Tuesday, May 10, 2022

Erena Terakubo - Little Girl Power

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:26
Size: 156,1 MB
Art: Front

(6:42) 1. Little Girl Power
(5:14) 2. Marmaduke
(6:12) 3. Rocky
(7:54) 4. Lover Man
(4:28) 5. Lover
(7:34) 6. Juicy Lucy
(4:41) 7. Introduction To A Samba
(6:19) 8. You Are The Sunshine Of My Life
(4:46) 9. Winter Fireworks
(4:26) 10. Bird Lives
(4:36) 11. When You Wish Upon A Star
(4:30) 12. High Touch

Erena Terakubo was born in Sapporo, Japan. She began playing the alto saxophone at the age of nine. Terakubo played the saxophone influenced by artists such as Charlie Parker, Cannonball Adderley, and Sonny Stitt.

In 2010, Terakubo released her first album, "North Bird" with Kenny Barron, Christian McBride, Lee Pearson, and Peter Bernstein, through Japanese major label King Records. It marked No. 1 on the Japanese jazz charts and was awarded Swing Journal's Gold Disc. Later that year, she performed with Ron Carter, Omar Hakim, and Will Boulware at the Tokyo Jazz Festival. In 2011, Terakubo recorded her second album, "New York Attitude" with Kenny Barron, Ron Carter, Lee Pearson, and Dominick Farinacci. In the same year, she received a presidential scholarship from Berklee College of Music. She graduated in 2015. She moved to New York in the same year.

Terakubo has performed with Kenny Barron, Ron Carter, Jimmy Cobb, Louis Hayes, Vincent Herring, Christian McBride, John Beasley's Monk'estra, Lewis Nash, and Lenny White just to name a few. In addition, Terakubo has toured around the globe as a leader including Asia, Europe, Africa, South America, Australia, and the Middle East. Terakubo released 6 albums as a leader. https://www.jamrice.co.jp/erena/en/bio/bio.html

Personnel: Elena Terakubo (alto-sax, soprano-sax); Mayuko Katakura (piano, Rhodes); Motoi Kanamori (bass); Shinnosuke Takahashi (drums, percussions)

Little Girl Power

Sinne Eeg & The Danish Radio Big Band - We've Just Begun

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:47
Size: 119,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:03) 1. We've Just Begun
(5:19) 2. Like a Song
(5:04) 3. Those Ordinary Things
(3:35) 4. Talking to Myself
(4:36) 5. Hvorfor er lykken så lunefuld
(5:05) 6. My Favorite Things
(5:47) 7. Samba Em Comum
(5:53) 8. Detour Ahead
(6:41) 9. Comes Love
(5:40) 10. To a New Day

Any vocalist who can summon the world-class Danish Radio Big Band to serve as a backup group must have something special to offer. Sinne Eeg, whose lustrous voice uplifts and illuminates her ninth album, We've Just Begun, has all of that and more. Eeg, as it turns out, is a shining star in her native Denmark and if she weren't, she certainly should be. Singing mostly in English, Eeg displays a charming voice that is strong and clear and a style that is jazz-inflected but unmannered, in the image of her role models: Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan and Anita O'Day. For comparison's sake, the contemporary vocalist who springs to mind is Roberta Gambarini, and there can be no higher compliment than that. No less than four of Eeg's earlier albums earned Danish Music Awards for Best Jazz Vocal Album of the Year, and the impression here is that We've Just Begun should be a strong contender for Music Award No. 5. Besides singing, Eeg wrote or co-wrote half of the album's ten selections, starting with the album's opener / title song, a freewheeling swinger on which Eeg's buoyant vocal (and scat chorus) is underlined by the band and tenor saxophonist Hans Ulrik. Eeg wrote the engaging waltz, "Like a Song," which follows, and co-authored the wistful and meditative ballad, "Those Ordinary Things," with lyricist Helle Hansen.

The DRBB's rhythm section shines on "Talking to Myself," an old-line swinger on which Eeg showcases her admirable jazz chops, grooving and scatting in a style that would certainly have pleased the above-named role models. She sings in Danish on "Hvorfor er Lykken Sa Lunefuld," a melodic song from the 1937 Danish film A Consummate Gentleman, before addressing the first of three American evergreens, Rodgers and Hammerstein's "My Favorite Things," whose even-tempered opening stanza gives way to a fiery midsection with burning solos by tenor Frederik Menzies and drummer Soren Frost. As if to show there is no limit to her virtuosity, Eeg sings the gently swaying "Samba em Comum" in English and Portuguese. The light-hearted solo is by trombonist Peter Dahlgren. The next two numbers, "Detour Ahead" and "Comes Love," were scored for Eeg by her longtime friend, the late American saxophonist / arranger Roger Neumann, to whose memory the album is dedicated. "Detour" advances slowly, lending full rein to Eeg's shapely and seductive voice, while "Comes Love" allows her to make the most of its clever and playful lyric (with more scatting thrown in for added spice). Eeg rings down the curtain with another of her compositions, the enticing, gospel-flavored anthem "To a New Day," which further underscores her impressive range and unerring timbre. Make no mistake, this is Eeg's album all the way, and she is a radiant and beguiling centerpiece. As for the Danish Radio Big Band, it is the luscious icing on the cake.

Personnel: Sinne Eeg: vocals, composer, arranger; Nikolai Bogelund: conductor; Dave Vreuls: trumpet; Bjarke Nikolasjsen: trumpet; Thomas Kjergaard: trumpet; Mads la Cour: trumpet; Gerard Presencer: trumpet; Lars Vissing: trumpet; Peter Fuglsang, Nicolai Schultz, Hans Ulrik, Anders Banke, Frederick Menzies, Anders Gaardmand, Jan Harbeck: saxes; Peter Dahlgren: trombone; Vincent Nilsson: trombone; Kevin Christensen: trombone; Annette Saxe: trombone; Jakob Munck: trombone; Henrik Gunde: piano; Per Gade: guitar; Kaspar Vadsholt: bass; Seren Frost: drums. Guest musicians – Rune Harder Olesen: percussion (3); Luis Conte: percussion (7); Sille Grenberg, Birgitte Soojin, Ninna Milner Juel, Maja Hanghoj, Alice Carreri: backing vocals (7).

We've Just Begun

Trudy Kerr - Cloudburst

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:21
Size: 150,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:18) 1. Joy Spring
(3:57) 2. Cloudburst
(4:16) 3. The Rabbit
(5:41) 4. Lady Luck
(4:35) 5. Weird Nightmare
(3:40) 6. Funk Evans
(4:10) 7. Somewhere In The Hills
(2:51) 8. Ruby My Dear
(4:02) 9. Come On Home
(5:20) 10. Jeannine
(6:21) 11. Left Alone
(4:53) 12. On A Misty Night - September In The Rain
(4:38) 13. Cinema Paradiso - That Day
(5:34) 14. Up Jumped Spring

Something of a miniature epiphany this. A vocal album sufficiently musicianly, substantial and in the instrumental tradition that it could equally well be filed under mainstream. Think vocal jazz automatically equals jazz-lite? Think again.

Cloudburst is London-based Australian Kerr's fifth album and follows her fine '02 homage to Chet Baker, My Old Flame. This time she puts the Great American Songbook aside and offers fourteen hardcore jazz instrumentals, to which lyrics and/or vocalese have later been added, either by her or by earlier writers. The original composers are Coltrane, Mingus, Monk, Clifford Brown, Gerry Mulligan, Horace Silver, Mal Waldron, Tadd Dameron, Bill Evans, Lerov Kirkland & Jimmy Harris, Duke Pearson, Antonio Jobim, Ennio Morricone, and Freddie Hubbard. To say Kerr does justice to these guys which she does is really to say something. The arrangements are unfussy, and wholly unsweetened, and Kerr's warm and sensuous voice, particularly effective in the midrange, delivers straightforward and engaging readings.

Key to the album's success is Kerr's band, a half dozen of London's finest, who're given plenty of space in which to stretch out and improvise. Dick Pearce (trumpet) and Derek Nash (baritone saxophone) return from My Old Flame, joined by Alan Skidmore (tenor saxophone), Tom Cawley (piano) perhaps best known right now as keyboards player with thrash jazz uber-iconoclasts Acoustic Ladyland Sam Burgess (bass), and Steve Brown (drums).

Tom Cawley's playing here will be a revelation to anyone who only knows him from his Acoustic Ladyland incarnation. Eight of the tracks are just Kerr and piano trio, and Cawley's fleet and glowing solos, out of Bud Powell, Al Haig, and Horace Silver, but fresh with it, are riveting. Skidmore, Nash, and Pearce shine as bright as you'd expect. Nash is compelling on Mulligan's "Bunny," here retitled "Rabbit," and Waldron's "Left Alone," as is Skidmore on Coltrane's "Moment's Notice," here retitled "Lady Luck," and Mingus' "Weird Nightmare." Pearce's dueting with Kerr on Dameron's "On A Misty Night" is exquisite. Burgess and Brown each get a couple of solos, with Brown particularly strong on Silver's "Come On Home," developing a series of snare drum press-rolls of barely restrained ferocity.

So, a vocal album for people who don't usually like vocal albums. Kerr is 100% real jazz musician, and Cloudburst is 100% real jazz. Things are looking up.~Chris May https://www.allaboutjazz.com/cloudburst-trudy-kerr-jazzizit-review-by-chris-may

Personnel: Trudy Kerr, vocals; Tom Cawley, piano; Sam Burgess, bass; Steve Brown, drums. Dick Pearce, trumpet, Alan Skidmore, tenor saxophone, Derek Nash, baritone saxophone on "The Rabbit," "Lady Luck," "Weird Nightmare," "Jeanine," "Left Alone," and "On A Misty Night/September In The Rain."

Cloudburst

John Beasley - Positootly!

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:16
Size: 113,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:04)  1. Caddo Bayou
(4:32)  2. Positootly!
(5:30)  3. Dindi
(6:40)  4. Black Thunder
(4:58)  5. Shatita Boom Boom
(5:28)  6. Tanguedia III
(4:53)  7. Elle
(4:45)  8. So Tired
(4:50)  9. The Eight Winds
(2:32) 10. Hope.. Arkansas

On Positootly!, pianist John Beasley explores a variety of styles for a thoroughly enjoyable and stimulating experience. Each track benefits immensely from the indelible touch of drumming great Jeff "Tain" Watts, in alliance here with percussionist Munyungo Jackson. Hailing from Louisiana, Beasley started playing in the late seventies, getting his seasoning with such jazz greats as Miles Davis, Freddie Hubbard and Dianne Reeves. Lately, he has gravitated towards composing for film and television, but he continues to release new music and tour with his band. This recording follows-up Letter to Herbie (Resonance, 2008), in which Beasley presented an impressionistic take on Herbie Hancock's music. Besides Watts and Jackson on drums, the musicians participating here are bassist James Genus, along with the blistering front line of saxophonist Bennie Maupin and trumpeter Brian Lynch. Most numbers are Beasley originals with three notable exceptions. The standout is a knockout rendition of, Argentine composer Astor Piazzolla's tango "Tanguedia III." On most selections, Beasley plays piano, but here he uses Fender Rhodes and synthesizer to create bandoneon accordion effects essential to tango. It's uniquely tango-jazz all the way in 2/4 start-stop fashion, building to a dynamic climax.

Other selections range from funk and soul to bop and bossa nova. Staying in a South American vein, Beasley puts forth his take on Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Dindi." Genus' bass sets the tone for this soft reflective piece, with the piano delivering softly swaying interludes. Watts and Jackson, as expected, add complexity to the beat. A further highlight is Beasley's "Black Thunder," dedicated to the late drummer Elvin Jones, and featuring Watts as a positive dynamo with pounding sticks. Maupin and Lynch deliver stirring solos as well. On Beasley's vigorous "The Eight Winds," Lynch's muted trumpet effectively leads the pianist into a burning,double-time solo, again resolutely backed by the churning drum duo. For hard boppers, there is Beasley's opener, "Caddo Bayou," featuring the whole band in this energized tribute to the leader's hometown. For soulful funk there is Bobby Timmons "So Tired," with Beasley again On Fender Rhodes, framing Maupin's strong tenor solo. Since positivity is the theme of this CD, it is fitting that it ends with the piano solo piece "Hope, Arkansas," Beasley's stately ode to Obama's presidency. ~ Larry Taylor https://www.allaboutjazz.com/positootly-john-beasley-resonance-records-review-by-larry-taylor.php

Personnel: John Beasley: piano, Fender Rhodes, synthesizer; Bennie Maupin: tenor and soprano saxophones; Brian Lynch: trumpet; James Genus: bass; Jeff "Tain" Watts: drums; Munyungo Jackson: percussion.

Positootly!

Monday, May 9, 2022

Keith Jarrett - Always Let Me Go (Live In Tokyo) Disc 1, Disc 2

Album: Always Let Me Go (Live In Tokyo) Disc 1

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:06
Size: 140,2 MB
Art: Front

(32:12)  1. Hearts In Space
( 3:34)  2. The River
(16:18)  3. Tributaries
( 9:01)  4. Paradox


Album: Always Let Me Go (Live In Tokyo) Disc 2

Time: 76:22
Size: 175,1 MB

(34:25)  1. Waves
(14:04)  2. Facing East
(14:51)  3. Tsunami
(13:00)  4. Relay

Recorded live in Tokyo in April 2001, Always Let Me Go is Keith Jarrett's 149th concert in Japan. Joined by his long-standing partners Gary Peacock and Jack DeJohnette, these performances are playful, explosive, somber, and completely improvised. After 20 years of working together, they trust each other (and the audience) enough to deliver over two hours of unscripted music. DeJohnette prowls through his drums like a restless cougar: he chatters, scuffles, and pounces on the skins with agility. Likewise, Peacock spoons out a concrete foundation of bass; one that bubbles as it spreads through the cracks in Jarrett's 88 keys (which serve the pianist so very well). For listeners familiar with the trio's Inside Out CD, here is the same idea further elaborated on. "Hearts in Space" spirals out of the starting gate with geometrical tremors, as three virtuosos all start their respective engines and read each other's pulses over the course of 32 minutes. The trio effortlessly glide from mood to mood in synchronization to deliver a ballad in the eye of a hurricane, then dismount into straight-ahead swing. "The River" is a stoic hymn, a richness of melancholy in deep scarlet blue. It is Jarrett's only solo here, as brief as it is rewarding. "Paradox" rides the crest of bebop in a simmering stew to close out the first disc with a punch that stops on a dime. There are enough recurring themes here to call it a standard of sorts, and the musicians quickly assume the proper formation as they've done thousands of times before. Disc two opens with "Waves," another half-hour marathon of moods that evolves seamlessly between chromatic stillness, manic fluttering, and gunpowder bop. DeJohnette clearly sets the tone for "Facing East" a syncopated clockwork of beat, as Jarrett pinwheels in like-minded percussives with Peacock flipping through volumes of frets. Next comes the aptly titled "Tsunami," which swells and bursts with power before finally subsiding to fractured stillness. It is the fire in the musicians' bellies perhaps the darkest and most ferocious passage of the album. As is often the case, Jarrett's distant vocals pinch the air from time to time. Although purists may wince at this additional layer of seasoning, there's no denying his expression comes out of the deepest level of commitment. It is this same commitment that fuels so much of the album. With the knowledge that Always Let Me Go is live and improvised, it adds a rewarding layer of understanding and appreciation, as few musicians can deliver such diamonds with so little structure in place. Song for song, the symbiosis is a marvel to behold and the audience knows it. These are gods at play, and the lightning bolts they toss around are awe-inspiring. ~ Glenn Swan https://www.allmusic.com/album/always-let-me-go-live-in-tokyo-mw0000662266

Personnel:  Keith Jarrett – piano; Gary Peacock - bass; Jack DeJohnette - drums


Gonzalo Rubalcaba - Charlie

Size: 167,0 MB
Time: 72:39
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz: Latin Jazz, Afro-Cuban Jazz
Art: Front

01. First Song ( 5:58)
02. Sandino (11:48)
03. La Pasionaria ( 9:58)
04. Hermitage ( 9:20)
05. Bay City ( 8:55)
06. Blue In Green ( 4:36)
07. Nightfall ( 9:07)
08. Transparence ( 6:03)
09. Silence ( 6:51)

One of the most important figures to emerge from Afro-Cuban jazz in the '90s, Gonzalo Rubalcaba is an extraordinarily versatile pianist able to blend disparate strands of Cuban and American jazz tradition into a fresh, modern whole. Born into a musical family in Havana on May 27, 1963, Rubalcaba began studying classical piano at age eight, honing his technique in that area for the next 12 years while playing around Havana by night. In 1983, he toured France and Africa with Cuba's longstanding Orquesta Aragon, and formed his own band, Grupo Proyecto, in 1985, the same year he was discovered by Dizzy Gillespie. In 1986, Rubalcaba played the Havana Jazz Festival with the American rhythm section of Charlie Haden and Paul Motian, and with Haden's support soon appeared at major international festivals like Montreal and Montreux.

Rubalcaba's early dates for Blue Note -- 1990's Discovery: Live at Montreux and the following year's The Blessing -- were instant classics, breaking him among American jazz audiences and showcasing his virtuosic technique and dense improvisations. Rubalcaba was finally able to play for American audiences beginning in 1993, including a star-making appearance at Lincoln Center, and soon emigrated from Cuba (though not to the U.S. right away; he eventually settled in South Florida in 1996). Rubalcaba recorded for several labels, including Blue Note, which was home to much of his best later work, including 1999's introspective Inner Voyage, 2001's Grammy-winning Supernova, 2004's Paseo, which offered new interpretations of old songs, and 2005's aptly named Solo. In 2002 Rubalcaba shared the title of Artist in Residence at the Montreal Jazz Festival with fellow pianist Chucho Valdés, and in 2003, as part of the Bele Bele Jazz Club series, issued Straight Ahead, re-releases of three separate recording sessions between 1986 and 1987. ~by Steve Huey

Charlie

Doug Webb - The Message

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:12
Size: 142,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:55) 1. Caught In The Webb
(5:17) 2. Nekide
(5:28) 3. The Message
(4:49) 4. I Was Doing Alright
(4:59) 5. Frustration
(4:26) 6. Doug's Dilemma
(4:53) 7. Keeping Up With The Joneses
(6:14) 8. New Beginning
(4:36) 9. Baubles, Bangles & Beads
(8:35) 10. Where Did You Come From?
(6:54) 11. Bonnie Lass

Tenor saxophonist Doug Webb may have played more gigs than anyone, claiming to never have turned one down. He continues to be the go-to saxophonist on the Los Angeles film and television scene with over 30 years in the business, and over 500 recordings. (One publication claims that he has appeared on over one thousand records). He’s also one of the longest-tenured artists on the Posi-Tone label, retuning with The Message, his eleventh album. While most of his recordings are in a quartet configuration, here he returns to the triple saxophone lineup of his acclaimed 2015 Triple Play, albeit with a mostly different lineup which includes Greg Osby on alto, Bob Reynolds on tenor, Charles Ruggiero on drums, and returning anchor Brian Charette on organ.

While the lineup would at first glance suggest an all-out blowing session, the date is centered in a more disciplined way around the compositions, bringing more ensemble passages like a big band than a series of lengthy solos or heated exchanges. That’s not to say there isn’t plenty of spirit at play in these mostly up-tempo renderings of mostly original material. In fact, while Webb contributes just one, Reynolds offers two with Osby and Charette contributing one each, as well as Webb’s frequent collaborator, Randy Aldcroft, who doesn’t play on the album, authoring three. That leaves just three covers, the title track, Gershwin’s “I Was Doing Alright,” and “Baubles, Bangles, and Beads.” The session invariably swings into hard bop and slight hints of soul-jazz with Charette being the linchpin on bass pedals, textured and nuance comping, concise chords to push the soloists, and his own economical statements.

They open with Webb’s “Caught in the Web” with the three saxophonists making rapid, rousing runs in just a few choruses each. There’s a clear emphasis on getting in out strong entries, focused improvisations, and precise handoffs to the next. Osby’s’ mid-tempo “Nekide” has the composer blowing fiercely before while the other group members join intermittently just to encourage him to go further. Eventually, the tenors get their say, joining in for an eventual explosive climax. The melodic title track follows as the horns mix ensemble parts with energetic individual statements. Charette’s organ and Ruggiero’s pulsating drumming steer the group deftly through changes like those heard on the title track. Charette sets up the mid-tempo Gershwin swinger “I Was Doing Alright” with Webb leading first to snappy snare work from Ruggiero and Osby and Reynolds follow as does Charette with his first solo opportunity.

We next have four consecutive originals, beginning with Reynolds’ “Frustration,” which opens at a blistering pace, settling in somewhat for his tenor solo before passing the baton to Osby’s frenetic cluster of notes and finally to Webb, who like, Reynolds settles it somewhat until Charrette takes up a notch in this turn as all go out with choruses of drum rolls on the eights. “Doug’s Dilemma” is the first of the three Aldcroft compositions, and we can breathe a little as Webb and company deliver the first ballad. The sound of the tenor and organ in unison on the melody is an interesting touch, just another example of how Webb deftly navigates various tempos and brings fresh perspectives to the material. “Keeping Up with the Joneses’ is taken at a steady pace although the title may suggest a brisker one. It’s another swinger. Charrette seems anxious to move into the soul-jazz mode, taking that tact with his solo and carrying the latter half of the tune in that direction. Finally, the highly melodic “New Beginning” is another mid-tempo swinger with concise statements from each front liner and Charette.

“Baubles, Bangles & Beads” is from the 1953 musical Kismet and is most often associated with Frank Sinatra. The quintet puts plenty of juice into this rendition, a feature for Charette, with each stating the theme beautifully to the abrupt close. Reynolds’ “Where Did You Come From” weighs in as the longest rack at eight and half minutes, giving each a chance to stretch at a relaxed pace. As he consistently does, Osby bursts in with a flurry of energy that lifts up the subsequent flights of each soloist. When one threatens to go to stratospheric levels, it almost seems like Webb acts as a conductor, cutting off ideas then offering something else, without any hint of disengagement or loss of continuity. Charette has the closer, “Bonnie’s Lass,” so organ centric that it conjures slight strains of soul-jazz but blossoms into one where the horns take their customary inspired flights.

One gets the impression that Webb could play virtually anything. His career reflects it and this album echoes strains that we’ve heard in jazz for the past six decades or more. These players know how to get in and get out, holding little back, saying tons with just a few impassioned choruses on most of the tracks in this joyous session. https://glidemagazine.com/273671/veteran-saxophonist-doug-webb-goes-all-out-with-bop-soul-jazz-mission-via-the-message-album-review%EF%BF%BC/

Personnel: Doug Webb - tenor saxophone; Greg Osby - alto saxophone; Bob Reynolds - tenor saxophone; Brian Charette - organ; Charles Ruggiero - drums

The Message

Sunday, May 8, 2022

Olivia Trummer, Hadar Noiberg - The Hawk

Styles: Vocal, Piano And Flute
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:35
Size: 96,9 MB
Art: Front

(7:20) 1. The Hawk
(4:19) 2. Moena
(6:12) 3. Privacy
(4:52) 4. Beit Ha´arava
(5:08) 5. Fading Blue
(3:34) 6. Triste
(3:57) 7. Here Comes the Sun
(6:10) 8. Carossel

A surprising meeting in Berlin revealed to Hadar Noiberg and Olivia Trummer that they breath music similarly and like to mix their musical upbringing of jazz and classical music with various influences. With the flute and piano extending each other into one unified voice, they create passionate, mysterious and lyrical music which takes the listener on a voyage into their fantastical world.https://www.flavoredtune.com/produkt/olivia-trummer-hadar-noiberg-the-hawk-2-2/?lang=en

Personnel: Olivia Trummer - Piano, Vocals; Hadar Noiberg - Flutes, FX

The Hawk

Bobby Darin - The Legendary Bobby Darin

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:30
Size: 150.0 MB
Styles: Pop/Rock/Jazz vocals
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[2:06] 1. Once In A Lifetime
[2:24] 2. More
[1:46] 3. Charade
[4:23] 4. Beyond The Sea
[1:33] 5. As Long As I'm Singing
[3:32] 6. Mack The Knife
[2:06] 7. On The Street Where You Live
[3:13] 8. Hello, Dolly!
[3:00] 9. A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square
[2:23] 10. The Good Life
[1:55] 11. I Got Rhythm
[2:43] 12. Oh! Look At Me Now
[2:48] 13. Moon River
[2:24] 14. You're The Reason I'm Living
[2:03] 15. Call Me Irresponsible
[2:22] 16. Goodbye, Charlie
[2:54] 17. Softly, As I Leave You
[2:33] 18. Venice Blue
[2:20] 19. If A Man Answers
[2:17] 20. 18 Yellow Roses
[2:19] 21. If I Were A Carpenter
[3:11] 22. Hits Medley Splish Splash 22. Beyond The Sea Artificial Flowers Clementine
[5:00] 23. (Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher And Higher
[4:03] 24. The Curtain Falls

In a recording career lasting 17 years, Bobby Darin spent only three of those years, 1962-1965, signed to Capitol Records. They were busy years for him in the recording studio: he released seven Capitol LPs, five of which made the charts, and 11 Capitol singles, eight of which entered the Billboard Hot 100, two of those, the self-written, country-styled "You're the Reason I'm Living" and "18 Yellow Roses," reaching the Top Ten. Still, his relatively brief Capitol sojourn was not as memorable as his two stints at Atlantic Records, 1958-1961 (on the Atco subsidiary) and 1966-1967, which accounted for his eight other Top Ten hits, including the chart-topping "Mack the Knife." Naturally, however, Capitol has re-compiled its Darin catalog several times over the years, starting with 1966's deceptively titled The Best of Bobby Darin. In 2004, with a film biography and two book biographies imminent, Capitol tried again, and The Legendary Bobby Darin is the label's longest and most comprehensive attempt at a Darin compilation yet, topping out at 70-plus minutes and covering the stylistic bases of the singer's eclectic dabbling in rock & roll (the title song from his 1962 movie If a Man Answers), country (the hits noted above), folk-rock (the Atlantic recording of the Top Ten hit "If I Were a Carpenter"), and, of course, traditional pop. The last actually dominates the collection, with Darin, employing such arrangers as Frank Sinatra stalwart Billy May, turning in his versions of early-'60s show tunes and movie themes like "Once in a Lifetime," "Moon River," and "Hello, Dolly!" To give the collection the appearance of a more complete hits set, live versions of the Atco hits "Beyond the Sea" and "Mack the Knife" have been included, and the album concludes with two previously unreleased live cuts, both recorded in Las Vegas in 1963, the first a hits medley and the other a version of "The Curtain Falls." The result is a respectable effort that still represents only a slice of Darin's recording career.~William Ruhlmann

The Legendary Bobby Darin       

Terra Hazelton - Gimme Whatcha Got

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:57
Size: 113,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:50)  1. Coffee In The Morning
(4:59)  2. Everything I've Got Belongs To You
(5:19)  3. If I Had You
(3:02)  4. If I Can't Sell It
(3:26)  5. Gotta Gimme Whatcha Got
(3:58)  6. What Are You Doing New Years Eve?
(2:44)  7. Don't Let Your Love Go Wrong
(4:34)  8. Smoking My Sad Cigarette
(3:40)  9. I Like It Cause' I Love It
(4:02) 10. Two Sleepy People
(4:14) 11. Send Me To The 'Lectric Chair
(2:25) 12. I'm An Old Cowhand
(1:37) 13. Just Squeeze Me

With her sophomore album,  “Gimme Whatcha Got” , Terra Hazelton pays  tribute to the traditional jazz and gut-bucket blues that she came to love,  under the guidance of her mentor, the late legendary guitarist and music historian Jeff Healey (who also produced and was featured on  her 2004 debut “Anybody’s Baby”).This exciting new release also paints a portrait of a singer who has very much come into her own, supported by a veritable who’s who of Canadian talent;  Michael Kaeshammer, Alex Pangman, country star Russel De Carle and the Valleau Brothers (much loved front-men for the Polyjesters). Hazelton worked closely with producer John Sheard, crafting an album that expresses her own musical journey of the last five years. The result is an album which showcases her distinctive voice, innate musicality and her ability as a born storyteller. With “Gimme Whatcha Got”, Hazelton has emerged as one of Canada’s most versatile and engaging vocalists.  http://www.terrahazelton.com/music/albums/

George DeLancey - Swing Springs

Styles: Jazz, Bop
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:57
Size: 87,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:17) 1. Cold Shoulder
(4:35) 2. Patience
(6:36) 3. Waltz in E
(4:11) 4. Man in the Moon
(3:30) 5. Flashpoint
(3:49) 6. Two-Step Away
(6:08) 7. Blues in F
(4:47) 8. Blind Love

A native of Cambridge, OH, and a student of such prestigious programs as the Columbus Youth Jazz Orchestra and the Michigan State University Jazz Studies Program, where he studied under Rodney Whitaker. He toured nationally and internationally with the Larry Fuller Trio from 2017 to 2019, and has performed as a sideman with bandleaders including Wessell Anderson, Peter Bernstein, Bobby Broom, Tia Fuller, Philip and Winard Harper, Christian Howes, Willie Jones III, Wynton Marsalis, Cécile McLorin Salvant, Tomoko Omura, Johnny O'Neal, Houston Person, Ben Paterson, Jeremy Pelt, Bria Skonberg, as well as many others in New York and throughout the United States.

He is active nationally as a bandleader and educator, and has worked with programs including Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Jazz for Young People, Christian Howes’ Creative Strings Workshop, and Keith Hall's Summer Drum Intensive. He is also the director of the Midwestern arts initiative Appalachian Muse. https://georgedelancey.com/about

Personnel: George DeLancey - bass; Chris Pattishall - piano; Charles Goold - drums; Stacy Dillard - soprano saxophone; Caleb Wheeler Curtis - alto saxophone; Jon Beshay - tenor saxophone and flute; Andrew Gutauskas - baritone and bass clarinet; Bryan Davis - lead trumpet; Josh Lawrence - trumpet; Robert Edwards - trombone and tuba; Jimmy O'Connell - trombone

Swing Springs

Saturday, May 7, 2022

Erena Terakubo - Absolutely Live!

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:03
Size: 136,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:16) 1. Bird Lives
(4:13) 2. Stompin' At The Savoy
(8:25) 3. Little Girl Power
(8:10) 4. Bud Powell
(6:54) 5. A Crystal Path
(4:24) 6. Shaw 'Nuff
(8:47) 7. Skylark
(9:01) 8. Fiesta Espagnol
(4:47) 9. Be Nice

Erena Terakubo was born in Sapporo, Japan in 1992. She began playing the alto saxophone at the age of nine. Between the ages of 10 and 15, she participated in the Sapporo Junior Jazz Orchestra, where she had the opportunity to have jazz clinics with musicians including Herbie Hancock and Tiger Okoshi. Terakubo later attended the Berklee Five-Week Summer Performance Program, where she was rewarded a full-tuition scholarship and was selected for the Berklee Summer Jazz Workshop with Terri Lyne Carrington.

In 2010, she recorded her first album, "North Bird" with Kenny Barron, Christian McBride, Lee Pearson, and Peter Bernstein. The album was released in Japan by Japanese major record label King, reached no. 1 on the Japanese jazz charts, and was awarded Swing Journal's Gold Disc. Later that year, she performed with Ron Carter, Omar Hakim, and Will Boulware as part of the Tokyo Jazz Festival. In 2011, Terakubo recorded her second album, "New York Attitude" with Kenny Barron, Ron Carter, Lee Pearson, and Dominick Farinacci, and she was chosen as one of just six Presidential Scholars from across the world to attend Berklee College of Music in Boston.

Her concert appearances have included Tokyo Jazz Festival, Sapporo City Jazz Festival, Jazz Week Osaka 2010 (with Michel Camilo Trio), Nagoya Jazz Festival (with Yosuke Yamashita), Kitara Hall (with Sapporo Symphony Orchestra), and D.C. Jazz Festival 2012. She has been fortunate to work with musicians such as Sadao Watanabe, Terumasa Hino, Eddie Gomez, Jimmy Cobb, and Anthony Jackson.. Terakubo has been selected to perform in summer 2012, at the Playboy Jazz Festival in Los Angeles, as part of Bill Cosby's portion of the program. In 2013, her long-awaited third album “Burkina” with Kenny Barron, Ron Carter, Lenny White & Jimmy Cobb set a high valuation on her ability. In 2014, she graduated Berklee College Of Music. In 2015, Moved to New York City. https://www.jazzmusicarchives.com/artist/erena-terakubo

Personnel: Erena Terakubo - alto saxophone,soprano saxophone; Mayuko Katakura - piano; Motoi Kanamori - bass; Shinnosuke Takahashi - drums

Absolutely Live!

Dave Brubeck - Young Lions & Old Tigers

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:28
Size: 146,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:29)  1. Roy Hargrove
(2:33)  2. How High the Moon
(4:57)  3. Michael Brecker Waltz
(3:27)  4. Here Comes McBride
(3:51)  5. Joe Lovano Tango
(7:52)  6. In Your Own Sweet Way
(6:22)  7. Joshua Redman
(5:43)  8. Together
(6:59)  9. Moody
(4:46) 10. Gerry-Go-Round
(6:43) 11. Ronnie Buttacavoli
(4:41) 12. Deep in a Dream

To celebrate his 75th birthday, Dave Brubeck recorded one number apiece with quite a variety of top jazz stars, both young and old. Some of the performances (which alternate duets with quartets) work better than others (eight are recent Brubeck compositions) but all of the musicians display mutual respect, and it is obvious that the guests are all fans of the still-masterful pianist. Trumpeter Roy Hargrove plays beautifully on his lyrical feature but Jon Hendricks, who sings "How High the Moon" as a ballad, takes it at such a slow tempo as to be dreary. Tenor-saxophonist Michael Brecker is fine on "Michael Brecker Waltz," although he sounds a bit restrained, the wittily-titled "Here Comes McBride" is a good-humored romp with bassist Christian McBride; Joe Lovano (on tenor) works well with Brubeck, and particularly memorable is the first meeting on record between Brubeck and fellow pianist George Shearing, with a chance-taking interpretation of "In Your Own Sweet Way." 

Joshua Redman performs fine hard bop on one song, "Together," is a well-conceived duet for baritonist Gerry Mulligan and Brubeck, James Moody plays tenor, sings, and yodels on the minor blues "Moody," Mulligan returns for the contrapuntal "Gerry-Go-Round," and, although the obscure flugelhornist Ronnie Buttacavoli sounds very out of place on his boring feature, the set closes with one of the strongest performances, a solo piano showcase for Brubeck on "Deep in a Dream." Overall, this is quite a mixed bag but, even with its occasional misses, the CD is a must for Dave Brubeck fans, because the pianist is consistently inventive throughout the unusual set. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/young-lions-old-tigers-mw0000176313

Personnel: Dave Brubeck (piano); James Moody (vocals, tenor saxophone); Jon Hendricks (vocals); Michael Brecker, Joe Lovano, Joshua Redman (tenor saxophone); Gerry Mulligan (baritone saxophone); Roy Hargrove (trumpet); Ronnie Buttacavoli (flugelhorn); George Shearing (piano); Chris Brubeck (electric bass); Christian McBride, Jack Six (bass); Randy Jones (drums).

Carmen Cuesta & Chuck Loeb - Palabras

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:18
Size: 113,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:43)  1. Palabras
(5:00)  2. Te Vas
(5:06)  3. Vaiven
(4:44)  4. Despues
(4:42)  5. Nubes
(4:29)  6. Nada
(4:33)  7. Canción De Las Palabras
(5:13)  8. Barro
(5:28)  9. Belleza
(5:14) 10. Vive

The wife of smooth jazz synthesizer, flute and guitar player Chuck Loeb, Carmen Cuesta has established her own reputation as a soulful pop and jazz vocalist, guitarist and songwriter. Having served an apprenticeship as a background singer for Grover Washington, Jr., Michael Franks, Gato Barbieri, Peabo Bryson, Earl Klugh and Jim Hall and a chorus dancer in such musicals as Godspell, Cuesta has been steadily attracting acclaim as a soloist. Her debut 1996 solo album, One Kiss, which featured guest appearances by Bill Evans and Toots Thielemans, was followed by the impressive Peace Of Mind three years later. A self-taught guitarist, Cuesta wrote her own songs before her fifteenth birthday. Although she attended college, she balanced her studies with work in commercials and Spanish musical theater. She moved to New York at the age of twenty-four. Cuesta's appearances in the New York area have featured the stellar accompaniment of such top-notch jazz players as Will Lee, Michael Brecker, Peter Erskine, Dave Weckl and Mitchel Forman. ~ Craig Harris https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/palabras/1348595007

Palabras

Sylvia Bennett - Reflections

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 25:46
Size: 59,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:24) 1. Reflections
(3:52) 2. All Through the Years
(3:45) 3. Feel Again
(3:21) 4. I Never Thought
(4:27) 5. Along the Way
(3:31) 6. Witchcraft (World Mix)
(3:23) 7. Feel Again (Acoustic)

Since her recording debut on the Grammy-nominated SENTIMENTAL JOURNEY album with music icon Lionel Hampton, multi-talented jazz vocalist and songwriter Sylvia Bennett has become something of a legend herself, with a dozen solo albums to date, and a successful emergence into Smooth Jazz that includes collaborations with Arturo Sandoval, Paul Brown, Rick Braun and Nathan East.

With production by longtime collaborator and producer Hal S. Batt, the vibrant singer’s latest album REFLECTIONS finds her looking firmly ahead, pairing her lush, lilting and sultry vocals with seductive light grooves and sweet caressing musical atmospheres. Complementing her emotionally impactful originals with a tasty “world mix” of a Songbook standard ("Witchcraft"), she thoughtfully explores the many facets of relationships, from hopeful beginnings and making dreams reality to the fine art of working things through.https://www.smoothjazz.com/jazzblasts/artist/39213/sylvia-bennett

Reflections

Friday, May 6, 2022

Ray Brown Trio - Some Of My Best Friends Are...Singers

Styles: Contemporary Jazz, Vocal
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:32
Size: 128,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:19) 1. I Thought About You
(3:24) 2. Poor Butterfly
(5:30) 3. More Than You Know
(2:25) 4. Little Boy
(5:37) 5. But Beautiful
(3:19) 6. At Long Last Love
(5:57) 7. Skylark
(6:15) 8. Cherokee
(4:16) 9. (There Is) No Greater Love
(4:32) 10. Imagination
(3:36) 11. The Party's Over
(5:15) 12. The Perfect Blues

What does a bass player do when he's recording an album as a leader? Surely not an hour's worth of bass solos! Ray Brown solved the bass player's dilemma with a series of recordings under the Some of My Best Friends Are... heading. This 1998 release is the third in the series, following the earlier Some of My Best Friends Are...Piano Players and Some of My Best Friends Are...Sax Players, and it's a gem. Featuring a sextet of fine vocalists, ranging from the well-established to the unknown, this CD is a class act from beginning to end. The rising jazz vocal superstar of the late '90s, Diana Krall, is showcased to great effect on "I Thought About You" and "Little Boy." Well-established female vocal veterans Etta Jones, Dee Dee Bridgewater, and Marlena Shaw deliver superb performances, soulfully giving master lessons in the art of singing. The lone male singer spotlighted here, Kevin Mahogany, wraps his smooth baritone around the ballad "Skylark," and swings gently on "The Party's Over."~Jim Newsonhttps://www.allmusic.com/album/some-of-my-best-friends-aresingers-mw0000042710

Personnel: Ray Brown – double bass; Geoff Keezer – piano; Gregory Hutchinson – drums; Antonio Hart – alto saxophone; Russell Malone – guitar

Some Of My Best Friends Are...Singers

Charles Mingus - Riding Where Sunshine

Styles: Bop, Post-Bop
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:54
Size: 183,4 MB
Art: Front

( 5:57) 1. Lady Bird
(13:11) 2. I’ll Remember April
( 6:48) 3. All The Things You Are In C Sharp
( 7:24) 4. Salt Peanuts
( 5:35) 5. A Foggy Day (Live Take)
( 3:53) 6. Bass-ically Speaking (Alternate Take 2)
( 5:37) 7. Drums (Live Take)
( 9:10) 8. Hot House
( 8:37) 9. Percussion Discussion (Live Take)
( 7:42) 10. Perdido
( 5:58) 11. Serenade In Blue

One of the most important figures in twentieth century American music, Charles Mingus was a virtuoso bass player, accomplished pianist, bandleader and composer. Born on a military base in Nogales, Arizona in 1922 and raised in Watts, California, his earliest musical influences came from the church choir and group singing and from "hearing Duke Ellington over the radio when [he] was eight years old." He studied double bass and composition in a formal way (five years with H. Rheinshagen, principal bassist of the New York Philharmonic, and compositional techniques with the legendary Lloyd Reese) while absorbing vernacular music from the great jazz masters, first-hand. His early professional experience, in the 40's, found him touring with bands like Louis Armstrong, Kid Ory and Lionel Hampton.

Eventually he settled in New York where he played and recorded with the leading musicians of the 1950's Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Bud Powell, Art Tatum and Duke Ellington himself. One of the few bassists to do so, Mingus quickly developed as a leader of musicians. He was also an accomplished pianist who could have made a career playing that instrument. By the mid-50's he had formed his own publishing and recording companies to protect and document his growing repertoire of original music. He also founded the "Jazz Workshop," a group which enabled young composers to have their new works performed in concert and on recordings.

Mingus soon found himself at the forefront of the avant-garde. His recordings bear witness to the extraordinarily creative body of work that followed. They include: Pithecanthropus Erectus, The Clown, Tijuana Moods, Mingus Dynasty, Mingus Ah Um, The Black Saint and the Sinner Lady, Cumbia and Jazz Fusion, Let My Children Hear Music. He recorded over a hundred albums and wrote over three hundred scores. Although he wrote his first concert piece, "Half-Mast Inhibition," when he was seventeen years old, it was not recorded until twenty years later by a 22-piece orchestra with Gunther Schuller conducting. It was the presentation of "Revelations" which combined jazz and classical idioms, at the 1955 Brandeis Festival of the Creative Arts, that established him as one of the foremost jazz composers of his day.

In 1971 Mingus was awarded the Slee Chair of Music and spent a semester teaching composition at the State University of New York at Buffalo. In the same year his autobiography, Beneath the Underdog, was published by Knopf. In 1972 it appeared in a Bantam paperback and was reissued after his death, in 1980, by Viking/Penguin and again by Pantheon Books, in 1991. In 1972 he also re-signed with Columbia Records. His music was performed frequently by ballet companies, and Alvin Ailey choreographed an hour program called "The Mingus Dances" during a 1972 collaboration with the Robert Joffrey Ballet Company

He toured extensively throughout Europe, Japan, Canada, South America and the United States until the end of 1977 when he was diagnosed as having a rare nerve disease, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis. He was confined to a wheelchair, and although he was no longer able to write music on paper or compose at the piano, his last works were sung into a tape recorder. From the 1960's until his death in 1979 at age 56, Mingus remained in the forefront of American music. When asked to comment on his accomplishments, Mingus said that his abilities as a bassist were the result of hard work but that his talent for composition came from God.

Mingus received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, The Smithsonian Institute, and the Guggenheim Foundation (two grants). He also received an honorary degree from Brandeis and an award from Yale University. At a memorial following Mingus' death, Steve Schlesinger of the Guggenheim Foundation commented that Mingus was one of the few artists who received two grants and added: "I look forward to the day when we can transcend labels like jazz and acknowledge Charles Mingus as the major American composer that he is." The New Yorker wrote: "For sheer melodic and rhythmic and structural originality, his compositions may equal anything written in western music in the twentieth century." He died in Mexico on January 5, 1979, and his wife, Sue Graham Mingus, scattered his ashes in the Ganges River in India. Both New York City and Washington, D.C. honored him posthumously with a "Charles Mingus Day.

After his death, the National Endowment for the Arts provided grants for a Mingus foundation created by Sue Mingus called "Let My Children Hear Music" which catalogued all of Mingus' works. The microfilms of these works were then given to the Music Division of the New York Public Library where they are currently available for study and scholarship - a first for jazz. Sue Mingus has founded three working repertory bands called the Mingus Dynasty, Mingus Orchestra, and the Mingus Big Band, which continue to perform his music. Biographies of Charles Mingus include Mingus by Brian Priestley, Mingus/Mingus by Janet Coleman and Al Young, Myself When I Am Real by Gene Santoro, and Tonight at Noon, a memoir by Sue Mingus.

Mingus' masterwork, "Epitaph," a composition which is more than 4000 measures long and which requires two hours to perform, was discovered during the cataloguing process. With the help of a grant from the Ford Foundation, the score and instrumental parts were copied, and the piece itself was premiered by a 30-piece orchestra, conducted by Gunther Schuller, in a concert produced by Sue Mingus at Alice Tully Hall on June 3, 1989, ten years after Mingus' death. The New Yorker wrote that "Epitaph" represents the first advance in jazz composition since Duke Ellington's "Black, Brown, and Beige," which was written in 1943. The New York Times said it ranked with the "most memorable jazz events of the decade." Convinced that it would never be performed in his lifetime, Mingus called his work "Epitaph," declaring that he wrote it "for my tombstone.”
"The Library of Congress purchased the Charles Mingus Collection, a major acquisition, in 1993; this included autographed manuscripts, photographs, literary manuscripts, correspondence, and tape recordings of interviews, broadcasts, recording sessions, and Mingus composing at the piano. Sue Mingus has published a number of educational books through Hal Leonard Publishing, including Charles Mingus: More Than a Fake Book, Charles Mingus: More Than a Play-Along, Charles Mingus: Easy Piano Solos, many big band charts including the Simply Mingus set of big band music charts and a Mingus guitar book. https://www.charlesmingus.com/mingusbio

Riding Where Sunshine

Thursday, May 5, 2022

Carol Welsman - Dance with Me

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:56
Size: 100,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:13)  1. You and the Night and the Music
(4:14)  2. A Taste of Paradise
(3:58)  3. Femme Fatale (Amor Fugaz)
(4:28)  4. Dance with Me (Si Tú No Bailas Conmigo)
(3:42) 5. Time to Dance Cha Cha Cha (Ya Llegó La Hora)
(3:35)  6. Yesterday (Como Fue)
(3:36)  7. Island Lullaby
(3:37)  8. I Think of You (Hoy Como Ayer)
(3:49)  9. I Won't Dance
(5:37) 10. Revelations
(4:03) 11. Yesterday I Heard the Rain (Esta tarde Vi Llover)

Juno-nominated vocalist and pianist Carol Welsman’s forthcoming album Dance With Me is a collection of jazz songs infused with traditional Latin rhythms.It’s the 13th album for the six-time Juno nominee and marks her first venture into Latin jazz. The song selections include popular Latin standards adapted into English, standards from the Great American Songbook, original compositions, and even a song written by Canadian rock icon Randy Bachman.The first single is a duet with Juan Luis Guerra on an English adaptation of the Grammy-winning Dominican superstar’s song Si tú no bailas conmigo. Dance With Me, which arrives this Friday, was co-produced by Welsman and Oscar Hernández, a four-time Grammy-winning composer and arranger.

Welsman is surrounded by the skills of saxophonist and flautist Justo Almario, percussionist Joey de Leon, bassist Rene Camacho and drummer Jimmy Branly.The Cuban-born Branly was instrumental in introducing Welsman to Latin music, particularly the work of Beny Moré. She and co-lyricist Jo Perry chose a number of Latin standards to include on the album and wrote English adaptations such as Y Hoy Como Ayer (I Think of You), Como Fue (Yesterday), and Ya Llegó La Hora (Time to Dance Cha Cha Cha) in the hopes of introducing these songs to a new audience.Among the album’s other cuts are Randy Bachman’s song A Taste of Paradise, which draws on his inspiration from Lenny Breau and Antônio Carlos Jobim, and two of Welsman’s own original compositions: Island Lullaby and Revelations. https://jazz.fm/carol-welsman-dance-with-me-new-album-latin-jazz/

Dance with Me

Didier Lockwood - Tribute to Stéphane Grappelli

Styles: Violin Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:47
Size: 150,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:06)  1. Les valseuses
(3:20)  2. I Got Rhythm
(5:53)  3. Nuages
(4:19)  4. Barbizon Blues
(3:37)  5. All the Things You Are
(3:27)  6. My One and Only Love
(4:07)  7. The Kid
(5:37)  8. Someday My Prince Will Come
(4:15)  9. Minor Swing
(6:13) 10. Misty
(3:33) 11. Pent up House
(4:50) 12. Tears
(5:55) 13. In a Sentimental Mood
(6:30) 14. Beautiful Love

After his excursions into modal jazz, rock, fusion and bop, Didier Lockwood has come home again to revel in the music of jazz violin great Stéphane Grappelli with whom Lockwood performed early in his career. In the process, Lockwood is exposing his astounding talent on a difficult instrument seldom heard in jazz to a broader audience. That audience can't help but sit up and take notice. With the aid of just-as-astounding Biréli Lagrène on guitar (assuming the Django Reinhardt role, of course) and Niels Henning Ørsted Pedersen on bass, this percussionless trio doesn't lack for swing or dynamism. In fact, its swing and dynamism overflow, leaving the listener awash in the thrill that Le Jazz Hot generated over 60 years ago. Lockwood And Company are obviously beyond technique. They have sublimated the style of Grappelli and Reinhardt and effortlessly interpret the legends' approach to their infectious music, slightly gypsy or Gallic in its gushes of emotion and slightly American in its democracy. We can expect excellence in the tributes of "Nuages" and "Les Valseuses". But the unexpected pleasures like Lockwood's overtoned and atmospheric introduction to "Someday My Price Will Come", its timbre pure and almost flute-like, or the Brazilian rhythm expressed by the strings on "The Kid" elevate the CD with more than exceptional musicianship. These pleasures communicate joy and youthful delight and extroversion of spirit. The trio's command of their instruments truly is beyond description. Lockwood's penultimate cadenza and breath-taking final note in the highest register of the instrument on "My One And Only Love" seem to be the tune's reason for existence, the melody itself serving as its lead-in. Lagrène can back up another string musician with irresistible rhythm, but his polyphonal workout on "All The Things You Are" exhibits a free spirit reigned in by the rhythmic needs of the piece. NHØP, ever the solid foundation behind any group, provides nimble soloing, as if the bass were a guitar, before withdrawing into his role as percussive stand-in when the group congeals again as a unit. More than a mere tribute to Stéphane Grappelli, Lockwood's CD represents an infectious demonstration of the potential of the violin as an inspiring jazz instrument. ~ AAJ Staff https://www.allaboutjazz.com/tribute-to-stephane-grappelli-didier-lockwood-dreyfus-records-review-by-aaj-staff.php

Personnel: Violin, Producer – Didier Lockwood; Double Bass – Niels Henning Orsted Pedersen; Guitar – Biréli Lagrène

Tribute to Stéphane Grappelli

Harry Allen, Dave Blenkhorn - Play the Music of Phil Morrison

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:01
Size: 106,1 MB
Art: Front

(8:00) 1. April and U
(6:31) 2. Summer Rain
(4:24) 3. Down in Rio
(4:37) 4. Mieke Jade
(7:00) 5. Without You
(3:02) 6. Fiddlin’
(7:03) 7. Mystique
(5:20) 8. Your Eyes

Gene Lees writes, “Stan Getz was once asked his idea of the perfect tenor saxophone soloist. His answer was, 'My technique, Al Cohn's ideas, and Zoot's time.' The fulfillment of that ideal may well be embodied in thirty-year-old Harry Allen.”

BMG recording artist Harry Allen has over twenty recordings to his name. Three of Harry's CDs have won Gold Disc Awards from Japan's Swing Journal Magazine, and his CD Tenors Anyone? won both the Gold Disc Award and the New Star Award. His recordings have made the top ten list for favorite new releases in Swing Journal Magazine's reader's poll and Jazz Journal International's critic's poll for 1997, and Eu Nao Quero Dancar (I Won't Dance), the third Gold Disc Award winner, was voted second for album of the year for 1998 by Swing Journal Magazine‚s reader‚s poll.

Harry has performed at jazz festivals and clubs worldwide, frequently touring the United States, Europe, and the Far East. He has performed with Rosemary Clooney, Ray Brown, Hank Jones, Frank Wess, Flip Phillips, Scott Hamilton, Harry 'Sweets' Edison, Kenny Burrell, Herb Ellis, John Pizzarelli, Bucky Pizzarelli, Gus Johnson, Jeff Hamilton, Terry Gibbs, Warren Vache, and has recorded with Tony Bennett, Johnny Mandel, Ray Brown, Tommy Flanagan, James Taylor, Sheryl Crow, Kenny Barron, Dave McKenna, Dori Caymmi, Larry Goldings, George Mraz, Jake Hanna, and Al Foster, among others.

Harry is featured on many of John Pizzarelli's recordings including the soundtrack and an on-screen cameo in the feature film The Out of Towners starring Steve Martin and Goldie Hawn. He has also done a series of commercials for ESPN starring Robert Goulet.

Harry was born in Washington D.C. in 1966, and was raised in Los Angeles, CA and Burrillville, RI. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in music in 1988 from Rutgers University in New Jersey, and currently resides in New York City. https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/harry-allen

Play the Music of Phil Morrison