Monday, May 3, 2021

Perry Smith Quintet - New Angel

Size: 124,7 MB
Time: 53:44
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Rise And Fall (7:01)
02. Deep Water (6:45)
03. New Angel (7:30)
04. Lullaby For Freedom (1:20)
05. Monk's World (6:23)
06. Notes For Nostalgia (0:45)
07. The Old Road (8:41)
08. Graceful Spirit (6:37)
09. Lucid Night (7:16)
10. Hope For Peace (1:22)

At the core of everything that guitarist/composer Perry Smith does is the desire to create personal and musical connections with the artistic community. That’s true of the community he’s built around his inclusive weekly series in Brooklyn, “The Nest Session;” it’s behind his decision to use social media as a means of reaching out, not cutting off. And it lies at the very heart of his third album as a leader, New Angel — both in the close relationships he shares with his bandmates and in his desire to make the sometimes heady concepts of modern jazz something accessible and deeply personal.

New Angel marks the debut of the gifted guitarist’s stellar new quintet, which features saxophonist Jon Irabagon, pianist Glenn Zaleski, bassist Matt Aronoff and drummer Allan Mednard. While they’ve all played together in a variety of contexts, Smith’s decision to bring together this particular group stems directly from their shared experiences at Nest Sessions jams, which he and Aronoff have co-led for more than three years.

The band’s thrilling chemistry is vividly apparent from the opening moments of “Rise and Fall,” whose title makes the tune’s shifting moods and tempos sound deceptively simple. The gentle, memorable melody is prime evidence of Smith’s gift for crafting compositions that embrace the listener while providing plenty of spark for improvisation.

“Deep Water” is a much knottier outing; its title, in fact, reflects the challenge that confronts the quintet in its harmonic complexity and sharp, treacherous angles. “Playing this song can feel like, ‘We’re in deep water right now,'” Smith admits. “That’s always been a tradition in jazz: the idea that you’re pushing yourself to try to explore something new while still trying to create something musical.”

If the title track seems to hang in the air like an unanswered question, that may be due to the fact that it’s the earliest piece on the album, one that Smith started working on as he turned 30, met the woman who would become his wife, and found himself facing many of the larger “what ifs” in life. “New Angel” may be a reference to his now-wife, but more broadly it’s a reference to a spirit of freshness and change.

The spikiness of “Monk’s World” immediately evokes the keen-edged genius and eyebrow-arched joy of the great Thelonious Monk. Smith wrote the piece on the chord changes of Monk’s classic “Epistrophy” as a way of paying homage to the legendary pianist’s outsized influence. “In my experience on the jazz scene in New York,” Smith says, “musicians are always more excited about playing Monk’s tunes than anybody else’s — more than even Coltrane or Wayne Shorter or Herbie. I think it has to do with the playful nature of his songs and the cool, creative melodies that he wrote, which open a lot of freedom in the landscape.”

Presaged by Smith’s introspective, soulful “Notes for Nostalgia,” “The Old Road” is a wistful rumination on the composer’s early days growing up in the California Bay Area. A similarly reflective spirit pervades “Lucid Night,” where the incisive melody suggests a certain brooding clarity.

“Graceful Spirit” returns the album to the theme of connection and community. It was specifically inspired by the eloquence and example of former President Barack Obama, but more generally muses on the idea of grace and empathy as powerful and necessary qualities in a leader — whether of the free world or of a scintillating and passionate jazz quintet.

New Angel

Eddie Daniels & Roger Kellaway - Duke at the Roadhouse: Live in Santa Fe

Styles: Clarinet, Saxophone and Piano Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:54
Size: 117,1 MB
Art: Front

(7:05)  1. I'm Beginning to See the Light
(4:31)  2. Creole Love Call
(7:33)  3. Perdido
(3:22)  4. Duke At The Roadhouse
(6:20)  5. In a Mellow Tone
(9:09)  6. In a Sentimental Mood
(5:27)  7. Duke in Ojai
(4:47)  8. Mood Indigo
(2:38)  9. It Don't Mean a Thing

For a powerful adrenaline rush, it's hard to beat a full house (sixteen or seventeen single-minded musicians wailing in unison and swinging like there's no tomorrow), although there's a lot to be said for a pair of aces, too. That's the hand that's dealt on Duke at the Roadhouse: Live in Santa Fe, the aces in question being clarinetist / tenor saxophonist Eddie Daniels and pianist Roger Kellaway (with cellist James Holland raising the ante as a wild card on four numbers). As the title denotes, this is music for the most part associated with Duke Ellington, amplified by one original apiece by Daniels ("Duke at the Roadhouse") and Kellaway ("Duke in Ojai"). Ellington wrote (or co-wrote) seven numbers, the odd song out being Juan Tizol's "Perdido."

Daniels penned "Roadhouse" to honor a time in 1966 when, as a new member of the Thad Jones / Mel Lewis Orchestra, he was invited to play in a jam session with Ellington at a nightclub in Greenwich Village, an experience he has never forgotten. While Kellaway doesn't say what led him to write "Duke in Ojai," there must be a story there too. Daniels, who has become almost a full-time clarinetist since his tenure with the Jones / Lewis Orchestra, shows on "In a Mellow Tone" and "Sophisticated Lady" that he can still wield a mean tenor sax. He has "Lady" to himself (with Kellaway comping trimly), and his unaccompanied intro, lasting a minute and a half, is a gem among gems. Also worth noting is how easily Kellaway, who can swing with the best of them, slips into Ellington's more high-toned dinner jacket to produce subtle motifs that blend erudition with elegance.

The duo cut loose only on the closing theme, "It Don't Mean a Thing," and even here the customary exuberance is held somewhat in check, perhaps in deference to the session's sobriety quotient. In every respect, the temper is unmistakably Ellingtonian, from "I'm Beginning to See the Light" through "Creole Love Call," "Perdido," "In a Sentimental Mood," "Mood Indigo," Daniels' tenor showpieces and the two originals. The addition of a cello, suggested by Daniels, was enthusiastically endorsed by Kellaway, who wrote Holland's solos (he takes a couple) in advance. The album was (superbly) recorded in October 2012 at Santa Fe's Lensic Theatre as a benefit for the city's Center for Therapeutic Riding, which uses horses to help young people with disabilities recuperate. Whatever the cause, Daniels and Kellaway have dealt themselves a winning hand, one that is well worth betting on. ~ Jack Bowers  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/duke-at-the-roadhouse-live-in-santa-fe-eddie-daniels-ipo-recordings-review-by-jack-bowers.php#.VD8LAxawTP9
 
Personnel: Eddie Daniels: clarinet, tenor saxophone; Roger Kellaway: piano; James Holland: cello.

Mike Levine - Just Chillin'

Styles: Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:58
Size: 124,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:24) 1. Let's Do This
(4:08) 2. Gliding
(3:45) 3. Reflection
(4:39) 4. Miami
(3:39) 5. Just Chillin
(3:41) 6. I Found You
(4:36) 7. Summer
(3:27) 8. Soul Gumbo
(3:43) 9. Eleanor Rigby
(4:32) 10. Star Gazing (Vocal Version)
(3:53) 11. Simple Samba
(3:48) 12. Nice and Easy
(5:38) 13. On Ramp

A proponent of the more relaxing side of the jazz spectrum, pianist and keyboardist Mike Levine presents his fourth album as leader, offering thirteen primarily original pieces falling decidedly within the smooth jazz category. A talented composer, Levine's music seems to eschew the core jazz tenet of improvisation in favor of catchy melodies perfect for those chilling-out moments that overwhelm us all sooner or later. A first-call musician by anyone's count, Levine draws on his vast experience performing in various genres and in many formats from trios to big band in designing this special album. A well-established artist in Miami and the south Florida area, he calls on thirty musicians, playing in different formats, to complete this effort. From flautist Nestor Torres, and saxophonist Andy Snitzer to altoist Ed Calle as well as guitarists Steve Oliver and Randy Bernsen, among them. In reaching out to friends, including several musicians from the talent-rich Miami jazz scene, Levine assembles an impressive cast.

Opening up with the apropriately titled "Let's Do This," Levine and band do just that on a lively, percussive chart featuring Snitzer, whose exquisite solo moments slide right into the second piece, "Gliding," where guitarist Oliver takes over the tune with his light string work on a charming chart. The pianist's melodic lines come shining through. Paying tribute to the city he has called home for a long time, Levine plays joyfully and humbly on his own "Miami," accompanied well by the great Nestor Torres. Definitely a shoulder-moving number, the title track is one of the keepers of the set featuring the leader on keyboards. Other like tunes include "I Found You," "Summer" and "Star Gazing," featuring a vocal duet from LeNard Rutledge and Wendy Petersen.

The doctor is in the house when Dr. Ed Calle lends his high-pitch alto saxophone on the rousing "Soul Gumbo." Levine provides a delicate touch on Lennon-McCartney's "Eleanor Rigby" with fusion guitarist Aaron Lebos powering the track with his rock-styled riffs. The relaxing tunes wind down the set on the stellar "Simple Samba" and "Nice and Easy," and closes with "On Ramp," bringing one marvelous session to a smooth ending. But not for long: Mike Levine's Just Chillin is one of those albums that creates a distinct musical appetite which only repeated spins can satisfy.~ Edward Blanco https://www.allaboutjazz.com/just-chillin-mike-levine-self-produced

Personnel: Mike Levine: piano; Andy Snitzer: saxophone; Steve Oliver: guitar; Ed Calle: saxophone; Will Lee: bass; Nestor Torres: flute; Randy Bernsen: guitar; Lindsey Blair: guitar; Wendy Petersen: voice / vocals; Lee Levin: drums; Richard Bravo: percussion; Carlomagno Araya: drums; Jimmy Madina: percussion; Dan Warner: guitar; Aaron Lebos: guitar; Rene Toledo: guitar; Nicky Orta: bass, electric; Rafael Valencia: bass; Julio Hernandez: bass; LeNard Rutledge: voice / vocals.

Just Chillin'

Stephan Thelen - Fractal Guitar 2

Styles: Guitar Jazz, Fusion
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:46
Size: 169,3 MB
Art: Front

(14:08) 1. Cosmic Krautrock
( 7:58) 2. Fractal Guitar 2
(12:03) 3. Mercury Transit
(14:54) 4. Ladder To The Stars
(12:29) 5. Celestial Navigation
(12:12) 6. Point Orf Inflection

Guitarist and composer Stephan Thelen's Fractal Guitar (MoonJune Records, 2018) found him stepping outside of his role in the band Sonar in a big way. An absolute feast of multiple guitars with electronic effects, live looping and soundscaping, it also featured a star-studded group of guest guitarists (not to mention a grooving rhythm section). The good news is that almost all of them are back for the second instalment, along with some new friends. The original album was largely created via file sharing, a process ideally suited to pandemic conditions. So, in that sense, the procedure was surprisingly similar to the first album; if anything this one is a bit more "live" in that one track was partially recorded by a core group of musicians in a room (back in the halcyon days of November 2019). "Cosmic Krautrock" opens the set with a familiar odd-meter groove. New drummer Andy Brugger (who alternates with Thelen's Sonar band mate Manuel Pasquinelli) is joined in the rhythm section by new touch-guitar U8 player Stefan Huth on bass, along with percussionist Andi Pupato. Pupato played on one track on the first album, but here he plays on all of the tracks, providing significant rhythmic continuity to the group sound. Solo highlights include Markus Reuter's heavily processed touch guitar, Jon Durant's blast of high energy guitar, Pupato's atmospheric percussion interlude (over soundscapes and feedback guitar), and Bill Walker's final psychedelic guitar solo.

The title tune, of course, features Thelen's fractal guitar (a rhythmic delay that creates cascading delay patterns), as well as Reuter's glitchy touch guitar, Barry Cleveland's melodic 12-string guitar, and the first of several striking Durant fretless guitar solos. "Mercury Transit" is marked by quite a bit of solo space for the composer, first in the opening section (with Cleveland's bowed guitar and keyboardist Fabio Anile, a new recruit), then with e-bow. "Ladder To The Stars" is built upon Anile's striking 11/8 bass line, played by Andy West. This is the track built upon a live session, with West, Chris Muir's electric guitar and live looping, Thelen's electric guitar, and guitarist Henry Kaiser (who plays a wild glitched solo near the end). "Point Of Inflection" closes the album with Cleveland as co-composer (also playing bowed guitar, a memorably melodic solo, and a lovely fuzz guitar ensemble), and no less than three David Torn solos. Once again, Thelen and his collaborators have crafted a banquet of odd-meter grooves (which always feel completely natural) and guitars, guitars, guitars! Enthusiastically recommended to fans of the first installment. Thelen has mentioned a number of contributions that will appear in the remix version something to look forward to.~ Mark Sullivanhttps://www.allaboutjazz.com/fractal-guitar-2-stephan-thelen-moonjune-records

Personnel: Stephan Thelen: guitar, electric; David Torn: guitar, electric; Markus Reuter: guitar, electric; Henry Kaiser: guitar, electric; Jon Durant: guitar, electric; Bill Walker: guitar, electric; Barry Cleveland: guitar, electric; Chris Muir: guitar, electric; Fabio Anile: keyboards; Stefan Huth: guitar, electric; Andy West: bass, electric; Andi Pupato: percussion; Manuel Pasquinelli: drums; Andy Brugger: drums.

Additional Instrumentation: Stephan Thelen: electric guitar, choppy organ, granular synth, programming, fractal guitar, e-bow, keyboards; David Torn: electric guitar, live looping; Markus Reuter: touch guitar U8, soundscapes; Henry Kaiser: electric guitar; Jon Durant: electric guitar, cloud guitar, fretless guitar, VCS3 guitar: Bill Walker: electric guitar, live looping, lap steel; Barry Cleveland: 6 & 12-string guitar, bowed guitar, Revox loops; Chris Muir: electric guitar, live looping; Fabio Anile: keyboards, electric piano; Stefan Huth: touch guitar U8 (bass); Andy West: bass guitar; Andi Pupato: percussion; Manuel Pasquinelli: drums; Andy Brugger: drums

Fractal Guitar 2

Sunday, May 2, 2021

Hristo Vitchev Quartet - In Search of Wonders Disc 1, Disc 2

Album: In Search of Wonders Disc 1
Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:33
Size: 116,5 MB
Art: Front

( 8:44) 1. The Transitory Nature
(13:35) 2. It May Backfire
( 7:09) 3. Post Nubes
( 7:04) 4. Fuchsia Brown Eyes
( 5:30) 5. In Search of Wonders
( 1:38) 6. Almost Home (Intro)
( 6:50) 7. Almost Home


Album: In Search of Wonders Disc 2
Time: 50:22
Size: 116,2 MB

(8:03) 1. Falling in Orange
(7:25) 2. Old Theme
(9:30) 3. It Is Here, Somewhere
(2:22) 4. Stay (Prelude)
(6:15) 5. Stay
(9:07) 6. Without Words, As the Full Moon Shines
(6:35) 7. The Invisible Stairway
(1:03) 8. We Search for Wonders

Bulgarian-born San Franciscan jazz guitarist/composer Hristo Vitchev leads an experienced quartet on this double-CD collection of attractive modern jazz. This is his seventh release as a leader, and the third with this quartet (allowing for a change in the drum chair), following Familiar Fields (First Orbit Sounds Music, 2013) and Song For Messsambria (First Orbit Sounds Music, 2009). His influences are eclectic, but the chamber jazz sound of tracks like the piano solo "Stay (Prelude)" and the guitar/piano duet "We Search For Wonders" are balanced by a more generally energetic sound. "Old Theme" even includes a section where the players trade fours, an unexpected nod towards bebop performance practice in what is otherwise a contemporary jazz program..

Vitchev is joined by pianist Jasnam Daya Singh (also a duet partner on Heartmony (First Orbit Sounds Music, 2012) and The Secrets of an Angel (First Orbit Sounds Music, 2009), bassist Dan Robbins, and drummer Mike Shannon. Their long playing history shows: they sound like a band, listening and responding, each member actively contributing to the sound. The program opens with "The Transitory Nature," a melodic, pastoral song that recalls the Pat Metheny Group. Vitchev's compositions share a sunny, melodic, extroverted quality with Metheny's writing, and his playing has the same qualities. A fine technician, he never indulges in technical display for its own sake

"It May Backfire" features an infectious flamenco-tinged theme, lending the whole tune a unique rhythmic groove. Other rhythmic treats include the distinctive rhythm of "Without Words, As the Full Moon Shines" (which gives drummer Shannon a chance to shine soloing under a vamp), and the subtle bossa of "The Invisible Stairway" (where the usual bossa nova rhythm is implied, rather than stated directly).

The group took the music on the road before recording it, which gives the performances a comfortable, lived-in quality. What they lose in the energy that can come from responding to new material, they gain in all the players being confident enough in their parts to be able to relax and listen to each other, and arrangements that have had time to evolve and find their own level. Vitchev has provided the quartet with a fine set of tunes that does not overstay its welcome over the course of a double album.

Personnel: Hristo Vitchev: guitar; Dan Robbins: bass; Jasnam Dava Singh (Weber Iago): piano; Mike Shannon: drums.

In Search of Wonders

Ulla Haesen - Prendila Così

Styles: World Music
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:13
Size: 97,6 MB
Art: Front

(1:24) 1. Soittajapaimen
(4:36) 2. Prendila Così
(4:41) 3. Bambina
(3:36) 4. Anna Verrà
(4:01) 5. Amarsi Un Pò
(3:47) 6. E La Chiamano Estate
(3:40) 7. Napule È
(5:12) 8. Outra Vez
(5:33) 9. Rapaz De Bem
(5:38) 10. Caruso

"Prendila Così" is the title of the new album by guitarist and songwriter Ulla Haesen, about which we have already reported several times in SOUL TRAIN @ soultrainonline.de. What Ulla Haesen describes in the accompanying booklet as chic as well as excellent as a “musical arc that extends from the Nordic climate of Finland to the heart and soul of Italy to samba, swing and sway of Brazilian rhythms”, plays skillfully but also modestly through the tidy acoustic guitar playing by Ulla Haesen and shows character and a firm interpretational hand from the beginning, which is at the same time and above all based on modesty.

Haesen takes on material from songwriting giants such as Lucio Battisti, Pino Daniele or Antonio Carlos Jobim, to name just a few, all of them impressive personalities, about which we repeatedly reported in SOUL TRAIN, sometimes in detail and intensively. Recorded in the Hansa Haus Studios in Bonn by none other than Klaus Genuit (who reported on SOUL TRAIN), Ulla Haesen's “Prendila Così” once again shows her extremely sensitive and sometimes beautiful, melodic S (a / e) ite, but also the cohesive one , warm, discreetly designed guitar playing and Haesen's delicate but expressive, unobtrusive voice, which flow together naturally in one direction. The ten titles of the multilingual “Prendila Così” by Ulla Haesen show a strong cohesion and play Haesen's characteristics as a constantly advancing singer / songwriter and acoustic guitar player as well as composer and singer unobtrusively and sensitively and allow for many other such easy, at the same time demanding publications like this one hope - nice thing.~ Translated to English using Google Translator... http://www.soultrainonline.de/ulla-haesen-prendila-cosi/

Prendila Così

Matt Chandler, Ross Stanley, Eric Ford - Astrometrics

Size: 155,2 MB
Time: 66:42
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Jazz Funk, Cool Jazz
Art: Front

01. Funk Work (8:11)
02. The Sting (5:32)
03. El Diablo (7:16)
04. Doctor's In The House (7:18)
05. Intricate Facade (8:46)
06. Scene Of No Scene (8:30)
07. 5 Bar Short (8:36)
08. Dirty Rat (7:20)
09. A Change Of Scene (Of No Scene) (5:09)

Guitarist Matt Chandler has worked with a diverse range of artists including Youth (Killing Joke, The Orb), Arno Carstens, Fake, Poly Styrene and more recently accompanied Ozark Henry on his European tour.

His innovative style is supported by a career that has spanned genres from jazz to punk, folk to electronica.

Based in London, this is album is Matt's current project and includes the respected musicians Ross Stanley on Hammond Organ and Eric Ford on drums.

Astrometrics

Lina Nyberg - So Many Stars

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:23
Size: 152,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:29)  1. Suddenly
(4:45)  2. So Many Stars
(4:22)  3. The End
(5:39)  4. I'll Be Seeing You
(4:34)  5. Nothing New
(6:50)  6. My Castle
(5:11)  7. For All We Know
(6:33)  8. Once I Was Like You
(2:23)  9. On the Street Where You Live
(5:06) 10. Going to Chicago
(7:09) 11. Lost But Still
(5:46) 12. Ordinary Day
(3:29) 13. Alone

Lina Nyberg was born in Stockholm, Sweden in 1970 and raised in an artistic home. She discovered jazz at age 14 and at 18 years of age Lina began singing with Swedish senior jazz stars such as Bernt Rosengren, Nisse Sandström, Fredrik Norén Band, and others. In 1990 Lina built her own first constellation “Lina Nyberg Kvintett” consisting of Per “Texas” Johansson, Esbjörn Svensson, Dan Berglund and Mikel Ulfberg. After gratuating from the Royal College of Music in Stockholm as a Master of Fine Arts in 1993 she released her first CD- Close (Prophone records). A duo recording with late pianist Esbjörn Svensson. An instant success and Swedish jazz classic. This was also the beginning of a very fruitful cooperation with the brilliant producer and owner of Prophone records, late Erland Boëthius.

Lina and her quintet received the prestigious Swedish Grammis award for her CD “when the smile shines through” in 1995. “OPEN” released in 1998 and recorded with bassist Palle Danielsson and pianist Anders Persson, among others, was nominated for a Swedish Grammis and received raving reviews.Over the years Lina Nyberg has collaborated with various jazz musicians such as John Taylor, Marilyn Crispell, Palle Danielsson and Rigmor Gustafsson. She has toured in Scandinavia, parts of Europe, Vietnam, Canada and Brazil. A couple of times Lina also has toured Japan with Yasuhito Moris Scandinavian Connection. The Brazilian connection is also very strong to Lina and she has produced two cds dedicated to Brazil and its vast musical landscape, Brasilien (Prophone) 2003 with world famous bassplayer Anders Jormin and Brasil Big Bom 2007 (Caprice records) with big band and the great Swedish saxophonist Magnus Lindgren.

Lina Nyberg is one of Sweden’s most creative and innovative jazz singers. For more than 15 years she has been attracting consistent and widespread attention, mostly in Scandinavia, but also in other parts of the world. As a solo artist and producer she has released 16 CDs. Her main constellation right now is Lina Nyberg Band featuring an all-star band: Cecilia Persson, piano, David Stackenäs, guitar, Josef Kallerdahl, bass and Peter Danemo, drums.In September 2011 Lina Nyberg and her band released their latest Cd Palaver (Moserobie Records). The Cd recieved fantastic reviews and was selected by Chicago Reader writer Peter Margasak as the Vocal CD of the year. The music is a blend of influences from Brazilian Tropicalia, European Free form, modern classical composers, the American songbook and old school jazz.

In March 2011 Lina Nyberg was awarded the prestigious Jazzmusician of the Year-prize by the Swedish Radio and in October 2011 she was the Guest of Honour at the Umeå International Jazz Festival.2014 she released her latest CD “The Sirenades” a project including composing music for Norrbotten Big Band on commission and her own quintet. The Cd got a wonderful reception from the press.She was awarded the prestigeous “Lars Gullin Award” and also the Bert Levin award of 75.000 swedish kronor. Lina was nominated as the Jazz composer of the year by the Swedish Radio Jazzkatten jury. http://www.linanyberg.se/?page_id=45

So Many Stars

George Robert, Tom Harrell Quintet - Cape Verde

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:24
Size: 161.2 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1995/2014
Art: Front

[ 8:45] 1. Streets
[ 7:22] 2. Softly
[12:36] 3. Morning Star
[ 8:38] 4. Cape Verde
[ 9:58] 5. Missing You
[10:29] 6. Sail Away
[12:34] 7. Fast Lane

Alto Saxophone – George Robert; Bass – Reggie Johnson; Drums – Byron Landham; Flugelhorn, Trumpet – Tom Harrell; Piano – Dado Moroni. Recorded live in Rheinfelden, Switzerland on September 24-25, 1992.

This is the fifth and final release by the George Robert/Tom Harrell Quintet, taped during a pair of Swiss concerts in 1992. As in previous outings, the alto saxophonist and trumpeter/flüegelhornist are in top form and each musician also contributed strong originals as well; the potent rhythm section includes the underrated pianist Dado Moroni, bassist Reggie Johnson, and drummer Byron Landham. Harrell's snappy post-bop strut "Streets" features his flüegelhorn, plus fines solos by Robert and Johnson. An extended version of "Sail Away," an emotional driving samba that is also one of Harrell's best known compositions, is another highlight. Robert's rich ballad "Softly" also has a Latin feel to it, while his hard bop "Cape Verde" is clearly inspired by Horace Silver. The only work not composed by either co-leader is "Morning Star," by Rodgers Grant; this highly enjoyable work features an extensive solo by Moroni. The Robert/Harrell Quintet knew how to go out on top! ~Ken Dryden

Cape Verde

Saturday, May 1, 2021

Azar Lawrence - The Seeker

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:12
Size: 146,0 MB
Art: Front

(10:27)  1. Gandhi
( 7:45)  2. Lost Tribes Of Lemuria
(12:04)  3. The Seeker
( 9:21)  4. One More Time
( 5:57)  5. Rain Ballad
(10:24)  6. Spirit Night
( 7:12)  7. Venus Rising

Azar Lawrence is fulfilling his musical quest with a most impressive live recording!  Sunnyside Records will drop an incredible live set recorded at the Jazz Standard. This all star collective features saxophonist Azar Lawrence, trumpet great Nicholas Payton, and a critically acclaimed rhythm section of Benito Gonzalez on piano, Essiet Okon Essiet on bass and the mighty Jeff "Tain" Watts on drums. The Seeker pays homage to those harmonic rebels that have forged their own path and this created and elevated the form and function of the improvisational music we have come to know as jazz. For the uninitiated, Lawrence has been cutting his own lyrical trail for the last four decades and has played with such luminaries as Freddie Hubbard and Earth Wind & Fire. 

The original compositions from Lawrence are diverse and visionary in their lyrical thought. Nicholas Payton shares the front line with Lawrence due largely in part to his exceptional conceptual feeling of just where Lawrence was heading on this most unique journey. Picking a highlight or two would be equivalent to asking a parent to pick their favorite child but I'll give it a whirl with "Rain Ballad" and "Spirit Night" topping the list. Both compositions are compelling lush ballad oriented tunes with a zen like serenity move slowly beneath the surface. Both tunes allow for dynamic interplay within the rhythm section with Essiet's bowed bass and Watts finesse on "Rain Ballad" while Gonzalez shines on "Spirit Night." The band finds their groove on the Gonzalez tune "One More Time" with a spirited exchange between Lawrence, Payton and of course Gonzalez.  Azar Lawrence may be a searching artist, the good artists are. The search for the listener can continue with one of the better live sets you will hear. Virtually flawless on all levels. http://www.criticaljazz.com/2014/06/azar-lawrence-seeker-sunnyside-2014.html

Personnel: Azar Lawrence (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Nicholas Payton (trumpet); Benito Gonzalez (piano); Jeff "Tain" Watts (drums).

The Seeker

Avishai Cohen - Two Roses

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:29
Size: 144,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:59) 1. Almah Sleeping
(3:52) 2. When I'm Falling
(4:45) 3. Song for My Brother
(4:24) 4. Two Roses (Shnei Shoshanim)
(4:33) 5. Nature Boy
(7:14) 6. Emotional Storm
(6:24) 7. Puncha Puncha
(5:17) 8. Arab Medley
(8:35) 9. A Child Is Born
(4:55) 10. Alon Basela
(4:11) 11. Morenika
(4:16) 12. Nature Talking

Avishai Cohen dreamed big, with images of symphony orchestras dancing in his head. The Israeli-born bassist maneuvered that dream into a reality with Two Roses, a recording that finds Cohen in the company of the ninety-two piece Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra, in addition to his jazz cohorts, Azerbaijani pianist Elchin Shirinov and New Jersey born and bred drummer Mark Guiliana. Eleven of the tunes presented here, in this lush landscape, come from Cohen's pen. The title piece is a popular tune from Cohen's homeland. "A Child Is Born" comes from the Thad Jones Songbook, and "Nature Boy" is the familiar Eben Ahbez tune, recorded by everyone from Miles Davis to Nat King Cole, Sarah Vaughn, John Coltrane, Zoot Sims and many more.

The majestic, sweeping scope of this music suggests Cohen as a nominee for the "Aaron Copland of World" Music Award, as the bassist brings to the table influences which span the globe Afro-Caribbean music, melodies of Israeli folklore, Middle Eastern motifs, North African tinges and hints of Slavic and Russian shadings, all intertwined to create its own unique multicultural listening experience. With a beautiful and implacable grandeur in the embrace of a collective momentum of eighty-plus players including Cohen's occasional "every man of the world" vocals (he sounds like a nondenominational priest singing some kind of jazz Mass) the music could serve as a soundtrack to a grand epic of Cecil B. DeMille proportions, the orchestra at times delicate and fragile, at others powerful and momentous, and always profound.~ DAN MCCLENAGHAN https://www.allaboutjazz.com/two-roses-avishai-cohen-naive-believe__23161

Personnel: Avishai Cohen: bass; Mark Guiliana: drums; Elchin Shirinov: piano.

Two Roses

Lina Nyberg, Daniel Karlsson - The Night and the Music

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:22
Size: 113,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:09) 1. Night and Day
(4:51) 2. Let's Face the Music and Dance
(4:26) 3. Red Sails in the Sunset
(5:44) 4. 'Round Midnight
(4:22) 5. Stardust
(3:54) 6. Dream a Little Dream of Me
(4:44) 7. Sure on This Shining Night
(3:36) 8. You and the Night and the Music
(4:09) 9. In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning
(4:36) 10. Good Morning Starshine
(4:46) 11. I Like the Sunrise

Two of Sweden's most successful jazz musicians perform together for the first time. Singer Lina Nyberg and pianist Daniel Karlsson have both had brilliant careers in Sweden and internationally through the years. April 30, 2021 the duo album The Night and the Music will be released, containing a string of famous songs inspired by nighttime. A number of jazz standards and evergreens has been carefully selected, all taking us step by step through evening, night and finally to early morning. You will hear classics like Red sails in the sunset and Thelonius Monk's Round midnight combined with modern hits such as Goodmorning starshine from the musical Hair, but also Samuel Barber's famous composition of James Agee's poem Sure on this shining night. With these melodies, the duo creates an inspiring musical experience for the listener and discovers new worlds in the music. https://www.amazon.de/-/en/Lina-Nyberg/dp/B08YHZVB1T

Personnel: Lina Nyberg - Vocal; Daniel Karlsson - Piano.

The Night and the Music

Friday, April 30, 2021

Lori Williams - Full Circle

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:59
Size: 143,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:05) 1. My Funny Valentine
(5:39) 2. Evergreen
(5:11) 3. Turn Turn Turn (To Everything There is a Season)
(5:04) 4. The Shadow of Your Smile
(6:51) 5. Peresina (Full Circle)
(5:11) 6. Bewitched Bothered and Bewildered
(7:41) 7. Come Sunday
(4:52) 8. Way over Yonder
(3:56) 9. The Best is ye
t to Come
(4:32) 10. Auld Lang Syne (4:00) 11. Turn Turn Turn (To Everything There is a Season) - Radio Edit
(3:51) 12. Turn Turn Turn (To Everything There is a Season) - Vocal Version

As the lead vocalist of her self-titled Washington, D.C.-based jazz ensemble, Lori Williams is well regarded in our area for her soothing voice and for performing incredible sets of jazz and R&B. She has also taught vocal music in D.C. public schools for more than 20 years, and is beloved by generations of musicians. Born and raised in Southeast D.C., Williams has been heralded for her voice since she was a young student at Hampton University. Over the years, she has played some of the top places in D.C., as well as venues around the country and the world.

She has directed numerous choirs, such as the National Diamond Girls Jazz Choir (which performed during the Inauguration Ceremony for President George Bush), the Sagamihara Christian Fellowship Gospel Choir in Japan and several gospel choirs throughout the area. “When I started out, I met with two professors who introduced me to jazz and then I was on a radio show on campus, and got the chance to be the jazz program director and hear some music and play some music, and just fell in love with it,” Williams said. “I felt like jazz was my voice and [something] I could identify with.”

Williams will hold a CD release party at City Winery on Sept. 29, introducing fans to her fifth album, “Full Circle,” a return to traditional jazz music. “The music actually came out in July but I was over in Europe at the time so I didn’t get the chance to share the music with people here at home, and I want to be able to showcase my CD to the good folks in Washington, D.C.,” she said. “I’m going to do a couple of tunes off the new CD, but other tunes from other CDs I have put out over the years.” The album offers classic standards such as “My Funny Valentine,” “Evergreen” and “Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered” that are done in unique ways and showcase some of D.C.’s best jazz musicians.

“It’s a return to a love of mine, which is traditional jazz,” Williams said. “My father passed last year, and the gentleman who produced the CD, Alan Johnson, found a recording that my dad did in 2012 and we did a Nat King Cole/Natalie Cole-esque kind of vibe, giving me an opportunity to sing along with my dad on a song he put together.” Williams said picking the rest of the set list came from the songs she fell in love with in her late teens and early 20s the tunes that made her fall in love with jazz. “For example, Barbra Streisand was one of the first women singers whose voice I was absolutely captivated by, so I’m doing ‘Evergreen,’” she said. “And because of what’s happening in our world today, ‘Turn, Turn, Turn’ is a very apropos selection.”

She’s no stranger to City Winery, having played this venue three times and the one in Atlanta a couple of times as well. “The ambiance there is absolutely incredible. Also, I love wine,” Williams said. “I’ve traveled to Europe and have been introduced to different types of wines, and I just love how sophisticated City Winery is. People are coming there with the expectancy of hearing great music and enjoying great food and wine. It’s a good combination.” Williams is making a big change in her life this fall, as she is relocating to Georgia to become a full-time musician, artist, and symposium director for colleges and universities teaching students about the essence of jazz and lyrical content through her commissioned program “Positive Music For Positive Minds.”

“My dad’s no longer here, my mom’s no longer here, and I need something new,” she said. “I’ll be coming back but sometimes in order to come back to one’s hometown and be truly seen, you need to disappear.” One thing that will not change is her love of being onstage. “I love sharing an experience about peace and positivity,” Williams said. “I’m still learning. When you’re a performer, you are using every part of who you are. I’m grateful that I am part of a circle that is giving me advice and I can surround myself with great producers and musicians, and always enjoy singing live.” Keith Loria http://www.fairfaxtimes.com/articles/lori-williams-comes-full-circle/article_0c8d19ee-e141-11e9-9a26-9758114f0c9a.html

Full Circle

Lauren White And The Quinn Johnson Trio - Ever Since the World Ended

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:37
Size: 71,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:52) 1. If You Never Fall in Love with Me (Del Sasser)
(4:11) 2. Just the Two of Us
(4:16) 3. Ever Since the World Ended
(4:21) 4. Alone Together
(3:46) 5. Remembering the Rain
(3:53) 6. Some of That Sunshine
(3:39) 7. Take Love Easy
(2:35) 8. Shattered

There is a cadre of West Coast jazz musicians who tacitly orbit one Mark Winkler. This embarrassing wealth of talent includes: Cheryl Bentyne, Dolores Scozzesi, Judy Wexler, Robyn Spangler, Gary Brumburgh, Jeffery Gimble, Ada Bird Wolfe, and our present subject, Lauren White. White, an original East Coast product, expatriated to Westward to act and sing...and record. Her previous recording, Life In The Modern World (Cafe pacific Records, 2019) was the (unknowing) opening bookend to a most curious cultural year we are just completing. Considering the view from here and now, that album could have just as well been entitled, Life on Mars (with apologies to David Bowie). Life In The Modern World is now potently ironic considering our Darwinian, Covid-19 wake up call.

Eighteen months or so later, White reacts to the plague year with Ever Since The World Ended, the title piece a composition of Tippo, MS native Mose Allison. from his 2006 Blue Note recording of the same name. White shares vocal duties with friend and colleague Dolores Schozzesi. White used the pandemic as a programming opportunity, bringing together songs sung in response to the veritable unknown and never experienced.

Supported again by pianist Quinn Johnson and his rhythm section of bassist Trey Henry and drummer Ray Brinker. Lockdown and quarantine is captured in Bill Withers' "Just The Two Of Us," and the chestnut "Alone Together," an experience had by so many that the phrase, "the new normal," actually makes sense. The introversion of the period is expressed in the juxtaposition of "Remembering the Rain" (this helmed by bassist Kevin Axt, guitarist Grant Geissman, and drummer Chris Wabich) with "Some of that Sunshine."

White closes her recital with Jimmy Webb's plaintive "Shattered," completing the circle that began with Life In The Modern World, a modern world showing that the Medieval remains among us. White expands an already impressive artistry with a great mind for programming nuance. Higher themes enhance the listening experience, something White, and the rest of her West Coast Cadre, has internalized and put into capable practice. White's sturdy yet pliable alto guides a delicate balance through the disparate, yet related songs: soothing and accepting.~ C.Michael Bailey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/ever-since-the-world-ended-lauren-white-cafe-pacific-records

Personnel: Lauren White: voice / vocals; Quinn Johnson: piano; Trey Henry: bass, acoustic; Ray Brinker: drums.

Ever Since the World Ended

Anaïs Reno - Lovesome Thing (Feat. Emmet Cohen)

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:09
Size: 122,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:54) 1. Caravan
(5:26) 2. Mood Indigo
(2:41) 3. Still in Love
(5:25) 4. Chelsea Bridge / A Flower Is a Lovesome Thing
(5:15) 5. I'm Just a Lucky So-and-So
(5:37) 6. It's Kind of Lonesome Out Tonight
(4:24) 7. Day Dream
(4:35) 8. I Ain't Got Nothin' but the Blues
(4:22) 9. All Roads Lead Back to You
(1:06) 10. U.M.M.G. (Upper Manhattan Medical Group)
(5:47) 11. Lush Life
(3:30) 12. Take the "A" Train

Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn were collaborators for several decades beginning in the late 1930s. They became so closely intertwined musically that it was frequently impossible to distinguish their work. Anaïs Reno a young and promising singer has chosen to use their compositions as the basis for her debut release Lovesome Thing: Anaïs Reno Sings Ellington & Strayhorn. This choice was not without risk as the harmonic structure and lyrics of some of the compositions are better suited to a more experienced vocalist. However, Reno was undeterred and the results are more than impressive.

In addition to being fearless in her choice of material, Reno had the foresight to look for a supporting musical cast that would enhance her vocal efforts. Pianist and arranger Emmet Cohen was an ideal selection as he is a stellar and inventive musician. Rounding out the band are Russell Hall (bass), Kyle Poole (drums), Tivon Pennicott (saxophone) and on a couple of tracks violinist Juliet Kurtzman, who also happens to be Reno's mother.

The opening Ellington tracks "Caravan" and "Mood Indigo" had co-writers, namely Juan Tizol on the former and Barney Bigard for the latter. Cohen has put together a rhythmically off-beat construction for "Caravan" that gives Reno the foundation to test her vocalese before the lyric begins. Pennicott covers much ground with his Middle-Eastern influenced solo, before Reno picks up the lyric again in the out chorus. Cohen's light fingered piano opening on "Mood Indigo" foretells the interpretation offered by Reno. Gliding over the lyrics, she shows a gift for flowing delicacy, that segues into Kurtzman's violin for an uncluttered interjection.

The impact of Ellington and Strayhorn either separately or together cannot be underestimated in the jazz world. Their work here as co-composers includes "Day Dream" and "All Roads Lead Back To You." The former was written as a feature for alto saxophonist Johnny Hodges in order to take advantage of his restrained vibrato and daunting glissandos. Here Reno imparts an earthy intimacy to the number. The second number is also known as "Lotus Blossom" and is emotionally similar to the former composition, although slightly more melancholy. "Lush Life" was Billy Strayhorn's first classic composition, written when he was just a teenager. It is filled with demanding harmonies and is complex chromatic music. The lyrics tell the story of the isolation of a black man who declined to compromise his sexual identity. No small stretch for a debutante singer, but one which she reaches with assurance. The final track in this session, "Take The "A" Train," was the first composition that Strayhorn wrote for Ellington. History tells us that the composition's name was based on directions that Ellington gave to Strayhorn to find Ellington's apartment in Harlem from mid-town New York. Reno's interpretation of the composition uses the imbedded swing norms and harmonic cleverness to deliver an "A" train experience.

Anaïs Reno exudes confidence on this debut and with experience should develop into a singer who will delve further into the heart of the songs she chooses.~ PIERRE GIROUX https://www.allaboutjazz.com/lovesome-thing-anais-reno-sings-ellington-and-strayhorn-anais-reno-harbinger-records

Personnel: Anaïs Reno: voice / vocals; Emmet Cohen: piano; Russell Hall: bass; Kyle Poole: drums; Tivon Pennicott: saxophone, tenor; Juliet Kurtzman: violin.

Lovesome Thing

Thursday, April 29, 2021

Kate Ceberano - True Romantic: The Best of Kate Ceberano

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:27
Size: 160,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:20) 1. True Romantic
(4:22) 2. Pash
(4:31) 3. I Won't Let You Down
(4:09) 4. Calling You
(4:49) 5. Everythings Alright
(4:06) 6. Love and Affection
(4:01) 7. Change
(4:28) 8. Feelin Alright
(5:32) 9. Brave
(3:56) 10. Bedroom Eyes
(4:37) 11. Time to Think
(4:26) 12. I Dont Know How to Love Him
(4:17) 13. Love Is Alive
(3:24) 14. Young Boys Are My Weakness
(4:17) 15. All That I Want Is You
(4:11) 16. See Right Through

True Romantic – The Best of Kate Ceberano is a greatest hits album released by Australian recording artist Kate Ceberano. It was a commercial success, peaking at number 9 on the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) album chart, and was certified platinum in Australia. The album was re-released in 2004, under the title The Definitive Collection. It includes songs from her time with I'm Talking, tracks from Jesus Christ Superstar, her studio albums Brave, Blue Box and Pash as well as two new tracks. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/True_Romantic

True Romantic: The Best of Kate Ceberano

David Binney And Edward Simon - Oceanos

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:57
Size: 130,7 MB
Art: Front

(7:30)  1. We Dream Oceans
(9:13)  2. Impossible Question
(9:57)  3. Amnesia
(7:33)  4. El Parrandero
(5:11)  5. Govinda
(6:23)  6. Twenty Four Miles To Go
(3:37)  7. Impossible Question Reprise
(7:29)  8. Home

Reconvening the same core quartet as on Afinidad (Red, 2001), altoist David Binney and pianist Edward Simon demonstrate how a collaborative effort can bear the distinct imprint of each musician while, at the same time, possessing its own indelible stamp. Binney and Simon have emerged, over the past decade, as leaders in an evolving musical context informed by broader cultural concerns, often complex harmonic and rhythmic foundations, and a fresh thematic approach that's eminently lyrical yet steadfastly avoids the obvious. Both are fine soloists, able to combine a sense of the cerebral with deeper emotional resonance. Teamed with bassist Scott Colley and drummer Brian Blade, Océanos is a compellingly listenable album, despite some considerable challenges hidden underneath the covers. Binney's "We Dream Oceans" opens the disc with simmering intensity. Percussionist Pernell Saturnino augments Blade's delicate touch, while guitarist Adam Rogers and Binney double a theme that first stands alone but is ultimately countered by Luciana Souza's wordless vocals. Simon builds a lithely focused solo that gradually intensifies, leading to a recapitulation of the theme and a solo from Binney that's as much about the sound of the notes as the notes themselves, building to a fever pitch only to fade to a gentler coda. While there's plenty of solo space, Océanos is as much about composition and arrangement, with Binney and Simon making judicious use of the added guests. Binney's polyrhythmic and Latin-esque "El Parrandero" makes full use of the three-piece horn section, creating a sound that's at times sharply pointed, other times richly expansive, contrasting with "We Dream Oceans" where the horns are used only briefly to reinforce the tune's final figure. Simon's 9/4 "Impossible Question" is first heard in expanded form, with Rogers' acoustic guitar solo navigating the pianist's changes with ease and Blade delivering a short but energetic solo. Binney's most powerful improvisation of the set is heard on a later reprise; a shorter but more texturally lush version that's expanded to include the horn section and percussion. 

Binney's closer, "Home," begins with a poignant theme that unfolds gradually but keeps returning to the same four-chord pattern. Colley and Simon both deliver lyrical solos before returning to the theme, leading into a repetition of that same four-chord pattern as a foundation for Binney's final solo which, bolstered by the rest of the group, builds the "Home" to a powerful climax before ending on an etheral note. Continuing to collaborate periodically over the years acts as a yardstick of both individual growth and a shared aesthetic for Binney and Simon. Océanos is their best pairing yet an album that brings together two strong musical minds to create a whole that's truly greater than the sum of its parts. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/oceanos-david-binney-criss-cross-review-by-john-kelman.php?width=1920

Personnel: David Binney: alto saxophone; Edward Simon: piano; Scott Colley: bass; Brian Blade: drums; Luciana Souza: vocals (1, 2, 5, 6); Adam Rogers: guitar (2, 5); Shane Endsley: trumpet (3, 4, 7); Jesse Newman: trumpet (3, 4, 7); Alan Ferber: trombone (3, 4, 7); Pernell Saturnino: percussion (1, 4, 7).

Oceanos

Lara Solnicki - The One And The Other

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:24
Size: 102,7 MB
Art: Front

(8:33) 1. Bit Her Sweet Christopher Street
(4:36) 2. Idée Fixe
(3:46) 3. The Embrace
(6:04) 4. Furling Leaf, Retrocede
(6:19) 5. I Pass a Glass
(7:16) 6. II Awe of the Sea
(7:46) 7. III Hollow the Need

Among feelings are nervousness and anxiety. While synonymous in any thesaurus, the two words differ in the same way that thankfulness and gratitude differ, that is, in focus. Nervousness and thankfulness often have no focus, no definite object creating them. Anxiety and gratitude are those feelings, those reactions to the specific. Something clearly gives rise to them. With regards to anxiety and disquiet, Canadian vocalist and composer Lara Solnicki uses "free jazz" and poetry as the stimulus for generating a mood of anxiety. Not anxiety in a bad way. More like a lack of clarity in an otherwise cohesive narrative. Solnicki presents this unease cinematically in discrete vignettes, or tone poems, each following its own creative arc, resolving or not, in a state still possessing tension, but one better realized than before.

The One And The Other is Scolnicki's third release, after A Meadow In December (Self Produced, 2010) and Whose Shadow (Inner Circle Music, 2014). The singer is hyperliterate, existing at a modern-postmodern interface where her art is informed equally by the other, often at the same time. Solnicki plants her spear in the sand in the cleverly entitled "Bit Her Sweet Christopher Street." The piece begins as if awakening, but not quite making it, falling back into that twilight that can disconcert. Jonathan Goldsmith's angular piano and Peter Lutek's screeching saxophone introduce the first fit of concern buoyed on Scott Peterson's bubbling electric bass. After a moment of respite, guitarist Rob Piltch 's Ben Monder-inspired glorious noise stirs the dream before emerging, not quite settled.

"Furling Leaf, Retrocede" is a spoken poetry narration carried slowly along by fractured and unrecognisable music, gently simmering with the occasional release of tension only to double down into further chaos. "Furling leaf, retrocede, whaft, near view" sets up a scene that develops into "Sheer currents beyond the finestra stir machines in this laundromat..." juxtaposing nature versus the mechanised. This performance could be envisioned performed at some yet unnamed, future Village Vanguard, at whatever a poetry slam is called in that way off time. Solnicki's words are clinical, astringent: "Green-yellow ataxia to the flushing gates -Twenty-one; Sixty Six...precocious tides with its attaches of amnesia...pleading sighs in the undertow / with swells of heaving flesh..." With music these are industrial visions, humid, clanging, insomniac: Hypnotic in the same way as Placidyl or Quaalude.

In this guise, this is no music with which to unwind after a typically hectic, post-COVID-19 day. But Solnicki does provide the tuneful interlude in the descriptively titled "Idée Fixe" (think Berlioz' Symphonie Fantastique deconstructed to a schizophrenic piano-saxophone duet over a wandering bass). Her wordless melodies tie the piece together into the messy stuff of life. "The One And The Other" is a three section suite combining all the stylistic elements that have preceded them. It takes an informed talent to conceive of and then execute music and lyrics of this complexity.

Lara Solnicki is able to present disintegration in an orderly and understandable fashion. While this is not cocktail party music, it is rich food for thought and contemplation.~ C.Michael Bailey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-one-and-the-other-lara-solnicki-outside-in-music

Personnel: Lara Solnicki: voice / vocals; Jonathan Goldsmith: keyboards; Peter Lutek: woodwinds; Hugh Marsh: violin; Rob Piltch : guitar; Scott Peterson: bass; Rich Brown: bass; Davide Di Renzo: drums.

The One And The Other

Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Blossom Dearie - Les Blue Stars - The Pianist

Styles: Vocal and Piano Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:08
Size: 79,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:46)  1. The Continental
(2:51)  2. The Boy Next Door
(2:34)  3. They Can't Take That Away From Me
(2:34)  4. Moonlight Saving Time (There Ought To Be A)
(2:56)  5. The Surrey With The Fringe On Top
(2:55)  6. April In Paris
(2:42)  7. Blue Moon
(3:24)  8. Down The Depths Of The 90th Floor
(2:50)  9. La Legende Du Pays Des Oiseaux
(3:04) 10. Lettre A Virginie
(2:43) 11. Toute Ma Joie
(2:45) 12. Embrasse-Moi Bien

A distinctive, girlish voice and crisp, impeccable delivery, plus an irrepressible sense of playful swing, made Blossom Dearie one of the most enjoyable singers of the vocal era. Her warmth and sparkle ensured that she'd never treat standards as the well-worn songs they often appeared in less capable hands. And though her reputation was made on record with a string of excellent albums for Verve during the '50s, she remained a draw with Manhattan cabaret audiences long into the new millennium. Actually born with the name Blossom Dearie in the New York Catskills, she began playing piano at an early age and studied classical music before making the switch to jazz while in high school. After graduation, she moved to New York and began appearing with vocal groups like the Blue Flames (attached to Woody Herman) and the Blue Reys (with Alvino Rey). She also played cocktail piano around the city, and moved to Paris in 1952 to form her own group, the Blue Stars of France. Dearie also appeared in a nightclub act with Annie Ross, and made a short, uncredited appearance on King Pleasure's vocalese classic, "Moody's Mood for Love." She recorded an obscure album of piano solos, and in 1954, the Blue Stars hit the national charts with a French version of "Lullaby of Birdland." After hearing Dearie perform in Paris in 1956, Norman Granz signed her to Verve and she returned to America by the end of the year. Her eponymous debut for Verve featured a set of standards that slanted traditional pop back to its roots in Tin Pan Alley, Broadway, and cabaret. 

Her focus on intimate readings of standards ("Deed I Do," "Thou Swell") and the relaxed trio setting (bassist Ray Brown and drummer Jo Jones, plus Dearie on piano) drew nods to her cabaret background. On her next few records, Dearie stuck to her focus on standards and small groups, though her gift for songwriting emerged as well with songs like "Blossom's Blues." She performed in solo settings at supper clubs all over New York, and appeared on the more cultured of the late-'50s New York talk shows. Her husband, flutist Bobby Jaspar, made several appearances on her records, notably 1959's My Gentleman Friend. After a recording break in the early '60s, Blossom Dearie signed to Capitol for one album (1964's May I Come In?), but then recorded sparingly during the rest of the decade. Finally, in the early '70s, she formed her own Daffodil Records label and began releasing her own work, including 1974's Blossom Dearie Sings and 1976's My New Celebrity Is You. She also performed at Carnegie Hall with Anita O'Day and Joe Williams, billed as the Jazz Singers. She continued to perform and record during the 1980s through to the early 2000s, centered mostly in New York but also a regular attraction in London as well. She retired from playing live in 2006 due to health concerns and died quietly in her Greenwich Village apartment on February 7, 2009. ~ John Bush https://www.allmusic.com/artist/blossom-dearie-mn0000758601/biography

Personnel:  Alto Vocals [Contralto] – Blossom Dearie (tracks: 9 to 12), Nadine Young (tracks: 9 to 12); Bass Vocals – Jean Mercadier (tracks: 9 to 12); Double Bass – Herman Garst (tracks: 1 to 8); Drums – Bernard Planchenault (tracks: 1 to 8); Piano – Blossom Dearie (tracks: 1 to 8); Piano, Arranged By – Michel Legrand (tracks: 9); Soprano Vocals [First] – Christiane Legrand (tracks: 9 to 12); Soprano Vocals [Second] – Janine De Waleyne (tracks: 9 to 12); Tenor Vocals [Second] – Christian Chevallier (tracks: 9 to 12); Trumpet, Baritone Vocals – Roger Guérin (tracks: 9 to 12); Vibraphone, Tenor Vocals [Lead] – Fats Sadi (tracks: 9 to 12)

The Pianist

Joanie Pallatto - My Original Plan

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:01
Size: 144,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:29) 1. Open Your Eyes
(5:00) 2. Do Butterflies Cry?
(5:17) 3. The Blank Page
(4:54) 4. The Confessional
(5:27) 5. My Original Plan
(3:58) 6. Jon's Place
(4:47) 7. About a Song
(2:13) 8. Rest
(3:35) 9. The Photograph
(4:57) 10. Almost 65
(4:09) 11. A Simple Time
(5:38) 12. They Sentenced Us to Paradise
(3:09) 13. This Winter
(4:21) 14. Lucky to Belong to You

Jazzy-Pop! All Original Music from 39th Annual Chicago Music Awards ~ Lifetime Achievement Recipient for Extra-Ordinary Contributions to the Music Industry Singer-Songwriter Joanie Pallatto co-produced by modern guitar virtuoso Fareed Haque featuring an ALL Star Chicago lineup: Joanie Pallatto, Fareed Haque, Howard Levy, Bobby Lewis, Steve Eisen, John Devlin, Luiz Ewerling, Juan Pastor, Kurt Schweitz, Bradley Parker-Sparrow

Described by Rick Kogan of the Chicago Tribune as having “a stirring and special voice,” Joanie Pallatto is a graduate of The University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music. Pallatto toured with The Glenn Miller Orchestra as a featured vocalist before moving to Chicago in 1979. Co-owner and partner with pianist/composer and husband, Bradley Parker-Sparrow at Sparrow Sound Design Recording Studio and Southport Records, Pallatto has expertise in all aspects of musical production. As a studio singer and voiceover talent, she has recorded on hundreds of Radio and TV commercials. As a jazz vocalist, Pallatto has performed at Chicago clubs City Winery, Andy’s and The Green Mill and New York venues the Iridium, Pangea and Birdland. Concert engagements have include Chicago Jazz Festival, Chicago Cultural Center, The Old Town School of Folk Music, Park West, Stage 773 and Bailiwick Theater; she was also a featured soloist with Daniel Barenboim in “Ellington Among Friends” at Symphony Center in 1999. Awards include: Lifetime Achievement Award for Extra-Ordinary Contributions to the Music Industry, Chicago Music Awards (2021); The Coleman Award in Music Business Entrepreneurship from Elmhurst College (2018) and the Jazz Journalist Association 2016 Chicago Jazz Heroes Award, to Joanie Pallatto & Sparrow.

Joanie Pallatto My Original Plan (2021) featuring modern guitar virtuoso Fareed Haque, showcases Singer-Songwriter Pallatto’s fourteen original Jazzy-Pop songs! Produced by Fareed Haque and Joanie Pallatto. The Single Do Butterflies Cry? is available on all digital platforms, and the music video, a rhythmic journey through nature and the beautiful countryside of Costa Rica, is available for viewing on YouTube.com. This Winter is a heartwarming track from the CD with a music photo video. “Listen closely and find out how to dream and how to use those dreams…With Joanie, the personal becomes universal.”Stephen Cole, award winning songwriter and playwright (from liner notes)

In 2011, Pallatto released the critically-acclaimed CD As You Spend Your Life and the music videos “For My Mother’s Love,” “As You Spend Your Life” and “Playa Bonita” plus Jazz Legend Bob Dorough recorded his vocal and piano on Frank Foster’s “Simone,” with Pallatto’s lyrics. It’s Not Easy is Singer-Songwriter Pallatto’s first CD of ten original tunes and videos (2008.) Christopher Loudon in the May 2011 issue of Jazz Times says of Pallatto “Pallatto sounds a lot like Stevie Nicks if, that is, Nicks was a top-drawer jazz stylist of expansive musical tastes and keen instincts.” and “Trying to channel Pallatto is like attempting to bottle a cyclone. It’s best to just let her run wild…”

Other recordings in Pallatto’s discography include Float Out to Sea with Sparrow (2017); Two Again with pianist/arranger Marshall Vente (2015) Days with Joanie & Sparrow (2013); The King and I (2000) with legendary pianist/composer King Fleming; Words and Music (1999); Two with Marshall Vente (1997); FIRE with Von Freeman (1996); Passing Tones (1995); Who Wrote This Song? (1994); and Whisper Not (LP 1986). Pallatto has continually recorded original music with Sparrow, The Light, a tone poem (2004); Canned Beer (2003), and We Are Not Machines (2001). https://www.katesmithpromotions.com/artists/joanie-pallatto/

My Original Plan