Saturday, June 4, 2022

Lori Lieberman - Truly

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:35
Size: 100,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:03) 1. You Go To My Head
(3:45) 2. Moonlight In Vermont
(2:29) 3. I Like The Likes of You
(3:21) 4. What Kind of Fool am I
(3:49) 5. Truly
(3:13) 6. It Might As Well be Spring (C'est le Printemps)
(5:19) 7. Killing Me Softly
(3:00) 8. You Are Not my First Love
(3:59) 9. My One and Only Love
(2:57) 10. She Knows Better
(3:26) 11. Love's a Fragile Thing
(3:08) 12. Que Sera, Sera

Truly, quite possibly Lori Lieberman's finest album to-date, both musically & sonically, is guaranteed to become an audiophile favorite. A potpourri of fresh covers from the American Songbook, sprinkled with new, original compositions, embellished by thoughtful arrangements, played by some of the finest musicians, Truly was recorded, mixed and mastered to perfection. Joe Cali, executive producer, assembled a Grammy award winning crew for Truly. Lori 's voice is in shockingly fine form, but wait until you hear Matt Rollings on piano & Hammond B-3 organ and the amazing Lyle Workman on guitar. The album was co-produced by Lori Lieberman and Matt Rollings. Recorded & mixed by Bob Clearmountain and mastered by Darcy Proper. This is Lori's finest sounding album. Eight songs are covers which Lori listened to with her father, while driving in Switzerland as a child, bopping to an eight track car stereo.

Two originals were co-written forty years ago with Joe Harnell and never previously recorded. While there is one fresh composition, the title track "Truly" and a wonderful re-imagining of Lori's classic - "Killing Me Softly". Matt Rollings gorgeous jazz improvisation on piano opens the song, later the song is fleshed out by David Pitch (bass), Victor Indrizzo (drums) & Lyle Workman (guitar). In contrast, the original version, recorded when Lori was 19, sounds truly dated. Lori's new version, here on Truly, is the most heartfelt and brought the experienced Bob Clearmountain to tears. Lori's "Moonlight In Vermont" sounds remarkably fresh and current. The song opens with Matt Rollings piano which provides a wonderful counterpoint to her singing. When the rhythm section and Lyle Workman on guitar join in, the party starts to swing. Lyle Workman's twenty second guitar sorbet is clean & refreshing, every note tugs at your heart. We are talking goosebumps territory here. Lori continues singing with the band in full swing it's glorious. Her singing displays maturity & delivers wonderful shades of emotion & passion. This is a top shelf project and it sounds it. https://sirenrecords.com/UPC/793888291171

Personnel: Lori Lieberman, vocal; Matt Rollings, piano; David Piltch, bass; Lyle Workman, guitar; Victor Indrizzo, drums

Truly

Friday, June 3, 2022

Vanessa Rubin - Soul Eyes

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:11
Size: 122,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:18)  1. I've Got The World On A String
(3:16)  2. When We Were One
(5:51)  3. Soul Eyes
(8:13)  4. Tenderly
(4:00)  5. Giant Steps
(4:47)  6. Autumn
(6:35)  7. Willow Weep For Me
(6:01)  8. Voyager II
(5:24)  9. Wait For Love
(3:42) 10. Dearly Beloved

Vanessa Rubin at the time of her Novus debut had been a high-school English teacher for seven years. This CD was a good start for her singing career although the results are a little mixed. Rubin displays an attractive voice (sounding great when holding long notes) but at this point in time ballads were not her strong point (on "When We Were One" she recalls Barbra Streisand). In addition, producer Onaje Allan Gumbs cannot resist gumming up the works in a few places with phony strings from his keyboards; he funks up what may be the initial vocal version of Mal Waldron's classic "Soul Eyes" along with a slower-than-usual "Giant Steps." On the plus side, Rubin's workout on a flagwaving "I've Got the World on a String" is enjoyable, the backup crew (which includes pianist Kirk Lightsey, trumpeter Eddie Allen and saxophonist Roger Byam) get occasional solos and the singer does a fine tribute to Sarah Vaughan on "Tenderly." This was a worthwhile debut but Vanessa Rubin's best work would be in the future. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/soul-eyes-mw0000273378

Personnel: Vanessa Rubin (Vocals); Eddie Allen Trumpet, Flugelhorn;  Roger Byam Sax (Alto), Sax (Soprano), Sax (Tenor);  Kirk Lightsey Piano;  Cecil McBee Bass;  Lewis Nash Drums

Soul Eyes  

The Ahmad Jamal Trio - Chamber Music Of The New Jazz

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1961
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:39
Size: 82,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:39) 1. New Rhumba
(4:23) 2. A Foggy Day
(3:15) 3. All Of You
(3:00) 4. It Ain't Necessarily So
(3:25) 5. I Don't Wanna Be Kissed (By Anyone But You)
(4:50) 6. I Get A Kick Of You
(4:52) 7. Jeff
(3:10) 8. Darn That Dream
(4:01) 9. Spring Is Here

This album is unusual in two ways. Because pianist Ahmad Jamal would soon become famous for his piano/bass/drums trios, it is often forgotten that, up until 1956, his group consisted of bassist Israel Crosby and guitarist Ray Crawford. Crawford's percussive hitting of his guitar would soon be utilized by Herb Ellis in Oscar Peterson's Trio. And, although it is know that Miles Davis listened closely to Jamal and often "borrowed" his repertoire, few probably realize that Gil Evans based some of his famous arrangements on Jamal's interpretations.

A comparison of "New Rumba" and "Medley" (which is really "I Don't Want To Be Kissed") on this album with Evans' version for Miles Ahead in 1957 sounds nearly identical despite the very different personnel. It is a pity that Jamal would soon change his group's instrumentation since his communication with Crawford and Crosby (heard here on such tunes as "A Foggy Day," "All of You," "I Get a Kick out of You" and "Spring Is Here") was often magical, but he would soon gain great popularity with the upcoming guitarless trio (which was just as telepathic).~Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/chamber-music-of-the-new-jazz-mw0000656533

Personnel: Piano – Ahmad Jamal; Double Bass – Israel Crosby; Guitar – Ray Crawford

Chamber Music Of The New Jazz

Marilyn Scott - The Landscape

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:09
Size: 83,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:09) 1. Thrown out into Space, Butterfly
(4:23) 2. The Landscape
(4:03) 3. Summer Night
(7:01) 4. Irreplaceable
(4:51) 5. Tomorrow
(4:30) 6. Unzip
(6:09) 7. The Sun

A native of southern California, vocalist Marilyn Scott counts among her earliest influences, artists Aretha Franklin, Donny Hathaway, Etta James, Jean Carn and Andy Bey. She began performing in local clubs and fronted soul-jazz bands around the San Francisco Bay area. Among the many friends she made were the guys of Tower of Power, who gave her the opportunity to do backing session vocals with the Oakland-based band. Those recording sessions steered her to making her way back to Los Angeles as a studio session singer, where she performed with musicians and groups including Spyro Gyra, Yellowjackets, Hiroshima, John Mayall, Etta James, Bobby Caldwell and Bobby Womack.

Scott’s first recording in 1977, as a solo artist, was a single version of Brian Wilson’s “God Only Knows”, which led to her first album, Dreams of Tomorrow, on Atco/Atlantic. Her discography continued with, 1983 Without Warning, Polygram, 1991 and 1992 Sin-Drome recordings, Smile and Sky Dancing. 1996 and 1998 Warner Bros. releases of Take Me with You and Avenues of Love. The Japanese Venus Records recording, Every Time We Say Goodbye, in 2008.

Marilyn moved to Prana Entertainment and released from 2001 to 2017, Walking With Strangers, Nightcap, Handpicked, Innocent of Nothing, Get Christmas Started and Standard Blue in 2017. Her 2022 release on Blue Canoe Records marks her most recent release, The Landscape. She has combined her interest in neo-soul, jazz and Brazilian music. She has collaborated with Dori Caymmi, George Duke, Russell Ferrante, Bob James, Jimmy Haslip, Brenda Russell, Bob Mintzer, Perri Sisters, Terri Lyne Carrington, Patrice Rushen and Scott Kinsey.

Marilyn is best known for her Grammy-nominated work as a contemporary jazz vocalist and singer songwriter. As the years have progressed, she has dived deeper into jazz writing and interpretations. Collaborations with many acclaimed artists and musicians have opened and widened her range in a music that’s rich in texture and complexity. https://marilynscott.com/bio-lyrics/#1651100400816-3811bf3e-4475

The Landscape

Thursday, June 2, 2022

Sir Roland Hanna, Carrie Smith - I've Got A Right To Sing The Blues: The Songs of Harold Arlen

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:25
Size: 136.0 MB
Styles: Piano jazz, Blues-jazz vocals
Year: 1990/2003
Art: Front

[5:05] 1. Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive
[4:15] 2. When The Sun Comes Out
[4:55] 3. Happiness Is A Thing Called Joe
[5:33] 4. Ill Wind
[4:01] 5. I've Got The World On A String
[3:55] 6. Let's Fall In Love
[7:34] 7. I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues
[5:25] 8. Blues In The Night
[4:23] 9. Stormy Weather
[3:28] 10. It's Only A Paper Moon
[4:28] 11. That Old Black Magic
[6:18] 12. Over The Rainbow

Three types of creative authority that each spring from the same muse characterize this disc. First is the vocal authority of Carrie Smith. Second is the piano talent of the late Sir Roland Hanna. And finally, third is the lyric prowess of Harold Arlen.

A blues singer with a jazz singer's soul, Carrie Smith's conversational style and masculine sense of humor are a commanding presence on I've Got A Right. No better is this illustrated than on "Blues in the Night," where she injects the urban Arlen/Sinatra standard with the earthy element of Bessie Smith's "A Pigfoot and a Bottle of Beer" to produce a song that is uniquely Carrie Smith. "Accentuate the Positive" is the sung like the Revelator's wail and "Stormy Weather" a plaintive, angry ballad. Ms. Smith is a consummate singer in this genre, lending the music and lyrics an authenticity of the blues.

The late Sir Roland Hanna was a pianist’s pianist. A superb accompanist, he supported the likes of Ruth Brown and Sarah Vaughan. His playing behind a vocalist always surprises with his choice of notes and harmony, as well as rhythm and time. He is talented enough to use his generous sense of humor in his playing without ever sounding trite or inappropriate. He never overshadows her, remaining her equal on the floor throughout.

Finally, composer Harold Arlen has provided the American Songbook with some of its most enduring songs. As an introduction to Arlen’s music, one could not ask for more than what's on this disc. I've Got A Right, along with Hanna’s Everything I Love , serves as a fitting tribute to the pianist. ~C. Michael Bailey

I've Got A Right To Sing The Blues

Bert Kaempfert - Smile

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 1979
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:41
Size: 89,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:07) 1. Raining In My Heart
(2:41) 2. Chanson D'Amour
(3:24) 3. Just You, Just Me
(3:33) 4. What Kind Of Fool Am I?
(6:23) 5. Frisco Disco
(2:55) 6. Rosalie
(3:19) 7. I Cried For You
(3:29) 8. I'll Be Seeing You
(3:16) 9. Smile
(6:30) 10. Keep On Dancing

Bert Kaempfert had almost too much talent, ability, and good luck rolled into one career to be fully appreciated, even by his own chosen audience, the lovers of fine orchestral pop music. He was one of the most successful conductors, arrangers, and recording artists in the latter field, but was also a major producer and played a key (if indirect) role in the roots of the British beat boom of the early '60s, which evolved into the British Invasion of America in 1964. Berthold Kaempfert was born in Barmbek, a working-class section of Hamburg, Germany, in 1923. He was musically inclined as a boy, and found that interest indulged by an act of fate when he was six years old Kaempfert was injured in a car accident and his mother used the money from the settlement to buy him a piano. He became proficient at the keyboard, and also on the clarinet and saxophone, among other instruments. He studied at the Hamburg Conservatory and although he was interested in all facets of music, Kaempfert was particularly taken with American-style big-band music of the late '30s and early '40s his multi-instrumental skills made him a potentially valuable commodity, and he was recruited into a pop orchestra run by Hans Bussch while in his teens, but was later drafted and served as a bandsman in the German navy, before being captured and interned as an Allied prisoner.

He founded a band of his own and later toured American military installations in Germany, at last able to play his favorite kind of music. Returning to his native Hamburg, he began performing on British Forces Network radio and writing compositions, initially using the alias of Mark Bones. Kaempfert's reputation in Hamburg attracted the attention of Polydor Records, which hired him as an arranger, producer, and music director during the second half of the 1950s. Among the talent that he brought to the company's roster was the Yugoslav pop artist Ivo Robic, who chalked up an international hit (Top 20 in America), and Viennese singer/guitarist/actor Freddy Quinn, who had a German hit with "Die Gittarre und das Meer." His own orchestra generated such hits as "Catalania," "Ducky," "Las Vegas," and "Explorer," but he had bolder, more ambitious music in mind. He arranged, produced, and recorded an instrumental entitled "Wonderland by Night," which was pretty enough but couldn't seem to get a hearing in Germany, even from his own company.

Instead, Kaempfert and his wife brought the track to Milt Gabler, the legendary producer at Decca Records in New York, who arranged for its release in America in 1959; with its haunting solo trumpet, muted brass, and lush strings, the single topped the American pop charts and turned Bert Kaempfert & His Orchestra into international stars. Over the next few years, he revived such pop tunes as "Tenderly," "Red Roses for a Blue Lady," "Three O'Clock in the Morning," and "Bye Bye Blues," bringing them all high onto the pop charts internationally, as well as composing pieces of his own, including "Spanish Eyes (Moon Over Naples)," "Danke Schoen," and "Wooden Heart," which were recorded by, respectively, Al Martino, Wayne Newton, and Elvis Presley (with Joe Dowell charting the hit single of "Wooden Heart"); for an old American jazz fan like Kaempfert, however, little may have brought him more personal satisfaction than Nat King Cole recording his "L-O-V-E."

At the turn of the decade into the 1960s, Kaempfert was still busily at work in his duties as a producer. He was well aware that a new generation of listeners had come along, whose interests lay far from the beautifully crafted instrumental music that he favored, which was an outgrowth of the pop sides of such '40s artists as Tommy Dorsey, Harry James, and Glenn Miller they preferred music drawn from country and R&B sources. He had signed a Liverpool-based singer named Tony Sheridan, who was performing in Hamburg, and needed to recruit a band to play behind him on the proposed sides he auditioned and signed a quartet from Liverpool called the Beatles, and even cut a couple of interesting sides of theirs, "Ain't She Sweet" (sung by rhythm guitarist John Lennon) and the instrumental "Cry for a Shadow" (co-authored by Lennon and lead guitarist George Harrison) during his sessions for Sheridan; with its pounding beat and raw singing, the former wasn't Kaempfert's kind of music, but "Cry for a Shadow," with its rich melodic line and sonorous guitar, was perhaps as close as this new music ever came to his own.

The Beatles' own sides didn't emerge until a couple of years later, when events made it economically feasible to do so, but Kaempfert's recording of the Beatles, even as a backing band for Sheridan, proved a vital catalyst to their entire subsequent success. Stylistically, none of the Kaempfert-recorded sides closely resembled the music for which they became famous, and had their path to being signed by George Martin at Parlophone Records resulted from, say, their being heard in a performance, those Hamburg-recorded sides would rate nothing more than a footnote in their history but those Polydor sides cut by Kaempfert played an essential role in their story. As Beatles biographer Philip Norman recalled in his book Shout!, on October 28, 1961, an 18-year-old printer's apprentice named Raymond Jones walked into the music store owned by Brian Epstein to ask for a copy of "My Bonnie," recorded by the Beatles (though it was actually credited to Tony Sheridan); the store didn't have it, but Epstein noted the request and was so intrigued by the idea of a Liverpool band getting a record of its own out that he followed up on it personally. Thus began a chain of events that led to his discovery of the Beatles and, through his effort, their signing by George Martin to Parlophone Records (they first had to get clear of any contractual claim by Polydor).

Kaempfert had become so successful as a recording artist that he was forced to give up his duties as a producer his records were selling by the hundreds of thousands, the album of Wonderland by Night even topping the American charts for five weeks in 1961. By 1965, he'd joined the ranks of film music composers with the soundtrack to a movie entitled A Man Could Get Killed the title song from the movie became "Strangers in the Night," which Frank Sinatra propelled to the top of the American and British charts. He followed this up a year later with another hit for Sinatra, "The World We Knew (Over and Over)." For Kaempfert, whose admiration of American music began with the big-band pop sound whence Sinatra had begun his career, those hits must have represented a deep personal triumph, transcending whatever money they earned indeed, he was selling records during the early '60s in the kind of quantities that rivaled Tommy Dorsey or Harry James' successes 20 years before, and he'd proved himself a prodigiously talented composer as well, an attribute that few of the big-band leaders possessed.

Although Kaempfert's chart placements faded by the end of the decade, there could be no disputing his impact on the popular culture of the 1960s, which was so widespread into so many different areas that few individuals appreciated its scope; teenagers, had they known of his role, could be grateful to him for giving the Beatles that all-important first break, while their parents may well have danced to "Wonderland by Night" and its follow-ups, their older siblings might well have orchestrated their romantic endeavors to "Strangers in the Night," and television viewers and casual radio listeners might well have heard and hummed the Kaempfert tunes "That Happy Feeling" (an early piece of world music pop, adapted from a piece by Ghana-born drummer Guy Warren), "Afrikaan Beat," or "A Swingin' Safari" (which, in a recording by Billy Vaughn, became the theme for the long-running game show The Match Game). His success as a composer was reflected in the five awards that he received from BMI in 1968 for "Lady," "Spanish Eyes," "Strangers in the Night," "The World We Knew," and "Sweet Maria." Kaempfert's chart placements vanished in the 1970s as the music marketplace (especially on radio) finally squeezed out the adult and older dance music listenership he'd cultivated. His records continued to sell, however, and his bookings remained healthy for another decade, and Kaempfert piled up awards in Germany.

As he had with rock & roll, he also changed somewhat with the times when disco became popular in the mid-'70s, Kaempfert recorded a disco version of Isaac Hayes' "Theme from Shaft" that even impressed the composer. His sales were always healthy, if not substantial, in America, but in Europe he was still a top concert draw as well. Kaempfert died suddenly, at the age of 56, of a heart seizure while at his home in Mallorca, resting up after a triumphant British tour. In the years since, he has finally been recognized for the breadth of his achievements virtually his entire album catalog (and all of his hits) from the late '50s through the end of the 1960s remains in print on CD. Additionally, Kaempfert's recordings of the Beatles have at last been given the recognition that they deserved, in the form of a Bear Family Records box. Additionally, his own music has acquired a new fan base in tandem with the late-'90s boom of interest in 1950s pop instrumental (i.e., "bachelor's den" audio) music, and "Afrikaan Beat" is arguably as popular as incidental music in 2003 as it was in 1965, as well as closely associated with that past in American popular culture, itself a great achievement for the bandleader from Hamburg.~Bruce Eder https://www.allmusic.com/artist/bert-kaempfert-mn0000748088/biography

Smile

Pee Wee's Song - The Music Of Pee Wee Russell

Styles: Jazz, swing
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:46
Size: 151,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:40) 1. Oh No!
(4:44) 2. I Got 'Em Again
(4:13) 3. But Why
(3:56) 4. What's The Pitch
(3:33) 5. Midnight Bue
(4:45) 6. Twenth Eighth And Eight
(5:22) 7. Muskogee Blue
(4:13) 8. Are You Here'
(5:19) 9. Pee Wee' Song
(4:04) 10. Cutie Pie
(5:40) 11. Pee Wee's Blues
(5:50) 12. Charles Ellsworth Stomp
(4:51) 13. Missy
(5:30) 14. I'd Climb The Highest Mountain

This is a logical tribute since clarinetist Bobby Gordon's main influence is Pee Wee Russell. Although Gordon's solos are not as eccentric or death-defying as Russell's, his tone is similar and there are times when he sounds eerily close to his idol. Joined by trumpeter Jon-Erik Kellso, trombonist Dan Barrett, tenor saxophonist Rick Fay, pianist Johnny Varro, rhythm guitarist Marty Grosz, bassist Bob Haggart, and drummer Gene Estes, Gordon explores a dozen songs composed by Russell. In addition, Gordon performs "Charles Ellsworth Stomp" (which he co-wrote) and one of Russell's favorite songs, "I'd Climb the Hightest Mountain." Since some of these numbers were co-written by Dick Cary and recorded by Russell in modern swing settings during the late '50s (rather than Dixieland dates with Eddie Condon), the music on this CD is often tightly arranged while leaving some room for spontaneous jamming. Pee Wee Russell himself would have enjoyed the results.~Scott Yanowhttps://www.allmusic.com/album/pee-wees-song-the-music-of-pee-wee-russell-mw0000026868

Musicians: Bobby Gordon: Clarinet; Jon-Erik Kellso: Trumpet; Dan Barrett: Trombone; Rick Fay: Tenor Sax, Clarinet; Johnny Varro: Piano; Marty Grosz: Guitar; Bob Haggart: Bass; Gene Estes: Drums

Pee Wee's Song: The Music Of Pee Wee Russell

Olivia Trummer - Fly Now

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:28
Size: 101,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:26)  1. Precious Silence
(3:32)  2. Snow Coloured Streets
(4:01)  3. Sharing My Heart
(3:39)  4. Gotta Miss Someone
(4:42)  5. Fly Now
(3:29)  6. All Is Well
(1:13)  7. Watching The Moon (Intro)
(4:01)  8. Watching The Moon
(6:13)  9. Stay Awake
(2:30) 10. Fly Now - Reflection
(5:38) 11. Don't Ask Love

Singer or pianist? Actually, both hats fit Stuttgart-born Olivia Trummer pretty snugly, as evidenced by her splendid opening slot for Charles Lloyd in Dublin's National Concert Hall in November alongside bassist David Redmond and drummer Kevin Brady and her subsequent sell-out show at the EFG London Jazz Festival. Trummer possess a soulful voice of pristine quality and displays a feathery, understated lyricism on the keys; both assets are finely tuned and beautifully balanced on this, her fifth recording as leader.  As a singer and lyricist Trummer is something of a late bloomer. A classically trained pianist and a jazz piano graduate from the Manhattan School of Music, it wasn't until Nobody Knows (Neuklang, 2010) her third release -that she felt confident enough to flex her vocal pipes. It's a case of better late than never, for on these original meditations on matters of heart and mind Trummer's crystal-clear articulation seduces like a jazzier Norah Jones. Her softly poetic introspection is lent New York gravitas by the rhythm team of Obed Calvaire and Matt Penman, with Kurt Rosenwinkel adding luster to several numbers. On the persuasive opener "Precious Silence" Trummer sings of "bridges built to change our lives" and this quietly stated optimism is emphasized by mantra-like repetition. It's a stylistic approach she reprises on the lightly funky "Gotta Miss Someone" and the jazzy "All is Well" -two tracks with potential commercial radio appeal and the slow-burning epic "Sharing My Heart." On this latter tune, Rosenwinkel weaves atmospheric lines over Trummer's continuous two-note motif while Calvaire and Obed move effortlessly between sotto voce stealth and stronger pulses.

Trummer's playing is characterized by economy and a lightness of touch, notably on the blue-toned title track; it's a solo outing of exquisite delicacy and throughout the recording in general mood trumps technique. Calvaire's brushes stir almost subliminally on the slow tempo track "Snow Colored Streets" as Trummer's high vocal notes glide over the sparse architecture. Likewise, the spacious arrangement of "Watching the Moon" accentuates the nuances of Trummer's caressing, less-is-more style. Her lilting wordless improvisations are also used sparingly, though perhaps a little more adventure in that department would have added spice. Occasional Rhodes piano and shimmering Hammond C3 inject strokes of color here and there, working particularly well on the slow-grooving "Stay Awake" where Trummer's soulful delivery underlines her obvious crossover appeal. Trummer's minimalist Rhodes dabs combine with Rosenwinkel's softly spiraling, pedal-driven lines on the arresting instrumental "Fly Now Reflection" while her strengths as a balladeer are foregrounded on the trio number "Don't Ask Love," a haunting lullaby that could have come from the Bill Evans songbook. Fly Now is Trummer's first release sung entirely in English and it could well be the one that introduces this multi-talented artist to a wider audience. Trummer's instantly appealing voice emotive and sensuousis arguably her chief weapon, while her lyrical piano playing works more subtle charms. The combination of the two on these finely crafted tunes is hard to resist. ~ Ian Patterson https://www.allaboutjazz.com/fly-now-olivia-trummer-contemplate-review-by-ian-patterson.php

Personnel: Olivia Trummer: vocals; piano; Fender Rhodes; Hammond C3; shaker; Matt Penman: double bass; Obed Calvaire: drum set; Kurt Rosenwinkel: guitar (3, 6, 10)

Fly Now

Wednesday, June 1, 2022

Barbara Rosene and Her New Yorkers - Moon Song

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2005
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 78:18
Size: 144,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:34)  1. Get Under the Moon
(4:51)  2. Moonglow
(3:02)  3. Me and the Man in the Moon
(3:49)  4. Moon Song
(2:18)  5. I Never Knew What the Moonlight Could Do
(4:09)  6. Under the Moon (You-oo-oo-oo)
(4:00)  7. Moonlight Becomes You
(3:16)  8. Livin' in the Sunlight, Lovin' in the Moonlight
(4:30)  9. It's Only a Paper Moon
(2:21) 10. Me and the Moon
(5:01) 11. Moonlight and Roses
(3:24) 12. (There Ought to Be a) Moonlight Saving Time
(4:18) 13. The Moon Got My Eyes
(2:51) 14. On a Chinese Honeymoon
(3:32) 15. Moonburn
(3:43) 16. When the Moon Comes Over the Mountain
(3:15) 17. I Thank You, Mr. Moon
(3:45) 18. Sheltered By the Stars, Cradled By the Moon
(3:49) 19. Moonstruck
(3:21) 20. Shine On Harvest Moon
(5:20) 21. I Wished on the Moon

Barbara Rosene has built an unequalled reputation for interpreting the great music of the 1920s and 30s and 40s. She is a passionate vocalist whose interpretations uncover the richness of jazz classics through the subtle, skilled delivery of one truly in love with the genre she sings. Rosene gives voice to songs in ways that are both gracefully provocative and warmly welcoming. Few singers have her feel for classic material, from all eras of Jazz, interpreting the music with not only a full understanding and love of the original time period but with the rare ability to make the material sound fresh and emotionally relevant today. In her established career she has shared stages with jazz icons, performing internationally with The Harry James Orchestra, Vince Giordano and The Nighthawks, the late Les Paul at New York’s Iridium Jazz Club, The Woody Allen Band, at The Carlyle Hotel, as well as directing her own New Yorkers, and as guest artist with orchestras and in festivals across the world. She has played such venues as The Iridium, Lincoln Center’s Rose Hall, The Montreal Jazz Festival,  Night Town (Cleveland), Blues Alley (DC), The Arizona Music Festival, Jazz Amarinois, and The Hotel Villa Flori, Lake Como. Barbara has been featured on Judy Carmichael’s NPR program  ”Jazz Inspired”, and recently on NPR’s “Hot Jazz Saturday Night.” She has been recognized by Backstage Magazine (Bistro Award, 2006), “Jazz Improv Magazine”, and is featured in Scott Yanow’s “Great Jazz Singers.” Rosene is personally committed to the significance of jazz music in American Popular Song and in America’s roots and spirit. Finding the soul of a song and linking its heart and expression with her own story brings this seductive blonde singer the satisfaction of a career well-spent. Recently she has begun lecturing on The Tin Pan Alley composers and early women jazz singers. “Do what thrills you. Do what has meaning,” says Rosene, genuinely. “One thing I know is that it really is a privilege to perform. When someone is touched or broadened by something you have given them it is a gift to be able to give back to the world in that way.” Barbara’s CDs include several on the Stomp Off label, all of which pay homage to the great composers and vocalists of the 1920s and 30s. Including  “Nice and Naughty”, a collection of double entendre tunes, which features Conal Fowkes who’s voice and piano stylings as Cole Porter, were featured in “Midnight In Paris”.  Vince Giordano and The Nighthawks ( Boardwalk Empire) collaborated on Barbara’s first CD entitled “Deep Night”. Will Friedwald, author of Jazz Singing and Sinatra! has written: “No one evokes more vividly the music of the great singers of the 1920s than Barbara Rosene.” Barbara’s CDs include releases on the Blues Back, Arbor’s and Azica labels. http://barbararosene.com/biography/

Moon Song

Olivia Trummer Trio - Nach Norden

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:07
Size: 123,9 MB
Art: Front

(8:45)  1. Eternal Dance
(7:09)  2. Leaving Earth
(7:40)  3. Rostock
(7:23)  4. Nach Norden
(8:17)  5. Last Tango
(3:45)  6. Restless
(7:47)  7. A Hint Of Sorrow
(3:17)  8. A Hint Of Sorrow (Solo Version)

The young piano trio around Olivia Trummer is the new sensation! The three award-winning newcomers act in a laid-back and relaxed manner on their debut album in harmonic interplay and in an animated communication. They are instrumental and compositionally mature as their role models, but make their own music. All pieces are taken from the musical (and pretty) head of Olivia Trummer. She describes her jazz pieces as "melodic and modern, young and dreamy and always original and lively" and assigns them stylistically to the mainstream. Again and again she lets her penchant for swing, funk and Latin flash through. https://www.amazon.de/Nach-Norden-Olivia-Trummer-Trio/dp/B000ION58C

Personnel:  Piano, Composed By, Arranged By – Olivia Trummer;  Contrabass – Joel Locher;  Drums – Marcel Gustke

Nach Norden

Evan Christopher, Spanky Davis, Wycliffe Gordon - Times Like These: Jam Session Concert

Styles: Clarinet,Trumpet And Trombone Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 98:09
Size: 225,7 MB
Art: Front

( 9:02) 1. Deed I Do
( 9:13) 2. Blues in the Air
( 4:38) 3. Blues in Thirds
( 7:38) 4. Basin Street Blues
( 5:15) 5. Rosetta
( 4:41) 6. Passport to Paradise
( 4:05) 7. Do Nothin' Till You Hear from Me
( 9:06) 8. St. Louis Blues
(11:06) 9. Si Tu Vois Ma Mère / Petite Fleur / Summertime / Mood Indigo
( 9:05) 10. Royal Garden Blues
( 5:22) 11. Just One of Those Things
( 7:54) 12. Basin Street Blues II
( 4:42) 13. Passport to Paradise II
( 4:00) 14. Georgia Cabin
( 2:14) 15. Times Like These

"This is a rollicking session that will delight both traditional jazz fans and those with ears inclined to more modern sounds ... Gordon shines here and is clearly having a ball."~ Cadence

"My goal is to maintain the integrity of early jazz styles, its structure, but move forward so that it's speaking to an audience of today instead of being something bottled and preserved."~ Evan Christopher

"The high technical quality of this recording and the creative music, featuring compositions by Sidney Bechet and songs he recorded, is intended to serve the memory of the great Wizard and afford joy to the listener. Vive Bechet!~ Eric D. Offner, President of the Sidney Bechet Society

Personnel: Evan Christopher - clarinet; Spanky Davis - trumpet; Wycliffe Gordon - trombone; Jack Lesberg - bass; Mark Shane - piano; Jackie Williams - drums

Times Like These: Jam Session Concert

Seth MacFarlane - Blue Skies

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:58
Size: 97,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:49) 1. It's You or No One
(2:22) 2. No Moon At All
(2:45) 3. You'll Get Yours
(3:00) 4. A Hundred Years From Today
(2:22) 5. If I Were A Bell
(3:12) 6. Out of Nowhere
(3:05) 7. On Green Dolphin Street
(2:49) 8. That Old Feeling
(3:14) 9. Blue Skies
(2:53) 10. It Could Happen to You
(3:37) 11. I Didn't Know About You
(3:13) 12. You Turned The Tables On Me
(3:42) 13. Never In A Million Years
(2:46) 14. Unless I Do It All With You

For Seth MacFarlane, “blue” means less balladic. He’s announcing a new album on the way, “Blue Skies,” and says it marks a return to a more swinging style than the softer approach he employed on his last record. Out May 20, the seventh album from the “Family Guy” creator and jazz cat will again see him working with a catalog of classics, and again see him working closely with arranger and conductor Andrew Cottee. Still, it’ll mark a turnaround from their previous release.

“I have long been a fan of Andrew Cottee’s supremely artful and buoyant orchestrations,” MacFarlane tells Variety. “So after our last collaboration, ‘Once in A While,’ a ballad-themed record, I really wanted to hear what he could do with an up-tempo album. As always, Andrew did not disappoint. His arrangements of these 14 songs, carefully selected by the two of us, are yet another shining example of the expertise with which he handles both melodic interpretations and orchestral dynamics.”

Cottee speaks in terms of raising the bar. “This is the album I’ve always wanted to make,” he says. “The chance to collaborate with an artist like Seth MacFarlane and work with such a high calibre of players is a dream for any arranger.”

The first single from the Verve/Republic release, “No Moon at All,” is out today, and ironically, perhaps, given the album title, it’s about enjoying the favors of a black sky. The song a jazz standard written in 1947 by David Mann and Redd Evans has previously been recorded by artists including Doris Day, Ella Fitzgerald, Julie London and Diana Krall… and for some reason has been favored largely be female vocalists over the year, although men like Mel Torme have put their hands on it too. Who’s to say why it has so often been women jumping at the chance to sing lines like “It’s so dark / Even Fido is afraid to bark / What a perfect chance to park”? MacFarlane, for his part, is not afraid to go there.

Together, MacFarlane and Cottee wrote one new song for the album, “Unless I Do It All With You,” which closes the collection. Otherwise it’s reliant on some of the less over-familiar pages from a songbook handed down from songwriters like Irving Berlin (who co-wrote the 1926 title song), Frank Loesser, Sammy Cahn and Edward Heyman. Musicians recruited for the project include Chuck Berghofer (bass), Peter Erskine (drums), Larry Koonse (guitar), Dan Higgins (alto sax) and Tom Ranier (piano). Back on board from past projects are producer Joel McNeely and engineer Rich Breen. Cottee’s credits include arrangements on films including “Sing” and “Beyond the Sea,” orchestrating Paul McCartney’s “Ocean Kingdom” ballet and composing music for McFarlane’s Hulu series “The Orville.” Seth MacFarlane - Blue Skies 2022 https://variety.com/2022/music/news/seth-macfarlane-new-album-blue-skies-1235237598/

Personnel: Chuck Berghofer (bass), Peter Erskine (drums), Larry Koonse (guitar), Dan Higgins (alto sax) and Tom Ranier (piano).

Blue Skies

Tuesday, May 31, 2022

Vanessa Rubin - The Dream Is You: Vanessa Rubin Sings Tadd Dameron

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:40
Size: 128,5 MB
Art: Front

(7:42)  1. Lady Bird
(2:34)  2. Kitchenette Across the Hall
(7:10)  3. If You Could See Me Now
(3:34)  4. Weekend
(4:17)  5. On a Misty Night
(4:04)  6. Never Been in Love
(5:18)  7. Next Time Around
(3:05)  8. Good Bait
(3:51)  9. Reveries Do Come True (The Dream Is You)
(5:07) 10. Whatever Possessed Me
(5:29) 11. You're a Joy
(3:23) 12. I Think I'll Go Away

Tadd Dameron is regarded as the great romantic of bebop-era jazz composers, a writer with a talent for creating smooth, memorable melodies that could evoke real emotion. Most of his works are known mainly as instrumentals but Vanessa Rubin has compiled lyrics written for some of his tunes, had new lyrics written for others and even provided words to one herself. This recording of her efforts is, surprisingly, the first ever all-vocal set of Tadd Dameron's music.  Rubin's singing is classy throughout, with hints of the subtle swing of Carmen McRae. She benefits from the backing of an eight-piece band playing charts by several of Dameron's friends and disciples, Frank Foster, Benny Golson, Jimmy Heath, Willie Smith and Bobby Watson. There are several familiar pieces like "Lady Bird" and "On A Misty Night" on hand, all played with swinging assurance. Willie Smith's version of "Good Bait," in particular, comes off breezily hip with the horns tightly arranged to sound like a much larger band. Benny Golson gives the classic ballad "If You Could See Me Now" an elegant arrangement, with the reeds and piano flowing gently behind Rubin's velvety voice, and Eddie Allen and Clifton Anderson taking pretty solo turns.  Lesser-known compositions are treated with the same care and style as the familiar ones. "Never Been In Love" is an elegant Latin-flavored ballad given a smoky, romantic sheen in Bobby Watson's arrangement, while "Weekend" is a swirling waltz sporting a brassy horn arrangement by Frank Foster not too far from some of the arranging on Dameron's own recordings. "You're A Joy" is a lush ballad with an unidentified flautist fluttering through the ensemble, and "Whatever Possessed Me" may be the single most beautiful track on the CD, thanks to Rubin's angelic singing and the swooning horns in Jimmy Heath's arrangement. Alex Harding's baritone is a secret weapon of this and many other tracks in the way his sax wraps around the horn ensembles like smoke, giving them a lush gravity. On the ballads "Reveries Do Come True," a romantic tango with Rubin's own lyrics, and "Next Time Around," a vocal version of "Soultrane," the horns lay out and Rubin is backed only by the rhythm section. John Cowherd's piano, Kenny Davis' bass and Carl Allen's drums all shine on these tracks with Cowherd's touch on "Next Time Around" being particularly lovely. Tadd Dameron is something of a neglected figure today but this set reminds us of the beauty and depth of his music, and shows how well it adapts to vocal treatments. It is also a reminder of how good a singer Vanessa Rubin is. ~ JEROME WILSON https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-dream-is-you-vanessa-rubin-sings-tadd-dameron-vanessa-rubin-nibur-records-review-by-jerome-wilson.php

Personnel: Vanessa K. Rubin: vocals; John Cowherd; piano; Kenny Davis: bass; Carl Allen: drums; Eddie Allen: trumpet; Patience Higgins: tenor saxophone; Bruce Williams: alto saxophone; Clifton Anderson: trombone; Alex Harding: baritone saxophone.

The Dream Is You: Vanessa Rubin Sings Tadd Dameron

Clark Terry - Clark Terry

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:42
Size: 119,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:06)  1. Swahili
(3:32)  2. Double Play
(4:27)  3. Slow Boat
(3:45)  4. Co-Op
(5:33)  5. Kitten
(6:42)  6. The Countless
(3:05)  7. Tuma
(4:19)  8. Chuckles
(3:31)  9. Cat Meets Chick
(2:30) 10. Mamblues
(3:15) 11. The Man I Love
(4:51) 12. Anything You Can Do

Aside from a three-song session for V-Disc during the late 1940s, this CD contains Clark Terry's first recordings as a leader. Already an alumni of both Charlie Barnet's and Count Basie's bands, and a then-current member of Duke Ellington's orchestra, Terry is more focused on bop in these dates, with a terrific band including trombonist Jimmy Cleveland, baritone saxophonist Cecil Payne, pianist Horace Silver, cellist/bassist Oscar Pettiford, bassist Wendell Marshall, and drummer Art Blakey, with charts by Quincy Jones. The infectious opener, "Swahili," was credited to Jones, though in Carl Woideck's liner notes, Terry remarks that he had a hand in its creation at the date. The loping "Double Play" features both bassists and a fine muted chorus by the leader. The easygoing bopper "Co-Op" was penned by Terry and fellow Ellington sideman Rick Henderson, with pungent statements by the trumpeter and Payne. 

The brisk blues "Chuckles" is a dazzling finale to his first LP, showcasing Payne and Cleveland before Terry takes over and plays a chorus in each of the 12 keys to wrap things up with a flourish. There may be a bit of confusion for anyone who owns a copy of the original LP, as many of the songs were mislabeled on it. The last four tracks came from a 1954 10" album, Cats Vs. Chicks' players include Silver and Pettiford (Percy Heath takes his place on two numbers), trombonist Urbie Green, tenor saxophonist Lucky Thompson, guitarist Tal Farlow, and drummer Kenny Clarke. Terry's vocal-like muted horn is heard in "Cat Meets Chicks," while his distinctive style on open horn is prominent in his "Mamblues," which also has a tasty chorus by Farlow and a bit of Latin percussion behind the ensemble passage. "Anything You Can Do (I Can Do Better)" is a mock battle between instrumentalists, with Mary Osborne challenging Farlow, trumpeter Norma Carson putting Terry to the test, while Terry Pollard takes on Horace Silver. There are no losers in this swinging meeting. ~ Ken Dryden  http://www.allmusic.com/album/clark-terry-polygram-mw0000595668

Kenny Drew - Fantasia

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1983
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:25
Size: 114,0 MB
Art: Front

(7:34) 1. Flight Of Fancy
(5:37) 2. Someday My Prince Will Come
(6:24) 3. Wishing Hoping
(4:59) 4. When You Wish Upon A Star
(8:54) 5. Fantasia
(5:06) 6. Dream
(6:33) 7. Polka Dots And Moonbeams
(4:15) 8. Children's Dance

Kenny Drew was born in New York City in August of 1928. At the age of 5, he began studying classical piano with a private teacher and at 8, gave a recital. This early background is similar to that of Bud Powell, the man who later became his main inspiration as a jazz pianist. After digging Fats Waller, at 12, and then Art Tatum and Teddy Wilson, Drew attended the High School of Music and Art. He was known as a hot boogie woogie player but passed through this phase before graduation.

Kenny's first professional job was as accompanist at Pearl Primus' dance school. At the same time, he was alternating with Walter Bishop Jr. in a neighborhood band that included Sonny Rollins, Jackie McLean and Art Taylor. In this period, he used to hang-out on 52nd Street to listen to Charlie Parker and Powell and began sitting in at various jam sessions around town.

In January of 1950, Drew made his first appearance on record, with Blue Note. Howard McGhee was the leader and the other featured soloists were Brew Moore and J.J. Johnson. One of the six sides released was “I'll Remember April.” The label, in addition to stating “Howard McGhee's All Stars”, further read, “Introducing Kenny Drew.”

Later, in 1953, Kenny made his first album as a leader. Again it was Blue Note who recorded him, this time in a trio with Curly Russell and Art Blakey. But Kenny opted to settle in Los Angeles for the next few years. There in 1955, he formed a quartet with the late Joe Maini, Leroy Vinnegar and Lawrence Marable. The quartet first recorded together in 1955 for Pacific Jazz. In December, Jazz West, a subsidiary of Aladdin Records, brought the quartet as is into Capitol's recording studios for “Talkin' & Walkin'.” In February of '56, Kenny's band and arrangements were used for another Jazz West release, this one by vocalist Jane Fielding. A month later, Drew, Paul Chambers, John Coltrane and Philly Joe Jones made the great “Chambers' Music” for the same label, which is now reissued on Blue Note.

In early 1957 Kenny made his way back to New York as accompanist for Dinah Washington. That September, he participated in John Coltrane's monumental masterpiece “Blue Train,” but his association with Blue Note did not heat up again until 1960 when he made his own “Undercurrent” as well as Jackie McLean's “Bluesnik,” and “Jackie's Bag,” Kenny Dorham's “Whistle Stop,” Dexter Godon's “Dexter Calling,” Grant Green's “Sunday Mornin'” and a couple of Tina Brooks dates all within the space of a year.

Although Kenny was active on the recording and club scenes in New York and even subbed for Freddie Redd for a while in the successful Off-Broadway run of The Connection, he eventually chose to migrate to Europe. But he again popped up on a classic Blue Note date, Dexter Godon's “One Flight Up,” done in Paris in 1964.

Kenny became a major star in Europe and Japan although his music was sadly neglected at home. He settled in Copenhagen where he ran a publishing company and was the house pianist at the Café Montmartre. He was also the pianist for the Steeplechase label, where he was on countless sessions backing visiting musicians. He left an impressive legacy of recordings both as sideman and leader. Kenny Drew died on Aug. 4, 1993. https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/kenny-drew

Personnel: Kenny Drew (p); Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen (b); Ed Thigpen (d)

Fantasia

Vivian Buczek - Roots

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:54
Size: 147,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:41) 1. Visions
(4:40) 2. Who Are You
(5:05) 3. Devil May Care
(4:54) 4. Fly Away
(6:04) 5. Always and Forever
(4:04) 6. The Jody Grind
(7:12) 7. Waltz for Debbie - Monicas Vals
(7:05) 8. The Meaning of the Blues
(3:52) 9. What Now?
(5:58) 10. Nature Boy
(3:15) 11. Better Days Ahead
(3:00) 12. Jej Portret

Since 2003, Vivian Buczek has established herself as a powerful force in the contemporary jazz scene. Her voice is soulful and powerful. She can be sensitive and emotional on a ballad, but then turn around and sing blues songs as if she's been doing it all her life, which she actually has been. With Roots, she brings the listener into her musical world and offers, what she calls, "the most personal album I've ever made." On Roots, Buczek teams up with saxophonist Seamus Blake, Martin Lundgren on trumpet and flugelhorn, Martin Sjöstedt on piano, Jasper Bodilsen on bass, and Morten Lund on drums. All of the musicians offer impressive performances here, and there is quite a variety of jazz styles featured, which is not surprising considering Buczek's background.

She was born in Sweden, and both her parents were Polish-born jazz musicians. Buczek grew up immersed in both Polish and Swedish culture along with a healthy dose of jazz. Being an only child, music was always, as she describes, her closest friend. She began singing as a child, and her passion for music eventually led her onto the global stage. From listening to Roots it is easy to see how different musicians have influenced her, and she loves a wide variety of jazz music. There are hints of singers such as Annie Ross and Sarah Vaughan here, but her own sound is certainly not derivative. Buczek has her own unique voice, which is certainly impressive.

While there are original compositions included, she also features classics such as "Nature Boy" and a vocalese version of Bill Evans' "Waltz for Debby/Monicas Vals" sung in both English and Swedish. She also features more contemporary compositions by artists such as Stevie Wonder and Pat Metheny. One of Buczeck's major influences, however, is Ella Fitzgerald. She even recorded a tribute album called Ella Lives (Prophone 2017). Although Roots is not another tribute, it is easy to see elements of Ella here. Fitzgerald frequently used her voice not only to carry a song's melody but also to improvise lines as well. In a similar fashion, Buckzek uses her voice much as another instrument in the ensemble, creating improvised lines which weave melodically along with the other players.

The music on Roots is satisfying throughout. From beautiful ballads such as "Who Are You?" and "Always And Forever" to all-out swinging songs such as "The Jody Grind" or "What Now?" this is an album which has plenty to offer. While this is her most personal album, it will probably be a personal favorite for many listeners.~ Kyle Simpler https://www.allaboutjazz.com/roots-vivian-buczek-prophone-records

Personnel: Vivian Buczek: voice / vocals; Seamus Blake: saxophone, tenor; Mårten Lundgren: trumpet.

Roots

Monday, May 30, 2022

Kristin Berardi - Where or When

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:32
Size: 130,0 MB
Art: Front

( 4:34)  1. Where or When
( 4:43)  2. Lucky 13
( 6:09)  3. Suzanne
( 5:06)  4. Born to Be Blue
( 6:12)  5. Brad
( 5:05)  6. Unity Village
( 4:42)  7. Cool Baby
(10:10)  8. Limbo
( 5:04)  9. Is It Ok for Clowns to Cry?
( 4:41) 10. Young at Heart

Kristin Berardi is one of Australia’s ‘first call’ jazz vocalists.Having won a swag of awards including Montreux Jazz Festival’s International Vocal Competition and twice winner of The Australian Jazz Bell Award for Best Vocal Album she is also the recipient of a National Freedman Fellowship as well as the National Jazz Award for Voice at The Wangaratta Jazz Festival. A graduate of the Queensland Conservatorium,where she now lectures, she has toured internationally to Japan,Germany,New York and Indonesia and is probably one of the best jazz singers that Australia has produced. Where or When is a collection of songs that showcases Berardi’s astonishing talents delighting the listener with her warm and beautiful tone.Leonard Cohen’s Suzanne from the 1960’s is a brilliant simplistic rendition of that frequently covered song. 

It sits comfortably alongside of Rodgers and Harts’ Where or When superbly complementing Johnny Richards soulful million selling hit from 1953 Young at Heart. Could this be the version to finally rival that of Frank Sinatra’s? One of Berardi’s original compositions on the album Lucky 13 is a tribute to the good fortune behind this album’s creation when she was able to gather all her chosen musicians in one studio in Melbourne on 13th September 2013 and another original composition, Is It OK For Clowns To Cry , shows the jazz ballad at its most touching and poignant. The intimacy of the band is heightened by the decision to record without drums anchoring the album’s sound with the richness of Sam Anning’s faultless bass playing. James Sherlock is as impressive as always on guitar and Steve Newcomb is flawlessly superb on piano.Julien Wilson adds that final magic touch with his tenor saxophone that makes this the perfect jazz vocal album of 2015. ~ Barry O’Sullivan  http://jazz.org.au/where-or-when-kristin-berardi/

Personnel:  Kristin Berardi -vocals and composition;  Steve Newcomb – piano;  James Sherlock – guitar;  Julien Wilson – tenor saxophone; Sam Anning – bass

Where or When

The Dan Barrett, Enric Peidro Quintet - And the Angels Swing

Styles: Trombone And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:45
Size: 119,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:54) 1. I Can´t Believe That You´re in Love With Me / Kansas City Stride
(5:52) 2. 'Deed I do
(3:45) 3. Limehouse Blues
(5:46) 4. And the Angels Swing
(6:10) 5. Serenade to Sweden
(6:37) 6. If I Didn't Care
(5:17) 7. My Blue Heaven
(5:12) 8. Vic's Spot
(7:07) 9. Sultry Serenade

Swing is hard to define, but it’s the difference between ripe cherries and a cherry candy “with natural flavors” synthesized in a laboratory. I’m happy to report that the CD that pairs tenor saxophonist Enric Peidro and trombone legend Dan Barrett is satisfying swinging jazz throughout. In fact, it reaches new heights in the most refined yet impassioned ways. Let’s start at the back of the bandstand, or the bottom of the band (no offense intended), the fine rhythm section. I didn’t know pianist Richard Busiakewicz, bassist Lluis Llario, or drummer Carlos “Sir Charles” Gonzalez before this recording, but I love them. Their swing is unforced and easy; they know how, what, when, why, and when not to . . .

But before I write more, here’s a sonic sample, celebrating both Vic Dickenson (the composer) and his horticultural endeavors: The question of what is “authentic” is treacherous, because we defend our subjectivities with a lover’s defensive ardor, but that performance feels both expressive and controlled in the best ways. Forget for a moment the warm twenty-first century recording technology. If I heard that track, coming after a 1945 Don Byas-Buck Clayton Jamboree 78 and a Mel Powell Vanguard session, I would not think VIC’S SPOT an impostor. Swing is more than being able to play the notes or wear the hat; it’s a world-view, and this quintet has it completely.

Barrett remains a master not only of the horn, but of what I’d call “orchestral thinking,” where he’s always inventing little touches (on the page or on the stand) to make any performance sound fuller, have greater rhythmic emphasis and harmonic depth. I’ve seen him do this on the spot for years, and his gentle urgency makes this quintet even more a convincing working band than it would have been if anyone took his place. And as a trombonist, he really has no peer: others go in different directions and woo us, but he is immediately and happily himself, totally recognizable, with a whole tradition at his fingertips as well as a deep originality.

But Dan would be the first one to say that he is not the whole show: this CD offers us a swinging little band. We’ve all heard recordings, some of them dire, where the visiting “star” is supported by the “locals,” who are not up to the star’s level: many recorded performances by Ben Webster immediately come to mind. And the Angels Swing is the glorious countertruth to such unbalanced affairs, because Enric Peidro, who was new to me before I heard this CD, is a masterful player. He’s no one’s clone I couldn’t predict what his next phrase would be or where his line of thought would go and although he is not cautious, he never puts a foot wrong. You can hear his gliding presence on the track above, and for me he summons up two great and under-praised players, primarily Harold Ashby, but also a cosmopolitan Paul Gonsalves with no rough edges. He is a fine intuitive ensemble player, with an easy sophistication that charms the ear. I think of the way Ruby Braff appeared in the early Fifties: someone not afraid to play the melody, to improvise in heartfelt ways, to eschew the harder aspects of “modernism” without being affected in any reactionary ways. https://jazzlives.wordpress.com/tag/vanguard-records/

Personnel: Dan Barrett Trombone; Enric Peidro Tenor sax; Richard Busiakiewicz piano; Lluis Llario Bass; Carlos Gonzalez Drums

And the Angels Swing

Sal Nistico - Empty Room

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:15
Size: 96,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:38)  1. Come Rain Or Come Shine
(9:04)  2. Lush Life
(9:10)  3. Inner Urge
(7:02)  4. Empty Room
(6:13)  5. I Should Care
(6:05)  6. The Hymn

Sal Nistico's explosive tenor solos with Woody Herman in the mid-'60s helped make that edition of Herman's Herd into a success. Originally an altoist, Nistico switched to tenor in 1956 and played with R&B bands for three years. He gigged with and made his recording debut in 1959-1960 with the Jazz Brothers, a band also including Chuck and Gap Mangione. But it was while with Herman in 1962-1965 that Nistico made history. In 1965, he spent five months with Count Basie. He returned to Basie in 1967 and to Herman on several occasions (1968-1970, 1971, 1981-1982), although without the impact of the first stint. Otherwise, the tenor freelanced throughout his career, playing with Don Ellis and Buddy Rich but mostly working with pick-up groups. Nistico recorded for several labels as a leader including Riverside, Red, and Beehive. Bio ~ https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/sal-nistico/id5056531#fullText
 
Personnel: Sal Nistico (tenor saxophone); Rita Marcotulli (piano); Roberto Gatto (drums).

Steve Davis - Bluesthetic

Styles: Trombone Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:46
Size: 146,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:39) 1. Encouragement
(6:35) 2. Silver at Sundown
(6:25) 3. Maybe So
(6:47) 4. Bedford Strolle
(5:57) 5. Faraway Dream
(8:20) 6. They Wore 44
(7:30) 7. Off the Cuff
(5:22) 8. Indigo to Azure
(5:57) 9. Bluesthetic
(6:10) 10. A Star for Chick

Trombonist/composer Steve Davis has long been a first-call sideman. Chick Corea, as one example, tapped Davis for his revived Spanish Heart Band a couple of years ago. But, like the members of this esteemed sextet, Davis is a bandleader too, in his case with close to twenty-five albums under his name. On each of his three previous releases for Smoke Sessions Records, Davis assembled a stellar sextet with modern jazz’s most vaunted players. He repeats that here with Bluesthetic, but in an interesting way, shunning additional horn players on the front line, instead, he creates interesting harmonic possibilities with guitarist Peter Bernstein and vibraphonist Steve Nelson, a reunion of sorts as both appeared on his 1998 album Vibe Up! years. Rounding out his elite sextet is the formidable rhythm section of Geoffrey Keezer, bassist Christian McBride, and drummer Willie Jones III. All of these players had convened in various configurations over the past three decades.

The ten Davis originals each bear a story of their own. The breezy “Encouragement” hails the emergence of the pandemic with an uplifting melody. “Silver at Sundown” is dedicated as you may guess to Horace Silver and may not guess the Hartford jazz community from which Davis emerged under the mentorship of many, most notably Jackie McLean, whose lines course through the previous tune. In the liners, Davis references Silver’s trio playing in Hartford at The Sundown, a club where Silver led the house band in the early 1950s. It was there that Stan Getz saw Silver play and invited him on tour, a key moment in the pianist’s now-legendary career. Silver later recounted the story to Davis, who lived in Hartford for more than 25 years before moving to his current home in Stamford. “It’s a very cool piece of jazz history connected to a city that I spent a lot of time in,” Davis says.

The tune “Maybe So” comes from two words Davis uttered upon waking up. It glides along briskly with shimmering turns from each front liner as well as a pizzicato statement from the ever articulate McBride, who in turn engages his rhythm mates through a few choruses before Davis returns with the melody, passing the baton to Bernstein and Nelson in the hard-swinging beauty. Just three tracks in, Davis displays a remarkable sense of melody.

Commenting on the free-flowing, relaxed nature of the music McBride compares many of these compositions to those of pianist James Williams and Bobby Watson of Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers because the compositions have the feeling of soul and R&B mixed with post-bop blues. Speaking of McBride his waling bass line is perfect for “Bedford Stroll,” named for the bustling street where he and his wife live in Stamford, CT, and where he often develops his melodic ideas on late night walks. Low tones from the trombone usher in “Faraway Dream,” another nocturnal one as if floating on Nelson’s resonant vibes and Bernstein’s ringing guitar, with Keezer sitting out and Jones whispering on brushes.

The aptly muscular “They Wore 44” draws on a passion for sports that Davis shares with McBride. The recent death of legendary right fielder Hank Aaron, who wore the number 44 during his long tenure with the. Davis, a die-hard Red Sox fan, would likely have loved to mention one from his team but none measure up to those listed above. It features featuring lively soloing, especially both Keezer and Nelson.

Bernstein carves out a bluesy solo and Willie Jones III creates a maelstrom on his kit. “Off the Cuff” is a spontaneous free-wheeling tune pulled together near the end of the session, features spirited soloing from each band member. The aching ballad “Indigo to Azure” explores the full spectrum of the blues, with some of the leader’s most sensitive and lyrical playing, matched by his band members led by Keezer’s elegant comping, Nelson’s inspiring notes, and subtle support from the rhythm tandem as Bernstein sits out.

The title track Bluesthetic captures a combination of the appreciation of artful beauty suggested by “aesthetic” combined with the foundational influence of the blues. Interestingly in the liners, he alludes to the first concert he ever saw – electric Muddy Waters at Tanglewood. Finally, and inevitably given the close association between Davis and Chick Corea, “A Star for Chick” bids the icon a warm farewell. Davis was initially tapped for a three-year stint in Corea’s band Origin in late 1997, then later took part in the keyboardist’s orchestral piece “The Continents” and his Grammy-winning, Latin-inspired Spanish Heart Band. He played with Corea for over twenty years and earned the nickname “Davissimo the Melody Man” from Corea. Davis certainly lives up to it in this well-constructed session.~Jim Hayneshttps://glidemagazine.com/275863/master-trombonist-steve-davis-assembles-remarkable-sextet-on-all-original-post-bop-bluesthetic-album-review/

Personnel: Steve Davis – trombone; Peter Bernstein – guitar; Steve Nelson – vibraphone; Geoffrey Keezer – piano; Christian McBride – bass; Willie Jones III – drums

Bluesthetic