Saturday, April 2, 2022

Lisa Lovbrand - Embraceable

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:16
Size: 117,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:01)  1. Light My Fire
(4:58)  2. Embraceable You With Chris Botti
(3:00)  3. Smile
(4:50)  4. The Man I Love
(3:35)  5. When I Fall in Love With David Foster
(5:08)  6. The Nearness of You
(4:05)  7. Over the Rainbow
(3:39)  8. These Foolish Things
(4:32)  9. Seagulls
(4:58) 10. Come Rain or Come Shine  With Paul Buchanan
(5:25) 11. Good Morning Heartache

Lisa Lovbrand, a swedish singer/actress from Dorotea (Sweden) but now spending her days in Los Angeles. The album “Embraceable” was released by Lisa herself on her own label Lovbrand Productions. “Embraceable” is a soft jazz album with some very familiar songs as well as sparkling new music written by Lisa and composer/arranger Jeremy Lubbock. The album was mainly recorded in Stockholm with some of Sweden’s most prominent jazz musicians (see list below), all songs were arranged by Bengt Lindkvist and Kjell Öhman and the album is featured by international artists such as Chris Botti, Paul Buchanan and David Foster! Paul Buchanan from Blue Nile sings on the lovely duet “Come Rain Or Come Shine” and David Foster sings and plays keyboard on “When I Fall In Love”. http://www.westcoast.dk/artists/l/lisa-lovbrand/

Musicians on the Embraceable album: Lisa Lovbrand, David Foster, Chris Botti, Paul Buchanan, Johan Setterlind, Bengt Lindkvist, Per V. Johansson, Jesper Kviberg, Jan Ottesen, Kjell Öhman, Jorgen Smeby, Joakim Ekberg & Klas Lindquist.

Embraceable

Maxine Sullivan & Scott Hamilton Quintet - Uptown

Styles: Vocal And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1985
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:21
Size: 106,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:34) 1. You Were Meant for Me
(5:10) 2. I Thought About You
(3:49) 3. Goody Goody
(5:22) 4. Something to Remember You By
(5:54) 5. Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams
(3:50) 6. You're a Lucky Guy
(3:48) 7. Georgia on My Mind
(4:21) 8. By Myself
(4:47) 9. I Got a Right to Sing the Blues
(5:41) 10. Just One of Those Things

The first of her two Concord CDs, this set features veteran singer Maxine Sullivan performing ten of her favorite songs, all of which originated from the swing era or before. Sullivan sounds quite happy to be joined by tenor saxophonist Scott Hamilton's very complementary quintet (which also includes guitarist Chris Flory and pianist John Bunch). The best among the familiar songs are Maxine's renditions of "I Thought About You," "Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams," "By Myself" and "I Got a Right to Sing the Blues."~Scott Yanowhttps://www.allmusic.com/album/release/uptown-mr0001470229

Personnel: Maxine Sullivan - vocals; Scott Hamilton - tenor saxophone; John Bunch - piano; Phil Flanigan - bass; Chris Flory - guitar; Chuck Riggs - drums

Uptown

Arne Domnerus & Rune Gustafsson - Sketches of Standards

Styles: Bop
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:21
Size: 131,3 MB
Scans: Front

(5:37)  1. Blowing in the wind
(4:11)  2. I'm beginning to see the light
(4:50)  3. Jazz me blues
(6:25)  4. Mean to me
(5:07)  5. Here's that rainy day
(3:49)  6. Autumn leaves
(3:23)  7. Hymn to freedom
(3:23)  8. It don't mean a thing
(5:06)  9. Mood indigo
(3:04) 10. I've got it bad
(3:33) 11. Sweet Lorraine
(4:39) 12. Don't get around much anymore
(4:09) 13. Is God a three letter word for love?

Swedish-born saxophonist Arne Domnérus looms large in the annals of European jazz -- his breakthrough performance at the Paris Jazz Fair of 1949 is widely cited as the tipping point of the Scandinavian bop movement. Born in Stockholm on December 20, 1924, Domnérus studied clarinet as a child and made his professional debut during the early '40s, playing alto sax in popular dance bands led by Lulle Ellboj and Simon Brehm. By 1942 he led his own group and made his recorded debut in 1945, honing an urbane, sophisticated style that nevertheless possessed an urgency often absent from the cool, remote tone often associated with Swedish jazz. American icons Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie were both in attendance for Domnérus 1949 Paris festival gig, a performance which served notice that players of European descent could offer their own authoritative interpretations of music largely considered an African-American phenomenon -- Parker was so impressed that he signed Domnérus for the Scandinavian tour he mounted a year later. Throughout the '50s Domnérus headlined the Stockholm jazz club Nalen, often appearing alongside trumpeter Rolf Ericson and baritone saxophonist Lars Gullin (who both turn up in the 1952 short film Arne Domnérus Spelar). Domnérus also joined Stockholm locals including pianist Bengt Hallberg for a landmark 1953 Swedish tour in support of American trumpeters Clifford Brown and Quincy Jones. From 1956 to 1965 Domnérus served as a member of Harry Arnold's Swedish Radio Big Band, continuing on with its successor Radiojazzgruppen through 1978 -- concurrently he wrote for television and films, most notably scoring 1966's Nattlek, a film produced by Mai Zetterling and based on her own novel. Domnérus' 1977 LP Jazz at the Pawnshop proved an unprecedented hit, selling more than half a million copies upon its original release -- a year later, he returned with Duets for Duke, a collaboration with Hallberg that captures both men at the zenith of their artistry. While remaining true to his bop roots, Domnérus cited traditional Scandinavian folk music as a growing influence throughout the later chapters of his career, and from the '70s on he regularly performed live in churches, inspired by Duke Ellington's own sacred concerts. He also toured the U.S. and Japan, and recorded with American notables including Clark Terry, James Moody and Jimmy Rowles. After several years in poor health, Domnérus died in Stockholm on September 2, 2008 at the age of 83.

Rune Gustafsson - Heavily inspired by generations of blurry-toned jazz guitar maestros such as Jimmy Raney, Jim Hall, and Tal Farlow, this Swedish artist went on to compose critically acclaimed film soundtracks as well as pick and strum. The Swedish music scene in general is where documentation of Rune Gustafsson is most prevalent, his discography on Sonet, Metronome, and other labels even including a tribute to soul genius Stevie Wonder. The guitarist began performing folk music as a young teen, apparently under considerable prodding from an uncle who was already engaged in the same kind of activity. Gustafsson had evolved to playing jazz on stages in the early '50s, his bandleaders including Bert Dahlander, Putte Wickman, Hacke Bjorksten, and Lars Gullin. When profiled in Leonard Feather's Encyclopedia of Jazz in the '70s, Gustafsson talked about his ambitions in composing and arranging concert music, a promise he certainly made good on in the ensuing years. He also expanded his instrumental arsenal for some of these projects, recording on the banjo and the celeste, among other unusual axes. His film credits include the 1992 Ingmar Bergman release with the English title of Sunday's Children.

Buddy Tate Feat. Clark Terry - Tate-A-Tate (Remastered Version)

Styles: Saxophone And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1960/2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:40
Size: 82,7 MB
Art: Front

(8:12)  1. Groun' Hog
(4:10)  2. Tate-a-Tate
(5:38)  3. Snatchin' It Back
(6:21)  4. 20 Ladbroke Square
(4:13)  5. All Too Soon
(7:04)  6. Take the "A" Train

For more than seven decades, Texas-bred George “Buddy” Tate graced the American jazz scene with his hard-blowing tenor saxophone style. A resilient tone with high register inflections in the so-called “Texas tenor” sound distinguished Tate among his swing era colleagues. He was a member of the Count Basie Orchestra during the late 1930s and 1940s and later became a bandleader in his own right. By most accounts, Tate was born George Holmes Tate on February 22, 1913, in Sherman, Texas. He began performing in 1925 while still in his teens when his brother handed him an instrument and asked him to play tenor saxophone with the family quartet called McCloud's Night Owls. Tate and the Night Owls learned to play largely by listening to recordings by Louis Armstrong and mimicking the sound. The band toured professionally for the next four years, after which Tate continued to play the horn, performing with a series of territory bands and with circus bands until the early 1930s when he toured the south-western United States with Nathan Towles' band. During those early years, Tate spent time with Terrence Holder's band from 1930-33 and toured with Andy Kirk's Clouds of Joy in 1934-35. In 1934 Tate filled in briefly with Count Basie's Orchestra as a replacement for Lester Young. Young eventually returned to the band, and Tate joined up with Towles for another four years beginning in 1935. Tate worked with Towles until 1939 when Herschel Evans, who was Basie's tenor saxophone player, died. Basie then brought Tate back into the orchestra as a permanent fixture for nearly a decade. Perhaps nowhere was the contention for attention between saxophone players of that era more pronounced than among Basie's sidemen. Among the notables were Illinois Jacquet also one of the so-called Texas tenors, Lucky Thompson, and Young, all of whom along with Tate transformed moments of the orchestra's performances into full-scale dueling sets between horns. Tate was heard on many recordings by the Basie orchestra during that era, including selected recordings where Tate performed on alto saxophone as well as tenor. He emerged from Basie's band as a seasoned professional. After Tate parted ways with Basie in 1949, Tate appeared with Hot Lips Page, Lucky Millinder, and Jimmy Rushing until 1952. He then assembled his own house band at Harlem's Celebrity Club in 1953, marking the start of a gig that lasted for 21 years, until the early 1970s. Tate's European tours brought him largely to France where, in 1967 and 1968, he performed as bandleader in a trio comprised of Milt Buckner on organ and Wallace Bishop on drums. 

Tate and Buckner recorded a series of tenor saxophone and organ duets in 1967 on the Black and Blue label, including “Buddy Tate with Milt Buckner,” which is revered among Tate's best works. He made two earlier European tours as a sideman for Buck Clayton, in 1959 and 1961 respectively. In 1967 Tate also appeared with John Hammond in a concert program called Spirituals to Swing and toured with the Saints and Sinners. Tate spent time in the 1970s as a sideman in the Benny Goodman Orchestra. Tate's 1973 release, “Buddy Tate and His Buddies”, featured his former Basie cohort, Jacquet, pianist Mary Lou Williams, and trumpeter Roy Eldridge. Also numbered among the buddies were guitarist Stan Jordan, drummer Gus Johnson, and Milt Hinton on bass. The album, one of Tate's more popular recordings, was re-issued in 1994. In the 1980s, Tate toured extensively with Jacquet's group called the Texas Tenors. The Tenors followed a festival circuit that took the players to the Newport Jazz Festival in 1980 and to the festival in Cork in 1983 and again in 1985. His festival tours with Jacquet in the 1980s included annual visits to the Grande Parade du Jazz in Nice, France. Additionally, Tate's North American agenda included both live and taped performances with Jay McShann and Jim Galloway in Canada. In 1978 Tate taped a collection of recordings for Muse Records under the bill of Buddy Tate & the Muse All Stars.” Those albums included “Live at Sandy's,” “Hard Blowin',” and “Muse All Stars.” In 1991 Tate joined fellow tenor saxophone player James Moody and a collection of others among his peers on the live recording, “Lionel Hampton and the Golden Men of Jazz.” The 1996 album “Conversin' with the Elders,” by saxophonist James Carter marked what would become Tate's final appearance on record. He remained active and performed with Lionel Hampton and the Statesmen of Jazz in the late 1990s until a bout with cancer left him incapacitated. In January of 2001 Tate moved to Phoenix, Arizona, to live near his daughter. He died in Arizona soon afterward, in a nursing home in Chandler on February 10, 2001. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/buddytate

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone – Buddy Tate; Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Clark Terry;   Bass – Larry Gales; Drums – Arthur Taylor; Piano – Tommy Flanagan

Tate-A-Tate (Remastered Version)

Friday, April 1, 2022

Cyrille Aimée + Friends - Live at Smalls

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:00
Size: 155,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:56)  1. September in the Rain
(6:16)  2. Que Reste-Il ( I Wish You Love)
(6:36)  3. Yesterdays
(5:43)  4. East Village Inamorata
(9:38)  5. Love for Sale
(6:47)  6. I Was Beginning to See the Light
(6:07)  7. When I Was a Child
(5:29)  8. Lover Man
(7:40)  9. I Mean You
(5:46) 10. Stand by Me


Cyrille Aimée has consistently proven herself to be an unstoppable, undeniable talent in the modern age of jazz. Her culturally rich background has supplied her with the driving force of Dominican rhythm and the incredible swing of the French Gypsies. Taking these natural abilities with her across the world, she has received rave reviews and a loyal following in each country she graces with her voice. She was a finalist in the prestigious Thelonious Monk Vocal Competition of 2010, performing in front of a jury of Al Jarreau, Kurt Elling, Dianne Reeves, Dee Dee Bridgewater. In 2007, Cyrille won both the first and public prize in the Montreux Jazz Festival Competition. For her SmallsLIVE debut, she is accompanied by jazz legend Roy Hargrove as well as tenor saxophonist Joel Frahm. The rhythm section consists of pianist Spike Wilner, bassist Phil Khuen and drummer Joey Saylor. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Cyrille-Aimee-Friends-Live-Smalls/dp/B004NWHVT4

Personnel:  Cyrille Aimée – vocals;  Roy Hargrove – trumpet;  Joel Frahm – tenor sax;  Spike Wilner -  piano;  Phillip Kuehn – bass;  Joseph Saylor – drums

Live at Smalls

Miriam Klein - By Myself

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:05
Size: 94,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:10)  1. Something to Remember You By
(3:33)  2. By Myself
(4:23)  3. Bei mir bist du schoen
(4:08)  4. Lush Life
(4:49)  5. Sophisticated Lady
(3:28)  6. There Is No Greater Love
(3:20)  7. Prelude to a Kiss
(3:50)  8. Mean to Me
(4:21)  9. It's a Sin to Tell a Lie
(3:57) 10. I'm Glad There Is You

Swisss vocalist Miriam Klein first came into the public eye when she performed in Paris in the 1950s with Dexter Gordon, Pierre Michelot, Don Byas and Art Simmons. Later she attended Music School in Vienna and went back to Switzerland to work with the ensembles of her husband, trumpeter and guitarist Oscar Klein. It was in the 1960s and 1970 that she became known internationally. In 1978 her album 'By Myself' was produced by concert management tycoon Horst Lippmann for the L+R label. Lippmann: This is the NEW Miriam Klein confident of her own way of singing. A Miriam Klein By Herself hence the album title. Jazz critic Markus Woelfle: It is her best recording and if she were an American lady and not a Swiss this album would be the pride of everyone's vocal collection. 

The emotional power of her voice and the rich shadings of her interpretations are highlighted by the perfect accompaniment of her inspired sidemen Roland Hanna and George Mraz. It is rare that a pianist offers such perfection and musical additions to a singer - the solos are brilliant and of perfect architecture without overpowering the vocalist. Miriam Klein celebrated her last triumph on her saxophonist son David's 'My Marilyn' album (ENJ-9422) and the label is proud to now present 'By Myself' for the first time on CD. http://akmuzik.com.tr/ak/catalog/showalbum.asp?album=JNKPMPQPO

Personnel: Vocals – Miriam Klein; Acoustic Bass – George Mraz; Piano – Sir Roland Hanna

By Myself

Larry Goldings,Peter Bernstein,Bill Stewart - Perpetual Pendulum

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:00
Size: 149,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:08) 1. United
(7:07) 2. Let's Get Lots
(5:03) 3. Libra
(5:28) 4. Prelude
(5:06) 5. FU Donald
(5:20) 6. Come Rain or Come Shine
(5:54) 7. Little Green Men
(5:35) 8. Reflections in D
(6:05) 9. Perpetual Pendulum
(5:25) 10. Lurkers
(7:43) 11. Django

Larry Goldings, Peter Bernstein, and Bill Stewart celebrate over three decades as a trio with PERPETUAL PENDULUM, a scintillating program combining clever originals with fresh takes on jazz classics. And, while 30 years is not quite an eternity in jazz terms, it might as well be they show no signs of slowing down.

PERPETUAL PENDULUM is also their debut release on Smoke Sessions, which has some historical significance related to their origins as a trio. Smoke Jazz & Supper Club, the label’s parent venue, was opened on the former site of Augie’s Jazz Bar, where Goldings, Bernstein and Stewart first performed together and established their rapport on a regular Thursday night gig starting in 1989. They also recorded this album at New York’s Sear Sound Studio A, which is where they recorded their second outing together, 1992’s "Light Blue" and was also 30 years after the release of their debut album, Goldings’ 1991 album "The Intimacy of the Blues."

If it’s hard to imagine a band with the kind of longevity that Goldings, Bernstein, and Stewart share, it’s even more rare to find one maintaining their brilliant level of musicianship and chemistry and that is not lost on the trio. “We all really dig each other, and that's probably the most important thing,” Goldings says in an attempt to explain the trio’s indefinable chemistry. There’s a lot of crossover in what we like to play and listen to, and our individual visions of jazz tend to align. It’s hard to say, because we never really discuss it; we just try to make good records. We came up together.”

Bernstein concurs. “I think we all share a pure feeling of gratitude. With these cats, I feel pressured to play my best because they’ve heard everything I can do. At the same time, I feel comfortable trying anything with them because I know whatever I do, they're going to hold it together. We’ve all grown through our individual experiences, but we always come back to this. And it's only getting better.”

Personnel: Larry Goldings - organ; Peter Bernstein - guitar; Bill Stewart - drums

Perpetual Pendulum

Thursday, March 31, 2022

Kenny Lattimore - Here To Stay

Styles: Vocal, R&B
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:13
Size: 88,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:43) 1. Nothing On You
(4:30) 2. Never Knew
(3:47) 3. Only Girl
(3:19) 4. All In
(4:10) 5. What Are You Waiting For?
(5:00) 6. Lose You
(3:12) 7. Take A Dose
(3:32) 8. Pressure
(3:47) 9. Priority
(3:08) 10. Survive

On his ninth solo album, Kenny Lattimore applies his tender tenor vocal stylings and heartfelt lyrics to both the old school and the new school. Maintaining his classic balance of mellifluousness and robust, he effectively secures his relevance in an overcrowded marketplace by keeping in mind both longtime fans and potential new listeners. The first half of Here to Stay incorporates shades of past hits from albums such as Kenny Lattimore and Weekend, while the second expands upon the stylistic diversions hinted at on 2017’s Vulnerable.

Here to Stay opens with the chillaxed yet danceable sway of “Nothing on You,” housing a serene chorus and retro-fitted groove as the backdrop for Lattimore’s assurance of appreciating a good thing: “Heaven ain’t got nothing on you, I wish the Lord could see how much you mean to me…You’re the beat in my chest, nothin’ but assets/They try to buy your love, but can’t afford it.”

The pace is slowed down slightly with “Never Knew,” a crisp midtempo mover bearing a radio-friendly hook imbued by Lattimore with strong phrasing and tonal momentum. Meanwhile, the vibe is breezy on the catchy “Only Girl.” Strong verses surround the assured chorus, as he reflects on the value of resisting temptation when one’s got it good in a relationship: “I can be foolish tonight, I can be careless tonight/She’s my only, she’s my all for life/I would be a fool if I ever let her leave my side/Blessed that she’s mine, and I’ma be all she needs.”

“All In” is a similar ode to a special lady, adding falsetto flourishes into the mix, while “What Are You Waiting For” goes for a club vibe. The groove is good, and Kenny slides in and out of it with finesse. With the melody and pulsations complemented by lyrical passages focused on reclaiming love in one’s life, the track could be especially effective if beefed up with some more vocals and an extension of the percussive elements hinted at here and there. As it stands, it falls short of having a lasting impact.

The second half of Here to Stay, in keeping with its title, makes clear Lattimore’s intent to remain relevant in an era where listening habits are often more particular and hard to predict than ever. While he doesn’t make any overt attempts to pander to a basic sound, the atmosphere of these five tracks is designed more pointedly in line with currently popular production approaches. Thankfully, the lyrical content remains minimally swayed by trends. And while the vocal production is at times heavier than desirable, Lattimore continues to effectively purvey a range of musically emotive qualities.

With the instrumentation pared down on selections like “Lose You” and “Pressure,” it’s striking how little his voice has changed through the years. The high notes are resonant, the flourishes and resiliency smooth and strong. Melodically speaking, most of these cuts fall a bit flat in comparison to the earlier tracks. While they’re solid by contemporary radio standards, they’re not as memorable or soul-stirring as Lattimore classics such as “Never Too Busy” or “Weekend.”

The closing ballad, “Survive,” however, is more impactful with a keyboard-driven arrangement honing in on his sweet falsetto tones and a pretty melody, to boot. With his words on this tune and several others preceding it, perhaps Lattimore gets a bit carried away with the “good man to the rescue” narrative; but that’s highly preferable to the tasteless alternatives for which many artists will settle. Recommended.~Justin Kantorhttps://www.soultracks.com/review-kenny-lattimore-here-to-stay

Here To Stay

Dutch Swing College Band - Dixieland Goes Dutch

Styles: Jazz, Swing 
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:51
Size: 181,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:39)  1. At the Jazz Band Ball
(4:38)  2. Fidgety Feet
(3:02)  3. Beale Street Blues
(3:44)  4. The Sheik of Araby
(3:36)  5. Don't Fence Me In
(3:07)  6. High Society
(3:35)  7. Mood Indigo
(3:43)  8. Royal Garden Blues
(2:34)  9. Big Butter and Egg Man
(2:54) 10. I Ain't Gonna Give Nobody None o' this Jelly Roll
(3:09) 11. Marina
(3:12) 12. Savoy Blues
(2:21) 13. Take Your Pick
(3:58) 14. Wolverine Blues
(3:42) 15. Baby Won't You Please Come Home
(2:15) 16. Bel Ami
(3:19) 17. You Don't Know How Much You Can Suffer
(2:32) 18. Besame Mucho
(3:20) 19. Just a Closer Walk with Thee
(2:54) 20. Wilhelm Tell
(5:51) 21. Bei Mir Bist Du Schon
(3:03) 22. Tiger Rag
(4:32) 23. When the Saints Go Marching In

The Dutch Swing College Band has endured numerous personnel changes in its more than fifty-year history as one of the Netherlands' top jazz ensembles. Although no members remain from the original group, the latest lineup continues to honor the tradition-rooted approach of the founders.  Bob Kaper (1939- ) replaced clarinet player Peter Schilperoort during an illness in 1966, and remained with the band; he has led the Dutch Swing College Band since Schilperoort's death in 1990. 

The fourth leader in the group's history, Kaper succeeds Frans Vink, Jr. (1945-46), Joop Schrier (1955-60), and Schilperoort (1946-55; 1960-1990). Kaper previously led the Beale Street Seven, a group he founded in 1957.  An amateur group from 1945 until turning professional in 1960, the Dutch Swing College Band reached their early peak in the late '40s, when they were tapped to accompany such jazz musicians as Sidney Bechet, Joe Venuti, and Teddy Wilson. The New Melbourne Jazz Band recorded an album, A Tribute to the Dutch Swing College Band, featuring music associated with the Holland-based group. ~ Craig Harris https://www.allmusic.com/artist/dutch-swing-college-band-mn0000130996/biography

Dixieland Goes Dutch

The Manhattan Transfer - The Manhattan Transfer

Styles:  Vocal Jazz
Year: 1975
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:38
Size: 82,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:05)  1. Tuxedo Junction
(2:28)  2. Sweet Talking Guy
(3:13)  3. Operator
(3:30)  4. Candy
(3:00)  5. Gloria
(2:57)  6. Clap Your Hands
(2:54)  7. That Cat Is High
(3:33)  8. You Can Depend On Me
(2:24)  9. Blue Champagne
(2:47) 10. Java Jive
(3:08) 11. Occapella
(2:35) 12. Heart's Desire

Riding a wave of nostalgia in the '70s, the Manhattan Transfer resurrected jazz trends from boogie-woogie to bop to vocalese in a slick, slightly commercial setting that balanced the group's close harmonies. Originally formed in 1969, the quartet recorded several albums of jazz standards as well as much material closer to R&B/pop. Still, they were easily the most popular jazz vocal group of their era, and the most talented of any since the heyday of Lambert, Hendricks & Ross during the early '60s.  When the group was formed in the late '60s, however, the Manhattan Transfer was a hippie cornball act similar to the Lovin' Spoonful or Spanky & Our Gang. The lone LP that appeared from the original lineup leader Gene Pistilli plus Tim Hauser, Erin Dickins, Marty Nelson, and Pat Rosalia was Jukin', assembled by Capitol. An odd and hardly successful satire record, it was the last appearance on a Manhattan Transfer album for all of the above except Hauser.  After Hauser met vocalists Laurel Masse and Janis Siegel in 1972, the trio re-formed the Manhattan Transfer later that year with the addition of Alan Paul. 

The group became popular after appearances at a few New York hotspots and recorded their own debut, an eponymous LP recorded with help from the jazz world (including Zoot Sims, Randy Brecker, Jon Faddis, and Mel Davis). Featuring vocalese covers of "Java Jive" and "Tuxedo Junction" as well as a Top 40 hit in the aggressive gospel tune "Operator," the album rejuvenated the field of vocalese (dormant since the mid-'60s) and made the quartet stars in the jazz community across Europe as well as America. The Manhattan Transfer's next two albums, Coming Out and Pastiche, minimized the jazz content in favor of covers from around the music community, from Nashville to Los Angeles to Motown. A single from Coming Out, the ballad "Chanson d'Amour," hit number one in Britain. Though Masse left in 1979 for a solo career, Cheryl Bentyne proved a capable replacement, and that same year, Extensions introduced their best-known song, "Birdland," the ode to bop written by Weather Report several years earlier. Throughout the 1980s, the group balanced retreads from all aspects of American song. The 1981 LP Mecca for Moderns gained the Manhattan Transfer their first American Top Ten hit, with a cover of the Ad Libs' 1965 girl group classic "The Boy from New York City," but also included a version of Charlie Parker's "Confirmation" and a surreal, wordless tribute (?) named "Kafka." (The album also earned the Manhattan Transfer honors as the first artist to receive Grammys in both the pop and jazz categories in the same year.) 

The production on virtually all was susceptible to '80s slickness, and though the group harmonies were wonderful, all but the most open of listeners had trouble digesting the sheer variety of material. The group's 1985 tribute to vocal pioneer Jon Hendricks, titled Vocalese, marked a shift in the Manhattan Transfer's focus. Subsequent works managed to keep the concepts down to one per album, and the results were more consistent. Such records as 1987's Brasil, 1994's Tubby the Tuba (a children's record), 1995's Tonin' ('60s R&B), and 1997's Swing (pre-war swing) may not have found the group at their performance peak, but were much more easily understandable for what they were. The group stayed very active and concept-heavy during the 2000s, beginning with a tribute to Louis Armstrong for 2000's The Spirit of St. Louis. They included a pair of Rufus Wainwright songs among the jazz material on 2004's Vibrate, and released An Acapella Christmas the following year. The Symphony Sessions followed in 2006, offering re-recordings of some of their best-known songs with orchestral arrangements. In 2009, the Transfer saluted one of the biggest names in jazz with The Chick Corea Songbook, and featured contributions from Corea, Airto Moreira, Christian McBride, and Ronnie Cuber, among others. During the early 2010s, the group focused more on performing, although both Bentyne and Hauser were forced to find temporary replacements during medical procedures. After spinal surgery in 2013, Hauser returned to the group, but then died suddenly from cardiac arrest in October 2014. ~ John Bush http://www.allmusic.com/artist/the-manhattan-transfer-mn0000674749/biography

Personnel: Alan Paul, Janis Siegel, Cheryl Bentyne, Tim Hauser- vocals

The Manhattan Transfer

Paul Gonsalves, Harry Carney, Mitchell Wood - Stanley Dance Presents The Music Of The Great Ellingtonians (2-Disc Set)

Spanning over five decades (1923-1974), the Duke Ellington orchestra was nursery, proving ground and finishing school for dozens of jazzmen. Three of the greatest, Harry Carney, Mitchell “Booty” Wood, and Paul Gonsalves, here front all-star groups on three albums produced by celebrated jazz critic Stanley Dance. They add up to an engaging example of the unpretentious kind of jazz these musicians liked to play when they were “stretching out”: adventurous but not avant-garde, traditional but not old-fashioned, free-ranging in its moods and full of that sound of surprise which is the lifeblood of jazz—the kind of timeless music, beyond fad and fashion, forever associated with the Great Ellingtonians.

All sessions recorded in New York between September, 1960 and January 1961.

Album: Stanley Dance Presents The Music Of The Great Ellingtonians (disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:13
Size: 126.4 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 2011

[4:52] 1. Tree Of Hope
[3:43] 2. Blues For Blokes
[4:17] 3. Baby Blue
[3:48] 4. Jeepers Creepers
[4:03] 5. Rock Me Gently
[5:13] 6. Hand Me Down Love
[3:29] 7. Mabulala
[3:57] 8. Five O'clock Drag
[5:47] 9. Hang In There
[7:11] 10. New Cambridge Blues
[4:03] 11. Easin' On Down Piccadilly
[4:45] 12. Ohso

Album: Stanley Dance Presents The Music Of The Great Ellingtonians (disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:37
Size: 152.5 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[4:17] 1. Snowstorm
[4:32] 2. Blues In Bones
[3:49] 3. Sunday
[5:06] 4. Our Delight
[4:09] 5. Out Of Nowhere
[8:24] 6. Swallowing The Blues
[5:32] 7. London Broil
[4:46] 8. Midnight Sun
[6:17] 9. Just Squeeze Me
[5:51] 10. Blue Skies
[5:28] 11. Jeeps Blues
[8:22] 12. You Can Depend On Me

Stanley Dance Presents The Music Of The Great Ellingtonians (Disc 1) (Disc 2)

Wednesday, March 30, 2022

Michael Brecker - Don't Try This At Home

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1988
File: MP3@128K/s
Time: 55:34
Size: 52,3 MB
Art: Front

(7:43) 1. Itsbynne Reel
(7:51) 2. Chime This
(7:46) 3. Scriabin
(4:59) 4. Suspone
(9:30) 5. Don't Try This At Home
(7:13) 6. Everything Happens When You're Gone
(5:10) 7. Talking To Myself
(5:20) 8. The Gentleman & Hizcaine

Michael Brecker's second album as a leader is almost the equal of his first. Surprisingly, only one song ("Suspone") uses his working quintet of the period (which consists of guitarist Mike Stern, pianist Joey Calderazzo, bassist Jeff Andrews and drummer Adam Nussbaum) although those musicians also pop up on other selections with the likes of pianists Don Grolnick and Herbie Hancock, bassist Charlie Haden, drummer Jack DeJohnette and violinist Mark O'Connor. Brecker (on tenor and the EWI) is in superb form, really ripping into the eight pieces (mostly group originals). Recommended.~Scott Yanowhttps://www.allmusic.com/album/dont-try-this-at-home-mw0000197612

Personnel: Michael Brecker – tenor saxophone, Mike Stern – guitar; Don Grolnick – piano; Herbie Hancock – piano; Joey Calderazzo – piano; Jim Beard – synthesizer, piano ; Mark O'Connor – violin; Charlie Haden – bass; Jeff Andrews – fretless electric bass; Jack DeJohnette – drums; Adam Nussbaum – drums; Peter Erskine – drums; Judd Miller – synthesizer programming

Don't Try This At Home

Dave Pike - Noisy Silence - Gentle Noise

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 1969
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:59
Size: 87,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:33) 1. I'm On My Way
(4:37) 2. Regards From Freddie Horowitz
(4:40) 3. Somewhat, Somewhere, Somehow
(5:36) 4. Noisy Silence - Gentle Noise
(4:19) 5. Mother People
(3:42) 6. Mathar
(3:19) 7. Vian-De
(3:44) 8. Teaming Up
(3:26) 9. Walkin' Down The Highway In A Red Raw Egg

American vibraphonist Dave Pike gained fame from his work throughout the 60’s with popular jazz flutist Herbie Mann, recording 11 albums with Mann’s groups, also recorded with legendary pianists Bill Evans and Paul Bley. On moving to Europe, the Dave Pike Set became an instant success through the combination of Pike’s vibes play and German Volker Kriegel’s electric, acoustic, guitar and sitar play. Kriegel’s compositions helped create the quartet’s unique sound, encompassing jazz, funk, psychedelia, avant-garde, and ethno. The popish I’m on My Way is followed by the folksy blues Regards From Freddy Horrowitz.

The beautiful ballad Somewhat Somewhere Somehow features Kriegel, and the bluesy title piece jumps into double time with stellar guitar, vibes and bass solos. On Mother People Kriegel reworks a Frank Zappa composition into an unrestrained showpiece. Kriegel grabs the sitar on Mathar as jazz-rock peers East, and the poignant balladic waltz Vian-De highlights the vibes. Teaming Up takes off at breakneck speed with a couple of open-ended detours on the way. Walking Down the Highway celebrates the band’s dilapidated red Citroen, as they maneuver through the 13/4 time signature with ease. The first of six albums Pike recorded for MPS, it exquisitely chronicles the beginnings of a group that achieved popularity while maintaining their uniquely adventurous musical vision.–MPS https://theanalogvault.com/products/the-dave-pike-set-noisy-silence-gentle-noise

Personnel: Dave Pike, vibraphone, tambourine; Hans Rettenbacher, bass; Peter Baumeister, drums; Volker Kriegel, guitar

Noisy Silence - Gentle Noise

Wayne Shorter - Sony Jazz Portrait

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:58
Size: 122,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:45)  1. Endangered Species
(7:20)  2. Lusitanos
(5:14)  3. Ponte De Areia
(5:07)  4. Port Of Entry - Live
(5:48)  5. The Three Marias
(5:43)  6. Eurydice
(4:45)  7. When It Was Now
(5:02)  8. Beauty and the Beast
(6:10)  9. Mahogany Bird
(3:01) 10. Diana

Though some will argue about whether ten-time Grammy winner Wayne Shorter's primary impact on jazz has been as a composer or as a saxophonist, few will dispute his importance as one of jazz's leading figures of the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Though indebted to John Coltrane, with whom he practiced in the mid-'50s, Shorter eventually developed his own more succinct manner on the tenor horn, retaining the tough tone quality and intensity and, in later years, adding elements of funk. On soprano, Shorter is almost another player entirely, his lovely tone shining like a light beam, his sensibilities attuned more to lyrical thoughts, his choice of notes becoming more spare as his career unfolded. As a composer, he is best known for carefully conceived, complex, long-limbed, endlessly winding tunes, many of which have become jazz standards. Of his mid-'60s albums for Blue Note, most notably Juju and Night Dreamer, the composer and the saxophone stylist meet, showcasing provocative compositions and arrangements performed with both subtlety and force. During his two decades with the six-time Grammy-winning Weather Report from the late '60s through the mid-'80s, and on his solo jazz-funk recordings for Columbia and Verve in the late '80s and early '90s, Shorter showcased both poles of his writing persona the inimitable lyricist and the emboldened tonal seeker who utilized what he'd learned from jazz and applied it to open creative possibilities for funk, even as he sought inspiration from international musical traditions. As a horn player, Shorter's membership in V.S.O.P. revealed he'd continued to grow and experiment. With 2002's Footprints Live!, continued on 2003's Alegria, Shorter showcased a new acoustic quartet dedicated to performing his compositions. In the new century's second decade, Shorter re-signed to Blue Note. Shorter started playing the clarinet at 16 but switched to tenor sax before entering New York University in 1952. After graduating with a BME in 1956, he played with Horace Silver for a short time until he was drafted into the Army for two years. Once out of the service, he joined Maynard Ferguson's band, meeting Ferguson's pianist Joe Zawinul in the process. The following year (1959), Shorter joined Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers, where he remained until 1963, eventually becoming the band's music director. During the Blakey period, Shorter also made his debut on record as a leader, cutting several albums for Chicago's Vee-Jay label. After a few prior attempts to hire him away from Blakey, Miles Davis finally convinced Shorter to join his quintet in September 1964, thus completing the lineup of a group whose biggest impact would leapfrog a generation into the '80s.

Staying with Miles until 1970, Shorter became the band's most prolific composer at times, contributing tunes like "E.S.P.," "Pinocchio," "Nefertiti," "Sanctuary," "Footprints," "Fall," and the signature description of Miles, "Prince of Darkness." While playing through Miles' transition from loose post-bop acoustic jazz into electronic jazz-rock, Shorter also took up the soprano in late 1968, an instrument that turned out to be more suited to riding above the new electronic timbres than the tenor. As a prolific solo artist for Blue Note during this period, Shorter expanded his palette from hard bop almost into the atonal avant-garde, with fascinating excursions into jazz-rock territory toward the turn of the decade. In November 1970, Shorter teamed up with old cohort Joe Zawinul and Miroslav Vitous to form Weather Report, where after a fierce start, Shorter's playing grew mellower, pithier, more consciously melodic, and gradually more subservient to Zawinul's concepts. By now he was playing mostly on soprano, though the tenor would re-emerge toward the end of WR's run. Shorter's solo ambitions were mostly on hold during the WR days, resulting in but one atypical solo album, Native Dancer, an attractive side trip into Brazilian-American tropicalismo in tandem with Milton Nascimento. Shorter also revisited the past in the late '70s by touring with Freddie Hubbard and ex-Miles sidemen Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, and Tony Williams as V.S.O.P. Shorter finally left Weather Report in 1985. Still committed to electronics and fusion, his recorded compositions from the period feature welcoming rhythms and harmonically complex arrangements. 

After three Columbia albums during 1986-1988 Atlantis, Phantom Navigator and Joy Ryder and a tour with Santana (represented by the 2005 album Montreux 1988), he lapsed into silence, emerging again in 1992 with Wallace Roney and the V.S.O.P. rhythm section in the "A Tribute to Miles" band. In 1994, now on Verve, Shorter released High Life, an engaging electric collaboration with keyboardist Rachel Z. In concert, he has fielded an erratic series of bands, which could be incoherent one year (1995) and lean and fit the next (1996). He guested on the Rolling Stones' Bridges to Babylon in 1997, and on Herbie Hancock's Gershwin's World in 1998. In 2001, he was back with Hancock for Future 2 Future and on Marcus Miller's M². Footprints Live! was released in 2002 under his own name with a new band that included pianist Danilo Pérez, bassist John Patitucci, and drummer Brian Blade, followed by Alegria in 2003 and Beyond the Sound Barrier in 2005. Given his long track record, Shorter's every record and appearance are still eagerly awaited by fans in the hope that he will thrill them again. Blue Note released Blue Note's Great Sessions: Wayne Shorter in 2006. Though absent from recording, Shorter continued to tour regularly with the same quartet after 2005. They re-emerged to record again in February of 2013 with a live outing from their 2011 tour. Without a Net, his first recording for Blue Note in 43 years, was released in February of 2013, as a precursor to his 80th birthday. Just after that release, the Wayne Shorter Quartet performed four of the leader's compositions with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra at Carnegie Hall in New York City. Shorter immediately brought the quartet and orchestra into the studio to record those same four pieces: "Pegasus," "Prometheus Unbound," "Lotus," and "The Three Marias," as a unified suite. The title of this four-composition orchestral suite is also Shorter’s title character for the graphic novel: Emanon, or "no name" spelled backward. Each of the four movements has a corresponding theme in a graphic novel penned by Shorter and Monica Sly, illustrated by Randy DeBurke. It draws inspiration from the concept of a multiverse (where numerous universes co-exist simultaneously) and features a character named Emanon, an action-hero proxy of Shorter, a comic book aficionado since he was a boy. The story alludes to dystopian oppression and was clearly informed by the saxophonist's Buddhist studies. All told, the music  performed by the quartet with and without the chamber orchestra was recorded live in London as well as in the studio; compiled, it created a triple album accompanied by the 84-page graphic novel. Emanon was issued in September of 2018, just after Shorter's 85th birthday. ~ Richard S.Ginell https://www.allmusic.com/artist/wayne-shorter-mn0000250435/biography

Sony Jazz Portrait

Tuesday, March 29, 2022

Scott Silbert - Introducing the Scott Silbert Big Band: Jump Children

Styles: Big Band, Swing
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:04
Size: 112,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:15) 1. Jump Children
(3:12) 2. Annie Laurie
(3:01) 3. In A Persian Market
(3:37) 4. Jumpin' Punkins
(3:08) 5. Edna
(3:05) 6. Tootsie's Rag
(2:46) 7. I Want A Roof (Over My Head)
(3:39) 8. Dusk
(3:25) 9. Lullaby In Rhythm
(2:40) 10. 11:60 P.M.
(3:14) 11. Down For Double
(3:10) 12. Chloe
(3:39) 13. Shipyard Ramble
(2:52) 14. She's Crazy With The Heat
(4:16) 15. Stompin' At The Savoy

The actual title of the album says “Introducing The Scott Silbert Big Band” but this band needs no introduction, as the sounds here are no strangers to your ears. Hopefully, they smoking reads of vintage swing are familiar to you; if not, well, maybe this isn’t an introduction to a new band, but to a better way of life!

Tenor saxist Scott Silbert leads a 15 member ensemble through vintage charts from the 30s-40s as well as a couple Depression Era originals. Four beats to the bar is the thing here, and step right up to it, with Helen Humes-inspired vocalist Gretchen Migley cooing through a Basie-ish beat on “Jump Children” and bold and brassy with trumpeter Josh Kauffman on Harry James’ “11:60 pm”.

Silbert himself is a Louie Prima jive mood on the R&Bish jive of “I Want A Roof Over My Head” while blowing a velvety clarinet on “Lullaby In Rhythm” and Kansas City’d “Stompin’ At The Savoy”. His tenor sears through the patented Jimmie Lunceford two stepper “Annie Laurie” while Leigh Pilzer’s baritone is as thick as molasses with Ken Kimery doing some Krupa’d tom tomming on “Shipyard Rumble”.

This album reminds you that music was made for dancing, not navel gazing, something today’s artists need to keep thinking during their endless cacophonic solos. Here’s why you should like jazz.~George W.Harris https://www.jazzweekly.com/2022/03/the-scott-silbert-big-band-jump-children-kari/

Introducing the Scott Silbert Big Band: Jump Children

Kenny Werner Quintet - Lawn Chair Society

Styles: Post-Bop, Piano Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:21
Size: 141,3 MB
Art: Front

( 4:48)  1. Lo's Garden
( 6:28)  2. New Amsterdam
(12:25)  3. The 13th Day
( 2:29)  4. 4X
( 7:03)  5. Uncovered Heart
( 5:04)  6. Inaugural Balls
( 3:32)  7. 3X
( 9:39)  8. Lawn Chairs (and other foreign policy)
( 2:39)  9. Loss
( 7:08) 10. Kothbiro

With this upbeat program of original material, pianist Kenny Werner takes his quintet through a swinging confrontation that combines modern innovation with classical training. His music is timeless. Working with an all-star lineup on Lawn Chair Society that features trumpeter Dave Douglas, saxophonist Chris Potter, bassist Scott Colley and drummer Brian Blade, he's at the top of his game. Werner's story is familiar. He studied hard to learn to play piano as well as he does but with all that hard work, however, came a reluctant disposition. He felt that all his "hard work and no play had kept him from becoming completely free. Perfect piano performances had held little allure for him, since one note followed another in phrase after phrase; however, something about the feel of it all bothered him. 

After working with Madame Chaloff in Boston and Juao Assis Brasil in Brazil, he began to relax and enjoy what was happening, lighten up somewhat, and develop into the pianist that he wants to be. That was a long time ago. Werner has continued to grow at the piano for over thirty years. He is a spiritual person. As a composer, his music flows with a natural lyricism that harbors a deep-down blues sensibility. From this session, "Uncovered Heart releases that kind of emotion freely, and Werner's musical partners feel it as well as he does. Other selections capture new and interesting ideas and release them at will. Werner's use of a computer to bring contrasting rhythms to play on several pieces provides a unique thrill. Throughout the session, a tried and true mainstream fiber holds Werner's feet to the jazz fire of our forefathers. As far out as he leans from time to time, we always know that his heart is at the center. Lawn Chair Society sits atop this year's best-of list for its innovation, for its ties with tradition, and for the quintet's superb musicianship. ~ Jim Santella  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/lawn-chair-society-kenny-werner-blue-note-records-review-by-jim-santella.php
 
Personnel: Kenny Werner: piano, keyboards, computer; Dave Douglas: trumpet, cornet; Chris Potter, tenor saxophone, bass clarinet; Scott Colley: bass; Brian Blade: drums; Lenny Pickett, wooden flute.

Oscar Peterson Trio - Night Train

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1962
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:29
Size: 157,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:52) 1. Happy-Go-Lucky Local (Aka Night Train)
(3:26) 2. C-Jam Blues
(3:46) 3. Georgia On My Mind
(5:43) 4. Bag'S Groove
(2:55) 5. Moten Swing
(2:45) 6. Easy Does It
(2:24) 7. The Honeydripper
(4:38) 8. Things Ain'T What They Used To Be
(5:08) 9. I Got It Bad (And That Ain'T Good)
(3:55) 10. Band Call
(5:38) 11. Hymn To Freedom
(5:00) 12. Happy-Go-Lucky Local (Aka Night Train) [alternative Take]
(2:49) 13. Volare
(3:57) 14. My Heart Belongs To Daddy
(3:36) 15. Moten Swing [rehearsal Take]
(2:36) 16. Now'S The Time
(5:11) 17. This Could Be The Start Of Something

This classic jazz piano album Night Train was recorded by The Oscar Peterson Trio almost 60 years ago in Los Angeles on December 15 and 16, 1962. It’s a record that belongs in every collection, whether you’re presently a jazz fan or whether you’ve taken a vow against improvised music, thinking it’s incomprehensible and annoying. I’ll give you three reasons why you might just be listening to this record on a regular basis for the next ten or twenty years:

1. No one ever dazzled the piano keys like Oscar did, or swung as hard with a bluesy feeling (okay, so that’s two or three reasons in one).

2. No one ever played in a tighter group than this trio Ed Thigpen on drums and Ray Brown on bass, along with Oscar on ivory, set a standard for ensemble playing which is a model for all musicians, whatever their genre. These guys deliver everything an orchestra could, and more.

3. The joy and intensity of this music will have an impact on your life which will not be forgotten anytime soon.

The original album contained just 11 songs, and the re-released digital version adds several more, which are unnecessary and detract from the beauty of the concept. Speaking of beauty, the cover photograph by Pete Turner of the train in motion is stunning. Verve recordings were always known for their quality of music and the outstanding artwork on their covers. Night Train is one of the most famous jazz albums of all time, and deservedly so on both counts.

The 11 tunes are on the shortish side, none much longer than five and a half minutes, so if you’re thinking that jazz is some form of endless noodling and self-indulgence, this is the album to contradict that notion. With every tune the group snaps to it and you are drawn in right away. Before you know it, the album’s over and you’re eager to listen to it again. This is the kind of precious possession you’d save if your house were burning and you had only a minute to fetch something other than your family. The playing is elegant, restrained, and yet hard-driving. This is the kind of record that gets 15 year old doe-eyed girls in Victoria named Diana to thinking they’re going to grow up to play jazz piano, and it’s the kind of record that makes electric bassists head down to their music store and trade up to an all-acoustic bass fiddle so that they can play with some real bottom end. It’s also the kind of record that makes drummers forget all about John Bonham, and starts them to dreaming of the subtleties they can achieve with brush work. And if you think this is some simple introduction to jazz that was recorded to popularize the form, you’ll need to think again. This stuff is both sophisticated and irresistible.

Take the title tune for instance. It was a classic before this record, but it was meant for a big band, Duke Ellington’s to be precise. Peterson delivers this tune with elegance and amazing dexterity, putting the stamp of his own formidable personality on his arrangement. Then comes ‘C Jam Blues’ , as if to remind the listener that it’s all about the blues. His rendition of ‘Georgia On My Mind’ is a revelation, for this is a song that has been done so many times in so many ways you would it’s impossible to wring anything meaningful from it, yet Oscar’s rendition of this piece is enough to move one to tears. Other standout tracks are ‘Honey Dripper’ and ‘Hymn to Freedom’, the latter being a very stirring and emotional piece that begins as a solo, with Ed and Ray joining in gradually to provide a rousing finish. There the original album ended.

Oscar Peterson was a lifelong Canadian and the winner of seven Grammy awards. He started playing piano at the age of five, and progressed from playing boogie-woogie to being named “the Maharajah of the piano”, heavily influenced by people like Nat Cole and Art Tatum, the masters of jazz piano. It was said of his playing in later years, after a stroke, that “a one-handed Oscar was better than just about anyone with two hands”. Though he passed away in 2007 his music lives on, and will live on for decades to come. Whenever anyone wants to know what the hands of a genius can do with piano, and what can be accomplished with a trio of great musicians, Night Train will be at or near the top of every list.~Brian Miller https://www.vivascene.com/oscar-peterson-night-train-album-review/

Personnel: Oscar Peterson - piano; Ray Brown - double bass; Ed Thigpen - drums

Night Train

Sunday, March 27, 2022

Clifford Brown - Memorial Album (Remastered)

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1953/2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:12
Size: 165,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:14)  1. Bellarosa
(3:56)  2. Carvin' The Rock
(3:14)  3. Cookin'
(3:46)  4. Brownie Speaks
(4:51)  5. De-Dah
(4:19)  6. You Go To My Head
(3:51)  7. Carvin' The Rock (Alternate Take)
(3:08)  8. Cookin' (Alternate Take)
(4:05)  9. Carvin' The Rock (Alternate Take #2)
(4:02) 10. Wail Bait
(4:07) 11. Hymn Of The Orient
(3:56) 12. Brownie Eyes
(3:27) 13. Cherokee
(3:44) 14. Easy Living
(4:34) 15. Minor Mood
(4:07) 16. Wail Bait (Alternate Take)
(3:42) 17. Cherokee (Alternate Take)
(4:01) 18. Hymn Of The Orient (Alternate Take)

Clifford Brown emerged fully formed in 1953, a trumpeter gifted with an ebullient swing and technical skills that added polish and precision to fresh invention. Foregoing both the manic pyrotechnics of Dizzy Gillespie and the laconic introversion of Miles Davis, he also provided a stylistic model for jazz trumpeters that has never gone out of style. This CD combines Brown's first two recording dates as leader, placing him in quintet and sextet settings with some of the core musicians of the New York bop scene. The first nine tracks have Brown in an inspired quintet, prodded by the twisting, off-kilter solos and comping of the brilliant and underrated pianist Elmo Hope and the sparkling complexity of drummer Philly Joe Jones. While altoist Lou Donaldson is deeply in the sway of Charlie Parker, Brown sets his own course, whether it's the boppish "Cookin'" or the standard "You Go to My Head." 

The final nine tracks have Art Blakey's drums driving the sextet, while altoist Gigi Gryce's understated concentration acts as an effective foil to Brown's joyous, dancing lines. Taken at a medium up-tempo, "Cherokee" is one of Brown's most effective vehicles. The alternate takes from each session highlight Brown's spontaneous creativity, while Rudy Van Gelder's remastering adds fresh focus to both his gorgeous tone and the explosive drumming. ~ Stuart Broomer - Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Memorial-Album-Clifford-Brown/dp/B00005MIZ6

Personnel: Tracks 1-9: Clifford Brown - trumpet; Lou Donaldson - alto saxophone; Elmo Hope - piano; Percy Heath - bass; Philly Joe Jones - drums. Tracks 10-18: Clifford Brown - trumpet; John Lewis - piano; Gigi Gryce - alto saxophone, flute; Charlie Rouse - tenor saxophone; Percy Heath - bass; Art Blakey - drums

Memorial Album

Charlie Rouse - Bossa Nova Bacchanal

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1962
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:32
Size: 97,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:56)  1. Back to the Tropics
(2:58)  2. Aconteceu
(4:50)  3. Velhos Tempos
(6:18)  4. Samba de Orfeu
(5:56)  5. Un Dia
(5:58)  6. Meci Bon Dieu
(5:29)  7. In Martinique
(7:05)  8. One for Five

About eight or nine years ago, the major record labels finally realized that they could sell more copies of classic jazz CDs if they reissued them with the respect they deserved, including high-quality remastering and packaging. This has proved an unprecedented boon for the jazz fan; never have so many records by so many artists been readily available, even if the inventories are in cyberspace rather than in the attic of the corner shop. However, there is a cloud to this silver lining. There are simply so many old albums in the reissue queue that some artists, particularly those who were more prolific as sidemen than as leaders, are underrepresented. And not just in quantity sometimes whole stylistic forays are lost. A case in point is Charlie Rouse, the vastly underrated tenor man best known for his long tenure with Thelonious Monk in the late '50s and '60s. Thankfully, then, Blue Note has reissued Rouse’s 1962 Bossa Nova Bacchanal as part of its limited edition Connoisseur Series. I know, I know, “not another bossa nova cash-in album!” But keep an open mind; this is no crass marketing ploy. Bacchanal is actually a fine album, and apparently Rouse was very serious about making authentic bossa nova music, recruiting excellent Latin rhythm players alongside the dual guitar line of Kenny Burrell and Lord Westbrook (playing acoustic Spanish guitars). 

The selection of tunes is perfect, too, with really only one bossa warhorse (“Samba de Orfeu”), several refreshingly lesser-known gems (the breezy “Aconteceu,” the ominous “Meci Bon Dieu”), and a Rouse original for good measure. Rouse does nothing to soften his sharp-edged, sinusoidal tone but lacks nothing in melodic invention, and his acerbic lines provide a citric zing where this kind of music is often too sticky sweet. The dual-guitar team is a real treat, providing excellent solos (both Westbrook and Burrell have their chance to shine) and a constant stereophonic percolation in the background. A startling bonus track, however, threatens to steal the show, at least for Rouse fans "One For Five," a non-bossa original from a later, 1965 session with (get this) Freddie Hubbard, McCoy Tyner, Bob Cranshaw, and Billy Higgins. The tune is reminiscent of something that might have fit on Wayne Shorter’s contemporary Blue Notes, and it features a nice Rouse solo different from his Monk guise, as well as fleet work by Hubbard and Tyner. How the rest of this session could remain in the vaults is beyond imagining, and only goes to prove the point made above. So please, Blue Note, put out the rest, and soon but until then, thanks for the Brazilian appetizer. ~ Joshua Weiner https://www.allaboutjazz.com/bossa-nova-bacchanal-charlie-rouse-blue-note-records-review-by-joshua-weiner.php

Personnel: Charlie Rouse, tenor sax; Kenny Burrell and Chauncey "Lord" Westbrook, guitars; Larry Gales, bass; Willie Bobo, drums; Patato Valdes, conga; Garvin Masseaux, chekere. On "One For Five": Rouse; Freddie Hubbard, trumpet; McCoy Tyner, piano; Bob Cranshaw, bass; Billy Higgins, drums

Bossa Nova Bacchanal

Ellis Larkins - Blues In The Night

Styles: Piano
Year: 1952
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 23:41
Size: 55,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:12) 1. Blues in the Night
(2:51) 2. I'll Wind
(2:56) 3. Over the Rainbow
(2:59) 4. Come Rain or Come Shine
(3:04) 5. Stormy Weather
(2:58) 6. One for My Baby
(2:42) 7. Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea
(2:56) 8. I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues

Stomping blues, charming ballads, and dazzling interpretations of standards by pianist Ellis Larkins, one of the most underrated players from the swing era still active.~Ron Wynn https://www.allmusic.com/album/blues-in-the-night-mw0000909970

Personnel: Ellis Larkins - Piano

Blues In The Night