Tuesday, October 4, 2022

Karen Marguth - Until

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:59
Size: 122,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:13) 1. Comes love
(5:07) 2. Until
(5:23) 3. Black crow
(5:02) 4. What color is love
(3:42) 5. La ronda
(6:20) 6. Hearts and bones
(4:24) 7. Maureen
(4:08) 8. Close your eyes
(4:58) 9. Twistable turnable man
(5:35) 10. Old friends - Bookends
(4:03) 11. Days of wine and roses

Bay area vocalist and educator Karen Marguth hit the jazz recording scene with 2009's self-titled debut and has released a series of excellent albums. On 2015's Just You, Just Me is Marguth and bassist Kevin Hill build from the promise of previous efforts like her excellent Carrol Coates songbook A Way With Words by taking somewhat of a left turn. Taking cues from the bass and voice master, Sheila Jordan, she tackles classics like "You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To" "I Got it Bad," and "Imagination" perfectly capturing their melodic and rhythmic contours, and emotional essence in the sparsest of settings. She makes her greatest impact on her scat-laden rendition of the title track, a surprisingly blues-y and quite humorous rapid fire "Blues My Naughty Sweetie Taught Me," and fresh songs like her loping version of Phoebe Snow's "Harpo's Blues" and the charming Johnny Mercer tune "Love's Got Me in a Lazy Mood." Other inspired choices include takes on Nellie Lutcher and Rickie Lee Jones. Marguth is quite assured in a variety of modes, and she and Hill have faultless chemistry.

Most recent album: On 2021's Until (OA2), Marguth continues her eclectic approach interpreting Paul Simon's "Hearts and Bones" and "Old Friends/Bookends" with great clarity, exploring Latin rhythms on Maria Gomez's "La Ronda" and Sting's "Until," and swinging with aplomb ("Comes Love," "Close Your Eyes"). She also contributes the original tune "Maureen" and take listeners on a unique journey on Andrew Bird and Shel Silverstein's "Twistable Turnable Man.
"https://originarts.com/oa2/reviews/review.php?ReviewID=1091

Personnel: Karen Marguth: Vocal; David Aus: piano; Richard Giddens: bass; Pat Olvera: bass; Dan Feiszli: bass; Brian Hamada: drums; Nathan Guzman: drums; Gilbert Castellanos: trumpet; Mike Taylor: guitar; Eva Scow: mandolin; George Ramirez: percussion; Omar Ledezma, Jr.: percussion and vocals; John R. Burr: piano; Matt Finders: bass; Kelly Zaban Fasman: drums; Erik Jekabson: trumpet.

Until

Alvin 'Red' Tyler - Graciously

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:09
Size: 103.4 MB
Styles: New Orleans R&B, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1987/2011
Art: Front

[4:49] 1. Count 'em
[5:23] 2. Cutie Pie
[6:57] 3. Graciously
[5:11] 4. Here's That Rainy Day
[4:30] 5. If My Shoes Hold Out
[4:50] 6. Greystoke
[5:18] 7. Like So Many Others
[8:07] 8. Dreamsville

This is the second of two late-'80s straight jazz dates by Alvin "Red" Tyler, better known for his years toiling in the city's R&B studios. Tyler savored the opportunity to do more than play short bursts, demonstrating his expansive skills on the disc's eight cuts. While the soulfulness remained in his tone, Tyler proved he could handle hard bop chord changes, build and complete ideas, and head a jazz combo. The cuts "Dreamsville," "Here's That Rainy Day," and "Like So Many Others" emphasize the jazz connection, but the R&B and blues base comes through on "Cutie Pie" and "Count 'Em." This is nicely played, at times above-average, jazz from a celebrated veteran getting to show another side of his musical personality. ~Ron Wynn

Graciously

Neil Swainson - Fire in the West

Styles: Contemporary Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:47
Size: 137,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:46) 1. Fire in the West
(5:09) 2. Fool's Gold
(7:41) 3. Cascades
(7:26) 4. Standing Back
(5:31) 5. Fell Among Thieves
(5:06) 6. Kyushu
(7:53) 7. Late Afternoon
(6:04) 8. Near North
(4:51) 9. Gone Away
(4:18) 10. Silver Mine

It hardly seems possible, but it took thirty-five years for Canadian bassist extraordinaire Neil Swainson to lead a sparkling quintet in this new recording of Swainson original compositions entitled Fire In The West. His prior recording from 1987 was called 49th Parallel and received little attention at the time. However it was re-released as an LP in 2020 by Reel to Real Records and it generated some welcomed critical reviews. Accompanying Swainson in this outing was a blue-chip rhythm section of pianist Renee Rosnes and drummer Lewis Nash, with a first rate front line of trumpeter Brad Turner and tenor saxophonist Kelly Jefferson.

The session opens with the title track "Fire In The West" which was inspired by a flight over the forest fires which were raging in the Okanagan Valley of British Columbia at the time. This up tempo tune begins with some Turner and Jefferson unison playing which states the theme, before each of the principals takes a solo turn, working out their ideas. All of this was nicely done, while Swainson's sturdy hand maintained the composition's rhythmic pulse. As will be evident throughout the album, Swainson was a fan of the front line pairings that predominated in the '50s, with the bands of Miles Davis, {Art Blakey}} and {Horace Silver}} so, accordingly, his compositional structures reflect this dynamic.

Some of the charts Swainson created have implied dedications to a variety of influences and influencers. "Fell Among Thieves," which could be classified as a lament, is carried throughout by Jefferson's compelling mournful tenor saxophone with Rosnes providing support in a svelte linear style. The title is meant to convey how good people often fall into difficult company. "Kyushu" is a musical reflection on time the composer spent on the Japanese island of the title. Laid out in a relaxing swinging tempo, the band delivers a straight ahead rhythmic feel which supports the improvisations offered by Turner, Jefferson and Rosnes. Finally, in an acknowledgement to Horace Silver, one of his musical influences, Swainson penned "Silver Mine." The bop-fashioned line charges out of the gate in a full-fisted attack. The solos taken by Turner and Jefferson are down the center and Rosnes delivers a single note excursion which is filled with Silver nuggets. In summation, a musical excursion well worth the wait.By Pierre Giroux https://www.allaboutjazz.com/fire-in-the-west-neil-swainson-neil-swainson-cellar-records

Personnel: Neil Swainson: bass, acoustic; Renee Rosnes: piano; Lewis Nash: drums; Brad Turner: trumpet; Kelly Jefferson: saxophone, tenor.

Fire in the West

Monday, October 3, 2022

David Flanagan - Eleventh Hour

Styles: Jazz, Bop
Year: 2021
File: MP3@128K/s
Time: 46:34
Size: 43,6 MB
Art: Front

(1:27) 1. The Old Man and the Hill
(1:14) 2. Eleventh Reflection
(6:35) 3. Bring Deeps
(1:55) 4. Refraction i
(6:08) 5. Kirk on the Bay
(4:31) 6. Refraction ii
(6:24) 7. Dog Days
(5:24) 8. Bloodline
(4:14) 9. Horizon Vision
(8:36) 10. The Castle on the Waves

David Flanagan is a bassist, composer and improviser from the Orkney Islands and is currently based in Glasgow.

As a band leader, David thrives on pushing the boundaries of contemporary jazz performance and composition, whether it be through his large ensemble writing, incorporating free improvisation into a big band, utilising electronics to create sonic soundscapes or his exhilarating quartet music.

His most recent works - The Unseen Genisis & Vista Impacts - written for trio and quartet respectively, pushes Flanagan’s music into complex structural and harmonic landscapes while still achieving an uplifting approach to contemporary jazz.

David’s album - Eleventh Hour - draws inspiration from the landscape of the Orkney Islands as well as contemporary jazz composers and performers such as Henry Threadgill, Matt Mitchell, Steve Lehman and Tim Berne. https://davidflanaganmusic.com/biography

Eleventh Hour

John Allred, Jeff Barnhart, Danny Coots - The ABCs Of Jazz

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:07
Size: 155.9 MB
Styles: Swing
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[4:36] 1. Pick Yourself Up
[6:41] 2. My One & Only Love
[3:28] 3. All Through The Night
[5:03] 4. I Believe In Miracles
[3:49] 5. Anita
[5:11] 6. Some Of These Days
[8:18] 7. First Song
[4:05] 8. Just One Of Those Things
[5:33] 9. Medley Puttin' On The Ritz Bernie's Tune
[3:57] 10. In The Still Of The Night
[7:13] 11. Medley Jitterbug Waltz Valse Hot
[3:27] 12. You Must Be Losin' Your Mind
[3:17] 13. There's A Gal In My Life
[3:23] 14. High Society

John Allred - trombone; Jeff Barnhart - piano; Danny Coots - drums; Dave Stones - bass.

Jeff Barnhart, one of the top stride pianists on the scene today, and the versatile and very fluent trombonist John Allred, join with drummer Danny Coots and bassist Dave Stone in a wide-ranging repertoire, which includes three obscure Fats Waller tunes, an unlikely medley, a long-forgotten Hoagy Carmichael song, numbers by Sonny Rollins and Charlie Haden, and a pair of dixieland warhorses in presenting an unusually eclectic program of The ABC’s Of Jazz.

The ABCs Of Jazz

Conrad Herwig - The Latin Side of Mingus

Styles: Trombone Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:40
Size: 130,3 MB
Art: Front

(7:38) 1. Gunslinging Bird
(6:58) 2. Boogie Stop Shuffle
(5:50) 3. Don't Let It Happen Here
(8:46) 4. Goodbye Pork Pie Hat
(5:03) 5. Hora Decubitus
(7:16) 6. Duke Ellington's Sound of Love
(6:16) 7. All the Things You Could Be By Now If Sigmund Freud's Wife Was Your Mother
(8:50) 8. Better Get Hit in Your Soul

After receiving four Grammy nominations for his highly successful series of recordings that "latinize" the music of John Coltrane, Miles Davis, Joe Henderson, Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock and Horace Silver, Conrad Herwig turns his attention to the legendary Charles Mingus. An imposing figure in jazz, Mingus was known for being complicated, volatile and a touched-by-genius innovator. As an homage to this influential artist, Conrad Herwig provides a fiery excursion into the world of Afro-Caribbean rhythms skillfully applied to Mingus' wildly imaginative compositions.

Joining Herwig is special guest trumpeter Randy Brecker together with long-time "Latin Side" band colleagues pianist Bill O'Connell, reedman Craig Handy and the trumpet/flugelhorn of Alex Sipiagin with the rhythm section of Luques Curtis, Robby Ameen and Camilo Molina. Collectively they bring a vibrant spirit and authority to this repertoire which is unique among today's salsa ensembles. Featured tunes run the gamut from the thoughtful and intimate "Duke Ellington's Sound of Love" to the unbridled joy of "Boogie Stop Shuffle" with the somewhat lop-sided introduction to the opening track, "Gunslinging Bird," being the perfect harbinger of things to come. This latest installment in Conrad Herwig's "Latin Side" series pays tribute to the work of Charles Mingus with progressive arrangements, propulsive rhythms, exciting solos and the consummate musicianship of the leader and his bandmates. Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Latin-Side-Mingus-Conrad-Herwig/dp/B0BB8HHK72

Personnel: Conrad Herwig - Trombone; Randy Brecker - Trumpet; Alex Sipiagin - Trumpet; Craig Handy - Saxophone; Bill O'Connell - Piano; Luques Curtis - Bass; Robby Ameen - Drums; Camilo Molina - Percussion

The Latin Side of Mingus

Sunday, October 2, 2022

Sasha Dobson - Girl talk

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:15
Size: 107,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:27) 1. Better days
(5:27) 2. Sweet and lovely
(4:22) 3. Girl talk
(3:35) 4. Perhaps perhaps perhaps
(4:19) 5. You're the death of me
(4:08) 6. The great city
(5:04) 7. Softly as in a morning sunrise
(6:18) 8. Time on my hands
(4:48) 9. Autumn nocturne
(4:41) 10. The boots are made for walking

Sasha Dobson is an American jazz singer from Santa Cruz, California, now based in New York City. Dobson comes from a musical family. Her father, Smith Dobson was a pianist who recorded with Mark Murphy and played with Bobby Hutcherson and her mother Gail is also a singer, and her brother Smith is a tenor saxophonist, drummer, and vibraphonist. The family performed at the Monterey Jazz Festival in 1991 when Dobson was twelve. Her debut album, Modern Romance, was released in August 2006 by Jesse Harris's Secret Sun Recordings label. Dobson participated in the Norah Jones The Fall tour, providing guitar, percussion, and vocal harmonies and she was the opening act on the tour. Her album Aquarius was released in 2013 and another Into The Trees was released in 2014. In 2020, she released an EP https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/sasha-dobson

Personnel: Sasha Dobson (vocals); Peter Bernstein (guitar); Ian Hendrickson-Smith (alto sax); Steven Bernstein (trumpet, flugelhorn, slide trumpet); Smith Dobson (vibes); Mauro Refosco (perc.); Neal Miner (bass); Dred Scott (drums) + Kenny Wollesen (drums - 2 tks); Norah Jones (backing vocal on Girl Talk).

Girl talk

Allison Miller & Jane Ira Bloom - Tues Days

Styles: Bop, Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:48
Size: 133,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:43) 1. Tues Days
(5:36) 2. Technicolor
(5:26) 3. Rowing In The Dark
(3:16) 4. This Is It
(2:16) 5. Five Bells
(8:30) 6. The Wild Frontier
(5:59) 7. Light Years Away
(4:16) 8. A's & J's Test Kitchen
(6:13) 9. Crayola
(4:19) 10. On Seeing JP
(6:08) 11. Walk Alone

The story goes that, during spring 2021, on five consecutive Tuesdays in March and April, soprano saxophonist Jane Ira Bloom and drummer Allison Miller recorded a handful of improvised sax and drum duets just to see what might happen and evolve. Well, a lot does because with Tues Days both Miller and Bloom cut their inner hippie loose to gambol out in the fields with flowers in their hair and their skirts all a-billow.

It is not all fun and games, as any ageing hippie learns, but still you have gotta get out in the sunshine, air it out and bond; close the chasm that technology, in equal terms ,either helps us cross or broadens, and jam merrily on. Even if it is remotely, you are never alone.

So we have the title track, a true reversal of fortune given the last two years of our human story, opening a dance fest of ideas. "Technicolor" vaunts and veers into the thoughtful and sparing "Rowing in the Dark." Pensive yet hopeful, the duo share epiphanies that last long after something proves otherwise.

"This Is It" sets the foot tapping once again while "The Wild Frontier" beckons in its own obstinate, oblique way. Bloom screams, Miller skitters and somehow everything is right with world. "Light Years Away" is that quieter moment everyone needs. "A's and J's Test Kitchen" is the duo's (and listeners') just reward for the unbridled, pure human engagement that Tues Days swears by. By Mike Jurkovic https://www.allaboutjazz.com/tues-days-jane-ira-bloom-outline-supaphine

Personnel: Allison Miller: drums; Jane Ira Bloom: saxophone, soprano.

Tues Days

Various - Capitol Sings Harry Warren

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:33
Size: 127.2 MB
Styles: Easy Listening, Vocal
Year: 1995
Art: Front

[2:49] 1. Nat King Cole - I Found A Million Dollar Baby (In A Five And Ten Cent Store)
[2:36] 2. Ray Anthony & His Orchestra - Chattanooga Choo Choo
[2:53] 3. Bobby Darin - You'll Never Know
[2:22] 4. Dakota Staton - September In The Rain
[2:39] 5. Helen Forrest - I Had The Craziest Dream
[3:07] 6. The Four Freshmen - Lulu's Back In Town
[3:09] 7. Ethel Ennis - Serenade In Blue
[2:59] 8. Chet Baker - There Will Never Be Another You
[2:12] 9. Nancy Wilson - The More I See You
[3:10] 10. Nat King Cole Trio - I'll String Along With You
[3:02] 11. Al Belletto - Jeepers Creepers
[2:56] 12. Ann Richards - Lullaby Of Broadway
[3:01] 13. Time-Life Orchestra - At Last
[2:09] 14. June Christy - I Know Why (And So Do You)
[1:32] 15. Count Basie - With Plenty Of Money And You
[3:35] 16. Dinah Shore - I Only Have Eyes For You
[2:26] 17. The Four Freshmen - On The Atchison, Topeka & The Santa Fe
[2:41] 18. Peggy Lee - You're Getting To Be A Habit With Me
[3:00] 19. Nat King Cole - An Affair To Remember
[3:06] 20. Dean Martin - That's Amore

If this era and genre of music is your taste then you will love this collection. The various singers add a wonderful blend of variety and the orchestrations are time capsules of a day long gone by. (Sad). But this music will bring you back and make you appreciate popular music again. ~Aurexia

Capitol Sings Harry Warren

Kevin Eubanks, Orrin Evans - EEE (Eubanks-Evans-Experience)

Styles: Piano And Guitar Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:51
Size: 110,2 MB
Art: Front

( 6:53) 1. Novice Bounce
( 4:41) 2. Dreams Of Loving You
( 5:27) 3. I Don't Know
( 3:35) 4. And...They Ran Out of Bisquits!
( 5:18) 5. Dawn Marie
(13:02) 6. Variations on The Battle (Live)
( 8:51) 7. Variations on Adoration (Live)

Guitarist Kevin Eubanks and pianist Orrin Evans joined forces for a sympathetic duo offer designated as EEE - Eubanks-Evans Experience. These two musicians with strong ties to Philadelphia spent years honing their crafts, revealing a proclivity to expand horizons beyond pure jazz. Besides leaders in their own right, the twosome contributed as sidemen on albums of each other (Evans’ #knowingishalfthebattle; Eubanks’ East West Time Line). The guitarist is commonly associated with the bassist Dave Holland and the singer Diane Reeves, while the pianist was a member of the Ralph Peterson Quintet and groups led by trumpeter Sean Jones. He also replaced Ethan Iverson in the newfangled trio The Bad Plus.

Flowing with a relaxed vibe, “Novice Bounce” opens the record with smooth touches on jazz-funk and bossa. Written by Eubanks, this opening number collected from his first record, Guitarist (Discovery, 1982), finds him tackling it with half the tempo and electric guitar instead of the acoustic. If the ballads “Dreams of Lovin’ You” (composed by Tom Browne) and “Dawn Marie” (a tribute from Evans to his wife) - breathe and never rush, then other pieces make our heartbeat increase during their musical route by going in different directions.

The improvised “I Don’t Know” seems to squeeze two different worlds into the same sonic bubble. The artists treat their instruments with a newly discovered freedom, and the initial sense of bluesy dispersion is eased when Eubanks starts to work on the lower register, fulfilling bass duties. There are a couple more spontaneous numbers, but those don’t reach the heights of the two last tracks, both recorded live at Chris’ Jazz Cafe in Philadelphia. They are variations of Evans’ “Half the Battle” and Eubanks’ “Adoration”. The former is transformed into a mercurial fusion work by the addition of often-bluesy rock licks, a spiritual harmonic progression evocative of Pharaoh Sanders, and a groovy funk-rock strut that contracts and expands with multiple levels of intensity. The latter piece, instead, arrives in triple time, spreading out a beautiful energy.https://jazztrail.net/blog/eee-eubanks-evans-experience-album-review

Personnel: Kevin Eubanks: guitar; Orrin Evans: piano.

EEE (Eubanks-Evans-Experience)

Saturday, October 1, 2022

Kate McGarry + Keith Ganz Ensemble - What to Wear in the Dark

Styles: Vocal and Guitar Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:48
Size: 145,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:08) 1. Dancing in the Dark
(7:49) 2. Barrytown
(7:31) 3. Both Sides Now
(5:52) 4. God Moves on the City
(6:48) 5. The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feeling Groovy)
(4:15) 6. Desperado
(5:45) 7. On the Road to Find Out
(7:26) 8. Anthem
(4:47) 9. Here Comes the Sun
(6:23) 10. It Happens All the Time in Heaven

Let us start with a nod to Steely Dan, the rock/jazz group headed up by Walter Becker and Donald Fagen, a pair of tunesmiths who hit a career zenith in the early 1970s with albums like Can't Buy A Thrill (1972), Countdown To Ecstasy (1973), Pretzel Logic (1974) and Aja (1974), all on ABC Records. The group drew in top jazz artists to help craft their albums saxophonists Wayne Shorter and Tom Scott, guitarists Larry Carlton and Lee Ritenour, drummers Steve Gadd and Rick Marotta shaping high-polish productions featuring catchy melodies and cerebral lyrics to form up their pop/rock artistry.

Taking a tangent off from this digression we run into vocalist Kate McGarry's What To Wear In the Dark. Comparisons to Steely Dan? Beautiful production, meticulous arrangements and a bunch of top notch jazz players Gary Versace on keyboards, Ron Miles on cornet, Clarence Penn on drums, Keith Ganz of the Keith Ganz Ensemble on guitars creating the backdrops for McGarry's pure-toned everywoman deliveries on tunes mostly familiar, shaped into often unconventional readings of (again, mostly) pop/rock tunes of the 1960s and 1970s.

McGarry offers up her distinctive take on Steely Dan's "Barrytown," Paul Simon's "The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin' Groovy)," The Eagles' "Desperado" and George Harrison's "Here Comes the Sun." She picks her composers well, opening with the one Great American Songbook tune of the set, "Dancing in The Dark," featuring a spare arrangement with Gary Versace's sighing accordion playing prominently in the mix.

McGarry has the rare ability to deliver a tune with remarkable immediacy like she is singing it just for you. She sings "Barrytown" with a bounce in her step, with a hopeful self assurance, a clear-eyed aplomb. On Joni Mitchell's "Both Sides Now" McGarry's delivery is angelic, the harp (actually Keith Ganz' acoustic guitar) in a perfect, heavenly simpatico with the singer's inward-looking vocal.

Then there is "Life, I love you," a line from Paul Simon's "The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin' Groovy)." It is one of Simon's happiest tunes. McGarry opens with a minute long, rapid fire rant (penned by pianist Hal Galper) about the travails of the working jazz artist, backed by Ron Miles' scratchy cornet complaint, before shifting into the simple melody in which she sings that "Life, I love you," line, drawing, apparently, on the balm the tune served up for her during difficult times.

The set wraps up with "It Happens All The Time In Heaven," penned in part by McGarry, from "The Subject Tonight Is Love" by poet Daniel Ladinsky. Again, she sings just for you, with a beautifully spare and crisp arrangement featuring Versace on organ and Ganz on acoustic guitar, closing up a masterfully-produced, highlight-filled recording. By Dan McClenaghan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/what-to-wear-in-the-dark-kate-mcgarry-keith-ganz-ensemble-resilience-music-alliance

Personnel: Keith Ganz: guitar; Kate McGarry: voice / vocals; Ron Miles: cornet; Gary Versace: piano; Obed Calvaire: drums; Sean Smith: bass, acoustic; Clarence Penn: drums; Becca Stevens: voice / vocals; Erin Bentlage: voice / vocals; Michelle Willis: voice / vocals; Christian Euman: drums; James Shipp: percussion.

What to Wear in the Dark

Arturo O'Farrill - Dreaming in Lions

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:05
Size: 149,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:43) 1. Del Mar
(5:06) 2. Intruso
(3:53) 3. Beauty Cocoon
(5:21) 4. Ensayo Silencio
(7:52) 5. La Llorona
(6:30) 6. Dreaming in Lions
(4:09) 7. Scalular
(4:31) 8. How I Love
(4:38) 9. The Deep
(2:31) 10. War Bird Man
(5:03) 11. Struggles and Strugglets
(2:37) 12. I Wish We Was
(3:35) 13. Blood in the Water
(3:28) 14. Dreams So Gold

Music for dance comes in a variety of forms. At one end of the spectrum are abstract soundscapes composed without reference to the choreography with which they share the stage; an example being John Cage's work with the choreographer Merce Cunningham. At the other end of the spectrum is music written in close collaboration with the choreographer; an example being Igor Stravinsky's work for Sergei Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, which reached its peak in 1910 with The Firebird, jointly realized by Stravinsky and the choreographer Michel Fokine (a comparable collaborative triumph is Leonard Bernstein and choreographer Jerome Robbins' 1957 Broadway musical West Side Story).

Composer and bandleader Arturo O'Farrill's Dreaming In Lions was written in collaboration with Osnel Delgado, the choreographer, principal dancer and artistic director of Cuba's Malpaso Dance Company, a relatively young company specializing in high energy, non-folkloric modern dance. The album, which is O'Farrill's Blue Note debut, includes two of the four suites O'Farrill has composed for Malpaso: the nine-part "Dreaming In Lions," which takes its name from an image in Ernest Hemingway's "The Old Man And The Sea," and the five-part "Despidida," a word which in Cuba refers to partings and farewells, usually sorrowful ones.

The band is O'Farrill's ten-piece Afro-Latin Jazz Ensemble, a scaled-down edition of his Afro-Latin Jazz Orchestra, which is replaced on the final section of "Dreaming In Lions" by classical pianist Alison Deane, O'Farrill's partner. O'Farrill learnt his art at the feet of his father, Chico O'Farrill, and the tradition continues here with the presence in the band of Arturo's sons, trumpeter Adam O'Farrill and drummer Zack O'Farrill.

Some choreographers are wary of music so worthy of attention in its own right that it has the potential to upstage the dancers' steps. Fokine and Robbins did not have such concerns with Stravinsky and Bernstein, and neither, it appears, did Delgado with O'Farrill, whose scores are not shy of full-on fireworks. Dreaming In Lions is assured in composition and immaculate in execution but, that said, it is at times borderline generic and at those moments probably works better when heard in a theatre supporting the choreography; which is, after all, the purpose for which it was written.By Chris May https://www.allaboutjazz.com/dreaming-in-lions-arturo-ofarrill-and-the-afro-latin-jazz-ensemble-blue-note-records

Personnel: Arturo O'Farrill: piano; Adam O'Farrill: trumpet; Rafi Malkiel: trombone; Alejandro Aviles: saxophone, alto; Travis Reuter: guitar; Rodriguez Platiau: bass; Zack O'Farrill: drums; Vince Cherico: drums; Carlos Maldonado: percussion; Victor Pablo Garcia Gaetan: percussion; Alison Deane: piano.

Dreaming in Lions

Jimmie Lunceford - The Complete Decca Sessions Disc 4, Disc 5, Disc 6, Disc 7

Album: The Complete Decca Sessions Disc 4
Styles: Big Band, Swing
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:15
Size: 157,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:41) 1. He Ain't Got Rhythm
(2:33) 2. Linger Awhile
(2:55) 3. Honest and Truly
(3:02) 4. Slumming on Park Avenue
(3:10) 5. Coquette
(2:56) 6. The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down
(3:12) 7. Raggin' the Scale
(3:12) 8. Hell's Bells
(2:43) 9. For Dancers Only
(3:01) 10. Posin'
(2:47) 11. The First Time I Saw You
(3:12) 12. Honey, Keep Your Mind on Me
(2:50) 13. Put On Your Old Grey Bonnet
(2:41) 14. Pigeon Walk
(2:46) 15. Like a Ship at Sea
(2:57) 16. Teasin' Tessie Brown
(3:12) 17. Annie Laurie
(3:12) 18. 'Frisco Fog
(3:01) 19. Honest and Truly
(3:14) 20. Coquette
(2:50) 21. The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down
(3:10) 22. Raggin' the Scale
(2:46) 23. Pigeon Walk

Album: The Complete Decca Sessions Disc 5
Time: 60:40
Size: 139,9 MB

(3:06) 1. Margie
(3:05) 2. The Love Nest
(2:52) 3. I'm Laughing Up My Sleeve
(3:07) 4. My Melancholy Baby
(2:50) 5. Sweet Sue, Just You
(3:17) 6. By The River Sainte Marie
(2:58) 7. Blue Prelude
(3:10) 8. Twenty-Four Robbers
(2:55) 9. I Had A Premonition
(2:47) 10. Battle Axe
(3:16) 11. Peace And Love For All
(2:56) 12. Chocolate
(3:13) 13. I'm Walking Through Heaven With You
(2:44) 14. You're Always In My Dreams
(3:05) 15. Flamingo
(3:03) 16. Siesta At The Fiesta
(3:08) 17. Gone
(2:55) 18. Hi Spook
(3:13) 19. Yard Dog Mazurka
(2:51) 20. Impromptu

The Complete Decca Sessions Disc 4, Disc 5

Album: The Complete Decca Sessions Disc 6
Time: 65:18
Size: 150,6 MB

(2:38) 1. Blues In The Night (Part 1)
(2:48) 2. Blues In The Night (Part 2)
(3:20) 3. I'm Losing My Mind
(2:41) 4. Life Is Fine
(3:06) 5. It Had To Be You
(3:09) 6. I'm Gonna Move To The Outskirts Of Town (Part 1)
(2:56) 7. I'm Gonna Move To The Outskirts Of Town (Part 2)
(2:37) 8. Strictly Instrumental
(3:01) 9. Knock Me A Kiss
(2:20) 10. Keep Smilin' Keep Laughin'
(3:09) 11. I Dream A Lot About You
(3:00) 12. Easy Street
(3:05) 13. Back Door Stuff (Part 1)
(2:43) 14. Back Door Stuff (Part 2)
(2:21) 15. The Goon Came On
(3:04) 16. Just Once Too Often
(2:52) 17. Jeep Rhythm
(2:51) 18. Chairmaine
(2:44) 19. Solitude
(2:30) 20. Down By The Old Mill Stream
(2:52) 21. Like A Ship At Sea
(2:29) 22. For Dancers Only
(2:51) 23. Jeep Rhythm (Alt Tk-1)

Album: The Complete Decca Sessions Disc 7
Time: 52:18
Size: 120,7 MB

(2:19) 1. The Chicks That I Pick Are Slender, Tender and Tall
(2:59) 2. By the River Sainte Marie
(2:03) 3. Pretty Eyes
(2:43) 4. Margie
(3:03) 5. Sleepy Time Gal
(2:16) 6. My Melancholy Baby
(2:55) 7. I'm Gonna See my Baby
(2:50) 8. That Someone Must Be You
(2:38) 9. Oh Gee, Oh Gosh, Oh Pshaw
(3:03) 10. I'm in a Jam (with Baby)
(2:50) 11. What a Difference a Day Made
(2:55) 12. I Passed Through Memphis Last Night
(2:25) 13. Buzz-Buzz-Buzz
(3:01) 14. This is my Confession (to You)
(2:51) 15. I Need a Lift
(3:02) 16. Baby Are You Kiddin'
(2:32) 17. Where's the Melody
(2:45) 18. The Honeydripper
(2:57) 19. I've Got Those Carolina Blues

The Complete Decca Sessions Disc 6, Disc 7

The Manhattan Transfer - Fifty

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:47
Size: 114,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:27) 1. Agua
(3:47) 2. The Man I Love
(5:24) 3. Paradise Within
(4:40) 4. On A Little Street In Singapore
(4:27) 5. The Man Who Sailed Around His Soul
(6:19) 6. Twilight Zone / Twilight Tone
(4:33) 7. Blues For Harry Bosch
(3:35) 8. Chanson D'Amour
(4:56) 9. What Goes Around, Comes Around
(5:32) 10. God Only Knows

GRAMMY Award-winning vocal group The Manhattan Transfer celebrate their 50th-anniversary with the new studio album, Fifty. Recorded with Germany's WDR Funkhausorchester, it contains arrangements of some of their biggest hits, combining the orchestral sounds of WDR with their trademark harmonies.
Included are new versions of "Chanson D'Amour," and "The Man Who Sailed Around His Soul," plus arrangements of Artie Shaw's timeless "The Man I Love," and The Beach Boys' classic "God Only Knows." https://www.amazon.com/Fifty-Manhattan-Transfer-WDR-Funkhausorchester/dp/B0B7NMVW19

Fifty

Friday, September 30, 2022

Teresa Luján - Teresa Luján sings Anita O'Day

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:09
Size: 114,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:52) 1. Fine and dandy
(4:16) 2. Honeysuckle rose
(5:45) 3. A nightingale sang in Berkeley square
(3:15) 4. Sing, sing, sing
(2:46) 5. Pick yourself up
(5:36) 6. Somebody's crying
(3:43) 7. Let's face the music and dance
(3:19) 8. Four brothers
(2:26) 9. Drum boogie
(4:04) 10. Tenderly
(3:27) 11. Whisper not
(4:34) 12. Tea for two

"I saw Anita O'Day live in 1987, at Teatro Principal in Valencia. Her and clarinetist Buddy DeFranco were the guest artists in tour with Woody Herman’s Orchestra, which was then led by Frank Tiberi. I barely knewher then; she looked like a nice old grandma, but I wasn’t impressed. Almost 70 then, her best days were behind her. I discovered her little by little, thanks to the wonderful albums that I slowly managed to get my hands on, and to films like Jazz on a Summer’s Day (1960), where a hat with feathers, a pair of white gloves and a black cocktail dress became the iconic get-up that today we associated with her.

In any case, for those of us without ties to her and her times, her independent character, her defiance of apartheid, her addiction problems and her flashes of genius on stage feel very far away. For us, Anita O'Day means mainly a vocal style. A style that share with Billie Holiday the limitations of their tone and timbre as well as the creative solutions to overcome them , with Ella Fitzgerald the passion of rhythm, and with Mel Tormé the overwhelming imagination necessary to recreate well-known songs and turn theminto one surprise after another.

Teresa Luján is also an independent soul among us. A singer who spends her time teaching and investigating she is one of the foremost experts in Tete Montoliu when she decides to face an audience, it is always after careful consideration of the project. She is not particularly keen on experimenting, butwhen she looks back in search of inspiration, there isn’t a hint of nostalgia in her eye. Her interest in Henry Mancini or the Boswell sisters is focused on the more timeless aspects of their work. Now, with her tribute to Anita O'Day she wants to highlight just how modern she was.

This CD also represents a step forward in Teresa Lujan’s career as a singer. For the first time she is confronting an artistwith a similar stylistic frame, range and color to her own. Although Teresa’s voice has a deeper timbre and a more pronounced vibrato, she manages to sidestep the main danger in this endeavor, which was imitation. And she does so using her strongest suit, which she also shares with her admired O’Day: the more jazz-oriented aspects of her craft. And being backed by a trio and an excellent trio at that,withMiano, Ferrer and Pérez, experts inmaking the music walk a fresh, swinging approach is guaranteed. When all is said and done, a feeling of freedom pervades their music, and the end result belongs to all of them, not taxes, no tolls, no buts.

The choice of songs hearkens back to Anita O'Day, but with subtle innovations with respect to her better-known versions. The first three tracks were already on the LP 'Anita' (1956), with orchestrations by Buddy Bregman and some tunes for small group. Teresa Luján’s «Fine and Dandy» still uses the original arrangement, but focusing more on the pure vocal sensuality of the first bars, to later go into a beautiful scat that remindsme of Chet Baker. From the initial walkin’ bass, «Honeysuckle Rose» also sounds like the 1956 arrangement, but Teresa adds a vocal solo, followed by two more by Richi Ferrer and Fabio Miano. «A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square» is the first ballad,which lets Teresa showmore of her personality, her range of colors and phrasing, as she let’s herself be dragged by the beautiful melody, never straying too far from the intimacy that O'Day imparted to her own version.

«Sing, sing, sing», uno of Benny Goodman’s hits,was recreated by O'Day in 'Anita O'Day Sings the Winners' her own homage album, backed by the orchestra of Russ Garcia, and foregoing the famous quote from«Christopher Columbus». Luján’s version iswell adapted to the trio format; it is somewhat contained, but very dynamic. «Pick Yourself Up» is the Jerome Kern original that gave title to an O'Day LP also with Bergman alternating with a small group. The original version sounds almost like a recital, fast and rhythmic which Luján follows closely and makes her own. In less than three minutes there’s time even for a beautiful solo by Fabio, whose good taste is unfailing.

The little known «Somebody’s Crying» comes from a 1952 recording with the orchestra of Larry Russell, a Hollywood arranger and co-writer of the tune. Teresa Luján was drawn to its combination of blues and ballad, which she approaches with a display of vocal colors and her unique brand of sensual accent. Miano’s piano goes on a decidedly blues trip. Irving Berlin’s «Let’s Face the Music and Dance» follows, a song first brought to life by Fred Astaire and which usually feels slow. Anita O'Day’s rendition has a Latin beat with a hard bop tinge. The backing trio feels comfortablewith these stylistic licenses, embracing themwith contagious enthusiasm.

With Jimmy Giuffre’s «Four Brothers» we go back to 'Anita O'Day Sings The Winners.' Teresa Lujan’s rendition includes solos by herself, piano and double bass; let’smake a note for curious collectors, that Teresa quotes «Ain’t She Sweet», from 1927, recorded by The Beatles in 1961 (and by no other than Marujita Díaz in 1959). In the return, she recovers the lyrics written by the great Jon Hendricks for Manhattan Transfer. It is a version full of bebop spunk. Then comes «Drum Boogie», one of Gene Krupa’s greatest hits, with an arrangement that has somemore rhythmic freedom, some harmonic surprises and a shared spotlight.

The next ballad on the CD is «Tenderly», mainly associated to Sarah Vaughan, but which O'Day included in her album 'Anita Sings the Most' A year earlier it had been recorded by Billie Holiday, so it won’t be for lack of heavy-weight referents... Although she playfully recognizes O'Day’s influence, Teresa delivers a personal rendition in a song where she can display her musicality and attention to the lyrics. The soloist this time is Richi Ferrer, with a classical style and flavor. As for «Whisper Not», by Benny Golson, is is one of the melodies most heavily linked to the hard bop era. O'Day and Mel Tormé were the first well-known singers to record Leonard Feather’s lyrics. She did so in 'Anita O'Day and The Three Sounds' (1962). Fabio follows that version closely at first, but then recovers the usual solo structure that O'Day had changed in her version.

«Tea for Two» closes the album, al old-timey standardwhere Anita O'Day let loose all her imagination and sense of humor. Although she recorded it with Krupa, the version she references is the one from 'Anita O'Day at Mister Kelly’s' (1958). Teresa bases her rendition on it, respecting almost every detail of the fast-paced original, although Fabio adds a long intro in ballad time. O'Day's fours exchange with her faithful drummer John Poole is also kept here, giving Julio Pérez a chance to use his winged brushes.

As the last tune ends, I wonder what I would think today of that 1987 concert with Anita O'Day. I would probably enjoy it more, for one. I also realize I have really enjoyed this album with Teresa, Fabio, Richi and Julio. It’s is a homage made for an audience, with sincere admiration and no trace of arrogance or pompousness. With themain tool required when embarking in projects such as this: talent."By Jorge Garcia https://www.freshsoundrecords.com/teresa-lujan-albums/53998-sings-anita-o-day.html

Personnel: Teresa Luján (vocals), Fabio Miano (piano), Richi Ferrer (bass), Julio Pérez (drums).

Teresa Luján sings Anita O'Day

Jimmie Lunceford - The Complete Decca Sessions Disc 1, Disc 2, Disc 3

Album: The Complete Decca Sessions Disc 1
Styles: Big Band, Swing
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:04
Size: 163,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:12) 1. Sophisticated Lady
(2:56) 2. Mood Indigo
(3:04) 3. Rose Room
(2:49) 4. Black And Tan Fantasie
(2:17) 5. Stratosphere
(3:07) 6. Nana
(2:45) 7. Miss Ottis Regrets (She's Unable To Lunch Today)
(3:10) 8. Unsophisticated Sue
(3:07) 9. Star Dust
(3:11) 10. Dream Of You
(3:09) 11. Stomp It Off
(3:11) 12. Call It Anything
(3:16) 13. Because You're You
(3:05) 14. Chillun, Get Up!
(3:07) 15. Solitude
(3:16) 16. Rain
(3:26) 17. Since My Best Gal Turned
(3:04) 18. Jealous
(3:14) 19. Rhythm Is Our Business
(2:56) 20. Mood Indigo (Alt Tk-A)
(3:03) 21. Star Dust (Alt Tk-B)
(3:17) 22. Because You're You (Alt Tk-B)
(3:12) 23. Rhythm Is Our Business (Alt Tk-B)

Album: The Complete Decca Sessions Disc 2
Time: 54:53
Size: 126,5 MB

(2:46) 1. Shake Your Head
(3:15) 2. I'm Walking Through Heaven With You
(3:10) 3. Sleepy Time Gal
(3:15) 4. Bird Of Paradise
(3:21) 5. Rhapsody Jr.
(3:08) 6. Runnin' Wild
(3:09) 7. Four Or Five Times
(3:03) 8. (If I Had Rhythm) In My Nursery Rhymes
(3:08) 9. Babe
(2:45) 10. Swanee River
(3:03) 11. Thunder
(3:08) 12. On Boy
(2:54) 13. Charmaine
(2:38) 14. You Take The East, Take The West, Take The North, I'll Take The South
(3:03) 15. Avalon
(2:51) 16. Charmaine (Matrix 600)
(3:00) 17. Hittin' The Bottle
(3:08) 18. Four Or Five Times

Album: The Complete Decca Sessions Disc 3
Time: 57:39
Size: 132,9 MB

(3:14) 1. My Blue Heaven
(3:01) 2. I'm Nuts About Screwy Music
(3:17) 3. The Best Things in Life Are Free
(3:02) 4. The Melody Man
(2:39) 5. Organ Grinder's Swing
(2:55) 6. On the Beach at Bali-Bali
(2:59) 7. Me and the Moon
(3:05) 8. Living from Day to Day
(3:13) 9. 'Tain't Good
(2:54) 10. Muddy Water
(3:00) 11. I Can't Escape from You
(2:58) 12. Harlem Shout
(2:49) 13. My Last Affair
(3:03) 14. Running a Temperature
(3:01) 15. Honey, Keep your Mind on Me
(3:11) 16. Count Me Out
(2:49) 17. I'll See You in my Dreams
(3:14) 18. My Blue Heaven
(3:07) 19. The Melody Man

When saxophonist Jimmie Lunceford signed to the Decca label in 1934 he was running one of the best orchestras in the US. He had signed a deal to appear at the Cotton Club (where bandleaders Duke Ellington and Cab Calloway had recently launched into stardom) and was frequently beating others in battles of the bands, all the while leading an outfit with an uncanny amount of precision and professionalism. Even Glenn Miller claimed that when Lunceford's band was at its peak, no one could top it. It's a shame, then, that Lunceford isn't more well known in 2011, since the music he recorded for Decca is some of the best that came out of the big band era. Perhaps it's because Lunceford never had an era-defining hit such as Benny Goodman's "Sing, Sing, Sing" or Miller's "In the Mood." Or maybe it's because the bandleader had trouble finding ways to adapt in the mid 1940s when the big band era was over (Lunceford himself died a few years later.) More than likely it's that the fickle nature of popular music, that sometimes rewards the less deserving while others languish in relative obscurity. Because Lunceford recorded for Decca for almost his entire career, the superb seven disc Mosaic set The Complete Jimmie Lunceford Decca Sessions provides as complete a look at an artist as you're likely to find and an essential document of the time when big bands reigned. As is the norm with Mosaic sets, the sound is exceptionally crisp, although more than a few tracks display the tell-tale crackle of age (since Mosiac is known for being fastidious about such matters these will have been the best sources the label could find.) The trumpets are bright, the drums have a propulsive snap, the horn sections are well balanced and, unusually, the rhythm guitar and bass are audible. It'seasy to imagine being one of the eager teens depicted on the cover hearing this band live in its heyday.

The Lunceford band was all about arrangements, not composing; very few of the band's charts were originals. Rather, the bandstand was always stocked with a handful of men who could do double duty as a player or arranger. Trumpeter Sy Oliver was the most accomplished and played the largest role in determining the band's sound, but there was also the Eddies, Durham and Wilcox, and Willie Smith. The Lunceford band proved to be fertile ground for ideas; the individual styles of each began to converge as the years went on and the arranging think tank began to settle on a precise network of contrasts and balances. In many ways they were working as architects of the big band sound, eagerly listening to what others (including themselves) were doing and grabbing the best ideas; many of their charts sound drastically different from what anyone else was doing at the time, but very similar to what would come shortly thereafter. Of course part of the craft of arranging is making sure your "Star Dust" doesn't sound like the other guy's "Star Dust," and Oliver and company in the band were capable of coming up with ways to add new twists to just about anything. The first sides the band recorded for Decca, for instance, were a handful of Ellington tunes, and "Mood Indigo" is markedly different from Ellington's, not as solemn and brisker. The breakout chart was Oliver's "Rhythm Is Our Business," an apt title for a band that was on the verge of perfecting the swing tempo (before Count Basie perfected the way to play it), and filled with little surprises from Oliver, who had an endless supply of ways of writing exciting horn parts (it also helped that Wilcox, one of the best at crafting horn lines, was in the house).

By the mid 1930s, Lunceford was turning out so many jukebox hits that A&R men told him that he should spread out his best material over several records instead of putting them back to back. Part of this was due to strong material put together by men who seemed to have an endless supply of new ideas for old songs "Swanee River" and "Organ Grinder's Swing" are two of many such masterpieces but Lunceford, ever the professional, also treated the novelty tunes that he and everyone else were forced to record with the same standards. Thus goofy junk such as "I'm Nuts About Screwy Music" and "'Tain't Good (Like a Nickel Made of Wood)" and even "The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down" become fairly decent tracks when given the Lunceford treatment there never seemed to be anything that couldn't be arranged properly (well, maybe not "Merry-Go-Round"). Of course, the Lunceford band had its share of outstanding soloists, none of whom enjoyed the renown of any of Ellington's or Basie's guys, but were nonetheless architects of what would become the standard big band sound. Joe Thomas was an important influence on the honking and bar walking saxophones that would come later; both Eddie Tompkins and Tommy Stevenson contribute dexterous trumpet solos. Then there was trombonist Trummy Young, who cut his teeth with the Lunceford band and got a significant spotlight with "Margie," and Eddie Durham, who carved out the role for the guitar in a big band context (especially when he plugged it in later.) Many of these guys contributed vocals as well; for most of his career Lunceford never had a singer that didn't also play an instrument. The vocals are uncommonly good for the time, still with that pre-Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra feel, and the vocal trios are as good as any that were around at the time.

By the latter half of the 1930s, the Lunceford band was able to combine great arrangements and reliable soloists to cut some of the best swing records of the era, most of which are contained on the third and fourth Mosaic discs. A perfect arrangement of "My Blue Heaven" features an Oliver arrangement and a splendid vocal trio; the band's signature hit, "For Dancers Only," features sprightly soloing over a tune pitched at the perfect tempo for young crowds eager to jitterbug. Even a song like "On the Beach of Bali-Bali," which sounds like it might be a dreadful Hawaiian-themed number, is in fact a trickily syncopated jump tune. Sadly, the recording ban was not good to the Lunceford band. Much of his lineup left disgruntled during this time, feeling like they weren't getting a fair shake financially, and many of the arrangers left for more lucrative gigs (Sy Oliver in particular continued to create some of the best arranged records in jazz for the likes of trumpeter Louis Armstrong and singer Ella Fitzgerald). Their replacements had clearly been inspired by the adventures of their predecessors, but their current work had none of the spark that made the previous decade's work so engaging. Only the appearance of arrangers Gerald Wilson and Tadd Dameron, both of whom were beginning to explore new avenues for the big band sound, threatens to make this band a little more special. In truth, what probably led to the foundering of Lunceford's unit was what actually made his records so appealing. He never had aspirations to write suites or appear at Carnegie Hall; he just wanted to entertain. Had Lunceford set his sights a little wider, he might have found a way to ride his popularity and to thrive after most orchestras had to call it quits. But instead he crafted some of the most enjoyable records in the big band era, songs, as one of his tunes put it, "For Dancers Only." One of the endearing qualities of all Mosaic sets is that in their completeness the real warts and all nature of an outfit is revealed, and Lunceford had to record his share of dogs just like any other band of the time. But nobody infused the lighter fair with more of a sense of spirited fun and professionalism as he did, and nobody treated the harder-hitting material with a better sense of how to make it work.~David Rickert https://www.allaboutjazz.com/jimmie-lunceford-the-complete-jimmie-lunceford-decca-sessions-by-david-rickert

Personnel: Jimmie Lunceford: director, alto sax; Eddie Tompkins: trumpet, vocal; Tommy Stevenson: trumpet; Sy Oliver: trumpet, vocal, arranger; Russell Bowles: trombone; Henry Wells: trombone, vocal; Willie Smith: clarinet, alto sax, vocal, arranger; Laforet Dent: clarinet, alto sax; Joe Thomas: clarinet, tenor sax; Earl Carruthers: clarinet, alto sax, baritone sax; Eddie Wilcox: piano, arranger; Al Norris: guitar, violin; Moses Allen: bass; Jimmy Crawford: drums, vibes, tympani, glockenspiel; Paul Webster: trumpet; Elmer Crumbley: trombone; Eddie Durham: trombone, guitar, arranger; Dan Grissom: clarinet, alto sax, vocal; Ed Brown: clarinet, alto sax, tenor sax; Trummy Young: trombone, vocal; Ted Buckner: alto sax; Leon Carr: arranger; Snooky Young: trumpet; Gerald Wilson: trumpet, vocal, arranger; Billy Moore, Roger Segure: arranger; Freddie Webster: trumpet; Harry Jackson: trumpet, arranger; Fernando Arbello: trombone; Benny Waters: tenor sax; Truck Parham: bass; Tadd Dameron: arranger; Bob Mitchell: trombone; Russell Green: trumpet; Melvin Moore: trumpet; William Scott: trumpet; Earl Hardy: trombone; John Ewing: trombone; Omer Simeon: clarinet, alto sax; Kirt Bradford: alto sax; Ernest Purce: tenor sax; Claude Trenier: vocal; Horace Henderson: arranger; Ralph Griffin: trumpet; Bill Darnell: vocals; Lonnie Wilfong: arranger; Rostelle Reece: trumpet; Les Current: trumpet; John Mitchell: guitar; Charles Stewart: trumpet; Bob Mitchell: trumpet, vocal; Nick Brooks: vocal; Delta Rhythm Boys: vocal; Joe Liggins: arranger.

The Complete Decca Sessions Disc 1, Disc 2, Disc 3

Michael Lemmo - Blue Comet

Styles: Smooth Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:01
Size: 117,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:18) 1. La Cienega
(3:40) 2. Blue Comet
(3:51) 3. Island Runner
(4:20) 4. Living Without You
(4:39) 5. Will You Ever Love Me Again
(4:08) 6. Chandler Boulevard
(4:42) 7. Nobody Knows
(4:43) 8. Ready for It
(4:23) 9. Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love
(4:19) 10. Smoove
(3:59) 11. Closin' Time at Norm's
(4:55) 12. Northern Lights

In a genre and format that too often encourages even the most brilliant of artists to play it safe and sacrifice the full expanse of their chops for easy, friendly, infectious listenability, Michael Lemmo is that once in a decade cat who’s ready to blow all those niceties out of the water (while still being wildly melodic) on his genre-stretching, perfectly titled debut smooth jazz single “Blue Comet” also the name of his upcoming debut.

Understanding his unique background, the first clue that you’re in for a more fiery adventure with this multi-faceted singer, songwriter and guitar virtuoso is a list of his chief influences. While Lee Ritenour is up there, the rest are rockers Lindsey Buckingham, John Mayer and late greats Jeff Buckley and Eddie Van Halen. While Lemmo is clearly in a class all his own, for point of comparison, he’s what might happen if we merged the historical power of Eric Clapton’s blues/rock and George Benson’s inventive jazz sensibilities.

The genius of this relentlessly burning, constantly exploding “Blue Comet” is the decision to turn the powerhouse tune into a funky, jamming dance-duet with this generation’s premiere saxophonist, Jeff Ryan. It’s today’s genre equivalent of what might have happened if blues-rock inspired guitarist, the late Jeff Golub, joined forces with Richard Elliot. Once Ryan was added to the mix, the gale force of the track prompted an unprecedented reaction from its producer Paul Brown, who has helmed #1 hits for nearly every genre artist (including himself) for 30 years. Listening back with Lemmo, Brown was literally floored, like “that’s some serious crazy s*** right there.” It’s billed as “Michael Lemmo ft. Jeff Ryan,” but the camaraderie between artists is so much more than main artist/featured artist.

So, prepare yourselves for not just urban jazz business as usual. The jam starts out with some crisp trademark Lemmo licks before Ryan blasts in with his combustible yet cool flow and unlike most tracks like this where the guitar might be featured and the sax plays a harmony and takes a later solo, the two are engaged in buoyant, high-energy conversation from the get go often allowing Lemmo to establish a melodic line solo, then repeat it in tandem with Ryan. The joyful thing for mainstream genre fans is that while their performances are generally higher octane and their individual solos a few minutes in more blistering and intense than traditional radio fare, there are still some incredibly hooky melodic lines to latch onto.

While Ryan’s solos these past few years on his own recordings and those of other artists have become the stuff of legend, the real payoff is hearing Lemmo, on his very first instrumental radio single, take his lengthy solo spotlight as an opportunity to fuse his aggressive, stratospheric rock and jazz sensibilities. It’s breathtaking stuff that will no doubt have listeners capping their astonishment with a moment to catch their breath. Brown’s usual studio crew of Roberto Vally (bass), Gorden Campbell (drums) and Marco Basci (keys) is on hand to make sure things are always poppin’ behind the two lead instruments.

“For folks who like their “smooth jazz” a little less smooth and a lot more adventurous, the success of this song will hopefully lead other artists to cut loose like this more often.” By Jonathan Widran https://smoothjazzlife.wordpress.com/2022/02/17/michael-lemmo-blue-comet/

Blue Comet

Thursday, September 29, 2022

Bud Powell - Bud In Copenhagen

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:31
Size: 97,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:16) 1. Rifftide
(6:01) 2. Bouncing With Baud
(4:59) 3. Move
(6:02) 4. The Best Thing For You
(6:45) 5. Straight, No Chaser
(6:15) 6. I Remember Clifford
(5:49) 7. Hot House
(2:22) 8. 52nd Street Theme

After establishing iconic status as the first great bop pianist in the 1940s, Bud Powell was plagued by both mental illness and a fondness for, to borrow his mentor Charlie Parker's famous phrase, "a little sherry before dinner." As a result his output was vastly uneven. Catch Powell right and he is brimfull of energy and ideas. Catch him wrong and, while the technique is there, his playing falls flat and lacks inspiration it can even be a downright mess. Powell's move to Europe in 1959 gave him a new lease of life. This album, recorded in 1962, features Powell close to his best, scatting and growling happily as he plays with his old, rediscovered fire. Originally titled Bouncing With Bud, it has been released on different labels over the years, before emerging in Storyville's excellent In Copenhagen series. Powell is backed by the phenomenal bassist Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen, astonishingly just 15 at the time, and a self-effacing drummer, William Schiopffe.

The opener, "Rifftide," based on the chords of "Lady Be Good," dates back to 1945 when Powell was in his 20s and had just left Cootie Williams to take his place in the jazz revolution on 52nd Street. Just a year later, by which time he had absorbed Charlie Parker's ideas into his playing, his composition, "Bouncing With Bud" was being recorded by Sonny Stitt (as "Bebop In Pastel") and, more famously, in 1949 (under its correct title) by a quintet that included Sonny Rollins and Fats Navarro. The version here is claimed to be the first ever trio recording of the song.

The main part of the album comprises Powell's takes on tunes by fellow boppers. These include Tadd Dameron's "Hot House," the first time he's played it on record since the famous Massey Hall concert with Parker and Gillespie in 1953. Then there's Denzil Best's "Move" and, most interestingly, Thelonious Monk's "Straight, No Chaser" and "52nd Street Theme."

Powell pays jaunty tribute to such pre-bop influences as Earl Hines on Irving Berlin's "The Best Thing For You," obliterating memories of a disastrous 1955 recording he made of the same song. The only ballad, Benny Golson's magnificent "I Remember Clifford," is given a sensitive, very slow and lyrical treatment, a welcome break from all the up-tempo pyrotechnics. This album documents a troubled genius seeking and finding reconciliation with his past. Grateful thanks to Storyville for putting it back in circulation.By Chris Mosey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/bud-powell-in-copenhagen-bud-powell-storyville-records-review-by-chris-mosey

Personnel: Bud Powell: piano; Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen: bass; William Schiopffe: drums.

Bud In Copenhagen

Rosemary Clooney - The CBS Radio Recordings 1955-61 Disc 1, Disc 2, Disc 3

Album: The CBS Radio Recordings 1955-61 Disc 1
Styles: Vocal, Swing, Ballad
Year: 1955
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:50
Size: 105,5 MB
Art: Front

(1:26) 1. Just You, Just Me
(3:03) 2. Don't Take Your Love From Me
(2:41) 3. I Guess I'll Have To Change
(1:40) 4. Keep It Gay
(1:25) 5. I Can't Believe That You're In
(1:51) 6. From This Moment On
(2:37) 7. But Not For Me
(2:02) 8. Nice Work If You Can Get It
(1:46) 9. 's Wonderful
(2:10) 10. Taking A Chance On Love
(1:50) 11. It's A Most Unusual Day
(3:02) 12. C'est Magnifique
(2:57) 13. Mood Indigo
(1:42) 14. Back In Your Own Backyard
(1:38) 15. You're The Top
(1:42) 16. The Gold Digger's Song (We're in the money)
(1:12) 17. Anything Goes
(2:51) 18. All Through The Night
(3:00) 19. Teach Me Tonight
(2:30) 20. I've Got My Love To Keep Me Wa
(2:36) 21. I Get A Kick Out Of You

Album: The CBS Radio Recordings 1955-61 Disc 2
Time: 46:38
Size: 107,8 MB

(1:25) 1. I Feel A Song Coming On
(3:31) 2. Little Man You've Had A Busy Day
(1:41) 3. Thou Swell
(2:04) 4. You're In Kentucky Sure As You're Born
(2:35) 5. Almost Like Being In Love
(1:49) 6. I'm Gonna Sit Right Down And Write Myself A Letter
(2:18) 7. Hey There
(2:10) 8. Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone
(2:18) 9. Something Wonderful Happens
(2:17) 10. Mountain Greenery
(2:34) 11. Mangoes
(2:15) 12. How About You?
(2:21) 13. No Other Love
(2:38) 14. It's Not For Me To Say
(2:23) 15. So Rare
(2:15) 16. Lover Come Back To Me
(1:34) 17. Oh! Look At Me Now
(2:01) 18. Don'cha Go 'way Mad
(2:04) 19. What Is There To Say?
(2:09) 20. It's All Right With Me
(2:06) 21. Goody Goody

Album: The CBS Radio Recordings 1955 - 1961 Disc 3
Time: 52:24
Size: 121,0 MB

(2:32) 1. Sunday In Savannah
(2:32) 2. I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart
(2:30) 3. It Happened To Happen To Me
(2:42) 4. A Touch Of The Blues
(2:25) 5. The Nearness Of You
(2:23) 6. You'll Never Know
(2:36) 7. On The Street Where You Live
(1:57) 8. New Sun In The Sky
(2:24) 9. Everything Happens To Me
(1:49) 10. 'deed I Do
(3:04) 11. I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues
(2:43) 12. I'm Beginning To See The Light
(2:48) 13. Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me
(2:26) 14. What Is This Thing Called Love
(2:28) 15. You Make Me Feel So Young
(2:43) 16. All The Time
(2:38) 17. Witchcraft
(2:23) 18. You Turned The Tables On Me
(2:50) 19. All The Way
(2:14) 20. Cheek To Cheek
(2:07) 21. It's All In The Game

While no one who has heard her can deny the charm and vocal talents of Rosemary Clooney, the truth is she usually recorded with big orchestras which favored commercial arrangements. Also the songs selected for her sessions frequently included more novelties or hits of the day than what he can consider properly jazz tunes.

This new Mosaic box, on the other hand, showcases her doing a radio show with the only backing of a jazz quartet, formed by Buddy Cole on piano, Vince Terri on guitar, Don Whitaker on bass, and Nick Fatool on drums. Also, for these shows, she was allowed to freely choose her program, and the results are amazing, five full CDs of Clooney doing the standards she loved with no restriction. An unexpected treasure of vocal jazz. https://www.jazzmessengers.com/en/67226/rosemary-clooney/rosemary-clooney-cbs-radio-recordings-1955-61

Personnel: Buddy Cole - piano, organ, celeste, harpsichord; Vince Terri – guitar; Don Whitaker - bass; Nick Fatool – drums, percussion

The CBS Radio Recordings 1955-1961 Disc1,Disc2,Disc3

Sharon Azrieli - Secret places (A Tribute To Michel Legrand)

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:35
Size: 150,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:56) 1. If there were no dreams
(4:21) 2. Secret places
(5:27) 3. Les moulins de mon coeur
(4:03) 4. Little boy lost
(4:52) 5. On my way to you
(4:22) 6. Maybe someone dreamed us
(3:17) 7. What are you doing the rest of your life
(4:20) 8. Retour en java
(6:08) 9. You must believe in spring
(3:46) 10. Paris violon
(4:38) 11. Summer me, winter me
(3:55) 12. Comme elle est longue à mourir
(3:47) 13. Watch what happens
(5:35) 14. I will wait for you

Originally from Montre´al, soprano Sharon Azrieli has enjoyed international success at world-famous venues including Carnegie Hall, the Metropolitan Opera, the Ope´ra Bastille de Paris, and with leading organizations such as the Canadian Opera Company, Orchestre Symphonique de Montre´al, and the New Israel Opera, among others.

In 2019, she was awarded the National Order of Quebec (Chevalie`re du Que´bec) for her remarkable achievements as a performer. Known for her versatility as a singer, Sharon has released several albums, including her latest with Tamir Hendelman Secret Places: A Tribute to Michel LeGrand which she toured North America with including stops at Hermann’s Club (Victoria, BC), Frankie’s Jazz Club (Vancouver, BC), Yardbird Suite (Edmonton, AB), The Royal Room (Seattle, WA), Piedmont Piano Company (Oakland, CA), and Catalina Jazz Club (Los Angeles, CA). Blogcritics praised her previous album, Frankly Sharon with Tony Award-winning composer Frank Wildhorn, saying, “Azrieli’s softly impassioned phrasing is exquisite…

She has, always, a naturalistic freshness in her voice, which makes it easy or sound easy for her to shunt aside opera’s tendency to call forth the mannered and the over-the-top, and sing with balance and grace.” Translations for the album were done in French, Italian, and Hebrew by Sharon herself. Other recordings include Sharon Azrieli Sings Broadway (with arranger Marvin Laird), The Gift of Joy, Rare French Arias of the 19th Century, and Fiddler on the Roof (in Yiddish).

Upcoming recording projects include original songs and jazz standards with the virtuosic pianist & composer Matt Herskowitz, a disc of lullabies, an unusual collection of Canadian Broadway Broadway numbers by Canadian Composers, as well as an album about Jewish Divas of the 19th century which is in the works with renowned conductor Steven Mercurio.

The upcoming season includes performances in Greece and a South American tour with violinist Alexandre da Costa, plus the world premiere of Aharon Harlap’s 2022 Azrieli Music Prize-winning piece with Orchestre Métropolitain. Sharon performed the role of Sister Dolcina in Puccini’s Suor Angelica at the Metropolitan Opera in 2018, was a headliner in a live televised concert at Toronto’s Zoomer Hall for Classical FM, and performed the roles of Marcellina in Le Nozze di Figaro (National Arts Centre) under the baton of Alexander Shelley and Liu in Turandot (Teatro Greco Siracusa) with the late tenor Marcello Giordani in 2019. Of her Laurette in Le Docteur Miracle with L’Opéra Français de New York, Andrew Porter of The New Yorker hailed her as a “mistress of merry inflections, piquant phrasing and pointed words.”

Sharon sang the title song of the Canadian film Stand! and her vocals were also featured in the Hollywood film Stage Mother, starring Lucy Liu, and the film Shepherd: The Story of a Jewish Dog, directed by Lynn Roth. Upcoming films to include her debut acting performances are SHTTL, a drama about a Yiddish village at the border of Poland during WWII, and Irena’s Vow.

Sharon created the advisory council of the Azrieli Music Prizes for the Azrieli Foundation in 2014 and is devoted to arts education and philanthropy. She sits on the boards of several philanthropic organizations including the Azrieli Foundation, National Arts Centre of Canada, Orchestre Classique de Montréal (where she holds the title President Emeritus), McCord Museum, the Canadian Vocal Arts Institute, The Opera Cares Foundation, the America-Israel Cultural Foundation, Sharon Azrieli Foundation for the Arts as well as on the honorary board of Camp Tutti and Camp Kinneret Biluim. https://sharonazrieli.com/about/

Secret places (A Tribute To Michel Legrand)