Wednesday, November 21, 2018

Joe Magnarelli & John Swana - New York Philly Junction

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:50
Size: 137,3 MB
Art: Front

( 6:36)  1. New York-Philly Junction
( 6:33)  2. Giants
( 7:24)  3. My Old Flame
( 7:02)  4. Lou Ann
( 7:20)  5. From Now On
( 7:50)  6. Eagles
( 6:25)  7. They Say It's Wonderful
(10:39)  8. If Ever I Would Leave You

During the course of nearly twenty-five years, the Criss Cross imprint has sustained an enviable reputation for recording promising talent from the East Coast (particularly New York City) jazz mainstream. Some of the music's rising stars, such as Chris Potter and Seamus Blake, made their debuts as leaders for Gerry Teekens' venerable Holland-based label. Even more impressive is Teekens' willingness to document the progress of some of the artists on a continuing basis, from their days as young lions and into middle age, when the years of persistence and hard work begin to pay off in significant artistic dividends.  New York-Philly Junction is co-led by trumpeters Joe Magnarelli and John Swana, both of whom have recorded as leaders and sidemen for Criss Cross since the early nineteen-nineties. The session is a reprise of a 1998 date (released as Philly-New York Junction ) that included four other of the label's regulars, pianist Joel Weiskopf, tenor saxophonist Eric Alexander, bassist Peter Washington, and drummer Kenny Washington. The material is well chosen, the ensemble playing leaves nothing to be desired, and the rhythm section stays alert and unobtrusive; however, it's the four primary soloists (three horns and piano) that makes the new recording top drawer. The three choruses he takes on the title track are quintessential Magnarelli. The trumpeter moves from one short segment to another, occasionally emitting sounds like long sighs. He frequently starts to develop a line, goes off on a convoluted tangent, and then comes back as if suddenly remembering to finish the original thought. Though the first three notes coming out of his horn are plump and certain, his ballad rendition of the standard "My Old Flame" sounds emotionally vulnerable. He's played the tune countless times, yet Magnarelli remains enamored of Johnson and Coslow's ode to a lost love, and takes liberties without violating its essence. During the eight measures preceding the bridge, he flashes a number of brief, pointed asides before once again finding the heart of the song. Magnarelli's solo on "Eagles" is firmly based in a recognizable, bebop-oriented vocabulary, but is nonetheless very personal. Listen closely and he gets under your skin. As the solo progresses changes in emphasis and direction are constant; however, he's very organized, the ideas fit, and he leaves nothing to question. In an instant, lines move from skittering this way and that to sounding decidedly pronounced. The rhythm section wisely stays out of his way. Weiskopf, in particular, comps sparsely and lays out altogether for a long stretch.

John Swana's solo on his spry, medium tempo composition "Eagles" is one of those marvelous instances in which everything coming out of the horn makes perfect sense and feels just right. The path of the solo is so clear that it almost doesn't sound improvised. Spinning witty and inventive melodies, Swana's totally at ease with the horn, the tune's changes, and the rhythm section. Spurred by Kenny Washington's snare drum accents and varied cymbal textures, his forward drive never sounds forced or labored. Even several sixteenth-note runs (something that, in his earlier work, Swana often overused) come off as playful instead of contrived. The first seven bars of Swana's wistful improvisation during Tom Harrell's "From Now On" are blissfully devoid of any tension. Working different registers of the horn, he juxtaposes long tones and pregnant pauses. Just when it seems as if Swana is simply going to fade away, he begins a series of winding lines (none of which last very long) that all gradually slow down to a standstill. In addition to his sensitivity as an accompanist, Weiskopf is a confident, orderly soloist who never sounds rushed or labored. During "New York-Philly Junction" the pianist has something different to say on each of three choruses. 

He begins by gracefully sliding from phrase to phrase, evoking blues locutions without becoming excessive. During the second chorus persistent clumps of chords jounce against Peter Washington's irregular bass line and Kenny Washington's patchwork of beats. In the last chorus, Weiskopf unleashes a whirlwind of precisely executed single note lines that wind down, as if he's trying to reverse direction and back out of the solo. His wonderful introduction to "My Old Flame" doesn't contain any hint of the melody; he nonetheless graciously guides us to the song. Melding single notes and chords into a dreamy perfection, the four measures are both purposeful and timeless. The chords ring a little; there's a brief, telling silence after the second bar; and despite the brevity Weiskopf's around long enough to allow us to admire his firm touch. The four choruses he takes during "Eagles" constitute an extended burst of creativity in an unassuming guise. Weiskopf refrains from pounding the keyboard; his changes in dynamics are both subtle and effective. He becomes marginally more assertive as the solo progresses, but the degrees of emphasis aren't dramatic. As he knits together themes with ease, the pianist is clearly interested in the solo as a whole rather than reaching for affected climaxes. The performance comes off as one continuous chain of thought. He strays briefly from Peter Washington's stalwart pulse, and then comes back into the fold without any loss of continuity. There's an epic quality to Alexander's seven choruses of saxophone athleticism on "Giants," Swana's variant of John Coltrane's "Giant Steps." It's good to hear him temper a tendency to squeeze too much information in a single presentation. In this case he's a methodical thinker, in complete control of his emotions as well as the instrument. Tightly woven variations of a handful of motifs display a balance between rigid discipline and finesse. Alexander pauses a few times in the first chorus, then stays in constant forward motion. His eighth-note lines become increasingly dense in texture despite their rapidity. By the sixth chorus the grand sweep of his blowing is nearly overwhelming; he then downshifts and concludes with a quote from "Giant Steps."~ David A.Orthmann https://www.allaboutjazz.com/joe-magnarelli-and-john-swana-new-york-philly-junction-by-david-a-orthmann.php

Personnel: Joe Magnarelli—trumpet; John Swana—trumpet; Eric Alexander—tenor sax; Joel Weiskopf—piano; Peter Washington—bass; Kenny Washington—drums.

New York Philly Junction

Charito - Affair to Remember

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:33
Size: 138,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:03)  1. Say It
(3:39)  2. Smile
(3:50)  3. All the Way
(5:03)  4. The Very Thought of You
(3:35)  5. Love Is a Many Splendored Thing
(4:08)  6. When October Goes
(3:20)  7. It's Impossible
(4:35)  8. Save Your Love For Me
(4:04)  9. Let's Fall In Love
(5:30) 10. Estate
(4:23) 11. Love Beware
(3:26) 12. Till the End of Time
(3:51) 13. An Affair to Remember

Distinctively a most prominent jazz vocalist in Japan with multi-awarded albums recorded and released internationally, Charito’s artistry continues to establish its global presence with her recent and forthcoming tours in Europe, Asia, North and Latin America. Her highly personal and expressive vocal style incorporates the breadth of her musical interests, from straight-ahead soulful ballads to hard-swinging grooves and improvisational adventures. Her approach is fresh and invigorating, paying tribute to the jazz tradition while interacting and exploring, always seeking to express herself in the moment. https://www.charito.com/biography/

Personnel:  Charito (Vocal); Soichi Noriki (Piano); Benisuke Sakai (Bass); Kengo Nakamura (Bass); Gene Jackson (Drums).

Affair to Remember

Alex Sipiagin - Out of the Circle

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:45
Size: 146,7 MB
Art: Front

( 9:47)  1. Wind Dance
(10:29)  2. Afternoon Dreams
( 8:47)  3. Echoes of Thought
(10:41)  4. Out of the Circle
( 7:03)  5. Flash
( 9:07)  6. Syn
( 7:49)  7. Sketches of Myself

Over the course of seven years and six albums for Criss Cross, trumpeter Alex Sipiagin has been evolving as a player, writer and bandleader, with Prints (2007) his most fully realized effort to date. Still, the Dutch record label's insistence on short sessions usually only a single day imposes practical limitations on what its artists can accomplish on a larger scale. While Sipiagin continues to record for Criss Cross, the larger ensemble and more ambitious compositional scope of Out of the Circle his first release using the web-based ArtistShare model that's been so successful for artists like Maria Schneider is an album that simply couldn't have been made within Criss Cross' limited timeframe. Sipiagin expands his usual quintet/sextet approach to as large as a ten-piece, featuring players who are part of the same New York cadre bassist Scott Colley, guitarist Adam Rogers, drummer Antonio Sanchez and saxophonist/flautist Donny McCaslin alongside under-appreciated keyboardist Henry Hey, Dave Holland Big Band/Sextet co-conspirator Robin Eubanks on trombone, percussionist Daniel Sadownick, wife/vocalist Monday Michiru and well-known keyboardist/arranger Gil Goldstein on accordion. It's a potent combination, allowing Sipiagin the opportunity to explore more detailed compositional form while, at the same time, having the improvisational prowess available to keep things spontaneous throughout. Sipiagin remains an eminently lyrical writer and soloist, although the contexts on Out of the Circle are his most challenging yet. What's always been a strong suit for the trumpeter, in addition to an inviting tone on whatever horn variant he plays, is his ability to find singable melodies, thread-through-needle-like, over the most difficult of changes. His solo on the relaxed but constantly shifting harmonies of the episodic "Syn" is a perfect example as are the contributions of Goldstein and Rogers. 

Compositionally, Sipiagin explores a broader palette than usual, with a Brazilian undercurrent on more than one of the album's seven tracks, most notably the vocal track "Afternoon Dreams" and adventurous "Wind Dance," where Eubanks delivers the kind of characteristically unpredictable solo on which his reputation has been built over the past two decades. Sipiagin even approaches pop territory with Michiru's "Sketches of Myself" the only non-Sipiagin track although it's still firmly entrenched in the jazz sphere, with richly melodic solos from both Sipiagin and Hey. Michiru, who has her own ArtistShare projects in release, demonstrates, like Sipiagin, a more complex lyricism, and a pure voice focused on melody rather than gymnastics. Sipiagin's writing for a three-horn frontline is outstanding, with the horns-only (and multi-tracked) section following Sadownick's brief but inventive solo on "Syn" a marvel of contrapuntal and harmonic conception. While the inherent spontaneity of his Criss Cross recordings will continue to be an important part of who he is, let's hope that Sipiagin can continue to pursue the more ambitious direction of Out of the Circle. When paired with Prints, it's a potent one-two punch of complex yet accessible writing, beautiful arrangements with a keen attention to detail, and risk-taking solos for which Sipiagin deserves a broader audience. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/out-of-the-circle-alex-sipiagin-artistshare-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Alex Sipiagin: trumpet, flugelhorn, piccolo trumpet, bass trumpet; Donny McCaslin: tenor and soprano saxophone, flute; Robin Eubanks: trombone; Adam Rogers: guitars; Henry Hey: keyboards; Antonio Sanchez: drums; Daniel Sadownick: percussion; Scott Colley: bass; Gil Goldstein: accordion; Monday Michiru: vocals and programming.

Out of the Circle

Mort Weiss - All Too Soon

Styles: Clarinet Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:45
Size: 169,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:58)  1. Scrapple From The Apple
(5:54)  2. Softly As In A Morning Sunrise
(6:01)  3. Blue Monk
(5:38)  4. Be My Love
(5:44)  5. Django
(5:40)  6. Dearly Beloved
(5:48)  7. O Grande Amor
(5:59)  8. Afternoon In Paris
(5:45)  9. Emily
(5:36) 10. Like Someone In Love
(7:12) 11. If You Could See Me Now
(4:24) 12. No More Blues

Not the least of this album's attractions is the title. To those few listeners familiar with the tune, "All Too Soon" might summon up one of Duke Ellington's more obscure compositions, were it included in the disc's playlist of no fewer than a dozen jazz "classics." Or it could be a reminder of the irreparable loss to the music as a result of the recent, premature death of clarinetist Mort Weiss' brilliant bassist, Dave Carpenter, to whose memory the album is dedicated. But to anyone familiar with the Mort Weiss Story, All Too Soon represents the life and career of the remarkable musician who, after shelving his axe some 45 years ago, suddenly burst back on the scene with several head-turning albums recorded with major players, ranging from veteran reedman Sam Most to organist Joey De Francesco. The key to the album's title is most likely held by the poet Robert Browning, who wrote: "Come grow old with me the best is yet to be." One suspects that with All Too Soon the clarinetist is saying, in effect, "I couldn't agree more, but did we have to get here so quickly?" Weiss has had quite a ride, and the present album, recorded on the day of his 73rd birthday, is at once a culmination of his journey and simply another milestone in the career of an artist who, above all, relishes his time along with the opportunities each increasingly precious moment offers for continued learning and growth. Besides testifying to Weiss' extraordinary achievement, All Too Soon must be seen as a resoundingly successful statement by guitarist Ron Eschete. Always a respected musician but rarely mentioned in the same breath with a Jim Hall or Joe Pass, a Russell Malone or Pat Metheny, Eschete demonstrates with this duo album that he's inarguably a charter member of the same exclusive fraternity of guitarists who can solo and accompany, donning a dazzling array of musical hats while never displacing attention from the music to the legerdemain of his own versatility. The telepathy between Weiss and Eschete brings to mind similar stunning duo recordings such as those featuring Hall and pianist Bill Evans (Undercurrent, Blue Note 1963), Pass and pianist Oscar Peterson (Live a la Salle Pleyel, Pablo 1975), Malone and Bennie Green (Bluebird, Telarc 2004), and Metheny and pianist Brad Mehldau (Metheny Mehldau, Nonesuch 2006). But whereas each of those sessions included a virtuoso keyboard player, on All Too Soon the full responsibility for the time and harmony, the chord voicings and accompaniment patterns, the melodic choruses and motivic counterstatments is on the guitarist. To say the least, Eschete carries the load, and does so all the more impressively for shouldering the burden so lightly.

On the opener, Charlie Parker's "Scrapple from the Apple," taken at a faster tempo than any recorded by Parker in full flight, Weiss and Eschete tear through the head in unison, with the exception of the bridge, on which the latter switches to rhythm guitar, sounding like Freddie Green on steroids. During Weiss' first flaming solo, however, the guitarist comps like a pianist, allowing the time to be implied by the momentum established in the melodic lines of the clarinet. His own solo alternates single notes with chords and seamlessly stitches the joint between treble and bass registers of his 7-string instrument. Like a rare vintage Bordeaux, Weiss' tone seems to acquire complexity and richness with each passing year. Its glowing, lustrous quality in the mid and lower registers of the horn begins to shine through on "Softly As in a Morning Sunrise" and the ensuing "Blue Monk," especially when Eschete's closely-blocked chord voicings augment the clarinet's lead, frequently adding a major 7th or dissonant tone to the cluster, imparting engaging tension to a melodic statement performed in lock-step by clarinet and guitar. On the quasi-operatic "Be My Love," Weiss is a hawk in its ethereal element suddenly swooping down upon its prey (or rather a full-throated E below middle C) and then back up again to savor the product of his labors. His appetite is hardly satisfied, however. On John Lewis' "Django" the clarinetist doesn't rest until he locates terra firma yet a half step lower, and on Tadd Dameron's "If You Could See Me Now" he manages yet another half step, scooping up with effortless ease the low D that begins the tune's ascending melodic phrase. The tones are securely full and "fat," and the slow vibrato that Weiss imparts to them is less suggestive of another clarinetist than of tenor saxophonist Ben Webster. With a player like Eschete, who simultaneously walks bass lines and plays chords in real time, the horn player's challenge of maintaining rhythmic flow is minimized if not eliminated. For the guitarist, the task at hand is considerably greater, requiring the employment of a variety of techniques. Like the late pianist Dave McKenna and a select group of musicians, Eschete has the facility to solo effectively whether using chords or single-note phrases over his own bass lines but is careful not to place over-reliance on the device. More often, it's the swing generated by his thoughtful, inventive lines, along with an implied rhythm, that assures a complete and unbroken narrative sweep to each of his offerings. Besides taking turns with individual solos, the pair trade fours ("Dearly Beloved"), eights ("Like Someone in Love"), and occasionally allow the conversation to heat up and converge into full-blown fugues ("Softly As in a Morning Sunrise," "Afternoon in Paris").

Despite the employment of such varied approaches, the listener's focus throughout is on the continuous and cohesive unfolding of a purposeful collective musical result. The late tenor saxophonist Al Cohn once said that, contrary to some of the hyped theory and method books about improvising, his primary principle was simply to listen and above all, to himself. Rather than let a single note "go to waste," even a mistake, take note of that note so that it can be repeated, altered, and developed in permutations that generate more permutations, ultimately assuring a statement that's marked by completeness, unity and organic form. As a result of Weiss and Eschete listening not merely to each other but intently to themselves, All Too Soon exemplifies jazz as it should and can be: free, spontaneous, in the moment but at the same time a representation of musical democracy in action.Not that it's a "perfect" recording. The alteration of the verbal accents for the lyric of Tadd Dameron's timeless tune is a tad distracting; on some of the up-tempo passages the pyrotechnical phrases have a tendency to pour forth so freely the notes running together in an almost portamento fashion that the effect is that of an Art Tatum fill rather than a pungent musical anecdote of the sort a resourceful minimalist like Pee Wee Russell might tell. Quite possibly, Weiss who, in the liner notes characteristically pulls no punches while commenting on the state of the art and his own playing as well as naming other clarinet players for better or worse, would be all too ready to agree. Regardless, listeners familiar with his previous work are likely to be in complete agreement with his assessment of All Too Soon as his best work to date (six albums preceded it). Moreover, he singles out Jobim's "O Grand Amor" as his favorite track. Along with "Blue Monk," it would have to be this listener's choice as well. There's not a glib or "unearned" moment to be heard during the artist's deeply-felt reading. Rather than the usual pleasant bossa nova meditation on a past love, the performance is more threnody than reflection. Each note is distinct and distinctive, each telling a story  about winning and losing, laughing and loving, out-racing time and, after a mighty struggle, conceding it some ground. It would, for some artists, serve as a fitting valedictory. But from a fighter like Weiss, not one to go gentle or otherwise any time soon, it's perhaps best seen as a "soul station," a point of respite and rejuvenation in the life of a productive if late-blooming adventurer. ~ Samuel Chell https://www.allaboutjazz.com/mort-weiss-all-too-soon-a-jazz-duet-for-clarinet-and-seven-string-guitar-by-samuel-chell.php
 
Personnel: Personnel: Mort Weiss: clarinet; Ron Eschete: seven string guitar.

All Too Soon

Kevin Eubanks - Opening Night

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1984
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:43
Size: 92,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:02)  1. Opening Night
(5:03)  2. Shades Of Black
(4:45)  3. The Navigator
(4:06)  4. Thought About Thinking
(4:08)  5. In Flight From Omelas
(6:03)  6. A Place Before you've Been
(4:52)  7. Vera's Isle
(4:39)  8. To Be Continued

An adept guitarist with a bent toward contemporary jazz, Kevin Eubanks is best known for leading Jay Leno's Tonight Show Band. Born in 1957 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Eubanks grew up in a musical family along with his older brother, trombonist Robin, and younger brother, trumpeter Duane  his uncle is pianist Ray Bryant. A talented musician by his teens, Eubanks eventually studied music at Berklee College of Music in Boston. After graduating, he played with a bevy of name musicians including drummer Roy Haynes and saxophonist Sam Rivers; he was also a member of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers from 1980 to 1981. Eubanks made his solo recording debut with Guitarist on Elektra in 1982. He then signed with GRP and released seven albums, beginning with 1984's Sundance and ending with 1989's Promise of Tomorrow. Moving to Blue Note, Eubanks released several albums, including 1992's Turning Point, 1993's Spiritalk, 1994's Spiritalk 2, and 1994's Live at Bradley's. In 1992, he joined bandleader Branford Marsalis on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno, and in 1995, Eubanks took over the band when Marsalis left.

His friendly chemistry and humorous repartee with Leno quickly established the guitarist as a household name. While the Tonight Show band was his focus during this time, Eubanks did release several albums on his own Insoul label. In 2009, he moved with Leno to lead the Primetime Band on NBC's short-lived The Jay Leno Show. In 2010, Eubanks left The Tonight Show shortly after Leno returned to host it again. That same year, Eubanks delivered the album Zen Food on Mack Avenue Records, and in 2012, he returned with his second Mack Avenue release, the stylistically eclectic The Messenger. In 2015, Eubanks paired up with innovative fellow guitarist/pianist Stanley Jordan for the eclectic covers album Duets. ~ Matt Collar https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/opening-night/1311647726

Personnel:  Kevin Eubanks - Guitar (Acoustic), Producer, Bass, Guitar (Electric), Guitar;  Branford Marsalis - Sax (Tenor);  Buster Williams - Bass;  Kent Jordan - Flute (Alto);  Big Black - Bass, Tumba;  Tommy Campbell - Drums;  David Eubanks - Bass;  Kenny Kirkland - Piano;  Marvin "Smitty" Smith -  Drums

Opening Night

Tuesday, November 20, 2018

Dick Hyman - Brazilian Impressions

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1966
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:21
Size: 75,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:29)  1. Sugarloaf
(2:46)  2. A Time for Love
(2:30)  3. Samba de Duas Notas
(2:21)  4. Mas Que Nada
(2:54)  5. A Message to Michael
(2:24)  6. Song of the Jet [Samba do Avião]
(2:36)  7. Jazz 'n' Samba [Só Danço Samba]
(3:13)  8. Insensatez [How Insensitive]
(2:27)  9. Eleanor Rigby
(2:49) 10. Ri
(2:33) 11. A Day in the Life of a Fool [Manhã de Carnaval]
(2:14) 12. O Barquinho

Pianist Dick Hyman wrote the arrangements for this Brazilian-flavored date, which has a fair amount of other high caliber jazz talent: flugelhornists Clark Terry and Joe Wilder, Phil Bodner on flute and piccolo, and a rhythm section that includes Bob Haggart and Bobby Rosengarden. But Hyman's charts aren't aimed primarily at a jazz audience, so they don't have much of the spirit of adventurous improvisation that jazz fans have come to expect of his work. While the music is pleasant and doesn't suffer from the extremely dated sound that many similar recordings done for Command during this era have, it is hardly an essential recording by Dick Hyman. In fact, it is Clark Terry's fat toned, if too brief, flugelhorn solos that tend to steal the spotlight. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/brasilian-impressions-mw0000965437

Personnel:  Arranged By, Piano, Woodwind – Dick Hyman

Brazilian Impressions

Joani Taylor - The Art of the Jazz Ballad

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:12
Size: 126,8 MB
Art: Front

(8:05)  1. I'm Glad There Is You
(6:25)  2. Forever Eyes
(6:55)  3. Make Someone Happy
(6:30)  4. Yesterday
(6:01)  5. Little Bridge
(3:22)  6. That Night
(8:49)  7. You Don't Know Me
(9:01)  8. 'Round Midnight

Joani taylor is canada's first lady of the jazz ballad. she has legendary status in canada's music circles. joani has practically lived in television and recording studios. she has sung solo and back up on literally thousands of film scores, commercials, and recordings with artists ranging from bryan adams, jon bon jovi, bruce fairburn, david foster, to tom jones and james galway, and producing herself as well as other artists. Joani has flown all over the world for special solo performances appearing in taiwan, san francisco, across canada, the 02/03/o4 vancouver international jazz festival and at the adelaide jazz festival in austraila. joani was nominated for the national jazz awards and the 03 juno awards for her fourth cd "the wall street sessions." the recognition has been earned and well deserved. she is a prolific lyricist and an excellent vocal arranger. sending her on teaching tours three to four times a year, joani's master classes for singers and musicians accompaning singers are compelling, inovative, and very well attended. her students love her approach and she covers areas of performance not delt with by other clinicians.constantly working on stage ms. taylor has opened for and performed with a real range of artists from stevie wonder and little richard, to lenny breau, p.j. perry, cannonball addrley, miles davis. don thompson, fraser macpherson, tommy banks, moe koffman campbell ryga, brad turner, ross taggart, john capon and many other artists. recently, joani recorded the opening song for  a feature film. With influences and encouragement from powerful artists such as ella fitzgerald, frank sinatra, bill evans. thelonious monk and cannonball adderly, joani has become a master of her own style. it has been roumored that joani's music is included in clint eastwood's personal collection. as a matter of fact you can clearly hear the impact and influence she's had on some of canada's best known singers. you can't miss the power of her spirit when deep into a song. joani taylor brings to her audience a truly personal and in the moment experience. this chick singer stirs up a compelling feast of vocal delights that lure and seduce the audience into a jazz buff born again conversion. joani taylor has arrived. https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/joani2

Personnel:  Vocals – Joani Taylor;  Piano – Bob Murphy .

The Art of the Jazz Ballad

Eddie 'Cleanhead' Vinson - I Want A Little Girl

Styles: Vocal And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1981
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:15
Size: 98,8 MB
Art: Front

( 5:36)  1. I Want A Little Girl
( 4:49)  2. Somebody's Got To Go
( 5:16)  3. Blues In The Closet
( 4:43)  4. No Good For Me
(10:55)  5. Stormy Monday
( 5:46)  6. Straight, No Chaser
( 3:07)  7. Worried Mind Blues

Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson, 64 at the time of this Pablo recording, is in superior form on the blues-oriented material. With Art Hillery (on piano and organ) and guitarist Cal Green leading the rhythm section, and trumpeter Martin Banks and the tenor of Rashid Ali offering contrasting solo voices, this is a particularly strong release. It is true that Vinson had sung such songs as "I Want a Little Girl," "Somebody's Got to Go," and "Stormy Monday" a countless number of times previously but he still infuses these versions with enthusiasm and spirit, making this set a good example of Cleanhead's talents in his later years. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/i-want-a-little-girl-mw0000649768

Personnel: Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson - alto saxophone, vocals; Rashid Jamal Ali - alto saxophone; Martin Banks - trumpet;   Art Hillery - piano;  Cal Green - guitar; John Heard - bass;  Roy McCurdy - drums.

I Want A Little Girl

Esko Linnavalli Sextet - Finnish Design

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1972
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:08
Size: 90,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:53)  1. On The Hills Of Carelia
(3:18)  2. Polska From Savitaipale
(2:57)  3. The Rose In The Valley
(2:45)  4. Polska From Koivisto
(1:14)  5. Strawberry - Take One
(1:23)  6. Strawberry - Take Two
(3:39)  7. There's My Sweetheart
(4:43)  8. Early In The Morning
(0:59)  9. Old Dance
(3:14) 10. Shepherd Song
(1:45) 11. Old Polska
(2:14) 12. Wedding Song

You might imagine that a set titled "Finnish Design" might be all cold and modern but the sound here is anything but and instead comes across in a really warm blend of creative percussion, unusual rhythms, and some especially great work on horns! The set was put together by Esko Linnavalli who plays a fair bit of acoustic piano and Fender Rhodes on the session but the record also draws from strong work by Eero Koivistoinen on tenor and soprano sax, and some rich trumpet lines from Bertil Lofgren who's got a way of stepping out in the lead, but with a fragile, human quality that really moves us. 

Jukka Tolonen plays guitar on the record too sometimes in ways that are a fair bit more subtle than his own records and other musicians include Seppo Paakkunainen on flute and recorder, Lars Urban Helje on bass, and Esko Rosnell on drums and percussion. Titles include "On The Hills Of Carelia", "Polska From Koivisto", "Strawberry Take One", "Early In The Morning", and "Wedding Song".  © 1996-2018, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/809199/Esko-Linnavalli-Sextet:Finnish-Design

Personnel: Conductor, Piano, Electric Piano [Fender Rhodes Electric Piano] – Esko Linnavalli;  Bass – Lars-Urban Helje;  Drums, Percussion – Esko Rosnell;  Flute, Recorder – Seppo Paakkunainen;  Guitar, Electric Guitar – Jukka Tolonen;   Soprano Saxophone – Eero Koivistoinen;  Tenor Saxophone – Eero Koivistoinen;   Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Bertil Löfgren

Finnish Design

Noriko Ueda Trio - Debut

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:18
Size: 108,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:36)  1. Bohemia After Dark
(5:11)  2. Blue Sunset
(4:28)  3. Just in Time
(5:12)  4. Forget Me Not
(5:39)  5. Double Vision
(3:59)  6. Parisian Thoroughfare
(5:58)  7. The Loop
(5:38)  8. For All We Know
(5:33)  9. The Touch of Your Lips

Born 14 March 1972, Osaka, Japan. From the age of 14, Ueda studied classical piano and two years later began playing electric bass. Her piano studies continued until she was 20, and in the meantime she had also begun to compose. During the last two years of these studies, she concurrently studied classical singing at Osaka College of Music. It was at this time that she made the change to playing the acoustic double bass, which thereafter became her principal instrument. After leaving Osaka College early in 1992, Ueda began playing at the city’s jazz clubs, work that provided an opportunity to accompany visiting jazz musicians such as Kenny Barron, Joe Chambers, Benny Green, Roy Hargrove, Jimmy Smith and Grady Tate. In 1994, she joined pianist Kiyoshi Takeshita for a year and then went to the USA to study at the Berklee College Of Music, where she majored in jazz composition. While at Berklee, she appeared on the 1997 BMG release Summa Cum Jazz: The Best Of Berklee College Of Music. From 1996, she led an all-Japanese, all-female trio, Groovin’ Girls, which has recorded in the studio and also appeared on Black Entertainment Television’s Jazz Central. With her in the group are pianist Takana Miyamoto and drummer Masumi Inaba. Ueda has composed extensively, often for big bands. Several of her pieces were used on Live At TUC, a 2001 radio broadcast on FM Tokyo. In 2000, 2002 and 2003 her compositions were performed at the BMI Annual Showcase Concerts. Her ‘Castle In The North’ won her the 2002 BMI Foundation’s Charlie Parker Jazz Composition Prize and the following year her ‘Power Of Spring’ was played at the BMI Annual Showcase Concert. This same composition was selected for the BMI Jazz Composer’s Workshop and was performed at the IAJE (International Association for Jazz Education) Annual Conference in January 2004. Ueda is a member of DIVA, the all-female big band, led by drummer Sherrie Maricle, and she also plays as a member of the DIVA small group, Five Play. https://www.allmusic.com/artist/noriko-ueda-mn0000119737

Personnel:  Noriko Ueda (bass) Ted Rosenthal (piano) Quincy Davis (drums).

Debut

Monday, November 19, 2018

Stanley Cowell - Musa - Ancestral Streams

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:00
Size: 90,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:06)  1. Abscretions
(3:43)  2. Equipoise
(7:08)  3. Prayer For Peace
(2:53)  4. Emil Danenberg
(5:28)  5. Maimoun
(2:58)  6. Travelin' Man
(5:20)  7. Departure No. 1
(2:14)  8. Departure No. 2
(3:06)  9. Sweet Song

Musa Ancestral Streams remains a relative oddity in the pantheon of jazz's black consciousness movement -- a solo piano set of stunning reach and scope, its adherence to intimacy contrasts sharply with the bold, multi-dimensional sensibilities that signify the vast majority of post-Coltrane excursions into spiritual expression, yet the sheer soulfulness and abandon of Stanley Cowell's performance nevertheless vaults the record into the same physical and metaphysical planes. Cowell's energy and touch are remarkable, as if guided by divine power, and for all the music's structural spaciousness and rhythmic freedom, not a note feels out of place, let alone excessive. Most intriguing is "Travelin' Man," an overdubbed "duet" featuring Cowell on both acoustic and electric piano that underscores his uncommon affinity for space and presence. ~ Jason Ankeny https://www.allmusic.com/album/musa-ancestral-streams-mw0000771842

Personnel:  Stanley Cowell - piano, electric piano, kalimba

Musa - Ancestral Streams

Carmen Bradford - Finally Yours

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:45
Size: 93,7 MB
Art: Front

(1:49)  1. Destiny (Prelude)
(4:56)  2. Destiny
(5:42)  3. Maybe September
(3:08)  4. Rough Ridin'
(3:48)  5. The Right To Love
(3:36)  6. I Believe In My Soul
(5:21)  7. I Love You More Than You Know
(3:18)  8. Chicago Hell
(5:54)  9. You Must Believe In Spring
(3:07) 10. More Than A Trial

Originally issued in 1992 on the Amazon label and then reissued five years later under the larger Evidence cover, this is Austin, TX, native Carmen Bradford's first album under her own name. Endowed with a powerful, expressive, wide-ranged voice, Bradford seasons her jazz vocalizing with soul and blues as she delivers on a play list of familiar and not so familiar material embossed with a variety of tempi. There's "Destiny," done with a Latin rhythm at an up-tempo pace and featuring the guitar of Charlton Johnson (who also composed the tune). She dips into the Lionel Hampton songbook for one of his hardly ever heard tunes, "Chicago Hello," showing off her swinging aptitude, this time with Bill Easley and Steve Greenfield sharing the solo spotlight on tenor, making it one of the more engaging tracks on the CD. Memories of Motown are recalled with Ray Charles' "I Believe to My Soul," done with Aretha Franklin in mind. Bradford shows she is at home with pure romantic ballads on a very heartfelt "The Right to Love," with James Polk carrying the bulk of the accompanist load. In fact, "heartfelt" may be the one best word that characterizes what is going on at this session. Bradford throws everything she has into each tune, leaving no emotion untouched. Even the Ella Fitzgerald classic "Rough Ridin'" gets a demonstrative reading, as the band offers a couple of quotes from the familiar racetrack call to colors. Backed by topflight jazz personages, who she uses very effectively, this is a more than credible first outing and a solid harbinger of good things to come by Bradford. ~ Dave Nathan https://www.allmusic.com/album/finally-yours-mw0000024152

Personnel:  Vocals – Carmen Bradford;  Bass – Darryl Jones, Earl May;  Drums, Percussion – Marvin Smith;  Flute – Steve Greenfield;  Guitar – Charlton Johnson;  Piano – George Caldwell , James Polk;  Saxophone [Baritone & Alto] – Steve Greenfield;  Saxophone [Tenor] – Bill Easley, Frank Foster;  Trumpet – Byron Stripling

Finally Yours

Rachel Therrien Quintet - Why Don't You Try

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:02
Size: 127,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:26)  1. Spectrum
(4:33)  2. Why Don't You Try
(6:44)  3. Demi-Nuit
(5:17)  4. Adirondack Jump
(5:49)  5. Hayde Santamaria
(5:42)  6. CRS
(3:34)  7. Omelette Coleman
(6:19)  8. I Am Alone
(4:08)  9. Tomber En Cinq
(5:40) 10. Rocket Launch
(4:44) 11. Miroé

Spearheaded by trumpeter Rachel Therrien, Why Don’t You Try presents a collaborative mosaic of original music by each member of the quintet. Recorded at Montreal’s Studio 270 with technician Robert Langlois and mixed at Studio ToneBender by Olivier St-Pierre, the project presents tasty jazz-rock with creative arrangements and beautiful cohesion between the musicians. Co-produced by Rachel Therrien and Kim Neundorf for Free Run Artists Productions, Why Don’t You Try features the sound of Simon Pagé’s groovy electric bass, Charles Trudel’s virtuoso piano, Alain Bourgeois’s energetic drums, Benjamin Deschamps’s inventive saxophone, and Rachel Therrien’s inspired trumpet. Why Don’t You Try is woven of bold musical proposals, great moments of improvisation and a sympathetic humoristic touch. This project was made possible in part by the Government of Canada and the TD Grand Prix 2015 of the International Jazz Festival of Montreal. https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/racheltherrienquintet

Personnel:  Rachel Therrien - Trumpet & Composition (1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 8); Benjamin Deschamps - Sax & Composition (3); Charles Trudel - Piano & Composition (10); Simon Page - Bass & Composition (7, 9); Alain Bourgeois - Drum & Composition (11)

Why Don't You Try

The Diva Jazz Orchestra - Special Kay!

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2016
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 56:31
Size: 103,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:16)  1. Did You do That?
(6:52)  2. Nothin'
(6:58)  3. To Sweets with Love
(4:36)  4. Where's the Food
(6:25)  5. Give Me Your Love
(5:24)  6. How Ya Doin'?
(6:25)  7. You Made a Mistake
(4:41)  8. The Brush Off
(4:45)  9. Special Kay
(4:04) 10. Three Sisters and a Cousin

No, it is definitely not advisable to open a review with an unequivocal superlative (for one thing, it sort of gives the game away, doesn't it?). But on Special Kay!, its ninth impressive album in twenty-four years, DIVA the gold standard among all-female big bands since its inception really gives a commentator no reasonable choice. Simply put, this is a mind-blowing live performance at the Tannery Pond Community Center in North Creek, NY, that electrifies and satisfies from start to finish. Perhaps one reason for the inspired endeavor is that the "Kay" in Special Kay! symbolizes Stanley Kay, a drummer-turned-talent manager (and entertainment director for the New York Yankees) who in 1990 approached another drummer, Sherrie Maricle, with the idea of forming an all-woman band. Two years later, DIVA made its widely-praised debut, and the rest, as they say, is history. Kay remained a driving force behind the orchestra until his passing in June 2010. Now, some six years later, DIVA pays tribute to its fallen leader by performing ten of his admirable compositions, several of which had never before been recorded. To underscore its import, Special Kay! marks the first time DIVA has ever produced an album of all-original themes. Among Kay's clients was the renowned tap-dancing trio Hines, Hines & Dad, and he wrote the flamboyant opener, "Did You Do That?" for Maurice and Gregory Hines' mother, Alma, who often asked that question after an especially intricate dance routine. The irrepressible barn-burner features a blistering duel between tenors Roxy Coss and Janelle Reichman who moves to clarinet to solo with trumpeter Tanya Darby on the strapping yet melodious "Nothin,'" trimly arranged by bassist Noriko Ueda. All trumpets are muted (and all solo) on "To Sweets with Love," Kay's loping homage to trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison, which precedes another brisk flag-waver, "Where's the Food?," a question Kay always insisted was the first one asked by band members at every gig. 

Emphatic solos courtesy of baritone Lisa Parrott, trombonist Deborah Weisz and pianist Tomoko Ohno. So far, an avalanche of exhilarating big-band jazz, and we haven't even reached the halfway mark. Ohno and trombonist Jennifer Krupa are front and center on the seductive "Give Me Your Love," altos Leigh Pilzer and Sharel Cassity on Scott Whitfield's snappy arrangement of the fast-moving "How Ya Doin'?" Reichman (clarinet), Krupa (muted) and trumpeter Jami Dauber (also muted) brighten John J. DiMartino's swinging arrangement of "You Made a Mistake," after which Maricle assumes command on "The Brush Off," written especially for her by Kay to showcase her remarkable dexterity with brushes. "Special Kay," a charming bossa arranged by Ueda on which Cassity (flute) and trumpeter Barbara Laronga shine, leads to the roaring finale, "Three Sisters and a Cousin," Kay's answer to Jimmy Giuffre's "Four Brothers" and the first chart ever written by him for DIVA. As one would surmise, the saxophones are ascendant, with volcanic solos by all hands. Maricle closes the concert, appropriately, by exclaiming "We love you, Stanley Kay!" It's a love that is self-evident in almost every measure of this sensational album, arguably the pinnacle in a long line of splendid recordings by this prodigious orchestra, and one that is indeed Special in every way. Five stars all around: for concept, arrangements, execution, aerial balancing without a net, and especially for an abundance of ardor and esprit de corps.~ Jack Bowers https://www.allaboutjazz.com/special-kay-sherrie-maricle-diva-records-review-by-jack-bowers.php

Personnel: Sherrie Maricle: music director, drums; Tanya Darby: trumpet; Jami Dauber: trumpet; Carol Morgan: trumpet; Barbara Laronga: trumpet; Sharel Cassity: alto sax, flute; Leigh Pilzer: alto sax, flute; Janelle Reichman: tenor sax, clarinet; Roxy Coss: tenor sax, clarinet; Lisa Parrott: baritone sax; Deborah Weisz: trombone; Jennifer Krupa: trombone; Leslie Havens: bass trombone; Tomoko Ohno: piano; Noriko Ueda: bass.

Special Kay!

Claudio Roditi - Gemini Man

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1988
File: MP3@128K/s
Time: 42:07
Size: 40,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:54)  1. We (To Kristen and Me)
(5:02)  2. Una Misma Alma
(4:58)  3. Jacarand`
(5:57)  4. Snow Samba
(5:55)  5. Gemini Man
(4:42)  6. Em Minas Gerais
(5:28)  7. Conceição
(4:07)  8. Brazilian Roots (To Amaury Tristco)

This CD features trumpeter Claudio Roditi playing Brazilian-oriented music with a group consisting of pianist Roger Kellaway, Daniel Freiberg on synthesizers, bassist Nilson Matta, either Ignacio Berroa or Akira Tana on drums and percussionist Rafael Cruz. Roditi, who composed or co-wrote six of the eight mostly gentle originals, also sings quite effectively on three numbers, one apiece in English, Spanish and Portuguese. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/gemini-man-mw0000198766

Personnel:   Flugelhorn, Vocals, Trumpet – Claudio Roditi ;  Bass – Nilson Matta;  Drums – Akira Tana, Ignacio Berroa;  Percussion – Rafael Cruz ;  Piano – Roger Kellaway;   Synth, Electric Piano – Daniel Freiberg

Gemini Man

Sunday, November 18, 2018

Tony Kofi Quartet - Plays Monk: All Is Know

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:02
Size: 161,1 MB
Art: Front

(7:25)  1. Boo Boo's Birthday
(4:48)  2. Ugly Beauty
(5:28)  3. Trinkle Tinkle
(4:58)  4. Ruby My Dear
(6:38)  5. Brilliant Corners
(2:43)  6. Comin' On The Hudson
(4:08)  7. We See
(2:38)  8. Crepescule With Nellie
(3:38)  9. Teo
(9:01) 10. Misterioso
(4:26) 11. Gallop's Gallop
(4:57) 12. Light Blue
(4:28) 13. Think Of One
(4:41) 14. Monk's Mood

First making a name for himself on the British jazz scene in '91 as a member of the high profile young Turks the Jazz Warriors, Tony Kofi went on to guest with a wide variety of artists during the first half of the '90s from the David Murray Big Band, Jazz Jamaica and Eddie Henderson to Queen Latifah and Salt-N-Pepa before joining the Township Express Orchestra and Tim Richards' Great Spirit, both of which he continues to play with. He is a red blooded and muscular soloist in whom Charlie Parker's wild, unruly tone is often writ enjoyably large, and who is also capable of moments of delicate, tender lyricism. His first horn is the alto, but he also plays soprano and an earthy yet fleet fingered baritone (more Leo Parker than Gerry Mulligan). Incredibly and rather shamingly for the British record business this is Kofi's first release as leader, a full thirteen years after his emergence with the Warriors. But that's another story, and an old one. The Tony Kofi Quartet, the members of which began woodshedding the Thelonious Monk songbook together in '00, debuted in fall '03 at the London Jazz Festival with a marathon six hour set in which they played every one of Monk's seventy known written compositions. The Quartet is part of the larger Monk Liberation Front ensemble co-led by Kofi, pianist Jonathan Gee and composer Philip Clark dedicated to bringing Monk's oeuvre to new audiences while also commissioning original work informed by Monk's legacy and spirit. 

So Kofi and his colleagues have paid their dues and spent plenty time getting inside the head of their spirit guide. And Plays Monk (All Is Know) itself is a blast: a respectful (without being slavishly so) and insightful celebration of fourteen of Monk's compositions. Unlike some albums given over entirely to Monk's works, for instance Esbjorn Svensson Trio's own excellent Plays Monk, the Quartet mix up some of the best known Monk standards with lesser known gems, some which many listeners will probably be hearing for the first time here. Half of the tracks feature the core alto-led quartet, while the other half ring the changes with a string arrangement (Philip Clark's sepulchral chart for "Ugly Beauty"), or with Kofi playing other saxophones (the closing "Monk's Mood" on unaccompanied baritone is especially memorable), or with a guest artist. (Orphy Robinson's lovely marimba on "Misterioso," at 9'01" the longest track on the album and a reminder of how well tuned percussion fits into Monk's work, probably because, without decrying his harmonic or melodic genius, Monk often approached the piano as a piece of tuned percussion.) Not only the first own-name album for Tony Kofi, Plays Monk (All Is Know) is also the first release on Proper Records' contemporary Specific Jazz imprint and it's an auspicious, hugely enjoyable and thoroughly convincing new beginning on both fronts. ~ Chris May https://www.allaboutjazz.com/plays-monk-all-is-know-specific-jazz-review-by-chris-may.php
 
Personnel: Tony Kofi, alto, soprano and baritone saxes; Jonathan Gee, piano; Ben Hazleton, bass; Winston Clifford, drums; Orphy Robinson, marimba; Reiad Chibah, viola; Andrew Joyce, cello; Madeleine Easton, violin.

Plays Monk: All Is Know

Richard "Groove" Holmes - Workin' On A Groovy Thing

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1969
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:58
Size: 85,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:15)  1. Isole Natale
(3:58)  2. Do You Know The Way To San Jose
(2:48)  3. Workin' On A Groovy Thing
(2:36)  4. Oklahoma Toad
(4:43)  5. High Blues Pressure
(4:07)  6. Listen Here
(3:32)  7. In And Out
(2:46)  8. Dreams Of The Everyday Housewife
(4:16)  9. Rhythm And Groove
(2:54) 10. I Can't Stop Dancing

Groove Holmes and Gerald Wilson  a wonderful combination on this late 60s session in a style that's everything great about mainstream LA jazz at the time! Wilson really has a way with the charts on the session and although the group is large, they've got a lean, clean sound that bounces along nicely slightly funky at times, always soulful at others a perfect backdrop for the well-played Hammond lines that Groove brings to the set! The album's not as much of an all-out organ wailer as some of Holmes' albums for Prestige but that's a-ok with us, because Wilson's group features some other great players too including Dennis Budimir on guitar, Tony Ortega and Arnie Watts on saxes, and Paul Humphrey on drums! Titles include "Dreams Of The Everyday Housewife", "High Blues Pressure", "Listen Here", "Oklahoma Toad", "Rhythm & Groove", "In & Out", and "Isole Natalie".  © 1996-2018, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/4536/Richard-Groove-Holmes:Workin%27-On-A-Groovy-Thing
 
Personnel:   Richard "Groove" Holmes - organ;   Paul Humphrey - drums;  Ernie Watts - alto saxophone;  Anthony Ortega - alto saxophone;  Richard Aplanalp - baritone saxophone;  Frank Strong - trombone;  Thurman Green - trombone;  Mike Wimberly - bass trombone;  Jerome Rusch - trumpet;  Larry McGuire - trumpet;  Paul Hubinon - trumpet;  Herbert Anderson - trumpet;   William Peterson - trumpet;  Dennis Budimir - guitar;  Wilton Felder - bass

Workin' On A Groovy Thing

Mal Waldron - In Retrospect

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1982
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:21
Size: 88,0 MB
Art: Front

( 7:31)  1. All Alone
(11:18)  2. Oleo
( 6:15)  3. Blue Monk
( 7:38)  4. I Can't Get Started
( 5:38)  5. Straight No Chaser

A great Japanese session from Mal Waldron with excellent tenor and flute from Akira Miyazawa, plus bass from Isao Suzuki and drums from Hironobu Fuzisawa! https://www.dustygroove.com/item/726554

Personnel:  Mal Waldron — piano;  Akira Miyazawa — tenor saxophone, flute;  Isao Suzuki — bass;  Hironobu Fujisawa — drums

In Retrospect

Sylvia Bennett - I Wish You Love

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:09
Size: 99,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:13)  1. Besame Mucho (English Version)
(3:05)  2. It's Impossible (feat Nathan East)
(2:52)  3. C'est Magnifique (English Version)
(3:44)  4. I Wish You Love
(2:38)  5. Sway
(3:28)  6. Autumn Leaves
(3:21)  7. Beyond the Sea
(2:38)  8. A Man and a Woman
(2:44)  9. La Vie En Rose (English Version)
(3:37) 10. I Will Wait for You
(3:16) 11. C'est Si Bon (English Version) feat Rick Braun
(2:19) 12. Moulin Rouge (English Version)
(2:54) 13. Be True to Me (Sabor a Mi)
(3:14) 14. I Wish You Love (Radio Edit)

Born in Italy, but emigrating to Philadelphia when she was a child, Sylvia Bennett traveled a twisted path on her way to becoming a jazz singer. Her first taste of show business came through appearances on children's shows during the 1950's. She started singing professionally in 1976 after moving to Miami, doing cabaret and pop. She even released two disco records. After she earned some notoriety, Phyllis Diller, Jackie Mason and other headliners began to use her to open their acts when in Florida. She was content being a pop performer until she met Lionel Hampton, who told her she should be singing jazz. Recording with Hampton in 1985, Bennett worked with him at festivals and at the inaugurals of Presidents Ronald Reagan and George Bush. Three jazz records resulted from Hampton's injunction to go jazz  I Need a Man in 1988 for New York Music, Rainbows in the Sky in 1991 for her own company, Out of Sight Music, and Here's That Rainy Day for Bay Cities in 1992. Tenor man Boots Randolph joined her on the latter session. During the 1990's, Bennett has appeared at European jazz festivals, notably in Budapest and in Amsterdam. Citing such diverse influences as Barbra Streisand and Nancy Wilson, Bennett possesses a clear soprano voice, is at ease with both ballads and up tempo tunes and takes an occasional fling with the blues. ~ Dave Nathan https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/i-wish-you-love/1361118785

I Wish You Love

The Diva Jazz Orchestra - The Diva Jazz Orchestra 25th Anniversary Project

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:24
Size: 147,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:04)  1. East Coast Andy
(6:39)  2. Middleground
(6:58)  3. Seesaw
(6:37)  4. Jami's Tune
(6:18)  5. Square One
(7:40)  6. Darkness of the Matter
(5:31)  7. La Americana
(5:47)  8. A Quarter Past the Last Minute
(7:12)  9. Forever In My Heart
(5:33) 10. The Rhythm Changes

The Diva Orchestra, with its vibrant sound and stellar soloists, is one of the premier large ensembles in jazz today. It also happens to be one of the few made up entirely of women. Therefore, it is both a creative hot bed for talented musicians and a forum for female instrumentalists, who remain sorely underexposed, to express themselves. The 25th Anniversary Project is an intriguing set of ten originals by various members of band that highlights their inventive and imaginative artistry. For instance, alto saxophonist Alexa Tarantino's cinematic "Square One" opens with fascinating dramatic tension. Trumpeter Rachel Therrien embellishes the melody with suave agility as she blows her Flugelhorn with warmth and slow, simmering passion. A delightfully riotous collective performance follows, setting the stage for Tarantino and her fluid and muscular improvisation. Elsewhere baritone saxophonist Leigh Pilzer's whimsical and energetic "East Coast Andy" features lively exchanges among various instruments. These form an exciting and colorful backdrop for the trumpeter Jami Dauber's lyrical and emotive spontaneous lines. Pilzer takes her turn in the spotlight with expressive phrases and vivid tones. Drummer Sherrie Maricle propels the tune with fervor and sophistication. Maricle's own "The Rhythm Changes" closes this superb album with exuberance. Hard swinging and fiery refrains overlap to create the piece's framework. Trumpeter Barbara Laronga solos with high notes and lithe lines. Saxophonist Mercedes Beckman follows with flittering acrobatics that stimulate and satisfy. The horns punctuate bassist Noriko Ueda's eloquent soliloquy and Maricle engages the various sections of the orchestra with her thunderous polyrhythms and ushers in the moving and riotous conclusion. Other noteworthy moments include woodwind player Janelle Reichman 's bittersweet clarinet monologue on her own, eastern flavored "Middleground." The composition also showcases pianist Tomoko Ohno's cascading and resonant chords. This recording is the result of a quarter century of artistic maturation that has crystalized in an exquisite display of high caliber musicianship. Thanks to Maricle's dynamic leadership the group continues to captivate and thrill. ~ Hrayr Attarian https://www.allaboutjazz.com/25th-anniversary-project-sherrie-maricle-artistshare-review-by-hrayr-attarian.php

Personnel: Sherrie Maricle: drums; Noriko Ueda: bass; Tomoko Ohno: piano; Leslie Havens: bass trombone; Sara Jacovino: trombone; Jennifer Krupa: trombone; Rachel Therrien: trumpet, flugelhorn; Barbara Laronga: trumpet, flugelhorn; Jami Dauber: trumpet, flugelhorn; Liesl Whitaker: trumpet, flugelhorn; Leigh Pilzer: baritone saxophone, bass clarinet; Erica von Kleist: tenor saxophone; Janelle Reichman: tenor saxophone, clarinet; Mercedes Beckman: alto saxophone, flute, clarinet; Alexa Tarantino: alto saxophone, soprano saxophone; Marcia Gallas: congas (7).

The Diva Jazz Orchestra 25th Anniversary Project