Sunday, September 23, 2018

Andy Fusco - Joy-Riding

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:54
Size: 151,6 MB
Art: Front

( 9:07)  1. Ezz-Thetic
( 5:39)  2. Tender Leaves
( 8:08)  3. Today
( 7:35)  4. Skylark
(10:18)  5. Erin's Blues
( 4:38)  6. What a Difference a Day Makes
( 6:45)  7. Relaxin' with Andy
( 6:24)  8. Joy-Riding
( 7:16)  9. Hot House

Veteran NYC altoist Andy Fusco returns to the Steeplechase label, and the result is Joy-Riding, a post hard bop date with a good mix of originals and classic jazz anthems. Having done long stints with the likes of drummers Buddy Rich and Steve Smith's Vital Information, Fusco has also appeared and recorded with Don Sebesky and the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra. His sidemen include tenorist and composer Walt Weiskopf, and his younger brother, pianist Joel Weiskopf. Louisville-born and bred  drummer Jason Tieman, and bassist Mike Karn complete the sterling rhythm section.  A first class date by all hands, indeed, with Fusco keeping the spirits of Jackie and Charles Mac (McClean and McPherson) thriving well into the millenium. Andy's rich and liquid sound is imbued with a snakelike bendy-ness in his phrasing that is unique and endearingly warm and comforting to boot. Dig his reading of Hoagy Carmichael's Skylark with his moist melodicism coupled with his biting rhythmic acuity on Walt Weiskopf's Joy-Riding, spelling out long and serpentine lines for evidence of this.  A top mod bop date indeed that will elate and please listeners from many different camps. http://www.londonjazznews.com/2017/10/cd-review-andy-fusco-joy-riding.html

Personnel: Andy Fusco - alto saxophone;  Walt Weiskopf - tenor saxophone;  Joel Weiskopf - piano;  Mike Karn - bass;  Jason Tiemann - drums.

Joy-Riding

Charito - American Gold Standards: Charito Meets Tamir Hendelman

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:39
Size: 158,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:21)  1. I've Got the World on a String
(4:16)  2. Dearly Beloved
(6:42)  3. Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out to Dry
(4:46)  4. Blue Skies
(5:33)  5. I Get a Kick Out of You
(5:25)  6. Do It Again
(5:02)  7. Cheek to Cheek
(5:59)  8. Blues in the Night
(5:23)  9. It's Magic
(4:14) 10. A Fine Romance
(6:18) 11. Dreamer
(5:36) 12. The Man I Love
(5:58) 13. Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye

Excited to share the upcoming Japanese release of vocalist Charito’s American Gold Standards: Charito meets Tamir Hendelman. I first met Manila-born, Tokyo-based jazz vocalist Charito in Japan when she sat in with the Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra. Her soulful spark, the way she sings from the heart- stayed with me.  Years later, we finally got to collaborate and it was truly a joyous occasion. Charito has recorded with Ivan Lins, Michel Legrand and Harvey Mason on some special projects.  This was a chance to pay tribute to the Great American Songbook. It was all about breathing new life to this classic songs by Irving Berlin,Gershwin, Cole Porter, Jobim and more. We hope you enjoy the music…

Personnel:  Charito (Vocals); Tamir Hendelman (Piano); John Clayton (Bass); Jeff Hamilton (Drums); Lori Bell (Flute); Gilbert Castellanos (Trumpet); Graham Dechter (Guitar).

American Gold Standards: Charito Meets Tamir Hendelman

Tal Farlow - Cookin' on all Burners

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1982
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:01
Size: 96,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:34)  1. You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To
(5:05)  2. If I Should Lose You
(5:28)  3. I Wished on the Moon
(6:29)  4. I've Got the World on a String
(4:04)  5. Love Letters
(3:14)  6. Why Shouldn't I
(5:46)  7. Lullaby of the Leaves
(3:54)  8. Just Friends
(4:23)  9. I Thought About You

On the fifth of six Concord albums (a surprising amount of activity considering that he only played locally in the New England area during most of 1957-1975), the brilliant bop-based guitarist Tal Farlow performs concise renditions (none over six and a half minutes in length) of nine standards with pianist James Williams, bassist Gary Mazzaroppi, and drummer Vinnie Johnson. Highlights of the excellent straight-ahead date include "You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To," "I've Got the World on a String," "Love Letters," and "Just Friends." ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/cookin-on-all-burners-mw0000184177

Personnel:  Tal Farlow – guitar;  James Williams – piano;  Gary Mazzaroppi – bass;  Vinnie Johnson – drums

Cookin' on all Burners

Young Gun Silver Fox - AM Waves

Styles: Vocal, Guitar, Pop/Rock
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:21
Size: 97,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:11)  1. Midnight in Richmond
(4:01)  2. Lenny
(4:02)  3. Take It or Leave It
(4:40)  4. Underdog
(3:33)  5. Mojo Rising
(3:48)  6. Just a Man
(4:20)  7. Love Guarantee
(4:00)  8. Caroline
(5:06)  9. Kingston Boogie
(4:36) 10. Lolita

The 1990s saw a mostly UK based nostalgia of American 70s RnB and jazz-funk, demonstrated by the rise of acid jazz acts like Jamiroquai, The James Taylor Quartet, Brand New Heavies and Incognito. As the 90’s turned into the Aughts, another figure in that general space emerged, the insanely talented producer and instrumentalist Shawn Lee. He’s not a household name, but with his work for video, movie and TV soundtracks like Desperate Housewives and Malcolm in the Middle, he’s certainly been widely heard. Furthermore, Lee has mastered as many music styles as he’s mastered musical instruments, which is to say, a whole lot of them. Lately, one of Lee’s main projects has been a collaboration with Andy Platts (Mama’s Gun), a composer, producer and multi-instrumentalist too, and a gifted singer to boot. As the two-man act Young Gun Silver Fox, Lee and Platts seeks to serve a slightly different kind of nostalgia, for late 70s Southern California pop. The smooth, rich, analog-washed sounds of Young Gun Silver Fox began with 2016’s West End Coast, an album particularly well received in the Netherlands. Two years after that album, which reflected an inviting Fleetwood Mac/Philly Soul vibe, Young Gun Silver Fox returns with AM Waves. Fender Rhodes, clavinets, tight bass lines, and smooth harmonies…all the hallmarks (the good ones, anyway) from that era are present. Apart from the horns, Lee and Platts handle virtually all the instruments and craft some catchy tunes. There isn’t a single track lacking hooks, and Platts is a rather solid lyricist: On the opener “Midnight in Richmond” he spins off stanzas like passages in a best selling novel (“Cross the bridge where the river threads silently like footsteps in the dark/where my mind comes alive with a new memory igniting up another spark”) or the kind of lines that are very much of the time being celebrated (“I wanna be so high, so free/Where I can feel my mojo rising”). “Take It Or Leave It” (video above) is a virtual rewrite of “What A Fool Believes” and “Mojo Rising” lifts its groove from “How Long,” that 1974 hit from the Paul Carrack-fronted band from England, Ace. A good depiction of RnB inflected rock from the Jimmy Carter years isn’t complete without a horn section on at least a few numbers and Young Gun Silver Fox take care of that by bringing in a platoon of brass and reeds dubbed the “Seaweed Horns,” making “Love Guarantee” a lost Earth, Wind & Fire gem and give the funky “Underdog” a hard, uplifting kick in the pants. Another 70s nostalgia act Lenny Kravitz figures into a couple of songs: Platts imagines him as a bartender serving him liquid salve for his pain on the Hall & Oates-like “Lenny” and again as the namesake for a festive bar sung about on the four-on-the-floor dance tune “Kingston Boogie.” Anyone who liked the MOR music coming from the radio forty years ago will find everything to like about Young Gun Silver Fox’s AM Waves, from Fat Beats. Yacht rock has a new soundtrack, and it’s a good one. http://somethingelsereviews.com/2018/07/06/young-gun-silver-fox-am-waves-2018/

AM Waves

Steve Coleman And Five Elements - Live At The Village Vanguard, Vol. 1

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 152:34
Size: 351,0 MB
Art: Front

( 7:49)  1. Horda
( 6:35)  2. Djw
(16:50)  3. Little Girl I'll Miss You | Embedded #1
( 6:46)  4. idHw
( 7:08)  5. twf
( 8:25)  6. Figit Time
( 8:21)  7. Nfr
( 7:02)  8. Little Girl I'll Miss You
( 7:01)  9. Change The Guard
(16:34) 10. rmT | Figit Time
( 9:47) 11. Nfr
( 6:55) 12. idHw
( 7:22) 13. twf
( 6:26) 14. Horda
( 6:58) 15. Embedded #1
( 7:33) 16. Djw
(14:52) 17. rmT | 9 to 5

Do you long for the days when jazz was punk? Not meaning music that is loud and out-of-control. but punk as in innovative, nonconformist, and seditious. One hundred years ago, the music of Louis Armstrong was punk, and a few decades later so was Charlie Parker's revolutionary bebop. You probably did not witness those rebellions, nor Ornette Coleman's free jazz of the 1960s. What would you give to be there for the "what-did-I-just-hear" moment?  Steve Coleman and Five Elements deliver that double-take experience with their performance on Live at the Village Vanguard, Vol. 1 (The Embedded Sets). But then again, Steve Coleman's music, beginning with his first releases in the mid-1980s, has always turned heads. Like the music of Charlie Parker, Coleman's sound is simultaneously contemporary, futuristic, and ancient. The unusual titles here are transliterations of Egyptian hieroglyphics utilized to develop his sound, which is very much related to spoken passages. Coleman has explained that he knits together chains of tonal dyads to create embedded melodic structures. Simply stated, the quintet engages in a conversation. These improvised colloquies though, can only be had within a very tight working group. Five Elements are composed of Coleman on alto saxophone, bassist Anthony Tidd, drummer Sean Rickman, and band leaders in their own right trumpeter Jonathan Finlayson and guitarist Miles Okazaki. The music is culled from three nights of recording at The Village Vanguard in 2017, a yearly residency Coleman began in 2015. The sounds grab hold from the first track "Horda" with Coleman introducing his composition (as he does often here) unaccompanied. He shapes much of the music with visual and sonic cues. His band, ever ready to follow, parlay and push back. There is a fluidity to the music here and a boldness. Finlayson plays the perfect foil, negotiating the complexities of the compositions and acting as counterpoint to Coleman, while Okazaki threads the needle to tie the music together. Live might be the best way to experience Coleman's music. He has released several live sessions, the first being The Tao Of Mad Phat < Fringe Zones > (RCA, 1993) and the last Resistance Is Futile (Label Bleau, 2001). Outside of a studio his staccato lines, metamorphosing thoughts, and threads of sound come alive against his signature M-BASE grooves. You might find yourself turning the volume dial up louder and still louder. ~ Mark Corroto https://www.allaboutjazz.com/live-at-the-village-vanguard-vol-1-the-embedded-sets-steve-coleman-pi-recordings-review-by-mark-corroto.php

Personnel:  Steve Coleman: alto saxophone;  Jonathan Finlayson: trumpet;  Miles Okazaki: guitar;  Anthony Tidd: bass;  Sean Rickman: drums.

Live At The Village Vanguard, Vol. 1

Saturday, September 22, 2018

Pharoah Sanders & William Henderson - A Prayer Before Dawn

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1987
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:05
Size: 128,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:11)  1. The Light at the Edge of the World
(5:18)  2. Dedication to James W. Clark
(5:22)  3. Softy for Shyla
(8:27)  4. The Greatest Love of All
(5:58)  5. Midnight at Yoshi's
(4:35)  6. Living Space
(6:37)  7. After the Rain
(7:09)  8. In Your Own Sweet Way
(7:24)  9. Christmas Song

Recorded in 1987, A Prayer Before Dawn is one of Pharoah Sanders' gentle, reflective dates. Some jazz fans may cringe at his versions of "Christmas Song" and Whitney Houston's "The Greatest Love of All," but the music displays a heartfelt spirituality as opposed to financial slickness. It is the opposite of Sanders' characteristic fire-breathing tenor of his Impulse days, but there is nobility in taking this tranquil direction; Sanders refuses to repeat himself. He demands you listen with open ears, dropping preconceived notions. For instance, unlike the adult contemporary direction taken by one-time free jazz tenor titan Gato Barbieri, this date doesn't sound like a polished commercial venture as much as a quiet, meditative one. The use of tabla, sarod, and chandrasarang adds to the session's spiritual nature. ~ Al Campbell https://www.allmusic.com/album/a-prayer-before-dawn-mw0000273356

Personnel:  Pharoah Sanders - tenor saxophone, miscellaneous instruments;  William Henderson - piano, synthesizer;  John Hicks - piano (track 7);  Lynn Taussig - sarod, chandrasarang (track 5);  Alvin Queen - drums (track 5)

A Prayer Before Dawn

Teri Roiger - Still Life

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:12
Size: 119,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:32)  1. So It Always Happens
(7:58)  2. Still Life
(4:54)  3. Boo Dah
(5:16)  4. Joie De Vivre
(4:04)  5. Maybe
(4:57)  6. I Just Got Back In Town
(4:23)  7. Dewey's Tune
(5:54)  8. That Old Devil Called Love
(5:08)  9. Twilight Delight (With John Menegon)
(5:02) 10. Straight, No Chaser

It is difficult not to be impressed by Teri Roiger's Still Life. Roiger has a small voice but, like Sheila Jordan, she knows exactly what to do with it and is constantly stretching herself. Her repertoire is quite fascinating, starting off with a Herbie Nichols song, including Billy Strayhorn's lesser-known "Maybe," and featuring two songs (including "Joie de Vivre," which is heard twice) for which she wrote lyrics to Dewey Redman's music in addition to two numbers of her own. "I Just Got Back in Town" has her singing Eddie Jefferson's words to James Moody's improvisation on "I Cover the Waterfront," and she also fares well on the only standards of the set, "That Old Devil Called Love" and "Straight, No Chaser." Of the supporting cast, accordionist Gil Goldstein is a strong asset during his four appearances, pianist Frank Kimbrough leads a fine rhythm section, and bassist John Menegan shares the vocal with Roiger on his "Twilight Delight." There is not a slow moment on this well-conceived outing, which is easily recommended. 
~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/still-life-mw0000489105

Still Life

Oliver Nelson - Fantabulous

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1964
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:36
Size: 82,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:13)  1. Hobo Flats
(5:30)  2. Post No Bills
(3:47)  3. A Bientot
(3:25)  4. Three Plus One
(5:28)  5. Take Me With You
(4:01)  6. Daylie's Double
(4:08)  7. Teenie's Blues
(3:59)  8. Laz-ie Kate

By the time Oliver Nelson and his big band had recorded Fantabulous in March of 1964 for Argo, the great composer, saxophonist, conductor, and arranger was a man about town in New York. He had released some truly classic dates of his own as a leader in smaller group forms Blues and the Abstract Truth and Full Nelson among them and had done arrangement work for everyone from Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis and Johnny Hodges, Nancy Wilson, Frank Wess, King Curtis, Etta Jones, Jimmy Smith, Jack Teagarden, Betty Carter, Billy Taylor, and Gene Ammons, to name more than a few. For Fantabulous, he took his working big band to Chicago for a gig sponsored by Daddy-O-Daylie, a famous local disc jockey. He had also worked with a number of the players on this date before, even recording an earlier version of the tune "Hobo Flats" that opens this set a year before on an album of the same name. Altoist Phil Woods, baritone roarer Jerome Richardson, trumpeters Snooky Young and Art Hoyle, bassist Ben Tucker, and drummer Grady Tate are a few of the names on Fantabulous. Nelson holds down the tenor chair, and Patti Bown is on piano with additional brass and reed players. Another Nelson original, "Post No Bills" features killer alto work from Woods, and a brief but smoking hot baritone break form Richardson on the same cut. This program is compelling in that it provides an excellent meld of all of Nelson's strengths-as an advanced, colorful harmonist who insisted on the hard swinging esthetic, as an excellent tenor saxophonist and a killer conductor. Another highlight is "Daylie's Double," (which bears a similarity to Nat Adderley's "Work Song"") named for the aforementioned DJ, with smoking tenor breaks from Nelson, and big fat soulful chord soloing from Bown. Likewise Billy Taylor's "A Bientot," it opens in true big brass Ellingtonian elegance, and unravels itself as a gorgeous bluesy ballad with echoes of "I Only Have Eyes for You" in its melody. The subtle shades of flute and twinned clarinet are a nice touch before the entire band arrives to carry it out on a big yet tenderly expressive lyric cloud. That said, there isn't a weak moment here, there isn't anything that doesn't captivate, delight, and even astonish, as in the smoking, striated harmonic bop head on "Three Plus One." It's almost amazing it took more than 20 years before this appeared on American shores on CD, but at last, here it is in excellent sound at a budget price as part of Verve's Originals series. This is for those who are fans who don't have it yet (and who are unwilling to pay high collector's fees for good vinyl copies or the wages of Japanese import insanity), and those wondering where to begin with Nelson the arranger. ~ Thom Jurek https://www.allmusic.com/album/fantabulous-mw0000493692

Personnel:  Oliver Nelson - tenor saxophone, arranger and conductor;  Phil Woods - alto saxophone, clarinet;  Kenny Soderblom - alto sax, flute;  Bob Ashton - tenor sax, clarinet;  Jerome Richardson - baritone saxophone, flute, alto flute;  Art Hoyle, Snooky Young - trumpet;  Ray Weigand - trombone;  Tony Studd - bass trombone;  Patti Bown - piano;  Ben Tucker - bass;  Grady Tate - drums

Fantabulous

Yusuf - An Other Cup

Styles: Vocal, Piano, Pop/Rock
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:21
Size: 95,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:24)  1. Midday (Avoid City After Dark)
(4:49)  2. Heaven / Where True Love Goes
(3:06)  3. Maybe There's a World
(4:54)  4. One Day at a Time
(0:41)  5. When Butterflies Leave
(4:02)  6. In the End
(3:22)  7. Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood
(5:34)  8. I Think I See the Light
(2:04)  9. Whispers from a Spiritual Garden
(4:51) 10. The Beloved
(3:28) 11. Greenfields, Golden Sands

Yusuf Islam, the artist formerly known as Cat Stevens, re-enters the singer-songwriter realm after a 30 year hiatus and reminds us all of why we love him. He was born Steven Demetre Georgiou. In 1978, after converting to the Islamic faith, he changed his name to Yusuf Islam. In 2004, he was prevented from entering the US as his name had mistakenly been added to the no-fly list  it seems they had confused him with suspected terrorist Youssef Islam. So it would seem there's actually a lot more in a name than Billy Shakespeare would have you believe, but if it makes things easier, this album's packaging let's us know that you can still call him Cat Stevens. The reason I'm presenting all of this is not to stall; I've started this review countless times over and am under no pressure to finish it. No, I'm bringing this up because first impressions are important, even if they're of an already established artist, and thus are not first impressions at all. Confusing I know, but you'll get it eventually. This is Yusuf Islam's (simply known as Yusuf on the cover) first pop album since the name change, but fear not, this is the same guy your parents/peers/grandparents fell in love with thirty years ago. Yusuf hasn't missed a beat, as this is still the same sound he made famous on 70s staple "Tea for the Tillerman" and later perfected on "Teaser and the Firecat", and while it's certainly not as impactful, I'm comfortable saying that "An Other Cup" comes pretty close. Yusuf relies, as always, on the piano and acoustic guitar, as well as his warm, soft voice, which has only become more effective with age. At its core, the music found on "An Other Cup" is relatively simple, but beneath the subdued singer-songwriter sound you'll find plenty of subtle nuances to keep things interesting. "Midday (Avoid City After Dark)" opens the album focusing almost entirely on Yusuf's voice, which lends itself to the production. The song tells the story of a man enraptured by a city's implicit beauty, but terrified of the night. Along with the traditional guitar/piano sound, the track employs tribal-esque drumming and, perhaps the most interesting of twists, horns. Perhaps the horns are supposed to exhibit the apparent contrast between day and night, quiet and loud, but probably not. I think it's what it sounds like good. Other stand-outs include the romantic "Heaven/Where True Love Goes", a song describing true love, and more specifically, how Yusuf follows his heart regardless of situation. As it says, "[he] goes where true love goes, [he] goes where true love goes". 

As the title implies, the track employs two specific themes, which interchange flawlessly; you'd be hard-pressed to actually notice when Yusuf shifts from describing an immaculate beauty programmed by the heaven's themselves to the way he lives his life. "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood", Yusuf's interpretation of a song first made popular by Nina Simone over forty years ago, is probably the most important on the album. While it may not be the best, it's definitely the most necessary. In lieu of all the controversy the fatwa, the name/faith change, that beard Yusuf wants to make sure that people aren't getting the wrong idea. To do this, Yusuf enlists the help of strings, which, upon being paired with the piano and Yusuf's voice, make for a very heartfelt plea; one that sceptics will hopefully take to heart. As the lyrics once again state, "[he's] Well I'm just a soul whose intentions are good, oh lord, please don't let [him] be misunderstood". It's not perfect by any means. Some songs can often be a little bit dull, perhaps even a little samey, and the album does seem to, at times, lack the power found in classic songs such as "Wild World". "Whispers from a Spiritual Garden" is, for lack of a nicer word, a useless interlude; a new-age romp complete with an awkward spoken word jaunt at the end. In the end, "Whispers From A Spiritual Garden" is barely two minutes in length, and besides these few minor faults, Yusuf reminds us of how he got to where he was, how he made it to a level where a simple change of faith could cause a backlash. He's been gone a while, but listening to this, it's a fact you'll have a hard time considering. Yusuf Islam is a genuine and talented songwriter, and while the album isn't without flaw, that's probably why it works. It is, after-all, a highly introspective album, laced with his beliefs (which does mean you will find some God talk on here), his ideas and of course his classic storytelling. I think it's time the public welcomed him back with open arms, so I suppose I'll get the ball rolling. https://www.sputnikmusic.com/review/11659/Yusuf-Islam-An-Other-Cup/

An Other Cup

Mark Turner & Ethan Iverson - Temporary Kings

Styles: Saxophone And Piano Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:49
Size: 125,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:00)  1. Lugano
(5:44)  2. Temporary Kings
(5:55)  3. Turner's Chamber Of Unlikely Delights
(6:00)  4. Dixie's Dilemma
(4:44)  5. Yesterday's Bouquet
(6:49)  6. Unclaimed Freight
(7:15)  7. Myron's World
(4:24)  8. Third Familiar
(7:54)  9. Seven Points

Pianist Ethan Iverson and tenor saxophonist Mark Turner have a bond going back to the New York clubs of the ’90s, which incubated the current generation of jazz masters. They went on to major success, both individually and as members of the venerated Billy Hart Quartet. An Iverson-Turner duo project had long been in the works, and the lustrous sound couldn’t be more ideal for music of such depth and intimacy. 

The six Iverson pieces, including the solo piano meditation “Yesterday’s Bouquet,” are full of forbidding harmony, often approaching contemporary chamber music (true of Turner’s closing “Seven Points” as well). But the pulse of jazz is vividly present in Iverson’s abstracted blues on “Unclaimed Freight”; in “Dixie’s Dilemma” by the late Warne Marsh, a key Turner influence; and in Turner’s workhorse “Myron’s World,” honed here to its essence. ~ Editors' Notes https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/temporary-kings/1416139368

Personnel:  Mark Turner - Saxophone;  Ethan Iverson - Piano.

Temporary Kings

Friday, September 21, 2018

Ernie Wilkins - Top Brass and Trumpets All Out

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:36
Size: 165,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:25)  1. 58 Market St.
(5:21)  2. Trick or Treat
(4:42)  3. Speeway
(5:39)  4. Dot's What
(3:21)  5. Top Brass
(2:17)  6. Willow Weep for Me
(2:42)  7. Imagination
(1:51)  8. It Might as Well Be Spring
(2:37)  9. The Nearness of You
(4:48) 10. Taking a Chance on Love
(8:28) 11. Five Cats Swingin'
(5:06) 12. Blues in 6/4
(3:19) 13. Trumpets All Out
(5:27) 14. She's Just My Size
(1:51) 15. Love Is Here To Stay
(1:49) 16. Time On My Hands
(1:51) 17. When Your Lover Has Gone
(2:00) 18. All Of Me
(3:53) 19. Low Life

Hard-swingin tracks from Ernie Wilkins one of the most soulful arrangers of his time, working here in a wonderful all-star session from the 50s! The album's definitely got the "top brass" promised in the title a lineup that features Donald Byrd, Ray Copeland, Idrees Sulieman, and Joe Wilder on trumpets all working at a level that allows plenty of space for well-blown solos, but tied up in tighter ensemble formation overall  all with that Wilkins sense of swing that really set Ernie apart at the time. Rhythm is from a trip that includes Hank Jones on piano, Wendell Marshall on bass, and Kelly Clarke on drums and titles include "58 Market Street", "Trick Or Treat", "Speedway", "Dot's What", "Top Brass", "Imagination", and "Willow Weep For Me". Also features the album Trumpets All Out an all-trumpet affair, one that features 5 different players on the instrument Art Farmer, Emmet Berry, Charlie Shavers, Ernie Royal, and Harold Baker supported by spare rhythm from the trio of Don Abney on piano, Wendell Marshall on bass, and Bobby Donaldson on drums. 

There's a definite swing-based approach here different than usual for some of Farmer's outings of the time but the differences between the players are nicely pronounced, and the amazing thing about the album is how it manages to pack so much solo energy in such a relatively small space, in a way that still lets you hear the different voices clearly. Titles include "She's Just My Size", "Five Cats Swingin", "Blues In 6/4", "Trumpets All Out", and "Low Life".  © 1996-2018, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/540512

Personnel:  Art Farmer, Emmett Berry, Charlie Shavers, Ernie Royal, Shorty Baker, Donald Byrd, Ray Copeland, Idrees Sulieman, Joe Wilder (trumpete),  Hank Jones, Don Abney (piano),  Wendell Marshall (bass),  Kenny Clarke, Bobby Donaldson (drums)

Top Brass and Trumpets All Out

Diane Schuur - Deedles

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 1984
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:37
Size: 95,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:47)  1. The Very Thought Of You
(5:20)  2. New York State Of Mind
(3:54)  3. Teach me Tonight
(2:35)  4. I'm Beginning To See The Light
(4:20)  5. I'll Close My Eyes
(4:13)  6. Reverend Lee
(3:22)  7. I'm Just Foolin' Myself
(4:59)  8. Rock Me On The Water
(4:41)  9. Can't Stop A Woman In Love
(3:20) 10. Amazing Grace

On her 1984 debut album, vocalist/pianist Diane “Deedles” Schuur triumphs from the start (a fluid, assured vocal delivery on the standard “The Very Thought of You”) to the end (a duo version of “Amazing Grace” with her on piano and coproducer Dave Grusin on keyboards). Deedles is both traditional, with a 20-piece string section, and contemporary-sounding, with electric bass throughout. Schuur’s career-long penchant for tackling the contemporary songbook is established here with a pair of numbers from the '70s: Billy Joel’s “New York State of Mind” (one of two tracks to feature her mentor, tenor saxophonist Stan Getz) and Jackson Browne’s “Rock Me on the Water.” It’s definitely an album of its time, with Yamaha DX-7 synthesizer and occasional Simmons electronic drums. But her effortless scat interpolating of the circus favorite “Entrance of the Gladiators” into Ellington’s “I’m Beginning to See the Light” is evergreen. ~ Editors' Note https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/deedles/29085

Personnel: Vocals – Diane Schuur; Drums – Moyes Lucas (tracks: 1 to 9); Electric Bass – Dan Dean (tracks: 1 to 9); Electric Guitar – Howard Roberts (tracks: 1 to 9); Electric Piano [Fender Rhodes] – Dave Grusin (tracks: 5, 6, 10);  Harp – Gloria Agostini;  Percussion – Dave Grusin (tracks: 2, 3, 6,);   Piano [Acoustic Piano] – Dave Grusin;  Strings – Barry Finclair, Charles Libove, Charles McCracken, Elena Barere, Gerald Tarack, Harry Lookofsky, Jan Mullen, Jean Ingraham, John Pintavalle, Julien C. Barber, LaMar Alsop, Lewis Eley, Regis Iandiorio, Richard Locker, Richard Sortomme, Sue Pray, Theodore Israel;  Strings, Concertmaster – David Nadien;  Synthesizer [OBX-a] – Dave Grusin (tracks: 2, 3, 6, 8, 9, 10);  Synthesizer [Yamaha DX-7] – Don Grusin (tracks: 1 to 5, 7 to 9)

Deedles

Les McCann - Another Beginning

Styles: Piano, Clarinet Jazz
Year: 1974
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:58
Size: 101,2 MB
Art: Front

( 4:00)  1. Maybe You'll Come Back
( 3:18)  2. The Song Of Love
(10:30)  3. When It's Over
( 3:37)  4. Somebody's Been Lying 'Bout Me
( 5:24)  5. Go On And Cry
( 5:23)  6. My Soul Lies Deep
( 3:43)  7. The Morning Song
( 6:59)  8. Someday We'll Meet Again

Les McCann reached the peak of his career at the 1969 Montreux Jazz Festival, recording "Compared to What" and "Cold Duck Time" for Atlantic (Swiss Movement) with Eddie Harris and Benny Bailey. Although he has done some worthwhile work since then, much of it has been anticlimactic. McCann first gained some fame in 1956 when he won a talent contest in the Navy as a singer that resulted in an appearance on television on The Ed Sullivan Show. After being discharged, he formed a trio in Los Angeles. McCann turned down an invitation to join the Cannonball Adderley Quintet so he could work on his own music. He signed a contract with Pacific Jazz and in 1960 gained some fame with his albums Les McCann Plays the Truth and The Shout. His soulful, funk style on piano was influential and McCann's singing was largely secondary until the mid-'60s. He recorded many albums for Pacific Jazz during 1960-1964, mostly with his trio but also featuring Ben Webster, Richard "Groove" Holmes, Blue Mitchell, Stanley Turrentine, Joe Pass, the Jazz Crusaders, and the Gerald Wilson Orchestra. McCann switched to Limelight during 1965-1967 and then signed with Atlantic in 1968. After the success of Swiss Movement, McCann emphasized his singing at the expense of his playing and he began to utilize electric keyboards, notably on 1972's Layers. His recordings became less interesting to traditional jazz fans from that point on, and after his Atlantic contract ran out in 1976, McCann appeared on records much less often. However, he stayed popular and a 1994 reunion tour with Eddie Harris was quite successful. A mid-'90s stroke put him out of action for a time and weakened his keyboard playing (his band began carrying an additional keyboardist) but Les McCann returned to a more active schedule during 1996 and was still a powerful singer. His comeback was solidified by 2002's Pump It Up, a guest-heavy celebration of funk and jazz released on ESC Records. ~ Scott Yanow https://itunes.apple.com/au/album/another-beginning/204677906

Personnel:  Les McCann- (Vocals, Piano, Electric Piano, Clarinet, Synthesizer);  Jon Faddis, Joe Wilder- (Trumpet);  Herbie Hancock- (Piano);  Chuck Rainey- (Electric Bass);  Cissy Houston- (Background Vocals).

Another Beginning

Greg Osby - Symbols of Light (A Solution)

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:23
Size: 122,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:22)  1. 3 for Civility
(5:42)  2. Repay in Kind
(6:57)  3. 'M'
(4:14)  4. The Keep
(3:15)  5. Golden Sunset
(5:03)  6. This Is Bliss
(6:29)  7. One Room
(4:39)  8. Northbound
(3:32)  9. Wild Is the Wind
(3:34) 10. Social Order
(4:30) 11. Minstrale Again (The Barefoot Tap Dance)

Both Ted Nash and Tom Harrell have explored the "double quartet" concept. Now we can add to the list Greg Osby, whose music sounds nothing at all like theirs. Supplementing his working quartet (Jason Moran, Scott Colley, Marlon Browden) with a string quartet, Osby heightens the dark, austere quality of his harmonies. This results in some of the most moving music of Osby’s career. On the whole, it’s more striking and focused than last year’s Invisible Hand. It also features some of Jason Moran’s best playing on record. Wisely, Osby doesn’t run the strings concept into the ground: Andrew Hill’s "Golden Sunset" is a sax/piano duo, as is the closing "Minstrale Again (The Barefoot Tapdance)." Strings appear only at the beginning of "One Room." And "Wild Is the Wind," the old Johnny Mathis hit, is performed without strings or drums. The sound of the album never gets old. Osby’s originals are strong, particularly "Northbound," which features his most inspired horn playing on the date. Other highlights include Moran’s "Repay In Kind" and Masabumi Kikuchi’s "M." ~ David Adler https://www.allaboutjazz.com/symbols-of-light-a-solution-greg-osby-blue-note-records-review-by-david-adler.php

Personnel:  Greg Osby - alto saxophone, soprano saxophone;  Jason Moran - piano;  Scott Colley - bass;  Marlon Browden - drums, percussion;  Christian Howes - violin;  Marlene Rice - violin;  Judith Insell - viola;  Nioka Workman - cello

Symbols of Light (A Solution)

Marcin Wasilewski Trio - Live

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:18
Size: 149,2 MB
Art: Front

(12:28)  1. Spark Of Life / Sudovian Dance
(10:43)  2. Message In A Bottle
( 9:14)  3. Three Reflections
(13:32)  4. Night Train To You
( 7:42)  5. Austin
(10:36)  6. Actual Proof

It is timely, albeit in a melancholy way, that one-time Tomasz Stanko protégé Marcin Wasilewski and his trio would offer a retrospective live performance that closely coincides with the passing of the legendary Polish trumpeter. The pianist, still just in his early forties, first recorded with Stanko's octet while he was a teenager and quickly went on to release his first Simple Acoustic Trio album, Komeda (Not Two, 1995), at just twenty. From the outset bassist Slawomir Kurkiewicz and drummer Michal Miskiewicz have been equally integral in shaping a distinctive sound that has straddled lines between minimalism, free playing and perpetual inquisitiveness. Live is the first planned release of the trio in performance though an earlier album, 20th Getxo International Jazz Festival (Hilargi Records, 1996), was apparently documented by the venue itself. Initially, it is a bit of a disappointment to learn that five of the six tunes on Live were taken from Spark of Life (ECM, 2014), given the wealth of exceptional material on the group's previous ECM albums, Trio (2005), January (2008) and Faithful (2011). 

That said, Spark of Life was a quartet album with tenor saxophonist Joakim Milder appearing on many of the tracks and so what we have here is a fresh perspective enhanced by the energy of a live performance. Take "Spark Of Life / Sudovian Dance"as a medley employing that familiar slow build up through the first half of its twelve-plus minute run. Wasilewski then takes the second half to new heights with his charged solo. Sting's "Message in a Bottle" is a longer, freer, looser interpretation giving Miskiewicz an opportunity to expand on his excellent drum solo of the previous version. The source outlier on Live is "Night Train To You," from Faithful. The Wasilewski composition stays true to its amalgam of groove and lyricism but here with the palpable dynamism of a well-oiled machine pushing its limits. "Austin"recorded in trio format originally is the only ballad on the album and in most respects, an accurate version of the beautiful original. Herbie Hancock's "Actual Proof" closes the album in an intense, spirited route that leaves the a five-thousand audience members at the Middleheim Jazz Festival ecstatic. The Marcin Wasilewski Trio of recent years has moved beyond their austere roots to a tranquility and airiness that often gives way to a show of force. Over time they have patiently and subtlety created a new identity where their low-key approach is often a stage-setter for their power trio alter ego. In this Live environment, partially fueled by an enthusiastic audience, the trio surpasses even their best studio material. ~ Karl Ackermann https://www.allaboutjazz.com/live-marcin-wasilewski-ecm-records-review-by-karl-ackermann.php

Personnel: Marcin Wasilewski: piano;  Slawomir Kurkiewicz: double bass;  Michal Miskiewicz: drums.

Live

Thursday, September 20, 2018

Dizzy Gillespie - Dizzy Gillespie Meets Phil Woods Quintet

Styles: Trumpet And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1986
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:48
Size: 117,9 MB
Art: Front

( 6:24)  1. Oon-ga-wa
( 8:09)  2. Loose Change
( 6:01)  3. Whasdishean
(12:47)  4. Round Midnight
( 8:49)  5. Love For Sale
( 8:37)  6. Terrestris

As the greatest musical heir on alto sax to Charlie Parker, it seemed only natural for Phil Woods to record a date with Dizzy Gillespie. This European studio session features Dizzy as a special guest sitting in with one of Woods' greatest quintets, with pianist Hal Galper and the brilliant trumpeter and flugelhornist Tom Harrell. In fact Dizzy's chops had already slipped somewhat during the decade and Harrell clearly outplays him even though he clearly isn't trying to embarrass the legendary trumpeter. Gillespie is at his best with a muted solo on "'Round Midnight," while Woods, Harrell and Galper are all outstanding throughout the entire CD. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/dizzy-gillespie-meets-the-phil-woods-quintet-mw0000916751

Personnel:  Dizzy Gillespie - trumpet;  Phil Woods - alto saxophone;  Hal Galper - piano;  Steve Gilmore - bass;  Bill Goodwin - drums;  Tom Harrell - trumpet, flugelhorn

Dizzy Gillespie Meets Phil Woods Quintet

Barb Jungr - Every Grain Of Sand

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:18
Size: 145,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:06)  1. I'll Be Your Baby Tonight
(3:09)  2. If Not For You
(4:57)  3. Things Have Changed
(3:14)  4. Ring Them Bells
(4:36)  5. Not Dark Yet
(4:37)  6. Don't Think Twice
(3:29)  7. Is Your Love In Vain
(4:10)  8. It's All Over Now, Baby Blue
(3:13)  9. I Want You
(7:40) 10. Sugar Baby
(3:10) 11. Born In Time
(3:58) 12. What Good Am I
(5:33) 13. Tangled Up In Blue
(2:57) 14. Forever Young
(4:22) 15. Every Grain Of Sand

Every Grain of Sand is a breathtaking revelation on several fronts. First, Barb Jungr treats Bob Dylan as one of the great tunesmiths of the American popular tradition. Not merely as rock & roll's preeminent songwriter, the direction from which virtually all others have approached his canon, but as a sophisticated composer the equal of the Gershwins, Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern, or Cole Porter. Jungr dramatically re-reads that canon and she fearlessly reshapes it in the process. To cite the most radical instances, she turns "Things Have Changed" into an Eastern European jig and "Tangled up in Blue" into a jaunty, jazzy western, while "Born in Time" is a marvel full of Baroque voicings. One may quibble and Dylan fanatics, known to be provincial on occasion, certainly will, perhaps vociferously with an arrangement here or a lyrical interpretation or subtle shading there without and here is the magic of the album in the least invalidating the singer's choices. Indeed, part of the sublime beauty of Every Grain of Sand is that it inspires, even challenges, one to make personal revisions and reinterpretations. Ultimately, Jungr is one of the few artists who has managed to not only come out on the other side of this songbook unscathed, but to actually come out having enhanced its gravity, significance, and unvarnished beauty as well as her own. She is not merely singing, but telling stories. She opens up a window of vulnerability and sensuality that had previously sat stoic beneath the surface of these songs and suffuses them with such a delicate, gauzy luminosity that they seem to glow from the inside out. Her singing is soulful and emotionally naked, and the performances are so expressive that you take something new away with each listen. The treasures ("I'll Be Your Baby Tonight," "Ring Them Bells," "Not Dark Yet," "Is Your Love in Vain?," and "What Good Am I?") tucked away here are endlessly rewarding. If you think you've heard Bob Dylan or Barb Jungr before Every Grain of Sand, you are, simply put, mistaken. ~ Stanton Swihart https://www.allmusic.com/album/every-grain-of-sand-mw0000661771

Personnel:  Barb Jungr - vocals, harmonica;  Simon Wallace - piano (tracks 1-3, 5-8, 10-12, 14-15);  Russell Churney - piano (tracks 4, 9, 13);  Mark Lockheart - saxophone;  Kim Burton - accordion;  Sonya Fairburn - violin;  Sonia Oakes Stuart - cello;  Julie Walkington - double bass;  Gary Hammond - percussion

Every Grain Of Sand

Ornette Coleman - Of Human Feelings

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1982
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:25
Size: 83,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:34)  1. Sleep Talk
(4:24)  2. Jump Street
(4:20)  3. Him and Her
(6:11)  4. Air Ship
(3:58)  5. What is the Name of That Song?
(4:58)  6. Job Mob
(2:54)  7. Love Words
(6:03)  8. Times Square

When one thinks of Ornette Coleman's innovative Prime Time Band, it is of crowded ensembles played by the altoist/leader, two guitars, two electric bassists, and two drummers. Actually, Jamaaladeen Tacuma, who plays enough for two musicians, is the only bassist on this date, but guitarists Charlie Ellerbee and Bern Nix, along with drummers Denardo Coleman and Calvin Weston, keep the ensembles quite exciting. None of the eight Coleman originals (which includes a tune titled "What Is the Name of That Song?") would catch on, but in this context they serve as a fine platform for Coleman's distinctive horn and often witty and free (but oddly melodic) style. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/of-human-feelings-mw0000902383

Personnel:  Denardo Coleman – drums;  Ornette Coleman – alto saxophone, production;  Charlie Ellerbee – guitar;  Bern Nix – guitar;  Jamaaladeen Tacuma – bass guitar;  Calvin Weston – drums.

Of Human Feelings

Will Davis Trio - Have Mood Will Call...

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:11
Size: 77,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:17)  1. Will Call
(4:07)  2. Sock Cha-Cha
(2:47)  3. Bye & Bye
(3:14)  4. St. George's Groove
(2:59)  5. Everybody's Cha-Cha
(2:42)  6. Moon Child
(2:59)  7. Mad About the Boy
(3:04)  8. Old Devil Moon
(4:15)  9. 50-21
(2:41) 10. Softly as in a Morning Sunrise

Pianist Will Davis was eventually obscured in the shuffle of similar-sounding jazzmen, in name as well as in style. His single album as a leader came out in 1959, a trio session entitled Have Mood, Will Call on the Sue label, a firm whose name sounds more like brash legal advice than a record company. This album, combined with Davis' work on the bebop scene since the '40s, earned him a spot in Leonard Feather's Encyclopedia of Jazz in the '60s. But by a few decades later, even jazz buffs probably thought Will Davis was an encyclopedia entry on organist Wild Bill Davis issing a handful of letters. Davis was raised in Chicago; his father was a clarinetist. The young man studied music initially with a private teacher in Virginia, then entered the Detroit Conservatory. He began gigging with bandleaders such as Snookum Russell and Paul Bascomb, becoming associated with new jazz directions through performances and recordings with trumpeter Howard McGhee. During the second half of the '40s, Davis was part of a scene of Detroit jazz players including important vibraphonist Milt Jackson, brilliant tenor saxophonist Wardell Gray, and perilously choppy saxophonist Sonny Stitt. Davis' own trio backed out-of-town stars such as Lester Young, Charlie Parker, and Miles Davis, the latter no family relation. While some of his associates were known for dazzling complexity, pianist Davis apparently never missed a chance to insert a funky touch. ~ Eugene Chadbourne https://www.allmusic.com/artist/will-davis-mn0000684410

Personnel:  Will Davis, piano;  William Austin, bass;  Oliver Jackson, drums

Have Mood Will Call...

The Count Basie Orchestra - All About That Basie

Styles: Jazz, Big Band, Swing
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:11
Size: 110,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:40)  1. Everyday I Have The Blues
(4:26)  2. Can't Hide Love
(3:38)  3. My Cherie Amour
(3:24)  4. Don't Worry ‘Bout Me
(4:25)  5. Tequila
(4:53)  6. Hallelujah
(3:53)  7. April In Paris
(3:08)  8. Honeysuckle Rose
(4:35)  9. Hello
(4:56) 10. Sent For You Yesterday
(6:08) 11. From One To Another

The Legendary Count Basie Orchestra celebrates their 80th anniversary as the premiere big band in jazz with a collection of classic material a twist on a few modern hits (Adele, Leonard Cohen, Stevie Wonder, and others). Special guests include: Stevie Wonder, Carmen Bradford, Kurt Elling, Take 6, Jamie Davis, Jon Faddis, Wycliffe Gordon, Joey DeFrancesco, Eric Reed, Rickey Woodard, and Gregg Field. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/About-That-Basie-Count-Orchestra/dp/B07FDVCMHP

Featuring Take 6, Kurt Eling, Carmen Bradford, Jon Faddis, Wycliffe Gordon, Jamie Davis, Joey Defrancesco and Stevie Wonder…

All About That Basie