Monday, February 7, 2022

Ranee Lee - You Must Believe In Spring

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 61:50
Size: 141.6 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1996
Art: Front

[5:35] 1. Secret Love
[5:08] 2. Nice And Easy
[5:05] 3. Angel Eyes
[3:26] 4. I've Got The World On A String
[4:09] 5. Au Privave
[4:25] 6. My Baby Just Cares For Me
[7:34] 7. Yesterdays
[5:47] 8. Stolen Moments
[4:58] 9. My Romance
[6:05] 10. Fine And Mellow
[6:12] 11. You Must Believe In Spring
[3:22] 12. What Is This Thing Called Love

"What would you get if you mixed the spirited lilt of Ella Fitzgerald with the sassy sophistication of Sarah Vaughan topped off with the ability to emotionalize a lyric ala Carmen McRae. A dream-like combination for sure, but Ranee Lee comes darn close to realizing it..." She's been around for some time, though she's not nearly as well known as some less talented singers. Perhaps this disc will change that for it presents Lee in her prime, a mature, confident vocalist. The songs here include "Angel Eyes," "I've Got the World On A String" and "Fine and Mellow." Lee's phrasing proves she understands the nuances both in the lyric and the melody line, as does the band, which features stellar vets Ray Brown and Ed Thigpen. ~ Deni Kasrel/Jazz Times

You Must Believe In Spring

Sunday, February 6, 2022

Michela Lombardi - Small Day Tomorrow

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:50
Size: 100,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:22) 1. Comes Love
(2:19) 2. It isn't so Good
(4:56) 3. Some Other Time
(4:38) 4. Small Day Tomorrow
(2:19) 5. Guess I'll hang my tears out to dry
(5:37) 6. The Meaning of the Blues
(4:07) 7. You Are There
(5:20) 8. Everything Must Change
(3:01) 9. That's All
(4:35) 10. Lunatic Lullaby
(2:32) 11. You Are There(Al Take)

Elegant, delicate, intense. The Tuscan Michela Lombardi is among the top ten Best Italian Jazz Vocalists according to the "Jazzit Award 2011", she has often been mentioned in the "Best Voice" section in the Top Jazz polls of the "Musica Jazz" magazine and the Jazz Magazine Italia has dedicated her the cover of February 2008 with Tierney Sutton and Anne Ducros.

He has recorded two discs with Phil Woods also composing some lyrics, he has signed a song with Burt Bacharach, he teaches jazz singing in three Italian conservatories, in his last two discs - "Solitary Moon" with the Piero Frassi trio together with Gabriele Evangelista and Andrea Melani , and “Live To Tell” with the Riccardo Fassi trio together with Luca Pirozzi and Alessandro Marzi - Steven Bernstein, Emanuele Cisi and Don Byron play as special guests.

He presented "Live To Tell" at the "jazzahead!" 2017 in Bremen (Germany) with the Riccardo Fassi trio and Alex Sipiagin special guest obtaining a final standing ovation, won the Ciampi 2010 prize and obtained the Special Mention at the 2007 Crest Jazz Vocal Concours, sang in duo with Danilo Rea, inaugurated the 2009 jazz season at the Tel Aviv Opera House with Nicola Stilo 5tet, she sang at the Duc des Lombards in Paris with her 4tet guest Nico Gori, she won the audience award as composer at the Piacenza Jazz Note di Donna 2009, she composed lyrics for a song by Kenny Wheeler who wanted her to sing it with him on stage (Bargajazz 2007), was conducted in bigband by Massimo Nunzi with the Operaia Orchestra (Arezzo, December 2014) and performed with the Barga Jazz Big Band,

He has sung / collaborated, among others, with: Kelvin Sholar, Byron Landham, Philip Harper, Matt Garrison, Michael Baker, Alex Sipiagin, Tom Kirkpatrick, Gabriele Evangelista, Bernardo Guerra, Andrea Tofanelli, Fabio Morgera, Riccardo Arrighini, Aldo Zunino, Massimo Faraò, Francesco Ponticelli, Giovanni Ceccarelli, Stefano Nunzi, Andrea Nunzi, Carlo Battisti, Alberto Marsico, Alessandro Minetto, Francesco Puglisi, Pietro Tonolo, Mattia Barbieri, Petra Magoni, Stefano Bollani, Marco Tamburini, Danilo Rea and many others. https://www-michelalombardi-it.translate.goog/singer/biography

Personnel: Vocals – Michela Lombardi; Baritone Saxophone – Alessandro Riccucci; Drums, Percussion – Riccardo Jenna; Guitar – Luca Giovacchini; Harmonica – Federico Bertelli; Piano, Vocals – Piero Frassi

Small Day Tomorrow

Aaron Goldberg - Worlds

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:13
Size: 136,1 MB
Art: Front

( 8:05)  1. Lambada de Serpente
( 8:31)  2. Taurus
( 2:27)  3. Kianda's Song
( 5:05)  4. Unstablemates
( 5:10)  5. Modinha
( 5:28)  6. Salvador
( 4:26)  7. Oam's Blues
( 6:57)  8. Inutil Paisagem
(11:01)  9. Oud To Omer
( 1:58) 10. Between Worlds

Man, am I glad that pianist Aaron Goldberg and I never tried to apply for the same job. I'm not a musician, but you should see this guy's CV. While he was double-majoring at Harvard in history and science plus mind, brain and behavior, he was working with Betty Carter, gigging weekends in Boston and winning all kinds of awards, including the formidable-sounding Clifford Brown/Stan Getz Fellowship. After graduation (magna cum laude), he moved to New York and played with a bunch of top names, among them Joshua Redman. What next? Goldberg was a member of Wynton Marsalis's quintet and the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra. Ah, well, now we're onto something: he's one of those young fogeys, all chops and no soul. But, you know, the problem with this critique of the young conservatives is that, sure, Stanley Crouch (an intellectual guru to some) can be a pompous ass, but most of the players are damn good and indeed quite soulful. (And don't misunderstand me, Mr. Crouch: I mean that you are an often brilliant pompous ass.)
So, what about Worlds, Goldberg's third recording as leader? Is he stuck in the past? It's true that, listening to this album, you might think history had stopped with Everybody Digs Bill Evans. But for as long as the record is playing, these guys will have you convinced that maybe history should have stopped in 1958. Goldberg's playing is just delectable from start to finish. Admirers of Cecil Taylor or Marilyn Crispell might feel a kind of guilty pleasure digging his apparently retrograde style, but no guilt is necessary, and there's nothing retrograde about the style, either. The upside of the postmodern character of contemporary jazz is that all these stylistic strata can be sampled simultaneously. If you value the great piano trios, of which Evans's was surely the avatar, then go ahead and wallow in this trio's mastery of the idiom. And Goldberg's embrace of explicit and implicit Brazilian references contributes mightily to the unity and exuberance with which that mastery is expressed.

An essential ingredient in this record's success is the endlessly inventive interplay among the trio members: bassist Reuben Rogers and especially drummer Eric Harland play just as well as the leader, reminding us of the critical role played by bassists and drummers in great piano trios of times past. (Their CVs are not included in the press kit, but I'm reasonably confident that between them they hold a couple of biotechnology patents and/or Ivy League diplomas.) Plenty of young players are remarkably good sidemen, but it's relatively unusual that so young a leader can convey and communicate so coherent a musical vision over the length of an album. ~ Jeff Dayton-Johnson http://www.allaboutjazz.com/worlds-aaron-goldberg-sunnyside-records-review-by-jeff-dayton-johnson.php

Personnel: Aaron Goldberg: piano; Reuben Rogers: bass; Eric Harland: drums; Luciana Souza: vocals (3); Kurt Rosenwinkel: guitar (9).

Worlds

Deni Hines & James Morrison - The Other Woman

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:25
Size: 154,4 MB
Art: Front + Back

(3:29)  1. I Only Have Eyes For You
(5:21)  2. Lady Sings The Blues
(3:04)  3. Too Darn Hot
(4:51)  4. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
(4:45)  5. All The Kings Horses
(3:06)  6. Them There Eyes
(3:34)  7. The Man I Love
(3:25)  8. Summertime
(4:58)  9. The Other Woman
(4:01) 10. Strange Fruit
(5:07) 11. God Bless The Child
(2:54) 12. Wake Up
(3:44) 13. The Very Thought Of You
(3:46) 14. Turn Me On
(6:41) 15. (Tired Of Being) Other Woman
(4:34) 16. Someone To Watch Over Me

The Other Woman; World renowned Jazz artist James Morrison and leading Soul/RNB singer Deni Hines join forces and show off their exceptional, diverse talents with the release of The Other Woman. The Other Woman is a dynamic 16 track album, covering some of the most respected female Jazz artists in history, such as Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, Ella Fitzgerald and Aretha Franklin. An unique and dynamic album in every sense, The Other Woman is truly a 'must have' release from two of Australia's most talented artists.  http://www.birdland.com.au/catalogue/category634/p46959

Antti Sarpila - Encore Live : The Buck Clayton Legacy

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:12
Size: 177,2 MB
Art: Front

( 7:37)  1. All The Cats Join In
( 5:16)  2. Buckin' The Blues
( 5:32)  3. Toot Sweet
( 7:49)  4. Robbins Nest
( 6:23)  5. Professor Jazz
( 3:35)  6. Fiesta In Blue
(11:10)  7. Jumpin' At The Woodside
( 6:48)  8. Blue And Sentimental
( 6:51)  9. Sabine's Jazz Arena
( 5:13) 10. Lean Baby
(10:52) 11. Rock-A-Bye Basie

The arrangements, the compositions, and the joy of Buck Clayton's playing are celebrated during this live concert. The music looks back toward both the trumpeter's work as a member of Count Basie's Orchestra and his legendary Columbia jam sessions of the 1950s. The interesting mainstream group mixes together a few lesser-known Europeans  trombonist Jerry Tilitz, Antti Sarpila on reeds, pianist Brian Dee and bassist Len Skeat with trumpeter/arranger Randy Sandke (who does a superb job of taking Clayton's place), the tenors of Harry Allan and Danny Moss, baritonist Scott Robinson and drummer Butch Miles. The music really swings and has among its many highlights "All the Cats Join In," "Robbins Nest," "Jumpin' at the Woodside" and "Rock-A-Bye Basie." ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-buck-clayton-legacy-encore-live-mw0000045775

Personnel: Randy Sandke (trumpet); Antti Sarpila (clarinet, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Danny Moss, Harry Allen (tenor saxophone); Scott Robinson (baritone saxophone); Jerry Tilitz (trombone); Brian Dee (piano); Butch Miles (drums).

Saturday, February 5, 2022

Richard Wyands Trio - Lady Of The Lavender Mist

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:27
Size: 97.2 MB
Styles: Bop, Piano jazz
Year: 2002/2011
Art: Front

[5:44] 1. Softly, With Feeling
[6:38] 2. Flamingo
[6:12] 3. When I Fall In Love
[4:48] 4. So In Love
[5:51] 5. Lady Of The Lavender Mist
[7:31] 6. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
[6:11] 7. Born To Be Blue

Richard Wyands, Piano; Peter Washington, Bass; Kenny Washington, Drums.

Best known as a hard bop pianist side-man, this album represents Wyands’ 2002 success as lead, laying down a smooth sophisticated sound.

Lady Of The Lavender Mist

Elmo Hope Trio - Meditations

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1955
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:34
Size: 102,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:42)  1. It's A Lovely Day Today
(3:25)  2. All The Things You Are
(4:27)  3. Quit It
(2:55)  4. Lucky Strike
(4:58)  5. I Don't Stand (A Ghost Of A Chance With You)
(3:49)  6. Huh
(3:00)  7. Falling In Love With Love
(3:25)  8. My Heart Stood Still
(2:41)  9. Elmo's Fire
(4:28) 10. I'm In The Mood For Love
(6:41) 11. Blue Mo

Although Elmo Hope was one of the more interesting jazz composers of the 1950s, the emphasis on his trio set with bassist John Ore and drummer Willie Jones is on Hope's piano playing. Influenced greatly by Bud Powell (his contemporary), Hope performs standards (such as "All the Things You Are" and "Falling in Love with Love") along with some originals, most of which are based on the chord changes of earlier songs. Fans of bop piano and Bud Powell will want this enjoyable CD reissue. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/meditations-mw0000691394

Personnel:  Bass – John Ore;  Drums – Willie Jones;  Piano – Elmo Hope

Meditations

The Jonah Jones Quartet - A Touch Of Blue

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:01
Size: 132.8 MB
Styles: Trumpet jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[1:58] 1. So Blue
[2:07] 2. It's A Blue World
[1:47] 3. I Got The Blues When It Rains
[2:46] 4. Blues In My Heart
[1:55] 5. Blue Turning Grey Over You
[2:10] 6. A Touch Of Blue
[1:41] 7. Blue (And Broken Hearted)
[2:48] 8. Blue Champagne
[2:37] 9. Birth Of The Blues
[2:43] 10. Dust Bowl Blues
[1:57] 11. Blue Danube Rock
[2:22] 12. Blue Skies
[1:59] 13. The Poor People Of Paris
[2:29] 14. Cherry Pink And Apple Blossom White
[3:17] 15. La Rosita
[2:45] 16. Dansero
[2:41] 17. April In Portugal
[2:00] 18. The Third Man Theme
[2:38] 19. Lisboa Antigua
[2:13] 20. Sleepy Lagoon
[2:47] 21. Soft Summer Breeze
[2:45] 22. Serenata
[2:52] 23. Theme From Picnic
[2:33] 24. The Song From Moulin Rouge (Where Is Your Heart )

Twofer: A Touch of Blue (ST-1405) 1960 [#1-12], Greatest Instrumental Hits Styled by Jonah Jones (ST-1557) 1961 [#13-24]. Recorded in New York City, 1960-1961. 24-Bit Digitally Remastered. Jonah Jones, trumpet & vocal on #2, 5 & 9; Teddy Brannon, piano; John Brown, bass; George 'Pops' Foster, drums; Swinginest Chorale, vocals.

Jonah Jones zoomed to popularity in the late 50s. He found a successful formula and used it to brighten the hit charts with a succession of bouncy albums on Capitol Records. His quartet was one of the three newcomers in the Top 10 wide variety of small groups listed in the favorite Instrumental Billboard lists in 1958.

Jonah Jones was truly a man with a rare talent for playing in a way that people loved. Jones trumpet stays fairly close to the melodic line and he displays an excellent sense of timing and pacing. In these two albums he just added a new sound with the tasteful vocal backgrounds of the Swinginest Chorale. All tailored to suit the clean, compact style which became a Jonah Jones trademark.

A Touch Of Blue  

The Jimmy Rushing Allstars - Gee, Baby, Ain't I Good To You

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:20
Size: 131.3 MB
Styles: Jazz/blues vocals
Year: 1997
Art: Front

[5:45] 1. Gee, Baby, Ain't I Good To You
[6:34] 2. Mjr Blues
[3:29] 3. Tricks Ain't Walkin' No More
[5:37] 4. St. James Infirmary
[9:48] 5. One O'clock Jump
[5:09] 6. Who's Sorry Now
[7:31] 7. These Foolish Things
[5:48] 8. I Ain't Got Nobody
[7:35] 9. Good Morning Blues

Bass – Gene Ramey; Drums – Jo Jones; Piano – Sir Charles Thompson; Tenor Saxophone – Julian Dash; Trombone – Dickie Wells; Trumpet – Buck Clayton; Vocals – Jimmy Rushing.

An informal "Jazz party" situation taped in the studio in front of one-hundred invited guests, Jumbo Jimmy Rushing fronts an all-star group of New York Jazzmen and romps his way through a handful of standards. Joining Rushing are Buck Clayton-trumpet, Dickie Wells-trombone, Julian Dash-tenor sax, Sir Charles Thompson-piano, Gene Ramey-bass and Jo Jones on drums. Recorded and engineered by George Piros of Mercury Living Presence fame at Fine Studios in New York City. Originally released in 1967 on the MJR label.

Gee, Baby, Ain't I Good To You

Jimmy Cobb's Mob - Cobb's Groove

Styles: Straight-ahead/Mainstream
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:39
Size: 132,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:04)  1. Cobb's Groove
(5:29)  2. I Miss You, My Love
(5:28)  3. Willow Tree
(6:28)  4. Sweet and Lovely
(5:56)  5. Jet Stream
(5:53)  6. Moment To Moment
(8:07)  7. Minor Changes
(6:51)  8. Bubblehead
(6:20)  9. Simone

Some decisions are good, others bad, and a few are quite simply inspired, such as producer Todd Barkan's decision to invite tenor saxophonist Eric Alexander to join drummer Jimmy Cobb's Mob on its latest album, Cobb's Groove. I can picture the session as being a pretty good one without Alexander sitting in; with him, it rises far above that, moving toward the adjectival equivalent of superlative. And that's no knock on Cobb, pianist Richard Wyands, guitarist Peter Bernstein or bassist John Webber, each of whom is a standout. But it is Alexander's overshadowing presence that sets the album apart and makes it special. One must, of course, allow for a certain bias here. As unofficial spokesman for the Eric Alexander Fan Club, I've been praising his talents for a number of years now, and others must agree, as Alexander is not only one of the best but also one of the busiest tenors on the New York scene, a throwback to the days when musicians would wind up a gig, then take their horns or whatever to another location and blow until sunrise and beyond. In short, this is one player who clearly loves what he is doing, and it shows. 

What I admire most about Alexander, aside, that is, from his gorgeous tone, impeccable technique and endless stream of persuasive ideas, is that he seems always to have something fresh to say, some new and unexpected twist that lets one know that he is not standing still but constantly working to enhance his artistry. Stylistically, Alexander is straight-on but never dull, forswearing flashy histrionics in favor of beauty and intelligence to underscore his musical point of view. Best of all, he invariably comes to play. Of course, Cobb and his Mob come to play too, and Groove would be a rather tedious session without them. While perhaps not as well known as such contemporaries as Art Blakey, Max Roach, Roy Haynes, Philly Joe Jones and others, Cobb is a tasteful and experienced timekeeper who adds class to any group. Bernstein, who has been with the Mob from its outset, is a staunch team player and resourceful soloist, as are Wyands and Webber. 

They're an impressive group on their own terms, an even better one with Alexander on board. Seven of the nine tunes on Groove are originals'three by Bernstein ("Jet Stream," "Minor Changes," "Bobblehead") and one each by Cobb ("Cobb's Groove"), Wyands ("Willow Tree"), Steve Batten ("I Miss You, My Love") and Frank Foster ("Simone"). Completing the program are Henry Mancini's "Moment to Moment" and another standard, "Sweet and Lovely." Alexander puts on the gloves and trades punches on every number, and he never fails to deliver a knockout blow. Cobb's Groove is a paradigm of swinging, straight-ahead contemporary jazz, superbly performed by five world-class musicians. Warmly recommended. ~ Jack Bowers  
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/cobbs-groove-jimmy-cobb-fantasy-jazz-review-by-jack-bowers.php#.U44Dkiioqdk
 
Personnel: Jimmy Cobb: drums; Richard Wyands: piano; Peter Bernstein: guitar; John Webber: bass. Special guest: Eric Alexander, tenor saxophone.

Thursday, February 3, 2022

Barbara Dane - What Are You Gonna Do When There Ain't No Jazz?

Size: 137,5 MB
Time: 58:58
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2002
Styles: Jazz/Blues Vocals
Art: Front

01. The World's Jazz Crazy (2:42)
02. Jelly Bean Blues (2:56)
03. Ain't Nobody Got The Blues Like Me (3:57)
04. Black-Eye Blues (3:07)
05. Pinchbacks, Take 'em Away (4:17)
06. Besame Mucho (5:32)
07. How Can You Face Me Now (3:51)
08. Blues For The Old Timer (6:11)
09. Brother, Can You Spare A Dime (4:17)
10. Tain't Nobody's Bizness If I Do (6:59)
11. Street Walker's Blues (3:39)
12. I'll See You In C-U-B-A (4:02)
13. My Melancholy Baby (4:20)
14. What Are You Gonna Do When There Ain't No Jazz (3:03)

This is Barbara's mature hot jazz-blues best, recorded in New Orleans (1988) and in Berkeley (2000). Three revered veterans of the San Francisco '50s jazz revival play on both sessions: Bob Mielke (trombone), Richard Hadlock (soprano & alto sax) and Pete Allen (bass). Two brilliant younger players, Clint Baker (guitar) and Marc Caparone (trumpet) animate the California session. The piano chair is shared by two of the greatest in traditional jazz: Ray Skjelbred and Butch Thompson (of Prairie Home Companion fame). There’s a rich mixture of classics like Jelly Bean Blues and Black Eye Blues, prohibition-era tunes like the title song and Irving Berlin's "See you in C-U-B-A," Barbara’s original “Blues for the Old Timer” dedicated to the elders who have inspired her, Yip Harburg's beloved "Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?", and Fats Waller's "How Can You Face Me Now?", all delivered with a subtext that comments on life in today's uneasy world.

What Are You Gonna Do When There Ain't No Jazz?

Carla Cook - It's All About Love

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 56:22
Size: 129.1 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[3:59] 1. Corner Pocket/Until I Met You
[6:03] 2. Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)
[6:27] 3. Swing Time/The Way You Look Tonight
[5:22] 4. Knickerbocker Holiday/September Song
[6:29] 5. Cancao Do Sal
[5:08] 6. Hold To God's Unchanging Hand
[5:34] 7. It's All About Love
[3:30] 8. Where Or When/Babes In Arms/Where Or When
[4:50] 9. Can This Be Love
[5:34] 10. Heart Of Gold
[3:22] 11. These Foolish Things

Vocalist Cook took a beeline from her native Detroit to Boston, where she received a degree in speech communications, then to N.Y.C. She's influenced by the gospel and Motown music of her home, as well as jazz. Using an expressive, wide-ranging, utterly clear voice, Cook is also unafraid to scat as she does on several of these selections, sometimes in between lyrics. She's a warm, soulful singer, easy to enjoy and well aware of her capabilities, of which show a nice diversity, and the maturity of a more seasoned professional.

Cook's musical assets are greatly enhanced by the presence of pianist Cyrus Chestnut on eight of the 11 tracks. He truly can do it all, taking liberties with the song form on the Count Basie/Joe Williams evergreen "Corner Pocket," digging deep into soulful resources in tandem with percussionist Jeffrey Haynes for the spiritually oriented "Hold to God's Unchanging Hand," listening intently and responding to Cook and violinist Regina Carter during the heart melting "September Song," or simply laying out a lustrous melody as on "These Foolish Things." Andy Milne also plays piano on three selections, but is especially poignant as an arranger for Neil Young's "Heart of Gold," a midnight blue approach that is a stark contrast to the harmonica-spiked cowboy mentality of the original -- quite a showstopper. Cook's funkier persona is on the toned-down side as opposed to P-Funk; her "Inner City Blues" has an economical scat line sprinkled on top of the classic lyric. She wrote the pop blues title track and a samba-inflected "Can This Be Love?," Carter again accenting on violin. There are two versions of the standard "The Way You Look Tonight," one a bonus CD-ROM video track, the strictly audio version a vocal-bass intro that allows Cook flights of fancy that show how she's got it going on from a pure improvisers standpoint. She also does Milton Nascimento's "Salt Song" and, with Milne, a wonderful version of the patient Rodgers & Hart show tune "Where or When." This debut shows much promise, and though the theme in the title would suggest it, these are not all sappy torch songs. Her abilities are impressive, certainly enough to warrant the notion that this is a career in the making for Cook, and not a hobby. Recommended. ~Michael G. Nastos

It's All About Love

Richard Wyands - As Long as There's Music

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:29
Size: 118,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:31)  1. Stolen Sweets
(3:00)  2. As Long as There's Music
(6:19)  3. Stairway to the Stars
(5:31)  4. Focus
(6:37)  5. Ivy
(4:33)  6. What's New
(5:38)  7. Drop Me Off in Harlem
(5:29)  8. My Old Flame
(2:35)  9. With the Wind and the Rain in Your Hair
(6:12) 10. West 94th Street Funk

With the help of several independent labels and some of the best bassists and drummers in the business, Richard Wyands has been quietly building a superb body of jazz piano trio recordings. Amazing enough, As Long As There’s Music is his first American recording as a leader. Other trio recordings have been released by European labels such as Steeplechase and Criss Cross. On this outing, Wyands is accompanied by bassist Ray Drummond and drummer Grady Tate many a pianist’s dream rhythm section. His recent string of trio recordings with first rate rhythm sections is a testament to the pianist’s stature in the jazz world. This recording is a presentation of what admirers of Wyands have long cherished  his rich sense of tradition, his impeccable taste, his rhythmic ease, and his harmonic sophistication. Wyands is not a flashy pianist; he is a pianist of thoughtful, deeply felt emotion that is fully supported by the integrity of his technique and his artistic choices. Tadd Dameron’s “Focus” is one of the highlights of this recording. Wyands’ subtle shift in tempo over the stop-and-go course of the opening slides into a long, upbeat, boppish solo that brightly rounds the usual edges. Drummond follows with a concise solo before Wyands and Tate trade fours, leading to the closing. This track illustrates the trio’s easy rapport throughout the session. Another highlight is Wyands’ solo performance on “My Old Flame,” a track that vividly demonstrates the casual complexity of his rhythmic sense. A careful listening to his left hand at work, and how Wyands incorporates silences, is enlightening. Incidentally, this track does bring up the obvious that a solo Wyands recording is long overdue. Anyone familiar with this artist’s trio work will be happy to know that this recording is in the same league with his recent recordings with Peter and Kenny Washington on Criss Cross - high praise indeed. ~ Mike Neely https://www.allaboutjazz.com/as-long-as-theres-music-richard-wyands-savant-records-review-by-mike-neely.php

Personnel: Richard Wyands, piano; Ray Drummond, bass; and Grady Tate, drums.

As Long as There's Music

Kenny Drew - Misty

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1978-1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:03
Size: 115,1 MB
Art: Front

(7:14) 1. Stella By Starlight
(4:39) 2. Misty
(4:22) 3. Autumn In Rome
(4:37) 4. But Not For Me
(3:41) 5. As Time Goes By
(7:05) 6. Last Tango In Paris
(4:55) 7. Sunset
(3:16) 8. Blues In Green
(5:39) 9. The Way We Were
(4:31) 10. I'm Old Fashioned

Kenny Drew was born in New York City in August of 1928. At the age of 5, he began studying classical piano with a private teacher and at 8, gave a recital. This early background is similar to that of Bud Powell, the man who later became his main inspiration as a jazz pianist. After digging Fats Waller, at 12, and then Art Tatum and Teddy Wilson, Drew attended the High School of Music and Art. He was known as a hot boogie woogie player but passed through this phase before graduation. Kenny's first professional job was as accompanist at Pearl Primus' dance school. At the same time, he was alternating with Walter Bishop Jr. in a neighborhood band that included Sonny Rollins, Jackie McLean and Art Taylor. In this period, he used to hang-out on 52nd Street to listen to Charlie Parker and Powell and began sitting in at various jam sessions around town.

In January of 1950, Drew made his first appearance on record, with Blue Note. Howard McGhee was the leader and the other featured soloists were Brew Moore and J.J. Johnson. One of the six sides released was “I'll Remember April.” The label, in addition to stating “Howard McGhee's All Stars”, further read, “Introducing Kenny Drew.” Later, in 1953, Kenny made his first album as a leader. Again it was Blue Note who recorded him, this time in a trio with Curly Russell and Art Blakey. But Kenny opted to settle in Los Angeles for the next few years. There in 1955, he formed a quartet with the late Joe Maini, Leroy Vinnegar and Lawrence Marable. The quartet first recorded together in 1955 for Pacific Jazz. In December, Jazz West, a subsidiary of Aladdin Records, brought the quartet as is into Capitol's recording studios for “Talkin' & Walkin'.”

In February of '56, Kenny's band and arrangements were used for another Jazz West release, this one by vocalist Jane Fielding. A month later, Drew, Paul Chambers, John Coltrane and Philly Joe Jones made the great “Chambers' Music” for the same label, which is now reissued on Blue Note. In early 1957 Kenny made his way back to New York as accompanist for Dinah Washington. That September, he participated in John Coltrane's monumental masterpiece “Blue Train,” but his association with Blue Note did not heat up again until 1960 when he made his own “Undercurrent” as well as Jackie McLean's “Bluesnik,” and “Jackie's Bag,” Kenny Dorham's “Whistle Stop,” Dexter Godon's “Dexter Calling,” Grant Green's “Sunday Mornin'” and a couple of Tina Brooks dates all within the space of a year.

Although Kenny was active on the recording and club scenes in New York and even subbed for Freddie Redd for a while in the successful Off-Broadway run of The Connection, he eventually chose to migrate to Europe. But he again popped up on a classic Blue Note date, Dexter Godon's “One Flight Up,” done in Paris in 1964. Kenny became a major star in Europe and Japan although his music was sadly neglected at home. He settled in Copenhagen where he ran a publishing company and was the house pianist at the Café Montmartre. He was also the pianist for the Steeplechase label, where he was on countless sessions backing visiting musicians. He left an impressive legacy of recordings both as sideman and leader. Kenny Drew died on Aug. 4, 1993. https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/kenny-drew

Personnel: Bass – Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen; Drums – Alvin Queen, Ed Thigpen; Piano – Kenny Drew

Misty

Cy Coleman - Piano Witchcraft

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1963
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:02
Size: 76,7 MB
Art: Front

(2:14) 1. Brassmen's Holiday
(2:15) 2. Witchcraft
(2:32) 3. Misty
(1:54) 4. I'm Gonna Laugh You Right of My Life
(3:02) 5. It Amazes Me
(2:27) 6. Hey, Look Me Over
(2:18) 7. The Riviera
(2:49) 8. Autumn Nocturne
(2:17) 9. Leave It To Love
(3:01) 10. I Thought About You
(2:24) 11. You Fascinate Me So
(2:43) 12. The Best Is Yet To Come

The compositional skills of Cy Coleman (1929–2004) run through the veins of Jazz, and this is only the starting point for other genres, styles and radical interpretations du jour to succumb to the clarity of the tone sequences and strong melodies. In fact, there is no area of popular music in the 50’s and 60’s that hasn’t been touched by Coleman’s wizardry, and whether you call Space-Age, Exotica or Saturday show tunes your forte, multiple arrangers got your back and bring you Coleman, among them American composer, arranger and trumpeter Billy May (1916–2004) who brings us the 12-track compendium of Coleman corkers called Piano Witchcraft, released in 1963 on Capitol Records. If there is one basic premise of a spell, it is its reliance on ploys, illusions, deceptions, razzle-dazzle.

This applies to the very title of this album which offers much more than just the magic of the piano: varied brass layers and two flutes are equally important in transmuting the material into magic. And Billy May knows what he is doing. Exotica fans know him best as the principal leader of the Rico Mambo Orchestra that fueled Yma Sumac’s most celebrated release Mambo! (1954) or probably for his supergroup The Out Islanders whose album Polynesian Fantasy (1961) is an enchanting amalgamation of Proto-Surf, Ragtime and soothing island vibes. Here, then, is a closer look at Piano Witchcraft which is excitingly dreamy and insouciant as well. There’s probably no better way to start an album that’s called Piano Witchcraft than with Brakemen’s Holiday, at least when this particular arrangement is considered: spectacularly vivid piano helixes rotoscope amid municipal horn protuberances, the tempo is smoking fast, making side A running on all cylinders right from the get-go. The adjacent gold standard Witchcraft then resides on the laid-back side of life, enchanting with its fittingly aureate piano chords, the warm polyphony of the trumpets and cautiously shrill flute ectomorphs aka the wherewithal of magic.

While the warmhearted Misty’s physiognomy is that of a carefully accompanied piano arrangement with a delicious interlocution between pristine dew drops and name-related mellow brass smoke, I'm Gonna Laugh You Out Of My Life augments the timbrical retinue of brass, woodwind and piano epithelia with a unapologetically magnanimous good mood fueled by happy carefreeness, before It Amazes Me emits white keys like dew drops; their rotatory sprinkles are few and far between, but held together by a milquetoast micrometry of the brass layers. Hey, Look Me Over then illumines the proscenium with neon-colored show tune tonalities trumpet-wise and gives the hydromagnesite piano glints a Saturday night vibe. Side B opens with The Riviera, an uplifting stroll through the orthochromatic landscape that is inculcated via technicolor brass flares and a paraphyletic piano phytotelemata of the glacial kind, thus shuttling between fuzzy warmth and crystalline clarity whereas Autumn Nocturne revs up the presence of the piano in a quasi-focused arrangement with the signature instrument in the epicenter, only providing a mild serration of it with the fibrillar aura of the subdued brass illuminants; the precise proclivity of the flutes scythes through the viscoelasticity one single time only, and it’s more caproic than truly incisive.

Leave It To Love meanwhile oscillates between moonlit horn vibes and the piano-and-flute-driven concept of an afternoon stroll through concrete jungles, with the follow-up I Thought About You providing a starstruck slow dance ceremony where the piano glistens like cerulean dew; cautious intermediate tones even hint at a pinch of Rag, but make no mistake, this is a smoochy affair when compared directly to these fragile style adjuvants. The penultimate You Fascinate Me So returns to the saturated hue of cajoling brass fibroblasts and offers an another iteration of admixed predilection for a piano-driven epicenter before the cheeky occurrence of The Best Is Yet To Come marks the swinging finale that somewhat mirrors the opener of side A due to its orthogonal perianths: nomological flutes meet muted brass muons and their fully colored show tune brethren, altogether mustered by the plinking prestidigitation of Cy Coleman on the piano. Piano Witchcraft is a magnificent work of playful interdependencies between its primary three forces – piano, flutes, brass – and nothing else, and this erudite cathexis as well as the willful reduction to this formula make the album a masterful sparkler that should not remain underestimated. It is true that this particular work is less considered and clearly situated under the radar nowadays if only for the fact that an officially remastered digital reissue has yet to materialize at the time of writing this review, but this only heightens and magnifies the enchantment of the featured material. All compositions feature the basic premise of Cy Coleman’s cosmic melodies, centrifugal journeys and tantamount moments of contemplation and quiescence, and Billy May’s orchestra knows how to encapsulate and exude their particular spirits.

This is an album full of romanticism, but it is the good, non-cheesy kind of devotion and mutual understanding! Even my beloved and fully orchestral Love Eyes (1960) by Dominic Frontiere is much more tacky in its less stellar parts. Piano Witchcraft, on the other hand, advertises the well-known slogan ”less is more,” at least on the instrumental side of life before it ventures all the keener into the chromogenic verglas dioramas of Coleman’s compositions. Everything fits together, and despite the focus on coherence and continuity, the amethystine flow allows for sparkling surprises to happen throughout the short runtime. Piano Witchcraft never overstays its welcome which makes it even larger. http://www.ambientexotica.com/exorev476_cycoleman_witchcraft/

Piano Witchcraft

Adam Shulman Quartet - On Second Thought

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:24
Size: 125,1 MB
Art: Front

(7:33) 1. New Beginning
(7:10) 2. 78 Prosper Resolution
(5:32) 3. Bounce
(6:01) 4. The Little Ones
(5:06) 5. On Second Thought
(9:45) 6. For An Unknown Lady
(7:13) 7. Sara's Song
(6:01) 8. Going Home

With On Second Thought, the Adam Shulman Quartet breaks through with its first CD, a selection of thoughtful and eminently accessible originals by leader and pianist Shulman. It features eight melodic compositions, melding perfectly the group's talented musicians, which include Dayna Stephens on alto, John Wiitala on bass and Jon Arkin on drums. Shulman has been active in the San Francisco jazz scene since he moved there some six years ago, playing regularly in the Bay area with assorted groups. He paid his dues with renowned jazz artists such as Stefon Harris, Paula West and Bobby Hutcherson. On his site, Shulman praises Bill Evans as a huge influence on him. This can be heard in the melodic force and use of chord voicing, as Shulman borrows from both classical and popular forms. It is Stephens on tenor, though, who shines here.

With his warm, breathy tone, he is right out of the Lester Young school via Stan Getz and, currently, Harry Allen. On this album, he delivers a string of peerless solos. On his way to becoming one of the best, he is currently leading groups in the New York area which sometimes include pianist Taylor Eigsti. This praise is not to detract from Shulman, though. The two wonderfully complement each other, piano and sax weaving in and out of often contrapuntal, melodic configurations. Assuredly backing them are Wiitala's bass and Arkin's drums. The ensemble shows up best on "For An Unknown Lady. " Both Shulman and Stephens have strong solos, and, near the end, Shulman's repetitive chords support Stephens' powerful statement. The whimsical "Bounce" takes off from the children's tune "Inchworm" and goes with it, providing fodder for Stephens' imaginative ideas. After this, one looks forward to Shulman's next release.~Larry Taylorhttps://www.allaboutjazz.com/on-second-thought-adam-shulman-kabocha-records-review-by-larry-taylor

Personnel: Adam Shulman: piano; Dayna Stephens: tenor sax; John Wiitala: bass; Jon Arkin: drums.

On Second Thought

Beverly Kenney - Sings For Johnny Smith

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:19
Size: 69.4 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1955/2013
Art: Front

[2:11] 1. Surrey With The Fringe On Top
[2:35] 2. I'll Know My Love
[2:22] 3. Destination Moon
[3:11] 4. This Little Town Is Paris
[2:48] 5. Stairway To The Stars
[2:30] 6. Tis' Autumn
[2:20] 7. Looking For A Boy
[3:04] 8. Ball And Chain
[2:09] 9. Almost Like Being In Love
[2:13] 10. There Will Never Be Another Yo
[2:18] 11. Moe's Blues
[2:31] 12. Snuggled On Your Shoulder

Beverly Kenney was one of the most promising new jazz singers of the mid-'50s. Unfortunately, she did not live long and recorded just three albums as a leader. This particular CD reissue, a quartet date with guitarist Johnny Smith, pianist Bob Pancoast, bassist Knobby Totah, and drummer Mousie Alexander, is a real gem, with Kenney heard in top form. Her version of "Destination Moon" is quite delightful, and other highlights include "Tis' Autumn," "Almost Like Being in Love," "There Will Never Be Another You," and "Snuggled on Your Shoulder," even if "Ball and Chain" (a renamed "Sweet Lorraine") does not quite cut it. Beverly Kenney had great potential and deserves to be remembered today. This reissue from the Spanish Fresh Sound label is highly recommended. ~Scott Yanow

Sings For Johnny Smith

Tuesday, February 1, 2022

Rashied Ali & Arthur Rhames - The Dynamic Duo (Remember Trane And Bird) Disc 1, Disc 2

Album: The Dynamic Duo (Remember Trane And Bird) Disc 1

Styles: Vocal, Piano and Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:14
Size: 165,6 MB
Art: Front

(16:49) 1. Introduction By Rashied Ali
(23:19) 2. Mr. PC
( 5:59) 3. I Want To Talk About You
(16:06) 4. Giant Steps/Impressions/Tune Up
( 9:59) 5. Extra, Extra - Read All About It (1)

Album: The Dynamic Duo (Remember Trane And Bird) Disc 2

Time: 52:17
Size: 120,0 MB

( 7:17) 1. Giant Steps / Lazy Bird / Moments Notice
( 7:51) 2. Extra, Extra - Read All About It (2)
( 2:47) 3. Acknowledgement
( 2:41) 4. Resolution
( 6:29) 5. Pursuance
(10:11) 6. Homage Charlie Parker - Medley
(14:59) 7. The Work Of The Master

For some, Interstellar Space was the end of John Coltrane and for others, just the beginning. As many people dislike Rashied Ali for being Trane's last drummer as like him for that same reason. Indisputable though is that Interstellar Space began the examination of new possibilities for the duet format, apart from the typical piano/bass example. Ali continued to explore this arrangement after the death of his mentor on albums like Duo Exchange with late saxophonist Frank Lowe and in his current duo with altoist Sonny Fortune (in residency at Sweet Rhythm this month). Ayler Records, continuing a spate of exciting archival live albums, has released another chapter in Ali's saxophone duet history, this time as a double disc set with, sadly, another late player, tenor Arthur Rhames.

The performance was recorded in 1981 at the Willisau Jazz Festival. Given Rhames' relative obscurity, the first disc begins with Rashied Ali narrating liner notes over a 17-minute exposition by himself and Rhames. The rest of the set consists of material by Coltrane including "Mr. PC," "Giant Steps," "Impressions" and even a brief reading of most of A Love Supreme (all interesting choices as they all predate Ali joining Coltrane's group). The Eckstine standard "I Want to Talk About You," Miles' "Tune Up" and four pieces ostensibly improvised by Rhames and Ali are thrown in for good measure.

Unlike Interstellar Space , where Ali's desperate attempts to hang on are part of the charm, The Dynamic Duo presents an Ali almost fifteen years older and playing with a saxophonist near his age when he was recording with Coltrane. Ali may have matured, but never at the expense of the muscular aggressive style that makes him a perfect foil for horn players. Despite being viewed as a "free" drummer, players like Trane, Lowe, Rhames or Fortune can rely on him to follow the flow of their ideas as carefully as they do and surprise with his empathetic support.

The sound reproduction is quite good, helped by the two very distinct ranges of the instruments involved (Rhames does also contribute some piano to the set). What makes this music particularly appealing is the presentation of mostly actual tunes, a rare opportunity to focus on the melody and rhythm of jazz without the softening effect of harmony and counterpoint. Rhames can just blow (and does, furiously, from the 23-minute "Mr. PC" to the end) and Ali can react solely to him, creating a more visceral and monolithic sound. The medley style of the set makes one marvel not only at Rhames' remarkable facility and tone, even at high speeds, but at both musicians' stamina. Even the slower numbers do not lack for vitality, the duo format leaving no room to hide behind lush chords. Rhames may no longer be with us, but rest assured that Ali has not come close to finishing what he started.~ ANDREY HENKINhttps://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-dynamic-duo-remember-trane-and-bird-rashied-ali-ayler-records-review-by-andrey-henkin

Personnel: Rashied Ali: drums, vocals; Arthur Rhames, tenor saxophone, piano.

The Dynamic Duo (Remember Trane And Bird Disc 1, Disc 2

Matt Dusk - The Way It Is

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:54
Size: 139,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:29) 1. I Won't Dance
(4:23) 2. Something's Gotta Give
(6:23) 3. If I Had You
(4:48) 4. She's Funny That Way
(4:52) 5. Come Dance With Me
(4:13) 6. Just One Of Those Things
(4:03) 7. Nice Work If You Can Get It
(5:26) 8. On The Street Where You Live
(5:07) 9. I'm Confessin
(5:01) 10. I Thought About You
(5:11) 11. Change Partners
(3:48) 12. Tangerine
(4:05) 13. Charade

Multi-award-winning, Platinum-selling artist Matt Dusk has been enthralling audiences around the world for years, leaving in his wake a series of radio hits, acclaimed albums, and a loyal fan base that continues to grow with every passing year. He has had three number one radio hits: All About Me, Back in Town and Good News, is an alumnus of the St. Michael’s Choir School and studied under jazz piano legend Oscar Peterson at York University. Dusk has been awarded three GOLD albums: Two Shots, Good News and JetSetJazz and three PLATINUM albums: My Funny Valentine, Just The Two of Us and Old School Yule! Notable award nominations include, five JUNO awards, one ADISQ, one Róze Gali: Muzyka and a Dimond from Trójka PR3 in Poland. https://www.mattdusk.com/

Crooners like Toronto’s Matt Dusk has taken what he has learned from the greats and molded it for a modern audience.~ LA Times

Blending distinctly Sinatra-esque swagger, Dusk is waist deep in grandiose arrangements that are dripping with Sin City excess and turns the clock back some four decades with excellence.~ Jazz Times

Matt Dusk impressively brings Las Vegas back to the glory days as the standards singer sounds remarkably like Rat Packer Frank Sinatra.~Billboard

Musicians: Matt Dusk / vocals; Pat LaBarbera / tenor sax; Mark Eisenman / piano; Steve Wallace / bass; John Sumner / drums

The Way It Is

Champian Fulton Trio - I'll See You In My Dreams

Styles: Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:53
Size: 140,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:25) 1. All Of You
(3:59) 2. Baubles, Bangles & Beads
(5:42) 3. Blues For J.McShann
(4:45) 4. Body And Soul
(5:03) 5. Every Now And Then
(4:01) 6. I've Got A Crush On You
(3:49) 7. Happy Camper
(3:52) 8. I Don't Want To Set The World On Fire
(4:39) 9. I'll See You In My Dreams
(5:37) 10. I've Got My Love To Keep Me Warm
(5:47) 11. Opus De Funk
(8:07) 12. Pennies From Heaven

Champian Fulton (born September 12, 1985) is an American jazz singer and pianist. Champian Fulton was born in Norman, Oklahoma, in 1985. Her father, Stephen Fulton, was a jazz trumpeter who was often visited by musician friends such as Clark Terry and Major Holley. At the age of five, she took piano lessons from her grandmother. After trying trumpet and drums, she returned to piano and singing. When her father was hired to run the Clark Terry Institute for Jazz Studies, the family moved to Iowa. She went to jazz summer camp, where she founded the Little Jazz Quintet. One of their performances was Clark Terry's seventy-fifth birthday party. One of her early influences was Dinah Washington, particularly the album For Those in Love, which she played often as a young girl. She also admired Sarah Vaughan, Nat King Cole, Sonny Clark, Red Garland, Hampton Hawes, Wynton Kelly, Thelonious Monk, and Art Tatum.

Fulton graduated from high school in 2003, then attended State University of New York at Purchase, where she studied with trumpeter Jon Faddis. After graduating, she moved to New York City to pursue a career as a pianist and vocalist. Fulton has performed in New York City venues, including Birdland, Smalls Jazz Club, Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola, the Carlyle Hotel, Cleopatra's Needle, and Shanghai Jazz, New Jersey. At some of those venues she played with Jimmy Cobb, Scott Hamilton (musician), Frank Wess, Lou Donaldson, and Louis Hayes.

She has performed at jazz festivals and events across the U.S., including Jazz at Lincoln Center, Detroit Jazz Festival, Litchfield Jazz Festival, Rochester International Jazz Festival, Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, and the Chicago Humanities Festival. Internationally, she has performed at jazz clubs, jazz festivals, and other venues, including Ascona Jazz Festival (Switzerland), Edinburgh Jazz and Blues Festival (Scotland), Sunset-Sunside Jazz Club (France), Bansko International Jazz Festival (Bulgaria), Gouvy Jazz & Blues Festival (Belgium), Jamboree Jazz (Spain), Tanjazz (Morocco), Hot Jazz (Israel), Cellar Jazz (Vancouver, Canada), Yardbird Suite (Edmonton, Canada), JazzTone (Germany), and the Ystad Jazz Festival (Sweden).

She has worked with the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, the Litchfield Jazz Camp, and Rutgers University. In late 2015, she joined the faculty of the Jazz Arts Academy (in association with the Count Basie Theatre Education Department) to offer workshops in jazz vocals and jazz piano during the summer. https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Champian_Fulton#/Discography

Personnel: Champian Fulton, piano; Hans Backenroth, bass; Kristian Leth, drums

I'll See You In My Dreams