriquez, Freddie Hubbard, Sonny Stitt, Art Pepper, Tom Waits, Boots Randolph, and Nancy Wilson, to name just a few of his musical collaborations. Notably, Cole has performed at the Village Vanguard and Carnegie Hall as well as gave a command performance for the Queen of England.

Cole has recorded over 50 albums and CDs, including his top hit album “Hollywood Madness” (1979 Muse Records) and his tribute album to Leonard Bernstein, “Richie Cole Plays West Side Story” (1997 Music Masters Jazz). A prolific composer, Cole also finds time to arrange for full big bands, symphony orchestras and frequent performances at jazz festivals worldwide. Moreover, he enjoys sharing his love of music with younger generations and is active recording, touring and presenting university master classes.

The Alto Sax Of Richie Cole mc
The Alto Sax Of Richie Cole zippy

Donald Byrd - Places And Spaces

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1975
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:48
Size: 83,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:08)  1. Change (Makes You Want To Hustle)
(6:10)  2. Wind Parade
(4:30)  3. (Fallin' Like) Dominoes
(6:17)  4. Places And Spaces
(5:22)  5. You And The Music
(3:43)  6. Night Whistler
(4:35)  7. Just My Imagination (Running Away With Me)

Reuniting with Larry Mizell, the man behind his last three LPs, Donald Byrd continues to explore contemporary soul, funk, and R&B with Places and Spaces. In fact, the record sounds more urban than its predecessor, which often played like a Hollywood version of the inner city. Keeping the Isaac Hayes, Curtis Mayfield, and Sly Stone influences of Street Lady, Places and Spaces adds elements of Marvin Gaye, Earth, Wind & Fire, and Stevie Wonder, which immediately makes the album funkier and more soulful. Boasting sweeping string arrangements, sultry rhythm guitars, rubbery bass, murmuring flügelhorns, and punchy horn charts, the music falls halfway between the cinematic neo-funk of Street Lady and the proto-disco soul of Earth, Wind & Fire. Also, the title Places and Spaces does mean something there are more open spaces within the music, which automatically makes it funkier. Of course, it also means that there isn't much of interest on Places and Spaces for jazz purists, but the album would appeal to most fans of Philly soul, lite funk, and proto-disco. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine https://www.allmusic.com/album/places-and-spaces-mw0000616571

Personnel: Donald Byrd (vocals, trumpet, flugelhorn); Fonce Mizell (vocals, trumpet, Clavinet, clavichord); Larry Mizell (vocals, piano); Kay Haith (vocals); James Carter (whistling); Craig McMullen, John Rowin (guitar); Tyree Glenn (tenor saxophone); Ray Brown (trumpet); George Bohannon (trombone); Skip Scarborough (electric piano); Chuck Rainey (electric bass); Harvey Mason, Sr. (drums); Mayuto Correa (congas, percussion); King Errisson (congas).

Places And Spaces

Denise King - Fever

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:35
Size: 148,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:30)  1. The Nearness of You
(5:41)  2. Fever
(5:22)  3. Jim
(6:23)  4. It Never Entered My Mind
(6:38)  5. Song for My Father
(6:28)  6. Summertime
(5:31)  7. In a Sentimental Mood
(3:05)  8. Autumn Leaves
(3:50)  9. Violets for My Fur
(4:38) 10. When I Fall in Love
(5:47) 11. I Wish You Love
(4:37) 12. Green Dolphin Street

Influenced by Nancy Wilson, Marlena Shaw and Sarah Vaughan, Denise King is an expressive, big-voiced singer who combines jazz with elements of R&B, blues and gospel. King was born and raised in Philadelphia, where she was exposed to R&B as a child and discovered jazz at 12 thanks to an uncle who was an avid record collector. After graduating from high school, the Philadelphian entered the medical field and earned her living as a technician and a family-planning counselor. King was in her early 30s when she started doing club gigs around Philly, and eventually, she became a full-time singer. Though she's no stranger to standards, one of King's strong points has been her ability to provide jazz interpretations of rock and soul hits in fact, she has turned everything from Santana's "Evil Ways" to Ruby & the Romantics' "Our Day Will Come" into swinging acoustic jazz. King started recording in the 1990s, offering Live In Japan: I Remember You in 1993, Now Ain't That Love in 1996 and Simply Mellow in 1997. ~ Alex Henderson https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/fever/136807140

Fever

Anna Webber - Percussive Mechanics

Styles: Flute And Saxophone Jazz 
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:03
Size: 135,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:49)  1. Dan:Ce
(4:46)  2. Certain Transcendence
(5:34)  3. Terrarosa
(9:24)  4. Percussive Mechanics
(8:53)  5. Vigilance
(7:19)  6. Sleeping Is Giving In
(6:27)  7. Histrionics
(6:35)  8. Let It Cut More Deep
(3:12)  9. Eins!

First she was a flutist, then a saxophonist, now an outstanding jazz and new music composer. Canada's Anna Webber follows up her debut, Third Floor People (Nowt Records, 2010), with Percussive Mechanics, a skirmish between contemporary composed music and jazz improvisation. As a player, she has recorded with Stephon Harris's Blackout Urbanus (Concord, 2009) and has also performed with Jason Moran, Tony Malaby, and John Hollenbeck. It is Hollenbeck that is the touchstone for her compositions here. Webber plays with the conflicts between thoroughly composed music and jazz improvisation. Her pieces, like the title track, come across as automated, almost precise machine-driven compositions. Performed by skilled musicians, Percussive Mechanics is a tightly scored system of music. The beauty here is that her structures leak improvisation between the gears. The recording builds from its marimba/vibraphone and flute opening, adding clarinet, piano, and eventually the entire septet. Brief solos emerge as it gains momentum. Tension builds within the structure, eventually the orchestration giving way to the hoots and hollers of the players.

Webber's stratagem, to compose using layer upon precise layer to elicit both a disciplined sound and a new expression of controlled chaos, is the heart of jazz improvisation. Pianist Elias Stemeseder's simple and exact lines open "Sleeping Is Giving In" drums, percussion and meticulous horns then enter, following Webber's system. As the piece unfolds, the lines diverge and the music blossoms, with soloists spiraling above and escalating the music. Album highlights include "Terrarose," with its whistled passage, and "Histronics," which opens with Webber and one (then two) drummers, harmonizing with her tenor saxophone. The stripped-down piece sums up her methodology from the detailed discipline of writing, the human element and expression bloom. ~ Mark Corroto https://www.allaboutjazz.com/percussive-mechanics-anna-webber-pirouet-records-review-by-mark-corroto.php

Personnel: Anna Webber: flute, tenor saxophone; James Wylie: clarinet, alto saxophone; Elias Stemeseder: piano, wurlitzer; Julius Heise: vibraphone, marimba, whistling; Igor Spallati: double bass; Max Andrzejewski: drum set, glockenspiel, miscellaneous percussion, whistling; Martin Kruemmling: drum set, miscellaneous percussion.

Percussive Mechanics

Dan Siegel - Inside Out

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:27
Size: 104,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:12)  1. Just Like That
(5:31)  2. Inside Out
(4:07)  3. In Your Eyes
(4:47)  4. When The Time Comes
(5:18)  5. Between The Lines
(4:53)  6. To The Point
(5:00)  7. This Time Around
(4:05)  8. Crossroads
(3:23)  9. The Long Goodbye
(4:07) 10. Gone But Not Forgotten

Almost a quarter century after his debut, Dan Siegel remains one of the kings of smooth-as-silk piano smooth jazz. No computer blips or hip-hop samples here. Siegel is such a mellow mood on his first new studio CD in six years that if you're not completely relaxed after his latest, you should probably get your money back. Saxophonists Boney James and Jeff Kashiwa spice things up in solos and as part of a horn section, but their playing enhances the mellowness instead of taking it outside a comfort zone. None of this is bad, of course. On "Just Like That" and the cover track, Siegel's chirpy playing and smooth backbeat are just what my doc might prescribe during the nadir of a hectic work week. Siegel steps outside his comfort zone a little with "Between the Lines," laying down some tasty organ grooves, but soon slips back into his mellow groove with "To the Point." He ventures into Yanni territory on the final cut, "Gone, But Not Forgotten," a spiritual and uplifting four minutes of music cinema. Siegel is from the old school, a defining member of the smooth jazz movement who still believes in music's healing and calming attributes. In today's loud world, there's still plenty of room for that. ~ Brian Soergel https://www.allaboutjazz.com/inside-out-dan-siegel-native-language-review-by-brian-soergel.php

Personnel: Dan Siegel (piano and synthesizer); Brian Bromberg (fretless bass); Alex Al (bass); Robert Bacon (guitar); Lenny Castro (percussion); Boney James (saxophone); Jeff Kashiwa (saxophone); Dave Hooper (drums)

Inside Out

Ignasi Terraza - Live at the Living Room, Bangkok

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:16
Size: 168,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:29)  1. An Emotional Dance
(4:49)  2. Les dotze van tocant
(4:59)  3. Georgia on My Mind
(6:49)  4. Give Me Another
(7:58)  5. Motherland
(4:21)  6. Waltz for Auro
(4:58)  7. Corcovado
(3:38)  8. Under the Sun
(4:50)  9. Oscar's Will
(7:03) 10. Canco num.6
(4:44) 11. Chega de saudade
(5:49) 12. Blues for Stephanie
(5:42) 13. Liner Notes (by Claudio Cifuentes, Albert Mallofre, Joe Zender)

Pianist Ignasi Terraza has led trios and quartets for twenty years, collaborating with Spain's finest jazz musicians along the way. He's also played with saxophone legends Teddy Edwards, Lou Donaldson and Frank Wess, singer Stacey Kent, and trumpeter Jon Faddis. ...Live at the Living Room, Bangkok documents his trio, over two nights in the Thai capital, and shows just why Terraza has been first-call pianist for top jazz musicians visiting Barcelona. This nicely varied set includes standards, calypso, bossa nova, blues, five Terraza originals and the pianist's arrangements of two Catalan folk songs. Terraza is unashamedly old-school in his conception, influenced by pianist Oscar Peterson's graceful virtuosity, Wynton Kelly's blues, and arguably most of all by Ahmad Jamal's sense of space and dynamics. However, as this wonderful set demonstrates, Terraza is never imitative, personalizing a well-worn standard like Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Corcovado," whose intro he and bassist Pierre Boussaguet imbue with a classical air, the pianist's two-handed dialogue captivating. Jobim and Vinicius De Moraes's "Chega de Saudade" is also dressed in new robes, with a classical lining and swinging four-four time makeover. Terraza balances brilliant technique with a deft touch and an unerringly strong, melodic center.

"An Emotional Dance" is an invigorating example of Terraza's compositional flair, and his ability to solo at breathtaking speed without abandoning the song's melody. Boussaguet and drummer Esteve Pi are seasoned players and provide great support throughout. Hoagy Carmichael and Stuart Gorrell's "Georgia on My Mind" begins with a delicate piano intro and Pi's brushes. Boussaguet provides leisurely counterpoint to Terraza's soulful playing until the half-way point, when Terraza takes the tune onto another plane by unleashing dizzyingly fast and swirling runs over strong left-hand jangling. The fast-paced workout of "Oscar's Will" draws from stride and ragtime as much as bop. The tuneful "Give Me Another" underlines that Terraza doesn't have to go at a gallop to impress. Terraza makes a very Jamal-influenced trio arrangement of "Les dotze van tocant," a Catalan Christmas carol. Terraza has borrowed from Catalan folk before, with guitarist Miguel Llobet}}'s "El Noi de la Mar" given a jazzy yuletide treatment on Christmas Swings in Barcelona (K Industria, 2003), and he's clearly at home in this terrain. Catalan composer Federico Mompou's lovely "Canco num. 6" veers between softly voiced lyricism and vibrant trio interplay. 

The other Terraza originals include the dancing "Waltz for Auro," with a walking bass and ride cymbal at full tilt, and a calypso of irresistible rhythm and melodic charm, "Under the Sun." Boussaguet's impressive "Motherland," however, carries more dramatic ebb and flow, with Terraza's breathtaking virtuosity once again on show. Former Count Basie bassist John Clayton Jr.'s "Blues for Stephanie" puts a bouncing seal on an excellent set. Five minutes of audio liner notes bear the visually impaired in mind, and run in Spanish, Catalan, English and Thai. It's a nice touch, and symbolic of the inclusive, all-encompassing outlook that Terraza brings to his music. His jazz may be firmly rooted in the tradition, but it contains a whole world of vibrant colors. ~ Ian Patterson https://www.allaboutjazz.com/live-at-the-living-room-bangkok-swit-records-review-by-ian-patterson.php

Personnel: Ignasi Terraza (piano), Pierre Boussaguet (bass), Esteve Pi (drums).

Live at the Living Room, Bangkok

Sunday, February 25, 2018

Kenny Burrell - Ellington Is Forever Vol. 2

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:07
Size: 172.0 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 1977/1994
Art: Front

[1:50] 1. Azure
[7:34] 2. Take The A Train
[5:28] 3. In A Sentimental Mood
[4:14] 4. I'm Beginning To See The Light
[3:32] 5. Satin Doll
[5:37] 6. I'm Just A Lucky So And So
[5:48] 7. In A Mellow Tone
[3:17] 8. Solitude
[4:55] 9. Jeep Is Jumpin'
[6:55] 10. I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart
[2:56] 11. Prelude To A Kiss
[0:26] 12. Satin Doll-Segue
[3:08] 13. Come Sunday
[8:01] 14. Just Squeeze Me
[7:43] 15. I Ain't Got Nothin' But The Blues
[3:36] 16. Orson

The modus operandi of Ellington Is Forever, Vol. 2 is essentially the same as the first; Kenny Burrell gathered a great bunch of musicians together in a studio for a relaxed yet masterful tour through some of Ellington's best-known material. The sole exception to the Ellingtonia is the Strayhorn-penned "Take the 'A' Train," a song that will forever be associated with the Duke. Jimmy Jones provided a stunning solo reading of this composition on the first volume, but it gets a full band treatment on Vol. 2, and features a fantastic solo from Burrell, a bluesy romp through the changes. In fact, the leader seems to be a bit more present on this album compared to Ellington Is Forever, Vol. 1. This is not to say, however, that the excellent contributions of the many musicians on this record go without benefit of the spotlight. One only has to listen to Roland Hanna's solo piano introduction to "In a Sentimental Mood" or Philly Joe Jones' masterful brushwork on "I'm Beginning to See the Light" to realize the immense quality of the musicianship on display on this record. As on the first album, Ernie Andrews appears here on two tracks. His contributions, so essential to the overall quality of the first volume, are somewhat mixed here. His rendition of "I'm Just a Lucky So and So" is controlled and soulful, but his interpretation of "Satin Doll" seems a bit forced. However, this may seem this case only because the listener cannot help but compare it to the near-perfection of his performances on Vol. 1. Of historical note is the fact that this is the last recording to feature trombonist Quentin "Butter" Jackson, who passed away after the sessions were recorded but before the album could be released. Although he plays his horn with the confidence and expertise of a man who had been involved with some of the greatest bandleaders of all time (including Ellington), the most exquisite moment on this record is his singing on "Prelude to a Kiss." His soft, tremulous voice is frail and heart wrenching, and the fact of its inclusion alone is worth the price of admission. Burrell's initial plan was to release a volume in tribute to Ellington once a year, but this record and the one that preceded it were the only two albums in this proposed series that were ever made. One can only imagine what could have been if Burrell had continued. Alternately, and more positively, one can be glad that the only records that were released were as beautiful and as close to perfection as these two. ~Daniel Gioffre

Ellington Is Forever Vol. 2 mc
Ellington Is Forever Vol. 2 zippy

The Vocal Jazz Collective - Redefinition

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:03
Size: 164.9 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[5:19] 1. My Man's Gone Now (Feat. Camille Avery)
[5:25] 2. You Don't Know What Love Is (Feat. Leanne Robinson)
[7:28] 3. Moon River (Feat. Georgia Sedlack)
[5:39] 4. Time After Time (Feat. Cari Stevens)
[4:35] 5. Nothing Compares (Feat. Fara Sumbureru)
[7:47] 6. Much Farther To Go (Feat. Karmen Wolf)
[5:03] 7. My Funny Valentine (Feat. Georgia Sedlack)
[6:13] 8. Too Late Now (Feat. Leanne Robinson)
[5:44] 9. City Called Heaven (Feat. Harris Long)
[4:45] 10. Dienda (Feat. Cari Stevens)
[5:22] 11. Both Sides Now (Feat. Karmen Wolf)
[8:39] 12. Sparks (Feat. Mary Thompson)

Camille Avery: vocals (1, 12) ; LeAnne Robinson: vocals (2, 8, 12); Georgia Sedlack: vocals (3, 7, 12),; Cari Steven: vocals (4, 10, 12); Fara Sumbureru: vocals (5, 12); Karmen Wolf: vocals (6, 11, 12); Harris Long: vocals (9, 12); Mary Thompson: vocals (soloist on 12); Michael Wood: vocal (12); Sekeyi Sumbureru: vocal (12); Andrew Koba: vocal (12); Justin Nielsen: piano; Jeff Johnson: bass; John Bishop: drums; John McLean: guitar; Thomas Marriott: trumpet, flugelhorn; Brent Jensen: saxophone.

Jeff Baker, one of the best male jazz vocalists around today, is also the vocal director at ArtsWest School for Performing Arts in Eagle, Idaho. Working with high school age performers must be a gas, because Baker has produced a very engaging vocal jazz outing, featuring his students backed by an Origin Records all-star band, with pianist Justin Nielsen sitting in the piano/arranger's chair.

Redefinition takes a batch of familiar jazz tunes by the likes of George Gershwin, Henry Mancini, and Rodgers and Hart, and mixes in some popular songs from Prince, Joni Mitchell and Coldplay, with one traditional spiritual thrown in for good measure, and redefines them; bending their shapes a bit and giving them fresh spins. Under the guidance of polished professionals Baker and Nielsen, and backed by a roster of versatile top level musicians, the set holds up so well that the ages of the singers becomes simply a matter of interest. There is not a half-baked or tentative performance on the set; these young people sing with an uncluttered purity of feeling and remarkable confidence.

The Gershwins' "My Man's Gone Now" opens the set. Nielsen's piano sparkles, while Brent Jensen blows a sinewy soprano sax accompaniment to Camille Avery's heartfelt vocal, as the singer tells her story with feeling and a genuine sense of loss, giving way to John McLean's searing guitar. The songs are old familiar tales, leaning on the love or love lost theme. LeAnne Robinson gets deep into a beautiful, weary blues feeling on "You Don't Know What Love Is," while Georgia Sedlack soars in a buoyant take of Mancini's "Moon River." Cyndi Lauper's "Time After Time" (a Miles Davis favorite) is slowed down to a dirge, with a spare arrangement complimenting Cari Stevens' very direct and seemingly world-weary singing. The band brings in a funk feel on Prince's "Nothing Compares," with Fara Sumbureru bouncing into a light groove. "Much Farther to Go," a Rosie Thomas tune, features a Karmen Wolf's pure-toned, horn-like delivery. Harris Long—the lone male solo vocalist on the disc—possesses a rich baritone similar to Kurt Elling, and gives a fitting reverence to the traditional "City Called Heaven." Coldplay's "Sparks" closes the disc on a modern-leaning note. Mary Thompson's vocal exudes a melancholy, drifting-into-the-twilight mood. As the tune winds down she is joined by the choir—the other soloists plus Michael Wood, Sekayi Sumbureru and Andrew Koba—for a classy, collaborative ending to Redefinition, a fine set of jazz vocal tunes that introduce a bunch of amazing young talent. ~Dan McClenaghan

Redefinition mc
Redefinition zippy

Thilo Wolf Big Band - Big Band Shout

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:16
Size: 135.7 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[5:26] 1. Loosen Your Grip
[3:22] 2. Easy To Love
[5:19] 3. Nice Toys
[3:05] 4. Tickle Toe
[2:08] 5. The Man With A Horn
[3:45] 6. All Of Me
[2:30] 7. Tenderly
[3:22] 8. It Had To Be You
[3:43] 9. Mr. Anthony´s Boogie
[4:55] 10. Can You Hear These Dirty Horns
[3:26] 11. He´s Got The Whole World
[4:45] 12. Ain´t Misbehavin`
[3:29] 13. Let The Good Times Roll
[5:58] 14. Amazing Grace
[3:58] 15. One O´clock Jump

Thilo Wolf's Big Band Shout, we are informed in the booklet, was "recorded live . . . on the occasion of taping the television production SWING IT, the only plausible response to which is "wow! One simply can't imagine a television program of this caliber on any outlet—network, cable or public—here in the States. This is for the most part the sort of uncompromising big-band jazz that hasn't graced TV screens in these parts for too many years (read: decades). And judging from the response, the German audience is clearly elated, even before Wolf welcomes his special guests: trumpeter Ray Anthony and blues/gospel singer Joan Faulkner and her backup group, the Expressions.

After four instrumentals including Cole Porter's "Easy To Love and Lester Young's "Tickletoe, Anthony, an octogenarian who has been making beautiful music for more than seventy years (and still has decent chops), enters with his signature theme, "Man With A Horn. He's front and center again on "All Of Me, "Tenderly, "It Had To Be You, "Mr. Anthony's Boogie and the strapping finale, Count Basie's venerable "One O'Clock Jump. Faulkner's showpieces include "He's Got The Whole World, "Ain't Misbehavin', "Let The Good Times Roll and "Amazing Grace. The power-laden band is beyond reproach, as are soloists Wolf, Axel Kühn, Lennart Axelsson, Norbert Nagel, Otto Staniloi, Werner Tauber and Thomas Zoller. It's a shame one has to be in Germany to see and hear music as admirable as this on television, but at least the CD is here to offer some solace. ~Jack Bowers

Big Band Shout

Zimbo Trio - The Best Of Zimbo Trio

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 102:42
Size: 235.1 MB
Styles: Brazilian jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[6:06] 1. A Felicidade
[4:23] 2. Samba Dourado
[2:40] 3. Cravo E Canela
[3:45] 4. Garota De Ipanema
[5:27] 5. Wave
[5:15] 6. Coisa Feita
[2:38] 7. Radames E Pele
[3:33] 8. Nada Será Como Antes
[3:14] 9. Água De Beber
[2:02] 10. Piano Na Mangueira
[5:58] 11. Pot-Pourri Teia De Renda Coração De Estudante
[2:06] 12. Samba De Maria Luiza
[1:58] 13. Brigas Nunca Mais
[5:13] 14. Saudades Dos Aviões Da Painar (Conversando No Bar)
[2:56] 15. Corcovado
[3:28] 16. Meditação
[4:04] 17. Desafinando
[6:01] 18. Arrastão
[3:45] 19. O Morro Não Tem Vez
[5:52] 20. Ao Piazzolla
[2:50] 21. Vera Cruz
[3:26] 22. Só Danço Samba
[6:01] 23. Notas Que Falam
[3:33] 24. Asa (Zoo Blues)
[6:17] 25. Aquarela Do Brasil

The Zimbo Trio is a Brazilian instrumental trio, founded in March 1964, São Paulo, by Luiz Chaves Oliveira da Paz "Luiz Chaves" (bass), Rubens Alberto Barsotti "Rubens"(drums) and Amilton Godoy (piano). The first presentation took place at “Boate Oásis” on March 17, featuring the singer Norma Bengell. One of the songs played was "Consolação" by Baden Powell and Vinicius de Moraes.

Currently, the Zimbo Trio is formed by Amilton Godoy (piano), Mario Andreotti (bass) and Percio Sapia (drums) who shares the stage with his master Rubens Barsotti, who is recovering from surgery. In a new phase, the trio has a repertoire of Amilton's compositions. Over 45-year career and 51 albums recorded, the Zimbo Trio has gained worldwide recognition, toured the world, and have spread Brazilian instrumental music.

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Jean Oh - Invisible Worth

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:43
Size: 132.1 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[3:20] 1. Jelly Candy
[7:40] 2. Autumn Rhythm
[9:22] 3. Blues For Calvin
[1:06] 4. Piece For Dennis Erwin
[8:57] 5. The Music
[6:48] 6. Free Space
[6:45] 7. Humpty Dumpty
[3:04] 8. Right On It
[2:56] 9. Invisible Worth
[4:54] 10. It Never Entered My Mind
[2:46] 11. How You Do That

Guitarist Jean Oh was born in Seoul, Korea and began playing music at the age of 13. He began studying music formally at Seoul Jazz Academy, a school that was renowned for the best faculty in Korea. He soon began playing gigs. After several years of playing with many different bands around town, He realized that he needs different experience. This led him to Paris, a cultural heart of Europe. He studied jazz with Misja Fitzerald Michel, Sylvain Beof, Bernard Maury, Joe Malcolm, Emil Spanyl and Frederic Favarel. And he performed in various clubs such as 'Studio des Illettes', 'Caveau des Oubliettes' and 'La Fontaine'.

After graduating music conservatory, he quickly moved to New York City to attend New York University where he obtain master’s degree. During his two years at NYU, he studied with Ralph Alessi, George Garzone, John Scofield, and Gil Goldstein. He also attended School of Improvisation Music. At SIM, he studied with Steve Coleman, Mark Helias, Uri Caine, David Binney, and Bily Hart. He played many different gigs, working his way into the New York Jazz scene.

Since the beginning of his professional career, he has played on several commercially released recordings and toured throughout the United States, Canada, Japan, South America, Philippine, Russia. He has had many opportunities to share the stage with George Garzone, John Lockwood, Jeff Hirshfield, Billy Drummond, Ralph Alessi, Ron McClure, Mike Richmond. And he played at various places such as '169Bar', 'Swing 46', 'Milagro Theater', 'The Grind', 'Charlie's Den'. Recently, Jean has released his first album, “Invisible Worth”, featuring George Garzone, John Lockwood, and Jeff Hirshfield. And he is pushing himself to have his voice defined in music, both as a sideman and as a band leader.

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Various - Jazz Loves Disney

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:28
Size: 108.7 MB
Styles: Stage & Screen
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[2:55] 1. Jamie Cullum - Ev'rybody Wants To Be A Cat
[3:40] 2. Melody Gardot - He's A Tramp
[3:11] 3. Stacey Kent - Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo
[3:47] 4. Gregory Porter - When You Wish Upon A Star
[4:59] 5. China Moses - Why Don't You Do Right
[3:51] 6. Raphael Gualazzi - I Wan'na Be Like You (The Monkey Song)
[4:14] 7. The Rob Mounsey Orchestra - A Dream Is A Wish Your Heart Makes
[4:03] 8. Hugh Coltman - You've Got A Friend In Me
[3:23] 9. Anne Sila - Let It Go
[3:26] 10. Melody Gardot - The Bare Necessities
[3:28] 11. Laika - Once Upon A Dream
[3:16] 12. Nikki Yanofsky - Un Jour Mon Prince Viendra
[3:08] 13. The Hot Sardines - I Wanna Be Like You

The notion that jazz singers love Disney tunes is hardly new, the relationship stretching from Johnny Mercer’s 1947 rendition of Song of the South’s Oscar-winning “Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah” to Steve Tyrell’s Disney Standards, from 2006. Never, though, has so ambitious or smartly executed a Disney-themed collection of vocal jazz been assembled as this.

Recorded in 2014 and 2015 across sessions spanning London, Paris, New York and L.A., Jazz Loves Disney is overcrowded with A-listers, all in top form: Gregory Porter’s haunting “When You Wish Upon a Star”; Jamie Cullum’s frisky “Everybody Wants to Be a Cat”; Melody Gardot coyly channeling Peggy Lee on “He’s a Tramp” and teaming with Italian crooner Raphael Gualazzi for a sprightly spin through “The Bare Necessities”; and, in French, Stacey Kent reimagining Cinderella’s “Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo” as a cozy bossa nova. Reinterpretation en français is a recurring theme, with an impressively mature Nikki Yanofsky serving up a sultry “Un jour mon prince viendra” (“Someday My Prince Will Come”) and Miz Elizabeth’s Hot Sardines revitalizing The Jungle Book’s “I Wanna Be Like You” as what might best be described as Left-Bank Dixieland.

Less-familiar names add equally fine performances, among them a Connick-esque “You’ve Got a Friend in Me” by Hugh Coltman and a delicate handling of Frozen’s “Let It Go” by Anne Sila, a victor on the French version of The Voice. If there’s a sour note it’s the sole instrumental track, an overly lush “A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes” from the Rob Mounsey Orchestra that feels entirely out of place. ~Christopher Loudon

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Saturday, February 24, 2018

Wynton Marsalis - The Midnight Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:08
Size: 172.0 MB
Styles: Trumpet jazz
Year: 1997
Art: Front

[ 6:01] 1. The Party's Over
[ 6:35] 2. You're Blasé
[ 5:42] 3. After You've Gone
[ 7:43] 4. Glad To Be Unhappy
[ 6:03] 5. It Never Entered My Mind
[ 5:24] 6. Baby, Won't You Please Come Home
[ 5:55] 7. I Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out To Dry
[ 5:03] 8. I Got Lost In Her Arms
[ 5:46] 9. Ballad Of The Sad Young Men
[ 4:26] 10. Spring Will Be A Little Late This Year
[ 4:31] 11. My Man's Gone Now
[11:53] 12. The Midnight Blues

Wynton Marsalis (trumpet); Robert Freedman (conductor); Paul Peabody, Israel Chorberg, Krista Feeney, Richard Henrickson, Jean Ingraham, Ann Leathers, Nancy McAlhany, Ron Oakland, Susan Ornstein, Sandra Park, John Pintavalle, Matt Raidmondi, Laura J. Seaton, Lisa Steinberg (violin); Lamar Alsop, Julien Barber, Carol Landon, Sue Pray, Maxine Roach (viola); Richard Locker, Eric Friedlander, Eugene Moy (cello); Eric Reed (piano); Reginald Veal, John Beal, Lawrence Glazener, Paul Harris (bass); Lewis Nash (drums).

In his book, Lives of the Great Composers, Harold C. Schonberg titles each composer's life with a short, densely descriptive phrase. He titles the chapter on Johannes Brahms, "Keeper of the Flame." He opens the chapter with this comparison of Richard Wagner, J.S. Bach and Brahms: "Wagner was a revolutionary, spearheading the future. Brahms was the classicist who dealt with abstract forms and never wrote a note of program music in his life, much less an opera. Wagner was to exert enormous influence on the future. With Brahms the symphony was handed down by Beethoven, Mendelssohn, and Schumann and came to an end. Brahms, like Bach, summed up an epoch. Unlike Bach, he contributed little to the development of music."

With a small amount of editing, these lines could readily be adapted to the historic relationship between Miles Davis and Wynton Marsalis. Miles Davis was long the revolutionary, while Marsalis has been the classicist flame keeper. He is an academic and an archivist. Wynton Marsalis is our consummate jazz scholar and practitioner. It is these traits that are both good and bad about Marsalis recordings. I have found all of Marsalis' recordings of uniformly high quality. His playing has always been inventive and appropriate for what he was trying to say. His influences? Well, that depends on the piece and the period. Marsalis has so broadly listened to and studied the history of jazz trumpet that he has internalized a plethora of styles and influences. I hear Miles, Clifford Brown, Chet Baker, the list goes on and on. His tone is perfect, his vibrato is perfect, and his delivery and ideas are perfect. All of this perfection is Marsalis? only problem. I find his music without emotion. It is a studied delivery of a variety of notes presented in a variety of styles in a variety of well-crafted arrangements. Despite this grump, I thoroughly enjoy all Marsalis' recordings, including his newest one, The Midnight Blues: Standard Time Vol. 5.

I recently listened to Clifford Brown with Strings and found that I enjoyed this music much more than the majority of critics I had read. I look forward to all of Marsalis' standards recordings and when I gave this new one a spin, I was delighted with the results. Like Clifford Brown with Strings, it is a collection of ballads with a jazz rhythm section and strings. All of the ballads are tastefully chosen and performed, providing even a few surprises. Marsalis' choice of ballads cannot be called cliche. The best known "standards" on this disc are "It Never Entered My Mind" and "I Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out to Dry," both of which are skillfully performed. Marsalis' tone ranges from sleepy seductive on "You're Blase" to the entire tonal landscape on "Baby, Won?t You Please Come Home." This latter song is the disc's centerpiece. Here we find Marsalis opening with almost an accompanist's muted obligato (like Miles for Shirley Horn) for the introduction and the first chorus. He then moves into a manually muted mode recalling Cootie Williams, making his trumpet cry in a pinched and nervous plea. Eric Reed skips through the next chorus, until Marsalis reenters with an open bell that begins in a Clifford Brown sentimental manner, the tone full, round and luscious. The scene quickly changes, heating up into a full blues lament with the strings and rhythm section urging Marsalis toward resolution.

A piano trio rhythm section comprised of Eric Read on piano, Reginald Veal on bass and Lewis Nash on drums, supports Marsalis. Their contribution is solid, tasteful, and capable. The liner notes make it a point to inform the listener that the jazz group performed live with no overdubs, a fact not readily apparent because of the quality of the playing. But this disc is all Wynton Marsalis in the same way that the Galaxy Art Pepper Quartets were all Art Pepper. Mr. Marsalis performs the majority of this disc with an open bell. His technique is flawless and contains the whispers of every major jazz artist he has ever heard. He is more Louis Armstrong than Dizzy Gillespie, more Howard McGee than Fats Navarro, more Roy Elderidge than Miles Davis, more Miles Davis than, well, let?s just leave it at that. Wynton Marsalis is important for the same reason Ry Cooder is. He preserves the testament that is mainstream jazz. His passion for the music makes up for his technique over passion in the music. All of this silly quibbling aside, this is a very accessible and enjoyable disc and I highly recommend it. ~C. Michael Bailey

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Brenda Navarrete - Mi Mundo

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:07
Size: 85.0 MB
Styles: World music, Cuban rhythms
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[1:59] 1. Baba Elegguá
[3:18] 2. Rumbero Como Yo
[4:58] 3. Anana Oyé
[3:16] 4. Caravana
[4:33] 5. Drume Negrita
[3:24] 6. Namaste
[3:39] 7. Taita Bilongo
[3:44] 8. Mulata Linda
[3:10] 9. Cachita
[5:02] 10. A Ochún

Mi Mundo introduces a shining new star on the world music firmament. This is the solo debut of Brenda Navarrete, a Cuban-based singer, songwriter, percussionist and bandleader of rare skill and musical originality.

She has previously made an impact singing in the internationally-acclaimed Cuban group Interactivo, performing at clubs and festivals in the U.S. and Canada, but she now takes a giant creative leap forward with Mi Mundo. Set for worldwide release on ALMA Records in January/18, the album was recorded in Havana with producer Peter Cardinali (ALMA’s founder), award-winning engineer John “Beetle” Bailey, and an all-star cast of Cuban instrumentalists.

“Being able to record Mi Mundo in Havana is a dream come true,” Brenda explains. “Havana is where I was born. Cuba is my country, my homeland, and having the opportunity to record here with musicians who know me and who understand my musical style is amazing. The energy of Cuba and Havana is very important to me, and I think that we have captured that force on this album”.

The stylistically eclectic album features a variety of group settings, with the primary instruments consisting of drums, piano, electric bass and percussion, including batá and congas played by Navarrete. Renowned special guests include Horacio ‘El Negro’ Hernández, Rodney Barreto and José Carlos on drums, Roberto Carcassés, Rolando Luna and Leonardo Ledesman on piano, Alain Pérez on bass (he also arranged several of the songs and wrote “Taita Bilongo”), Adonis Panter on quinto and Eduardo Sandoval on trombone. ~Latin Jazz network

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Joscho Stephan - Acoustic Live

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:00
Size: 153.4 MB
Styles: Gypsy jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[4:55] 1. Hungaria
[2:35] 2. China Boy
[4:38] 3. Sweet Chorus
[4:18] 4. Exactly Like You
[2:37] 5. Mainstreet Breakdown
[4:29] 6. Ocean
[4:54] 7. Artillerie Lourde
[2:54] 8. Belleville
[3:25] 9. West Coast Blues
[2:43] 10. La Gitane
[3:41] 11. Bolero
[3:19] 12. J'attendrai
[4:17] 13. Bossa Dorado
[2:58] 14. The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise
[5:59] 15. Nuages
[2:42] 16. Les Yeux Noirs
[1:53] 17. Harry Lime Theme
[4:35] 18. Minor Swing

Joscho Stephan is one of the hottest up and coming guitarists of our time. I say "Up and Coming" because I think people will be listening to his CDs for the next 100 years! If you like gypsy jazz, this kid will blow your mind. He is probably the FASTEST gypsy jazz guitarist EVER! Now, because of that, I remember what my jazz guitar teacher told me years ago-"When you try to play a lot of notes, you tend to slip into what is comfortable for you, which diminishes the 'improvisational' aspect of your solos". With that said, you hear him repeat a lot of phrases (AT MIND BLOWING TEMPOS) and some might be put off by that. Not me. I can appreciate that not everyone is going to be virtuosic in EVERY solo. Like 'we' guitarists like to say, "Man, sometimes you just wanna hear somebody SHRED!"

If I may, i would call this album a compendium on GYPSY SHRED! This guy is maniac-ally fast! I enjoyed it and if you enjoy hearing gypsy jazz at break-neck tempos, you will too.

PS-the album does have a few ballads. :-) ~Ed G.

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Abigoba - Quantum Jazz Collapsing

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:16
Size: 87.6 MB
Styles: Electro-jazz, jazz, Nu Jazz & Soul
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[4:58] 1. Quantum Jazz Collapsing
[4:49] 2. Urban Jazz Pressure Cooker
[6:27] 3. Origines
[3:15] 4. Chinatown Obsession (Acoustic Version)
[4:24] 5. San Wah Hotel
[5:24] 6. What Is The Link
[7:19] 7. Darwin's Nightmare
[1:36] 8. In A Silent Day

The Lyonnais of Abigoba are back, under the leadership of their leader and keyboard Jean-Luc Briançon. After the album Fragments of Human Words and Voices, the quintet celebrates its fifteen years of career with a LP 7 titles Quantum Jazz Collapsing which brings together two new compositions and new versions of flagship titles. The faithful Erik Truffaz (trumpet), Sabine Kouli (vocals) and China Moses (vocals) are at the rendezvous, as well as a newcomer, the rising star of German jazz, flutist and saxophonist Nora Kamm, invited on the new version of the track "Origines". (Translated from French.)

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Martini Kings - Groovin'

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:23
Size: 76.4 MB
Styles: Cool jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[4:02] 1. Killer Joe
[3:11] 2. Speak Low
[2:51] 3. Groovin'
[2:50] 4. Bluesette
[3:54] 5. Two Fools
[4:02] 6. Moanin'
[3:04] 7. San Fancisco Scene
[3:30] 8. Picnic
[1:50] 9. Mall Blues
[4:03] 10. Killer Joe (Reprise)

New sounds from Doug MacDonald and the Martini Kings. Swing and groove ! Martini Kings take you on a late-night jazz excursion, featuring a stripped down sound of jazz guitar, bongos and acoustic bass.

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Duke Ellington, Coleman Hawkins - Duke Ellington Meets Coleman Hawkins

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:47
Size: 102.5 MB
Styles: Swing
Year: 1962/1995/2010
Art: Front

[5:13] 1. Limbo Jazz
[5:54] 2. Mood Indigo
[4:02] 3. Ray Charles' Place
[4:58] 4. Wanderlust
[4:17] 5. You Dirty Dog
[3:51] 6. Self-Portrait (Of The Bean)
[4:47] 7. The Jeep Is Jumpin'
[5:50] 8. The Ricitic
[5:50] 9. Solitude

Ray Nance: cornet and violin; Lawrence Brown: trombone; Johnny Hodges: alto sax; Harry Carney: baritone sax and bass clarinet; Coleman Hawkins: tenor sax; Duke Ellington: piano; Aaron Bell: bass; Sam Woodyard: drums.

This extraordinary 1962 session was the realization of a promise made thirty years earlier between the maestro, Duke Ellington, and the father of the tenor saxophone, Coleman Hawkins, that they would some day make a record together. Released a mere two months ahead of the largely iconic Ellington-Coltrane meeting, the earlier date is distinguished by the creative energies and commitment both men bring to the proceedings, with Ellington producing a scaled-down version of one of his best bands and Hawkins playing like his characteristically authoritative self while becoming an integral member of the ensemble (in effect, he replaces tenor saxophonist Paul Gonsalves).

There are two considerations with the disc. Musically, it offers the compositional genius of Ellington and inspired solo work by his principals—altoist Johnny Hodges, cornetist Ray Nance, and trombonist Lawrence Brown. On the opening, inviting calypso rhythms of "Limbo Jazz," energized by the vocalizations of drummer Sam Woodyard, Hawkins seems all but forgotten until he slyly joins the party with a short but definitive closing solo. On "The Jeep Is Jumping" he's a more visible clean-up hitter, following the felicitous statements of the other tonal personalities with a masterful, extended sermon that leaves no doubt about who's the guest of honor. He double-times "You Dirty Dog" and sweetly converses with Ray Nance's fiddle on "The Ricitic."

"Mood Indigo" and "Self-Portrait" are all Hawkins, with the former, especially, capturing the delicate textures of Ellington's orchestral palette thanks to exceptional mixing by engineer Rudy Van Gelder. The Latin-tinged "Ray Charles Place" soon yields to an up-tempo shuffle rhythm on which the principals again shine, Hawkins' tenor ultimately chasing away any remaining clouds. The broad back-beat of "Wanderlust" suits Hodges, the underrated Nance, and baritone saxophonist Harry Carney to a tee, with Brown's trombone once again threatening to take solo honors before Hawkins' sensual entrance and building, climactic solo. ~Samuel Chell

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