Friday, September 23, 2022

Martin Speake - My Ideal

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 40:12
Size: 92.0 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[5:53] 1. Everything Happens To Me
[4:13] 2. My Ideal
[4:06] 3. What Is This Thing Called Love
[4:39] 4. So In Love
[5:40] 5. Loverman
[3:05] 6. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
[3:34] 7. Stardust
[5:36] 8. How Insensitive
[3:22] 9. You Must Believe In Spring

British alto saxophonist Speake duets with a regular Transatlantic associate, the composer and pianist Ethan Iverson - better known as one-third of the lively and now fashionable genre-breakout band the Bad Plus. Although that full-on trio's robust irony, percussion-driven ferocity and raucous reworking of old pop hits is on another, noisier planet to these stripped-down duets exploring standards and ballads, including Michel Legrand's You Must Believe in Spring and a variety of Cole Porters, Jerome Kerns and a Jobim. But Speake's soft tone and undemonstrative audacity found an excellent counterpoise in Iverson, who is as likely to veer off into streams of classical arpeggios as he is to play swing or stride, though he does plenty of those too.

This music was recorded in December 2002 (and produced by Iain Ballamy, no stranger to saxophone understatement) when the pair were touring the UK, and their absorbing live show is recalled by Iverson's technically-sweeping free-classical upsurge after Speake's smoke-rings on Everything Happens to Me, the duo's limping, Monkish arrangement of Smoke Gets in Your Eyes, and the almost sinister idling saunter of Jobim's How Insensitive. Iverson's powers are probably better revealed in these bare surroundings than they are in the Bad Plus. ~John Fordham

My Ideal

Bob Baldwin - B Positive

Styles: Smooth Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:32
Size: 134,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:40) 1. Strength
(5:37) 2. Take the High Road (Just Crush It)
(5:49) 3. Summertime 3000 (Don't You Cry)
(4:02) 4. B Positive
(6:25) 5. A Woman Like You
(4:48) 6. Let's Rewind
(5:20) 7. Keep Your Spirit
(5:33) 8. You Got This
(4:54) 9. All My Life
(4:57) 10. Believe
(5:23) 11. Rejuvenate

Bob Baldwin’s 34th studio offering is a continual stay-at-home event. The 33rd offering was a live record recorded in Elmsford, NY (The live ‘Stay-at-Home Series’). The latest offering, “B Positive” is a musical road map on how to keep your chin up high. More information here.

“Having faced near-death family illness, I’m glad I can take away some things that I can share with my listener,” says the native New Yorker Pianist. “Chances are, if I’ve gone through it, so has a lot more people”, says Baldwin. “If you just look at the titles, you’ll clearly see what my intent is…simply don’t lose control of the ship, no matter what goes down”.

Here’s Baldwin’s further takes on some of the project below: This record feels more like a rejuvenation of his old projects like “Cool Breeze”, hearkening back to fun and bouncy melodies, with just enough harmonic tension to make the hair on the back of your neck tingle and tickle.
https://smoothjazzdaily.wordpress.com/2022/08/16/bob-baldwin-b-positive/

B Positive

Thursday, September 22, 2022

Joe Williams Feat. Ben Webster - Havin' A Good Time

Styles: Vocal And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:25
Size: 125,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:21) 1. Just a Sittin' and a Rockin'
(6:43) 2. Kansas City Blues
(3:02) 3. By the River St. Marie
(5:00) 4. That's All
(2:36) 5. Alone Together
(3:10) 6. I'm Through with Love
(2:34) 7. The Great City
(6:23) 8. A Hundred Years from Today
(6:46) 9. Ain't Misbehavin'
(5:57) 10. Honeysuckle Rose
(2:05) 11. Alright, Okay, You Win
(4:47) 12. Have a Good Time
(0:54) 13. Band Intro & Goodbye

Havin' A Good Time documents a concert that never should have happened. In the winter of 1964 Providence was socked with a blizzard that kept eager concertgoers away from the club where Joe Williams was playing. Enough people showed up that he still had to perform a few sets, but the lucky few who were there were given a rare treat; improbably, Ben Webster showed up out of nowhere and asked if he could sit in.

This is the sort of magical encounter on which jazz thrives: no preparation, no rehearsal, just a couple of masters joining together to produce some wonderful music on the spot. According to pianist Junior Mance, this was the only meeting between Webster and Williams, and fortunately it was caught on tape. All of these songs are either well-known or based on fairly simple chord progressions, which allows the band to plug into the numbers without much difficulty.

If Webster hadn't appeared, the set would still have been worth a listen; Williams always did his best work in front of an audience, and the fact that the small crowd had braved the storm to see him no doubt only added to his enthusiastic delivery. Blues songs like "Just A Sittin' and A Rockin' were tailor-made for Williams' rich baritone and exuberant presence. But the presence of Webster adds a new dimension; he gets ample solo space, really digging in to the slower numbers that he plays so beautifully, and huffs quietly behind Williams as he sings. The rhythm section seems invigorated by the chance to play with the added firepower; Junior Mance in particular carves out a niche with some smoking accompaniment.

Havin' A Good Time is an appropriate title for this new release. Clearly the audience enjoyed the collaboration and the musicians crafted some terrific entertainment. It may have been cold and snowy outside, but it sure was hot inside. By David Rickert https://www.allaboutjazz.com/havin-a-good-time-hyena-records-review-by-david-rickert

Personnel: Joe Williams: Vocals; Junior Mance: Piano; Mickey Roker: Drums; Ben Webster: Tenor Saxophone; Bob Cranshaw: Bass.

Havin' A Good Time

Bob Reynolds - Somewhere in Between

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:25
Size: 137,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:23)  1. Creep
(5:30)  2. Feedback
(5:25)  3. The Beginning
(4:16)  4. Holocene
(5:18)  5. What She Didn't Say
(7:01)  6. Rise and Fall
(4:50)  7. A Love Story (In Three Cities)
(4:52)  8. Everlong
(5:55)  9. Phalanx
(5:31) 10. Closer
(5:19) 11. 622 (Bonus Track)

As a saxophonist, Bob Reynolds has worked with a diverse array of artists in both pop (John Mayer, Michael Buble, Usher, Amos Lee, Jessica Simpson, Willie Nelson, Guy Sebastian) and jazz (Richard Bona, Tom Harrell, Brian Blade, Aaron Goldberg, Reuben Rogers, Eric Harland, Gregory Hutchinson). Reynolds is also an award-winning composer with 4 albums of original material and 4 ASCAP Young Jazz Composer Awards to his credit. He graduated with honors from Berklee College of Music and currently lives in Los Angeles.It's been nearly one year since we went into the studio to record this album. It's been nearly two years since I began talking with   Matt Pierson (Joshua Redman, Brad Mehldau) about what this album would be.It's been even longer since I began jotting down configurations for who might play this music, what songs would go on this album, and what the overall concept would be. Longer still since some of these tunes were born.I knew it was going to be a great album; I got the best people for the job. I naively thought this might be the record that caught the attention of a Blue Note, Nonesuch or Concord Records. 

Not because one needs a record label to release music these days. Anybody can put their music on iTunes. All my records are available online. But if you want to reach a wider audience, get promotion, tour effectively, and make more records, you need help. Or you need to be independently wealthy.I discovered jazz during the height of the young lion era. Wynton Marsalis paved the way in the '80s; Joshua Redman, Roy Hargrove and Christian McBride carried the torch in the 90's, and for awhile, every decent jazz musician in New York was putting out records for a label and touring.Those days are gone.But there's a big upside: I get to make whatever music I want with whomever I choose. You can't get dropped when you've never been picked up.My style doesn't fit neatly into a category like acoustic, straight-ahead, mainstream, contemporary or–God-forbid–smooth jazz, so it's a blessing I don't have to make music to please a particular record label.I don't have anyone telling me to make radio edits, use certain "marquee" players, what tunes to play, or that I'd sell more tickets/albums if I just wore leather pants and walked through the audience playing my sax high above my head.That is something to be grateful for.I'm also very grateful there are people in the world who dig my music. And thanks to technology, we're able to communicate directly.

I'm beyond grateful to find myself in such talented company. To have musical friends and compatriots who not only understand my vision, but bring such life, intensity, and personality to it. Does it take longer to produce and manufacture high-quality albums on your own? Yes. Will that prevent me from doing it? No. I only wish I could increase the pace of my output (hence the lament for a label [read: bank]). People love to talk about how "easy and cheap" making music is thanks to laptops, home recording software and the web, but the fact is it costs considerable sums to hire the best musicians, engineers and studios. You can buy tools and materials at Home Depot, but does that mean you should build your own house? Anyway, there's a track below in the YouTube media box we are all very excited about. I hope it makes you smile. http://www.jazzreview.com/jazz-spotlights/somewhere-in-between-by-bob-reynolds.html

Personnel: Bob Reynolds - tenor, soprano saxes; Eric Harland - drums; Janek Gwizdala - bass; Oli Rockberger - piano, keyboards; John Shannon - guitar; Bashiri Johnson - percussion with special guests John Mayer - guitar, lap steel guitar (2, 3)
Aaron Parks - piano (1, 3, 5)

Jeri Southern - Jeri Southern Blue Note, Chicago, March 1956

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:17
Size: 158,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:01)  1. I Hadn't Anyone Till You - Live
(0:23)  2. Jeri Introduces Her Trio Members - Live
(2:33)  3. Mad About the Boy - Live
(2:19)  4. You Better Go Now - Live
(3:19)  5. I'm in Love with the Honorable Mr. So and So - Live
(2:16)  6. Dancing on the Ceiling - Live
(2:18)  7. I Get a Kick out of You - Live
(3:33)  8. Too Late Now - Instrumental, Live
(4:18)  9. This Can't Be Love - Live
(3:30) 10. Miss Johnson Phoned Again Today - Live
(4:15) 11. One Day I Wrote His Name Upon the Sand - Live
(3:56) 12. It's De-Lovely - Live
(3:24) 13. September in the Rain - Live
(3:49) 14. When I Fall in Love - Live
(2:09) 15. Every Time - Live
(3:49) 16. He Was Too Good to Me - Live
(2:55) 17. Someone to Watch over Me - Live
(3:05) 18. Scarlet Ribbons - Unaccompanied Vocal, Live
(4:45) 19. Too Marvelous for Words - Live
(4:19) 20. Something Wonderful - Live
(3:10) 21. I've Got a Crush on You - Live

It’s a shame that pianist and vocalist Jeri Southern’s self-truncated career has left her a mere footnote in the history of jazz singing-for she ranked among the most gifted and compelling artists of the 1950s, blending the cool-school sangfroid of Chris Connor with the purr of Peggy Lee and the sophisticated sultriness of Julie London. (All the while she proved equally impressive behind a Steinway, with shades of Nat Cole, Art Tatum and Erroll Garner.) Southern released a dozen albums, all for major labels-Decca, Capitol, Roulette-before her chronic stage fright got the better of her and she retired from performing in 1962, still in her mid-30s. Her slim but stellar output included just one live LP, 1959’s At the Crescendo. At last, a quarter-century after her death, comes this 70-minute session, captured with stunning quality at Chicago’s Blue Note in early 1956. Alongside a pair of house-band stalwarts-bassist Al Bruno and drummer Dominic Simonetta-she navigates a sterling playlist: Noël Coward, Rodgers and Hart, Cole Porter, Burton Lane, Alan Jay Lerner, the Gershwins and a stunning, a cappella “Scarlet Ribbons.” Across her career’s dozen years, Southern also carved a unique niche, specializing in vaguely scandalous romantic mini-sagas. That enticing peculiarity is winningly exercised here, as she sketches the angst-driven drama of “Miss Johnson Phoned Again Today,” “One Day I Wrote His Name Upon the Sand,” “I’m in Love With the Honorable Mr. So and So” and her sole signature hit, the edge-of-sin “You Better Go Now.”~ Christopher Loudon https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/jeri-southern-blue-note-chicago-march-1956/

Jeri Southern Blue Note, Chicago, March 1956

Jazz Funk Soul - Forecast

Styles: Contemporary Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:48
Size: 103,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:33) 1. Hustle
(5:43) 2. Keep Holding On
(5:17) 3. Funkin' in AZ
(4:23) 4. Forecast
(3:50) 5. Bouncing Back
(5:15) 6. Fish Grease
(3:14) 7. Count Me In
(5:44) 8. When the Time Comes
(3:43) 9. Hidden in Plain Sight
(4:02) 10. CSL (For Charles Samuel Loeb)

On their fourth album, 2022's wryly titled Forecast, instrumental jazz supergroup Jazz Funk Soul further embrace their hooky, soulful sound. The record follows 2019's Life and Times, which found guitarist Paul Jackson, Jr. taking over for original guitarist Chuck Loeb (who tragically died from cancer in 2017) and joining forces with the other founding members, saxophonist Everette Harp and keyboardist Jeff Lorber. Though subtle, the change from Loeb to Jackson was significant, as each player brought his own distinctive style to the band's overall sound.

With Loeb, the trio favored soaring, brightly attenuated pop-jazz melodies. While that melodicism remains a core part of the group's style (just check out "Count Me In"), Jackson brings a crisp, rhythmic R&B sensibility to their sound, informed by his many years of working with artists like Quincy Jones, Michael Jackson, and Whitney Houston. If Life and Times evoked the funky soul-jazz of the Crusaders and sax icon David Sanborn, then Forecast makes such comparisons vibrantly explicit. Cuts like the opening "Hustle," "Fish Grease," and "Funkin' in AZ" spotlight the warm interplay between Harp's juicy sax lines, Lorber's rich keyboard harmonies, and Jackson's bluesy fretboard riffs.

Particularly evocative of the Crusaders' sound is "When the Time Comes," with its warm acoustic bass groove and summery, laid-back atmosphere. The trio even pay tribute to their late bandmate with the poignant slow-jam album closer "CSL (For Charles Samuel Loeb)." With Forecast, Jazz Funk Soul underline their reputation as masters of no-consense, soulful contemporary jazz.By Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/album/forecast-mw0003734081


Personnel: Everette Harp - Saxophone; Jeff Lorber - Keyboard; Paul Jackson Jr.- Guitar

Forecast

Wednesday, September 21, 2022

Martin Speake - Change Of Heart

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:50
Size: 121,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:53) 1. The Healing Power Of Intimacy
(4:43) 2. Change of Heart
(5:29) 3. Barefaced Thieves
(4:20) 4. Venn
(9:03) 5. Buried Somewhere
(5:16) 6. In The Moment
(8:21) 7. Three Hours
(8:40) 8. In Code

One of the more interesting extra-musical things to observe in jazz is how the connections between musicians happen, and then, of course, how those connections affect the music they produce.

In 1993, Martin Speake connected with Paul Motian, and they toured as a trio with bassist Mick Hutton, playing both Speake's and Motian's compositions. Fast forward seven years to 2000 and Speake added Bobo Stenson to the group, playing and composing music that was sensitive to both Motian's and Stenson's jazz conception. Stenson's Goodbye (ECM, 2005) is a direct result of Stenson and Motian playing together in Speake's band.

A delightful album, Change Of Heart has the perfect mix of understated playing and melodies that are direct, yet full of surprising turns of phrase and varied musical development. While it's entirely comprised of Speake compositions, it sounds at times very much like Motian's Garden of Eden (ECM, 2006) in the way the floating quality of Speake's phrasing is reinforced by Motian's drums and his very cool (meaning reserved, understated and thoughtful) sound, which evokes Chris Cheek's work on the Motian album.

Thus, Speake's response to Motian is clearly audible. Stenson is remarkably adept at fitting chameleon-like into any role, still being totally himself. While he might also be described as a cool player, the pianist always adds intensity to every note and phrase he plays.

Speake's alto tone is quite interesting, and if you close your eyes, it sounds at times like a trumpet with some kind of subtle mute. His phrasing has a strong vocal quality as he sings through his horn. The album's melodies take their time to unfold, and this quality is echoed in the way the tracks proceed and how each member of the group adds to the mix, yielding music with an organic wholeness.

For me, the essence of Change Of Heart is evident in the last track, "In Code." Introduced by Hutton alone on bass, an atmosphere of mystery and suspense is created, only to be intensified by the entrance of Motian and Stenson. As Speake plays the theme, supported mostly by a pedal tone, Stenson echoes and embellishes each phrase. The music washes upon the shores as Speake jumps into a higher range, as if to try to escape from the pedal anchor. Stenson replies with a magnificent solo that encapsulates his cool blue burning intensity and leads seamlessly to Speake's recap.Simple directness, overtly beautiful, cool and compact: just wonderful.
By Budd Kopman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/change-of-heart-martin-speake-ecm-records-review-by-budd-kopman

Personnel: Martin Speake: alto saxophone; Bobo Stenson: piano; Mick Hutton: bass; Paul Motian: drums.

Change Of Heart

Various - Capitol Sings Cole Porter: Anything Goes

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:44
Size: 148.2 MB
Styles: Standards, Easy Listening
Year: 1991
Art: Front

[2:16] 1. Annie Ross - All Of You
[2:03] 2. Peggy Lee - Always True To You In My Fashion
[2:21] 3. Count Basie - Anything Goes
[3:26] 4. Gordon Macrae - Begin The Beguine
[2:44] 5. Martha Tilton - Blow, Gabriel, Blow
[3:47] 6. Stan Kenton - Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye
[1:50] 7. Peggy Lee - From Now On
[2:41] 8. Stan Kenton - I Get A Kick Out Of You
[2:53] 9. Judy Garland - I Happen To Like New York
[2:15] 10. Helen O'connell - In The Still Of The Night
[2:38] 11. Dinah Shore - It's All Right With Me
[2:35] 12. Louis Prima - I've Got You Under My Skin
[2:13] 13. Nat King Cole - Just One Of Those Things
[2:37] 14. Liza Minnelli - Looking At You
[2:08] 15. Frances Faye - Miss Otis Regrets (She's Unable To Lunch Today)
[2:25] 16. John Raitt - So In Love
[2:30] 17. Dean Martin - True Love
[1:51] 18. Keely Smith - What Is This Thing Called Love
[3:16] 19. Margaret Whiting - Why Shouldn't I
[2:48] 20. Jo Stafford - Wunderbar
[2:35] 21. Nancy Wilson - You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
[2:35] 22. Jean Turner - You're The Top
[2:11] 23. Trudy Richards - Let's Do It (Let's Fall In Love)
[3:03] 24. Jeri Southern - Get Out Of Town
[2:50] 25. The Andrews Sisters - You Do Something To Me

As far as all-star Cole Porter compilations go, Capitol Sings Cole Porter: Anything Goes is recommended as an entertaining sampler of 25 titles performed by some of the label's biggest stars. These include, on the hip end of the spectrum, Nat King Cole, Nancy Wilson, Frances Faye, Jo Stafford, and Annie Ross, a disarming vocalist who collaborates warmly with baritone saxophonist Gerry Mulligan. Peggy Lee is heard with George Shearing, Keely Smith with Louis Prima, Dinah Shore with Red Norvo, Tony Bennett with Count Basie and Chris Connor, and June Christy with Stan Kenton. Pop singers heard on this collection include Judy Garland, Liza Minnelli, Margaret Whiting, Dean Martin, Gordon MacRae, and the Andrews Sisters. This mini-survey of great moments in mid-20th century pop culture is suitable for casual listening (and optional singalong) while cleaning house, preparing food, shampooing the cat, or operating heavy machinery during rush hour. ~arwulf arwulf

Capitol Sings Cole Porter: Anything Goes

Ian Matthews - Go For Broke + Hit And Run

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1977
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:12
Size: 174,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:55) 1. Darkness, Darkness
(3:33) 2. I'll Be Gone
(3:54) 3. Brown Eyed Girl
(3:23) 4. Rhythm Of The West
(2:53) 5. Groovin'
(4:48) 6. Lonely Hunter
(3:58) 7. Steamboat
(3:17) 8. A Fool Like You
(3:37) 9. Just One Look
(2:47) 10. When The Morning Comes
(4:20) 11. The Frame
(3:56) 12. One Day Without You
(4:53) 13. Times
(4:31) 14. I Will Not Fade Away
(3:34) 15. Tigers Will Survive
(3:00) 16. Just One Look
(4:11) 17. Help To Guide Me (I Need Your Help)
(3:34) 18. Shuffle
(5:59) 19. Hit And Run

Iain Matthews (born Ian Matthews MacDonald, 16 June 1946) is an English musician and singer-songwriter. He was an original member of the British folk rock band Fairport Convention from 1967 to 1969 before leaving to form his own band, Matthews Southern Comfort, which had a UK number one in 1970 with a cover version of Joni Mitchell's song "Woodstock". In 1979 his cover of Terence Boylan's "Shake It" reached No. 13 on the US charts.

Born in Barton-upon-Humber, Lincolnshire, Matthews was known in the 1960s as Ian MacDonald, but changed his name to Ian Matthews (his mother's maiden name) in 1968 to avoid confusion with Ian McDonald of King Crimson, with whom Judy Dyble began working when she left Fairport. In 1989, he changed the spelling of his first name to Iain and has been known as Iain Matthews ever since.

Influenced by both rock and roll and folk music, he has performed as both a solo artist, and as a member of various bands. He was a member of Fairport Convention during the early period when they were heavily influenced by American folk rock and sang on their first three albums before leaving in 1969. He initially embarked upon a solo career before forming the bands Matthews Southern Comfort and then Plainsong. Later in his career he was also a member of the bands Hi-Fi, No Grey Faith, and More Than A Song, and in the 2000s has twice revived both Plainsong and Matthews Southern Comfort (MSC). He continues to tour regularly with the current version of MSC. A new MSC album "The New Mine" was released in March 2020, and a vinyl-only album "Fake Tan", recorded with Norwegian band The Salmon Smokers, was released in September 2020.

In a career spanning over fifty years he has featured on over 100 albums and in 2018 published an autobiography co-written with author and broadcaster Ian Clayton, "Thro’ My Eyes : A Memoir’’, about his life in the music industry. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iain_Matthews

Go For Broke + Hit And Run

Al Foster - Reflections

Styles: Bop
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:56
Size: 156,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:20) 1. T.S. Monk
(5:04) 2. Pent-Up House
(7:17) 3. Open Plans
(6:23) 4. Blues on the Corner
(5:32) 5. Anastasia
(8:21) 6. Six
(5:11) 7. Punjab
(6:56) 8. Beat
(4:51) 9. Alone and I
(5:36) 10. Half Nelson
(6:18) 11. Monk's Bossa

On Reflections, Foster revisits the work of several of those peers alongside an inspiring quintet of all-stars: Nicholas Payton, Chris Potter, Kevin Hays, and Vicente Archer.

Throughout the session he propels this supremely talented unit through fresh, vital treatments of well-known and less-traveled numbers by iconic legends Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, Joe Henderson, Sonny Rollins, and McCoy Tyner, all of whom regarded Foster as their first-call drummer for long portions of his celebrated career at times competing for his services. Band members Payton, Potter, and Hays each contribute a tune apiece, while Foster penned three well-wrought songs, including two homages to Thelonious Monk that bookend the program.

It’s hard to overstate Foster’s contribution to the musical production of the aforementioned giants over his 60 years as a professional. But, as much as Foster likes to wax nostalgic about the past, it’s also evident on every note of this 68-minute gem that he’s fully committed to living in the moment and playing in the here and now. This follow-up to his well-received 2019 Smoke Sessions debut, INSPIRATIONS & DEDICATIONS, is Foster’s fifth leader recording and, as even the notoriously self-critical drummer surprisingly says, “It is my best record Yet." https://jazzbluesnews.com/2022/08/31/cd-review-al-foster-reflections-2022-video-cd-cover/

Personnel: Al Foster – drums; Nicholas Payton – trumpet; Chris Potter – tenor and soprano saxophone; Kevin Hays – piano and Fender Rhodes; Vicente Archer – bass

Reflections

Monday, September 19, 2022

Lindsey Webster - A Woman Like Me

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:30
Size: 148,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:30) 1. Feels Like Forever
(5:34) 2. Close To You
(5:37) 3. Only You
(5:18) 4. One Step Forward
(7:08) 5. Perspective
(5:07) 6. Running Around
(6:40) 7. A Woman Like Me
(5:16) 8. Rain
(5:19) 9. The Unknown
(6:12) 10. Always Love Me
(6:45) 11. Somewhere Over The Rainbow

The increasingly longer hiatus’s of Sade and Basia has left a big void for an audience that craves that smooth, urbane style of music that comes from a soul-jazz songstress, and Lindsey Webster has stepped in to fill that void. In a span of two years Webster has gone from a virtual unknown to being arguably the new queen of crossover jazz. And now, the reign extends with the impending release of A Woman Like Me.

That roll get started with a single “Fool Me Once.” That song reached #1 in 2016 on Billboard’s Contemporary Jazz Charts, a chart that had been topped by instrumentals for six straight years since Sade’s last release. Later in ’16 came Lindsey Webster’s first album for Shanachie Entertainment Back To Your Heart (2016), which spun off three more top three singles for that chart. And proving that she was no fluke, her 2018 follow-up Love Inside placed two more songs in the top ten.

This might sound a bit like being in the right place at the right time, but Webster’s talents merit her status. Starting with her voice, which is the soulfully sensual, smoky and unforced delivery that seduces with an earnest reading of the lyrics rather than hitting you on the head with over-the-top technique.

With the third album into her imperial period, we can now spot some big time session players on A Woman Like Me absent on prior records; imagine having a rhythm section like Nathan East (bass), Vinnie Colaiuta, (drums) and Luis Conte (percussion) on your album. While these guys might add a touch more polish to the overall musicianship not that it was ever lacking the winning formula remains, which is the production and songwriting team of Lindsey and her keyboardist and one-time husband, Keith Slattery.

Thus, there’s really nothing that’s going to set A Woman Like Me too far apart from two prior Shanachie records, which speaks more to her consistency and staying within her strengths, so Lindsey Webster fans will be quite pleased with it.

A song like “Feels Like Forever” validates why it was wise to stick with the formula. As is usual with a Webster song, it’s a melody with pop-catchiness and suffused with urbane jazz chords, played with real instruments and rich backing vocals (all done by Webster). All this paired with the timeless topic of romance means it’s a song that will never age.

Though Webster-Slattery often draws some cues from Bacharach-David, “Close To You” isn’t that Carpenters song but rather an attractive mid-tempo funky number that’s looks the part of another high-charting single, capped off by a George Benson-ish guitar solo by regular Webster guitar sideman Mike DeMicco. “Running Around” has that same kind of groove, but Tony DePauolo’s guitar has the bite of rock instead of jazz.

The production is so clean and, refreshingly, not cluttered. The backing track to a cut like “Only You” leaves plenty of breathing space for Webster’s singing and her lyrics, where the focus belongs. The instrumentation is peeled back even further on “One Step Forward,” (video above) by temporarily sidelining East and Conte, and though Slatterly’s piano aside won’t scare off Chick Corea, its delicate touch fits the easy-going groove of the song.

Other songs aren’t necessarily contemporary jazz per se, but close cousins to it, and Lindsey Webster’s got a great finesse of those styles as well. “Perspective” has a lusher, Quiet Storm sort of mood (as does “Rain”) and Webster’s vocal moans toward the end of the track smoothly hands off to Ken Gioffre’s saxophone. “Always Love Me” is a prototypical soul ballad tailor-made for slow dancin’.

But can Lindsey Webster do ballads? “A Woman Like Me” emphatically says ‘yes’; this is where her knack for delivering emotion in the right dose serves the song so well. In a bit of a surprise, East’s bass solo is paired with him scatting over it, though he’s done this before.

The album closes with the only non-original, the ubiquitous “Somewhere Over The Rainbow.” Personally, I would have preferred to hear her take on a Joni Mitchell or Carole King song, but Webster does treat this classic with due reverence.

Webster succeeds not by keeping up with current trends but instead through mastering the little time-honored things that latch people onto her music today and decades from now. This is why the roll Lindsey Webster got on in 2016 will continue with A Woman Like Me. By S. Victor Aaron https://somethingelsereviews.com/2020/03/23/lindsey-webster-a-woman-like-me-2020/

A Woman Like Me

Bill Mays - Mays In Manhattan

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:36
Size: 152,0 MB
Art: Front

(7:46) 1. Manhattan
(5:22) 2. Summer In Central Park
(6:25) 3. U.M.M.G. (Upper Manhattan Medical Group)
(9:34) 4. New York State Of Mind
(6:33) 5. All Accross The City
(6:48) 6. Sunday In New York
(6:19) 7. 317 E. 32nd St.
(9:35) 8. Autumn In New York
(6:12) 9. '39 World's Fair

Bill Mays is a California native, but like many jazz musicians, he was drawn to live in New York City. This session is made up of songs about the Big Apple, though they come from a wide range of composers: Broadway, jazz, and pop. On four of the tracks, Mays expands his trio to a sextet, adding alto saxophonist Jon Gordon, trombonist Ed Neumeister, and trumpeter/flügelhornist Marvin Stamm.

The boisterous take of Richard Rodgers' "Manhattan" makes it seem like a cool, breezy spring day. Stamm switches to flügelhorn for Billy Joel's "New York State of Mind," in which Neumeister adds a mute (for the introduction) to carry on the "ya-ya" tradition begun by Duke Ellington's star trombonist, Tricky Sam Nanton; the piece then shifts gears to suggest a leisurely stroll in the park on a sunny day. The trio selections include a brisk interpretation of Billy Strayhorn's "U.M.M.G." (showcasing bassist Sean Smith extensively) and Lennie Tristano's tricky "317 East 32nd Street." This highly recommended CD has unfortunately been deleted from the Concord catalog.
By Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/mays-in-manhattan-mw0000085036

Personnel: Piano – Bill Mays; Alto Saxophone – Jon Gordon (tracks: 1, 4, 6, 8); Bass – Sean Smith; Cornet – Marvin Stamm (tracks: 6); Drums – Tim Horner; Flugelhorn – Marvin Stamm (tracks: 4, 8); Trombone – Ed Neumeister (tracks: 1, 4, 6, 8); Trumpet – Marvin Stamm (tracks: 1).

Mays In Manhattan

Billy Drummond & Freedom of Ideas - Valse Sinistre

Styles: Jazz, Bop
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:31
Size: 102,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:56) 1. Little Melonae
(7:00) 2. Never Ends
(6:13) 3. Valse Sinistre
(3:29) 4. Laura
(5:18) 5. Frankenstein
(3:15) 6. Changes For Trane & Monk
(5:50) 7. Clara's Room
(4:22) 8. Reconfirmed
(4:05) 9. Lawra

Valse Sinistre is so good that it almost feels irresponsible. Drummer Billy Drummond and his postbop quartet (saxophonist Dayna Stephens, pianist Micah Thomas, and bassist Dezron Douglas) are not only firing on all cylinders, but venturing into such daredevilry that you want to shout, “Are you guys insured?”

This is only slight hyperbole. Starting on Jackie McLean’s “Little Melonae,” the band is already dancing on a tightrope with their warp-speed run through the complex composition. But then, Thomas charges out with an astonishing solo that goes everywhere at once—Drummond demonstrates his command simply by keeping pace. That’s just the opening salvo. The title track showcases another fine Thomas solo, but this one is overshadowed by a dark improvisation from Stephens’ soprano. It’s an instrument we often think of as letting a bit of light into the proceedings; not this time.By By Michael J. West https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/billy-drummond-freedom-of-ideas-valse-sinistre-cellar/

Personnel: Billy Drummond – drums; Dezron Douglas – bass; Micah Thomas – piano; Dayna Stephens – saxophones

Valse Sinistre

Saturday, September 17, 2022

One For All - The Long Haul

Styles: Jazz, Straight-Ahead/Mainstream
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:24
Size: 152,3 MB
Art: Front

(12:10) 1. A Cry For Understanding
( 7:49) 2. The Long Haul
( 8:01) 3. Echoes In The Night
( 7:26) 4. The Poo
( 6:36) 5. The Good Life
( 7:29) 6. Stash
( 7:35) 7. Summer Nights
( 9:14) 8. Nothin' To It

Working within the broad parameters of hard-swinging, harmonically sophisticated small-band styles from the 40s, 50s, and 60s, the music of the sextetOne For Allalso reflects the experiences of the individual members outside of their cooperative band. An incomplete but telling list of leaders who have employed and influenced various members of the crew includes Cecil Payne, George Coleman, Art Blakey, Jackie McLean, Junior Cook, Slide Hampton, and Louis Hayes.

On The Long Haul, the band’s second release for Criss Criss (and fourth overall), they stake their claim to the tradition. The record comprises impressive material (six out of eight cuts were written by various band members) and arrangements, four primary soloists with something distinctive to say, and a rhythm section that responds to every exigency and shoots off sparks of its own. Most of all, aside from the skill and technique involved, the music possesses a fervency that is genuine: These guys love playing together and it shows.

The disc’s opening cut, “A Cry For Understanding,” composed by John Farnsworth, encompasses the band’s virtues. A slow, somber introduction convincingly executed by tenor saxophonist Eric Alexander and the rhythm section leads to all of the horns playing the theme at a brisk tempo. Alexander’s solo is a fine example of his continuing development. His full-bodied sound spreads out and takes up space without being overbearing, and he stays in absolute control while deliberately working through a variety of ideas that add up to a complete, satisfying whole. In comparison, trombonist Steve Davis’ approach is somewhat spare, skillfully playing off and interacting with pianist David Hazeltine’s chords and the snap of drummer Joe Farnsworth’s snare drum accents.

During a commanding, live wire turn, trumpeter Jim Rotondi frequently phrases on top the beat and occasionally takes brief, fruitful detours. In the unenviable position of following the three horns, Hazeltine, ever mindful of Farnsworth’s and bassist Ray Dummond’s pulse, at first seems casual and then gradually hardens his touch, becoming more expansive and forceful. Backed only by Farnsworth’s brushes, Drummond completes the cycle of solos, integrating a snippet of the song “Wade In The Water,” into a smart, efficient statement.

Alexander’s rollicking tune “Stash,” the band’s first venture into the time signature of 5/4, is another of the disc’s standout cuts. It moves forward in a nice, lopsided manner, with the horns brazenly stating the melody, then giving way to a string of compact solos. First up is Alexander, who is clearly inspired by the odd meter, starting off with short, soulful phrases. When Hazeltine and Farnsworth signal a change in emphasis, he takes off in a series of sprints which ends in barrage of overblowing. Rotondi burns through the rhythmic thicket with ease, making his lines rhyme with call and response patterns. Initially taking more care than usual in placing his notes and letting the rhythm section fill in space, Davis’ solo gradually gains footing while working against the weight of Hazeltine’s stabbing chords. Over Drummond and Hazeltine’s vamp, Farnsworth slyly mixes rhythms that alternately refer to the pulse and create unrelated waves of percussive sound.By David A. Orthmann https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-long-haul-one-for-all-criss-cross-review-by-david-a-orthmann

Personnel: Eric Alexander - -tenor sax; Jim Rotondi - trumpet, flugelhorn; Steve Davis - trombone; David Hazeltine - piano; Ray Drummond - bass; Joe Farnsworth - drums.

The Long Haul

Stan Killian - Evoke

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:53
Size: 102,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:06)  1. Subterranean Melody
(4:54)  2. Evoke
(6:44)  3. Echolalic
(5:33)  4. Kirby
(7:47)  5. Beekman33
(6:16)  6. Observation
(6:30)  7. Hindu

Stan Killian is reminiscent of Jimmy Heath in that his compositions and tenor saxophone work make each other better, and reflect a stubbornly abstruse but still amiable sensibility. He’s a mainstream postbopper but favors layered riffs that don’t necessarily interlock in his tunes; his swing can be restless, and have a little hitch in its gait. And he enjoys the modal form. On Evoke, Killian eschews the high-powered guest stars (Roy Hargrove, David Binney, Jeremy Pelt) from his 2011 Sunnyside debut, Unified, and relies on the quintet that workshops his tunes every week at the 55 Bar in New York. That familiarity deepens the virtues, especially the somewhat quirky angularity, of his compositional style, while providing fewer solo highlights. It’s a solid band drummer McClenty Hunter, bassist Corcoran Holt and pianist Benito Gonzalez return from Unified, and guitarist Mike Moreno has a notable résumé and a low, liquid tone that calls to mind John Scofield. But the players are mostly in service to the tunes, with Hunter the most notable colorist aside from Killian. Not surprisingly, then, the songcraft seems top-notch. The opener, “Subterranean Melody,” makes arresting use of a 7/4 pulse that surges forth from Killian’s tenor as the rhythm section steadily ups the intensity. “Beekman33” moves with the sort of confident glide that became a hallmark of deeper cuts on albums released during Blue Note’s golden era. And “Hindu” is an effectively itchy pastiche, enlivened by noteworthy solos from Hunter, with Gonzalez unearthing his Latin roots. ~ Britt Robison  http://jazztimes.com/articles/94313-evoke-stan-killian

Personnel: Stan Killian (tenor saxophone); Benito Gonzalez (piano); McClenty Hunter (drums).

Evoke

Kris Davis & Craig Taborn - Octopus

Styles: Piano
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:40
Size: 137,0 MB
Art: Front

(10:54) 1. Interruptions One
( 8:02) 2. Ossining
(10:04) 3. Chatterbox
(14:36) 4. Sing Me Softly of the Blues / Interruptions Two
( 7:15) 5. Interruptions Three
( 7:47) 6. Love in Outer Space

Combining discrete notes with splashes and collages of sound, the music of pianists Kris Davis and Craig Taborn on Octopus showcases improvisational prowess at the highest levels. The live recording challenges listeners with electric and sometimes jarring compositions that appear to send shards of musical light in every direction.

Davis provides two compositions for the album and Taborn three. In addition, the pianists cover two tunes, both by keyboard players Carla Bley's "Sing Me Softly of The Blues" and Sun Ra's "Love in Outer Space."

Taborn chose to name his three compositions "Interruptions." The first, "Interruptions One," begins subtly enough with a lyrical abstraction. There's almost a tripping effect, as the notes splatter into ripples and spread out. As the music progresses, a more frenetic abstraction arises think Cecil Taylor here and the chords become more weighty and ponderous. The tune ends with a hopping back and forth between the pianos.

"Interruptions Two" emerges from Bley's "Sing Me Softly Of The Blues." Like a Cubist painting, the Bley tune is deconstructed and put back together in an unsettled disorienting manner. When Taborn's "interruption" enters, one piano explodes across the keys while the other states single notes paired with adroit pedal work. The music takes a spatial turn. The piano chords become more forceful and full throated. Single notes announce a grand orchestral climax. Then a repetitive note materializes above subtle explorations. Are we in a dream? The music becomes more forceful before sliding into the ether.

"Interruptions Three" begins as a blues abstraction. While one pianist contributes chords structured around an unusual time meter, the other races along with Taylor-like explorations of notes. The stutters and starts of one are embellished by the other's roving adventures.

Davis offers two compositions, "Chatterbox" and "Ossining." Both display fascinating interplay between the pianists. "Ossining" incorporates almost a binary approach as the pianists exchange "data." The highest keys on the piano are broached and the composition revolves and spins in a circular motif. "Chatterbox" incorporates more Cecil Taylor-like booms, swirls, plops, twirls and trills. The pianists race around each other, creating great splashes of sound. The listener feels pinned to the back of the seat of this musical roller coaster. The roller coaster slows at the end and its musical passengers may exit the car.

The album concludes with a gentle performance of Sun Ra's "Love in Outer Space." There is an impressionistic and romantic feel to the music and, as it progresses, the music develops a Latin rhythmic impulse underneath the melody.

No doubt the music on Octopus is dense and complex. But Davis and Taborn elicit a vocabulary that is both challenging and "in the moment." Their stream of consciousness improvisations are both ear and mind bending. They have thrown down the musical gauntlet. Are you brave enough to pick it up?
By Don Phipps https://www.allaboutjazz.com/octopus-kris-davis-piano-craig-taborn-piano-pyroclastic-records-review-by-don-phipps

Personnel: Kris Davis: piano; Craig Taborn: piano.

Octopus

Charles Lloyd - Trios: Chapel

Styles: Saxophone, Flute Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:52
Size: 105,6 MB
Art: Front

( 7:23) 1. Blood Count
( 9:00) 2. Song My Lady Sings
( 7:19) 3. Ay Amor
( 9:49) 4. Beyond Darkness
(12:19) 5. Dorotea's Studio

Blue Note Records has a history of boasting strong stables of players. In the 1950s and 60s, we could look to Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers, trumpeter Lee Morgan, pianist Herbie Hancock, saxophonist Wayne Shorter and if ever there was an incomplete list compiled, that one is it. Time rolls on. Twenty years (or thereabouts) into the new millennium, the label hosts an all-star roster once again pianist Gerald Clayton, saxophonist Melissa Aldana, sax man Immanuel Wilkins, guitarist Julian Lage, and to wrap up another partial listing veteran saxophonist Charles Lloyd.

At eighty-four years of age, Lloyd after a sixty-plus year career that includes album releases on Atlantic, Columbia and ECM Records, Warner Music extends his twenty-first century connection with Blue Note Records via a "Trio of Trios," three separate trio albums, featuring three different groups of players, released one at a time on different dates over a mid-to-late 2022 time span.

The first of these, Trios: Chapel, was named for the San Antonio, Texas, Elizabeth Coates Chapel in which it was recorded. Lloyd's choice of bandmates: guitarist Bill Frisell and bassist Thomas Morgan, a duo teaming responsible for a pair of gorgeous and understated ECM albums, Small Town (2017) and Epistrophy (2019). In addition, Frisell is a member of Lloyd's other Blue Note recording group, the Marvels; so there is a connection, a built-in rapport at play in the spontaneous-sounding set of tunes.

Overall, the group displays a light touch, making buoyant and delicately pretty sounds that vibrate in an understated chapel resonance. An obvious parallel is with the Paul Motian recordings the drummer did with saxophonist Joe Lovano and Frisell for ECM Records: It Should Have Happened A Long Time Ago (1985) and I Have The Room Above Her (2005). Lloyd's sound is gentle, bird-like (not Charlie Parker "bird-like," but possessed of an actual ornithological elocution), opening with the prettiest version of Billy Strayhorn's "Bloodcount" imaginable. Frisell is succinct, his notes and chords ringing clear and true, unembellished, while Morgan's deft underpinnings offer a perfect support without calling out for attention.

Dreamy, compelling, non-propulsive sounds that exist outside of time, as a sort of soundtrack to some kind of tranquil enlightenment, or as a testament to "right now."
By Dan McClenaghan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/trios-chapel-charles-lloyd-blue-note-records

Personnel: Charles Lloyd: saxophone, alto flute; Bill Frisell: guitar, electric; Thomas Morgan: bass, acoustic.

Trios: Chapel

Dave Brubeck Quartet - Tralfamadore Buffalo New Yörk

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:18
Size: 154,9 MB
Art: Front

( 3:11) 1. Introduction
(10:29) 2. Sunny Side Of The Street
( 7:10) 3. These Foolish Things
(16:31) 4. Travellin' Blues
( 5:27) 5. Stompin' For Mili
( 9:09) 6. Margie
(13:58) 7. Take Five
( 1:20) 8. Closing Words By DB

In the 1950s and '60s, few American jazz artists were as influential, and fewer still were as popular, as Dave Brubeck. At a time when the cooler sounds of West Coast jazz began to dominate the public face of the music, Brubeck proved there was an audience for the style far beyond the confines of the in-crowd, and with his emphasis on unusual time signatures and adventurous tonalities, Brubeck showed that ambitious and challenging music could still be accessible. And as rock & roll began to dominate the landscape of popular music at the dawn of the '60s, Brubeck enjoyed some of his greatest commercial and critical success, expanding the audience for jazz and making it hip with young adults and college students.

David Warren Brubeck was born in Concord, California on December 6, 1920. Brubeck grew up surrounded by music his mother was a classically trained pianist and his two older brothers would become professional musicians and he began receiving piano lessons when he was four years old. Brubeck showed an initial reluctance to learn to read music, but his natural facility for the keyboard and his ability to pick up melodies by ear allowed him to keep this a secret for several years. His father worked as a cattle rancher, and in 1932, his family moved from Concord to a 45,000-acre spread near the foothills of the Sierras. As a teenager, Brubeck was passionate about music and performed with a local dance band in his spare time, but he planned to follow a more practical career path and study veterinary medicine. However, after enrolling in the College of the Pacific in Stockton, California, Brubeck played piano in local night spots to help pay his way, and his enthusiasm for performing was such that one of his professors suggested he would be better off studying music. Brubeck followed this advice and graduated in 1942, though several of his instructors were shocked to learn that he still couldn't read music.

Brubeck left college as World War II was in full swing, and he was soon drafted into the Army; he served under Gen. George S. Patton, and would have fought in the Battle of the Bulge had he not been asked to play piano in a Red Cross show for the troops. Brubeck was requested to put together a jazz band with his fellow soldiers, and he formed a combo called "the Wolfpack," a multi-racial ensemble at a time when the military was still largely segregated. Brubeck was honorably discharged in 1946, and enrolled at Mills College in Oakland, California, where he studied under the French composer Darius Milhaud. Unlike many composers in art music, Milhaud had a keen appreciation for jazz, and Brubeck began incorporating many of Milhaud's ideas about unusual time signatures and polytonality into his jazz pieces. In 1947, Brubeck formed a band with several other Mills College students, the Dave Brubeck Octet. However, the Octet's music was a bit too adventurous for the average jazz fan at the time, and Brubeck moved on to a more streamlined trio with Cal Tjader on vibes and percussion and Ron Crotty on bass. Brubeck made his first commercial recordings with this trio for California's Fantasy Records, and while he developed a following in the San Francisco Bay Area, a back injury Brubeck received during a swimming accident prevented him from performing for several months and led him to restructure his group.

In 1951, the Dave Brubeck Quartet made their debut, with the pianist joined by Paul Desmond on alto sax; Desmond's easygoing but adventurous approach was an ideal match for Brubeck. While the Quartet's rhythm section would shift repeatedly over the next several years, in 1956 Joe Morello became their permanent drummer, and in 1958, Eugene Wright took over as bassist. By this time, Brubeck's fame had spread far beyond Northern California; Brubeck's recordings for Fantasy had racked up strong reviews and impressive sales, and along with regular performances at jazz clubs, the Quartet began playing frequent concerts at college campuses across the country, exposing their music to a new and enthusiastic audience that embraced their innovative approach. Brubeck and the Quartet had become popular enough to be the subject of a November 8, 1954 cover story in Time Magazine, only the second time that accolade had been bestowed on a jazz musician (Louis Armstrong made the cover in 1949). In 1955, Brubeck signed with Columbia Records, then America's most prestigious record company, and his first album for the label, Brubeck Time, appeared several months later.

A steady stream of live and studio recordings followed as the Dave Brubeck Quartet became the most successful jazz act in the United States, and in 1959, they released one of their most ambitious albums yet, Time Out, a collection of numbers written in unconventional time signatures, such as 5/4 and 9/8. While Columbia were initially reluctant to release an album they felt was too arty for the mainstream, their fears proved groundless Time Out became the first jazz album to sell a million copies, and in 1961, it bounded back into the charts when "Take Five" unexpectedly took off as a single, rising to 25 on the pop charts and five on the adult contemporary survey.

As Brubeck enjoyed increasing commercial success, he began exploring new musical avenues; in 1959, the Brubeck Quartet performed with the New York Philharmonic, performing "Dialogues for Jazz Combo and Orchestra," a piece written by Howard Brubeck, Dave's brother. Dave's own composition "Elementals," written for orchestra and jazz ensemble, debuted in 1962; "Elementals" was later adapted into a dance piece by choreographer Lar Lubovitch. And Brubeck and his wife, Iola, wrote a song cycle called "The Real Ambassadors" that celebrated the history of jazz while decrying racism; it was performed at the 1962 Monterey Jazz Festival, with contributions from Louis Armstrong, Carmen McRae, and Lambert, Hendricks & Ross. The Brubeck Quartet also became international stars, with the State Department arranging for them to perform in locales rarely visited by jazz artists, including Poland, Turkey, India, Afghanistan, Iraq, and Sri Lanka.

In 1967, Brubeck dissolved the Dave Brubeck Quartet and began devoting more time to composing longer works that often focused on his spiritual beliefs, including an oratorio for jazz ensemble and orchestra, "The Light in the Wilderness," which debuted in 1968; "The Gates of Justice," first performed in 1969, which melded passages from the Bible with the writings of Martin Luther King, and "Upon This Rock," which was written for Pope John Paul II's visit to San Francisco in 1987. Brubeck continued to perform in a more traditional jazz format as well, forming a new combo in 1968 featuring Jack Six on bass, Alan Dawson on drums, and Gerry Mulligan on baritone sax. In the '70s, Brubeck also toured with a group featuring his sons Darius (keyboards), Chris (bass and trombone), and Dan (drums); dubbed Two Generations of Brubeck, the ensemble performed a bracing fusion of jazz, rock, and blues. In 1976, Brubeck reassembled the classic lineup of the Dave Brubeck Quartet for a 25th anniversary tour; the reunion was cut short by the death of Paul Desmond in 1977.

From the mid-'80s onward, Brubeck maintained a schedule that would befit a rising star eager to make a name for himself rather than a respected elder statesman. He continued to compose orchestral works as well as fresh jazz pieces, and recorded and performed on a regular basis with a variety of accompanists. Perhaps the most honored jazz artist of his generation, Brubeck received awards from two sitting United States Presidents -- Bill Clinton presented him with the National Medal of the Arts in 1994, and Barack Obama presented him with the Kennedy Center Honors in 2009. Brubeck also received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, a lifetime achievement Grammy from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, the Smithsonian Medal, and honorary degrees from universities in five different countries, among many other awards for his life in music. When he died of heart failure late in 2012, just one day before his 92nd birthday, his life and his work were celebrated around the world.By Mark Deming https://www.allmusic.com/artist/dave-brubeck-mn0000958533/biography

Personnel: Dave Brubeck - Piano; Randy Jones - Drums; Bobby Militello - Sax; Michael Moore - Bass

Tralfamadore Buffalo New Yörk

Jackie Cain & Roy Kral - Echoes

Stleys: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:33
Size: 154,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:29)  1. I Wonder What's the Matter With Me
(3:58)  2. Corcovado
(2:38)  3. Mountain Greenery
(6:15)  4. It's So Peaceful In The Country
(3:58)  5. Walk Pretty
(4:21)  6. Sweet Surrender
(4:23)  7. The Fat Man
(3:39)  8. How Little We Know
(4:51)  9. The Way We Are
(3:43) 10. The Echoes Of My Life
(5:42) 11. Samba Do Avião
(4:51) 12. Winter Comes
(3:17) 13. The Runaround
(6:19) 14. Wheelers And Dealers
(6:01) 15. New York State Of Mind

In the annals of jazz vocal duos, none stands taller than Jackie Cain and her husband, the late Roy Kral. When it came to interpreting American popular songs they were without peer, and like Bobby Short or Matt Dennis, every note, every measure, every phrase was urbane and tasteful.  Echoes, on which Cain and Kral radiate hipness and charm as leaders of a blue-collar quintet, was recorded live in September 1976 at Howard Rumsey's Concerts by the Sea in Redondo Beach, California. The twosome would keep on singing and playing until Kral's death in 2002, always with the same warmth, intelligence and clarity of purpose that had defined their partnership for more than half a century. I don't know if this concert was typical (I suspect that it was), but one of the great pleasures lies in Cain and Kral's wide-ranging choice of material, some of which may be unfamiliar but all of which is splendid. It's pointless to catalog highlights, as almost everything qualifies; on the other hand, one must at least acknowledge the lovely, seldom-heard verse to Alec Wilder's "It's So Peaceful in the Country, Roy's clever salute to filmdom's Sydney Greenstreet, "The Fat Man (lyric by Fran Landesman), Wilder's poignant ballad "Echoes of My Life (lyric by Rogers Brackett) and André Previn/Dory Langdon's sardonic survey of the battle of the sexes, "The Runaround. 

That's not to suggest that anything else is less than stylish, from Robert Ragan's "I Wonder What's the Matter with Me to Billy Joel's "New York State of Mind. Antonio Carlos Jobim is well represented with "Corcovado and "Samba do Aviao, and there are irresistible songs by David Gates ("Sweet Surrender ), Harvie S ("Winter Comes, lyric by Jackie), Dave Frishberg ("Wheelers and Dealers ), Wilder again ("Walk Pretty, lyric by Landesman), Rodgers and Hart ("Mountain Greenery ) and Hoagy Carmichael/Johnny Mercer ("How Little We Know, which isn't the song of that name made popular by Frank Sinatra). Completing the concert are David Gates' "Walk Pretty and Roy's all-scat original, "The Way We Are. The backup trio, brought in from San Francisco, is admirable, and there are a number of bright solos by young vibraphonist Brian Atkinson. Engineer Rod Nicas, who recorded the concert in '76, has superbly mastered and mixed the tapes. For fans of Cain and Kral, Echoes provides a chance to hear them again at their best; for those who haven't had the pleasure, it's an exhilarating preface to their artistry and charisma. ~ Jack Bowers  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/echoes-jackie-cain-jazzed-media-review-by-jack-bowers.php

Personnel: Jackie Cain: vocals;  Roy Kral: piano, vocals;  Brian Atkinson: vibes;  John Mosher: bass;  Gary Nash: drums.

Echoes

Stan Killian - Brooklyn Calling

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:22
Size: 122,7 MB
Art: Front

(8:53) 1. Horizon
(8:57) 2. Holocene
(5:14) 3. Buy Back
(7:40) 4. Shibuya Crossing
(9:01) 5. Concept of Peace
(7:45) 6. Brooklyn Calling
(5:49) 7. Open Doors

Years ago, a group of folks were having dinner at a Westside San Antonio, Texas, restaurant known as Los Barrios. Occasionally, some restaurants there would start a jazz policy. In a place better known for mariachis, this would be a pleasant surprise. One Friday evening, some kid was playing tenor sax, quite a bit of tenor sax, in fact. The guy's name because getting his card seemed like a good idea was Stan Killian, not a familiar one among the roll of local notables, which made his instrumenal facility even more interesting. What was this guy doing playing here?

There have been a number of players who made the seventeen-hundred mile trek from San Antonio to New York, such as Ernie Caceres, for one. Others have, too, but Killian has stuck around, for good reason. While the temptation to label him a Texas Tenor is understandable, that is not really fair to Killian. Apart from being able to blow with a raw edge, he does not really put a listener in mind of Arnett Cobb, Buddy Tate, or David "Fathead" Newman. In the end, he sounds very much himself, modern, less bluesy or r&b than any of the other Texans. On "Horizon," one thinks, a taste of Sonny Rollins, but Killian's bridge is the Brooklyn, not the Williamsburgh.

Killian also plays with his band, not just backed by a rhythm section. "Shibuya Crossing," which he dedicates to his Japanese fans, is an interactive production, not just solo tenor, and pretty as well. We get to hear plenty of both bassist Corcoran Holt and McClenty Hunter, a fine drummer who can definitely play time. "Concept of Peace" is reflective, framed by Paul Bollenback's spare guitar and a fine arco solo on bass which shows how far bowing on jazz bass has come since Paul Chambers.

Bollenback also provides a reflective solo which strikes a delicate feeling. Killian comes roaring back on "Brooklyn Calling," with a certain urgency which adds to the jazz-rock ambience Bollenback provides. "Open Doors," with its shifting rhythmic feel, closes things out. All the compositions are original, by the way. There was, of course, nothing laid back about the Texas Tenors. Maybe, in just that way, Killian does fit right on this very appealing and dynamic recording.
By Richard J Salvucci https://www.allaboutjazz.com/brooklyn-calling-stan-killian-sunnyside-records

Personnel: Stan Killian: saxophone, tenor; Paul Bollenback: guitar; McClenty Hunter: drums; Corcoran Holt: bass.

Brooklyn Calling