Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Tsuyoshi Yamamoto - Night at Body and Soul

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:40
Size: 153,1 MB
Art: Front

(13:14)  1. Like Someone in Love
( 9:56)  2. Blue
( 6:19)  3. For Once in My Life
( 9:03)  4. Rhythem-A-Ning
( 7:56)  5. My Body, My Soul
(13:33)  6. The Night Has a Thousand Eyes
( 6:35)  7. The Good Life

Tsuyoshi Yamamoto is a drummer, percussionist, composer, arranger, and educator from Nagoya, Japan. He began playing drums in Japan as a teenager, excelling in rock, and funk. In college, he began to play Jazz and had many live performances with various big bands, small bands, and funk bands while continuing to play rock. His band released a CD on an independent label in March 2004, and toured in Japan around Tokyo and Osaka. He graduated from Nagoya University with a Bachelor of Science Degree in Biological Science in 2006.

In 2006 Tsuyoshi received a scholarship to attend the Berklee College of Music where he majored in jazz composition and performance, winning the Louie Bellson Award, as well as a Berklee achievement-based scholarship. He graduated Magna cum laude with a Bachelor of Music in 2011.In 2011 Tsuyoshi moved to New York City to attend Rutgers University, where as a part of the Rutgers Jazz Ensemble, he had the honor of performing at the famous Blue Note in May 2013.

Since graduating with a Master of Music Degree in Jazz Studies from Rutgers, Tsuyoshi has been performing and teaching extensively in New York in the genres of jazz, fusion, salsa, and rock. Besides drum set, he also plays timbales, cajon, and djembe. http://www.tsuyoshiyamamoto.com/biography

Personnel: Piano – Tsuyoshi Yamamoto;  Bass – Tsutomu Okada; Drums – Winard Harper

Night at Body and Soul

Max Roach - Jazz In 3/4 Time

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1957
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:41
Size: 100,6 MB
Art: Front

( 6:31)  1. Blues Waltz
(14:21)  2. Valse Hot
( 4:31)  3. I'll Take Romance
( 5:36)  4. Little Folks
( 5:35)  5. Lover
( 7:05)  6. The Most Beautiful Girl in the World

At the time of its appearance in 1957, this album, currently part of the limited EmArcy reissue series, was considered somewhat revolutionary due to its all-waltz program. That's become a moot point after all of the triple-meter jazz material that would follow from "All Blues" to "Waltz for Debby" to "Someday My Prince Will Come." What makes this session essential listening is the masterful solo work, and not simply by Sonny Rollins. With Clifford Brown gone, trumpeter Kenny Dorham makes each of his turns, as usual, an adventure in melodic and rhythmic surprises, deliberately getting himself into trouble and always finding a way out. And whereas Rollins almost overcompensates for the absence of Brown, playing these tunes with broad and ballsy, aria-like bravado, Dorham takes the tunes inward, not afraid of the empty spaces where the poetry often resides, and in the process looking forward to a more subtle, implicit rhythmic approach to jazz waltzes, such as Freddy Hubbard's "Up Jumped Spring."

The enigmatic pianist Billy Wallace, who made this single auspicious recorded appearance then disappeared into various urban lounge scenes, is one of the few truly ambidextrous bop pianists. On the opening "Blues Waltz" his solo sounds like Monk playing counterpoint with himself; on his remaining solo spots his interdependent melodies and rapid, two-handed octaves are reminiscent of Phineas Newborn, Jr. Whether or not his saucy, copy-cat rejoinder to Dorham's complex solo on "Lover" was appreciated by its originator, Wallace can't help but impress the listener with his ear and quick instincts. He's a far stronger player than his predecessor, Richie Powell, who perished in the same car crash that took Brown's life. Besides the pop standards, Rollins' "Valse Hot" is a lovely composition, an extended 3/4 melodic equivalent of Brown's "Joy Spring." During each of his solos he clearly exudes a Viennese spirit, bringing to his deliberative, assured melodic constructions the singing bravura of a great tenor, legit or otherwise. It's a performance that clearly ranks with his work on the revered, almost contemporaneous Sonny Rollins, Vol. 2 (Blue Note, 1957).

Roach catches the lilting dancing spirit with heavily accented downbeats on his own "Little Folks, prompting both Rollins and Wallace to go for the gold on their solo turns. And for a change the relatively unfamiliar triple-meter holds down the tempos just sufficiently to allow Roach's bassist, George Morrow, to play some melodic lines during his solos. There seems little doubt that this is the best post-Clifford Brown, Roach-led session on record demonstrating that the fall of the drummer's ensembles from the visibility they once shared with Blakey's and Silver's groups cannot be entirely blamed on the loss of Clifford Brown (though nothing can detract from the luster of this musician's favorite). Consequently, as the only recording by this particular cast (there would be one sequel but without Billy Wallace), Jazz in 3/4 Time is a session that brings with its pleasures no small amount of regret about what might have been. ~ Samuel Chell https://www.allaboutjazz.com/jazz-in-3-4-time-max-roach-emarcy-review-by-samuel-chell.php

Personnel: Max Roach: drums; Kenny Dorham: trumpet; Sonny Rollins: tenor saxophone; Billy Wallace: piano; Ray Bryant: piano (on "The Most Beautiful Girl"); George Morrow: bass.

Jazz In 3/4 Time

Aziza Mustafa Zadeh Trio - Generations

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:57
Size: 139,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:38)  1. Mimi
(5:49)  2. Lullaby
(1:42)  3. Sieben Kreisel
(4:47)  4. Netter Junge
(3:40)  5. Despite All
(4:37)  6. September Ballade
(6:15)  7. New Baku
(2:48)  8. Theatre of Marionettes
(9:57)  9. Näje Sevim
(3:27) 10. Prélude
(9:38) 11. Concert No. 2
(3:35) 12. Native Landscape

Aziza Mustafa-Zadeh born in Baku, capital of Azerbaijan. Yet despite a mysterious name that could be straight out of Arabian Nights, this pianist & singer does not regard herself as the exotic product of a distant land. Since she was born, music has been an integral part of her life. Aziza's Father - Vagif Mustafa-Zadeh (1940-1979) is a legendary founder of Mugam-Jazz, composer & pianist, who played an important role in making Jazz acceptable in Soviet Union. Her Mother Eliza Mustafa-Zadeh is trained and famous singer of traditional Azerbaijani music and has rarely left her daughter's side during the constant rise of fame within last decade. Aziza Mustafa-Zadeh's music is the natural, easy fusion of two fundamental elements: Jazz, the modern sound of freedom, and Mugam, the ancient music of wisdom and love. “The Rainbow has many colors. The Soul, too, has many different shades.” Unquestionably, these words can applied equally well to the Artist herself, and to the Way she views the world around her. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/azizamustafazadeh

Generations

Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Della Reese - You Don't Know What Love Is

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:09
Size: 81,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:21)  1. I'm Through With Love
(3:45)  2. I Got It Bad and That Ain't Good
(2:09)  3. I'll Never Be the Same
(3:13)  4. I'm Nobody's Baby
(3:31)  5. Something I Dreamed Last Night
(2:32)  6. And That Reminds Me
(2:56)  7. What Do You Know About Love
(5:54)  8. When I Fall In Love
(3:09)  9. You Better Go Now
(4:36) 10. You Don't Know What Love Is

Renowned as both a television star and a top-flight interpreter of jazz, blues, R&B, gospel, and straight-ahead pop music, Della Reese's many talents ensured a long, varied, and legendary show biz career. In addition to being nominated for both an Emmy and a Grammy and receiving a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, Reese was also an ordained minister in the Universal Foundation for Better Living, an association of churches she helped found in the early '80s.

Born Deloreese Patricia Early on July 6, 1931, the young Reese began singing in the Baptist church choir in her hometown of Detroit at age six. In 1945, having developed quite rapidly, she caught the ear of legendary gospel queen Mahalia Jackson, who invited Reese to join her touring choir; Reese did so for the next five summers. Upon entering Wayne State University to study psychology, Reese formed a women's gospel group, the Meditation Singers, but her college career was cut short by the death of her mother and her father's serious illness. Reese worked odd jobs to help support the rest of her family; she also continued to perform with the Meditation Singers and various other gospel groups. Encouraged by her pastor, Reese began singing in nightclubs in hopes of getting a singing career off the ground; recently married to a factory worker named Vermont Adolphus Bon Taliaferro, her name was too long to fit on marquees, and she eventually arrived at her performing alias by splitting up her first name. After impressing a New York agent, who promptly signed her, Reese moved to New York and joined the Erskine Hawkins Orchestra in 1953. A year later, she had a recording contract with Jubilee, for whom she scored hits like "And That Reminds Me," a 1957 million-seller. Switching to RCA Victor, Reese landed her biggest hit in 1959 with "Don't You Know?," a song adapted from Puccini's La Bohème; this cemented her career, leading not only to plentiful appearances on variety shows, but successful nightclub tours of the country and eventually nine years of performances in Las Vegas, as well as recording contracts with a variety of labels over the next few decades.

Building on her previous variety show experience, Reese made a small bit of television history in 1969 when she became the first woman to guest-host The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. Later that year, she became the first black woman to host her own variety show, the syndicated Della, which ran until 1970. Following its cancellation, Reese returned to her nightclub tours, often putting in guest appearances on television shows like The Mod Squad, Sanford and Son, and Chico and the Man; after three prior failed marriages, Reese also found a lasting relationship with producer Franklin Lett, whom she married in 1978. On October 3, 1980, while taping a song for The Tonight Show, Reese suffered a brain aneurysm that nearly proved fatal; however, thanks to a successful operation, she was able to make a full recovery. She kept up her singing career and appeared on television shows like Designing Women, L.A. Law, and Picket Fences, as well as the Eddie Murphy films Harlem Nights and The Distinguished Gentleman. Reese also starred in the Redd Foxx sitcom The Royal Family from 1991-1992, and garnered what was undoubtedly her highest level of recognition in the inspirational drama series Touched by an Angel, a quite popular program that ran for nine years, between 1994 and 2003, on the CBS network. After Touched by an Angel finished its run, Reese continued to act intermittently on television through to 2014. She died at her home in Encino, California in November 2017 at the age of 86. ~ Steve Huey https://www.allmusic.com/artist/della-reese-mn0000196544/biography

You Don't Know What Love Is

Jimmy Heath - Love Letter

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:19
Size: 102,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:16)  1. Ballad From Upper Neighbors Suite
(4:26)  2. Left Alone
(4:50)  3. Inside Your Heart
(7:12)  4. La Mesha
(5:32)  5. Don't Misunderstand
(5:12)  6. Con Alma
(5:37)  7. Fashion Or Passion
(7:11)  8. Don’t Explain

Often nicknamed "Little Bird," Jimmy Heath began on the alto saxophone acquiring this informal title by dedicating his studies to Charlie Parker and his wee stature. Although not a familiar name to many outside of the devoted jazz community, Heath would go on to pursue a remarkable 76-year career sadly passing away in January, 2020. A fabled musician to many tenor players, Heath presents us with his final testament, a collection of formative ballads. Enhancing the already prolific status that Love Letter features, guest appearances are warmly welcomed that include trumpeter Wynton Marsalis with vocalists Gregory Porter and Cecile McLorin Salvant. The robust rhythm section that accompany Heath are: NEA Jazz Master Kenny Barron on piano, Russell Malone on guitar, vibraphone veteran Monte Croft, bassist David Wong and longstanding jazz drummer Lewis Nash.

Whilst serving his four-and-a-half-year internment, Heath would manage the prison big band and also write for them. It was only the day after his discharge in 1959 when he met his lover, Mona Brown, a marriage which would span sixty years. Due to his parole restrictions, Heath was restricted to staying in Philadelphia which precluded him from embarking on an opportunity to succeed John Coltrane in Miles Davis' group. After being prompted by Cannonball Adderley and Philly Joe Jones, he signed with Riverside Records where he served as an arranger and releasing notable tracks such as "Gemini" and "Gingerbread Boy."  The opener, written by Heath more than twenty-five years ago, is named "Ballad from Upper Neighbors Suite" and makes use of brilliant bassist David Wong with an arco introduction. "Left Alone" is written by Mal Waldron and words originally by Billie Holiday, although she never recorded it. Salvant gives an intrinsic display of quality showing true justice to Holliday's lyricism. "Inside Your Heart" demonstrates Heath's idiomatic ability on soprano saxophone while "La Mesha" is proudly driven by Wynton Marsalis in honour of Kenny Dorham who wrote the tune.

"Don't Misunderstand" falls to Gregory Porter with "Con Alma" following, a composition by Dizzy Gillespie who was both a mentor and friend to Heath. The penultimate track on Love Letter is the third tune composed by Heath, "Passion or Fashion." It was originally composed to guide Lyndon B Johnson's civil rights address, "The American Promise." The final track named "Don't Explain" was a suggestion from Barron, Heath allowed it on the album commenting that he only permitted tunes that he knew the lyrics to. Jimmy Heath brings forward his final chapter where we experience melodic artistry. In 2001, Benny Golson said Heath "moved through chords, not scientifically, but melodically. He plays ideas. It's like a conversation, but musical, not linguistic. He has a story to tell, and it's right in tune with those chords" .~ Thomas Fletcher https://www.allaboutjazz.com/love-letter-jimmy-heath-verve-music-group__347

Personnel: Jimmy Heath: saxophone, tenor; Kenny Barron: piano; Russell Malone: guitar, electric; Monte Croft: vibraphone; David Wong: bass; Lewis Nash: drums.

Love Letter

Sunday, August 9, 2020

Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong - Autumn In New York

Styles: Vocal And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:52
Size: 171,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:59)  1. Summertime
(3:50)  2. Can't We Be Friends
(4:35)  3. A Foggy Day
(4:02)  4. Love Is Here To Stay
(5:01)  5. Don't Be That Way
(4:49)  6. I Won't Dance
(3:13)  7. I've Got My Love To Keep Me Wa
(6:01)  8. Autumn In New York
(5:16)  9. Stompin' At The Savoy
(3:54) 10. A Fine Romance
(4:15) 11. Let's Call The Whole Thing Off
(5:56) 12. Cheek To Cheek
(3:45) 13. Moonlight In Vermont
(4:41) 14. They Can't Take That Way From
(4:20) 15. Under A Blanket Of Blue
(5:08) 16. Tenderly

Recognized worldwide as "The First Lady of Song," Ella Fitzgerald is arguably the finest female jazz vocalist of all time. Blessed with a highly resonant voice, wide range, and near-perfect elocution, Fitzgerald also possessed a deft sense of swing, and with her brilliant scat technique, could hold her own against any of her instrumental contemporaries. She came to initial popularity as a member of drummer Chick Webb's band in the 1930s, scoring a hit with a "A-Tisket, A-Tasket," before ascending to wide acclaim in the 1940s with Jazz at the Philharmonic and Dizzy Gillespie's Big Band, and issuing landmark performances like "Flying Home" and "How High the Moon." Working with producer/manager Norman Granz, she gained even more acclaim with her series of albums on Verve, recording definitive versions of the music of the Great American Songbook composers, including 1956's Sings the Cole Porter Songbook. Over her 50-year career, she earned 13 Grammy Awards, sold over 40 million albums, and picked up numerous accolades including a National Medal of Arts and the Presidential Medal of Freedom. A hugely important cultural figure, Fitzgerald made an immeasurable impact on the development of jazz and popular music, and remains a touchstone for fans and artists decades after her passing.

Born in 1917 in Newport News, Virginia, Fitzgerald grew up in a working-class family in Yonkers, New York. Her parents split up soon after her birth, and she was largely raised by her mother, Temperance "Tempie" Fitzgerald, and her mother's boyfriend Joseph "Joe" Da Silva. She also had a younger half-sister, Frances, who was born in 1923. To help with the family's finances, Fitzgerald often worked odd jobs including, at times, running bet money for local gamblers. By her teens, the self-professed tomboy was active in sports and often played in local baseball games. Influenced by her mother, she also enjoyed singing and dancing, and spent many hours singing along to records by Bing Crosby, Connee Boswell, and the Boswell Sisters. She also began taking the train to see shows with friends at Harlem's Apollo Theater. In 1932, her mother died from injuries sustained in a car accident. Deeply distraught over the loss, Fitzgerald went through a difficult period that found her skipping school and getting in trouble with the police. She was subsequently sent to a reform school, where she endured abuse by her caretakers. Eventually breaking free from the reformatory, she found herself on her own in New York during the height of the Great Depression. Despite her struggles, she worked to pursue her love of performing. In 1934, she entered and won an amateur contest at the Apollo, singing Hoagy Carmichael's "Judy" in the style of her idol, Connee Boswell. In the house band that night was saxophonist Benny Carter, who took the young vocalist under his wing and encouraged her to keep developing her career.....More https://www.allmusic.com/artist/ella-fitzgerald-mn0000184502/biography

A jazz pioneer, Louis Armstrong was the first important soloist to emerge in jazz, and he became the most influential musician in the music's history. As a trumpet virtuoso, his playing, beginning with the 1920s studio recordings he made with his Hot Five and Hot Seven ensembles, charted a future for jazz in highly imaginative, emotionally charged improvisation. For this, he is revered by jazz fans. But Armstrong also became an enduring figure in popular music due to his distinctively phrased baritone singing and engaging personality, which were on display in a series of vocal recordings and film roles. He weathered the bebop period of the '40s, growing ever more beloved worldwide. By the '50s, Armstrong was widely recognized, even traveling the globe for the US. .State Department and earning the nickname "Ambassador Satch." His resurgence in the '60s with hit recordings like 1965's Grammy-winning "Hello Dolly" and 1968's classic "What a Wonderful World" solidified his legacy as a musical and cultural icon. In 1972, a year after his death, he received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. Similarly, many of his most influential recordings, like 1928's "West End Blues" and 1955's "Mack the Knife," have been inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.

Born in 1901 in New Orleans, Louisiana, Armstrong had a difficult childhood. William Armstrong, his father, was a factory worker who abandoned the family soon after the boy's birth. Armstrong was brought up by his mother, Mary (Albert) Armstrong, and his maternal grandmother. He showed an early interest in music, and a junk dealer for whom he worked as a grade-school student helped him buy a cornet, which he taught himself to play. He dropped out of school at 11 to join an informal group, but on December 31, 1912, he fired a gun during a New Year's Eve celebration, and was sent to reform school. He studied music there and played cornet and bugle in the school band, eventually becoming its leader. He was released on June 16, 1914, and did manual labor while trying to establish himself as a musician. He was taken under the wing of cornetist Joe "King" Oliver, and when Oliver moved to Chicago in June 1918, Armstrong replaced him in the Kid Ory Band. He moved to the Fate Marable band in the spring of 1919, staying with Marable until the fall of 1921. Armstrong moved to Chicago to join Oliver's band in August 1922 and made his first recordings as a member of the group in the spring of 1923. He married Lillian Harden, the pianist in the Oliver band, on February 5, 1924. (She was the second of his four wives.) With her encouragement, he left Oliver and joined Fletcher Henderson's band in New York, staying for a year and then going back to Chicago in November 1925 to join the Dreamland Syncopators, his wife's group. During this period, he switched from cornet to trumpet....More.... https://www.allmusic.com/artist/louis-armstrong-mn0000234518/biography

Autumn In New York

Jay Rodriguez, Chucho Valdes - Live In Verona

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:08
Size: 126,9 MB
Art: Front

(8:35)  1. Blues To You
(8:05)  2. Blue In Green
(5:46)  3. Beatrice
(7:28)  4. All of You
(1:28)  5. Channel Five
(7:40)  6. Sunday Kind of Love
(8:34)  7. Thing a Ma Jig
(7:28)  8. Mambo Influenciado

Colombian-born Jay Rodríguez (Hernan Ramiro Rodríguez Sierra) began playing music while attending elementary school and has been performing professionally since eighth grade. The talented musician studied clarinet with Paquito D'Rivera's father, Tito D'Rivera, and later harmony at the Hight School of Performing Arts. After graduating from the Manhattan School of Music, Rodríguez became involved in the tropical music field, teaming up with the legendary Eddie Palmieri and Ray Barretto, among other prominent Latin artists. However, New York's environment moved him to explore different sounds, having the opportunity to join the acid jazz outfit Groove Collective soon after. 

In 2001, DJ and producer Ron Trent teamed up with him to assemble an experimental duo called Batidos, issuing a full-length record titled Olajope. ~ Drago Bonacich https://www.allmusic.com/artist/jay-rodriguez-mn0000222172/biography

Live In Verona

Saturday, August 8, 2020

Emil Richards, Joe Porcaro All Star Big Band - Odd Men In

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz, Hard Bop
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:40
Size: 133,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:03)  1. Free Flight
(6:27)  2. This is the Moment
(7:59)  3. Blues for Royalty
(5:31)  4. Yo Go Jo Po
(4:00)  5. Turn Up the Audio for Claudio
(4:37)  6. Walking Proud
(5:31)  7. On Green Dolphin Street
(6:43)  8. Blues Machine
(6:12)  9. A Minor Affair
(5:33) 10. Hard Sock Dance

This band was assembled by Emil Richards (vibes) and Joe Porcaro (drums). Emil is a leading percussionist in the studios of LA and Joe is also a leading percussionist in the same area. They both hail from Hartford Connecticut and they have both worked the full gambit of music from jazz to classical and most things in between! The CVs of the band members justify the title of an "Allstar" big band: everyone has paid his dues, performing with the best of the best, and so as you expect this is a big band of great quality. 

The playing is crisp and clean and the solos a delight. The arrangements by the likes of Sammy Nestico and others are extremely musical and it is a real treat to hear them played so well. Today there are only a few working big bands. This wonderful music has become a hobby item for musicians, who earn their living playing in other genres, or it is played by musical educators and enthusiastic amateurs. For the latter group of players this album is an indication of what can be achieved when the charts are played correctly.More.. http://www.musicweb-international.com/jazz/2010/Richards_AIX80035.htm

Odd Men In

Susan Tobocman, The Cliff Monear Trio - Love from Detroit

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:38
Size: 135,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:12)  1. Let's Face the Music and Dance (Live)
(4:27)  2. The Way to You (Live)
(5:23)  3. I Should Care (Live)
(3:50)  4. Jim (Live)
(3:09)  5. I Could Have Danced All Night (Live)
(3:58)  6. Too Late Now (Live)
(5:51)  7. Fragile (Live)
(3:51)  8. Frim Fram Sauce (Live)
(5:23)  9. Every Time We Say Goodbye (Live)
(4:19) 10. I Wish I Knew (Live)
(5:36) 11. Isn't It a Pity? (Live)
(4:27) 12. Touch and Go (Live)
(4:05) 13. I'll Be Seeing You (Live)

Yes I know, it’s my bio; such an original idea for a musician's website. So here it is, straight from the promo package (scroll down for the real deal)...

Singer/composer/lyricist/producer/arranger Susan Tobocman has been making a name for herself among audiences and musicians alike on both the New York city and Detroit jazz scenes for a number of years. Whether leading her own gigs at Zinc Bar (where she was the original artist-in-residence), cornelia street cafe, Flatiron Room, Fine & Rare, Symphony Space, Highline Ballroom, Smalls, The Bitter End, Birdland, Cliff Bell's, The Blue Llama, Steinway Jazz Gallery, Smoke, 55 Bar, or Cleopatra's Needle (among others) or as the guest of such luminaries as Barry Harris, Al Foster, or the late Doc Cheatham Susan is equally comfortable working as a leader and/or sideman. Susan’s extensive repertoire of standards from the familiar to the obscure is distinctly enhanced by her inventive arrangements In addition to her original  compositions, some of which are strictly instrumental.  Among her influences, the Detroit-born singer cites Shirley Horn, Carmen McRae, Joao Gilberto, Dena DeRose, Johnny Mandel, and Andy Bey.  Not only is Tobocman the first-prize recipient of the prestigious National Scholastic Writing Award For Poetry, she has also received the ASCAPLUS composer grant for the past fifteen consecutive years.  Susan collaborates as both composer and lyricist with several of New York’s finest jazz musicians, including guitarists elliott randall and Pete McCann, pianists Henry Hey and David Hazeltine, trumpeter Jim Rotondi, and trombonist Steve Davis.  her work is signed to renowned jazz publisher/Grammy-winner Don Sickler; susan has also written for and been recorded by Denise Donatelli, norman simmons, Allan Harris, and Rodgers Grant, among others.

Susan’s professional experience includes numerous European tours as featured artist, several Off-Broadway musicals, a varied array of national television and radio jingles, touring as keyboardist and vocalist with Tom Tom Club (Talking Heads sans David Byrne), and appearing on ‘Late Night with David Letterman.’  In addition to session work for the MCA and Atlantic record labels as well as singing background vocals for Red Hot Chili Peppers, The Wailers, Richie Havens, and Garland Jeffries (and more) - Susan is currently featured on four European and three japanese CDs, as well as her own releases entitled Watercolor Dream (first picked up by Mike Longo’s Consolidated Artists label), Live In Detroit  With The Cliff Monear Trio, Love From Detroit with the cliff Monear Trio, and her newest recording Touch and Go.  Susan was also chosen as a featured artist on the Japanese CD compilation Jazz Bar and is currently a signed recording artist on the eponymous DISK UNION label. A re-release of Watercolor Dream is currently available in Japan on the same label, along with Live In Detroit, plus love from detroit was just released worldwide this past april. Her newest recording project entitled Touch and Go (a unique musical departure from her previous offerings) will be available July 31st, 2020. That was exciting, wasn't it?  Now, if we were between sets sitting at the bar, this is more like what I might actually want you to know...

“Words...to sing them is a different thing than it is to speak them. And most especially to write them.  At times they can tumble out, yet other times barely seem to come at all.  But to feel, conceptualize, write and then sing them is a whole other thing for me. At age four I started writing poetry, a year later my first poem was published, and by 15 I had won a national award. Two years later I found myself enrolled in the graduate poetry department at Columbia University, pretty much on my own with not much more than some old records and a tome of teen-angst journals.  But when a professor told me no one (I assumed he was referring to me) should write anything until at least the age of 25, I put the pencil down. A couple of years later I checked out an ad to answer phones at Electric Lady, a well-known recording studio in Greenwich Village, built by Jimi Hendrix.  At the time I thought nothing of it, other than a way to make a few bucks. Three months in I had been anointed with the title of Studio Manager.  I spent close to a decade running top-flight recording studios all over NYC, but not on the ‘right side of the glass.’  On the surface, my work seemed exciting, if not fulfilling - meeting rock stars, going to concerts, sitting in on recording sessions - but instead I always somehow felt as though I was living someone else’s life.  As my 30th birthday approached, I came upon a book about visualizing what one dreams for oneself. Three weeks later I could barely believe it.  There I was - exactly where I had imagined / visualized myself to be (on the road with a famous rock band).

Since I had not yet met the musical love of my life (jazz), my first affair was to sing and play keyboards with the pop-rock band Tom Tom Club. Fast-forward one year, and I was back in New York City, broke, and with no prospects.  I knew I loved this new life; I just hadn’t found my niche.  Knowing virtually nothing about jazz -other than I thought I'd read somewhere it attracted mostly intelligent, progressive and dedicated musicians - this vague idea already had a magnetic pull. I decided to put up an ad at NYU ISO a jazz pianist who would be willing to help a novice like me learn songs but without so much as a dollar (let alone gig) in return.  To my surprise, dozens of pianists showed up at my door! As the fates would allow, one of them was a life-long protege of pianist Barry Harris (a fellow Detroiter), and from there it was as though I was gliding home, only this time to a home I’d never been. I quickly met and befriended myriad creative, talented, and generous musicians who spent countless hours helping me to understand music from the inside out, encouraging me to learn everything I could, so that as a singer - even if I was in no way the most accomplished or experienced - I would at least know how to be professional, thus allowing me to acquire the skills I would need if I were to ever be lucky enough to make a living doing what I truly loved.  To this day, each and every time someone pays me to sing, I feel truly blessed. 

My favorite poet Pablo Neruda once wrote, 'One must achieve a balance between solitude and solidarity, between feeling and action, between the intimacy of one's self, the intimacy of humanity, and the revelation of nature.'  This has always meant so very much to me; I even ended up naming my music publishing company Soliterra Music.  'Soliterra' is not a word in the dictionary; in fact it is a word I dreamt after reading Neruda's quote.  It reminds me of being alone and writing a song, then hearing it come to life as it's played for the first time.  It is truly one of THE most entirely thrilling feelings in my musical lexicon. What’s meaningful to me about being a singer/composer is so multi-faceted that words (prose, anyway) don’t often suffice.  I think that’s why I write - to communicate through the universal language of music, to expand and go deeper, and to lean into the unknown.  I feel incredibly fortunate to have been and continue to be in the company of so many gifted musicians, to earn a living doing so, and to have learned this much already. But even more importantly, to know that there is more to learn, always more. It is a lifelong endeavor, and for that I feel infinitely grateful.” ~ Susan Tobocman, February 2017 https://www.susantobocman.com/bio.html

Love from Detroit

Friday, August 7, 2020

Dizzy Reece - Dizzy Reece: Only the Best

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:22
Size: 134,3 MB
Art: Front

(10:11)  1. The Story of Love
( 6:42)  2. Sands
( 6:18)  3. The Things We Did Last Summer
( 5:44)  4. The Case of the Frightened Lover
( 9:05)  5. Tenderly
( 6:50)  6. Goose Dance
( 6:42)  7. Ye Olde Blues
( 6:47)  8. Comin' On

To grasp the art and life's work of trumpeter-composer-philosopher (not necessarily in that order) Alphonso Son "Dizzy Reece, a short biographical sketch and recording data, though not thrown completely out the window in terms of relevance, are only relevant insofar as one gets an idea of the artist as a whole. Facts of his birthplace (Kingston, Jamaica, 1931) and relocations to London (1948) and New York (1959) and the collection of recordings for Tempo, Savoy, Blue Note, Prestige, Futura, Beehive and other labels throughout the past fifty years are surely crucial sonic tools that one can use to discover certain aspects of Reece's work and the time and place in which they occurred, but grasping a few nuggets of Reece's knowledge and experience requires a grander query than what motivates one to assemble a record date or lead a large orchestra through a series of charts.

In the course of learning who Reece is and what the sum of his interests and experiences are, his approach calls for an understanding of those close to him not only musically or proximally, but even (or perhaps especially) those interested in his work. Instead of this interviewer asking Reece how he came to study music, Reece asked how I came to him what my interests are musically and how his work fits in to my own studies, and how I got interested in jazz. Delving into what attracts one about a certain approach to music, Reece contends that interconnectedness is a primary facet of what imbues the jazz idiom with its massive emotional, tonal and rhythmic possibility "everybody plays the blues; Indians have it, the Chinese, every nationality has the blues. The Portuguese have the Fado, reflected in most of the Brazilian music that you hear. The soul is the Fado and we call it the blues. This is a common thread for everybody, and every music has it  I've studied every music. North Africa I used to listen to the UNESCO recordings of drummers from all over... East African drummers, Czechoslovakia, Chinese drummers, I listened to everybody. It is a sound that is endemic not only to the horn player (or the vocal 'cry' of the blues), but also something in the rhythms of the music, and by virtue the body, something that girds every system of life  it is no wonder that rhythms and their juxtapositions infuse Reece's recordings like Asia Minor (New Jazz, 1962), the perversely pan-tempo "Blues in Trinity (from the 1959 Blue Note session of the same name) or the cutting minor themes of From In to Out (Futura, 1970).

Reece firmly states his interest as "beginning in modern jazz, [as] it tells the story of everything that has been before in the blues idiom, a sort-of 'jumping in the middle' where one's formative dabblings are not long past but one's being is fully ensconced in one's art  not coincidentally, in interview Reece preferred to start with the beginning of his New York sojourn in 1959-60. "It came down through Louis Armstrong and Lester Young, but here comes Charlie Parker you know, he was a summation of everything that came before, he loved the blues, but [with Bird] we get to the level of intelligence now, we take it to the next level. That's what the modern jazz era is about, and that's what I've been dealing with... Charlie Parker [and by default, modern jazz] was already a finished product. Yet, for Reece, it certainly comes back not only to what is vertical in the music (harmonics), but to what spans the temporal experience of the music rhythm. "That started with Charlie Parker and Max Roach; sure, of course the rhythm aspect is the whole thing. He plays drums on the saxophone. It goes into intelligence in the '40s, we covered Aldous Huxley's Brave New World, the skyscrapers were going up, the political scene was changing, and [other music] would not suffice to express it... Hemingway, Picasso, it's all related. Reece's most regular partner in rhythm was drummer Art Taylor, who appeared on three of his Blue Note leader dates (a fourth, unissued until recently, had Art Blakey in the drum chair) and From In to Out; Reece even encouraged Taylor to compile Notes and Tones, a book of musician-to-musician interviews (Da Capo, 1977). Reece has also penned several volumes, by instrument, of his own musician-to-musician research, much of which centers on organizing and analyzing players with respect to personality psychology being just one of the sciences Reece has found his interdisciplinary calling in.

Reece acknowledges what he calls the "diffuse nature of the musical and cultural climate we have today, and the difficulty in making a scene in what this writer calls a "blasé cultural sensibility. "I used to be on Broadway  Broadway was my beat; you had Birdland and so much music that was great. You could walk up Broadway and meet people from Hollywood, arrangers, everybody. Music all over the streets  it was a different thing, it was alive and that's what's missing. You didn't have that period, and you can feel that it's missing. I had it and I know what it is... I was one of the last figures on Broadway; I used to hold up on 52nd Street and Broadway, some of that energy and its residue is still there. Coming to New York in the late 50s, Reece was certainly on the tail end of that scene, for 1959 was the year that Ornette Coleman brought his group to New York for a several-months run at the Five Spot, a move which history tells us turned modern jazz on its head. Yet Reece maintains that the negativity attached by some critics to Bird and the lingering animosity felt toward this music carries on even today: "A lot of people are still resisting it, because it's intelligence and it's on another level. We can play as much free jazz and as much technical some of the cats are very technical but nobody plays as fast as Charlie Parker... all the fruits of technology, that was already expressed in the music. That was an expression of what's to come. This is not to say that the sensory overload that has girded much of our 20th Century experience is the only thing mirrored by Bird and Picasso; "there is the soul  that's why we always talk about soul, the other side of it of course, something else supports the material. It's called spirit, it's called soul, whatever, and I call it the essence... [modern experience] really doesn't add anything to your soul. It's still not comfortable, and people are still not comfortable with technology. But it's a part of nature, so there it is and you work with it, and you still have to deal with your soul. https://www.allaboutjazz.com/dizzy-reece-dizzy-reece-by-clifford-allen.php

Dizzy Reece: Only the Best

Thursday, August 6, 2020

Jay Rodriguez - Your Sound (Live at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola)

Styles: Saxophone, Flute and Clarinet Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:54
Size: 145,0 MB
Art: Front

(9:53)  1. Ghost Dancer (Live)
(5:36)  2. Golden Earring (Live)
(5:01)  3. Clouds (Live)
(5:03)  4. All of You (Live)
(6:01)  5. Your Sound (Live)
(6:03)  6. When the Stars Fell (Live)
(6:51)  7. Spirits (Live)
(6:02)  8. Inolvidable (Live)
(7:22)  9. Lover (Live)
(4:58) 10. Let's Just Kiss and Say Goodbye (Live)

You might hear Jay Rodriguez and wonder, “Is there anything you can’t do?” The fact is, it might be tough to track down something along Jay’s musical continuum that he hasn’t done. A versatile bandleader, with flute, clarinet and saxophone chops, the Colombia-born, New York City-bred musician is profoundly talented and incredibly prolific. Since graduating from the New York School of Performing Arts and attending the New School of Jazz at its inception alongside Larry Goldings, Brad Mehldau and Roy Hargrove. He has had musical adventures in salsa with Celia Cruz, Tito Puente, Ray Barretto, Paquito D’Rivera, pop/hip-hop with Prince, Guru, the Wu-Tang Clan, DJ Premier and Groove Collective, straight-ahead with Doc Cheatham, Mingus Big Band, David Murray, Craig Harris, Jason Miles and Miles Davis. He has played alongside Joe Lovano, Gil Evans, Elvis Costello, Stevie Wonder, Bernie Worrell and Joan Osborne, to name a few. His original work is daring, groovy, breathtaking and soulful, sometimes all at once. His new recording, Your Sound: Live at Dizzy’s Club, captures all of lovely rawness in real time. Accompanied by Billy Harper on tenor sax, Larry Willis on piano. Eric Wheeler on bass, JT Lewis on drums and percussionist Billy Martin, Rodriguez frees himself up to showcase his work on saxes, flutes, and bass clarinet. The result is magical. Over his career, Rodriguez has tackled composition, arranging, accompanying, and leading. It is high time for the world to hear all the wonderful things Jay Rodriguez musician, personality, iconoclast, and innovator has to offer. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/your-sound-live-at-dizzys-club-coca-cola-jay-rodriguez

Personnel: Jay Rodriguez: saxophones, flute, bass clarinet;  Billy Harper: tenor saxophone;  Larry Willis: acoustic piano;  Eric Wheeler: acoustic bass;  J.T. Lewis: drums;  Billy Martin: percussion.

Your Sound (Live at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola)

Wednesday, August 5, 2020

Jill Barber - Entre nous

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:39
Size: 88,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:59)  1. Entre nous
(3:07)  2. Chat domestique
(2:49)  3. Joue avec le feu
(3:07)  4. Le monde est beau
(3:55)  5. Les étés de Montréal
(3:26)  6. Comme les fleurs
(3:19)  7. La pluie
(3:22)  8. Reflets
(3:34)  9. Suzanne
(4:17) 10. Nos retrouvailles
(3:41) 11. Coeur de ma jeunesse

I'm sure that there are many of you, like me, who are willing to purchase or ‘pre-order’ a new album based solely from the artist name alone?   Ah yes, I’m dropping hints of my age by recalling fond memories of riding the bus to my favorite record store on the day of the release (no online ordering back then heck, no internet even growing up in the Dark Ages was so challenging).  Scouring the album racks, hoping your choice would be found in the correct space, listed under the correct genre; or better yet, taking a copy from the store-front display if your musical taste was deemed worthy enough, and then eagerly giving it several spins when you got back home.  By 2020 standards, this whole process seems so alien and archaic, with access to digital music so readily and easily available, yet one thing remains the same true music fans have no reservations in purchasing music (unheard) from artists that always bring joy into their lives.Upon learning that Vancouver, BC singer-songwriter Jill Barber was releasing a new album this summer, her first since the groundbreaking 2018 “Metaphora” release, I had no reservations in pre-ordering a copy once the announcement was made.  Learning, too, that this was to be a fully-fledged French language project, the first since her incredibly successful 2013 “Chansons” album, I was very curious to see what Jill had in store for us this time around.  Both “Chansons,” (an album of classics and jazz covers) and her 2011 “Mischievous Moon” albums happened to be the first two Jill Barber CDs that made their way into our collection, purchased when stumbling upon them both here in a PA music store many years ago.  And with the formal release of “Entre nous” last Friday, Jill provides an absolute gem of an album, perfectly timed for not only the summer season, but for raising all of our spirits during this on-going tumultuous 2020 pandemic. In a bold move for an Anglophone, “Entre nous” not only sees Barber opting to flex her love of the French language once more, but also presents her first collection of original French songs, co-written with Francophone collaborator Maia Davies, and produced by acclaimed Montreal & NYC producer Gus Van Go.  As you extract the CD or “Mimosa” colored vinyl for that first spin, I highly recommend absorbing the pastels and outfit adorned by Jill from the album cover artwork, as this imagery perfectly captures the retro, throw-back nature of what your senses shall soon detect.  Inspired by French pop music of the 1960s, Barber reaches a new level of intimacy with the language of love on “Entre nous.” Offering a true time-travel adventure as she whisks you away to a 60s era Quebec City café-bar or summers’ eve stroll along a Parisienne cobbled street, these eleven tracks provide a very welcomed and quite remarkable 38 minutes of charming, romantic escapism.

Opening with the title track, the champagne-soaked sounds of this toe-tapper set a very pleasing and definitive tone; rich in vintage instrumentation cues that remain prevalent throughout the album.  Charming blasts of vibrophone and mellotron, with a chorus of congas, are joined by a triple onslaught of timeless organ sounds courtesy of Wurlitzer, Farfisa and Hammond to perfectly complement Jill’s authentic and era-appropriate vocal delivery.  Inspiring you to dance along to the cha-cha paced “Chat domestique” one moment, then forcing your full, seated attention for “La pluie” the next, the common thread binding each and every track together is the nostalgic timelessness of each composition.  “Quand on est ensemble / Notre amour fleuri / On s’est fait une famille / Elle grandit aussi,” Jill recites during “Nos retrouvailles,” accompanied by some light acoustic guitar and piano keys that are equally at home in 1960 and 2020; at least until luring you back to the past with tambourines and traditional Gallic accordion that accompany the chorus: “Non retrouvailles seront un jardin planté de nos tendresses / On s´embrassera comme si on ne se quittera jamias / Nos retrouvailles feront de nos deux corps une forteresse / On s´embrassera comme si on ne se quittera jamais.”With firmly established musical roots within the folk, indie and jazz genres, “Metaphora” proved that Jill is equally at home with pop music too, a genre represented well here on this new release.  “Les étés de Montréal” is a light back & forth duet with popular Quebecois artist Yann Perreau (an English version titled “Summer Nights in Montréal” was released as a stand alone single last month), while “Le monde est beau” has a breezy pace, complete with simple, yet wonderful hand-claps to accompany Jill’s delivery of the catchy chorus.  Vintage early 60s sounds return with the eerily beautiful “Comme les fleurs,” the moving organ notes reminding me of the Santo & Johnny classic, “Sleep Walk,” while “Reflets” should feel more at home maybe in the Southern region of France, given the slight flamenco guitar riffs that play alongside Jill in an otherwise instrumentally muted number.  “Regarde mon visage plein de regrets / Ne fais pas les mêmes erreurs que j´ai faites,” she recites, “Regarde mon visage plein d´espoir / Je ne ferai jamais les erreurs de ma mêre.”

“Chansons” was a well-received French language album due in part to Jill’s unique interpretation of classic French tunes, so it seems perfectly fitting that she should once again record a popular cover version.  Yet with “Suzanne,” she changes her navigational course somewhat, turning a popular English language track into a haunting French interpretation.  And while there are no shortages of Leonard Cohen covers (indeed, “Suzanne” was included on “Homage,” an excellent Cohen tribute album by Toronto artist Andrea Ramolo in 2018), Barber’s switching of language and sweet, somber tones really accentuate Cohen’s biographical words.  “Comme une pierre / Tu veux rester à ses côtés / Maintenant tu n´as plus peur / De voyager les yeux fermés / Une flamme blûle dans ton coeur.” I am a connoisseur of all things mid-century modern, fond of the ‘atomic’ era of design, architecture and lifestyle, so the retro sounds of “Entre nous” naturally appeal to me.  

Closing my eyes, it is too easy to picture myself seated in an Eames chair, perhaps in a room furnished like Don Draper’s Manhattan home (Mad Men) with a generous serving of whisky in hand, and few cares in the world as I get lost in Jill’s music.  “Entre nous” is a stunning collection of songs that belong in every home, whether French speaking or English speaking, it really makes no difference.  Like a fine Bordeaux, or a classic Citroen DS, this is a magnificent piece of French culture that will continue to be appreciated through the ages. Bravo to Jill Barber for creating this true ray of sunshine; an album perfect for any occasion, and a total lock for my year end Top 20 albums list.  Skip this one at your own peril, it’s a beauty! https://greatdarkwonder.com/review-jill-barber-entre-nous/

Entre nous

Susan Tobocman - Watercolor Dream

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:12
Size: 132,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:17)  1. The Ruby and the Pearl
(5:16)  2. Watercolor Dream
(2:57)  3. Lazy Afternoon
(4:31)  4. Close Your Eyes
(4:02)  5. Peel Me a Grape
(8:11)  6. Besame Mucho
(4:25)  7. Feel Like Makin' Love
(3:47)  8. I Never Meant to Dream of You
(3:53)  9. Again It's Spring
(4:16) 10. I Don't Think of Him Anymore
(4:36) 11. He's Out of My Life
(5:55) 12. Close to You

Singer/composer/lyricist/producer/arranger Susan Tobocman has been making a name for herself among audiences and musicians alike on both the New York city and Detroit jazz scenes for a number of years. Whether leading her own gigs at Zinc Bar (where she was the original artist-in-residence), cornelia street cafe, Flatiron Room, Fine & Rare, Symphony Space, Highline Ballroom, Smalls, The Bitter End, Birdland, Cliff Bell's, The Blue Llama, Steinway Jazz Gallery, Smoke, 55 Bar, or Cleopatra's Needle (among others)  or as the guest of such luminaries as Barry Harris, Al Foster, or the late Doc Cheatham  Susan is equally comfortable working as a leader and/or sideman. Susan’s extensive repertoire of standards from the familiar to the obscure is distinctly enhanced by her inventive arrangements In addition to her original  compositions, some of which are strictly instrumental.  Among her influences, the Detroit-born singer cites Shirley Horn, Carmen McRae, Joao Gilberto, Dena DeRose, Johnny Mandel, and Andy Bey.  Not only is Tobocman the first-prize recipient of the prestigious National Scholastic Writing Award For Poetry, she has also received the ASCAPLUS composer grant for the past fifteen consecutive years.  Susan collaborates as both composer and lyricist with several of New York’s finest jazz musicians, including guitarists elliott randall and Pete McCann, pianists Henry Hey and David Hazeltine, trumpeter Jim Rotondi, and trombonist Steve Davis.  her work is signed to renowned jazz publisher/Grammy-winner Don Sickler; susan has also written for and been recorded by Denise Donatelli, norman simmons, Allan Harris, and Rodgers Grant, among others.

Susan’s professional experience includes numerous European tours as featured artist, several Off-Broadway musicals, a varied array of national television and radio jingles, touring as keyboardist and vocalist with Tom Tom Club (Talking Heads sans David Byrne), and appearing on ‘Late Night with David Letterman.’  In addition to session work for the MCA and Atlantic record labels - as well as singing background vocals for Red Hot Chili Peppers, The Wailers, Richie Havens, and Garland Jeffries (and more) - Susan is currently featured on four European and three japanese CDs, as well as her own releases entitled Watercolor Dream (first picked up by Mike Longo’s Consolidated Artists label), Live In Detroit  With The Cliff Monear Trio, Love From Detroit with the cliff Monear Trio, and her newest recording Touch and Go.  Susan was also chosen as a featured artist on the Japanese CD compilation Jazz Bar and is currently a signed recording artist on the eponymous DISK UNION label. A re-release of Watercolor Dream is currently available in Japan on the same label, along with Live In Detroit, plus love from detroit was just released worldwide this past april. Her newest recording project entitled Touch and Go (a unique musical departure from her previous offerings) will be available July 31st, 2020. That was exciting, wasn't it?  Now, if we were between sets sitting at the bar, this is more like what I might actually want you to know...

“Words...to sing them is a different thing than it is to speak them. And most especially to write them.  At times they can tumble out, yet other times barely seem to come at all.  But to feel, conceptualize, write and then sing them is a whole other thing for me. At age four I started writing poetry, a year later my first poem was published, and by 15 I had won a national award. Two years later I found myself enrolled in the graduate poetry department at Columbia University, pretty much on my own with not much more than some old records and a tome of teen-angst journals.  But when a professor told me no one (I assumed he was referring to me) should write anything until at least the age of 25, I put the pencil down. A couple of years later I checked out an ad to answer phones at Electric Lady, a well-known recording studio in Greenwich Village, built by Jimi Hendrix.  At the time I thought nothing of it, other than a way to make a few bucks. Three months in I had been anointed with the title of Studio Manager.  I spent close to a decade running top-flight recording studios all over NYC, but not on the ‘right side of the glass.’  On the surface, my work seemed exciting, if not fulfilling - meeting rock stars, going to concerts, sitting in on recording sessions - but instead I always somehow felt as though I was living someone else’s life.  As my 30th birthday approached, I came upon a book about visualizing what one dreams for oneself. Three weeks later I could barely believe it.  There I was - exactly where I had imagined / visualized myself to be (on the road with a famous rock band).

Since I had not yet met the musical love of my life (jazz), my first affair was to sing and play keyboards with the pop-rock band Tom Tom Club. Fast-forward one year, and I was back in New York City, broke, and with no prospects.  I knew I loved this new life; I just hadn’t found my niche.  Knowing virtually nothing about jazz -other than I thought I'd read somewhere it attracted mostly intelligent, progressive and dedicated musicians - this vague idea already had a magnetic pull. I decided to put up an ad at NYU ISO a jazz pianist who would be willing to help a novice like me learn songs but without so much as a dollar (let alone gig) in return.  To my surprise, dozens of pianists showed up at my door! As the fates would allow, one of them was a life-long protege of pianist Barry Harris (a fellow Detroiter), and from there it was as though I was gliding home, only this time to a home I’d never been. I quickly met and befriended myriad creative, talented, and generous musicians who spent countless hours helping me to understand music from the inside out, encouraging me to learn everything I could, so that as a singer - even if I was in no way the most accomplished or experienced - I would at least know how to be professional, thus allowing me to acquire the skills I would need if I were to ever be lucky enough to make a living doing what I truly loved.  To this day, each and every time someone pays me to sing, I feel truly blessed. 

My favorite poet Pablo Neruda once wrote, 'One must achieve a balance between solitude and solidarity, between feeling and action, between the intimacy of one's self, the intimacy of humanity, and the revelation of nature.'  This has always meant so very much to me; I even ended up naming my music publishing company Soliterra Music.  'Soliterra' is not a word in the dictionary; in fact it is a word I dreamt after reading Neruda's quote.  It reminds me of being alone and writing a song, then hearing it come to life as it's played for the first time.  It is truly one of THE most entirely thrilling feelings in my musical lexicon. What’s meaningful to me about being a singer/composer is so multi-faceted that words (prose, anyway) don’t often suffice.  I think that’s why I write - to communicate through the universal language of music, to expand and go deeper, and to lean into the unknown.  I feel incredibly fortunate to have been and continue to be in the company of so many gifted musicians, to earn a living doing so, and to have learned this much already. But even more importantly, to know that there is more to learn, always more. It is a lifelong endeavor, and for that I feel infinitely grateful.” ~ Susan Tobocman, February 2017 https://www.susantobocman.com/bio.html

Watercolor Dream

Andrew Hill - Invitation

Styles: Piano Jazz 
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:00
Size: 133,7 MB
Art: Front

( 6:31)  1. Catfish
( 5:23)  2. Lost No More
(12:19)  3. Morning Flower
( 8:40)  4. Invitation
( 7:34)  5. Laverne
( 6:51)  6. Little John
(10:39)  7. Catfish - Take 3

After a flurry of recordings for Blue Note during the 1960s, Andrew Hill didn't make another album as a leader until this Steeplechase studio session in 1974. Not that the pianist was inactive during this five-year stretch; he was performing concerts, teaching at Colgate University, and also writing for string quartets and symphony orchestras. This trio date with bassist Chris White and drummer Art Lewis features five original compositions, beginning with the turbulent but enticing "Catfish," which alternates between post-bop and avant-garde. "Lost No More" is far more intense, rarely giving the listener a time to focus before Hill switches his attack in another direction. The one standard of the date, Bronislaw Kaper's "Invitation," finds the pianist in an adventurous mood as the members of his rhythm section seem to be playing with a mind of their own. The CD reissue adds an alternate take of "Catfish," omitted from the original LP. Such fascinating music will be of great interest to fans of Andrew Hill. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/invitation-mw0000436631

Personnel: Piano – Andrew Hill;  Bass – Chris White; Drums – Art Lewis

Invitation

Tuesday, August 4, 2020

Emil Richards - Wonderful World Of Percussion

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:38
Size: 99,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:45)  1. Good Grief
(4:57)  2. Enjoy
(5:41)  3. Sheep Lie
(5:34)  4. Underdog Rag
(2:53)  5. Venezuela-la
(3:54)  6. Celesta
(3:28)  7. Alive in Five
(4:52)  8. Yo Yazz
(4:59)  9. Amos
(1:30) 10. Bells of Hollywood

Wonderful World of Percussion is an imaginative and innovative tour de force by studio great, concert showman and now recording artist Emil Richards. The pieces range from zany to romantic, played on percussion instruments that go from African rhythm log to xylophone. Richards gives full voice to the potential of each instrument and destroys the stereotype that percussion's role is to provide rhythm and texture. 

Instead, Richards' percussion pieces are alive with the melody and countermelody that one would expect from music written for any other group of instruments. Richards' works are clear expressions of his knowledge and interest in world music and jazz. https://www.allmusic.com/album/release/wonderful-world-of-percussion-mr0000927278

Wonderful World Of Percussion

Sylvia Bennett - This Love Is Real

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 25:21
Size: 58,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:32)  1. This Love Is Real
(4:00)  2. Lorilee
(3:04)  3. It’s Impossible (NE Version)
(3:54)  4. Shadow of Your Smile (HB Version)
(3:40)  5. One-Sided Love
(3:56)  6. Where or When (SF Version)
(3:13)  7. Lorilee (Pop)

“Man, the lady can sing! Her magic gets to the ears and the hearts of the audience.” ~ Lionel Hampton

She’s one part jazz, one part pop, and one part sultry. If you like Ella Fitzgerald, Barbra Streisand, and Rosemary Clooney, you’ll LOVE Sylvia Bennett.

Italian born and American raised Sylvia Bennett is a Grammy nominated international recording artist and song–writer who has performed at Presidential Inaugurations and opened for such renowned artists as Bob Hope, Phyllis Diller, Jackie Mason, Dizzy Gillespie, Barry Gibb and David Brenner. Discovered by the legendary Lionel Hampton, she has since captivated audiences and critics alike with her sultry, honeyed tones and seductive blend of jazz and pop. She’s the inimitable, unforgettable Sylvia Bennett.

Sylvia and Lionel Hampton’s first recording project was the Grammy nominated Sentimental Journey. A second project, There Will Never Be Another You, was a CD/DVD tribute she dedicated to her beloved mentor and would be followed by nine more CDs: Songs From the Heart (featuring Boots Randolph, Ed Calle, and Kirk Whalum), It’s Christmas Time, Smile, Sonríe, C’est Si Bon, Best Love Songs, It’s All About Love, For You and I Wish You Love. It’s All About Love, Sylvia’s first CD of all original music, reached #24 on the 2016 SmoothJazz.com Year End Top 50 Album Chart. In 2017, Sylvia Bennett teamed up with Grammy award winner Paul Brown after their mutual friend and music colleague, Sandy Shore Founder/President/CEO of Smooth Jazz Global Radio, brought them together. They recorded a unique and modern rendition of the timeless classic, Baby, It’s Cold Outside, at Afterhours Music, in North Miami with Sylvia’s long–time producer, Hal S. Batt. It reached #18 in the Mediabase Adult Contemporary Holiday Chart, #26 in the Mediabase Adult Contemporary Chart, and #20 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary Indicator Chart.

Because it’s all we need... because it’s the answer and because it never fails, Sylvia Bennett wishes everyone love on her latest recording I WISH YOU LOVE. Dipping into her collection of favorites from the classic songs that she’s romanced over the years in several languages, this luciously arranged and produced set by Hal S. Batt, is all in English and features some amazing special guests including the one and only bass master, Nathan East on an impeccable cover of “It’s Impossible” and Chart–topping Smooth Jazz trumpeter Rick Braun on a highly enjoyable run of “C’est Si Bon,"” or as we like to call it, “C’est Si Braun.” Really, it’s all you need to get by. Love that is... and this wonderful assortment of love songs falls into that category as well. Find out for yourself! In addition to recording and creating new products for the Sylvia Bennett Gift Collection, she loves to perform in front of a live audience and has created a range of shows that cover everything from Broadway to pop and from swing to international. She sings in English, Spanish, and French but regardless of the language her goal remains the same: to bring people joy through music and song! http://www.sylviabennett.com/bio.html

This Love Is Real

Monday, August 3, 2020

Linda Carone - Black Moonlight

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:32
Size: 93,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:39)  1. Guilty
(2:52)  2. Big Bad Handsome Man
(5:24)  3. The Spring Don't Mean a Thing to Me
(4:03)  4. Sweet Lotus Blossom
(5:42)  5. Black Moonlight
(2:33)  6. Oh I'm Evil
(4:46)  7. Why Is a Good Man so Hard to Find
(3:44)  8. Blue Drag
(3:29)  9. Under the Spell of the Blues
(4:16) 10. Livin My Life My Way

LINDA CARONE IS A VINTAGE JAZZ AND BLUES VOCALIST: a niche song stylist and interpreter of popular music from the 1920's and beyond. With a voice that has been described as ‘beautiful, rich, sultry and provocative’. Ms. Carone’s raw, natural and diverse approach to music has shaped her vocal style in a way that is playful, intimate and unpretentious. She boasts an expressive voice and is known to caress lyrical phrasing often lost in todays’ interpretations. “Music is timeless.If it’s a forgotten song that one has never heard before, then it’s considered new. Recreating the sound of an era is not my goal  I discover songs that I love and transport them into the present”. Linda sings with a pure vocal style all her own while  TRANSCENDING THE HEART OF THE SONG. An early passion for jazz and blues developed upon first hearing the raw and emotive melancholy of Billie Holiday. This inspiration laid the foundation for growth as a vocalist and as an artist. Linda’s musical journey was further influenced by jazz and blues vocalists like Ella Fitzgerald, Carmen McRae, Mildred Bailey, Helen Humes, Valaida Snow and Lil Armstrong. Linda’s eclectic repertoire includes rare and sometimes risque vintage songs of the 20’s, 30’s and 40’s, classic jazz and swing standards, cocktail lounge and torch ballads, to boogie woogie & roots blues. Linda continues to earn rave reviews and is an impressive regular in the music scene today.

Working with some of Toronto’s best musicians in the industry, performances can include mellow’n smooth duos with piano or guitar accompaniment, to lively trios, quartets or quintets. Her performances generate rave reviews with audiences finding themselves both entertained and educated as she plays the Toronto circuit with impressive regularity, wowing crowds at venues such as Jazz Bistro, Old Mill Inn, Ontario Place Art & Music Festival, Orillia Jazz Festival, U of T Harthouse, Berkeley Bicycle Club's Jazz on Jarvis, Distillery District Christmas Market, SpiritHouse, 70 Down, Coco Espresso Bar in Yorkville, RasaBar, 120 Diner, Relish Bar & Grill, Free Times Cafe, Lula Lounge, Salutè Piano Bar, Dovercourt House, Gate 403, White Elephant Bar and Rasputin Vodka Lounge as well as various venues and private functions.

“Linda Carone’s taste in music is born of great jazz vocalists, (Bing Crosby, Julia Lee, Una Mae Carlisle) and her voice is refreshingly grown up & womanly. It’s the voice of a singer who has stories to tell, great diction, affection for the melody, and the lovely inflections that one might expect from a 78rpm, but recorded here in a modern crisp recording of some delicious yet lamentably overlooked songs in jazz history. I’m very excited about this recording, and this great singer!” Alex Pangman ~  Juno Nominee, Vocalist, Band Leader Canada’s Sweetheart of Swing https://www.lindacarone.com/about-linda/

Personnel: Linda Carone • vocals George Koller • bass Mark Kieswetter • piano Davide DiRenzo • drums Ted Quinlan • guitar John Johnson • bass clarinet, tenor sax Ron Westray • trombone

Black Moonlight

Art Hodes - Pagin' Mr. Jelly

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:38
Size: 134,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:34)  1. Grandpa's Spells
(5:06)  2. Mamie's Blues
(3:09)  3. High Society
(4:23)  4. Mr. Jelly Lord
(5:23)  5. Buddy Bolden's Blues
(2:52)  6. Pagin' Mr. Jelly
(3:54)  7. Original Jelly Roll Blues
(6:11)  8. Winin' Boy Blues
(2:34)  9. Beale Street Blues
(3:32) 10. Wolverine Blues
(3:11) 11. Ballin' the Jack
(3:34) 12. The Pearls
(4:56) 13. Gone Jelly Blues
(3:27) 14. Doctor Jazz
(2:45) 15. Oh! Didn't He Ramble

Art Hodes was just ten days short of his 84th birthday at the time of this Candid solo piano CD. Hodes had his own style for quite a few decades by then. A masterful blues player, on the more up-tempo tunes, Art's left hand tended to state each beat in double-time, a very effective device. For this tribute to Jelly Roll Morton, Hodes performs 13 tunes recorded by Morton (eight of which Jelly Roll wrote) along with two of his own originals: a blues number and "Pagin' Mr. Jelly," which is partly based on Morton's "King Porter Stomp." The five faster performances really stomp, the three medium-tempo renditions swing, and the seven more introspective pieces are quite soulful. Recommended. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/pagin-mr-jelly-mw0000308546

Pagin' Mr. Jelly

Sunday, August 2, 2020

Della Reese - Voice Of An Angel

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:57
Size: 153,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:24)  1. I'm Beginning To See The Light
(3:08)  2. Baby Won't You Please Come Home
(2:46)  3. Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out To Dry
(2:41)  4. I'm Just A Lucky So And So
(2:32)  5. Here's That Rainy Day
(4:51)  6. Little Girl Blue
(2:39)  7. And Now
(3:44)  8. Two Sleepy People - (from the film "Thanks For The Memory")
(2:36)  9. The End Of A Love Affair
(2:35) 10. I'll Get By
(4:21) 11. How Did He Look
(4:24) 12. All By Myself
(3:57) 13. I Had The Craziest Dream
(2:26) 14. Let's Get Away From It All
(3:13) 15. Always
(5:14) 16. Someday (You'll Want Me To Want You)
(4:24) 17. These Foolish Things
(2:45) 18. Call Me
(2:39) 19. And the Angels Sing
(2:32) 20. Don't You Know

Renowned as both a television star and a top-flight interpreter of jazz, blues, R&B, gospel, and straight-ahead pop music, Della Reese's many talents ensured a long, varied, and legendary show biz career. In addition to being nominated for both an Emmy and a Grammy and receiving a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, Reese was also an ordained minister in the Universal Foundation for Better Living, an association of churches she helped found in the early '80s.  Born Deloreese Patricia Early on July 6, 1931, the young Reese began singing in the Baptist church choir in her hometown of Detroit at age six. In 1945, having developed quite rapidly, she caught the ear of legendary gospel queen Mahalia Jackson, who invited Reese to join her touring choir; Reese did so for the next five summers. Upon entering Wayne State University to study psychology, Reese formed a women's gospel group, the Meditation Singers, but her college career was cut short by the death of her mother and her father's serious illness. Reese worked odd jobs to help support the rest of her family; she also continued to perform with the Meditation Singers and various other gospel groups. Encouraged by her pastor, Reese began singing in nightclubs in hopes of getting a singing career off the ground; recently married to a factory worker named Vermont Adolphus Bon Taliaferro, her name was too long to fit on marquees, and she eventually arrived at her performing alias by splitting up her first name. After impressing a New York agent, who promptly signed her, Reese moved to New York and joined the Erskine Hawkins Orchestra in 1953. A year later, she had a recording contract with Jubilee, for whom she scored hits like "And That Reminds Me," a 1957 million-seller.

Switching to RCA Victor, Reese landed her biggest hit in 1959 with "Don't You Know?," a song adapted from Puccini's La Bohème; this cemented her career, leading not only to plentiful appearances on variety shows, but successful nightclub tours of the country and eventually nine years of performances in Las Vegas, as well as recording contracts with a variety of labels over the next few decades. Building on her previous variety show experience, Reese made a small bit of television history in 1969 when she became the first woman to guest-host The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. Later that year, she became the first black woman to host her own variety show, the syndicated Della, which ran until 1970. Following its cancellation, Reese returned to her nightclub tours, often putting in guest appearances on television shows like The Mod Squad, Sanford and Son, and Chico and the Man; after three prior failed marriages, Reese also found a lasting relationship with producer Franklin Lett, whom she married in 1978. On October 3, 1980, while taping a song for The Tonight Show, Reese suffered a brain aneurysm that nearly proved fatal; however, thanks to a successful operation, she was able to make a full recovery. She kept up her singing career and appeared on television shows like Designing Women, L.A. Law, and Picket Fences, as well as the Eddie Murphy films Harlem Nights and The Distinguished Gentleman. Reese also starred in the Redd Foxx sitcom The Royal Family from 1991-1992, and garnered what was undoubtedly her highest level of recognition in the inspirational drama series Touched by an Angel, a quite popular program that ran for nine years, between 1994 and 2003, on the CBS network. After Touched by an Angel finished its run, Reese continued to act intermittently on television through to 2014. She died at her home in Encino, California in November 2017 at the age of 86. ~ Steve Huey https://www.allmusic.com/artist/della-reese-mn0000196544/biography

Voice Of An Angel

Erroll Garner - Columbia Jazz (1950-1957)

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:07
Size: 124,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:10)  1. Lover
(3:16)  2. It's The Talk Of The Town
(3:43)  3. When You're Smiling (The Whole World Smiles With You)
(2:43)  4. Laura
(3:15)  5. Dancing In the Dark
(3:23)  6. How High the Moon
(2:50)  7. Easy to Love
(5:25)  8. Moonglow
(3:13)  9. Lullaby of Birdland
(3:06) 10. Poor Butterfly
(4:26) 11. If I Had You
(4:14) 12. My Heart Stood Still
(3:51) 13. Love for Sale
(3:03) 14. Dreamy
(3:22) 15. St. Louis Blues

One of the most distinctive of all pianists, Erroll Garner proved that it was possible to be a sophisticated player without knowing how to read music, that a creative jazz musician can be very popular without watering down his music, and that it is possible to remain an enthusiastic player without changing one's style once it is formed. A brilliant virtuoso who sounded unlike anyone else, on medium tempo pieces, Erroll Garner often stated the beat with his left hand like a rhythm guitar while his right played chords slightly behind the beat, creating a memorable effect. His playful free-form introductions (which forced his sidemen to really listen), his ability to play stunning runs without once glancing at the keyboard, his grunting, and the pure joy that he displayed while performing were also part of the Erroll Garner magic. 

Garner, whose older brother Linton was also a fine pianist, appeared on the radio with the Kan-D-Kids at the age of ten. After working locally in Pittsburgh, he moved to New York in 1944 and worked with Slam Stewart's trio during 1944-1945 before going out on his own. By 1946, Garner had his sound together, and when he backed Charlie Parker on his famous Cool Blues session of 1947, the pianist was already an obvious giant. His unclassifiable style had an orchestral approach straight from the swing era but was open to the innovations of bop. From the early '50s on, Garner's accessible style became very popular and he never seemed to have an off day up until his forced retirement (due to illness) in early 1975. His composition "Misty" became a standard. Garner, who had the ability to sit at the piano without prior planning and record three albums in one day (all colorful first takes), made many records throughout his career for such companies as Savoy, Mercury, RCA, Dial, Columbia, EmArcy, ABC-Paramount, MGM, Reprise, and his own Octave label. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/erroll-garner-mn0000206967/biography

Columbia Jazz (1950-1057)