Monday, May 20, 2019

Andy LaVerne Quartet - Four Miles

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 70:13
Size: 112,9 MB
Art: Front

(8:28)  1. When you wish upon a star
(4:52)  2. Summertime
(8:22)  3. Maiden voyage
(7:32)  4. Some say my prince will come
(6:41)  5. Song for my father
(7:41)  6. All blues
(7:58)  7. Mr Syms
(7:26)  8. Cantaloupe island
(4:29)  9. Round midnight
(6:40) 10. On green dolphin street

Despite the CD's title, most of the music on this date does not have any close connection to Miles Davis; in fact five of the ten songs were not even recorded by Davis. In addition, trumpeter Randy Brecker, who joins the Andy Laverne Trio (which is comprised of pianist Laverne, bassist George Mraz and drummer Al Foster) sounds closer to Freddie Hubbard and Lee Morgan than to Davis. However, if one does not think about the tribute aspect (or lack of), the music is quite enjoyable. Laverne and Brecker have many fine solos within the hard-bop tradition on such numbers as "When You Wish Upon a Star," "Maiden Voyage," "All Blues" and "Cantaloupe Island." An excellent modern straight-ahead date that falls just a little short of being essential. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/four-miles-mw0000025762

Personnel:  Piano – Andy Laverne; Bass – George Mraz; Drums – Al Foster; Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Randy Brecker

Four Miles

Les Pommes De Ma Douche - Swing from Paris

Styles: Gypsy Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:24
Size: 133,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:34)  1. Scènes de Paris
(3:14)  2. I Love Paris
(3:10)  3. A Paris
(4:00)  4. Pigalle
(4:51)  5. J'aime Paris au mois de mai
(3:30)  6. Stranger in Paris
(3:30)  7. Swing from Paris
(4:15)  8. Ménilmontant
(5:56)  9. Où es-tu passé mon Saint-Germain-des-Prés
(4:11) 10. Fleur de Paris
(4:57) 11. Quel temps fait-il à Paris?
(3:35) 12. Paris Jadis
(3:26) 13. Paris Swing
(5:08) 14. Revoir Paris

With this fourth CD released in February 2008, Les Pommes de ma Douche, a quintet Blésois that no longer presents have decided this time to celebrate the popular Paris, that of Ménilmuche, Pigalle, the hill and the bastoche. And so it is 14 themes all dedicated to our capital that offers us here our five musicians in full form; while the Delaveau father and son ensure a still very effective rhythm, our three excellent soloists (Dominique Rouquier on guitar, David Rivière on accordion and Laurent Zeller on violin) very verve, compose very pretty solos. If the apples have never claimed to compete with the champions of style, their music is always borrowed nice notes, fun to play and a sense of swing! And then virtuoso point of view, after Tchavolo Schmitt in the first album, it is here the guitarist Raphaël Faÿs who comes to make sing his Argentines on two titles boosted by the maestria of the prestigious guest ( Swing from Paris , Paris once).  And as for the repertoire, beyond the inevitable expected of Trenet ( Ménilmontant, Revoir Paris ), Lemarque ( A Paris ), Aznavour ( I love Paris in May), Maurice Chevalier ( Fleur de Paris ), etc ... Apples had the delicacy to register us some pretty rarities like the deliciously nostalgic Where did you spend my St Germain des Pres signed Michel Legrand and Eddy Barclay or this very nice and very funny Paris Jadis de Caussimon, sung with a lot of heart by all the happy team ... A warm record to listen while strolling between the 18th and the 20th district ...! Translate by Google https://www.djangostation.com/Swing-from-Paris,906.html

Musicians: Dominique Rouquier: solo guitar; Pierre Delaveau: guitar; Laurent Delaveau: double bass; David Rivière: accordion; Laurent Zeller: violin; Guest: Raphaël Faÿs - guitar on 7 and 12

Swing from Paris

V.A.- The Big Band Legends: Go Harlem Swing! Vol.2

Styles: Jazz, Big Band 
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:27
Size: 122,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:53)  1. Lotta Sax Appeal
(2:34)  2. Facts and Figures
(3:19)  3. Trippin In
(2:54)  4. Jump for Joy
(2:58)  5. You Rascal, You
(3:14)  6. Minnie the Moocher
(2:46)  7. Liza
(2:58)  8. Leap Frog
(3:06)  9. Moten Swing
(3:07) 10. Stampede
(3:27) 11. Holiday for Swing
(2:23) 12. Squaty Roo
(2:50) 13. Hotter Than 'ell
(2:21) 14. Go Harlem
(3:01) 15. Good Dip
(2:44) 16. Moten Stomp
(3:05) 17. Spinnin' the Web
(2:40) 18. Pluckin' the Bass

Go Harlem Swing !, Vol.2

Sunday, May 19, 2019

Fred Hersch - Alone at the Vanguard

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:20
Size: 163,9 MB
Art: Front

(7:25)  1. In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning
(7:35)  2. Down Home (Dedicated to Bill Frisell)
(8:27)  3. Echoes
(7:06)  4. Lee's Dream (Dedicated to Lee Konitz)
(7:05)  5. Pastorale (Dedicated to Robert Schumann)
(8:09)  6. Doce De Coco
(8:39)  7. Memories of You
(8:47)  8. Work
(8:04)  9. Encore: Doxy

Pianist Fred Hersch almost cashed out back in 2008, when he fell ill with AIDs-related complications and spent seven weeks in a coma. The recovery was arduous, the resumption of his wide-ranging and top-level musical artistry uncertain an uncertainty erased without a trace by Whirl (Palmetto Records, 2010), a trio set so assured, vibrant and beautiful that it would surely show up in any knowing top ten list of the best piano trio sets of the new millennium's first decade. There was a subtle change in Hersch's sound, post illness. It's what Hersch's fellow pianist, Jessica Williams (who has suffered her own health problems), calls "illness as a teacher," a focusing of intent and approach from the washing away of the peripheral and unimportant. Alone at the Vanguard is Hersch's solo piano offering, recorded on the last night of a six-night stand at the hallowed New York club where innumerable jazz greats have held court and recorded performances, resulting in classic albums. Hersch opens his set on a shimmering introduction to "In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning," an old American Songbook jewel that gets buffed up often. Hersch has what it takes to ignore the "never open with a ballad" advice: a supple and exquisitely-refined touch; a sharp focus on the melody; a deep sense of classical harmony; and a magical ability to get inside the tune and make it his own. Hersch's sound here has a uncommon fragility/strength dynamic, and it is serious and cerebral, with an opposing simplicity buoyed by a rich complexity, born of a lifetime's immersion in the music. On this nine-tune set, Hersch offers up four masterful originals: "Down Home," dedicated to guitarist Bill Frisell, has a jaunty, fun, light-stepping feel; "Echos" is an inward journey, hopeful and lushly harmonic; "Lee's Dream," for alto saxophone legend Lee Konitz, has a sunny, sparkling, playful vibe; and "Pastorale," dedicated to Robert Schumann, draws on Hersch's classical background. Hersch gives Jacob de Bandolim's "Doce de Coco" a sense of frisky, devil-may-care grace, and he slows down the standard "Memories of You" and turns it into a ruminative prayer. Almost all jazz pianists like to get lost inside the idiosyncratic tunes of Thelonious Monk, and Fred Hersch is no exception, but few do it as well. His study of Monk's "Work" sounds like joyous play, full of very erudite Hersch-ian turns, fun and at the same time stately, a closer that demanded an encore: Sonny Rollins' "Doxy." Hersch delivers that tune at a measured pace, drawing the sound into a timeless and bluesy wee hours mood, a majestic wrap-up of an exceptional night of music at the Village Vanguard. ~ Dan McClenaghan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/alone-at-the-village-vanguard-fred-hersch-palmetto-records-review-by-dan-mcclenaghan.php

Personnel: Fred Hersch: piano.

Alone at the Vanguard

Sarah Vaughan - My Kinda Love

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1955/2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:11
Size: 81,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:05)  1. Tenderly
(2:51)  2. If You Could See Me Now
(3:13)  3. Don't Blame Me
(2:51)  4. I'm Thru With Love
(2:56)  5. Body And Soul
(3:00)  6. I've Got A Crush On You
(3:08)  7. Once In A While
(2:52)  8. I Cover The Waterfront
(2:46)  9. The Man I Love
(2:56) 10. Don't Worry 'Bout Me
(2:40) 11. My Kinda Love
(2:47) 12. I Don't Stand A Ghost Of A Chance

Possessor of one of the most wondrous voices of the 20th century, Sarah Vaughan ranked with Ella Fitzgerald and Billie Holiday in the very top echelon of female jazz singers. She often gave the impression that with her wide range, perfectly controlled vibrato, and wide expressive abilities, she could do anything she wanted with her voice. Although not all of her many recordings are essential (give Vaughan a weak song and she might strangle it to death), Sarah Vaughan's legacy as a performer and a recording artist will be very difficult to match in the future. Vaughan sang in church as a child and had extensive piano lessons from 1931-39; she developed into a capable keyboardist. After she won an amateur contest at the Apollo Theater, she was hired for the Earl Hines big band as a singer and second vocalist. Unfortunately, the musicians' recording strike kept her off record during this period (1943-44). When lifelong friend Billy Eckstine broke away to form his own orchestra, Vaughan joined him, making her recording debut. She loved being with Eckstine's orchestra, where she became influenced by a couple of his sidemen, Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, both of whom had also been with Hines during her stint. Vaughan was one of the first singers to fully incorporate bop phrasing in her singing, and to have the vocal chops to pull it off on the level of a Parker and Gillespie. Other than a few months with John Kirby from 1945-46, Sarah Vaughan spent the remainder of her career as a solo star. Although she looked a bit awkward in 1945 (her first husband George Treadwell would greatly assist her with her appearance), there was no denying her incredible voice. She made several early sessions for Continental: a December 31, 1944 date highlighted by her vocal version of "A Night in Tunisia," which was called "Interlude," and a May 25, 1945 session for that label that had Gillespie and Parker as sidemen. However, it was her 1946-48 selections for Musicraft (which included "If You Could See Me Now," "Tenderly" and "It's Magic") that found her rapidly gaining maturity and adding bop-oriented phrasing to popular songs. Signed to Columbia where she recorded during 1949-53, "Sassy" continued to build on her popularity. Although some of those sessions were quite commercial, eight classic selections cut with Jimmy Jones' band during May 18-19, 1950 (an octet including Miles Davis) showed that she could sing jazz with the best. During the 1950s, Vaughan recorded middle-of-the-road pop material with orchestras for Mercury, and jazz dates (including Sarah Vaughan, a memorable collaboration with Clifford Brown) for the label's subsidiary, EmArcy. Later record label associations included Roulette (1960-64), back with Mercury (1963-67), and after a surprising four years off records, Mainstream (1971-74). Through the years, Vaughan's voice deepened a bit, but never lost its power, flexibility or range. She was a masterful scat singer and was able to out-swing nearly everyone (except for Ella). Vaughan was with Norman Granz's Pablo label from 1977-82, and only during her last few years did her recording career falter a bit, with only two forgettable efforts after 1982. However, up until near the end, Vaughan remained a world traveler, singing and partying into all hours of the night with her miraculous voice staying in prime form. The majority of her recordings are currently available, including complete sets of the Mercury/Emarcy years, and Sarah Vaughan is as famous today as she was during her most active years. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/sarah-vaughan-mn0000204901/biography

My Kinda Love

Brad Mehldau - Highway Rider Disc 1 And Disc 2

Album: Highway Rider Disc 1

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:17
Size: 95,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:15)  1. John Boy
(8:40)  2. Don't Be Sad
(1:07)  3. At the Tollbooth
(7:45)  4. Highway Rider
(8:21)  5. The Falcon Will Fly Again
(4:05)  6. Now You Must Climb Alone
(8:00)  7. Walking the Peak


Album: Highway Rider Disc 2

Time: 62:52
Size: 144,5 MB

(12:28)  1. We'll Cross the River Together
( 5:20)  2. Capriccio
( 6:24)  3. Sky Turning Grey (For Elliott Smith)
( 7:36)  4. Into the City
( 8:28)  5. Old West
( 6:19)  6. Come with Me
( 6:20)  7. Always Departing
( 9:52)  8. Always Returning

For a pianist who not only demonstrated remarkable promise, but actually began delivering on it at a very early stage in his career with what would ultimately become his five-part Art of the Trio (Warner Bros.) series, Brad Mehldau's side projects have with the exception of the solo Live in Tokyo (Nonesuch, 2004) met with mixed reactions. Perhaps it's because of his emergence as one of modern jazz's most distinctive and popular interpreters of both contemporary song and standard material in a trio setting, that placed unfair expectations on seemingly tangential projects like the concept-based Places (Warner Bros, 2000). The unexpected diversion of Largo (Warner Bros., 2002), in particular, was met with some curiosity as, for the first time, Mehldau expanded into larger musical environs electrified territories, even with acclaimed producer/multi-instrumentalist Jon Brion (Kanye West, Robyn Hitchcock, Aimee Mann). Highway Rider reunites Mehldau with Brion for an album that's even more ambitious than Largo and, despite their first collaboration's many strong points, a far more successful one. Mehldau's recent work writing for orchestra The Brady Bunch Variations for Orchestre Natonal D'Îsle-de-France, and the song-cycle Love Sublime (Nonesuch, 2006), with soprano René Fleming, amongst others has clearly given Mehldau the confidence to find, with Highway Rider, a nexus point where form-based improvisation and through-composition meet. Based around the preexisting chemistry of his regular trio with bassist FLY and drummer Jeff Ballard, but expanding to a quintet with longtime friend Joshua Redman on saxophones and, back from Largo, drummer Matt Chamberlain, Highway Rider is a double-disc suite that's as much a soundtrack to an imaginary film as anything Mehldau's ever done. It's also the most fully realized original music the pianist has written to date, as unequivocally American as Aaron Copland, Bill Frisell and Pat Metheny, despite citing the influence of European Romantics like Strauss, Brahms and Tchaikovsky, in addition to more eclectic sources. Mehldau's voice as a composer has been gradually emerging with original music contributed to trio recordings like Live (Nonesuch, 2008) and House on Hill (Nonesuch, 2006), but with Highway Rider, Mehldau the composer has clearly arrived. What distances Highway Rider from stereotypical (and often saccharine) "jazz with strings" projects with Dan Coleman leading a chamber orchestra on much of the disc is the sense of immediacy that Brion has achieved by recording the orchestra and jazz quintet together one of Mehldau's original goals for the project. This isn't a jazz quintet blowing and an orchestra then layered over top; this is fully integrated music, where the soloing is as spontaneous as it needs to be, even when the orchestra creates a firm and fixed foundation. Mehldau's solo on the first half of "We'll Cross the River Together" builds to an idiosyncratic, block chord-driven climax, but it's his orchestration which turns this relatively simple, repeating set of eight chords into a masterful tour de force that's not only one of Highway Rider's most dramatic moments, but one that then resolves into one of its most tender interludes. A second half, with gradually building tension from the strings and the turbulent double-drumming of Ballard and Chamberlain, leads to a second climax of equal strength, this time courtesy of Redman.

As lush as Mehldau's orchestration is throughout Highway Rider, he knows how to create a narrative arc through dynamics and breaking the ensemble down. "Capriccio" starts with nothing more than piano though, as ever, Mehldau's virtuosity leads to the belief that it's being played by two hands until an emergent melody makes it clear he's playing it with only one. Hand percussion quite literally, with clapping driving much of the tune and Redman's soprano develop the theme until Mehldau takes over for a brief but quirky solo, sounding not unlike Oregon in instrumentation, but absolutely unlike it in Mehldau's voicings, which turn another deceptively simple, descending four-chord structure into something else entirely. Similarly, "The Falcon Will Fly Again," a longer piece but, again, with drastically reduced instrumentation, leads from lengthy piano and saxophone solos to a theme sung by members of the group and The Fleurettes, and an ending that dissolves into some relaxed banter amongst the group that makes it clear that as serious as much of this music sounds, it's being made by a group of people who are having fun. Sonically, Highway Rider bears some resemblance to Largo, in particular Mehldau's use of pump organ, synth and orchestral bells on certain tracks, but it feels somehow more natural and better integrated this time around. Perhaps the more focused compositional approach of the album makes its expanded use of texture work more naturally. Despite breaks between songs, the music flows and feels like a continuous suite, and is certainly best experienced as such. The folkloric piano solo, "At the Tollbooth," acts as a brief interlude between the slower-tempo of "Don't Be Sad," with hints of gospel driving its form, and the title track, a more propulsive trio tune with subtle aural enhancements creating a soft cushion beneath Mehldau's extended solo. "Into the City" also narrows the focus down to Mehldau's trio, with Grenadier doubling, alternately, the pianist's left and right hands on a knotty, riff-based tune that may reduce the album's broader textural expanse, but demonstrates just how vibrant and progressive this working trio is, with Ballard almost literally on fire. As Mehldau combines in-the-moment playing with carefully structured form, and repeated chordal and melodic motifs that continue to resurface throughout Highway Rider's 100 minutes, the album builds to a climax on "Always Returning," before ending on a softer, tone-poem note that incorporates Mehldau's inherent classicism and somehow, on repeated listens, brings Highway Rider full circle. The music may bear no real resemblance to it, but in scope Highway Rider is Mehldau's Secret Story (Nonesuch, 1992), a fan favorite for Pat Metheny and a milestone in terms of ambition and scope until the guitarist reached a new level with The Way Up (Nonesuch, 2005) and, most recently, Orchestrion (Nonesuch, 2010). It's no coincidence, then, that Mehldau and his trio collaborated with Metheny on Metheny Mehldau (Nonesuch, 2006) and Quartet (Nonesuch, 2007). That the pianist's overall career choice focusing largely as he has on solo and trio works has been almost diametrically opposed to Metheny's greater compositional ambitions and orchestrations seems somehow less so now, with the release of Highway Rider. In its almost perfect mix of form and freedom, Highway Rider manages to be both Mehldau's most personal and most broad-scoped album to date, and surely one that will remain a classic amongst his discography, no matter what's to come. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/brad-mehldau-highway-rider-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Brad Mehldau (piano); Joshua Redman (tenor saxophone); Jeff Ballard , Matt Chamberlain (drums).


George Shearing & Don Thompson - George Shearing at Home

Styles: Piano Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:59
Size: 132,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:35)  1. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
(2:50)  2. A Time for Love
(5:51)  3. Ghoti
(3:01)  4. The Things We Did Last Summer
(4:50)  5. Laura
(4:13)  6. The Skye Boat Song
(5:42)  7. Confirmation
(2:50)  8. The Girl Next Door
(2:24)  9. Can't We Be Friends?
(5:07) 10. I Cover the Waterfront
(3:18) 11. Out of Nowhere
(3:06) 12. That Old Devil Called Love
(5:09) 13. Subconsciouslee
(3:56) 14. Beautiful Love

Pianist Sir George Shearing (1919—2011) was himself an integral part of the be bop jazz movement in the late 1940s. His quintet that featured vibraphone and guitar with the standard piano trio was sonically ground breaking. His precise and measured piano style influenced a generation of pianists and several of his compositions ("Lullaby of Birdland" and "Conception") have become jazz standards. He was not flashy, but a solid, well-considered player whose playing could always be counted on to be elegant and durable. These fourteen tracks were recorded in Shearing's home during a six-week residency at a New York City jazz club in 1983. Bassist Don Thompson, with whom Shearing made these recordings, found them shortly after Shearing's 2011 death at 91. More than aurally acceptable, these recordings reveal a relaxed and swinging Shearing, playing as effortlessly as if it were the easiest thing in the world. Thompson provides expert timekeeping and some piquant soloing of his own on this diverse collection of 20th Century music. David Raksin's "Laura" shimmers while the Styne/Cahn classic "The Things We Did Last Summer" bounces with a restful and quaint stride. The be bop of Charlie Parker's "Confirmation" is fresh and the abstract and angular "SubconsciousLee" bares all the edges, sharp and smooth. George Shearing at home is a treat in the same way, (Vladimir) Horowitz at Home (Deutsche Grammophon, 1989) was both men were relaxed and at the top of their game. ~ C.Michael Bailey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/george-shearing-at-home-george-shearing-proper-records-review-by-c-michael-bailey.php

Personnel: George Shearing: piano; Don Thompson: bass.

George Shearing at Home

Claude Tissendier Septet - Carrots for Hodges

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:45
Size: 131,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:06)  1. Sweetie Frog
(6:23)  2. Patte de lapin
(4:39)  3. Super Carl
(5:10)  4. Slow and Relax
(4:39)  5. Jump, Rabbit, Jump
(5:04)  6. Johnny Saxo
(4:55)  7. Carrots for Hodges
(3:16)  8. Green Eyes
(4:24)  9. Jumpin' in Etretat
(8:27) 10. Evening Blues
(4:38) 11. Gehod

CARROTS (the familiar name given by the musicians to the soprano saxophone) FOR HODGES (one of the greatest servants of the saxophone and alto saxophonist of Duke Ellington). Claude Tissendier (viola sax) pays tribute to Johnny Hodges' repertoire by composing 11 swing songs. 

The other members of the Septet: Claude Braud (tenor sax), Jean Etève (baritone sax), Michel Camicas (trombone), Stan Laferrière (piano), Pierre-Yves Sorin (bass), Vincent Cordelette (drums). Translate By Google https://www.placedeslibraires.fr/music/3322420071628-carrots-for-hodges-claude-tissendier-septet/

Carrots for Hodges

Saturday, May 18, 2019

Al Hirt, Ann-Margret - Beauty And The Beard

Styles: Trumpet And Vocal Jazz
Year: 1964
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:51
Size: 74,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:12)  1. Personality
(2:11)  2. Tain't What You Do
(3:15)  3. Bill Bailey
(2:07)  4. My Baby Just Cares for Me
(2:13)  5. Everbody Loves My Baby (But My Baby Don't Love Nobody but Me)
(2:12)  6. Little Boy (Little Girl)
(3:11)  7. The Best Man
(2:17)  8. Ma (He's Making Eyes at Me)
(2:39)  9. Mutual Admiration Society
(2:20) 10. Row, Row, Row
(3:29) 11. Baby, It's Cold Outside - Remastered
(2:39) 12. Just Because

Beauty and the Beard is an album by Al Hirt released by RCA Victor in 1964. Ann-Margret was featured on the album. The album was arranged by Marty Paich and produced by Steve Sholes. The album landed on the Billboard 200 chart in 1964, reaching #84. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beauty_and_the_Beard

Personnel:   Ann-Margret - vocals;  Al Hirt - trumpet;  Jerry Hirt - trombone;  Pee Wee Spitelera - clarinet;  Eddie Miller - tenor saxophone;  Red Norvo - vibraphone; Fred Crane - piano; Al Hendrickson - guitar;  Lowell Miller - bass;  Jimmy Zitano - drums

Beauty And The Beard

Jacqui Dankworth - Le Départ

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:07
Size: 104,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:06)  1. Butterfly's Wing
(4:15)  2. Angel Feet
(4:00)  3. The Bear Song
(5:39)  4. Le départ
(3:47)  5. The Bridge
(3:37)  6. Just a Song
(1:45)  7. The Madman
(3:12)  8. To Marie
(4:26)  9. The Knee
(5:17) 10. The Alchemist and the Catflap
(4:57) 11. Poem on a Rainy Day

For this irresistible feast of songs, Grammy-Award-winning singer Jacqui Dankworth is joined by an all-star line-up: award winning composer and jazz pianist David Gordon; Ben Davis, whose group Basquiat Strings have been Mercury-nominated; and Christian Garrick, widely recognised as the UK's leading jazz violinist.  In 2002 David Gordon added the violin and cello strings of Garrick and Davis to his already established duo with Jacqui Dankworth to create the group Butterfly's Wing. Four fantastic musicians, a wonderfully transparent sound-world  by turns magical, witty, powerful  and a panoply of seductive rhythms, cutting-edge improvisation and lyrics, at once heart-rending, joyous and surreal. 'Le Depart' is the group's first recording, here, on Garrick's Flying Blue Whale label. https://www.propermusic.com/product-details/Jacqui-Dankworth-Christian-Garrick-David-Gordon-and-Ben-Davis-Butterflys-Wing-Le-Depart-253380

Le départ

Sol Yaged - It Might as Well Be Swing

Styles: Clarinet Jazz, Swing
Year: 1962
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:08
Size: 85,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:20)  1. Yacht Club Swing
(2:55)  2. Easy Living
(4:52)  3. Love Me or Leave Me
(3:26)  4. I'll Never Be the Same
(6:05)  5. It Might as Well Be Swing
(3:18)  6. Auf Wiedersehen My Dear
(2:47)  7. Lulu's Back in Town
(7:21)  8. After You've Gone

Sol Yaged is one of the final living legends from the original era of American Big Band & Swing music. Born 1922, playing clarinet since 1935, Sol has played alongside every jazz great you can imagine from Glen Miller to Lionel Hampton to Gene Krupa. Known as “the disciple of Benny Goodman,” Sol was amazed by Goodman’s abilities and attended nearly every single Benny Goodman orchestra live show, band rehearsal, or recording date. So much so that when it came time to film the 1956 movie “The Benny Goodman Story” Sol Yaged was hired to fly out to Hollywood for a month to teach lead role Steve Allen how to play, look and act like Benny Goodman. Now 95 years old, Sol continues to remain a world-renown clarinetist and legend in the underground jazz, big band and swing communities from players of all ages, especially in his home: New York City.  What lies before you is Sol’s debut LP release “It Might As Well Be Swing.” Released in 1956 and out of print since 1962, Pine Hill Records and Sol Yaged teamed up to bring this wonderful album back to life with a limited edition reissue on white vinyl, digipak CD, and digital. This is the first time any Sol Yaged recording has been made available digitally. This album features fellow living legend Harry Sheppard on vibraphone. At 89 years old, Harry still performs regularly in Texas where he now lives. He remains the only other surviving musician on this album. The album was delicately and passionately remastered to make it sound the highest quality possible while keeping it true to its original sound. This is a very limited edition pressing of 300 LP’s [White vinyl w/ Download Card] and 300 Digipak CD’s. Pine Hill Records is honored to bring this back over 60 years after its original release. Sol and Harry are two wonderful people who have and continue to give their entire lives to music. Don't miss out on this piece of big band history! https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/solyaged1

Personnel:  Clarinet – Sol Yaged; Bass – Mort Herbert; Drums – Mickey Sheen; Piano – Ken Kersey; Vibraphone – Harry Sheppard

It Might as Well Be Swing

Barney Kessel - Supreme Jazz

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:11
Size: 142,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:43)  1. Speak Low
(3:25)  2. Love Is Here To Stay
(3:15)  3. On A Slow Boat To China
(3:18)  4. How Long Has This Been Going On?
(3:09)  5. A Foggy Day
(3:18)  6. 64 Bars On Wilshire
(3:12)  7. Prelude To A Kiss
(4:26)  8. Begin The Blues
(3:22)  9. Embraceable You
(3:07) 10. Midnight Sun
(3:49) 11. Jeepers Creepers
(3:37) 12. My Old Flame
(2:50) 13. You Stepped Out Of A Dream
(3:55) 14. I Didn’t Know What Time It Was
(4:02) 15. Easy Like
(4:09) 16. That's All
(2:44) 17. April In Paris
(2:43) 18. North Of The Border

One of the finest guitarists to emerge after the death of Charlie Christian, Barney Kessel was a reliable bop soloist throughout his career. He played with a big band fronted by Chico Marx (1943), was fortunate enough to appear in the classic jazz short Jammin' the Blues (1944), and then worked with the big bands of Charlie Barnet (1944-1945) and Artie Shaw (1945); he also recorded with Shaw's Gramercy Five. Kessel became a busy studio musician in Los Angeles, but was always in demand for jazz records. He toured with the Oscar Peterson Trio for one year (1952-1953) and then, starting in 1953, led an impressive series of records for Contemporary that lasted until 1961 (including several with Ray Brown and Shelly Manne in a trio accurately called the Poll Winners). After touring Europe with George Wein's Newport All-Stars (1968), Kessel lived in London for a time (1969-1970). In 1973, he began touring and recording with the Great Guitars, a group also including Herb Ellis and Charlie Byrd. A serious stroke in 1992 put Barney Kessel permanently out of action, but many of his records (which include dates for Onyx, Black Lion, Sonet, and Concord, in addition to many of the Contemporaries) are available, along with several video collections put out by Vestapol. Kessel was diagnosed with inoperable cancer in 2001, which eventually took his life in May of 2004. He was 80 years old. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/barney-kessel-mn0000784527/biography

Supreme Jazz

Jacques Loussier Trio - Ravel's Boléro

Styles: Piano
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:55
Size: 124,5 MB
Art: Front

(17:15)  1. Ravel's Boléro
( 6:10)  2. Nymphéas I. Allegro
( 5:45)  3. Nymphéas II. Andante
( 5:29)  4. Nymphéas III. Vivace
( 6:02)  5. Nymphéas IV. Largo
( 3:54)  6. Nymphéas V. Presto
( 3:08)  7. Nymphéas VI. Cantabile
( 4:08)  8. Nymphéas VII. Prestissimo

As with his CD The Bach Book , Jacques Loussier is again embellishing the work of another master composer on this recent Telarc release entitled Ravel's Bolero. This CD is as much, and even more so about Loussier's own compositional abilities, for with the exception of the title cut, all songs were composed and arranged by Loussier. As great a record as the Bach Book is, Bolero easily surpasses it on many different levels. Maybe it's the fact that Loussier and Ravel share a common heritage and nationality, or that Loussier's formative years where spent studying with Yves Nat, himself a disciple of Ravel. It's this reviewers opinion that Ravel is just more of a modern figure than Bach, and being that there is less of a gap in the lineage between Ravel and modern players like Loussier, Ravel's music is simply more accessible, leaving a lot of space for creative improvisations. Take the title cut for example, an extended line played over a pedal point. With such minimalism at work, Loussier is able to extend over and beyond the composers harmonic conception, by improvising complex lines that revolve around, and are at times intertwined with original theme. A feeling of impressionism and noir prevail throught this CD from the opening Bolero, which faithfully reproduces the exotic flavor of Ravel's original score, within the confines of the piano trio. Although the piece Nympheas, with it's seven movements, was composed by Loussier; it's various themes filled with violent storms and eerie silence, manage to suggest melodies and harmonies found within the repetitive structure of Ravel's Bolero. 

It is clear that Loussier and trio are playing off one another, and demonstrating extreme control over the use of time, tone, and timbre. The music on this disc represents homage being paid to one master gone, from another master living. ~ AAJ Staff https://www.allaboutjazz.com/ravels-bolero-telarc-records-review-by-aaj-staff.php

Personnel: Jacques Loussier (piano); Benoit Dunoyer De Segonzac (bass); Andre' Arpino (drums)

Ravel's Boléro

Friday, May 17, 2019

Dawn Holt Lauber - Something Borrowed, Something Blue

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:26
Size: 114,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:39)  1. My Love
(1:25)  2. Hands, Eyes, Heart
(2:10)  3. The Call
(4:57)  4. Ave Maria
(3:29)  5. Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring
(4:16)  6. I Follow Thee
(4:11)  7. Laudate Dominum
(2:15)  8. Alleluia
(2:55)  9. Pie Jesu
(4:12) 10. Vocalise
(4:19) 11. A Nuptial Blessing
(4:01) 12. Panis Angelicus
(2:49) 13. Vocalise
(4:41) 14. Heaven

Just as she blends a masterful mix of musical genres in concert halls across the country, engaging oratorio soloist Dawn Holt Lauber will inspire the musical choices you make for your wedding day with this collection of the old and new, appropriately titled "Something Borrowed, Something Blue." Listen in and you will be lured by a handful of selections that are a bit off the beaten path a beautiful marriage of classical and jazz that promises to be a perfect accompaniment to the beginning of your new life together. Dawn Holt Lauber has appeared extensively with the Chicago Jazz Ensemble. She first performed Duke Ellington's sacred works at the Riverside Church in New York City with members of the Duke Ellington Orchestra. She has been a soloist at the Riverside Church for five years.

Something Borrowed, Something Blue

Marcus Printup, Emil Viklicky - Jazz Na Hrade (Live)

Styles: Trumpet And Piano Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:52
Size: 135,5 MB
Art: Front

( 0:36)  1. Introduction by the President of the Republic, Vaclav Klaus
(12:01)  2. Highlands, Lowlands
(11:05)  3. In Holomoc Town
( 8:56)  4. Mystery of Man Blues
( 9:08)  5. Dolphin Dance
( 7:36)  6. Lasko, Boze, Iasko
( 9:25)  7. Body and Soul

A talented trumpeter with a lot of potential, Marcus Printup was discovered by Marcus Roberts at the University of North Florida in 1991. Printup started on trumpet in the fifth grade, played funk as a teenager, and in college was part of a ten-piece band called Soul Reason for the Blues. Since that time, he has toured and recorded with Roberts, played with the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra, recorded with Carl Allen, performed with Betty Carter, and cut a number of excellent albums as a leader for Blue Note. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/marcus-printup-mn0000673081/biography

Personnel:  Marcus Printup - trumpet; Emil Viklicky - piano; František Uhlír - bass; Laco Tropp - drums

Jazz Na Hrade

Les Pommes De Ma Douche - L'âme Des Poètes Disparus

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:51
Size: 127,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:51)  1. Le piano de la plage
(4:02)  2. Dis, quand reviendras-tu ?
(4:28)  3. La maison près de la fontaine
(4:13)  4. Couleur café
(4:26)  5. Ma première guitare
(4:05)  6. Tango pour Claude
(3:26)  7. Le p'tit bal perdu
(3:11)  8. Fais-moi mal Johnny
(4:18)  9. Les vieux amants
(4:09) 10. La chansonnette
(4:27) 11. La pluie fait des claquettes
(4:25) 12. Clopin clopant
(5:44) 13. C'est en septembre

The apples of my shower are literally, My Showerheads is an irresistible swing quintet, and they craftily delight in giving their growing audience of fans incredibly tasty gypsy-jazz arrangements of the greatest tunes from the golden days of French song. 

In this album they are Trenet and Gainsbourg, Boris Vian and Barbara, just some of the marvelous artists and composers whose Hall of Fame melodies they treat with tenderness, respect and unerring precision. Under the benevolent gaze of these great poets of the (recent) past, the band gives us a session (spiritualism!) Where the soul and the metronome rhythms and ethereal solos communicate in swing thats light and elegant The Apples at the (very) best of their Art! Augustin BONDOUX & Patrick FRÉMEAUX. Translate by Google https://www.amazon.fr/LAme-Poetes-Disparus-Pommes-Douche/dp/B01E99WLRC

L'âme des poètes disparus

Thursday, May 16, 2019

Irvin Mayfield - A Love Letter to New Orleans

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:36
Size: 165,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:26)  1. Mo' Better Blues
(5:56)  2. Latin Tinge II
(2:53)  3. Romeo and Juliet
(1:48)  4. Old Time Indians Meeting of the Chiefs
(8:54)  5. James Booker
(7:15)  6. El Negro Parts 1, 2, 3
(5:00)  7. Fatimah
(1:39)  8. Lynch Mob - Interlude
(8:08)  9. Blue Dawn
(3:52) 10. George Porter
(5:06) 11. Super Star
(4:59) 12. Wind Song
(2:26) 13. I'll Fly Away
(8:07) 14. Mardi Gras Second Line

The body of Crescent City trumpeter Irvin Mayfield's work might be considered "a love letter to New Orleans," and this compilation of his Basin Street Records recordings, assembled to accompany a book with each song constituting a chapter (it is available as a stand-alone CD and in a CD/book package), certainly makes that case. Drawing from such albums as Love Songs, Ballads and Standards (a duo collection with Ellis Marsalis), Half Past Autumn Suite, and Strange Fruit, plus Mayfield's work with the group Los Hombres Calientes, the music ranges from traditional N.O. "Indian" chants and second-line playing to straight-ahead jazz. Mayfield's different projects make for a range of music that is almost too varied. Strange Fruit, for instance, is a concept album about a 1920s lynching, and music from it sits oddly beside, say, the version of Leon Russell and Bonnie Bramlett's "Superstar" from the Ellis Marsalis album. But it all relates to New Orleans somehow, and the album gives a good sense of Mayfield's recorded accomplishments so far. ~ William Ruhlmann https://www.allmusic.com/album/a-love-letter-to-new-orleans-mw0002122078

A Love Letter to New Orleans

Pee Wee Erwin And His Dixieland Band - The Land Of Dixie

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:18
Size: 91,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:18)  1. At The Jazz Band Ball
(7:06)  2. Basin Street Blues
(3:30)  3. Lassus Trombone
(7:15)  4. Memphis Blues
(5:21)  5. Panama
(5:59)  6. Dixieland SHuffle
(4:49)  7. Satanic Blues

An excellent trumpeter who spent most of his career on the fringe of fame, Pee Wee Erwin made many fine records during his career. He began playing trumpet when he was four. Stints with territory bands were followed by gigs with Joe Haymes (1931-1933) and Isham Jones (1933-1934). Erwin then moved to New York and became a busy studio musician, working often on radio, including with Benny Goodman during 1934-1935. After playing with Ray Noble in 1935, he succeeded Bunny Berigan in both the Benny Goodman (1936) and Tommy Dorsey (1937-1939) orchestras. 

Erwin put together an unsuccessful big band in 1941-1942 and tried again with little luck in 1946. He worked steadily playing Dixieland at Nick's during the 1950s, ran a trumpet school with Chris Griffin in the 1960s (Warren Vache was one of his students), and played steadily until the end of his life. Pee Wee Erwin led sessions on an occasional basis in the 1950s (including a couple for United Artists) and made six albums during 1980-1981, including three for Qualtro and one for Jazzology, still sounding quite good that late in his career. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/pee-wee-erwin-mn0000301789/biography

Personnel: Pee Wee Erwin - Trumpet; Sal Pace - Clarinet; Andy Russo - Trombone; Billy Maxted - Piano; Jack Fav - Bass; Kenny John - Drums

The Land Of Dixie

Terell Stafford - Centripetal Force

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:40
Size: 156,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:58)  1. Addio
(5:36)  2. I'll Wait
(6:20)  3. Skylark
(7:12)  4. Old Devil Moon
(4:43)  5. A Child Is Born
(6:47)  6. Mia
(7:48)  7. For The Broken Hearted
(6:58)  8. My Romance
(7:15)  9. Daahoud
(7:58) 10. Somebody Bigger Than You And I

Centripetal Force is a good title for this CD, Terell Stafford's second as a leader. In physics, it describes how separate energies gravitate toward the center; here, the center is more than Stafford's beautiful horn there's a warm calm at the core of this music, regardless of tempo. Some of this comes from familiarity, since Stafford, Stephen Scott, and Victor Lewis were bandmates in Bobby Watson's hard bop '90s group, Horizon. But there's nothing hard about this release, which is full of soul and heart. Stafford's playing is clean, fluid, and expressive, whether he's going flat-out on an incandescent "Old Devil Moon" or being achingly tender describing "My Romance," accompanied only by Scott's eloquent piano. On the purely beautiful "A Child Is Born," he duets with Russell Malone, who also delivers memorable solos on the relaxed and swinging "Skylark" and Lewis' high-energy opener, "Addio." Stafford offers two fine compositions of his own: the haunting "I'll Wait," with subtle percussion (including bird sounds) supplied by Daniel Moreno, and "Mia," an intriguing mix of light and shadow that balances Stefon Harris' pearly vibe tones with Stafford's smoky flugelhorn and the honey of John Clark's French horn. Stafford's talent for building solos is especially evident on Scott's "For the Broken Hearted," which is more lively than its title suggests. An exciting "Dahoud" and a loving ballad tribute to Stafford's grandmother round out the ten tracks by these ten superb musicians. But while there's plenty of brilliance here, there's no trace of flash: Stafford goes straight for the honest meaning in every tune. And whether his tone is golden or growling, muted or crystalline, he communicates straight to the listener's center. ~ Judith Schlesinger https://www.allmusic.com/album/centripetal-force-mw0000483798

Personnel:  Trumpet – Terell Stafford; Bass – Ed Howard (tracks: 1 to 4, 6, 7, 9, 10); Drums – Victor Lewis (tracks: 1 to 4, 6, 7, 9, 10); Flugelhorn – Terell Stafford; French Horn – John Clark (2) (tracks: 6); Guitar – Russell Malone (tracks: 1, 3, 5); Percussion – Daniel Moreno (tracks: 1, 2, 7, 10); Piano – Stephen Scott (5) (tracks: 1, 2, 4, 6 to 10); Tenor Saxophone – Ron Blake (tracks: 9), Tim Warfield (tracks: 4); Vibraphone – Stefon Harris (tracks: 6, 7)

Centripetal Force

Cecilia Sanchietti - La Terza Via

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:35
Size: 112,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:24)  1. Which Way
(5:26)  2. Circus
(6:07)  3. Not (In) My Name
(3:44)  4. Shouting to a Brick Wall
(6:16)  5. Sweet & Bitter
(3:56)  6. Run Baby Run
(4:42)  7. Emerging Lands
(5:13)  8. Hang Gliding
(5:42)  9. The Third Way
(2:00) 10. Innocence

Italian drummer Cecilia Sanchietti is an elegant musician and thoughtful composer. Both attributes are amply demonstrated on her second release as a leader La Terza Via, loosely translated as "The Third Side of the Coin." Of the ten captivating pieces that comprise the album seven are Sanchietti's originals and the other three seamlessly fit within the overall conceptual unity of the disc. The leader's antiwar "Not (in) my name" is dramatic and multifaceted. It opens with poignant and bitter martial drumbeats. Belgian saxophonist Nicholas Kummert lets loose dense, floating lines over the resonant rhythm flourishes. Kummert, who is also an accomplished vocalist, makes his tenor sax sing in forlorn and yearning phrases. Pianist Pierpaolo Principato contributes a contemplative improvisation while bassist Marco Siniscalco solos with lyricism and eloquence. The tune transforms to a peaceful, lullaby like, nocturne and delightfully concludes on the cautionary note of Sanchietti's unaccompanied rolling thrums. In contrast composer and bandleader Maria Schneider's "Hang Gliding" is exuberant and expansive. Principato's angular vamps contribute subtle tension to the ambience. Sanchietti and Siniscalco add lithe and agile lines that together create a suave, instrumental dance. Kummert blows with warmth, passion and erudite spontaneity. The quartet members complement one another for a moving and cinematic performance. Equally intriguing is the trio's interpretation of the title track. It starts off with Siniscalco's reverberations echoing against silent pauses followed by the ensemble stating the theme with overlapping refrains. Principato lets loose shimmering crystalline melodic cascades. Sanchietti takes center stage with breathtakingly energetic and muscular polyrhythms showcasing her prowess as a percussionist. 

Still early in her career Sanchietti has proven herself a unique and versatile artist. Her compositions are engaging, her drumming gracefully nimble and her rapport with her band fluid. The result is a charismatic work that, even without breaking new ground, is soulful and satisfying. ~ Hrayr Attarian https://www.allaboutjazz.com/la-terza-via-cecilia-sanchietti-bluejazz-review-by-hrayr-attarian.php

Personnel: Cecilia Sanchietti: drums, composer; Pieraolo Principato: piano; Marco Siniscalco: electric/acoustic bass; Nicolas Kummert: tenor sax.

La Terza Via