Friday, April 10, 2020

Isabella Lundgren - Out of the Bell Jar

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:21
Size: 104,4 MB


( 5:25)  1. You're Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go
( 6:35)  2. The Times Are a Changing
( 8:05)  3. It Ain't Me Babe
( 3:52)  4. Lay Down Your Weary Tune
(10:44)  5. Trouble
( 4:06)  6. Out of the Bell Jar
( 6:31)  7. Forever Young

This release is the newest from Swedish vocalist Isabella Lundgren. It features arrangements of classic Bob Dylan songs, sung with Isabellas exceptional artistry. Isabella Lundgren has a seriousness and a gravity that is unique. It's like she makes time stand still just by being, I guess that's what they call charisma and presence. And then she sings absolutely fantastically, with a natural, flowing time and a low-key but expressive phrasing. The fact the she has something to say with her lyrics, also adds to the magic. She is one of the greatest things that has ever happened to the Swedish Jazz scene. (Swedish Daily News) Lundgrens incisive and agile voice, often reminiscent of Anita ODay and Billie Holiday, came from a formally attired, deceptively slight frame and it thus was less of a surprise than it might have been to discover later that having studied music at New Yorks New School she is now in Stockholm studying to be a priest. She had the congregation in her hand right from the lightly accompanied rubato intro to That Old Black Magic that opened the set. There was also Its Magic and a couple of blues, all delivered with compelling authority and a mischievous sense of swing. (Mark Gilbert, JazzJournal) ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Out-Bell-Jar-Isabella-Lundgren/dp/B07ZLK56KX

Out of the Bell Jar

Archie Shepp, Jasper Van't Hof - The Fifth of May

Styles: Saxophone And Piano Jazz
Year: 1987
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:10
Size: 110,4 MB
Art: Front

( 7:50)  1. Down Home New York
( 7:38)  2. The Hunter
( 6:37)  3. Naima
( 5:16)  4. Pulse of the Roots
(15:16)  5. 5th of May
( 5:30)  6. In a Decent Way

This is an unusual CD with Archie Shepp, mostly playing tenor but also contributing a couple of vocals and a bit of soprano, performing duets with the keyboards and synthesizer of Jasper Van't Hof. The music (originals by Shepp or Van't Hof, along with John Coltrane's "Naima") ranges from danceable tracks and mood pieces to explorative works, and generally holds one's interest. A good couple of days for Archie Shepp, who could be quite erratic in the 1980s. ~Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-fifth-of-may-mw0000652903

The Fifth of May

Thursday, April 9, 2020

Vincent Gardner - The Good Book, Chapter Three

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:53
Size: 167,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:07)  1. Double Talk
(7:34)  2. Another Hair-Do
(6:27)  3. I Waited for You
(6:40)  4. Compulsion
(6:38)  5. One Bass Hit
(6:57)  6. Darn That Dream
(5:57)  7. Dizzy Atmosphere
(5:48)  8. Charlie's Wig
(7:12)  9. There'll Never Be Another You
(8:29) 10. Sid's Delight

This album is like the cotton of the advertisement, it does not deceive. It is the third volume that trombonist Vincent Gardner edits from his series 'The Good Book' and is dedicated to bebop. So white and bottled ...

Vincent R. Gardner was born in Chicago in 1972 and grew up in Hampton, Virginia. He comes from a family with strong musical roots, it was Mercer Ellington who hired him for his first professional job and from there he went to work with Wynton Marsalis and entered the famous Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra to which he still belongs.

'The Good Book' is a series of CDs that Gardner has dedicated to musicians or styles. The first was dedicated to the music of Frank Foster and Horace Silver, the second entitled 'Now' , was dedicated to the closest composers in time with songs by Marcus Roberts, Kenny Barron, Jeremy Pelt or Anthony Wonsley . Also added some composition of old acquaintances like Kurt Weil, Jimmy Heath or Victor Young . Now it is the turn of the bebop and seeing the wishes of Vincent Gardner we can imagine that he will not do anything wrong.

In this third chapter of the 'Good Book' we find perfect performances of songs like 'Double Talk' by Fast Navarro, 'Another Hair-Do' and 'Charlie´s Wig' by Charlie Parker, 'Compulsion' by Miles Davis or 'Dizzy Atmosfere 'by Gillespie among others. Ten portions of bebop cleanly played by Marsalis string musicians such as Ryan Kisor on trumpet, Peter Washington on double bass or Ali Jackson on drums, Gardner's companions on 'Lincoln', plus the addition of musicians such as Dick Oatts on sax or pianist Peter Zak .If you like bebop do not hesitate, this album will be your favorite of the year, if not, you will enjoy a nice portion of tall bebop. http://www.distritojazz.com/discos-jazz/vincent-gardner-the-book-of-bebop-the-good-book-chapter-three

Musicians: Vincent Gardner (trombone), Ryan Kisor (trumpet), Dick Oatts (alto sax), Peter Zak (piano), Peter Washington (double bass), Ali Jackson (drums).

The Good Book, Chapter Three

Archie Shepp, Jasper Van't Hof - Mama Rose

Styles: Saxophone and Piano Jazz
Year: 1985
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:08
Size: 96,5 MB
Art: Front

( 9:17)  1. Contracts
(12:04)  2. Mama Rose
(11:47)  3. People
( 3:39)  4. Kalimba
( 5:19)  5. Recovered Residence

From the moment Jasper Van't Hof lays a finger on the synthesizer, unrolling a plush carpet of electronic music, it's clear that "Mama Rose" is not going to be your typical Archie Shepp album. The brash interplay often found on Shepp's small-group recordings has been replaced by a cozier relationship between keyboard and saxophone on this series of duets, recorded in concert in West Germany in 1982. The most moving performance is the title track, the only one of the album's five selections written by Shepp. A stirring recitation with an autobiographical slant, it's dedicated to Shepp's grandmother and "the struggle that transpired in the Sixties," and concludes with an impassioned soprano saxophone solo. Unfortunately, Van't Hof, a veteran of many European ensembles, isn't always up to Shepp's standards. He seems inordinately fond of minimalistic rhythmic effects and simulating rock-guitar runs. Still, the sheer variety of instruments at his disposal, both electronic and acoustic, allows him to anticipate and respond to Shepp's solos in infinitely colorful ways. The result is the exotic contours of "Kalimba" and the sweeping chromaticism of "Recovered Residence." Once Van't Hof establishes the mood, Shepp has no trouble making it meaningful and memorable. ARCHIE SHEPP & JASPER VAN'T HOF - "Mama Rose" (Steeplechase SCS1169). https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1984/02/17/a-mellow-archie-shepp/a5a6b40e-523f-4c9a-a245-4c01e19017ac/

Personnel: Archie Shepp - tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, recitation;  Jasper van't Hof - piano, electric piano, organ, synthesizer, computer, kalimba

Mama Rose

George Benson - Walking To New Orleans

Styles: Guitar and Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:31
Size: 87,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:54)  1. Nadine (Is It You)
(3:49)  2. Ain't That A Shame
(3:39)  3. Rockin' Chair
(3:35)  4. You Can't Catch Me
(4:54)  5. Havana Moon
(3:45)  6. I Hear You Knocking
(3:19)  7. Memphis, Tennessee
(4:08)  8. Walking To New Orleans
(3:03)  9. Blue Monday
(3:22) 10. How You've Changed

Following up 2013's urbane Inspiration: A Tribute to Nat King Cole, George Benson returns with another tribute production, 2019's ebullient Walking to New Orleans: Remembering Chuck Berry and Fats Domino. Interestingly, while Benson is best known for his funky instrumental jazz of the '70s and '80s, and smooth R&B crooning of the '80s and '90s, both of these latter-career tributes find him tackling material from even older traditions. Where Inspiration was a lushly swinging standards album, Walking to New Orleans is all blues grit and old-school R&B swagger. Though primarily influenced by jazz artists like Wes Montgomery and Charlie Christian, Benson certainly owes at least a modicum of his soulful style to early rock legends Berry and Domino, both of whom helped shape the sound of modern rock and pop music. As Benson grew up in Pittsburgh, the album's title evokes a conceptual travelogue as he moves from the Midwest through Berry's home state of Missouri, all the way down South to Domino's hometown of New Orleans. To help achieve this rootsy trek, Benson worked with producer Kevin Shirley (John Hiatt, Aerosmith, Joe Bonamassa) at Nashville's Ocean Way Studios, where he also conscripted the assistance of pros like drummer/music director Greg Morrow, guitarist Rob McNelley, pianist Kevin McKendree, and bassist Alison Prestwood. The results are loose and straightforward as Benson (primarily showcased here as a singer) takes on Berry favorites like "Walking," "Nadine (Is It You?)," and "Memphis, Tennessee," as well as Domino hits like "Ain't That a Shame," "I Heart You Knocking," and "Blue Monday." While there are tasty Benson guitar licks peppered throughout, fans of his instrumental work may wish there was more of an emphasis on his improvisation. Nonetheless, these are earthy and robust productions that never stray too far afield of their rock & roll source. ~ Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/album/walking-to-new-orleans-remembering-chuck-berry-and-fats-domino-mw0003250486

Walking To New Orleans

Tuesday, April 7, 2020

Scott Bradlee's Postmodern Jukebox - Top Hat On Fleek

Styles: Vocal, Contemporary Jazz  
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:44
Size: 122,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:08)  1. Halo
(3:31)  2. Hey There Delilah
(3:23)  3. Hey Ya!
(3:11)  4. Give It Away
(3:53)  5. Thong Song
(4:24)  6. Viva La Vida
(4:03)  7. Sugar, We're Going Down
(3:33)  8. Welcome To The Jungle
(2:59)  9. Umbrella
(3:31) 10. Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It)
(4:33) 11. Someday
(4:41) 12. Say My Name
(3:30) 13. Where Are Ü Now
(3:18) 14. Mad World

Released just prior to the group's 2015 North American tour, "Top Hat On Fleek" eschews current chart toppers for songs that will be especially nostalgic to Millenials.  "Thong Song" and Fall Out Boy's "Sugar, We're Going Down" receive the brassy, '40s swing treatment, while "Halo," "Hey Ya!," and "Say My Name" connect '90s R&B to its Motown ancestry.  Joey Cook, fresh from her appearance on American Idol that name checked Postmodern Jukebox live on prime time television,contributes her unique style and multi-instrumental abilities to the mix, and Sara Niemietz establishes herself as one of PMJ's most exciting new vocalists with her vocal on "Hey Ya!" Must-Have Tracks: LaVance Colley's vocal on "Halo" is a masterpiece; the psychedelic '60s Austin Powers take on "Give It Away" shows more brilliance from Aubrey Logan; the classic folk song remake of "Hey There Delilah" evokes Bradlee's work on Bioshock Infinite. https://www.postmodernjukeboxshop.com/product/5QDDMJ014/top-hat-on-fleek-download

Top Hat On Fleek

Jan Daley - Broadway Memories

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:04
Size: 76,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:15)  1. The Impossible Dream
(3:51)  2. I've Grown Accustomed to His Face
(3:30)  3. Somewhere over the Rainbow
(4:22)  4. Losing My Mind
(3:08)  5. The Sound of Music
(4:15)  6. Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow
(4:24)  7. Send in the Clowns
(4:15)  8. You Raise Me Up

Adored for her singular magic for making what’s classic, contemporary again, Jan Daley is the most multi-talented and beautiful, “Best Kept Secret” in entertainment today. The triple-threat singer/songwriter, actress and playwright, connects to audiences worldwide with her authentic, personal presentations couched with just the right amount of razzle dazzle to remind you why she’s at center stage. 2017/2018 was breakout years for Miss Daley! Working with legendary Motown producer and writer, Michael B. Sutton, she released her first EP “When Sunny Gets Blue” that landed No.#1 on AOL Smooth Jazz Chart. Then followed it up with her “Way of a Woman” CD, penned by Jan herself, among 5 other songs. It rode the Billboard Jazz Charts for 22 weeks in the Top 5, and then rose to No.#1 & #2 on the Traditional Jazz and Jazz charts! She followed that up with her “Home For Christmas” CD, which was still riding the Billboards Top 10 Jazz Chart in January after hitting No.#4 in December, receiving rave reviews on Radio stations World Wide. Jan broke into television at an early age and has appeared on The Tonight Show, The Merv Griffin Show, The Dean Martin Show, The David Frost Show, UK’s B.B.C’s Morcumb and Wise Show, and ATV’s “Roy Castle Show.” As a regular on “Here Come The Stars” she worked with Legends of Show Business: Anthony Quinn, Jimmy Stewart, Mickey Rooney, George Burns, Jack Benny, Bob Hope, Louis Armstrong, & Glen Campbell to name a few. She has toured the world and opened for comedians such as Don Rickles, David Brenner and Rodney Dangerfield, but her most treasured highlight in her career was singing to 40,000 GIs in Vietnam and around the world, as the singing star of The Bob Hope Christmas Tour.

Jan has recorded six albums. Her Tribute to Bob Hope CD, “Where There’s Hope,” caught fire on 122 Stations across the country. Her recording of “Till Love Touches Your Life,” the Title song for the movie Madron, was nominated for an Academy Award! She also wrote & recorded Dance songs for a “House Music” project, called “Lady J,” that her longtime friend, Jimmy Webb, produced. Miss Daley’s acting career has kept her busy co-starring with such popular actors as Bruce Willis, Alec Baldwin, Cybil Shepherd, Stephanie Zimbalist, Peter Fonda, George Kennedy, Hugh O’Brian, and Tom Hanks in Forrest Gump, besides doing more than 150 “on camera” commercials.  2019 She shot a movie called “The Revenge of The Bride” and appeared on To Tell The Truth. Over the past years she has become a prolific and versatile composer with songs ranging from Country, Pop to Rhythm & Blues. You can hear her song, "Eat Your Heart Out," in a new movie entitled “THE RIDE” and you can exercise to some of Jan’s songs on the Kathy Smiths walking tapes. starred in a new Musical “Showgirl on 52nd Street” at the Thousand Oaks Performing Arts Center and in the West Coast Premiere of ‘Funny, You Don’t Look Like a Grandmother,” at the Santa Monica Playhouse. She also starred in the “The Branson Follies” and appeared with Peter Marshall & Mimi Hines in the show “And Then She Wrote.”Ms. Daley became a popular regular soloist on Dr. Robert Schuller’s internationally known TV program “Hour of Power,” and has a large Christian following with two inspirational albums, “His Light” and “Live.” wonderfully talented Ms. Daley has inspired reviewers to rave, “Her voice matches her looks, in every sense a Knock-out!”-Billboard, “Jan Daley is one of the most entertaining, best-balanced talent blends on the boards. The town’s buyers should start biding for her exclusive services… Beauty, sex appeal, and top talent make for powerful impact, a good bet for toplining all mediums”-Variety. “Jan is a truly talented musician, singer and lyricist. Her marvelous voice is selectively controlled, and her intonation is immaculate”- Jack Segal, “A rare combination. She is not a carbon copy of anyone!”~Hollywood Reporter  https://www.jandaley.com/biography-2

Broadway Memories

Monday, April 6, 2020

Roxy Coss - Quintet

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:13
Size: 104,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:20)  1. Don’t Cross the Coss
(5:59)  2. All or Nothing At All
(6:53)  3. Mr. President
(4:52)  4. Free to Be
(6:34)  5. You’re There
(5:39)  6. Enlightenment
(5:06)  7. Breaking Point
(4:45)  8. Females Are Strong As Hell

At times, saxophonist Roxy Coss can appear to be a whirlwind. Over the past decade, Coss has firmly established herself as a saxophonist, bandleader, composer, and activist. She has toured extensively, most notably with trumpeter Jeremy Pelt. She founded Women In Jazz Organization (WIJO) to combat misogyny in jazz culture, and create gender equity in terms of opportunity and community. With the release of her new album, Quintet (Outside In Music, 2019), she has now authored five recordings under her name. While Coss gained some international buzz from her albums Restless Idealism (Origin, 2016) and Chasing the Unicorn (Posi-Tone, 2017), her brilliant 2018 release The Future Is Female (Posi-Tone, 2018) highlighted her ability to express a social narrative through jazz music. Her finely-crafted compositions, rooted deeply in her experiences as a female jazz musician, were interpreted admirably by her long-term working quintet. Quintet is an attempt to re-record her compositions from those previous recordings and concurrent time performing them live with her quintet. Anyone sceptical about that concept will be convinced otherwise by one listen to this album's eight tracks.

While Coss places the emphasis on her fine quintet, and the intuitive vibe they have established among themselves, it is she herself who stands out as the reason to revisit these tunes in a live-in-the-studio setting. While so much of her time, in the past few years, has been spent composing, and forming the impressive work of WIJO, this record is more representative of her upward spiral as a saxophonist. While her articulation and deep resonant tone on tenor have always been of note, there is a noticeable improvement in her playing on both tenor and soprano. That liberation in itself has added depth and substance to the restatement of the tunes she has written over the past 10 years. The familiarity she has gained with fellow front-line band mate guitarist Alex Wintz now approaches the kind of chemistry normally thought of between two horn players. Drummer Jimmy Macbride, pianist Miki Yamanaka, and bassist Rick Rosato complete a quintet that has achieved a rare conversational impulse.

The opener "Don't Cross the Coss" is performed at a faster tempo, turning this rollicking, meandering melody line into modern bop classic. The tune exemplifies the stated purpose of the recording, to unleash the hounds, as one might say. Coss' tenor statement is angular, fast-paced and melodically rich all at once. Yamanaka's well placed, resonant comps on Rhodes act as departure points for a fine solo from Wintz before she launches into her own reharmonization. "Mr. President," Coss' march-like romp from The Future is Female, is given new light and energy, immersing the listener in a narrative heartbeat that throbs in every American's chest each day. Macbride explores the rhythmic variations of the composition masterfully, while Coss takes off on the record's most memorable solo. There is a notable vibrancy to the tune, compared to the original recording, a feeling that can only be gained through familiarity over time. This tune pays the most dividends on the album in terms of a reinterpretation of a tune being a positive progression forward creatively.  "Free to Be," one of the highlights of Chasing the Unicorn, features Coss on soprano. This interpretation does not stray much from the former in terms of energy or interpretation.

It does offer Coss playing at a higher level. In any case, the playing is spontaneous and free, as the instrumentalist shakes off the constraints of the composer.  "Enlightenment," an earlier entry in Coss' compositional timeline, presents a tender side of her playing, sounding much like a country ballad in Charlie Haden-like fashion. Rosato's deep underpinning holds up Coss' big-sounding tenor throughout this lovely piece. In the end, the reason to spend time with this album is the bandleader herself. It is her inventive shifts, melodic platitudes and marvelous technique that rise above the fray of this very capable quintet. While the pieces of Coss' collective characterization as an artist have become more coherent and familiar, it is the saxophonist that we need to take notice of. Yes, she is an impressive composer, and her social activism is an inspiration to anyone who seeks justice in America's most important art form. Quintet tells us simply that she is a fine saxophonist in the midst of a meteoric rise.~ Paul Rauch https://www.allaboutjazz.com/quintet-roxy-coss-outside-in-music-review-by-paul-rauch.php

Personnel: Roxy Coss- tenor & soprano saxophones; Miki Yamanaka- piano; Alex Wintz- guitar; Rick Rosato- bass; Jimmy Macbride- drums

Quintet

Yoko Miwa Trio - Keep Talkin'

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:58
Size: 170,7 MB
Art: Front

( 4:16)  1. Keep Talkin'
( 6:32)  2. In Walked Bud
( 6:25)  3. Secret Rendezvous
( 6:09)  4. Sunset Lane
( 6:25)  5. Boogie Stop Shuffle
( 7:52)  6. Golden Slumbers / You Never Give Me Your Money
( 6:06)  7. Tone Portrait
( 5:52)  8. Casa Pre-Fabricada
( 7:32)  9. Conversation
( 6:38) 10. If You're Blue
(10:08) 11. Sunshine Follows the Rain

Pianist Yoko Miwa was born in Japan, but she has set up shop in Boston, where she teaches at Berklee College of Music. She has also beginning in 2003 with Fadeless Flower (Polystar Records) previously released seven CDs. The superb Keep Talkin' brings that number of recorded offerings from Miwa to eight. The music of Keep Talkin' says that Miwa has fully embraced an American state of mind, beginning with the title tune, a Miwa original that sounds like something out of the hard-grooving Horace Silver songbook. Or add some horns and Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers could come to mind. And apparent right out of the gate: Miwa and her trio play with joy. An especially spritely take on Thelonious Monk's "In Walked Bud" is up next, with a fierce momentum and an assured improvisational gusto from Miwa, aided and abetted by muscular and spicy rhythm from bassist Will Slater and drummer Scott Goulding.

The pianist is in fine form as a composer, offering up six of her own tunes, along with inspired covers of music from the previously mentioned Monk; from Charles Mingus ("Boogie Stop Shuffle"); Joni Mitchell ("Conversations"); and the Brazilian singer/composer guitarist Marcelo Camelo ("Casa Pre-Fabricada"). The album hits its highlight with the eight minute "Golden Slumbers/You Never Give Me Your Money" medley, from the Beatles songbook. The pairing of two of Paul McCartney's loveliest melodies works to perfection in this trio's hands, beginning with a stately and straight up reading on "Slumbers" that transitions into the dreamier "Money," leading into Miwa's searching and assertive improvisation, with the bass and drums cooking on high heat, pushing hard back into "Slumbers." 

The set closes with Miwa's "Sunshine Follows The Rain," with Brad Barrett sitting in on bass, for a pensive and melancholy, yet hopeful and gorgeous close out to a marvelous piano trio outing. ~ Dan McClenaghan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/keep-talkin-yoko-miwa-ocean-blue-tear-music-review-by-dan-mcclenaghan.php

Personnel: Yoko Miwa: piano; Will slater: acoustic bass; Scott Goulding: drums; Brad Barrett: acoustic bass (11).

Keep Talkin'

Zippyshare                  

Sunday, April 5, 2020

Paolo Alderighi, Stephanie Trick - A Jazz Story: volume 2

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 89:25
Size: 206,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:09)  1. Penny Lane
(4:05)  2. Kid From Red Bank
(8:11)  3. Ellington Medley (Sophisticated Lady / Prelude to a Kiss / Just Squeeze Me)
(3:05)  4. The Trolley Song
(2:42)  5. Pilgrim's Score (Tannhäuser's Pilgrim's Chorus)
(6:25)  6. After You've Gone
(5:25)  7. Stradivarius
(4:08)  8. St. Louis Blues
(5:33)  9. Love Me Tender / Blue Suede Shoes
(4:56) 10. Runnin' Wild
(3:21) 11. Temptation Rag / Handful of Keys
(4:05) 12. Ya Gotta Try
(6:00) 13. The World Is Waiting for the Sunrise
(3:51) 14. I Wish I Were Twins
(4:12) 15. Boogie Woogie Valzer
(7:31) 16. Medley Leonard Bernstein
(4:51) 17. I Got Rhythm
(3:08) 18. Little Rock Getaway
(2:39) 19. Warm Worm Boogie

Stephanie Trick “has come to practically dominate the stride piano field,” notes reviewer Jack Rummel. Harlem stride piano, which developed in the 1920s and ’30s, is an orchestral style of two-handed piano playing that not only swings, but is also technically demanding and exciting to watch. Louis Mazetier, a respected interpreter of this genre, writes in the Bulletin of the Hot Club of France that she has “won the esteem of specialists in the genre with wonderful interpretations of stride classics, James P. Johnson, Fats Waller, and Don Lambert (which she learned by ear). She plays these pieces with a punch that is matched by her precise interpretation.”A classically trained pianist, Stephanie began playing piano at the age of five. During the time between her beginning years and high school, her piano teacher exposed her to early jazz, and the syncopation and swinging rhythm piqued her interest. While in college, it became clear to Stephanie that she wanted to pursue stride and classic jazz styles professionally.

With a swinging approach inspired by second-generation stride pianists such as Dick Hyman, Ralph Sutton, and Dick Wellstood (as well as the original Harlem ticklers, James P. Johnson, Willie “The Lion” Smith, and Fats Waller), and one that includes boogie woogie and blues from the late ‘20s, Stephanie was the 2012 recipient of the prestigious Kobe-Breda Jazz Friendship Award, and has performed in many parts of the United States and Europe in a variety of venues, including the Teatro Dal Verme in Milan, Italy, the KIG Dixieland Festival in Dresden, Germany, the Arbors Records Invitational Jazz Party, the Rochester International Jazz Festival, the Gilmore Keyboard Festival, and the Sacramento Music Festival. In 2008, 2010, and 2014, she was invited to perform at the international Stride & Swing Piano Summit in Boswil, Switzerland. A serious student, dedicated to classic jazz and the stride piano tradition, she has played with a number of celebrated musicians, including Dick Hyman, Phil Flanigan, Rossano Sportiello, Allan Vaché, Louis Mazetier, Nicki Parrott, and Danny Coots. 

Graduating from college with a Bachelor of Arts in Music, she was inducted into the Phi Beta Kappa academic honor society at the University of Chicago.Stephanie frequently performs with her husband, acclaimed pianist Paolo Alderighi, making fresh arrangements of songs from the Swing Era in a four-hands piano duo, and they currently have four albums together (see www.paoloandstephanie.com). In 2014, they played for the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall at the Edinburgh Jazz & Blues Festival. Stephanie also enjoys accompanying Grammy-nominated lyricist and vocalist Lorraine Feather in a show that features the music of James P. Johnson and other stride piano composers, set to original lyrics by Feather (see www.nouveaustride.com). Stephanie has recorded eleven albums and one DVD. Her solo “Live” CD was awarded the “New Talent Prize 2011” by the Hot Club of France. (CD track listings, video clips, ordering information, and more may be found on her website at www.stephanietrick.com.) http://stephanietrick.com/biography.htm

“One of the nicest gifts to arrive on the jazz piano scene in recent times, and we couldn’t be more delighted to welcome her.”~ Dick Hyman

A Jazz Story: volume 2

Saturday, April 4, 2020

Alan Broadbent - To the Evening Star

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:04
Size: 132,0 MB
Art: Front

( 7:21)  1. As Morning Breaks (The Prize Song)
(11:50) 2. Amfortas 'Lament (Song of the Flower Maidens)
( 6:13)  3. Song to the Evening Star
( 2:40)  4. Bud Meets Carl
( 5:03)  5. Opus Blue
( 3:48)  6. Full Moon and Empty Arms
( 3:24)  7. Strangers in Paradise
( 4:10)  8. Baubles, Bangles and Beads
( 4:32)  9. Since That Time
( 3:03) 10. Candide (Indeed)
( 4:56) 11. Brother Ralf

Alan Broadbent was born in Auckland, New Zealand and in 1966, at the age of 19, received a Downbeat Magazine scholarship to attend Berklee College of Music in Boston. In 1969 he was asked to join Woody Herman's band as his pianist and arranger for 3 years. In 1972 he settled in Los Angeles, beginning a musical relationship with the legendary singer Irene Kral (no relation to Diana Krall). Soon he was also invited into the studio scene as a pianist for the great Nelson Riddle, David Rose and Johnny Mandel. In the early 90s he was asked to be a part of Natalie Cole's famous “Unforgettable” cd, at which time he toured as her pianist and, a little while later, as her conductor. At this time he wrote an orchestral arrangement for her second video with her dad, “When I Fall In Love”, which won him his first Grammy for “best orchestral arrangement accompanying a vocal”.

Shortly after, he became a member of Charlie Haden's Quartet West, touring the festivals of Europe, UK and the USA. It was while with this group that he won his second Grammy, an orchestral accompaniment written for Shirley Horn of Leonard Bernstein's “Lonely Town”. As a soloist and with his jazz trio, Broadbent has been nominated for Grammys twice for best instrumental performance, in the company of such artists as Herbie Hancock, Sonny Rollins and Keith Jarrett. In 2007 he was awarded the New Zealand Order of Merit, an honor he holds in high regard. Broadbent is Diana Krall's conductor for her occasional orchestra concerts and is the conductor on her “Live in Paris” DVD. Recently he has been the arranger on Glenn Frey's cd with strings, “After Hours”, and wrote six string arrangements for Sir Paul McCartney's “Kisses On The Bottom” with the London Symphony. He has just returned from solo piano concerts in the UK, Poland and France. It has been his lifelong goal, through his orchestral arrangements and jazz improvisations, to discover, in popular music and standard songs, deeper feelings of communication and love. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/alanbroadbent

To the Evening Star

Steve Khan - Patchwork

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 80:37
Size: 186,4 MB
Art: Front

( 8:08)  1. Epistrophy
( 7:45)  2. C. & D.
( 7:27)  3. Bouquet
( 7:42)  4. Naan Issue
(10:20)  5. A Shade of Jade
( 7:48)  6. Too Late Now
( 6:14)  7. T. & T.
(15:36)  8. The Journey Home
( 6:53)  9. Huracan Clare
( 2:40) 10. Nature Boy - Bonus Track

Amongst the many myths out there about music-making especially in jazz, where the improvisation quotient is often so high is that composing may, indeed, be work, but doesn't require the kind of relentless attention to detail that far more truthfully defines how many artists write and arrange their music. These days, one need only look to music by artists including Pat Metheny, Antonio Sanchez and Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah to find music conceived with intimate and painstaking detail while, at the same time, possessed of plenty of interpretive and improvisational freedom. But for a real window into just how much consideration, time and sweat goes into conceiving a single tune (let alone an entire album), just take a look at the news section of Steve Khan's website where, in addition to other regular (and enlightening) bits and bobs, the guitarist regularly posts detailed notes about the conception and execution of his recordings. Case in point: Khan's notes about Patchwork, the guitarist's fourth installment in a most decided and inimitable exploration of the nexus point where jazz guitar and Latin/Afro Cuban rhythms meet. His website notes reveal, with extraordinary honesty, everything from crises of confidence and moments of grand inspiration to the cornerstones of his ever-imaginative arrangements and much, much more.  Those who've followed Khan's career over the decades know that he's been moving towards this truly unique intersection point for a long time. The Latin influences are crystal clear on earlier Tone Center albums of the new millennium, like 2007's Borrowed Time and 2005's The Green Field.

Still, the guitarist's love affair with all things Latin actually dates further back still, to albums like Public Access (GRP, 1989) (recently collected, almost in its entirety, on BGO Records' 2018 double-disc set Public Access / Headline / Crossings). And while a little less overtly so, there are still plenty of hints of what's to come across Khan's three early '80s Eyewitness band albums, recently reissued, again by BGO, on its 2016 two- CD set, The Eyewitness Trilogy, which collects Eyewitness (Antilles, 1981), Modern Time's (Trio Records, 1982) and Casa Loco (Antilles, 1984). But beyond Khan's gradual, relatively late in life emergence as the preeminent guitarist in Latin jazz, there's another thread that connects every entry in what has, with Patchwork, now expanded to a quadrilogy. Literally every album, from 2011's Parting Shot through 2014's Subtext to 2017's Backlog seemed, at the time, like it would be Khan's last. And yet, from fearing loss of inspiration to physical issues that might have brought his days as a guitarist to an end (but, thankfully, have not), with each album since Parting Shot Khan has not only continued to hone his distinctive marriage of the many facets and touchstones of his musical career into a Latin-informed musical context; he's also managed to raise his game significantly with each successive release.  After a slight personnel detour with Backlog, where Khan's longtime first-call drummer Dennis Chambers was replaced by the equally talented but alternately focused Mark Walker (Oregon, Caribbean Jazz Project, Lyle Mays), the veteran Brecker Brothers, John Scofield, Steely Dan and John McLaughlin stick man is back, once again teaming seamlessly with percussionists Marc Quinones and Bobby Allende, along with Ruben Rodriguez, who has been Khan's recent bassist of choice.

As irrefutably fine as the lineup on Backlog was, it's great to have Chambers back in the fold, giving Patchwork the same kind of effortless energy and percussion simpatico as Parting Shot and, in particular, Subtext, where longtime Khan contrabassist Anthony Jackson was replaced, permanently it would seem, by Rodriguez, who first appeared with Khan as a guest on three of Borrowed Time's nine tracks. Perhaps the biggest shift, personnel-wise, with Patchwork is the far greater participation of keyboardist, composer and arranger Rob Mounsey. A longtime Khan collaborator with a résumé that includes, amongst many others, Steely Dan, James Taylor and Paul Simon, not to mention his 1987 Denon/Passport duo recording with Khan, Local Color, Mounsey has contributed, increasingly, to all of the guitarist's albums beginning with Borrowed Time. But this time, rather than receiving a "guest musician" credit, Mounsey receives, for the first time, a full band member listing. Between his astute keyboard parts, compelling orchestrations and, on two tracks, full orchestral arrangements, Mounsey's contributions to Patchwork's warm sonics and harmonic sophistications simply cannot be understated. Since Parting Shot, Khan has gradually moved away from his own writing, with that album's seven original compositions/co- compositions reducing to Subtext's three and Backlog's none. Khan's focus may, indeed, have leaned further away from original composition, moving more decidedly towards imaginative and innovative Latin-inflected rearrangements (both harmonically and, perhaps most importantly, rhythmically) of music written by artists including, most prominently, Thelonious Monk, Ornette Coleman and Bobby Hutcherson. But the guitarist's interpretive skills are so strong, so vivid and so inimitable, that even an evergreen tune like Monk's "Epistrophy" feels as much Khan's as it does the original (and similarly unparalleled) composer's. Khan's connection to Monk dates back to his extraordinary Evidence (Arista Novus, 1980), a solo album that, with multiple layers of overdubbed guitar parts (and, on one track, percussion) and creative arrangements of music by artists including Shorter, Lee Morgan, Horace Silver, Joe Zawinul and Randy Brecker, was the first signal that Khan's fusion leanings were on the wane, and that the guitarist's approach to both his instrument and harmony were in the midst of a major paradigm shift that would become clearer still with the release of the quartet-driven Eyewitness the following year. The second side of Evidence is devoted to a medley that, clocking in at over eighteen minutes and seamlessly moving through nine Monk tunes, is the highlight of an album that represents, truly, a series of watershed moments for the guitarist. More... https://www.allaboutjazz.com/patchwork-steve-khan-tone-center-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Steve Khan: guitar, voice (8, 9); Rubén Rodríguez: baby bass, electric bass; Dennis Chambers: drums; Marc Quiñones: timbal, bongó, percussion; Bobby Allende: conga; Rob Mounsey: keyboards, orchestrations, orchestral arrangements (3, 6): Randy Brecker: flügelhorn (5); Bob Mintzer: tenor saxophone (2); Tatiana Parra: voice (8, 10); Jorge Estrada: keyboards and arranger (9).

Patchwork

Friday, April 3, 2020

Rick Braun - Crossroads

Styles: Trumpet Jazz 
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:48
Size: 107,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:22)  1. Around The Corner
(4:42)  2. Brazz Street
(4:50)  3. Crossroads
(4:26)  4. The Moment I Saw You
(4:42)  5. I Wish
(4:32)  6. Me And You
(5:11)  7. Family
(5:11)  8. Bahia
(3:54)  9. Come With Me
(4:53) 10. Versace On The Floor

One of contemporary jazz’s most popular artists, trumpeter Rick Braun has a sound built on a silken, lyrical horn voice, usually set over grooving rhythms. On Crossroads, he doesn’t stray too far from that formula, but he deploys it in a rich variety of contexts. A collection of stylistically varied originals and covers, Crossroads includes references to (and appearances by) Braun’s family and friends. Braun collaborated on several tracks with keyboardist Philippe Saisse, a longtime friend, and he composed the tune “Me and You” with another friend and frequent collaborator, guitarist Peter White. The laid-back ballad reflects the pair’s genial bonhomie, with White’s guitar responses to Braun’s horn conveying the feeling of old friends chatting. Braun’s cover of Stevie Wonder’s “I Wish” is a joyous, funky jam featuring yet another longtime friend, saxophonist Richard Elliot, who teams with Braun to form a rollicking horn section.

Braun composed the irresistibly catchy “Around the Corner” for his daughter to dance to, and his 17-year-old son plays the keyboard intro to his gentle, lyrical cover of Bruno Mars’ “Versace on the Floor.” The Americana-esque “Family” was partly inspired by Braun’s grandparents, who were both musical. When composing the piece, Braun drew upon his memories of the music they used to play, and he performs the plaintively lovely melody with palpable emotion. The vibe is evocative of wide-open spaces, the melody underpinned by a chugging rhythm suggestive of train wheels. While not really jazz (or contemporary jazz), it’s an intriguing musical direction that well suits Braun’s sound and style. https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/rick-braun-crossroads-shanachie/

Crossroads

Bucky Pizzarelli - Green Guitar Blues / Café Pierre Trio

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:00
Size: 174,6 MB
Art: Front

(2:14)  1. Tangerine
(2:39)  2. What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?
(3:13)  3. Medley: Breakfast at Tiffany's / Dreamsville
(2:21)  4. Bizarre
(2:03)  5. The Summer Knows
(3:32)  6. Green Guitar Blues
(2:11)  7. I Don't Know How to Love Him
(3:28)  8. Satin Doll
(3:16)  9. Medley: Cry Me a River / Girl Talk
(3:55) 10. Medley: Adelita / Prelude #4
(1:56) 11. Chicken a La Swing
(2:16) 12. Goodbye
(4:52) 13. Cherokee
(5:33) 14. Invitation
(5:36) 15. Do Nothin' Till You Hear from Me
(5:51) 16. Medley: Isn't It Romantic? / Penthouse Serenade / East of the Sun / What Is There to Say?
(3:28) 17. Nola
(4:52) 18. Blues Chromatique
(4:48) 19. Indiana
(4:05) 20. Isfahan
(2:43) 21. My Ship

For more than six decades, the legendary Bucky Pizzarelli has had a stellar career. “The complete jazz musician”, he was a fixture in jazz and the studios since the early ‘50s. The list of big bands and vocalists with whom Bucky has performed and recorded reads like a veritable Who's Who of Jazz. One of the era's most solid rhythm players, Pizzarelli was in high demand, playing and touring with Benny Goodman, Zoot Sims, Bud Freeman, and Stephane Grappelli, and, later, recording with George Van Eps, Carl Kress and George Barnes. His superior mastery of the seven-string guitar is unparalleled. The beloved guitarist has developed a very personal style that sets him apart. He lives in Saddle River, New Jersey, with his wife, Ruth. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/buckypizzarelli

R.I.P.
Died: April 1, 2020
Born: January 9, 1926

Green Guitar Blues / Café Pierre Trio

Thursday, April 2, 2020

Ellis Marsalis - Ruminations in New York

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:30
Size: 114,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:51)  1. Things That You Never Were
(4:47)  2. A Moment Alone
(4:08)  3. Haven's Paradise
(4:43)  4. Homecoming
(4:27)  5. After
(3:36)  6. Tell Me
(4:31)  7. Somehow
(4:14)  8. Orchid Blue
(3:40)  9. Happiness Is the Thing
(4:08) 10. Chapter One
(5:05) 11. When First We Met
(2:14) 12. Zee Blues

A Striking solo piano album from the renowned new orleans pianist. Ellis Marsalis began his musical career as a tenor saxophonist, switching to piano while in high school. During the late '50s, Ellis trod the lonely road of modernist jazz in new orleans (with drummer ed blackwell), recorded with cannonball and nat adderley in the '60s and between 1967 and 1970, played the piano in trumpeter Al Hirt's band. Since 1989, ellis has been the director of the jazz studies program at the university of new orleans. https://ellismarsalis.bandcamp.com/album/ruminations-in-new-york

Personnel:  Ellis Marsalis (solo piano)

R.I.P.
Born: 14-11-1934
Died: 01-04-2020

Ruminations in New York

Wallace Roney - Home

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:40
Size: 139,2 MB
Art: Front

( 7:20)  1. Utopia
( 7:28)  2. Home
( 6:50)  3. Pacific Express
(10:20)  4. Plaza Real
( 8:35)  5. Dawn
( 8:06)  6. Evolution of the Blues
( 9:05)  7. Ghost of Yesterday
( 2:53)  8. Revive

Old-school funk and fusion? Contemporary R&B? Straight-ahead jazz? Open-air modal music? One never quite knows what to expect from a new Wallace Roney project-that is, aside from impressive blowing and a tone that, while still sometimes evocative of Miles, is its own thing of beauty: full, resonant, deftly shaded, often moving in unpredictable and mysterious ways. Roney, joined by his regular bandmates and several guests, touches on several of the stylistic strains mentioned above on Home. It’s chockfull of the leader’s dazzling displays, including the long tones and then quick runs of his “Evolution of the Blues”; that tune also offers a showcase for engaging tenor and soprano solos by Antoine Roney, Wallace’s younger brother, buoyed by the rhythmic punches of pianist Aruán Ortiz, bassist Rashaan Carter and drummer Kush Abadey. Roney’s way with a mute, to produce gorgeously dark and smoky sounds, is on display on the floaty title track as well as the exceedingly slow chestnut “Ghost of Yesterday,” limned with Ortiz’s lush chordings.

Wayne Shorter gets a mini-salute here, with opener “Utopia,” an uptempo unplugged tune with plenty of solo space for the horn men and Ortiz, and “Plaza Real,” which benefits from a lovely melody-first voiced by Antoine’s tenor, then joined by the trumpeter-and a fusion-tinted rhythm section. The ’60s/’70s vibe also dominates the feel of John McLaughlin’s “Pacific Express.” Roney is entirely absent from the closer, “Revive,” a nearly three-minute unaccompanied piece by Bobby Ward, the revered Boston drummer who was pals with Tony Williams (and is heard on three of the album’s eight tracks). It’s a solo in which there is never a dull moment, which might also be said about all of Home. ~  By Philip Booth https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/wallace-roney-home/

R.I.P.
Born: 25-05-1960
Died: 31-03-2020

Home

Wednesday, April 1, 2020

Brandee Younger - Soul Awakening

Styles: Harp Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:38
Size: 102,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:53)  1. Soulris (feat. Ravi Coltrane)
(4:43)  2. Linda Lee
(5:22)  3. Love's Prayer (feat. Ravi Coltrane)
(7:01)  4. Respected Destroyer (feat. Sean Jones)
(5:42)  5. Games
(5:30)  6. Save the Children (feat. Niia)
(3:51)  7. Soul Awakening
(7:33)  8. Blue Nile

Sure the recording for Soul Awakening was completed in 2013, but we are more than fortunate that harpist Brandee Younger and producer/bassist Dezron Douglas have chosen now to free this music from the vaults. For Soul Awakening brings a defining clarity to what we've experienced on previous releases, such as the raw, groove/fusion of 2014's The Brandee Younger 4tet: Live at the Breeding Ground (Brandee Younger), and 2016's Wax & Wane (Brandee Younger). Accompanied by her stalwart 4tet: tenor saxophonist Chelsea Baratz, soprano saxophonist Stacy Dillard, drummer E.J. Strickland and Douglas, the disc comes to stirring, ascendant life with Douglas' "Soulris" a powerful wave of spiritual vibe featuring the exultant tenor of Ravi Coltrane, who knows a thing or two about harpists and ascendant riffs. Younger stands fearless alongside Coltrane and drummer Chris Beck, whose combined energy would drown any lesser player. With a wash of celestial glissandi, Coltrane rises gloriously on Younger's own "Lover's Prayer," a soulfully emotive incantation and incarnation of Coltrane's mother, Alice Coltrane. Presented here as a gently swelling, rolling, almost 1960's pop radio instrumental, "Games," composed by another of Younger's great influences, Dorothy Ashby, spotlights Douglas and Strickland exercising great rhythmic restraint under Younger's gorgeous, delicate sweeps. 

Trumpeter Sean Jones, who held his own with Herbie Hancock and Wayne Shorter on their 2011 Tribute to Miles tour and held the lead trumpet position for Jazz at Lincoln Center from 2004-2010, leads trombonist Corey Wilcox through a range of trade-offs and colors Younger's solos on her ever shifting "Respected Destroyer." Featuring tenor saxophonist Antoine Roney and more shimmering solos from Younger, Alice Coltrane's "Blue Nile" closes Soul Awakening on the same high peak that it thrillingly began. ~ Mike Jurkovic https://www.allaboutjazz.com/soul-awakening-brandee-younger-self-produced-review-by-mike-jurkovic.php

Personnel:  Brandee Younger: harp; Ravi Coltrane: tenor saxophone (1, 3); Chelsea Baratz: tenor saxophone (2, 4, 7); Stacy Dillard: soprano saxophone (7, 8); Antoine Roney: tenor saxophone (8); Sean Jones: trumpet (4); Freddie Hendrix: trumpet (4); Corey Wilcox: trombone (4); Nicole Camacho: flute (7); Niia: vocals (6); Dezron Douglas: bass; E.J. Strickland: drums; Chris Beck: drums (1,3).

Soul Awakening

Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Dara Tucker/Charlie Hunter - The Seven Colors

Styles: Vocal And Guitar Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:42
Size: 94,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:34)  1. The Seven Colors
(4:18)  2. Miracle
(3:56)  3. Miss Me
(3:15)  4. Mantle
(4:21)  5. Glory
(4:26)  6. Windows
(1:56)  7. A Place Like This
(4:23)  8. Song of Freedom
(3:19)  9. Bright Red Hue
(4:45) 10. End of the River
(3:24) 11. Won't Be Long

Outstanding jazz vocalist will perform with guitarist Charlie Hunter, producer of her forthcoming album, at Nashville Jazz Workshop.  Acclaimed Nashville jazz vocalist Dara Tucker has enjoyed substantial critical and commercial success in the past couple of years. Besides appearances on NPR's Jazz Night in America and PBS' The Tavis Smiley Show, she was silver medalist in the American Traditions Vocal Competition, and winner of both 2017 Song of the Year (for “Radio") at the Nashville Indstry Music Awards and the 2018 Johnny Mercer Award. Tucker's sound equally combines traditional and contemporary references, blending influences from the classic jazz canon with blues, rock, soul and gospel elements. That mix provides the thematic foundation of her new LP The Seven Colors, which was produced by dynamic guitarist Charlie Hunter.  Though the album won't be officially released until May 31, Tucker and her band (including bassist Greg Bryant and drummer Derrek Phillips), with Hunter appearing as a special guest, will be performing songs from it tonight in an album release concert at the Nashville Jazz Workshop. "Charlie is a master sensei," Tucker tells the Scene in an email. "He brings a musical wisdom that comes primarily from the blues tradition. I’m accustomed to approaching music from the top down. I get a melody [or] lyrics, and I build down to the foundation (bass/drums/groove). Charlie works the complete opposite way  from the bottom up. He helped me to approach music-making from a perspective I never had before. There’s a minimalism there that he strove to maintain. He has always felt that my voice thrives in an environment where it’s competing with very little."

The LP contains both older tunes and newer songs, and represents the fruition of a collaboration that began when Tucker was on the road with Hunter for 40 dates last year. “He asked me to send him some material that would be good for a guitar combo," says Tucker. "I had several songs I had written over the years that I thought would work well in that context, but at the last minute, I decided to write a couple more songs with that specific instrumentation in mind (guitar/bass/drums). I was feeling really inspired after spending a year on the road with Charlie, so the songs I came up with (“Miracle” and “Glory”) really reflect his sound, and fit well with his production concept, I think."The Seven Colors also represents a change from past Tucker releases like Oklahoma Rain, where she was heavily involved in all phases of the recording. "With this album, I took a bit of a backseat after writing the tunes," says Tucker. "I wanted to allow Charlie Hunter to have full reign, and to be able to execute his vision for the songs. So, it was fully collaborative between the two of us  my material, his concept."He welcomed the band’s input when we had different ideas, but it was important to me that it reflect his vision in the end. What we got was something quite different than what we’ve achieved with previous projects. Charlie knows how to make the groove the central thing. I can get a little bogged down with storytelling at times, and the groove often takes a back seat. But he put the groove right up front and helped us craft a project that tells a story while giving that groove its proper respect." Tucker & Co. will share the fruits of their labors starting at 8 p.m. Advance tickets are sold out. Below, check out “Miracle” and “The Seven Colors” from the album, and check with your favorite record store or see Tucker’s website to preorder a copy of the album. https://www.nashvillescene.com/music/nashville-cream/article/21070286/dara-tucker-celebrates-the-seven-colors-tonight

The Seven Colors

Joe Locke - Storytelling

Styles: Piano and Vibraphone 
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:28
Size: 125,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:33)  1. The Thrill Is Gone
(6:39)  2. Nature Boy
(7:55)  3. Hello Like Before
(5:09)  4. Who Killed Davey Moore?
(5:51)  5. Midnight Star
(7:30)  6. A Tale of Coincidence
(5:55)  7. Blame It On My Youth
(4:46)  8. I'll Be There
(4:06)  9. Don't Let It Bring You Down

In a disappointing shift from 2000's Beauty Burning, vibraphonist Joe Locke enlists vocalist Mark Ledford and keyboardist/co-producer Henry Hey for the pop-oriented Storytelling. Surrounding Locke and Ledford is a solid jazz ensemble: Hey, saxophonist Tim Garland, bassist Eric Revis, drummer Jeff "Tain" Watts, and guitarist Paul Bollenback. But there's a preponderance of contrived rock and Motown covers, including an eye-rolling "I'll Be There." (Is there a need for another remake after Mariah Carey's?) The standards are given fluffed-up, unexceptional treatments, although the ensemble passages toward the end of "The Thrill Is Gone" are a brief ray of light. "Midnight Star," with original words and music (and piano playing) by Locke, unfortunately doesn't rise above the morass, nor does his "A Tale of Coincidence," the only instrumental track. There's some fine playing on the record. Tim Garland's tenor break on Bob Dylan's "Who Killed Davey Moore?" is a highlight, and every solo by Locke, Hey, and Bollenback is an unfailing display of expertise. Ledford's singing voice, too, can be quite appealing  he sounded terrific on Don Byron's A Fine Line: Arias and Leider. But here he's saddled with lame material, and his presence rapidly becomes unwelcome. ~ David R. Adler https://www.allmusic.com/album/storytelling-mw0000001217

Personnel: Drums, Cymbal – Jeff "Tain" Watts ; Guitars – Paul Bollenback ; Piano – Joe Locke (tracks: 5); Piano, Hammond B3, Synthesizer – Henry Hey ; Saxophone, Bass Clarinet, Flute – Tim Garland; Trumpet, Vocals – Mark Ledford; Vibraphone – Joe Locke

Storytelling

Monday, March 30, 2020

The Andrews Sisters - 'The Dancing 20s' / 'Fresh and Fancy Free'

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:18
Size: 152,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:47)  1. Don't Bring Lulu
(2:34)  2. Me Too
(2:59)  3. That Naughty Waltz
(2:11)  4. A Smile Will Go a Long Long Way
(1:54)  5. Barney Google
(2:37)  6. Collegiate
(2:40)  7. Last Night On The Back Porch
(2:11)  8. When Francis Dances With Me
(3:21)  9. Back In Your Own Backyard
(2:00) 10. Keep Your Skirts Down Mary Ann
(3:11) 11. The Japanese Sandman
(2:52) 12. Show Me The Way To Go Home
(2:17) 13. The Song Is You
(2:52) 14. You Do Something To Me
(2:43) 15. Comes Love
(3:02) 16. Nevertheless
(3:00) 17. With Every Breath I Take
(2:16) 18. Of Thee I Sing
(2:11) 19. Hooray For Love
(2:42) 20. My Romance
(2:27) 21. Tea For Two
(2:14) 22. I Could Write A Book
(2:57) 23. Let There Be Love
(3:10) 24. Younger Than Springtime

After the Andrews Sisters reunited in 1956, they joined Capitol Records, which initially had them re-record their big Decca hits for the LP The Andrews Sisters in Hi-Fi, then followed with a more conventional effort, Fresh and Fancy Free, and a concept album, The Andrews Sisters Sing the Dancing 20's. Those last two Capitol collections are paired on this CD in reverse chronological order. That means, however, that the material itself is in rough chronological order by date of composition, since Dancing 20's, of course, finds the sisters covering songs from the decade before they became popular, albeit in souped-up arrangements by Billy May. All concerned have fun with songs like "That Naughty Waltz" and "Barney Google." Fresh and Fancy Free, on the other hand, is typical of the kind of albums Capitol labelmates like Frank Sinatra and Nat King Cole were making around the same time. Again, Billy May handles the charts and the baton, and the songwriting credits are full of names like Gershwin, Kern, and Porter. May has the singers take the rarely used introductory verses to "Of Thee I Sing" and "Tea for Two" to give them a different feel. He introduces a Latin rhythm into "Let There Be Love," pacing the arrangement with bongo drums, and has the strings play in a Japanese tonality for "Younger Than Springtime" to evoke the Oriental aspect of the song from South Pacific. It is notable that, unlike so many of the Andrews Sisters' Decca recordings, these performances do not feature Patty Andrews singing a solo lead, accompanied by her two harmonizing sisters, Maxene and LaVerne. Instead, almost invariably, the songs are sung in three-part harmony throughout; only in rare instances is there a brief solo line. Maybe that was a condition of the reunion, since the sisters' early-‘50s breakup was precipitated by Patty Andrews' departure for a solo career; she is not spotlighted at the expense of her siblings here. ~ William Ruhlmann https://www.allmusic.com/album/sing-the-dancing-20s-fresh-and-fancy-free-mw0000384813

'The Dancing 20s' / 'Fresh and Fancy Free'