Sunday, March 14, 2021

Ake Johansson Trio - Chet & Toots

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:52
Size: 146,9 MB
Art: Front

( 9:57) 1. Beatrice
(10:28) 2. Lament
(11:10) 3. All the Things You Are
( 5:50) 4. When I Fall In Love
( 7:20) 5. Broken Wing
( 8:47) 6. For Minors Only
(10:18) 7. My Foolish Heart

Chet Baker was recorded so extensively in Europe that if you're a completist, you can expect to spend a fortune trying to acquire all of the European releases he is documented on. Recorded live at Sodra Teatern in Stockholm on February 26, 1985, this Swedish release finds the Åke Johansson Trio (which also includes bassist Kjell Jansson and drummer Rune Carlsson) joined by two visiting players, American Baker and Belgian harmonica player Toots Thielemans. Because Johansson is such a lyrical pianist, Baker and Thielemans were ideal choices for him. Melodic, subtle lyricism is the rule during this set, and the Scandinavian and American players enjoy a strong rapport on relaxed performances of Sam Rivers' "Beatrice," J.J. Johnson's "Lament" and the standard "All the Things You Are." Baker lays out on a sentimental version of "When I Fall in Love," while Thielemans is the one who lays out on Richie Beirach's "Broken Wing" and "My Foolish Heart." Baker's only vocal during the set comes on the latter, which underscores the fact that while he didn't have a fantastic range as a vocalist (especially after losing his teeth in the '60s), his singing could be incredibly soulful and expressive. On a few occasions, Baker's trumpeting becomes uncertain. But for the most part, the musicians are in good and sometimes excellent form on this CD.~ Alex Henderson https://www.allmusic.com/album/%C3ke-johansson-trio-with-chet-baker-and-toots-thielemans-mw0000432096

Personnel: Piano – Åke Johansson; Bass – Kjell Jansson; Drums – Rune Carlsson; Harmonica – Toots Thielemans (tracks: 1-4,6); Trumpet, Vocals – Chet Baker (tracks: 1.3,5-7)

Chet & Toots

Harry Allen, Mike Karn - Milo's Illinois

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:36
Size: 140,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:39) 1. Love Is Just Around the Corner
(6:20) 2. Just One of Those Things
(6:06) 3. A Time for Love
(7:52) 4. O Grande Amor
(4:50) 5. Tea for Two
(4:41) 6. Gypsy Sweetheart
(4:14) 7. Tenderly
(4:40) 8. Milo's Illinois
(5:08) 9. Just Pickin' out Ditties
(5:01) 10. The Song Is Ended
(6:00) 11. How Insensitive

The COVID pandemic has changed many things about daily life, creating something of a new, mutated "normal." This is no more apparent than in many of the "outside-the-box" methods that performance artists have used to subsist and ply their trade during a virtual lockdown. In particular, tenor saxophonist Harry Allen took the pandemic head on by cutting a European tour short in March 2020, returning to New York City. But rather than simply wait to see what happened, Allen jumped headlong into two ambitious projects. Taking advantage of some newly acquired recording equipment and computer software, the saxophonist recorded a "solo" recording, The Bloody Happy song (GAC Records, 2020). This recording featured Allen alone, appearing in a variety of computer-generated virtual formats, from solo horn to little-big band. The results were swinging and impressive

Extrapolating this method, Allen enlisted the guitarist Dave Blenkhorn , with whom he had been touring in Europe on the eve of the pandemic, to make a trans-Atlantic recording: Allen in New York City and Blenkhorn in Bordeaux, France (consider the romance of those locales!). This resulted in Under A Blanket Of Blue (GAC Records, 2020). Both projects successfully showed that creativity is adaptable as necessary, and , at its best, brings everything closer together, in spite of temporal circumstances. Allen's most recent projects highlight the good. They also restore that bit of mystery that is still able to make even the most jaded and cynical among listeners.

Take, for instance, Allen's third pandemic project, Milo's Illinois, recorded in Allen's home with double bassist Mike Karn. The title itself is filled with questions. Who is Milo and why in Illinois? Only part of this is revealed but that part is worth it. In numbers, Milo's Illinois is made up of nine standards and two originals. The subject matter is from across the map, from the hopeful "Love Is Just Around The Corner" to the resigned "Just One of Those Things," to the sepia-toned "Tea For Two." The songs are captured with an intensely relaxed spirit, one of making the best of a marginal situation with intimacy and empathy.

Allen's tone remains as sweet and confident as ever, adopting a piquant character when applied to Antonio Carlos Jobim ("O Grande Amor," "How Insensitive"). Karn meets Allen head on, anticipating the saxophonist and guiding him. Karn provides the introduction to several pieces, giving "Tea For Two" his most thoughtful consideration before kicking things off in a swinging fashion with Allen's entry. Mitchell Parish's rarely recorded "Gypsy Sweetheart" is provided a rounded treatment with saxophonist and bassist clicking along effortlessly. Irving Berlin's "The Song Is Ended" is submitted, upbeat and strolling in a steadfast 4/4, rolling into "How Insensitive," providing Karn is greatest, and most inventive, solo space.

"Milo's Illinois" is the Karn contribution to the recording, a circuitous bebop piece with an impressive head and compelling interior. Milo turns out to be a dog, a small one. And, "'Milo's Illinois" is a song about keeping a small dog warm, bringing this project to its peaceful and positive close with questions still unanswered. Praise the small and simple. They will never disappoint and it's been a long winter.~ C.Michael Bailey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/milos-illinois-harry-allen-gac-music

Personnel: Harry Allen(sax); Mike Karn(double bass)

Milo's Illinois

Saturday, March 13, 2021

Emil Viklicky Trio - What's New

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:13
Size: 145,6 MB
Art: Front

( 6:40) 1. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
( 5:55) 2. Enfance
( 8:50) 3. I'll Remember April
( 7:41) 4. Porthcawl
( 9:39) 5. Cherokee
(10:01) 6. What's New
( 9:01) 7. C.T.A.
( 5:22) 8. Going to Chicago

Emil Viklicky was born on the 23rd November 1948 in Olomouc, where in 1971 he graduated from the Palacky University in mathematics. Whilst a student he devoted much time to playing jazz piano. In 1974 he was awarded the prize for best soloist at the Czechoslovak Amateur Jazz Festival, and in that same year he became a member of Karel Velebny's SHQ ensemble. In 1976 he was a prizewinner at the jazz improvisation competition in Lyon and his composition Green Satin (Zeleny saten) earned him first prize in the music conservatory competition in Monaco, where in 1985 his Cacharel won second prize in the same competition. In 1977 he was awarded a year's scholarship to study composition and arrangement with Herb Pomeroy at the jazz school of the Berklee College of Music in Boston. He then continued his composition studies with Jarmo Sermila, George Crumb and Vaclav Kucera. Since his return to Prague he has been directing his own ensembles (primarily quartets and quintets), composing and arranging music and - since the death of Karel Velebny - working as director of the Summer Jazz Workshops in Frydlant. He has also lectured at a similar workshop event in Glamorgan, Wales. Between 1991 and 1995 Viklicky was President of the Czech Jazz Society, and since 1994 he has worked with the Ad lib Moravia ensemble, whose performances combine elements of Moravian folk music, modern jazz and contemporary serious music. In 1996 the ensemble undertook a highly successful concert tour of Mexico and the United States.

As pianist Viklicky often performs in international ensembles alongside musicians from the USA and other European countries - with the Lou Blackburn International Quartet and the Benny Bailey Quintet, for example, and with multi-instrumentalist Scott Robinson. He has made frequent appearances in Finland (with the Finnczech Quartet and in particular with Jarmo Sermila) and Norway (with the Czech-Norwegian Big Band and Harald Gundhus) and has performed in the USA, Japan, Mexico, Israel, Germany, Luxembourg, the Netherlands (at the North Sea Festival) and elsewhere. The editor of Rolling Stone wrote of Viklicky that "It was a delightful surprise to see such first-class, top-of-the-line jazz in Prague. As composer Viklicky has attracted attention abroad primarily for having created a synthesis of the expressive elements of modern jazz with the melodicism and tonalities of Moravian folk song that is distinctly individual in contemporary jazz. Besides this, however, he also composes 'straight-ahead' modern jazz as well as chamber and orchestral works that utilize certain elements of the New Music, and at times his music requires a combination of classical and jazz performers. He also composes incidental and film music and has produced scores for several full-length feature films and television series. Throughout the 1990s he has devoted an increasing amount of time to the composition of contemporary classical music for a great variety of instrumental combinations ranging from small chamber ensembles and electronic instruments to symphony orchestras and choruses. Viklicky's work has gained him quite a number of prestigious awards. https://www.jazzmusicarchives.com/artist/emil-viklicky

What's New

Jane Monheit - Come What May

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:31
Size: 112,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:58) 1. I Believe In You
(5:09) 2. When A Woman Loves A Man
(4:01) 3. Let’s Take A Walk Around The Block
(5:45) 4. Lush Life
(3:03) 5. Let’s Face The Music And Dance
(4:51) 6. Samba Do Aviao
(6:25) 7. The Nearness Of You
(3:53) 8. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
(5:29) 9. The Man That Got Away
(6:54) 10. My Funny Valentine

Jane Monheit is a potent antidote to a certain brand of jazz snobbery. At every major jazz festival, there are fans who will begrudgingly (or cheerfully) witness a set by Cécile McLorin Salvant or Gregory Porter, but if pressed, they would assert that they don’t consider vocalists to be in the same league as instrumentalists. (Was Ella Fitzgerald as good a musician as Count Basie? Debate that over a Zoom chat sometime.) When the luminous Monheit arrived on the scene 20 years ago with her debut, Never Never Land, she won over fans via renditions of standards such as “My Foolish Heart,” “I Got It Bad (And That Ain’t Good)” and Jobim’s “Dindi.” On her latest album, Come What May, Monheit continues to dazzle, delivering a program chockfull of standards, such as “Lush Life,” “Let’s Face The Music And Dance” and Jobim’s “Samba Do Avi?o.”

Monheit’s version of Frank Loesser’s “I Believe In You” is delicately spiced with segments of scatting that elevate the tune just a pinch of salt that works wonderfully. Throughout the program, it should be clear to any snobbish naysayer that her instrument is equal to that of her band’s, which includes guitarist Miles Okazaki, bassist David Robaire, pianist Michael Kanan, drummer Rick Montalbano and percussionist Kevin Winard. In the opening section of “My Funny Valentine,” while floating atop Kanan’s lines, Monheit’s breath control and exquisite elongation of vowel sounds are so intoxicating that some listeners won’t even pause to ponder the arcane lyrics: “Thy vacant brow, and thy tousled hair/ Conceal thy good intent/ Thou noble, upright, truthful, sincere/ And slightly dopey gent.”

The inclusion of “Let’s Take A Walk Around The Block” (penned by Harold Arlen, Ira Gershwin and E.Y. Harburg) seems suited to our pandemic era in a particularly bittersweet way. Similarly, an elegant reading of “The Nearness Of You” might resonate on multiple levels for lovers who still share a spark, despite being stuck in a small apartment for the past 11 months. On the latter tune, the combination of Monheit’s emotive, wordless flights and Wayne Haun’s lush orchestral arrangement is positively intoxicating. Monheit’s album-release show at Feinstein’s at Vitello’s will be livestreamed on March 12. Catching this virtual gig might not be as fun as hearing her vocals reverberate around a jazz club or a festival crowd, but that will come, hopefully soon. https://downbeat.com/reviews/detail/come-what-may

Come What May

Friday, March 12, 2021

Clare Foster - Kumbhaka

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:38
Size: 130,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:40) 1. Who will Buy?
(2:33) 2. Baião na Praia
(3:52) 3. I Get Along Without You Very Well
(3:58) 4. I Only Have Eyes for You
(4:23) 5. Singin' in the Rain
(2:50) 6. Gone with the Wind
(2:35) 7. No Moon at All
(3:12) 8. Can't Help Singing
(3:49) 9. I'll Remember April
(2:59) 10. Stairway to the Stars
(4:46) 11. Quem Canta os Males Espanta
(4:26) 12. There's a Small Hotel
(5:12) 13. What are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?
(3:50) 14. Just One of Those Things / In Search of Love
(4:25) 15. The Silent Space

Clare Foster is a multi-talented musician who sings, composes and, along the way, educates. Born in England, she learnt the clarinet and began listening to jazz at the age of five courtesy of her father and recently said in an interview, "he still doesn't believe there's any jazz after 1932!" Foster's inspiration for this album has emerged from her interests in Latin American rhythms but also her passion for the American songbook. "I'll Remember April," the ninth track on the album, is a perfect example of how she integrates these two musical characteristics. Her interpretation of this well-known standard is combined with a lesser-known style of music originating from Uruguay named, candombe. The groove is based upon three contrasting drums. Among the fifteen grooves that are presented on Kumbhaka, Clare's adaptation of Cole Porter's "Just One of Those Things" is performed in the style known as bomba, the first native music of Puerto Rico. She says that the sound of the four trumpets is a salute to the band, La Sonora Ponceña.

As well as herself, Foster also shares the vocal role with Sue Jarvis, singing "Quem Canta Os Males Espanta" in Portuguese. As one can expect from a first listen, this track is a samba and features and lengthy Rhodes solo performed by Neil Angilley. In addition to this track, Foster also has another original composition, dedicated to her mother, titled "The Silent Space." It incorporates an enchanting string arrangement both written and performed by Shanti Paul Jayasinha in the style of danzón, a slow formal dance from Cuba. Overall, Kumbhaka captures a wide variety of styles and rhythms associated with Latin America, many that are unknown to the general listener. Foster's process of connecting this part of the world with the success of the American songbook has clearly achieved high standards. A gifted musician who, along with her talented colleagues, has flourished in seamlessly merging complex rhythms with the popularity of the American tradition.~ Thomas Fletcher https://www.allaboutjazz.com/kumbhaka-clare-foster-self-produced

Personnel: Clare Foster - Voice, Arranger; Shanti Jayasinha - Arranger, Cello, Trumpet, Flügelhorn, Percussion; John Crawford - Fender Rhodes (except track 11); Andrés Lafone - Electric Bass, Tamborile (tr 9); Andrés Ticino - Drums & Percussion, Tamborile (tr 9); Guillermo Hill - Guitar, Tamborile (tr 9); Neil Angilley - Fender Rhodes (track 11); Sue Jarvis - Voice (track 11); Davide Giovannini - Backing Vocals (track 4); Mick Foster - Alto, Tenor, Baritone saxes, Bass Clarinet; Fayyaz Virgi - Trombone (tracks 4,10); Karen Tweed - Accordion (track 2)

Kumbhaka

Thursday, March 11, 2021

Lucky Thompson - A Lucky Songbook in Europe

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:22
Size: 91,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:27) 1. Sauvabelin
(5:31) 2. Lady Gail
(3:53) 3. Street of Dreams
(5:45) 4. Soul City
(6:11) 5. Easy Living
(5:18) 6. I Came from Sunday
(6:12) 7. Centre Ville

In 1968, saxophonist Lucky Thompson moved back to Europe with his family after a five-year stay in the States. He settled in Lausanne, Switzerland, which allowed him to tour in European cities where he found the most work. A year later, in March 1969, he recorded A Lucky Songbook in Europe for MPS, one of the Continent’s great labels. The album would become one of Thompson’s finest works. Lucky Thompson’s first trip to Europe came in 1956, when he relocated to Paris. While he was there, he joined the reed section of Stan Kenton’s orchestra when Kenton was short a baritone saxophonist after Jack Nimitz failed to make the trans-Atlantic tour. When the Kenton orchestra returned to the States, Thompson recorded with the band on Cuban Fire starting in May. Overall, the tour was a rather awkward fit for Thompson, since by the 1950s, his instrumental poetry was better suited to smaller ensembles. The blessing for Thompson is that he fell hard for European life. He returned to Paris for an extended stay in ’57, which enabled him to play the city’s many clubs and tour regionally. He remained in Paris until late 1962, when he moved back to the States before his move to Switzerland in ’68.

If you look at Thompson’s years of migration, he couldn’t have picked worse times to relocate. He left the States in ’57 just as jazz recording was picking up following the release of the 12-inch LP in 1956 and launch of stereo in 1958. Then he returned to the States at the dawn of the pop-rock era, when recording work and gigs were drying up for jazz artists who weren’t household names or studio musicians. On the other hand, Thompson seemed to suffer from mental illness and depression, so a more tranquil, integrated environment with access to healthcare surely meant more than hustling for scraps of opportunity. The good news for Lucky is that Europe was his oyster and he was highly appreciated there, which kept him busy. He also was more comfortable in Europe as a creative artist. But as a result of his detachment from the U.S. jazz scene, Thompson was one of only a few jazz giants who really can’t be classified as a member of one jazz school or another. In essence, if you combine the toughness of Coleman Hawkins and relaxed tones and agility of Lester Young, you’d probably come close to Thompson’s sound. [Photo above of Lucky Thompson and British pianist Stan Tracey]

Thompson also was magnificently inventive as a composer and particularly graceful and slippery on song introductions and improvisational passages. He had great training. Thompson had worked with Count Basie in 1944 and ’45 and then Boyd Raeburn in ’45, two challenging bands. He also worked and recorded with plenty of small groups, including dates with Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie. On March 13, 1969, after a flurry of written pleas by the team at MPS in Germany, Thompson finally agreed to record an album for the label at its studios in Villingen, in the Black Forest. Thompson, it turns out, was a perfectionist and something of a gentle control freak. According to the original liner notes for A Lucky Songbook in Europe by album producer Joachim Berendt (above), Thompson hand-picked each musician and insisted they be on the date. The album featured Lucky Thompson (ts,sop), Fats Sadi (vib,bgo), Ingfried Hoffman (org), Rene Thomas (g), Eberhard Weber (b) and Stu Martin (d). Guitarist Rene Thomas (above) and vibist Fats Sadi were Belgians and essential, Thompson said. In a series of letters between Thompson and MPS, Thompson said of Thomas, “Rene is very much worthy of the wonderful comments I had heard about him.” And of Sadi: “He is a must for our session. For not only does he come fully prepared to give 100% of himself but he is always in full possession of a big humor and great spirit.”

Five of the seven songs recorded for A Lucky Songbook in Europe were originals by Thompson while two Street of Dreams and Easy Living were standards. Thompson plays soprano sax on four of the tracks Lady Gail, Street of Dreams, Soul City and Easy Listening and tenor on the balance. Thompson took up the soprano sax during his first European stay between 1957 and late 1962. For the original album, Lucky wrote notes explaining his choices for each song. Perhaps the most telling and revealing were his comments for Sauvabelin: “Sauvabelin is the name of a very beautiful park here in Lausanne, where I often go, and especially so during some of my most depressing moments. For it is there I can be completely sure to find some real friends, who unfortunately are better known as animals. As as a personal gesture for their friendship and the many moments of happiness they always give to me, I composed Sauvabelin, which I do sincerely hope shall please them.” This is an extraordinary album, and I spent much of the weekend listening to it over and over again while writing. There isn’t a bad note or a dull phrase on the entire session. It’s just Lucky Thompson in all his glory recorded by a label that truly understood him and the nuances of jazz. https://jazz.fm/lucky-thompson-on-mps/

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Lucky Thompson; Bass – Eberhard Weber; Bongos, Congas, Vibraphone – Sadi; Guitar – René Thomas; Organ – Ingfried Hoffmann

A Lucky Songbook in Europe

Archie Shepp, Jason Moran - Let My People Go

Styles: Saxophone And Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 94:42
Size: 218,5 MB
Art: Front

( 8:20) 1. Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child
( 6:10) 2. Isfahan
( 6:41) 3. He Cares
( 7:01) 4. Go Down Moses
(13:13) 5. Wise One
( 8:48) 6. Lush Life
( 8:31) 7. Round Midnight
( 3:12) 8. Ain't Misbehavin' - Bonus Track
(12:59) 9. Jitterbug Waltz - Bonus Track
( 9:38) 10. Ujama - Bonus Track
( 6:11) 11. Slow Drag - Bonus Track
( 3:51) 12. Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child - Edit

Now an octogenarian, Archie Shepp's name is quite often spoken in the same sentence as that of John Coltrane. Shepp was born a decade after Trane and is associated with the great one's 'New Thing' and 'Fire Music.' His music though, post-Ascension (Impulse!, 1965), might be better equated to that of Billie Holiday, who was born, incidentally, a decade before Coltrane. Just as Holiday presented her music (especially in the later years) in a frank, warts-and-all manner, Shepp has for decades produced his message with a stark, candid and almost fragile delivery.

This fragility, or better yet vulnerability, is the essence Shepp cognoscenti covet. His unguardedness is on full display in these seven duos with Jason Moran. Culled from performances in 2017 and 2018, they draw a direct reference to the duos Shepp produced with Horace Parlan in the 1980s. Like the Parlan dates, this duo leans heavily on spirituals and standards. "Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child," finds Shepp's soprano saxophone following the reverent opening by Moran, before Shepp sings the lyrics. The pair's performance builds upon Paul Robeson's rendition with a weight of world weariness. The same can be said of "Go Down Moses," which is delivered as a slow cortège of notes and voice. The pair tackle two Ellington-Strayhorn standards "Isfahan" and "Lush Life." The latter recalls the Coltrane and Johnny Hartman version from 1963, yet gets stripped down to its essential elements. The same approach is taken on Thelonious Monk's "Round Midnight," where Moran works from an unembellished framework and Shepp's tenor saxophone retells the much-loved story to listeners. Listeners have consumed it many times before, yet are keen for this comfort food. The highlight here may be Coltrane's "Wise One," where the two stretch out a bit on the thirteen-minute rendition. Shepp's tenor is robust yet delicate, and Moran's approach gets roisterous in support. This hour of music will certainly leave listeners wanting more.~ Mark Corroto https://www.allaboutjazz.com/let-my-people-go-archie-shepp-and-jason-moran-archie-ball-records

Personnel: Archie Shepp: saxophone; Jason Moran: piano.

Let My People Go

Wednesday, March 10, 2021

Willie Nelson - That's Life

Styles: Vocal, Country
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:46
Size: 81,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:35) 1. Nice Work If You Can Get It
(2:25) 2. Just In Time
(2:54) 3. Cottage For Sale
(3:34) 4. I've Got You Under My Skin
(2:52) 5. You Make Me Feel So Young
(3:25) 6. I Won't Dance (feat. Diana Krall)
(3:39) 7. That's Life
(3:04) 8. Luck Be a Lady
(2:58) 9. In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning
(3:31) 10. Learnin' the Blues
(3:44) 11. Lonesome Road

Honoring the enduring inspiration of Frank Sinatra, That's Life is Willie Nelson s second album of classics made famous by The Chairman Of The Board. Willie's first ode to Frank, 2018's My Way, earned Willie the Grammy for Best Traditional Pop Solo Album, and That's Life finds Nelson (who has penned a few standards himself) inhabiting 11 more of the most treasured songs in the Great American Songbook including the title track, "Luck Be A Lady," "Nice Work If You Can Get It," "I've Got You Under My Skin," "You Make Me Feel So Young," and "I Won't Dance" (a duet featuring Diana Krall). Produced by Buddy Cannon and Matt Rollings, That's Life was recorded at Capitol Studios in Hollywood--where Frank Sinatra, created a string of album masterpieces with additional recording at Pedernales Studios in Austin, Texas. Willie delivers 11 new studio performances, coming alive in a musical landscape animated by lush string and vibrant horn arrangements on an album mixed by recording industry legend Al Schmitt (who's recorded and mixed more than 150 gold and platinum albums and won more Grammy Awards than any other engineer or mixer). The album cover features a brand new painting of Willie and his iconic guitar, Trigger, standing in the glow of a twilight streetlamp, evoking classic Sinatra album covers of yore.~ Opiniones Editoriales https://www.amazon.com/Thats-Life-Willie-Nelson/dp/B08Q6LPZLV

That's Life

Tuesday, March 9, 2021

Frank Sinatra - That's Life

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1966
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 25:34
Size: 60,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:07) 1. That's Life
(2:16) 2. I Will Wait For You
(2:16) 3. Somewhere My Love (Lara's Theme)
(2:27) 4. Sand And Sea
(2:30) 5. What Now My Love
(2:36) 6. Winchester Cathedral
(2:11) 7. Give Her Love
(2:40) 8. Tell Her (You Love Her Each Day)
(2:31) 9. The Impossible Dream (The Quest)
(2:57) 10. You're Gonna Hear From Me

Following the across-the-board success of Strangers in the Night, That's Life continued Frank Sinatra's streak of commercially successful albums that straddled the line between traditional and contemporary pop music. Adding more pop music techniques to his repertoire of show tunes, That's Life made contemporary pop concessions while satisfying Sinatra's own taste for weightier, more respected material. Although it was a pop-oriented record, Sinatra had not begun to rely on rock-influenced productions; instead, arranger/conductor Ernie Freeman contributed charts that alternated between bluesy, brassy swingers and mildly schmaltzy string arrangements, supported by an overbearing backing chorus. While the title track was the hardest blues Sinatra ever tried, that approach wasn't attempted for the entire album. A few tracks particularly a rearrangement of the New Vaudeville Band's campy "Winchester Cathedral" and the static version of "The Impossible Dream" fall flat, but the album works when Sinatra is either tearing into the song (like "That's Life") or coaxing life out of mid-level ballads like "You're Gonna Hear from Me." ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine https://www.allmusic.com/album/thats-life-mw0000650778

That's Life

Monday, March 8, 2021

Michael Musillami, Rich Syracuse - Dig

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:59
Size: 101,1 MB
Art: Front

(7:17) 1. C Minor Blues Chase
(6:01) 2. Twelve Tone Tune
(5:31) 3. Blue in Green
(7:31) 4. Nardis
(7:21) 5. All Blues
(3:39) 6. How My Heart Sings
(6:35) 7. Bill's Hit Tune

Guitarist Michael Musillami and bassist Rich Syracuse continue their engagement with the titans of the jazz world with Dig, their homage to Bill Evans. Like the discs that preceded it, Of The Night (Playscape, 2016), dedicated to Wayne Shorter and Bird Calls (Playscape, 2017), their salute to Charles Mingus, the duo approach this repertoire with both reverence and imagination, producing treatments that avoid simply capitulating to Evans' genius by opening his tunes to creative scrutiny.

It's noteworthy that the album leads off with a couple oftunes that are decidedly not among Evans' most storied compositions. "C Minor Blues Chase" was never recorded by Evans, and "Twelve Tone Tune" only surfaced on The Bill Evans Album (Columbia, 1971), arguably after his peak years were behind him. But they do have Evans' characteristic harmonic invention and rhythmic subtlety, both of which are captured wonderfully by Musillami and Syracuse. The two converse in avid dialogue, moving from written to improvised parts seamlessly, with enough lyricism to remind us of Evans but still maintaining their artistic independence. Musillami's gorgeous tone is so easy on the ears that it's hard not to be lulled by it, thereby overlooking the first-rate technique and virtuosity he brings to the instrument. And Syracuse's fleet scamperings are vital in the gripping exchanges making up "Twelve Tone Tune," bringing to mind Evans' original bass prodigy, Scott LaFaro, in his ability to play with such rhythmic fluidity and melodic freedom.

The more well-known tunes appear next, with "Blue in Green," "Nardis," and "All Blues" revealing the deep mutuality between Evans and Miles Davis, the latter of whom wrote all three pieces (perhaps with co-authorship in the case of "Blue in Green," at least as claimed by Evans). "Nardis" is the most striking of the three, played initially with only the most tenuous references to the tune's melody, as Musillami and Syracuse deconstruct the piece masterfully, Syracuse's arco bass interacting with Musillami's spartan lines to produce a brooding atmosphere before the duo turn the piece loose with some fierce swing as the melody fully emerges. But that's not to take anything away from the crystalline beauty of "Blue in Green" or the crunchy groove of "All Blues," both of which are delightful. One can tell that Musillami in particular really enjoyed getting to strut a bit on "All Blues," showcasing a grittier side to his playing than is otherwise found on the album.

Earl Zindars' "How My Heart Sings" is another trademark Evans cut, with the tune's memorable melody given faithful adherence here with an up-tempo rendition that gives both players ample solo space, even though at under four minutes it's the album's shortest track. And finally, with "Bill's Hit Tune" we have as a closer yet one more under-recognized Evans piece, and Syracuse's rich arco gracefully announces the emotion-laden theme as the duo conclude the album with warmth and heartfelt devotion to one of jazz's greatest artists.~ Troy Dostert https://www.allaboutjazz.com/dig-michael-musillami-playscape-recordings-review-by-troy-dostert.php

Personnel: Michael Musillami: guitar; Rich Syracuse: bass.

Dig

Kari Kirkland - Wild Is the Wind

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:47
Size: 128,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:12) 1. Do It Again
(4:45) 2. Jealous
(3:22) 3. It's Alright With Me
(4:44) 4. It's Probably Me
(3:22) 5. Break Your Heart
(6:17) 6. Too Late Now
(5:43) 7. Wild Is The Wind
(4:34) 8. Steamroller Blues
(3:53) 9. Too Close For Comfort
(5:03) 10. Secret
(4:10) 11. Everybody Wants To Rule The World
(4:37) 12. I'll Be Around

Performing on flying trapeze and aerial bungee came naturally to vocalist Kari Kirkland, a former Ironman Triathlete competitor and daughter of an Olympic-drafted swimmer. “Live music is not unlike Flying Trapeze; one must be confident, fully engaged, and ideally, joyful.” says the former co-owner of Emerald City Trapeze Arts. After eight years in Seattle working as a professional circus artist, the mystery of the Southern California desert beckoned. She left the dazzle of the circus and the death-defying practice behind to become a full-time musician. Kari remarks, “There is inherent magic in the desert… a stillness and an energy that coexist like nowhere else on earth. What better place to be an artist?” Kari’s debut album, Wild is the Wind, was inspired in part by David Bowie’s performance of the title track. “It’s been one of my favorite songs since I was 18”, says Kari. “I heard an interview with Bowie where he considered his version (an homage to Nina Simone), to be the closest to his ‘true’ voice ever recorded. I had a chance meeting with him in Vancouver, BC in 1997. I told him how inspired I was by “Wild is the Wind,” and we had a laugh because he said it was recorded almost exactly when I was born.” This idea of the “true voice” intrigued Kari, having spent most of her life in bands singing to suit the occasion. She wanted to get deeper inside the songs and allow her emotions derived from the lyrics to drive the vocal performance.

The collection of contemporary and jazz standard songs on the album have more in common than one might notice at first glance. Kari remarks, “the majority of songs are about unrequited or forbidden love. For me, this kind of love is rooted in pain. It’s easy to access the idea of pain, but very difficult to genuinely express it. Producer Shelly Berg would come into the booth just before a take, and we’d talk through the lyrics and share stories that connected with the song. He helped me achieve a sentimentally-raw state, allowing me to deliver a performance that was authentically painful, and occasionally playful.” In the gospel-inspired ‘Jealous’ and the contemplative and orchestral ‘I’ll Be Around’, the emotion is palpable. “I couldn’t get through either song without crying. We tried a few takes, took a few breaks, and still, the tears would come at the close. In the end, we kept the original takes. Those performances felt powerful, and thoroughly cathartic”, remembers Kari. Drawing from a darker underworld of emotions, ‘Do It Again’, ‘Secret’, and ‘Steamroller Blues’ gave Kari a chance to untether a sultrier, sexier vocal that spoke to a more visceral part of her.

The Canadian-born daughter of two working musicians from the US, Kari’s simple and acutely lean childhood was spent crisscrossing North America by car. Music was a part of nearly every day, and Kari learned to find her own way in a world filled with adult companionship. She was home-schooled on the road by her mother and learned to play the piano under her father’s encouragement, practicing scales and playing by ear before and after her parents’ performances each night. Non-travel days were spent picking out books and cassette tapes from the dollar bins in mom-and-pop stores. Desiring nothing more than to be like other kids her age, her favorites were Judy Blume (for the sheer teenage angst), and George Michael (to rebel against a conservative upbringing), respectively. She fastidiously studied her parents on stage and sang made-up melodies into a cassette recorder in hotel bathrooms or nestled in a sleeping bag in the back seat. At 19, she wrote her first complete song, and began playing with a pop band in Vancouver, BC. Kari played in various pop, rock, cabaret, and jazz groups through the early 2000’s in Canada and the US. She moved to Europe in 2003 where she spent 4 years writing, recording, and performing.

In 2012, while working in Seattle as a private chef by day, and performing original music at night, Kari signed up for a Flying Trapeze class. “My friend wanted to try it, and when her birthday rolled around, I decided I would take the leap with her.”, recalls Kari. That birthday gift would change her life in every way. The afternoon of her Flying Trapeze class, Kari met her husband in midair. He owned a circus school and performance venue in downtown Seattle and opened his arms and his heart to Kari. In true Big Top fashion, they married (one year to the day later), after performing on the Flying Trapeze for their 150 guests. Their wedding was filmed for TLC’s “Four Weddings”, and with a grand entrance spiraling down by one wrist from 40 feet above the ceremony altar, Kari set foot on a completely new stage: the circus.

Together, she and her husband, Gary produced large-scale theatrical circus shows with Kari at the creative helm. Whether coaching flying trapeze students from a platform suspended 30 feet off the ground or performing at private corporate events for the likes of DocuSign, Microsoft, Google, and Amazon, the husband and wife team were profoundly and happily busy. Her musical career took a back seat for a while until Gary stepped in. Searching for a sound that felt like the perfect fit for Kari’s voice, Gary contacted composer, pianist, and Grammy nominee Shelly Berg to see if he would consider working on a demo recording with Kari. Sight unseen, and with what Shelly would later describe as “just a feeling that I should do it”, he agreed to meet with Kari. After a cinematic, midnight meeting and impromptu musical hang at Shelly’s house in Coral Gables, Florida, he agreed to arrange and produce a 6-song EP. Shelly pulled together Phil Ramone’s rhythm section and booked United Recording in Los Angeles for the sessions. With perhaps the most recorded guitar player on the planet, Dean Parks, as well as Kevin Axt of the Tierney Sutton Band on bass, Sinatra’s drummer, Gregg Field, and Shelly himself on the piano, six songs were recorded over two afternoons. The energy at that session was so powerful that they decided to expand the EP into a full album.

The group agreed to meet again in November 2016 to record six more songs. Acclaimed percussionist Brian Kilgore was brought in to add percussion, and three-time Grammy winner John Daversa laid down a trumpet track on the album’s opening song, “Do It Again.” The project was engineered and mixed by Don Murray in LA and mastered by Paul Blakemore in Nashville. One special guest on the album came about through some of the same “magic” as the original meeting with Shelly: Roy Hargrove. Kari describes their first encounter: “After playing a late set at Jazz Alley in Seattle, Roy was coming out of the green room as I was coming out of the ladies’ room. We very nearly walked right into each other. I told him how much I had enjoyed his set, and that it was an honor to meet him. We chatted for a while, and in a moment of sheer boldness (which is most unlike me), I asked if he would play on my album. He looked me right in the eye, kind of shook his head and chuckled, and said ‘Yeah, man. Send my manager a message and let’s set it up.’ A few months later, I found myself in John Lee’s studio in New Jersey, sitting at the kitchen table with Roy. We spent the day working on the track, “Too Late Now.” A year and a half later, he was gone. I feel so fortunate. Though I never got to see him again, Roy’s presence on the album is an eternal reminder of his generosity and his love for music… even a complete stranger’s.”

Citing early vocal inspiration from Joni Mitchell, Kate Bush, and Linda Ronstadt, Kari’s vocal style and phrasing has been coined as “unique” by arrangers and producers alike. “In my teens, I listened to a wide array of artists; XTC, The Pretenders, Prince, The Police, Peter Gabriel, The Smiths, and The Band all stand out as influential in terms of melody, structure, and attitude. It was the iconic female song-stylists, though, that shaped me as a singer. In making Wild is the Wind, I drew from my deep admiration of Nancy Wilson, Eva Cassidy, and Julie London to bring forth a sound and a style that I hoped would do these songs justice.”

The album is rooted in jazz, but crosses over into Adult Contemporary, Pop, Blues, a little bit of Latin, and Cabaret. The American Songbook is lovingly featured with “It’s Alright With Me”, “Too Close For Comfort”, and “I’ll Be Around”, while more contemporary songs like “Everybody Wants To Rule The World”, “Secret”, and “Jealous” find a new and distinct sound. Kari’s voice is sultry and sensual, gently finding its place among the at times ethereal, at times straight-ahead swinging arrangements by Shelly Berg.

Wild is the Wind will be released on Slea Head Records. Slea Head, on the west coast of Ireland, is a geographical stepping-off point in Europe, where ships left Ireland for the new world. “People took a leap of faith, leaving behind family, friends, their land, and a life that they understood, for somewhere and something completely unknown,” says Kari. “I love the symmetry of that in my own life.” Having left the Circus in the Pacific Northwest in 2019, Kari now lives in the desert, where, after a lifetime of searching, she’s finally found home. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/karikirkland

Wild Is the Wind

Sunday, March 7, 2021

Claire Martin - The Very Best of Claire Martin: Every Now and Then

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:35
Size: 154,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:29) 1. When the Sun Comes Out
(4:44) 2. Be Cool
(4:43) 3. It's Always Four A.M.
(6:18) 4. Partners in Crime
(5:27) 5. Summer (Estate)
(4:09) 6. No Moon at All
(4:28) 7. Chased Out
(2:04) 8. Off Beat - Live
(6:15) 9. Would You Believe? - Live
(4:13) 10. Devil's Gonna Get You
(4:32) 11. Riverman
(3:08) 12. The Waiting Game
(7:57) 13. More Than You'll Ever Know
(4:03) 14. Any Place I Hang My Hat Is Home

Claire Martin has been one of the more outstanding new voices of the 1990's, not only in her native England, but in the US as well. For her eighth album for the British Linn label, Martin has decided to look back by compiling some selections from those previous releases and include some of the better offerings found on her Linn recording resume. It's interesting that while most of the musical agenda is made up of jazz tunes, most of them fall into the unfamiliar category. Martin makes it without using well known standards as a crutch. Good for her!

From her 1997 release Make This City Ours comes "Any Place I Hang My Hat Is Home" which offers some fine alto sax by Antonio Hart and piano by Gareth Williams. Her own "Devil's Gonna Get You" from her first album, the 1993 release Devil May Care gives some solo room to Jim Mullen on guitar and Arnie Somogyi on bass. The requisite nod to Latin rhythms comes with a swinging "Partners in Crime". One of the prettiest and most poignant ballads on the set is "It's Always Four A. M." from perhaps her finest CD, The Waiting Game. She does this with just Jonathan Gee's piano in support which sets off the purity of her voice. The thing that strikes one as each tune unfolds is Martin's amazing consistency. Whether the tune be from her first album, or from her last, the same high quality of interpretation and delivery remains intact. Recommended.~ Dave Nathan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/every-now-and-then-the-very-best-of-claire-martin-claire-martin-review-by-dave-nathan.php

Personel: Claire Martin - Vocals; Steve Melling, Jonathan Gee, Gareth Williams -Piano; Arnie Somogyi, Peter Washington - Bass; Clark Tracey, Greg Hutchinson, Jeremy Stacey, Ian Thomas - Drums; Mark Nightingale, Nichol Thomson - Trombone; Jim Mullen - Guitar; Antonio Hart - Alto Sax; Paul Stacey - Guitar/Bass Guitar/Keyboard; Robin Miller - Harmonica; Darragh Morgan, Anna Giddey, Brian Wright, Catherine Browning, Chris Payne - Violin; Charlotte Glasson, John Murphy, Sophie Sirota - Viola; Sarah Barker, Jo Richards - Cello; Mark Smith -Autoharp; Duncan Mackay, Alistair "Titch" Walker - Trumpet; Mornington Lockett - Tenor Sax; Robin Aspland - Wurlitzer; Andy Wallace - Hammond Organ

The Very Best of Claire Martin: Every Now and Then

Eldar Djangirov - Letter to Liz

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:05
Size: 117,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:23) 1. Amazing Grace
(3:25) 2. Waltz for Debby
(4:42) 3. I Remember Clifford
(4:30) 4. Here's That Rainy Day
(3:52) 5. All the Things You Are
(4:49) 6. For All We Know
(6:03) 7. Sophisticated Lady
(5:59) 8. Lullaby Fantazia
(5:43) 9. It Might As Well Be Spring
(5:15) 10. For Liz
(2:18) 11. Tiger Rag (Arr.By Art Tatum)

Hard bop/post-bop pianist Eldar Djangirov has accomplished something that the vast majority of jazz artists pianists or otherwise will never accomplish: he landed a contract with a major label (Sony Classical) when he still wasn't old enough to vote. It is not uncommon for people to learn to play jazz during their adolescent years (especially in Western Europe), but most of them won't record an album as a leader until they are in their twenties; many won't even be recorded as sidemen until after they reach their twenties. Djangirov, however, started recording as a leader when he was in his mid-teens, and had recorded three albums before his 18th birthday. Djangirov, an immigrant from what used to be the Soviet Union, brings an intriguing variety of bebop, hard bop, post-bop and swing influences to his work. The acoustic pianist (who also plays electric keyboards but is essentially straight-ahead in his approach) has been greatly affected by the clear, crystalline playing of Bill Evans, Dave Brubeck, Keith Jarrett, and Ahmad Jamal; like those musicians, he can be quite lyrical (sometimes in an impressionistic way). But he has also shown his appreciation of Oscar Peterson and Red Garland's funkiness at times, and his other influences range from McCoy Tyner to Bud Powell to pre-bop master Art Tatum. A Djangirov solo might acknowledge anything from Thelonious Monk's angularity to Garland's use of what musicians refer to as "block chords" (a technique that is easy for jazz listeners to recognize even if they don't understand the exact technical meaning of the term). Despite having recorded for Sony Classical, Djangirov is not a classical-oriented musician straight-ahead jazz is definitely his main focus. But like many jazz musicians, he has been influenced by the European classical tradition and can bring some of the Euro-classical vocabulary to his improvisations.

Djangirov was born on January 28, 1987 in Kyrgyzstan in the former Soviet Union, which did away with communism when he was only a child. At the age of five, he began studying the piano with his mother Tatiana Djangirov (who was a music teacher in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan). In 1996, a nine-year-old Eldar Djangirov performed at a jazz festival in Novosibirsk, Russia, where a visiting American jazz supporter named Charles McWhorter heard him for the first time. Feeling that the young pianist had a great deal of potential, McWhorter arranged for him to attend a summer camp at the Interlochen Center for the Arts in Michigan. Djangirov ended up staying in the United States; after leaving Michigan, he lived in Kansas City before making San Diego, CA his home. The improviser's first album, Eldar [D&D], was released in 2001, when he was 14; that disc was followed by the release of his sophomore disc, Handprints, in 2003. In 2004, Djangirov signed with Sony Classical and recorded his third album, which is also titled Eldar [Sony]; the album boasts John Patitucci on bass and Michael Brecker on tenor sax and was given a March 2005 release date. Two years later Eldar released Re-Imagination, which saw the pianist stretching out into solo acoustic piano and even electronica territory. Virtue appeared in 2009.
~ Alex Henderson https://www.allmusic.com/artist/eldar-mn0000648382/biography

Letter to Liz

Saturday, March 6, 2021

Dado Moroni Trio - What's New?

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:25
Size: 169,2 MB
Art: Front

(10:54) 1. What's New?
( 5:32) 2. Trawi
(16:05) 3. African Suite: the Market / The River / Ghanian Village
( 9:51) 4. Jamal
( 6:36) 5. Easy Living
( 9:18) 6. The Duck and the Duchess
( 7:58) 7. Skylark
( 7:08) 8. When Will the Blues Leave

As a pianist and composer, Dado Moroni is an elegant stylist whose post-Ahmad Jamal voicings and Gil Evans-styled arrangements even for small ensembles are singular in their subtle, suave grace and their quiet musical expertise. This trio date with a young rhythm section (Rosario Bonaccorso on bass and Gianni Cazzola on drums) is an amalgam of the familiar and ambitious for Moroni. His own compositions, which make up half the album, tend toward the inherently melodic side of his nature: There's the charming ostinato aplomb in "The Duck and the Duchess" and the multi-faceted chromatic gracefulness of "African Suite," which loops three different strains of rhythms around a complex harmonic structure that examines all the tones between B and D. And then there's the adventurous improviser who tackles the outrageously difficult melodic line in Ornette Coleman's "When Will the Blues Leave," which extrapolates a 12-bar blues and pours it into a fugue-like structure of flatted ninths. To temper the two poles, there are readings of Hoagy Carmichael's "Skylark" done as an exercise in intervallic interplay and mode-shifting melodic exchange and a solid post-bop reading of Robin & Rainger's "Easy Living." This is piano trio jazz at its lyrical, exciting best.~ Thom Jurek https://www.allmusic.com/album/whats-new-mw0000422873

Personnel: Dado Moroni(p); Rosario Bonaccorso(b); Gianni Cazzola(ds)

What's New?

Friday, March 5, 2021

Dannie Richmond - 'In' Jazz for the Culture Set

Styles: Soul-Jazz
Year: 1965
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:28
Size: 70,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:10) 1. High Camp
(2:14) 2. Sweet Little Sixteen
(3:05) 3. Freedom Ride
(3:56) 4. The Spider
(2:40) 5. Blowin' In The Wind
(4:24) 6. Pfoonick
(4:52) 7. The Berkeley Underground
(3:55) 8. Mister Nashville
(2:09) 9. John Kennedy Memory Waltz

As anyone who collects jazz records will very likely tell you, the rare ones are typically hard earned and usually accompanied by a story or two. Such is the case with the uncommon and definitely curious solo album that drummer Dannie Richmond cut for Impulse back in 1965. With shades of Any Warhol to be had via the Campbell’s soup cans on the cover, this oddity first caught my attention many years ago when shopping with one of my fellow collecting buddies. Housed in a five-car garage, a retired attorney by the name of Dan Link (that’s Mr. Jazz to those who knew him best, including drummer Kenny Washington) ran a record business that used to be a frequent stopping spot that always guaranteed pleasures and a quick fix. Foolishly I had passed by the album the first time out and even more rashly, described it to my buddy the next time out, who managed to find the proverbial needle in the haystack among thousands of boxes. Even several years later, I could not pry the album from his hands, despite the fact that my buddy claimed to not think much of it, playing it only one or two times.

Let’s now cut to the chase and lay out the details for one of the few albums the drummer ever recorded under his own name. The “in crowd” that Richmond assembles here includes pianist Jaki Byard and bassist Cecil McBee, with the guitars of Toots Thielemans and Jimmy Raney on various other cuts, not to mention some added Latin percussion on a trio of tracks. There’s definitely a quirky sound to these short cuts which owes as much to the tenor of the times as to the contributions of Byard, heard in rollicking stride fashion on of all things, Bob Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind”. Jimmy Raney’s “Freedom Ride” is one of the best cuts, its propulsive groove firmly established by Richmond and also featuring one of the few drum solos to be found on the record. Also worth mentioning are two Gary McFarland gems, namely “High Camp” and “Pfoofnick.” And let’s not forget the country twang that comes with Thieleman’s “Mister Nashville,” the idea being that pretty much anything goes when it come to this “in” jazz for the culture set. In the end, nothing all that dramatic will be found between the covers, but it’s a definite treat to hear some overlooked solo work from Byard, not to mention Thielemans’ guitar picking which has largely been overshadowed by his individualistic ways with the harmonica. But then, there’s a ‘60s vibe to the entire package, Campbell’s soup cans and all, which continues to endear itself to me every once in awhile when I get the turntable spinning. ~ C.Andrew Hovan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/dannie-richmond-in-jazz-for-the-culture-set-by-c-andrew-hovan.php

Personnel: Dannie Richmond – drums; Toots Thielemans – harmonica, guitar; Jaki Byard – piano; Jimmy Raney – guitar; Cecil McBee– bass; Willie Bobo, Victor Pantoja – percussion

'In'Jazz for the Culture Set

Chris Barber, Ottilie Patterson - Is it True 'Bout ..

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:44
Size: 85,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:32) 1. Dixie Cinderella
(3:09) 2. Porgy
(4:34) 3. Magnolia's Wedding Day
(2:26) 4. Doin' the Crazy Walk
(5:02) 5. New St. Louis Blues
(3:14) 6. Here Comes My Blackbird
(2:32) 7. Can't We Get Together
(3:49) 8. I Can't Give You Anything but Love
(3:31) 9. Sweet Savannah Sue
(3:16) 10. Diga Diga Doo
(2:34) 11. Baby

17 April 1930, Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, England. In the 40s Barber studied trombone and bass at the Guildhall School of Music, eventually choosing the former as his principal instrument (although he occasionally played bass in later years). In the late 40s he formed his first band, which, unusually, was formed as a co-operative. Also in the band were Monty Sunshine, Ron Bowden and Lonnie Donegan. By the early 50s the band had gained a considerable following but it was nevertheless decided to invite Ken Colyer to join. The move was musically promising but proved to be unsuccessful when the personalities involved clashed repeatedly. Eventually, Colyer left and was replaced by Pat Halcox. The vocalist Ottilie Patterson joined in 1954 when she was Barber’s girlfriend, (they married in 1959). In the mid-50s Barber also tried his hand at skiffle and his own Chris Barber Skiffle Group featured during this time Ron Bowden (drums), Dickie Bishop (vocals), and the powerful but nasal vocalist/guitarist Johnny Duncan. Barber played upright bass during this time, an instrument on which he is equally adept. Many years later, Paul McCartney’s recording of Bishop’s composition ‘No Other Baby’ was one of the highlights of his comeback rock ‘n’ roll set, Run Devil Run.Aided by remarkably consistent personnel, the Barber band was soon one of the UK’s leading traditional groups and was well placed to take advantage of the surge of interest in this form of jazz in the late 50s and early 60s. Barber experienced a ‘freak’ hit in the pop charts in 1959 when his arrangement of Sydney Bechet’s ‘Petite Fleur’ became a huge hit (No. 3 in the UK). The track was issued from a 1957 album to catch the boom that trad was experiencing. The clarinet solo was beautifully played by Monty Sunshine and remains a classic of the era. The decline in popularity of ‘trad’, which came on the heels of the beat group explosion, had a dramatic effect on many British jazz bands, but Barber’s fared much better than most.

This was owed in part to his astute business sense and also his keen awareness of musical trends and a willingness to accommodate other forms without compromising his high musical standards.In the 60s Barber changed the name of the band to the Chris Barber Blues and Jazz Band. Into the traditional elements of the band’s book he incorporated ragtime but also worked with such modern musicians as Joe Harriott. Among his most important activities at this time was his active promotion of R&B and the blues, which he underlined by bringing major American artists to the UK, often at his own expense. Through such philanthropy he brought to the attention of British audiences the likes of Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Brownie McGhee, Louis Jordan and Muddy Waters. Not content with performing the older blues styles, Barber also acknowledged the contemporary interest in blues evinced by rock musicians and audiences and hired such players as John Slaughter and Pete York (ex-Spencer Davis Group), who worked happily beside long-serving sidemen Halcox, Ian Wheeler, Vic Pitt and others. In the 70s, Barber focused more on mainstream music, showing a special affinity for small Duke Ellington -styled bands, and toured with visitors such as Russell Procope, Wild Bill Davis, Trummy Young and John Lewis. He also maintained his contact with his jazz roots and, simultaneously, the contemporary blues scene by touring widely with his Take Me Back To New Orleans show, which featured Dr. John. He happily entered his fifth decade as a band leader with no discernible flagging of interest, enthusiasm, skill or, indeed, of his audience. In 1991 he was awarded the OBE, the same year as Panama! was released, featuring the excellent trumpet playing of Wendell Brunious. As a trombone player, Barber’s work is enhanced by his rich sound and flowing solo style. It is, however, as band leader and trendspotter that he has made his greatest contribution to the jazz scene, both internationally and, especially, in the UK. https://www.oldies.com/artist-biography/Chris-Barber.html

R.I.P.

March 2, 2021

Born: April 17, 1930, Welwyn Garden City, United Kingdom

Is it True 'Bout Chris Barber & Ottilie Patterson?

Thursday, March 4, 2021

Nnenna Freelon - Blueprint Of A Lady

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:58
Size: 145,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:18) 1. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
(5:13) 2. What A Little Moonlight Can Do
(4:05) 3. Don't Explain
(5:21) 4. God Bless The Child
(2:21) 5. Strange Fruit
(2:52) 6. Willow Weep For Me
(4:48) 7. Balm In Gilead
(5:11) 8. Them There Eyes
(3:41) 9. Only You Will Know
(5:25) 10. You've Changed
(2:55) 11. Now Or Never
(4:14) 12. Lover Man
(5:02) 13. Left Alone
(1:32) 14. Interlude-Little Brown Bird
(5:54) 15. All Of Me

Nnenna Freelon's latest project pays tribute to singer Billie Holiday in the best possible way without imitation and putting her own interpretations on material written by or associated with Lady Day. Her band, adjusted to fit the mood of each song, skillfully complements her at every turn. Freelon's phrasing and vocal clarity contribute to an overall feeling that is more positive than Holiday's often dark and plaintive renditions of the same material. Interspersed within this tribute are three natural fits that don't come directly from the Holiday Songbook. "Only You Will Know and "Interlude-Little Brown Bird are original collaborations by Freelon and Brandon McCune that pay homage to Lady Day. The former, an intimate vocal-guitar duet with Andre Bush, enables Freelon to question aloud whether she should imitate Holiday's style or approach the project's material in a different manner. Holiday's answer in this imagined vocal dialogue was: "Sing until you know who you are and why you came... You may sing a Lady song, sweet drawl soft and low/but only if the song is you and only you will know.

The third is "Balm in Gilead a traditional African-American affirmation of faith, hope and optimism that enriches all of the other material. This duo version on which Freelon is accompanied by pianist McCune, leads into an uplifting and vibrant version of "Them There Eyes. Doug Lawrence's tenor sax offers a sublime conversational response to Freelon's vocals on "You've Changed and takes a different role on "Now Or Never by reinforcing and at times echoing her voice. Dave Ellis takes a more out-in-front complementary tenor role on the bluesy and soulful version of "Lover Man that follows. Julian Lage's guitar artistry sparkles throughout "Don't Explain and on several other tracks. "Left Alone presents a Holiday work she never recorded. Lady Day wrote it with the late Mal Waldron. Abbey Lincoln was the first vocalist to record the tune in 1961.

Freelon's vocals plus quartet version unearths the positives buried beneath Holiday's words about loneliness. "All of Me concludes this fine session with another twist a sultry reggae arrangement of the classic ballad.
~ Ken Franckling https://www.allaboutjazz.com/blueprint-of-a-lady-sketches-of-billie-holiday-nnenna-freelon-concord-music-group-review-by-ken-franckling.php

Personnel: Nnenna Freelon: vocals; Brandon McCune: piano: Fender Rhodes: Hammond B-3: trumpet; Wayne Batchelor: acoustic bass; Kinah Boto: drums; Beverly Botsford: percussion; Christian Scott: trumpet (1,2,8); Mary Fettig: alto and baritone saxes: alto flute (1,2); Dave Ellis (1,2,12) and Doug Lawrence (10,11): tenor sax; Julian Lage (3,8,11,15) and Andre Bush (9, duet with Nnenna): guitar; Jessica Ivry: cello (3,8).

Blueprint Of A Lady

Michael Dease - Give It All You Got

Styles: Trombone Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:43
Size: 133,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:47) 1. A Sliver Of Silver
(5:18) 2. The Next Level
(4:58) 3. Parker's Fancy
(5:23) 4. Word To The Wise
(5:58) 5. Dave's Boogie-Down
(6:08) 6. Ritmo De Brevard
(4:56) 7. Lake Toxaway Getaway
(5:58) 8. Zanderfied
(7:05) 9. Climb The Mountain
(6:08) 10. Transylvania County Funk Parade

Recalling many of those great Blue Note albums with trombonist Curtis Fuller and Art Blakey, Give It All You Got, the eighth Posi-Tone release by one of today’s leading voices on the trombone, Michael Dease, carries that infectious soul-jazz vibe and percolates with similar energy. Dease has appeared over 200 recordings wirh groups as diverse as Grammy winning artists David Sanborn, Christian McBride, Michel Camilo, and Alicia Keys. This one garners inspiration from his life in jazz education.. It focuses on North Carolina’s The Jazz Institute at Brevard Music Center, which is a two-week summer intensive workshop for 80 dedicated students that follow Dease’s custom-designed curriculum for traditional and progressive jazz study. Most of the musicians on the album are Brevard faculty members as well. The renowned trombonist and two-time Grammy award winner currently serves as Associate Professor of Jazz Trombone at the renowned Michigan State University jazz program and has also been on faculty at Queens College CUNY, The New School and Northeastern University. Many of Dease’s current and former students are enjoying successful careers in the music world. Always an informed, but forward-thinking musician, Dease learned the craft from trombone legends Wycliffe Gordon and Joseph Alessi and his extensive resume is far too reaching to cover in this space. Dease’s opener “Sliver of Silver” was inspired by a 2018 visit to Brevard by famed trumpeter Randy Brecker, who played with the piano icon when first coming up.

Throughout Alfredson’s sizzling B3 gives the proceedings a different color than those Blue Note recordings referenced earlier but this straight-ahead hard bop is terrific whether listening to Tardy’s tenor on “The Next Level” or the leader making his own poignant statements. “Parker’s Fancy,” written by drummer Luther S. Allison is not about Bird, but instead for Dr. Andrew Parker of the Institute. It’s familiar sounding groove fits as easily here as it could have in that glorious soul-jazz era of the early ‘60s with sparkling turns from trumpeter Stanco, Tardy, and the leader. Dease’s “Word to the Wise” is a mid-tempo piece with the leader in conversation with Alfredson until Tardy enters midway and the entire sextet brings it home. “Dave’s Boogie-Down,” as title suggests, is a white-hot burner, written by Alfredson but named for David Sanborn, with whom Dease toured extensively. This one features a blistering solo from altoist Sharel Cassity, one of Dease’s most inspired spots, with Tardy and Alfredson on fire as well, bringing it all to an explosive boil before the abrupt end. We then find the soothing Brazilian tones of “Ritmo De Brevard,” a nod to both Brazilian music and especially Dease’s mentor, the late Claudio Roditi as heard in the reverent tones near the end. “Lake Toxaway Getaway” is another Alfredson composition named for LakeToxaway Country Club where the jazz students from Brevard perform a 90-minute show as part of the curriculum. This is joyous tune, capturing the excitement of the students riding the “big ol’ white school bus” making the mountain climb to the site.

“Zanderfied,” named for the founders of the Institute, features an especially soulful Stanley Turrentine-like take from Tardy and the only guitar spot, a bluesy one, for Randy Alexander. “Climb the Mountain,” by Stanco, is Dease’s favorite track, as true to its name, it just keeps building, beginning rather calmly with turns from all three horns before Alfredson sets the stage for the crescendo, the last notes reflecting a deep exhale, as they have reached the summit. “Transylvania County Funk Parade,” the closer, written on the spot by Dease, is an ode to the collective band members roots in blues and soul. Tardy is on fire pushed by Owens Jr. Dease and Alfredson keep the cauldron boiling before the ensemble takes it out. In his notes Dease has this – “Dig these origins: Tardy/NOLA, Stanco/Detroit, Ulysess/JAX, Alfredson & Brooklyn/Lansing, Luther/Charlotte, Gwen/STL, Sharel/OKC, Napoleon/Ann Arbor (we’ll let that one slide) & Dease/Augusta, GA. These are places that like their Blues and Brevard’s Transylvania County is right in there.” This is one smoking session! Highly recommended.~ Jim Hynes https://www.makingascene.org/michael-dease-give-it-all-you-got/

Personel: Michael Dease – trombone; Anthony Stanco – trumpet/flugelhorn; Gregory Tardy – tenor saxophone; Jim Alfredson – organ; Ulysses Owens, Jr. – drums; Gwendolyn Dease – congas/triangle; Brooklyn Dease – percussion; Luther Allison – drums; Sharrel Cassity – alto saxophone; Randy Napoleon – guitar

Give It All You Got

Wednesday, March 3, 2021

Ralph Peterson and The Messenger Legacy - Legacy Alive, Vol. 6 at the Side Door

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop, Hard Bop
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 105:10
Size: 241,7 MB
Art: Front

(11:01) 1. A La Mode
(10:11) 2. Wheel Within a Wheel
( 7:45) 3. The Core
( 9:07) 4. My One and Only Love
( 8:38) 5. 3 Blind Mice
(11:49) 6. Blues March
(10:07) 7. In Case You Missed It
( 7:54) 8. Along Came Betty
( 6:53) 9. Children of the Night
( 8:51) 10. That Old Feeling
(12:49) 11. Caravan

Recorded loud and live at the Side Door Jazz Club in Old Lyme, CT, Ralph Peterson the last drummer to play side-by-side with the incomparable Art Blakey delivers an unstoppable two-disc hyperdrive swing-fest celebration of his mentor with Legacy Alive, Volume 6 at the Side Door. It's no deep state secret that Blakey, with his effortless and effusive glee, seamlessly bridged all of jazz's thrilling variants: '40's swing and blues; the nascent bop and hard bop of the '50s to the soaring, exploratory avant-garde of the '60's. Fletcher Henderson, Chick Webb and Mary Lou Williams to Thelonious Monk and McCoy Tyner, Blakey drove them all with his relentless spirit and snapping snare. So, to mark Blakey's centennial year and his own 57th, Peterson, his rhythmic intuitions and understandings of Blakey fully engaged, presents his frothy sextet: saxophonists Bill Pierce on tenor and Bobby Watson on alto, trumpeter Brian Lynch, bassist Essiet Essiet, and pianist Geoffrey Keezer and a raucous, eleven-song set of smoking tunes long associated with Blakey and any version of his Jazz Messengers. Peterson, Keezer, and Essiet blow the Side Door open with "A La Mode," and the momentum fiery, free, frenetic never lets up. Watson, himself a Blakey alum, contributes "Wheel Within A Wheel," a rolling hard-bop blazer that sets the stage for Freddie Hubbard's "The Core," a real showcase for the horns. And the hits keep coming! Rollicking takes of "3 Blind Mice," Benny Golson's signature "Blues March" and "Along Came Betty," Wayne Shorter's fervent "Children of the Night" and a set-closing jump-romp of Duke Ellington's "Caravan" serve to prove the fact that, on any given night, in any given club with the right combo, greatness can be heard.~ Mike Jurkovic https://www.allaboutjazz.com/legacy-alive-volume-6-at-the-side-door-ralph-peterson-onyx-music-label-review-by-mike-jurkovic.php

Personnel: Ralph Peterson: drums; Bobby Watson: saxophone; Bill Pierce: saxophone, Brian Lynch: trumpet; Geoffrey Keezer: piano; Essiet Essiet: bass.

R.I.P.
Born: May 20, 1962, Pleasantville, New Jersey, United States
Died: March 1, 2021

Legacy Alive, Vol. 6 at the Side Door

Dave Blenkhorn, Harry Allen - Under a Blanket of Blue

Styles: Saxophone And Guitar Jazz
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:08
Size: 108,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:05) 1. There's a Small Hotel
(5:17) 2. We'll Be Together Again
(4:23) 3. Dindi
(4:53) 4. Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered
(4:01) 5. Under a Blanket of Blue
(6:31) 6. Street of Dreams
(4:22) 7. La Mer
(4:13) 8. Imagination
(3:49) 9. The Bloody Happy Song
(4:29) 10. Solitude

Conceived from the same stressors catalyzing The Bloody Happy Song, Under A Blanket Of Blue added an additional level of complexity and challenge to the new COVID conception-production paradigm. In this case, Allen had been touring Europe with France-based, Australian guitarist Dave Blenkhorn in March 2020, when Allen received a telephone call from his wife, summoning him home due to the COVID travel ban to be instituted two days hence. Allen went home with a conversation he had with the guitarist in mind regarding recording at home ringing in his ears. So, with both musicians secure in their respective homes in New York City and Bordeaux, France, they recorded a collection of nine standards and one original (Allen's "The Bloody Happy Song" from the previous review) over a two-month period, working on one or two songs per week.

The two artists took a queue from classical music period performance specialists, deciding to go old school instrument and recording-wise. Allen recorded performing on a 1938 Selmer Balanced Action tenor saxophone captured through a Royer R10 ribbon microphone, while Blenkhorn used a 1958 Gibson 175 model guitar. A Django Reinhardt enthusiast, Blenkhorn brought a 1920 "Hot Club" vintage sound to the performances while maintaining Joe Pass-inspired walking-bass figures interspersed among his tasteful chording. That guitar environment proved to be money for Allen, who played at the top of his form.. Novel conception and recording method apart, the musical duet is the most intimate performance setting. It requires that two individuals cooperate and coalesce artistically, creating something not heard before. Sure, all of the songs in this recital have been performed and recorded every which way, some many times, before. But these songs as presented by Harry Allen and Dave Blenkhorn re freshly minted That alone makes them special, unique. Casual and close, the two musicians bring music together from across an open.

The repertoire is tried and true, with the closing songs defining the collection: Victor Young's 1932 "Street of Dreams" receives a breezy introduction from Blenkhorn before assimilating a first timid Allen into its confines. The song gathers swing density ending on a well conceived coda. Charles Trenet's "La Mer" (Columbia, 1946) bounces with tuneful glee, with Allen gently coaxing the melody through the harmonic underpinning provided by Blenkhorn's guitar. Jimmy Van Heusen's "Imagination" rubs its baladic backside against Allen's original "The Bloody Happy Song" reprised here from the same-titled recording above. The two end with an introverted performance of Duke Ellington "Solitude," proving again that the Great American Songbook continue tp provide an endless source of inspiration.~ C.Michael Bailey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/harry-allen-tenor-saxophone-in-the-time-of-covid-harry-allen

Personnel: Harry Allen (ts), Dave Blenkhorn (g)

Under a Blanket of Blue