Thursday, March 7, 2019

Jimmy Rowles, Stacy Rowles - Looking Back

Styles: Saxophone And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:54
Size: 149,5 MB
Art: Front

(7:00)  1. Good Bait
(5:26)  2. You Don't Know What Love Is
(6:23)  3. Dirty Butt Blues
(5:29)  4. Lady in the Corner
(6:02)  5. I Fall In Love Too Easily
(6:34)  6. East of the Sun (West of the Moon)
(6:06)  7. Lullaby of the Leaves
(8:23)  8. Emily
(8:13)  9. Take the A Train
(5:15) 10. Looking Back

This CD is filled with the type of music one would expect from pianist Jimmy Rowles and his daughter Stacy Rowles: tasteful and melodic renditions of standards. Stacy, who gives "Looking Back" an effective vocal, is a warm-toned and lyrical flugelhornist and is featured in a quartet with her father, bassist Eric Von Essen and drummer Donald Bailey. However the music is too safe and predictable, making one wish that a fire had been lit under the soloists. Jimmy Rowles' reworking of "Take The 'A' Train" is the closest that this uneventful session comes to the sound of surprise. Otherwise, little memorable or special occurs. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/looking-back-mw0000201867

Personnel: Piano – Jimmy Rowles; Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Stacy Rowles; Vocals (Track 10) – Stacy Rowles; Bass – Eric von Essen; Drums,Percussion – Donald Bailey

Looking Back

David Benoit - Fuzzy Logic

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:51
Size: 101,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:27)  1. Snap!
(5:09)  2. Fuzzy Logic
(4:55)  3. Someday Soon
(3:35)  4. Then The Morning Comes
(4:04)  5. Reflections
(4:56)  6. Coming Up For Air
(4:51)  7. You Read My Mind
(4:43)  8. War of the S.U.V.'s
(4:14)  9. Tango in Barbados
(2:52) 10. One Dream at a Time (June's Song)

Pianist David Benoit once again delivers a consummate jazz-pop release produced by trumpeter Rick Braun. Braun, who played on Benoit's 1999 Professional Dreamer, does a nice job of updating the piano man's trademark keyboard sound by addressing hip-hop and Latin rhythms. Despite the requisite candlelight noodlings and semi-funk party tracks that Benoit has admittedly popularized, there is much to appreciate here. With its ersatz harpsichord intro, the original "You Read My Mind" is reminiscent of early Bob James, and is a welcome breather from the usual bland jams. Similarly, an irony-free cover of Smashmouth's "Then the Morning Comes" brilliantly recalls the best of Burt Bacharach's '60s output. Fuzzy Math is perfect music for a romantic dinner or shopping a bridal registry at the mall. Either way, Benoit fans will no doubt be pleased. ~ Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/album/fuzzy-logic-mw0000217769

Personnel:   David Benoit - piano, Hammond B-3; Rick Braun - trumpet; Ross Bolton - guitar; Nick Lane - trombone; Andy Suzuki - saxophone; Abraham Laboriel - bass; Steve Ferrone - drums; Paul Jackson, Jr. - guitar; Roberto Vally - bass; Brad Dutz - percussion; Pat Kelly - guitar; Dean Taba - bass;  Jeff Olson - drums; Neil Angilley - keyboards; Ian Crabtree - guitar; Phil Mulford - bass; Stan Sargeant - bass; Scott Breadman - percussion

Fuzzy Logic

Wednesday, March 6, 2019

Sonny Clark Trio - Blues In The Night

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1958
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:00
Size: 80,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:20)  1. Can`t We Be Friends
(4:41)  2. I Cover The Waterfront
(4:18)  3. Somebody Love Me
(3:32)  4. Dancing In The Dark
(7:15)  5. Blues In The Night (alt)
(5:59)  6. Blues In The Night
(3:54)  7. All Of You

The piano trio material included in this Japanese reissue, along with another session from late 1958 (see The Art of the Trio, aka "The 45 Sessions"), constitutes a body of work which was never released in LP format during Sonny Clark's tragically short life. Clark was an underrated master of the hard bop genre who had a very subtle, artful touch. On this date, he exhibits the influence of Ahmad Jamal and Red Garland (a lighter sound) and less of the Bud Powell-inspired, hard-driving bebop lines. This material was intended for jukebox release in 45 format. The arrangements are simple and concise; the tunes are all well-known standards. Sonny's conception is quite accessible relaxed tempos and blues-inflected improvisations. His chord voicings and harmonies are exquisite on "I Cover the Waterfront," "Somebody Loves Me," "Dancing in the Dark," and Cole Porter's "All of You." The recording in many ways presages the Three Sounds' approach to a tightly organized, commercially affable piano trio concept. This material is also included in Blue Note's 1998 domestic Sonny Clark release entitled Standards. 
~ Lee Bloom https://www.allmusic.com/album/blues-in-the-night-mw0000536692

Personnel: Sonny Clark - piano; Paul Chambers - bass; Wes Landers - drums

Blues In The Night

Mary Ann Hurst - Chinese Folksongs In A Jazz Mode

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:38
Size: 131,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:22)  1. North Wind Blows
(5:28)  2. Nanniwan
(4:56)  3. Crescent Moon Rising
(4:58)  4. Swallow
(4:56)  5. Yi Meng Mountain
(4:38)  6. Sanshilipu Village
(7:03)  7. Embroidered Pouch
(7:31)  8. Kangding Village Lovesong
(7:44)  9. Little Cabbage
(3:58) 10. Herdsman Song

This is a great easy-listening CD - the vocals are done in soft-spoken Mandarin and English - and the backing Jazz Band (Small World & Friends) is as classy as they come. A Great Listen for World Music lovers! Realizing a 15-year dream, vocalist Mary Ann Hurst translated traditional Chinese folksongs into English and performs them in the jazz idiom, singing in both Mandarin and English. Liner notes and lyrics are in English, to include lyrics in Chinese characters and the romanization system, Pinyin. Ten traditional Chinese melodies were chosen for their intrinsically lovely melody lines. Instrumental back-up is by top jazz musicians who perfectly interpret the spirit of the project.  https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/mah
Reviews:
“A delight to the ears, thanks to incomparable jazz vocalist Mary Ann Hurst and an exclusive ensemble of Texas-based musicians. Hurst beautifully interprets thematic folks songs through the universal language of melodious instrumentation, chiming in with her flawless Mandarin…a very unique and unorthodox amalgamation of genres. ~ San Antonio Current

"Hurst's voice glides from English to Chinese with a buttery smoothness...belies her years of commitment to both the jazz idiom and the Mandarin tongue" ~ A.P. writer Alexa Olesen

“Highly recommended as a musical experience, and a good way to expand your knowledge of Mandarin Chinese!” ~ Amazon.com

“Your surprising yet fantastic CD [is] indeed a jewel. There are strong elements of light jazz and also poetic reminiscence of Chinese mentality. Anyone with some jazz background will appreciate this album effortlessly. The whole project conveys an artful rendition of your unique understanding of jazz a well as Chinese folk music…a well-blended version of our modern longing to reach out to our roots and to express simple beauty in our common humanity. The jazz motif is a wonderful format for your love of Chinese culture.” ~ C.C. Wang, Metropolitan Museum of Art collector and artist

“A one-of-a-kind record. Mary Ann Hurst lived in China long enough to know deeply the language and the music… a very musical voice, the feeling she gives to these songs is unique…[this is] truly world music.” ~ Francesco Martinelli, Pisa, Italy

Chinese Folksongs In A Jazz Mode

Walter Wanderley - When It Was Done

Styles: Latin Jazz
Year: 1968
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:46
Size: 70,7 MB
Art: Front

(2:39)  1. Open Your Arms (Let Me Walk Right In)
(2:35)  2. Surfboard
(3:35)  3. Baiao da Garoa
(2:37)  4. Reach Out for Me
(2:28)  5. Ole, Ole, Ola
(2:25)  6. Ponteio
(2:24)  7. When It Was Done
(2:46)  8. On My Mind
(2:20)  9. Just My Love and I
(4:20) 10. Capoeira
(2:34) 11. Truth in Peace (Verdade em Paz)

Walter Wanderley moved over to A&M from Verve with producer Creed Taylor, whose influence dominates this heavily produced yet attractive album of mostly Brazilian material. The Wanderley sound is more carefully terraced than ever on this strikingly packaged album, edited and faded for easy airplay. Especially nice is Jobim's "Surfboard," a sleek miniature tone poem. Besides his usual subdued organ work, Wanderley spends almost as much time on the electric harpsichord, upon which he uses a more legato attack than on the organ, a curious reversal of each instrument's properties. He is not helped by the cottonball-textured vocals from a superfluous female trio, who figure most prominently on the two American tunes, Burt Bacharach's "Reach Out For Me" and Jimmy Webb's title track. A few of the usual CTI suspects turn up Hubert Laws on flute, Marvin Stamm on flugelhorn; Don Sebesky provides the overlush string backdrops, with other points in the arrangements entrusted to Eumir Deodato. A young Milton Nascimento makes a cameo appearance on "Open Your Arms," scatting a countermelody that he invented on the spot after awakening from a nap (no, it was jet lag, not a commentary on the session!). ~ Richard S.Ginell https://www.allmusic.com/album/when-it-was-done-mw0001041579

Personnel:  Walter Wanderley - organ, electronic harpsichord; Marvin Stamm, John Glasel - flugelhorn; George Marge, Stan Webb - flute, piccolo; Donald Ashworth, Hubert Laws - flute, piccolo, oboe, English horn; José Marino - bass; João Palma - drums; Lu Lu Ferreira - percussion; Lewis Eley, Harry Glickman, Gene Orloff, Raoul Poliakin, Max Pollikoff, Matthew Raimondi, Tosha Samaroff, Sylvan Shulman, Avram Weiss - violin; Harold Coletta, Harold Furmansky - viola; Charles McCracken, George Ricci - cello; Gloria Agostini - harp; Anamaria Valle, Marilyn Jackson, Linda November, Milton Nascimento - vocals; Eumir Deodato - rhythm arrangements; Don Sebesky - string arrangements

When It Was Done

Joey DeFrancesco - Goodfellas

Styles: Jazz, Hard Bop
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:45
Size: 126,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:29)  1. Speak Softly Love
(4:14)  2. Volare
(5:13)  3. Fly Me To The Moon
(5:10)  4. All The Way
(4:13)  5. Whack 'Em
(4:04)  6. Malafemmena
(3:49)  7. Young At Heart
(5:12)  8. O Solo Mio
(4:32)  9. Evidence
(6:09) 10. Goodfellas
(4:44) 11. Ya See What I'm Sayin'?
(1:51) 12. Whack 'Em (Reprise) / Tarentella

When you spend your youth growing up in South Philadelphia, the music of Frank Sinatra and the earlier music that influenced him has to have a major lasting impact on you. The timeless nature of standards such as "Young At Heart," "Fly Me to the Moon" and "All The Way" cannot be ignored. Other significant crooners such as Perry Como, Dean Martin, and Tony Bennett have extended the feelings we harbor that these songs will live forever. For his latest album, 28-year-old organist Joey DeFrancesco adds in a little ethnic Italian folk scenery and some Godfather movie theme spice to these standards. The result is an enjoyable trio session that pays its respects to the tradition while folding in a mainstream jazz background. The trio’s best example of mixing the cauldron thoroughly is "O Solo Mio" with its ride cymbal and walking bass. Guitar and organ sound off effectively; the arrangement even includes a Basie ending. DeFrancesco’s Hammond B-3 is particularly hot on "Fly Me to the Moon," as the unit improvises on a familiar theme. Similarly, Frank Vignola swings heartily on most tracks; he’s particularly effective on the blues-based "Whack ‘em." Joe Ascione takes his share of fours and extended solos; the drummer’s steady driving force is particularly notable on "Malafemmena" with its hefty modified New Orleans shuffle beat. 

The title track is a tribute to another Philadelphia "godfather" organist Jimmy Smith. One of DeFrancesco’s mentors and a favorite driving force all over the world, Smith has a way with the blues that won’t quit. The trio captures this mood quite well, swings with passion throughout the session, and does a bang-up job of bringin’ home the good-natured fun. ~ Jim Santella https://www.allaboutjazz.com/goodfellas-joey-defrancesco-concord-music-group-review-by-jim-santella.php

Personnel: Joey DeFrancesco- Hammond B-3 organ; Frank Vignola- guitar; Joe Ascione- drums.

Goodfellas

Darrell Grant - The Territory

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:34
Size: 140,2 MB
Art: Front

( 1:13)  1. Introduction
( 5:56)  2. Mvt. 1 Hymn to the Four Winds
( 6:04)  3. Mvt. 2 Daybreak At Fort Rock
( 3:10)  4. Mvt. 3 Missoula Floods
( 4:03)  5. Missoula Floods, Pt. 2
( 5:58)  6. Mvt. 4 Rivers
(10:13)  7. Mvt. 5 Chief Joseph's Lament
( 5:48)  8. Mvt. 6 Stones Into Blossoms
( 7:12)  9. Mvt. 7 Sundays At the Golden West
( 2:37) 10. Mvt. 8 Aftermath (Interlude)
( 8:14) 11. Mvt. 9 New Land

The Territory marks Grant's seventh CD as a leader and his first since 2007's critically acclaimed "Truth and Reconciliation," which was selected one of the top 10 CDs' of the year by The Village Voice jazz critics poll. The nine-member ensemble includes Grant's long-time collaborators Grammy award-winning drummer Brian Blade, Grammy award-winning saxophonist Steve Wilson and celebrated vibraphonist Joe Locke, as well as renowned cellist Hamilton Cheifetz, Chicago bassist Clark Sommers, Portland vocalist Marilyn Keller, trumpeter Thomas Barber, and bass clarinetist Kirt Peterson. The Territory captures Grant in an exciting 2013 world premiere performance presented by Chamber Music Northwest in front a sold-out audience at Portland's Kaul Auditorium. https://www.darrellgrant.com/the-territory-album

Personnel: Darrell Grant, piano; Joe Locke, vibraphone & marimba; Steve Wilson, flute, alto flute, soprano & alto saxophone; Brian Blade, drums; Clark Sommers, bass; Marilyn Keller, vocals; Hamilton Cheifetz, cello; Thomas Barber, trumpet; Kirt Peterson, bass clarinet, tenor saxophone

The Territory

Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Eric Alexander Quartet - Sunday In New York

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:35
Size: 144,6 MB
Art: Front

(8:54)  1. Sunday In New York
(8:57)  2. Avotcja
(6:42)  3. Dearly Beloved
(6:26)  4. Like Someone In Love
(7:16)  5. Watch What Happens
(8:18)  6. My Girl Is Just Enough Woman For Me
(7:31)  7. Alone Together
(8:30)  8. My Romance

Since finishing second to Joshua Redman in the Thelonious Monk Institute's tenor sax competition, Eric Alexander has built an impressive discography as a leader, while also drawing a lot of attention in both the U.S. and Japan. This Venus CD, recorded in 2005 and one of the last sessions by pianist John Hicks (who died just over a year later), primarily focuses on standards, with the exception of Hicks' tense hard bop vehicle "Avotcja." A loping treatment of "Sunday in New York" is a solid opener, conveying the image of a brisk walk in Central Park on a cool autumn day. Alexander's driving arrangement of "Dearly Beloved" and the lush, slowly savored duet with Hicks of "Like Someone in Love" are obvious highlights. He also revives the unjustly obscure "My Girl Is Just Enough Woman for Me" in swinging fashion. The hard-charging setting of "Alone Together" shows the influence of Dexter Gordon, while the gorgeous interpretation of "My Romance" is the perfect wrap to an outstanding date. Bassist John Webber and drummer Joe Farnsworth, two of New York City's most in-demand players and regular collaborators with Alexander, provide strong support throughout the recording. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/sunday-in-new-york-mw0000261429

Personnel:  Tenor Saxophone – Eric Alexander; Bass – John Webber ; Drums – Joe Farnsworth; Piano – John Hicks

Sunday In New York

Nancy Harrow - Jazz Greats

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:29
Size: 107,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:13)  1. 'Tain't Nobody's Business If I Do
(5:28)  2. Wild Women Don't Have the Blues
(3:56)  3. I Don't Know What Kind of Blues I've Got
(7:29)  4. Blues for Yesterday
(5:26)  5. All Too Soon
(5:16)  6. Can't We Be Friends
(5:14)  7. Take Me Back Baby
(4:29)  8. I've Got the World on a String
(4:57)  9. On the Sunny Side of the Street

Nancy Harrow made a strong impression with her Candid recording Wild Women Don't Have the Blues in 1960, but it was a long time before she was a full-time singer. She had studied classical piano extensively from the age of seven before decided to become a dancer and later a jazz singer. After her Candid recording and an album for Atlantic (1962), Harrow raised a family and spent time outside of music. In 1975, Nancy Harrow came back and recorded frequently for Audiophile, Finesse, Inner City, Tono, Gazell, and Soul Note. She is a talented and swinging bop-based singer who wrote all of the material for her 1993 Lost Lady release. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/nancy-harrow-mn0000309127/biography

Jazz Greats

Horace Silver - Jazz Inspiration

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:20
Size: 171,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:51)  1. Cookin' At The Continental
(7:02)  2. Senor Blues
(6:18)  3. Sister Sadie
(5:38)  4. Que Pasa
(6:05)  5. The Outlaw
(7:18)  6. Song For My Father
(6:02)  7. Peace
(5:55)  8. Cool Eyes
(6:48)  9. Nica's Dream
(5:50) 10. The Jody Grind
(3:30) 11. Opus De Funk
(4:40) 12. Blowin' The Blues Away
(4:19) 13. The Preacher

The 2012 Horace Silver compilation, Blue Note Jazz Inspiration, presents some of the legendary pianist and bandleader's most influential recordings. Included here are such songs as "Senor Blues," "Song for My Father," "Nica's Dream," "The Preacher," and others. This is a solid single-disc overview of the prime of Silver's career at Blue Note in the '60s. ~ Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/album/blue-note-jazz-inspiration-mw0002294278

Jazz Inspiration

Bobby Previte - Too Close to the Pole

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:01
Size: 128,5 MB
Art: Front

( 4:14)  1. Too Close to the Pole
(13:02)  2. 3 Minute Heels
( 8:24)  3. The Countess' Bedroom
( 7:32)  4. Save the Cups
(14:16)  5. The Eleventh Hour
( 8:29)  6. Too Close to the Pole (reprise)

From its opening eccentric fanfare (which pops up briefly in other selections) through the wild group vocal on "Save the Cups" and "3 Minute Heels" (which sounds like Indian music for belly dancers), drummer Bobby Previte's Weather Clear, Track Fast band on this Enja release is continually colorful, cinematic (one can easily imagine crazy adventures occurring), and unpredictable. Although quite advanced, the expert use of repetition, complex but catchy rhythms, and echoey call-and-response riffing results in a complete lack of forgettable or routine moments. In addition to the six listed selections, there is an odd extra "bonus": an unidentified seventh song that is a five-part, 15-minute suite mostly featuring Andrew D'Angelo's bass clarinet. Although there are strong individual heroics from the sextet (such as Jamie Saft's organ and retro Fender Rhodes playing, Andy Laster's versatile flights on baritone, and Previte's stirring percussive work), it is the chance-taking spirit of the musicians and their performances as a whole that make this a memorable release well worth several listens. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/too-close-to-the-pole-mw0000093699

Personnel:  Bobby Previte – drums, voice; Lindsey Horner - electric bass, tin whistles, voice; Andy Laster - baritone saxophone, clarinet, flute, voice; Cuong Vu - trumpet, voice; Jamie Saft - piano, Fender Rhodes piano, Hammond organ, clavinet, voice; Curtis Hasselbring - trombone, voice; Andrew D'Angelo - alto saxophone, bass clarinet, voice

Too Close to the Pole

Keith Jarrett - The Mourning of a Star

Styles: Piano, Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1971
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:52
Size: 102,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:12)  1. Follow the Crooked Path (Though It Be Longer)
(1:17)  2. Interlude No. 3
(3:20)  3. Standing Outside
(2:13)  4. Everything That Lives Laments
(1:37)  5. Interlude No. 1
(6:56)  6. Trust
(2:18)  7. All I Want
(5:06)  8. Traces of You
(9:21)  9. The Mourning of a Star
(0:52) 10. Interlude No. 2
(4:35) 11. Sympathy

This album gives one an interesting look at the early Keith Jarrett, who was already performing on an album of the Charles Lloyd Quartet and Miles Davis' early fusion band. He had not yet fully developed his style, but he was clearly on his way. These trio performances (with bassist Charlie Haden and drummer Paul Motian) are impressive for the period, but the best was yet to come. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-mourning-of-a-star-mw0000111796

Personnel: Piano, Recorder [Tenor], Soprano Saxophone, Drums [Steel] – Keith Jarrett;  Bass, Drums [Steel] – Charlie Haden; Drums, Drums [Steel] – Paul Motian

The Mourning of a Star

Monday, March 4, 2019

Rick Braun - Body And Soul

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:15
Size: 111,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:35)  1. Notorius
(4:16)  2. Missing In Venice
(4:23)  3. Slick
(3:46)  4. Chelsea
(4:40)  5. Long Tall Judy
(4:32)  6. Dark Eyes
(4:31)  7. Body And Soul
(4:13)  8. Angel
(4:15)  9. Love Will Find A Way
(4:53) 10. Coolsville
(4:06) 11. Hymn For Her

Body & Soul, explores an introspective, thoughtful side of Rick Braun's artistry. Funk grooves and irresistible pop melodies still prevail in subtler shades, but Braun reflects maturely on the changes of his life with a collection that pays homage to his ongoing love for more traditional jazz. The result is his most thought-provoking, eclectic and artistically satisfying album to date. While he plays all the keyboard, trumpet and flugelhorn parts on Body and Soul, he's joined by some of the genre's best musicians, who got together at various times in the comfort of Braun's sunny home to record tracks reflective of friends gathering for a smooth sailing jam session. On hand for various tracks are sax star Boney James, guitarists Chris Standring and Jeff Golub, bassist Cliff Hugo, and drummers Dave Palmer and Dave Karasony. Body & Soul kicks off with the album's first single, the dreamy, cool, and seductive "Notorious," which features interplay between Braun and Boney James's horns and was co-produced by Paul Brown (who's produced hits for James as well as Peter White and Sam Riney). Braun gently fuses jazz sensibilities with streetwise seduction on the gently hypnotic "Missing In Venice" before exploring the pulsating edges of night on the spirited retro-soul vibe of "Slick." "Chelsea" is an easily shuffling romantic ode to the section of Manhattan where Jeff Golub lives, while "Long Tall Judy" finds musical soul mates Braun and Golub invoking the ghosts of Lee Morgan and Wes Montgomery in a sparsely arranged, slow burning jazz/blues jam. ~ Jonathan Widran https://www.allmusic.com/album/body-and-soul-mw0000080564

Body And Soul

Judith Owen - Here

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:29
Size: 93,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:22)  1. Here
(3:58)  2. You And The Moon
(3:08)  3. Best Friend
(5:03)  4. Worship
(5:07)  5. Climbing Shoes
(4:10)  6. I Go To Sleep
(5:04)  7. Hand Across The Water
(3:25)  8. Eye Of The Tiger
(4:09)  9. The Room
(2:58) 10. I'll Watch You (While You're Sleeping)

British singer/songwriter Judith Owen, for whom Here is her fifth self-released album, is the ideal performer for music fans who wish Joni Mitchell had gone on making records like Blue and For the Roses back in the first half of the '70s. Owen sounds like she has a complete collection of Mitchell's albums, at least up as far as The Hissing of Summer Lawns, that is, and also a general familiarity with the works of Carole King, Kate Bush, and Tori Amos. She writes and sings quiet, melodic songs dominated by her slow, careful piano playing and richly considered voice. Especially because of her accent, she often sounds exactly like Bush and Amos (who often sound exactly like each other, of course), at least when those singers are not wafting into their soprano ranges. But her lyrics are never as obscure, instead aiming for emotional clarity. That brings back the Mitchell comparison, and the difference there is that Owen sounds like a woman who is happily married with a child rather than suffering romantic turmoil, at least in the present moment. Although the first two songs, "Here" and "You and the Moon" seem to be about a lost and fondly remembered love and a love suffering from separation, respectively, the key songs are the third and fourth ones. "Best Friend" is full of advice to a loved one, while "Worship" is a recollection of a bad, but compelling love affair by someone who is now in a good one. 

As usual, Owen demonstrates a surprising taste in covers, giving a jazzy reading to the old Survivor hit "Eye of the Tiger," which is a funny idea, but also taking on the Kinks' "I Go to Sleep," a less appealing choice since another influence, Chrissie Hynde, got there first with the Pretenders. Here is an unfailingly tasteful and listenable collection, but it's the work of a confessional singer/songwriter who doesn't have all that much to confess. ~ William Ruhlmann https://www.allmusic.com/album/here-mw0000779521

Here

Jamie Saft Quartet - Blue Dream

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:19
Size: 128,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:38)  1. Vessels
(6:00)  2. Equanimity
(3:50)  3. Sword's Water
(5:56)  4. Violets for Your Furs
(3:37)  5. Blue Dream
(4:31)  6. Infinite Compassion
(2:50)  7. Sweet Lorraine
(3:54)  8. Walls
(3:07)  9. Decamping
(4:41) 10. Words and Deeds
(4:24) 11. Mysterious Arrangements
(6:47) 12. There's a Lull in My Life

If RareNoise Records has a characteristic sound as ECM Records has a characteristic sound, that sound is defined Jamie Saft. Whether it is the unholy ministry of Slobber Pup or the plaintive solo piano of his recent Solo A Genova (RareNoise, 2018), multi-instrumentalist Saft has brought Giacomo Bruzzo's and Eraldo Bernocchi's eclectic-electric British label front and center of not just the jazz world, but the music world.  Saft has recorded widely, most notably with John Zorn, Wadada Leo Smith, Roswell Rudd, Iggy Pop, Marc Ribot, Bill Laswell, Cyro Baptista, and Dave Douglas. He is responsible for producing the most magnificent noise as evidenced on recordings like, Berserk!'s Berserk! (RareNoise Records, 2013) and Slobber Pup's Black Aces (RareNoise Records, 2013) and Pole Axe (RareNoise Records, 2015), along with his collaboration with guitarist Joe Morris on Plymouth (Rare Noise, 2014). Overlapping with his noisemaking is Saft's redefinition of acoustic jazz over the past five years as heard on: The New Standard (RareNoise, 2014); Ticonderoga (Clean Feed, 2015); Strength & Power (RareNoise, 2016); Loneliness Road (RareNoise, 2017); and Solo A Genova (RareNoise, 2018).  

Jamie Saft's penetration of acoustic jazz continues with his present quartet recording Blue Dreams. Immediately, I thought of John Coltrane's great 1960's quartet, circa A Love Supreme. "Vessels" opens with sustained bass notes in a simple harmonic figure by Saft, very much in keeping the McCoy Tyner style of the time. Tenor saxophonist Bill McHenry plays Coltrane's part, without the screeching and loss of mind. Like an early '60s Coltrane solo, the ensemble begins simply before setting out to make a sonic statement, both musically and dramatically. "Equanimity" is introduced by drummer Nasheet Waits, when, at the 1:36 mark the rest of the band enters, anxious and excited. Bassist Bradley Jones carefully chooses his figures and times in such a way to propel the music in a swinging and unpredictable manner.  The first of three standard's, "Violets for Your Furs," reels the band back into mainstream mode, capturing the sound of 1950s Miles Davis. 

It is a beautiful revelation. "Sweet Lorraine" is taken at a loping pace, Saft playing between the lines with Jones' ever near-the-beat pulse avoiding temp tachycardia. McHenry plays as straight as Saft, quaint and beautifully. "Walls" offers an expansive answer to "Lorraine" with Jones providing a continuo arco. McHenry barley rattles the reeds, a sound like stretching parchment, while Saft favors his beloved low notes with sustain. Like a Coltrane performance, the piece is all introduction. It is worthwhile to consider that there is no resolution in music like this, only an extended consideration. "Words and Deeds" follows the same formula of the opening "Vessels," brooding and impressionistic. The final standard "There's a Lull in My Life" completes the recording beautifully and appropriately. McHenry first duets with Jones, Waits brushing in the background. By the time Saft gets there, things are well underway, introspectively. Within this musical microcosm, Saft and company blow the dust off of and update a storied method of performance. ~ C.Michael Bailey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/blue-dream-jamie-saft-rarenoiserecords-review-by-c-michael-bailey.php

Personnel: Jamie Saft Piano; Bill McHenry: tenor saxophone; Bradley Christopher Jones: acoustic bass; Nasheet Waits: drums.

Blue Dream

Emanuele Cisi - Where or When

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:08
Size: 120,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:30)  1. But Not for Me
(6:44)  2. Chelsea Bridge
(3:09)  3. Inverso Calypso
(4:45)  4. Sphere's
(4:54)  5. Time Was
(6:37)  6. Mama Anita
(5:30)  7. Warnin' Up
(4:53)  8. Where or When
(4:10)  9. Where or When (Alternate Take)
(4:52) 10. Wild Boar's Dance

Italian born saxist Emanuele Cisi drinks from the Coltrane fountain on this collection of originals and standards in a trio format with Joseph LePore/b and Luca Santaniello/dr. On soprano, he goes laconic and agonizing on “Chelsea Bridge” bluesy on “Spheres” and frisky, funky and fun on “Mama Anita.” A reading of “Inverso Calypso” has him on an autumnal tenor and reaching into his inner Rollins, and goes modal on “Wild Boar’s Dance”. Without a pianist, he walks a tightrope with his teammates, with LePore getting some space on  “Where Or When” and Santaniello’s brushes and sticks working wonders on the boppish “Time Was” and driving “Warnin’ Up.” Impulse! fans will have a field day with this one. https://www.jazzweekly.com/2014/03/emanuele-cisi-where-or-when/

Personnel:  Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Emanuele Cisi; Arranged By [All Arrangements By] – Emanuele Cisi; Bass – Joseph Lepore; Drums – Luca Santaniello 

Where or When

Quadro Nuevo - Grand Voyage

Styles: Latin Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:26
Size: 175,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:57)  1. Die Reise nach Batumi
(2:30)  2. Cançao Do Mar.mp3
(3:16)  3. Cien Años
(5:35)  4. Krim
(5:14)  5. Samba para parapente
(4:56)  6. Aus der Stille der Nacht
(5:06)  7. Nature Boy
(4:12)  8. Die Abenteurer
(6:34)  9. Lethe
(6:36) 10. Antakya - Concert Version
(4:33) 11. Meteora
(2:26) 12. Secret Garden
(2:31) 13. Mosaique Tunisienne (Morning)
(2:23) 14. Mosaique Tunisienne (Afternoon)
(3:30) 15. Mosaique Tunisienne (Night)
(3:53) 16. Goaz boq Muzik
(4:01) 17. Dopo Lo Spettacolo
(5:33) 18. Die Reise nach Batumi - Orchestral Version

Songs of a Grand Voyage. The baggage filled with melodies that were collected along the way. Every tone tells you a story about a new encounter and takes the listener on an epic adventure. Every song was recorded on a different place on this earth and represents the unique vibrations of those special locations. https://www.glm.de/en/product/quadro-nuevo-grand-voyage/

Personnel: Mulo Francel saxophones, clarinets, mandoline, glockenspiel, monochord, guitar on 6, bouzouki on 11; Robert Wolf guitar, bouzouki, piano on 17, steel drum; D.D. Lowka  acoustic bass, percussion, xylophone, cymbalom; Andreas Hinterseher  accordion, vibrandoneon, bandoneon, piano on 4; Evelyn Huber concert grand harp, single pedal harp, salterio

Grand Voyage

Sunday, March 3, 2019

Sylvia Vrethammar - Sommar! Samba! Sylvia!

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:53
Size: 149,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:44)  1. Sylvias samba
(3:02)  2. Que Bonito È
(2:48)  3. Magdalena
(3:14)  4. I skymningen
(3:22)  5. Lambada
(3:21)  6. Närhet
(3:11)  7. Vår lust var starkare än vi
(2:37)  8. Dansa samba med mej
(3:53)  9. O chêro Da Carolina
(2:17) 10. America do sul
(3:14) 11. Vo bate pa tu
(3:42) 12. Amanda
(3:46) 13. Allting förändras utom våren
(4:00) 14. Las alas del corazon
(3:00) 15. Livets fest
(3:34) 16. Copacabana
(3:53) 17. Bossa Nova
(3:40) 18. Samba Brasil
(3:26) 19. Y viva Espana

Sylvia Vrethammar an international acclaimed artist, whose repertoire ranges from swinging Jazz over South American rhythms all the way to the modern pop song. She was born in Uddevalla on the Swedish west coast as daughter to Harald and Britta Vrethammar and later moved with her family to the country's capital Stockholm. At the age of 16 she began her musical career with several prizes at amateur music-festivals. Nevertheless Sylvia decided to finish school first and to study which resulted in her graduation as a child psychologist.

In the year 1969 Sylvia's career in the music business started for real. Her first album TYCKER OM DEJ gets released and during a perfomance at the Stockholm club Gyllene Cirkeln she is noticed by a TV producer and immediately gets her first own personality show on Swedish TV. TV entertainer Lennart Hyland is watching the broadcast of this show and on the spot decides to engage Sylvia as a co-host for his enormously popular TV-show Hylands Hörna. Now the engagements start streaming in and Sylvia is been sent to the International Song-Festival in Rio de Janeiro as the representative of Sweden. In Brazil she develops her great love for Samba music and therefore puts together a tour with Brazilian Samba-group Trio Pandeiros De Ouro through the whole of Scandinavia under the leadership from Sylvia´s husband and producer at this time, Rune Öfwerman. This tour becomes such a sensational success, that Sylvia gets from now on described as the “Samba Queen” whenever there is an article about her. One of her numerous tours around the globe leads Sylvia through the former Soviet Union and even here the people cue up in masses to get to see Sylvia's stage-show. In 1974 her English original-version of the mega-hit Y VIVA ESPAÑA reaches the tops of the English charts, sells over 1 Million copies and stays for 39 consecutive weeks on the charts, leading to an entry into the Guinness Book of Records. 

In Concert is the name of Sylvia's first personality-show on German television. This next stage of her career begins with numerous appearances on German stage and television. She becomes so popular that the legendary band leader and composer Bert Kaempfert (Strangers in the Night) invites her to be the guest-star on his TV show. After the show he tours with Sylvia and his orchestra for several weeks through Germany, Switzerland and most of all England, terminating the tour at the famous Royal Albert Hall in London. It was the same venue in which opera-diva Kristina Nilsson had her last public appearance in 1897 … and by the way Kristina was Sylvias grand-grand aunt. Returning to Rio Sylvia starts working on her album RIO DE JANEIRO BLUE as well as on the adjoining TV-movie RENDEZVOUS IN RIO, where she is accompanied by such top-class musicians as harmonica wizard Toots Thielemans and Brazilian accordion magician Sivuca. Soon after that follow more concerts in neighbouring countries such as Argentina and Colombia and later that year her career hits another high: She is invited to perform in China and to inaugurate Sweden's first hotel in Xian. In the year of 1983 during the production of a TV-concert at the legendary Berns in Stockholm Sylvia works for the first time with Georgie Fame (Bonnie & Clyde) and during the summer of this year also records the album IN GOODMANSLAND together with him. In the meantime here later-to-become-evergreen RICARDO gets its first release in Germany...More http://sylvia-vrethammar.com/biography/

Sommar! Samba! Sylvia!

Midnight Serenaders - Hot Lovin'

Styles: Retro Swing
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:02
Size: 173,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:57)  1. My Honey's Lovin' Arms
(4:19)  2. I've Got A Hankerin' (For Some Love)
(4:43)  3. Victim of Love
(4:14)  4. I'm Playing In Your Parlour Game
(4:02)  5. Hot Lovin'
(3:28)  6. Man-o-phile
(2:49)  7. You're Barking Up the Right Tree
(3:59)  8. You Don't Understand
(3:52)  9. I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
(3:50) 10. Swingin' On Nothin'
(3:11) 11. Hawaiian War Chant
(3:56) 12. That Ain't Right
(3:23) 13. What A Pretty Miss
(4:39) 14. Junk Man
(4:58) 15. Mademoiselle
(3:33) 16. It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)

The Serenaders have released their third album, “Hot Lovin,” after their first two albums “Magnolia” (2007) and “Sweet Nothin’s” (2009) were release to critical acclaim. The Portland Tribune declared that their first album “revived lost classics from the vintage jazz era while keeping the inherent giddiness of that time perfectly intact,” and Portland Monthly says of their second album: “Plenty of bands attempt to recapture the jive sounds of the Roaring Twenties, but most of them just sound, well, jive. Midnight Serenaders...sashay from torch song to hot jazz with panache and a genuine respect for yesterday s hit parade.” Their new album features some new originals by Settlemier and ups the ante with the presence of several special guests with notable Portland jazz pianist/composer Andrew Oliver on piano and on accordion Eric Stern, leader of the popular Eastern European cabaret act Vagabond Opera.

The Midnight Serenaders continue to swing along in the modern age, helping to ensure that the joyous swing of one of America’s most original art forms will never be forgotten. https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/midnightserenader

Hot Lovin'

André Previn - Previn At Sunset

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:43
Size: 120,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:22)  1. I Got It Bad And That Ain't Good
(4:42)  2. Body And Soul
(3:51)  3. Sunset In Blue
(3:05)  4. All The Things You Are
(3:27)  5. Something To Live For
(2:34)  6. Good Enough To Keep
(2:56)  7. California Clipper
(4:10)  8. How High The Moon
(3:07)  9. Take The A Train
(3:23) 10. Subtle Slough
(4:09) 11. That Old Blue Magic
(3:02) 12. Blue Skies
(2:43) 13. I Found A New Baby
(4:25) 14. Variations On A Theme
(2:39) 15. Mulholland Drive

André Previn was just 16 years old when he recorded the earliest numbers on Previn at Sunset, but he was already a brilliant pianist and a busy arranger at the MGM studios. Most (but not quite all) of the recordings that he made for the Sunset and Monarch labels, among the earliest in his career, are here. A major swing stylist who had not yet been affected by bop, Previn is heard on some unaccompanied solos; in three different trios with such sidemen as guitarists Dave Barbour or Irving Ashby, bassists John Simmons, Eddie Safranski, or Red Callender, and drummer Lee Young; and a couple of jam tunes ("All the Things You Are" and "I Found a New Baby") with a sextet also either Buddy Childers or Howard McGhee on trumpet, altoist Willie Smith, and Vido Musso on tenor. The small group swing performances are quite enjoyable, and the teenage pianist easily keeps up with the other, more famous players. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/previn-at-sunset-mw0000121441

Personnel: Piano – André Previn;  Alto Saxophone – Willie Smith; Bass – Eddie Safranski , John Simmons, Red Callender; Drums – Lee Young; Guitar – Dave Barbour, Irving Ashby; Tenor Saxophone – Vido Musso; Trumpet – Buddy Childers, Howard McGhee

R.I.P.
Died: February 28, 2019, Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States 
Born: April 6, 1929, Berlin, Germany

Previn At Sunset