Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Norah Jones - Pick Me Up Off The Floor

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:30
Size: 105,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:42)  1. How I Weep
(3:21)  2. Flame Twin
(3:26)  3. Hurts To Be Alone
(4:12)  4. Heartbroken, Day After
(4:58)  5. Say No More
(2:38)  6. This Life
(4:28)  7. To Live
(4:16)  8. I'm Alive
(5:16)  9. Were You Watching?
(3:53) 10. Stumble On My Way
(4:16) 11. Heaven Above

Once she came to the end of the promotional cycle for 2016's Day Breaks, Norah Jones decided to challenge herself by recording a series of swift sessions with a rotating cast of collaborators. The intention was to release the results quickly, issuing them as a digital single at a time, and Jones followed through on this plan, releasing a new song every few months throughout 2018. These tunes were rounded up on 2019's Begin Again, but that wasn't the end of the project. Jones cut a number of songs during these sessions that were unreleased but not forgotten by the singer/songwriter. She kept listening to the rough mixes, eventually coming to the conclusion that these tracks would make a strong album of their own accord. Pick Me Up Off the Floor proves her instincts were correct. Lacking the purposeful digressions of Begin Again an album where the digressions were the entire point Pick Me Up Off the Floor is a tighter affair than its companion record, firmly rooted in the after-hours jazz-folk-pop hybrid that's Jones' calling card. Some of the cohesion may be due to how a good chunk of the album is anchored by her standby drummer Brian Blade, but it's also true that this record's collaboration with Jeff Tweedy is the amiably rambling "I'm Alive," a number that is firmly stationed within Jones' wheelhouse. The same could be said about Pick Me Up Off the Floor in general. There are accents and flourishes that distinguish the tunes "Flame Twin" is charged by curlicues of guitars and smears of organ, "To Live" is graced by muted horns straight out of the Big Easy but as a collection of songs, Pick Me Up Off the Floor winds up emphasizing how Jones slyly and elegantly synthesizes a pop sensibility with a jazz execution, a fusion that is comforting yet relies on her idiosyncratic twists. This blend of warmth and invention is what's so appealing about Pick Me Up Off the Floor: the shape may seem familiar, but the construction of the songs and the inventiveness of the performance keeps it fresh and surprising even after the first listen.~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine https://www.allmusic.com/album/pick-me-up-off-the-floor-mw0003360325

Pick Me Up Off The Floor

Monday, June 29, 2020

David Hobson, Rachael Beck - My Baby Just Cares For Me

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:36
Size: 92,7 MB
Art: Front

(2:27)  1. Get Happy
(3:19)  2. Baby, It’s Cold Outside
(2:26)  3. Almost Like Being In Love
(2:30)  4. I Got Rhythm
(4:42)  5. Bewitched, Bothered And Bewildered
(2:48)  6. You Stepped Out Of A Dream
(2:35)  7. Let’s Call The Whole Thing Off
(5:24)  8. The Sound Of Music Medley
(2:50)  9. Stranger In Paradise
(3:06) 10. My Baby Just Cares For Me
(2:42) 11. But Not For Me
(4:41) 12. Truly Scrumptious

In a must-have Mother’s Day release from ABC Music, two of Australia’s best-loved singers combine for their first recording together. Featuring favourites from screen and stage, the album includes classics such as ‘Baby It’s Cold Outside’, ‘Get Happy’ and ‘Stranger in Paradise’. Rachael Beck is one of Australia’s most well-known and prolific stage and TV performers; David Hobson has enjoyed a career in opera and on the concert platform that has included numerous best-selling recordings and awards. Their first recording collaboration is sure to be one of the year’s finest releases. https://www.abcmusic.com.au/discography/my-baby-just-cares-me

My Baby Just Cares For Me

Richard "Groove" Holmes, Les McCann - Players

Styles: Hard Bop, Soul-Jazz
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:04
Size: 159,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:34)  1. That Healin' Feelin'
(4:30)  2. God Bless the Child
(3:24)  3. Next Spring
(6:21)  4. Them That's Got
(4:23)  5. How Long Blues
(8:13)  6. Good Groove
(5:57)  7. Willow Weep for Me
(5:18)  8. Just Friends
(3:12)  9. C.C. Rider
(4:08) 10. Licks a Plenty
(9:10) 11. Deep Purple
(4:43) 12. St. James Infirmary
(4:04) 13. Seven Come Eleven

Revered in soul-jazz circles, Richard "Groove" Holmes was an unapologetically swinging Jimmy Smith admirer who could effortlessly move from the grittiest of blues to the most sentimental of ballads. A very accessible, straightforward, and warm player, Holmes was especially popular in the black community and had been well respected on the Philadelphia/Southern New Jersey circuit by the time he signed with Pacific Jazz in the early '60s. He started receiving national attention by recording with such greats as Ben Webster and Gene Ammons. Best known for his hit 1965 version of "Misty," Holmes engaged in some inspired organ battles with Jimmy McGriff in the early '70s before turning to electric keyboards and fusion-ish material a few years later. The organ was Holmes' priority in the mid- to late '80s, when he recorded for Muse (he also had stints throughout his career with Prestige Records and Groove Merchant). Holmes was still delivering high-quality soul-jazz for Muse (often featuring tenor titan Houston Person) when a heart attack claimed his life at the age of 60 in 1991 after a long struggle with prostate cancer. He was a musician to the end, playing his last shows in a wheelchair. ~ Alex Henderson https://www.allmusic.com/artist/richard-groove-holmes-mn0000848952/biography

Players

Ima - Smile

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:49
Size: 97,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:19)  1. At last
(3:58)  2. Smile / What a wonderful world
(3:20)  3. Jardin d'hiver
(3:45)  4. Que sera sera
(3:07)  5. Fire
(2:57)  6. Petite fleur
(2:57)  7. Le sourire de mon amour
(3:44)  8. Gracias a la vida
(3:51)  9. Laisse-moi t'aimer
(3:19) 10. Un homme (C'est beau)
(3:52) 11. Et pourtant
(3:34) 12. Reviens

French Canadian singer Ima was born Marie-Andre Bergeron on May 11, 1978. Growing up on the southern bank of Montreal, Ima spent much of her spare time learning dance, theater and song, ultimately choosing to focus on theater. In her adult life she took part in a number of successful film projects, including appearances in The Bone Collector and Eye of the Beholder. Not entirely satisfied with her dramatic career, she decided to turn her attentions to music, taking the performance name Ima, for imagination. After five years Ima recorded her first single, a song called "In Your Eyes" that was featured on an album dedicated to late Brazilian race car driver Ayrton Senna, Tribute to Ayrton Senna Her participation in a series of singing contests in 2000 and 2001 put Ima in contact with François Guy, who strongly encouraged her to make a record in French. Under the direction of drummer/industry veteran Dominique Messier (Celine Dion, Lara Fabian), Ima assembled repertoire from the country's finest songwriters for her 2002 self-titled debut release. A few years and some regional touring later, Ima set to work on her follow-up project with collaborators Tino Izzo and Alessandro Cerondolo. Pardonne Moi Si Je T'aime was released in 2005. Though targeting her French-speaking audience had treated her well, Ima chose a different direction for her third time out in 2007. Smile featured repertoire drawn from the jazz genre, sung primarily in English. Ima has since maintained a busy regional touring schedule in support of the project, which has earned slots on airplay charts throughout Canada. ~ Evan C.Gutierrez https://www.allmusic.com/artist/ima-mn0001322547/biography

Smile

Sunday, June 28, 2020

Ahmad Jamal - Digital Works

Styles: Piano Jazz 
Year: 1985
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:45
Size: 146,6 MB
Art: Front

(8:28)  1. Poinciana
(3:34)  2. But Not for Me
(3:22)  3. Midnight Sun
(5:14)  4. Footprints
(3:19)  5. Once Upon a Time
(7:18)  6. One
(5:23)  7. La Costa
(3:59)  8. Misty
(6:32)  9. Theme from Mash
(4:28) 10. Biencavo
(6:41) 11. Time for Love
(5:23) 12. Wave

Ahmad Jamal was never as distinctive on electric piano as he was on the acoustic counterpart, making this two-LP set, Digital Works, (which finds him doubling) a slight disappointment. Jamal does play well throughout, engaging his sidemen (bassist Larry Ball, drummer Herlin Riley, and percussionist Iraj Lashkaryl) in close interplay, but no new revelations occur on such remakes as "But Not for Me," "Wave" and Jamal's greatest hit, "Poinciana." Good music overall, but not essential. ~Scott Yanow  https://www.allmusic.com/album/digital-works-mw0000188321

Digital Works

Klaus Doldinger - Doldinger's Best

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:41
Size: 162,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:10)  1. Blues For George
(6:07)  2. Two Getting Together
(4:24)  3. Minor Kick
(4:59)  4. Quartenwalzer
(4:51)  5. Fiesta
(3:37)  6. Viva Brasília
(3:35)  7. Guachi Guaro
(7:37)  8. Raga Up And Down
(6:41)  9. Saragossa
(3:04) 10. Watz of The Jive Cats
(2:36) 11. Comin Home Baby
(4:06) 12. I Feel Free
(7:47) 13. Stormy Monday Blues
(5:02) 14. Compared To What

"Klaus Doldinger is the only European jazz musician I know who has always been able to use the diverse elements in jazz as a means of self-expression.Our ways crossed in 1962 when Klaus went professional with his quartet, then being voted Germany’s best tenor player in modern jazz - and best clarinet player in traditional jazz. I was the label manager for Jazz at Philips Records at the time and would not rest before getting the chance to record Klaus’ new band. At the age of 22 I became his producer and recorded him for over a decade. Our friendship has never ended. This "Bluesy Collection" is my view of "Doldingers Best" from that period. The music reflects his deep understanding of jazz and blues and his ability to play Rhythm & Blues like no other European tenor saxophone player." (Siegfried Loch)

Doldinger's Best

Friday, June 26, 2020

Ima - A la vida !

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:46
Size: 110,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:01)  1. Drôle de vie
(4:19)  2. Valparaiso
(4:01)  3. Les yeux ouverts
(3:21)  4. À quoi ça sert l'amour
(3:35)  5. Le temps des fleurs
(3:57)  6. Vai
(4:09)  7. Me & Bobby McGee
(3:59)  8. Cucurrucucu paloma
(4:14)  9. Tu verras
(3:51) 10. Matin
(3:23) 11. Dis-moi
(5:51) 12. Mourir dans tes bras

Ima's fourth album, A la Vida!, is an ornately produced collection of international pop standards, most of which date back to the 1960s and '70s. Her previous album, Smile (2007), was similarly comprised, featuring mostly French-language standards along with a little bit of original material. It was likewise produced by Guy St-Onge. Ima's vocals are once again front and center, backed by subtle string arrangements and light Latin rhythms. There isn't much differentiating A la Vida! from its predecessor other than the choice of standards. The album opens strongly with tropical-inflected versions of Véronique Sanson's "Drôle de Vie" and Paula Moore's "Valparaiso," the latter of which is the first of two English-language songs featured on the album. The other is Kris Kristofferson's "Me & Bobby Mcgee," a great country-rock song that isn't a good fit for Ima's vocal style. Elsewhere on A la Vida!, there are a couple of songs associated with the Beatles that are adapted to French: the 1966 favorite "Here There and Everywhere" and Mary Hopkin's 1968 hit "Those Were the Days," which was originally produced by Paul McCartney. Another French-language adaptation is "Yeux Ouverts," a version of "Dream a Little Dream of Me." Highlights among the French standards include Edith Piaf's "À Quoi Ça Sert l'Amour," Claude Nougaro's "Tu Verras," and Salvatore Adamo's "Mourir dans Tes Bras." Other standouts include a version of Tomás Méndez's "Cucurrucucú Paloma." Sung in Spanish by Ima, the Mexican standard is often associated nowadays with Brazilian singer/songwriter Caetano Veloso's memorable performance of it in the Pedro Almodóvar film Talk to Her (2002). A la Vida! also includes a couple originals, most notably "Matin," a charming song written by St-Onge. Too bad there wasn't more original material like this. The cover material is well selected but occasionally too familiar. ~ Jason Birchmeier https://www.allmusic.com/album/a-la-vida%21-mw0000813653

A la vida !

Chihiro Yamanaka - Rosa

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:22
Size: 102,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:34)  1. My Favorite Things
(4:36)  2. Falling Grace
(5:16)  3. Piano Sonata No.8 Third Movement
(3:57)  4. Donna Lee
(4:41)  5. Old Folks
(4:14)  6. Rosa
(4:22)  7. Take Love Easy
(4:28)  8. Symphony No. 5
(5:16)  9. Yardbird Suite
(3:54) 10. Someday Somewhere

Chihiro Yamanaka is a jazz pianist but she is also a composer, arranger and producer. He is also head of the CHIHIRO YAMANAKA TRIO. Famous at home, it is also loved abroad especially in the United States and Europe. During his school years he studied at Municipal North Junior High School in Kiryu, Toho Girls' High School and later moved abroad, more precisely to England, to the Royal Academy of Music to finish in Boston at Berklee College of Music from which comes out with flying colors. Soon Chihiro's skills are noticed and he starts releasing records. The first to be released in 2001, "Living Without Friday", remains at the top of the modern jazz HMV chart for 4 weeks. In 2002 "When October Goes" was released, a record that received the award for best jazz album of the year from HMV. A year later the first "Leaning Forward" DVD went on sale. Followed by "Madrigal" in 2004, "Outside by the swing" in 2005 which achieved the first position both in the HMV jazz ranking but also in the Tower Record jazz ranking and is also the first album under Universal. In 2006 it was the turn of "Lach Doch Mal" which a year later was also released in Europe by the EMarcy label. Shortly after Chihiro is ready with the album "Abyss" which reaches the first position in several charts and wins the Japan Jazz Prize of the 41st Jazz Disc Award. Two months later the DVD "Live In Tokyo" was released.

Chihiro's fame is now remarkable, both in Japan and abroad, and his concerts are all sold out. The following album, "After Hours", received the 23rd Japan Gold Disc Award as the jazz disc of the year. Bravogue will follow in 2008, "Runnin 'Wild" in 2009 (tribute album to Benny Goodman, a famous jazz artist of the early 90s) "Forever Begins" in 2010 and "Reminescence" in 2011. The latter manages to enter the daily Oricon ranking at 10th position and it is also the first album that can be purchased in Italy. In 2013 he returned to perform in Italy, with two concerts on March 6 in Naples and the following day in Milan. https://www.jmusicitalia.com/chihiro-yamanaka/biografia/

Rosa

Thursday, June 25, 2020

Peter Asplund Quartet - Asplund meets Bernstein

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:25
Size: 143,7 MB
Art: Front

(10:57)  1. Mass: A Simple Song
( 6:03)   2. Candide: Glitter and Be Gay
(12:23)  3. Wonderful Town, Act II: It's Love
( 4:35)  4. On the Town, Act II: Some Other Time
( 5:41)  5. Candide: It Must Be So
( 5:41) 6. West Side Story (arr. M. Halling): Act II: I Feel Pretty
( 5:41)  7. West Side Story (arr. M. Halling): Act II: Somewhere
( 5:41)  8. West Side Story (arr. M. Halling): Act I: Tonight
( 5:41)  9. Peter Pan, Act III: Never-Land

After two CD albums with the Peter Asplund Quartet: "Lochiel's Warning" (PCD 071) from 2004 and "As Knights Concur" (PCD 093) from 2008, in which we combined our own compositions with American standards, it is now time for an album with a specific theme and it feels quite natural to have chosen as that theme the music of Leonard Bernstein. The challenge to us as a jazz group is to succeed in playing Bernstein's music in our own way and thus even developing it for improvisation. It is now time for me to present my quartet, already a strongly knit unit, in a new light, this time together with a larger ensemble. For the purpose of interpreting Bernstein's music we chose to collaborate with a symphonic orchestra.To discover the essence in Bernstein's music, bring out the jazz oriented aspects, illuminate the special characteristics of the quartet and combine this in the most effective way with the symphony players, was the great challenge facing the arranger. 

The choice of arranger went to my good friend and trumpeter colleague, Mats Hålling.Dalasinfoniettan is the symphony orchestra of the Dalarna (Dalecarlia) region of Sweden and which makes up a section of the Musik i Dalarna regional organisation. It is a full-time professional ensemble consisting of 28 musicians and was formed in 1988.The reason that Dalasinfoniettan was the right orchestra with which to collaborate is best described by a quotation from out of the official presentation of the orchestra:"Our ambition is to be a many-sided, flexible and exciting orchestra with a broad program both in relation to the classical repertoire and in collaboration with musicians from other genres." https://peterasplund.com/index.php?sida=disco&coll=par&record=6

Personnel: Trumpet, Flugelhorn, Liner Notes – Peter Asplund; Bass – Hans Andersson; Drums – Johan Löfcrantz Ramsay; Piano – Jacob Karlzon

Asplund meets Bernstein

Aimee Nolte - Up Til Now

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:16
Size: 103,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:34)  1. Alpine Field
(4:35)  2. Up Til Now
(5:20)  3. Losing Love
(5:48)  4. Dear Tom
(5:07)  5. You Give Love
(3:03)  6. To Remember (for Miles and Ella)
(4:24)  7. How Strong is a Woman
(2:25)  8. Afterthought
(8:54)  9. The Way it Was

Most young jazz artists would find it difficult to create a unique sound while simultaneously paying due homage to the greats. Aimee Nolte deftly pulls off such a balancing act, presenting jazz stylings that craftily capture the epic sound of America's jazz legends without smacking of mimicry. Aimee's voice and instrumental prowess are superb and her lyrics draw you in with such power that by each songs end, you're left feeling as if you've been jerked and jostled on an emotional roller coaster. But Aimee doesn't attempt to be a one woman show; she allows the musicians that accompany her to shine in roles that are far from simply complimentary. Aimee is a fabulous artist and her CD is a gem! I highly recommend it to all music lovers. ~ Grover W. L. Alford, Jr. https://www.aimeenolte.com/recordings/up-til-now

Personnel:  Aimee Nolte: piano, vocals, harmonica; Joshua Payne: guitars; Mitch Lee: drums, percussion; Geoff Rayback: bass; Natalie Rayback: violin; Daniel Hoops: cello

Up Til Now

Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Sara Groves - Tell Me What You Know

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:50
Size: 108,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:42)  1. Song for My Sons
(4:50)  2. In The Girl There's a Room
(3:19)  3. Say a Prayer
(4:27)  4. Love Is Still a Worthy Cause
(4:12)  5. When the Saints
(5:39)  6. Honesty
(3:59)  7. Abstraction
(4:18)  8. I Saw What I Saw
(3:49)  9. It Might Be Hope
(5:06) 10. The Long Defeat
(3:23) 11. You Are Wonderful

One cannot approach Tell Me What You Know, Sara Groves' sixth album, expecting a lot of surprises. Sure, Groves is a perennial favorite among Christian music critics and audiophiles, but her high marks aren't necessarily a result of innovation or avant-garde career moves as much as of a strong, rock-solid track record of equally strong, rock-solid songwriting about Christian living and faith. Despite being a pop artist at heart, a lot of her depth is lost on more mainstream, radio-weaned Christian audiences, mainly because she dwells in the more sophisticated, triple-A side of pop, not the commercial, big-time pop/rock of, say, a Casting Crowns or a Chris Tomlin. Still, Groves is very comfortable at what she does, so much so that Tell Me What You Know could appear as if it was cut from the same mold as her celebrated The Other Side of Something and Add to the Beauty projects. Of course, Groves realizes how easily this brand of piano-based adult pop comes to her, so she tries to distance herself from her core strengths by way of offbeat, alternative pop never more evident than in the poignant "Song for My Sons" and the eccentric mini-masterpiece "In the Girl There's a Room." After that, though, she quickly retreats to what she does best namely, bouncy, quirky pop pieces ("Love Is Still a Worthy Cause"), tender folk dialogs ("Say a Prayer"), and pensive, piano-based balladry ("I Saw What I Saw"), all of which, while not mind-blowingly novel, are indeed moving, thought-provoking numbers, performed with finesse and inspired by Groves' newfound passion for reaching out to the least of these. In this regard, Tell Me What You Know deserves a mention, if not for its overall uniqueness, then for continuing to solidify Groves as one of the most important, consistent Christian singer/songwriters of the new millennium. ~ Andree Farias https://www.allmusic.com/album/tell-me-what-you-know-mw0000582810

Tell Me What You Know

David Binney - Here & Now

Styles: Saxophone Jazz 
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:59
Size: 97,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:28)  1. Forj
(4:46)  2. We Will See Our Way Through
(5:00)  3. To the Coast
(5:04)  4. Here & Now
(6:05)  5. Belgrade
(5:41)  6. Majesty
(6:29)  7. The Boats
(3:53)  8. Freeway
(2:28)  9. Forjtwo

Saxophonist David Binney is one of the most prolific jazz musicians on the scene today.The new album. Further compositional and musical explorations. Elements of a lot of Electronic music, improvisation. Featuring some fine musicians including Louis Cole. The new album Here & Now is a departure from earlier records. A direction that I am very into and excited about. It's much more electronic yet features live players too. I hope that you enjoy this album as much as I enjoyed making it! David Binney

Acclaimed as a considerable and highly individual compositional talent, saxophonist David Binney is one of the most prolific jazz musicians on the scene today. Winning praise from critics and colleagues alike. David's distinctive saxophone sound and innovative compositions have been heard from basement clubs in New York to jazz festivals in Europe and the world. In addition to his extensive work as a leader, he has been sought after as a sideman, appearing on record with Medeski, Martin & Wood, Uri Caine's Mahler Project, and hundreds of others. David has also appeared on stage with Aretha Franklin, at Carnegie Hall, and with Maceo Parker, to name a few. He has produced all of his own 22 albums, and many others including two of the Lost Tribe releases, Scott Colley's The Architect of the Silent Moment, and 8 Donny McCaslin releases, including the highly acclaimed Casting For Gravity, Fast Future, and Beyond Now. 

David Binney also put together and produces the band that became the band on David Bowie's Blackstar. He has won the DownBeat Critics Poll 3 different times in the Alto Saxophone category. And placed in Producer, Album etc.. As well as in the JazzTimes polls and polls worldwide. He has had front cover features in DownBeat, JazzTimes, and many other publications. Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Here-Now-DAVID-BINNEY/dp/B07SXQR6KW

Here & Now

Daryl Sherman - Lost In A Crowded Place

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:09
Size: 126,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:30)  1. The Land Of Just We Two
(5:38)  2. Stars Fell On Alabama
(3:38)  3. At Sundown
(6:22)  4. Lost In A Crowded Place
(5:32)  5. Turkquoise
(5:37)  6. You Go To My Head
(4:21)  7. Azalea
(5:06)  8. The Lorelei
(4:03)  9. If We Never Meet Again
(3:01) 10. Everything But You
(3:29) 11. New Sun In The Sky
(4:48) 12. Rainbow Hill

Personnel:  Daryl Sherman (piano, vocals); Jon-Erik Kellso (trumpet); Don Vappie (guitar, banjo, vocal); Jesse Boyd (acoustic bass); Boots Maleson (acoustic bass)

Daryl is the quintessential seeker, finding immense pleasure probing the oeuvre of America’s most beloved and respected composers. One would think there is little left to discover, but Daryl’s tenacity and perseverance once again find the archival equivalent of 18K gold. A quick glance at the titles will inspire our shared delight in the joy of hearing melodies and lyrics which have been hiding in the shadows. And we needn’t make any effort at all. Daryl has done all the heavy lifting for us, and quite skillfully too. All we need do is sit back and savor the fruits of her research as the generous gifts they are… Let us safely assume Daryl will continue to locate many more gems on her endless quests into the countless unopened or forgotten treasure chests of American popular song. We can but live in eager anticipation. ~ Carol Sloane https://darylsherman.com/lost-in-a-crowded-place/

Lost In A Crowded Place

Peter Asplund Quartet - Lochiel's Warning

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:28
Size: 143,7 MB
Art: Front

(10:12)  1. In a Sentimental Mood
( 7:23)  2. 26 Steps
( 8:26)  3. The Boys from Syracuse: Falling in Love with Love
( 6:59)  4. I Loves You Porgy: Summertime
( 5:48)  5. Lochiel's warning
( 8:37)  6. Let's Face It: Everything I love
( 2:30)  7. Lose the blues
( 9:25)  8. Carpe noctem
( 3:04)  9. Beate

When record releases of 2004 were summarized, the album "Lochiel\s warning" (Prophone, PCD 071) by Peter Asplund Quartet was picked by many Swedish critics as the best jazz album of the year. Johannes Cornell, a music critic for Sweden's biggest daily newspaper, Dagens Nyheter (DN), wrote that the album is "an instant classic" and one of the best Swedish jazz albums of all times. In addition to all the great reviews, Asplund as recently received two very prestigious awards. Peter Asplund Quartet is a dynamic and closely united group who represent some of the strongest voices to be found on the Scandinavian jazz scene today. With honest expressions, with respect for the tradition tastefully combined with a natural will of pioneering and with genuine charisma Peter Asplund Quartet manage to reach every single one in the audience. https://peterasplund.com/index.php?sida=disco&coll=par&record=4&view=about

Personnel: Peter Asplund (trumpet), Jacob Karlzon (piano), Hans Andersson (bass) & Johan Löfcrantz (drums)

Lochiel's Warning

Monday, June 22, 2020

Sara Groves - Add to the Beauty

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:01
Size: 129,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:44)  1. When It Was Over
(4:34)  2. Just Showed Up for My Own Life
(5:13)  3. You Are the Sun
(5:35)  4. It's Going to Be Alright
(4:10)  5. Add to the Beauty
(5:09)  6. Rewrite This Tragedy
(3:43)  7. Something Changed
(4:00)  8. How Can I Tell
(1:25)  9. To the Moon
(4:55) 10. Kingdom Comes
(3:47) 11. Why It Matters
(3:48) 12. Loving a Person
(3:54) 13. When It Was Over - Reprise

Some Christian pop music subordinates music to message, taking cookie-cutter chord progressions and cheap emotional gimmicks and pressing them into pastoral service. It's music that has much more to do with preaching than with communicating, and that is intended strictly for an audience of the already-converted. Then there's the Christian pop music that seems embarrassed by its doctrinal content, hiding it in double-talk about love that could as easily be physical as spiritual. There's a place for both kinds of music, it seems, but much more satisfying is the music that neither apologizes for its witness nor underestimates the importance of the tunes and arrangements and grooves. That kind of music is much rarer, and it's the kind that Sara Groves has become adept at producing. On her latest album she continues to sing like a wonderful combination of Dar Williams and Dolores O'Riordan, and her songs continue to be a revelatory blend of bell-toned pop guitars, judiciously applied strings, sturdy rock & roll grooves, and hook-laden melodies. 

Subtle and artful elements include the oboes and drum loops on "When It Was Over," the gorgeously understated slide guitar solo on "Loving a Person," and the combination of gospel-tinged backing vocals and Beatles-worthy chord progression on the gently remonstrative "How Can I Tell." If you already know you hate Christian pop music, then nothing here will change your mind. But if you just wish it were more consistently transcendent, then this album will give you cause for hope. ~ Rick Anderson https://www.allmusic.com/album/add-to-the-beauty-mw0000405500

Add to the Beauty

Ralph Moore - Images

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:48
Size: 121,2 MB
Art: Front

(8:07)  1. Freeway
(5:32)  2. Enigma
(7:40)  3. Episode from a Village Dance
(8:36)  4. Morning Star
(5:39)  5. This I Dig of You
(5:06)  6. Blues for John
(7:02)  7. Punjab
(5:03)  8. One Second, Please

The particularly strong material and the all-star lineup (tenor saxophonist Ralph Moore, trumpeter Terence Blanchard, pianist Benny Green, bassist Peter Washington, and drummer Kenny Washington) make this a particularly enjoyable set from the tenorman. Although still displaying the inspiration (soundwise) of early-'60s John Coltrane, Moore had developed an increasingly original style within the modern mainstream throughout the 1980s. Highlights of this excellent set include J.J. Johnson's "Enigma" (a ballad feature for Moore), Hank Mobley's "This I Dig of You," and Moore's "Blues for John" (written in tribute to Coltrane). One of Ralph Moore's more significant recordings to date.~ Scott Yanow  https://www.allmusic.com/album/images-mw0000201085

Personnel: Ralph Moore – tenor saxophone; Terence Blanchard – trumpet (tracks 1, 3, 5 & 7); Benny Green – piano; Peter Washington – bass;  Kenny Washington – drums

Images

Sunday, June 21, 2020

Charlie Spivak - At The Palladium

Styles: Trumpet Jazz 
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:55
Size: 99,2 MB
Art: Front

(0:34)  1. Theme And Introduction
(3:09)  2. Diggin' Groove
(2:42)  3. I Miss Those Little Things
(3:00)  4. Fla-Ga-La-Pa
(3:30)  5. Elegy
(2:38)  6. That Old Devil Moon
(2:58)  7. Ain't Goin' Nowhere
(2:44)  8. Either It's Love Of It Isn't
(3:57)  9. Three Deuces
(3:47) 10. I Want To Thank Your Folks
(4:06) 11. The General Jumped At Dawn
(1:57) 12. Put Your Arms Around Me Honey
(3:57) 13. The Dreamer
(3:53) 14. You Can Depend On Me

Despite coming up in the jazz world and spending his life around jazz musicians, Charlie Spivak rarely improvised and was most notable for his pretty tone. He moved to the U.S. with his family as a small child and grew up in New Haven, CT. Spivak began playing trumpet when he was ten, gigged locally as a teenager, and worked with Don Cavallaro's Orchestra. During most of 1924-1930 he was with Paul Specht's Orchestra, primarily playing section parts where his tone was an asset. Spivak was cast in the same role with Ben Pollack (1931-1934), the Dorsey Brothers (1934-1935), and Ray Noble. He worked in the studios during most of 1936-1937 and then had stints with the orchestras of Bob Crosby, Tommy Dorsey, and Jack Teagarden. Spivak formed his own band in November 1939 (financed by Glenn Miller) and, although his first orchestra failed within a year, his second attempt shortly after was more successful; in fact, Spivak became a major attraction throughout the '40s and he kept his band together until 1959. Spivak lived in later years in Florida, Las Vegas, and South Carolina, putting together orchestras on a part-time basis, staying semi-active up until his death at the age of 75. Among his better recordings were his theme "Let's Go Home," "Autumn Nocturne," and "Star Dreams." Charlie Spivak, who recorded as late as 1981, was married to singer Irene Daye (who was formerly with Gene Krupa's Orchestra). ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/charlie-spivak-mn0000214702/biography

At The Palladium

Pete & Cante Condoli - The Candoli Brothers

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:03
Size: 71,8 MB
Art: Front

(7:12)  1. Doodlin’
(5:49)  2. Willow Weep For Me
(3:42)  3. Take The A Train
(3:55)  4. Blue ‘N Boogie
(3:20)  5. Love Your Magic Spell Is Everywhere
(7:02)  6. Aleucha

Conte Candoli had this incredible mop of white hair, a carefully managed harvest of silver that flashed like a battle pennant when he was up there in the back row of a big band. The back row is where the trumpet players sit. This is the bridge, this is mission control. They called him Count, this strange Old World figure, and when Count was on duty, his bandmates could be sure those crucial brass passages would bark right out and make the whole band speak. This was true even though Candoli didn't play lead trumpet, but covered the second or third parts in the ensemble harmony. Count's place on the haphazard battlefield of modern jazz rested on his prowess as a trumpet soloist, a narrow specialty in which he was an all time top gun. Even Freddie Hubbard and Nat Adderley feared him. His reputation can be attested to by anyone who has heard Candoli in person with Bill Berry's L.A. Big Band, the Frankie Capp-Nat Pierce Juggernaut, Supersax or the Thursday Night Band, the small group he led weekly at the old Donte's in North Hollywood.

But he didn't have to push a recording career, like the bigger names. Count's meal ticket was his gig every day at NBC television studios in Burbank, in the trumpet section of the Doc Severinsen ''Tonight Show'' band, whose best numbers were played during commercial breaks and never reached the public ear.This was corrected when the 20-year-old band went on tour for the first time back in the 1980s.''It was a great tour, the crowds were terrific, but, you know, we're senior citizens. We had to take plenty or Preparation H, 'cause we had some rough jumps: Ten one-nighters.''But we had a really great bus with lounge chairs and a VCR and a bathroom and a kitchenette where we kept food. And we really needed it sometimes.''There was a scare when (fellow trumpetman) Johnny Audino got sick in Cleveland, because he thought maybe he was having a heart attack, but on the contrary it was an attack of food poisoning. It only cost him about $2500 to find out. But that was the only drag.''

Back home in the Valley, Candoli led the Thursday night band at the old Donte's club on Lankershim, backed usually by Ross Tompkins, a fellow member of the Tonight Show band, on piano. The band usually had Roy McCurdy or Lawrence Marable on drums, and Chuck Berghofer on bass. Local tenormen such as Don Menza, Jay Migliori, Joe Romano, or Bill Holman were apt to drop by for a workout. Sometimes trumpeter Sal Marquez, a fellow Woody Herman alumnus, would sit in; Al Cohn's son Joe, the guitarist, came around every few months with his Boston cohorts when the Artie Shaw band played Disneyland. In essence, the Thursday Night Band hosted the oldest permanent floating jam session in L.A. And every once in a while, Count's brother Pete Candoli, dean of the studio stalwarts and like his little brother a name band veteran, would stop by with his Martin Committee model trumpet. Then the band became the Candoli Brothers, and you had to look out, because the two dashing kinsmen from the South Side of Mishawaka, Ind., were a sight and a sound to behold. You had to go back to Louis Armstrong and Buddy Bolden for a pair of trumpeters like these.

Chest out, shoulders back and horn straight out, Pete looked like a bandmaster from ''The Music Man,'' as he and Conte went through their carefully polished duets on numbers like ''Jitterbug Waltz,'' ''Willow Weep for Me,'' and ''Round Midnight'' Count, whose given name is Secondo, (meaning the second son in Italian,) held his head down and angled his horn at the floor. He looked like a bandit as he harmonized, dark and soulful, while Pete played the melody, bright and bouyant. Every so often, Pete would wipe Count's head with a handkerchief, or Count would hold his horn out bell-to-chin, as though it were a violin, and pretend to bow it. You'd think you were at the London Palladium, watching a pair of music hall comics. Pete started out in the band business with Tommy Dorsey, and he's one of the great lead players. His solos are urgent but dignified, and he likes to throw in a little Stravinsky or Bartok for a touch of humor. Conte's solos were sardonic and bluesy, full of impossible feats like two octave grace notes, high velocity drum rolls on a single note, and intricate cadenzas that might have been played by Bud Powell, the pianist.

His first job was with Woody Herman, in the summer of 1943, when Conte was 16 years old. They wanted Pete, who was 20, but he was working with Benny Goodman at the time. ''They (the Herman band) were in Chicago, and my home town is like a hundred miles from Chicago,” Conte recalled for a reporter. “They figured 'Well, Pete's not available, why not try his kid brother, I heard he plays good.' Sheeesh! ''I joined the band at the Oriental Theater in Chicago, and Dave Tough was on drums; Chubby Jackson, bass; Flip Phillips, tenor; Bill Harris, trombone; Neil Hefti and Sonny Berman on trumpets, and Ralph Burns on piano. I mean, jeeze! ''We played 'Woodchopper's Ball,' and I'm so nervous, I can't believe it, man, I'm in the fing band! And Woody points to me, and I play a chorus, and he points again! You know, one more! And the first chorus, I was playing all right, but I couldn't keep my knees from shaking, man! I swear to God! It was the first time I'd ever got to where my knees were shaking!'' ''At that time, I was playing like 'Little Jazz' (Roy Eldridge) and every note that come out of my horn had a buzz sound.'' He'd heard Roy in Chicago, practicing backstage with a towel in his horn so no one could hear him in the audience out front. He couldn't wait to go home on the Illinois Central and try that out. Later, Pete took him to see Dizzy Gillespie in New York, but he didn't quite understand bebop at his tender age, and besides by this time his man was Harry James. ''I loved Harry till he died, and he had it all he could play jazz, he could play lead, you know, a great trumpet player, so clean. And Doc Severinsen is like an extension of Harry James.'' After his summer with Woody, Conte went back to Mishawaka and finished high school at the insistence of his father, who was born in Italy and settled in this country after World War I to work in the United Rubber Corp. plant."

My dad always had instruments around. He played trumpet, not professionally, but in a band they had formed at an Italian club. ''But, the horns were always around the house. I remember picking up a little peck horn when I was five or six years old, and I'd hide behind my dad, and Pete would play baritone horn, and I'd play oom pa pa, oom pa pa.''

Graduation behind him, Conte rejoined Woody, served in the army, landed with Stan Kenton, then got back with Woody for a while. He toured with Charlie Ventura, whose band featured Boots Mussulli on baritone sax, and it was Boots who gave him the nickname ''Count,'' in honor of an all-black outfit Candoli brought back from Sweden. He toured with Kenton again before settling in California in the 1950s, after his wife was injured in a bus crash. He remarried and became a grandfather. In L.A., he played in the studios,, recorded frequently, and worked countless nights at the Lighthouse and Shelly's Manne Hole with Dexter Gordon and the rest of the cats, landing in the Tonight Show band in 1968. But Conte Candoli said he would never forget the night he sauntered into a joint on Vine Street and found Count Basie seated at a table. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/contecandoli

''I say, 'Count!,' cackled Candoli, ''and he says, 'Count!'

''And I say, 'You're the real Count.'

''And he says, 'Naw, naw, you're the real Count.'

''Can you believe it? Jeesh! Unbelievable.'' The real Count clapped his hands in delight.

The Candoli Brothers

Gene McDaniels - A Hundred Pounds of Clay

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 1961
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:20
Size: 70,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:18)  1. A Hundred Pounds of Clay
(2:42)  2. It's All in the Game
(2:36)  3. Take Good Care of Her
(2:12)  4. At the End
(2:48)  5. Are You Sincere
(2:57)  6. Portrait of My Love
(2:32)  7. Till There Was You
(2:15)  8. Send for Me
(2:29)  9. Angels in the Sky
(2:22) 10. Cry
(2:09) 11. You Belong to Me
(2:54) 12. Make Me a Present of You

Built around his first hit, A Hundred Pounds of Clay ought to be a major part of the Gene McDaniels album library. The fact that it isn't is a statement of its poorly focused nature, in terms of this artist, and the latter can be attributed to an error -- though an understandable one at the time in judgment. McDaniels never liked the song, feeling it was too pop and mainstream, but it was his breakthrough, and a monster seller in the bargain, and producer Snuff Garrett, quite reasonably, chose to push his artist further in that direction. Thus, instead of exploiting the soul side of his appeal, this album, released in the wake of that hit, was an attempt to present him as a pop artist. So here McDaniels is, doing tame and, worse yet, unexciting renditions of "Till There Was You," "Portrait of My Love," "It's All in the Game," and "Cry" (yes, the old Johnnie Ray hit). His voice still has a basic appeal that‘s impossible to ignore anywhere here, especially when he wraps it around a phrase with a lot of feeling and reaches to either the lower or upper part of his register, even if it's being wasted on some of this repertoire and the dullish tempos and Garrett's production excesses bury some of that allure for the casual listener. Of course, at the time all parties involved were only interested in selling records and not worrying about the artistic validity of McDaniels' releases, or how these would be judged 50 years (or even 50 weeks) later; all of these decisions were being made on the fly, and they just happened to be the wrong ones in terms of making great music. Only on the title song, the jaunty hook-laden "Send for Me," and the bluesy, moody closer, "Make Me a Present of You," does the listener get a real taste of McDaniels' ability. If one doesn't mind the detour out of soul and into mainstream pop, this is an OK record it just follows the road map established by "A Hundred Pounds of Clay" in the wrong direction. ~Bruce Eder https://www.allmusic.com/album/a-hundred-pounds-of-clay-mw0000857053

A Hundred Pounds of Clay

Saturday, June 20, 2020

Bert Kaempfert and his Orchestra - A Swingin' Safari (Remastered)

Styles: Jazz, Swing, Big Band 
Year: 1962
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:36
Size: 75,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:07)  1. A Swingin' Safari
(2:52)  2. That Happy Feeling
(2:30)  3. Market Day
(3:02)  4. Take Me
(2:56)  5. Similau
(2:48)  6. Zambesi
(2:26)  7. Afrikaan Beat
(2:37)  8. Happy Trumpeter
(2:08)  9. Tootie Flutie
(2:40) 10. Wimoweh
(2:35) 11. Black Beauty
(2:49) 12. Skokiaan

This album was recorded in the Polydor Studio in Hamburg-Rahlstedt by sound engineer Peter Klemt in December 1961 and in March 1962. This production was first released in the United States the following August under the title THAT HAPPY FEELING and had climbed to Number 14 in the charts by September of that year. The LP was then released on the European market with the title A SWINGIN’ SAFARI in autumn of the same year. The two Kaempfert compositions A Swingin’ Safari and Afrikaan Beat soon became world hits and have since become evergreens. The success of Take Me famous is down to Dean Martin’s vocal version of the number, and That Happy Feeling, Market Day and Happy Trumpeter were sensational, long-running hits on American radio. At that time, the typical Kaempfert rhythm had been enhanced by a titillating sound coming from the flutes: Bert Kaempfert modeled this music on the sound produced by blowing penny whistles (brass flutes) in the same particular way as in South African Kwela music. The style of this had been influenced by American swing and was very popular among young black people in the townships.

“Bert Kaempfert tried to get the piccolos to imitate the sound of penny whistles. We had real hard rehearsals. But at last we had made it and Bert was really pleased to have captured the charm of the whistles in ‘his’ piccolos,” reminisced bass guitarist Ladi Geisler. The intro to Afrikaan Beat is also one of the most unmistakable symbols of Bert Kaempfert and his Orchestra today, with its typical ‘cracking bass’. Again Ladi Geisler recalls: “We musicians were, as always, gathered around one microphone. My amplifier was about 3 meters away, the same distance as the trombones. Bert Kaempfert advised me to go easy on the lower notes (these were to come from the double-bass) and the high notes were to be accentuated so that it would really ‘crack’. This was how the term for the Bert Kaempfert sound ‘cracking bass’ was born.” In the course of the years, Bert Kaempfert received a number of awards and gold LPs as a reward for the huge success of this album all over the world. But he was particularly delighted to receive a gold LP from South Africa. https://kaempfert.de/en/album/a-swingin-safari/

A Swingin' Safari (Remastered)