Friday, February 3, 2023

Bobby Watson - Back Home in Kansas City

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:49
Size: 151,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:32) 1. Back Home In Kansas City
(7:32) 2. Red Bank Heist
(5:26) 3. Our Love Remains
(6:25) 4. Bon Voyage
(6:33) 5. The Star In The East
(4:38) 6. Mind Wine
(5:41) 7. Celestial
(6:02) 8. Dear Lord
(4:57) 9. Side Steps
(7:15) 10. I'm Glad There Is You
(6:42) 11. Blues For Alto

Saxophonist/composer Bobby Watson draws inspiration from the rich jazz heritage of his Kansas City hometown on his spirited album BACK HOME IN KANSAS CITY, which features an all-star quintet with Watson’s longtime rhythm section of bassist Curtis Lundy and drummer Victor Jones along with pianist Cyrus Chestnut, trumpeter Jeremy Pelt, as well as a special guest appearance by vocalist Carmen Lundy.

“Great melodies are immortal, like a sculpture or a painting,” Watson insists. “This album is more about the singing quality of my instrument.”

As the title suggests, Back Home in Kansas City also pays homage to Watson’s hometown and its own rich musical heritage. The saxophonist grew up in KC, leaving to study at the University of Miami and then spending a quarter century making his name in New York City. He returned home in 2000 to serve as Director of Jazz Studies at the University of Missouri-Kansas City's Conservatory of Music & Dance, retiring 20 years later.

His retirement coinciding with the pandemic, Watson found himself with plenty of time to reflect on Kansas City’s importance to his distinctive sound and, gradually, to play for local audiences who helped attune his approach to the blend of soul and balladry that makes up the new album.

“Being out here in Kansas City has given me a chance to slow down and go deeper into what I want to play,” he explains. “The Kansas City audience is a sophisticated audience because of the history of this town. We've got people out here who have heard a lot of music. So I'm not playing down to the audience, and I'm not trying to simplify anything. I'm simply coming out of what I feel in my heart and my soul.”

The title tune is a contrafact (a new melody written over existing chord changes) on “Back Home Again in Indiana,” also famously the basis for Charlie Parker’s “Donna Lee.” The spirited swinger opens the album on a high note, Jones’ crisp percussion nailing every sudden stop before propelling the band forward again. It’s one of three similar Watson tunes on the album; the yearning “Bon Voyage” is based on Herbie Hancock’s “Maiden Voyage,” while the brisk “Side Steps” is Watson’s reimagining of John Coltrane’s classic (and notoriously challenging) “Giant Steps.”

Watson also drew the haunting ballad “Dear Lord” from the Coltrane songbook, one of several spotlights on the album for his burnished tone and silken melodicism. Chestnut’s achingly delicate touch sets the tone for a gorgeous version of the standard “I’m Glad There Is You,” featuring one of Watson’s most beautiful and moving solo turns. The album closes with the gritty, self-explanatory “Blues for Alto.”

Watson encouraged his bandmates to bring their own material to the session as well. Jones contributes the stealthy “Red Bank Heist,” which feels like Henry Mancini by way of Art Blakey. Chestnut’s sparkling “A Star in the East” is an easygoing waltz that thrives on the rich melody shared by Watson and Pelt. The trumpeter’s offering is the tender “Celestial,” highlighted by his own muted eloquence.

John Hicks’ “Mind Wine” pays tribute to the late pianist, with whom Watson, Lundy, and Jones all worked extensively. Hicks appears on Watson’s 1988 Blue Note debut, NO QUESTION ABOUT IT, as well as LOVE REMAINS; while Watson and Lundy are part of the quartet for Hicks’ 1988 release NAIMA'S LOVE SONG. “John Hicks was a mighty huge influence on me, Curtis and Victor,” Watson says. “When he passed away, that was one of the saddest moments in our lives. He was extremely near and dear to us.”

The saxophonist has long garnered inspiration from vocalists as well as his sax-playing peers and idols. He invited the acclaimed singer Carmen Lundy to join the band for “Our Love Remains,” co-written by Watson and his wife Pamela. In instrumental form, the song was the title track for his 1986 album LOVE REMAINS and was recorded again for 1992’s PRESENT TENSE. The vocal version has previously been recorded by Kevin Mahogany and Melissa Walker, and Lou Rawls was planning his own rendition prior to his death.

“I love hearing singers tell stories,” Watson says. “Joe Williams, Betty Carter, Sarah Vaughan, Carmen McRae, Ella, Gregory Porter, Andy Bey and Carmen does that. She's not just singing the melody, she's putting it out there as a story.”

Throughout Back Home in Kansas City, Watson’s gift for telling stories with his saxophone is on vibrant display. “Johnny Griffin told me that when you solo you want to introduce yourself, talk about how your day went, tell how you feel right now and where you want to take the listener – all through music,” he details. “I know that I have enough technique to last me the rest of my life. But what do I want to say with it? We’re all trying to play one grand solo our whole life in different contexts." https://bobbywatsonjazz.bandcamp.com/

Bobby Watson - alto saxophone; Jeremy Pelt - trumpet;Cyrus Chestnut - piano; Curtis Lundy - bass; Victor Jones - drums

Back Home in Kansas City

Stéphane Grappelli - Stéphane Grappelli Au Piano - Passage Gioffredo

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:58
Size: 83,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:15) 1. Tea For Two
(4:16) 2. Satin Doll
(3:18) 3. Time After Time
(3:18) 4. You Took Advantage Of Me
(3:41) 5. I Only Have Eyes For You
(3:36) 6. Passage Gioffredo
(3:13) 7. Makin' Whoopee
(3:34) 8. You Better Go Now
(3:44) 9. Looking At You
(2:57) 10. All God's Chillun Got Rhythm

Unpublished recordings by Stéphane Grappelli on the piano, for the first time accessible to music lovers. Improvisations around great jazz standards: Tea for Tow, Satin Doll, Time after Time, Looking at you...Stéphane Grappelli will be remembered as a legend of the violin, but we must not forget that the piano was his first instrument. According to him, it was the essential instrument for mastering chords and harmonies.

Although the talented violinist was also an excellent pianist, recorded testimonies of Stéphane Grappelli at the piano are very rare.These unreleased recordings reveal an artist in a playful mood, who, from standards to paraphrases, deploys the full extent of his inspiration, served by an exceptional talent.A magnificent discovery on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the disappearance of the musician!
By Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/St%C3%A9phane-Grappelli-piano-Enregistrements-in%C3%A9dits/dp/B09Q68YQ2G

Stéphane Grappelli Au Piano - Passage Gioffredo

Nathan Davis - London by Night

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1987
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:12
Size: 139,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:56)  1. Noite Em Leblon
(5:18)  2. I Thought About You
(6:20)  3. Rio De Janeiro
(4:23)  4. London by Night
(2:48)  5. Dr. Bu
(9:06)  6. But Beautiful
(6:33)  7. You've Changed
(5:37)  8. Shades
(5:53)  9. Lament
(7:14) 10. If I Fell

Nathan Davis split his career between being a fine tenor saxophonist and a jazz educator. He played briefly with Jay McShann in 1955, attended the University of Kansas, spent time in the Army in Berlin (1960-1963), and stayed in Paris where he worked with Kenny Clarke (1963-1969), Eric Dolphy (1964), and Art Taylor. He also toured Europe with Art Blakey (1965) and Ray Charles. Starting in 1969, Davis was a professor of jazz at the University of Pittsburgh and Moorhead State University. His two most important musical associations involved leadership of the Paris Reunion Band (1985-1989) and Roots (which he formed in 1991). After 44 years, Davis retired from the University of Pittsburgh in June 2013. He died of congestive heart failure in Florida in April 2018 at the age of 81. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/nathan-davis-mn0000377691/biography

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone – Nathan Davis; Trumpet – Dusko Goykovich;  Bass – Jimmy Woode; Drums – Al Levitt; Flugelhorn – Dusko Goykovich; Flute – Nathan Davis; Piano – Kenny Drew

London by Night

Wednesday, February 1, 2023

Lindsey Webster - Reasons

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:24
Size: 141,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:52) 1. I Didn't Mean It (Feat. Brian Culbertson)
(5:50) 2. Love Of Your Life (Feat. Nathan East)
(4:34) 3. Just The Night
(5:43) 4. Stay With Me (Feat. Randy Brecker & Kev Choice)
(5:47) 5. Wish You Well
(4:52) 6. The Way
(1:46) 7. 4am
(5:39) 8. Twin Flame
(5:28) 9. You Take Me
(5:18) 10. Reasons
(6:06) 11. I'm Ok (Feat. Nicholas Payton)
(4:24) 12. Stay With Me (Soul Jazz Mix) (Feat. Randy Brecker)

Chart-topping vocalist and songstress Lindsey Webster emerges from lockdown and the end of marriage stronger than ever. Reasons, her fourth album since her 2016 breakout, shows both artistic growth and resiliency.

Now a consistent hit maker in the crossover jazz realm, Webster has the luxury of getting the very best sessionists available to take her songs a bit higher still. Indeed, she enlisted help in guest spots from the likes of Brian Culbertson, Nathan East, Randy Brecker and Nicholas Payton. But as it’s always been, the Lindsey Webster Sound starts with Webster and long-time songwriting partner & keyboardist Keith Slattery, a musical partnership that is going strong as ever even after the marital partnership ended.

We got an early exposure to the advance single “I Didn’t Mean It” that gets the album off on the good foot, putting all of Webster’s strong suits as a vocalist and composer up front.As you go through Reasons, it becomes clearer that this is as much of an RnB record as it is a smooth jazz record, and Webster has fluency in both camps and knows how to put it together into her own personal genre.

For instance, “Love of Your Life” goes deep into Quiet Storm territory, but with lush jazz chords helped along by tasteful synth backing and a vocal bass scat from East. “Twin Flame” is more of that Quiet Storm, reaching its apogee when Webster hits those really high notes. That lushness carries over in the intro “The Way” and settles into a satisfying Philly soul sway. This “Reasons” isn’t the one made into hit by Earth, Wind & Fire but is nevertheless a similarly sweetened slice of soul.

Webster’s slow tunes are equally effectively at setting the right mood: “Just The Night” is a ballad that gets the job done solely off of Webster’s aching vocal delivery. But that segues right into another a snappy mid-tempo funk number “Stay With Me” that nods to the current scene with a guest rap turn from Kev Choice and an historical horn presence via Brecker’s flugelhorn (another mix of the song takes out the rapping).

“Wish You Well” has Webster singing a low, sultry and sassy voice, and Steely Dan-smooth horn backing. More horns add a suave touch to the lightly funky “I’m OK,” and Payton is on hand to deliver a flawless trumpet solo.

Lindsey Webster has been going through a change as she adjusts back into the ups and downs of the single life, providing a lot of fodder for her latest set of songs. But thankfully nothing has changed fundamentally in her craftsmanship and style; it’s still quality soul-satisfying music for grow-nups. https://somethingelsereviews.com/2022/10/07/lindsey-webster-reasons/

Reasons

Bill Coleman - Learning How to Disappear

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:19
Size: 182,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:36) 1. From Boogie To Funk
(6:32) 2. Afromotive In Blue
(3:25) 3. Come On A My House
(9:46) 4. Have Blues Will Play 'Em
(2:54) 5. Lester Leaps In
(5:10) 6. Colemanology
(5:13) 7. In My Solitude
(2:58) 8. The Blues Jumped Up And Got Me
(4:56) 9. Pound Horn
(6:12) 10. Bill Coleman Blues
(4:06) 11. Mood Indigo
(9:42) 12. Bill, Budd And Butter
(5:50) 13. I Surrender, Dear
(3:09) 14. Si Jolie
(4:43) 15. St. James Infirmary

A mellow-toned swing trumpeter with a distinctive sound and a lyrical style, Bill Coleman was a consistent if never particularly famous musician. In 1927, he went to New York with Cecil and Lloyd Scott's band, with whom he made his recording debut. He worked with Luis Russell (1929-1932) and Charlie Johnson, and then in 1933 traveled to France with Lucky Millinder. Coleman recorded with Fats Waller (1934) and played with Teddy Hill's Orchestra (1934-1935), but then moved to France for the first time in 1935.

While overseas, he recorded frequently as a leader (really coming into his own), with Willie Lewis' Orchestra, and on dates with Django Reinhardt. He ventured as far as Bombay, and spent 1938-1940 in Egypt with Herman Chittison. Returning to New York, Coleman played with Benny Carter, Teddy Wilson, Andy Kirk, Mary Lou Williams, and John Kirby during 1940-1945, and recorded with Lester Young and Coleman Hawkins (both in 1943). However, he preferred life in Europe and, after a period with groups led by Sy Oliver and Billy Kyle, in 1948, Coleman moved permanently back to France, staying active and recording fairly regularly up until his death in 1981. By Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/bill-coleman-mn0000068537/biography

Learning How to Disappear

Rickie Lee Jones - It's Like This

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:31
Size: 86,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:35) 1. Show Biz Kids
(5:12) 2. Trouble Man
(2:32) 3. For No One
(1:49) 4. Smile
(5:13) 5. Low Spark of High Heeled Boys
(3:26) 6. On the Street Where You Live
(4:30) 7. I Can't Get Started
(2:50) 8. Up a Lazy River
(2:03) 9. Someone to Watch Over Me
(3:16) 10. Cycles
(1:58) 11. One Hand, One Heart

Not since Billie Holiday has there been a vocalist who so completely transforms a song into her own. On It's Like This, eclectic folkie Rickie Lee Jones envelops standards, showtunes, '70s soul, and even slick jazz-rock, interpreting them with her familiar childlike, breathy shouts. In a very similar vein as 1991's Pop Pop, Jones pulls together a collection of diverse songs from throughout the 20th century and gives them a sparse, fragile spin, kind of like Diana Krall and Björk sharing coffee at an all-night diner.

Produced by Bruce Brody (who has also worked with Maria McKee and Bette Midler), this album is really a showcase for the dynamic vocalist her voice pitching and yawing like a sloop far out at sea. Several notable artists scatter themselves unobtrusively throughout the album like Joe Jackson, Ben Folds, John Pizzarelli, and Taj Mahal; each lend a subtle bassline or harmony vocal, cautiously not stepping on any of Jones' delicate lines.

Her passionate, earthy version of Marvin Gaye's "blaxploitation" hit "Trouble Man" is as soulful as her cover of the Beatles' "For No One" is pleading, each reaching out to the listener like a whisper from an inch away. Jones' unmistakable style is unlike anyone else's, and that fact alone will turn away some potential listeners; however, for fans of gentle jazz-pop, It's Like This is an intimate, dreamy wander through the songbooks of the last century. By Zac Johnson
https://www.allmusic.com/album/its-like-this-mw0000094246

It's Like This

Tim Warfield - Jazz Is ...

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:13
Size: 161,9 MB
Art: Front

(11:55)  1. Silence - The Angels Are Crying
( 8:14)  2. Origins
(10:24)  3. My Shining Hour
( 9:32)  4. The Magic Bag
( 8:43)  5. Tune # 2
(10:28)  6. My Old Country
(10:54)  7. Until Further Notice

Although it exists solely for the purposes of recordings and the occasional live gig, Tim Warfield’s quintet (Warfield- tenor saxophone; Nicholas Payton- trumpet; Cyrus Chestnut- piano; Tarus Mateen- bass; Clarence Penn- drums) has been a marvel to hear over the course of four albums dating back to the critically acclaimed A Cool Blue from 1995. They say the highest compliment that can be paid a jazz artist is the attainment of an individual voice, and in this regard Warfield stands head and shoulders above many of his peers. With a breathy and soulful timbre, his tenor voice is immediately identifiable; his compositions seek to explore a vociferous and spiritual platform that harkens back to the days of Coltrane. Unfolding in the way that a fine novel reveals itself over the course of many chapters, “Silence- The Angels Are Crying” opens with a whisper before unleashing several solo segments taken at a headier tempo. With a ‘60s Milesian flair, “Origins” possesses a catchy stop-and-go melody and a relaxed gait that allows for several extended forays. By contrast, “My Shinning Hour” is almost all Warfield and a tour-de-force it is, filled with exciting climaxes and those upper register ‘cries’ that give the saxophonist his emotional base. With an opening melody that very briefly recalls “Star Eyes,” Warfield’s “Tune #2” moves at a relaxed pace and lets Payton bask in the limelight for awhile. Just listen to the way the trumpeter paces himself and uses space to give a lesson in improvisation at the highest pinnacle. 

Then Warfield enters with that characteristic swagger and a velvet cushion provided by Mateen and Penn. Rounding things out are “The Old Country,” which finds vibe man Stefon Harris in Hutcherson mode during a well-crafted spot; and “Until Further Notice,” another wonder of shifting tempos and a perfect forum for the multifaceted brilliance of Clarence Penn. At its best, this latest installment in the saga of the Tim Warfield group is yet another lesson in the integrity and complexity that can be achieved with working groups who clearly understand the foundations of jazz. ~ C.Andrew Hovan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/jazz-is-tim-warfield-criss-cross-review-by-c-andrew-hovan.php

Personnel: Tim Warfield (tenor sax), Nicholas Payton (trumpet), Stefon Harris (vibes), Cyrus Chestnut (piano), Tarus Mateen (bass), Clarence Penn (drums)

Jazz Is ...

Nathan Davis - Two Originals (Happy Girl & The Hip Walk)

Styles: Flute And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1965
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:42
Size: 176,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:53)  1. The Flute In The Blues
(7:04)  2. Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most
(7:18)  3. Happy Girl
(7:15)  4. Evolution
(5:08)  5. Theme From Zoltan
(2:18)  6. Along Came Byrd
(3:21)  7. Mister E.
(7:00)  8. The Hip Walk
(7:23)  9. While Children Sleep
(5:26) 10. Train Of Thought
(2:54) 11. Yesterdays
(7:56) 12. That Kaycee Thing
(3:45) 13. Carmell's Black Forest Waltz
(4:57) 14. B's Blues

Nathan Davis spent some time living and working in Europe in the mid-'60s before returning to the United States to serve in jazz education. His recordings as a leader have been hard to find, so this compilation of two 1965 studio sessions, Happy Girl and Hip Walk, (both originally issued by MPS) will be a welcome discovery for collectors who can find it. In the earlier date he is joined by trumpeter Woody Shaw, Larry Young (on piano rather than organ), bassist Jimmy Woode and drummer Billy Brooks. His happy "The Flute in the Blues" showcases his lighthearted flute playing, accompanied only by bass and drums. His big tone on tenor sax in the standard ballad "Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most" is somewhat suggestive of John Coltrane, but with a stronger vibrato. His original "Evolution" has an exotic sound like the kind of post-bop material that was recorded by various Blue Note artists a year or two later. Shaw contributed the fascinating "Theme From Zoltan," which showcases Brooks' inventive polyrhythms and Woode's adventurous bass, backing strong solos by the trumpeter and the leader (on tenor sax). The jaunty, angular blues "Along Came Byrd" finds Davis holding his own on soprano sax. The later session retains Woode, but substitutes trumpeter Carmell Jones, pianist Francy Boland and drummer Kenny Clarke. Although the arrangements are equally challenging, things seem looser on this session, suggesting that there was more time to rehearse, though that is unlikely, since Jones was flown in especially for this date. 

The Coltrane influence is again apparent in the ballad "While Children Sleep." It would be easy to imagine Art Blakey tackling the furious "Train of Thought." Davis switches to flute for a haunting take of Jerome Kern's "Yesterdays." This valuable music was reissued in Europe by Motor Music in 1998, though it may very well have already lapsed again from print; it is well-worth investigating.~Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/two-originals-happy-girl-hip-walk-mw0000041160

Personnel: Nathan Davis (flute, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Carmell Jones, Woody Shaw (trumpet); Francy Boland, Larry Young (piano); Kenny Clarke, Billy Brooks (drums).

Two Originals (Happy Girl & The Hip Walk)

Monday, January 30, 2023

Carol Albert - Magic Mirror

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:51
Size: 96,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:40) 1. Magic Mirror
(4:10) 2. Fire & Water
(3:42) 3. Paradigm Shift
(4:27) 4. Sol Ipanema
(4:26) 5. Gemini Sun
(4:09) 6. The Chase
(4:06) 7. Crashing
(3:59) 8. Sapporo Dream
(4:21) 9. Sometime
(3:46) 10. Angels Watching Over Me

When Carol Albert released her debut vocal and instrumental album Love in Your Eyes back in 1992, there’s no way the multi-talented pianist/composer could have known that 25-30 years down the road, she’d not only be a Billboard chart sensation, but that her elegant and soulful, dreamy and free flowing melodic piano style, combined with her passion for R&B grooves and sexy tropical Brazilian rhythms, would make her a spot on fit for the urban centric vibe that drives today’s smooth jazz.

Though she had released an album of solo piano covers (Morning Music) in 2006 and a lovely holiday album (Christmas Mystique) in 2015, Carol seemed to come out of nowhere in 2016 to launch the most prolific and radio friendly phase of her career with a burning cover of “Mas Que Nada” – the first single from her 2017 breakthrough album Fly Away Butterfly, which also included the Top 5 Billboard title track and her first charting single “One Way.” She’s been smooth jazz radio gold ever since, most recently scoring the Top 5 singles “Perfect Sunday” and “Stronger Now” (from her 2020 album Stronger Now) and “Fire & Water,” the funky, festive and exotic samba lead single from her extraordinary, stylistically eclectic (and provocatively titled!) new album Magic Mirror, which reached #4.

Among her other accolades, perhaps Carol’s most extraordinary achievement – and testament to her widespread impact and success – is having Spotify streaming totals all but unheard of among even the most popular of her smooth jazz peers. “Perfect Sunday” has racked up nearly 6.7 million streams on Spotify, with “Stronger Now” currently at 2.3 million.

No doubt, the success of “Fire & Water” is just the beginning of the many chart and streaming accolades coming Carol’s way with all the potential hits on Magic Mirror. But the multi-talented Atlanta based performer isn’t just about cranking out infectious hits. On her previous two albums and now this collection, she starts with personally meaningful themes and concepts that reflect her unique emotional journey – from deep sadness to personal empowerment, from desire to enlightenment and, to draw from some of her best known titles, soaring on “Femme Flight” (a SiriusXM Watercolors smash featuring flutist Ragan Whiteside and saxophonist Magdalena Chovancova) to the liberating feeling of “Perfect Sunday” and “Sun’s Out.”

Even on a multi-faceted album that has many potential hits and everything from sumptuous, hot and festive samba (“Fire & Water”) and bossa nova (the breezy and intoxicating/exotic “Sol Ipanema”) to a hard thumping, piano pounding, certifiable dance jam (“The Chase”), it’s indicative of her compositional depth that the tunes on Magic Mirror that resonate most are the ones least likely to be chosen as radio singles.

One of five tracks co-produced by Carol and her new collaborating partner, bassist and genre stalwart Roberto Vally, the Carol-composed “Gemini Sun” reminds me that Carol’s sensibilities harken back to what the genre was like in the early 90s, when a tune like this - gentle, dreamy, laid back, with old school atmospheres and a sweet, witty conversation with Whiteside’s flute could be a big hit. Its charm and whimsy reminds me of the vibe of one of my favorite albums of the time, Peter Kater’s Rooftops.

My other favorite is the similarly sweet and blissfully ethereal “Someday,” which flows gracefully as a piano-guitar conversation with Paul Brown, who produced the other five songs on the album. Like the closing tune that follows it, the symphonic new age influenced gem “Angels Watching Over Me,” it’s a master class in purposeful relaxation, literally transporting the listener’s heart mind and soul to simpler times where cares can effortlessly drift away for a few minutes.

Of note, “Sometime” was written by Carol, Brown, Vally and Tom Schumann (who adds strings), while “Angels…” was composed and arranged by Carol and co-produced and mixed by Vally. Even if the credits are distinctive, with Brown and Vally each adding their unique touches on their home instruments (Vally being particularly effective on bowed bass), in the end, both serve to illuminate the seamless flow of Carol’s rich artistry.

It was insightful to learn that the whole process of developing Magic Mirror began with Brown who had produced five songs on Stronger Now sending Carol the foundation of “Sometime” that he had worked up with Vally. Carol of course wanted to collaborate with Brown again, but her love of this track and realization of what Vally brought to it launched a conversation which led to her next great collaborations, all brought to life on the album.

Magic Mirror’s second and current radio single is “Paradigm Shift,” a spirited light funk tune that features Carol’s playful piano melody in dialogue with Brown’s snappy acoustic guitar, riding over a tight soulful groove as it heads towards the irrepressible hook. Another tune with obvious hit potential is the opening title track, a silky, seductive, increasingly grooving ballad (penned by Carol, Brown and guitarist Shane Theriot) featuring some of Carol’s most expressive playing and the beautiful sax passion of Greg Vail.

Other tracks include the digital only single “Crashing,” a hypnotic romantic ballad given a touch of dramatic flair with the additional strings of Ben Babylon, who adds similarly lush textures to the lighthearted, easy funk adventure Carol’s ivories take us on in the sharing of her delightful “Sopporo Dream.”

With most albums in the smooth jazz genre these days, if you hear the hits, you’ve pretty much experienced the whole thing. With Albert’s magnificent Magic Mirror, it’s truly the proverbial journey, best immersed in fully and experienced from start to finish over and over. It’s easily one of the genre’s best albums of 2022. By Jonathan Widran https://www.jwvibe.com/single-post/carol-albert-magic-mirror

Magic Mirror

Pepper Adams - Any Day Now - Where or When

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:17
Size: 159,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:58) 1. Blackout Blues
(6:26) 2. Minor Mishap
(3:53) 3. My One And Only Love
(6:23) 4. Unforgettable
(5:57) 5. Afternoon In Paris
(5:55) 6. Muezzin
(4:45) 7. You Turned The Table On Me
(5:50) 8. Alone Together
(5:36) 9. Cottontail
(8:42) 10. High Step
(5:27) 11. Apothegm
(5:21) 12. Your Host

Pepper Adams handled the baritone saxophone with the driven facility of hard bop and fueled the big horn with a propulsive intensity that caused him to be nicknamed "the Knife" for his "slashing and chopping technique," which had a humbling effect upon musicians fortunate enough to gig with him. From 1954 until shortly before his passing in 1986, Pepper Adams existed as an indispensable ingredient in the North American jazz ensemble, releasing more than 20 albums as a leader, emanating a special warmth as a featured soloist, and serving as a strongly supportive sideman and an often overlooked accompanist, for he anchored many an ensemble behind vocalists such as Brook Benton, Aretha Franklin, Jon Lucien, Carmen McRae, Helen Merrill, Esther Phillips, Dakota Staton, Joe Williams, and Jimmy Witherspoon.

Often mentioned in the same breath with Serge Chaloff, Gerry Mulligan, and Cecil Payne, his powerhouse approach was closer to that of Harry Carney and Leo Parker. Born Park Adams III on October 8, 1930, in Highland Park, MI, he was five years old when his family moved to Rochester, NY, where he soon developed a passionate interest in jazz by listening to Fats Waller, Jimmie Lunceford, Duke Ellington, and Cab Calloway on the radio. At 12 he was blowing clarinet and tenor sax and was soon sitting in with local bands, including one led by veteran reedman Ben Smith. Pepper's primary inspiration was tenor archetype Coleman Hawkins, and Harry Carney inspired him to take up the baritone.

Moving back to Detroit in 1946, he played in a group led by Lucky Thompson and worked in the house band at the African-American-owned Bluebird Inn with Barry Harris, Billy Mitchell, and Thad and Elvin Jones while holding down a job manufacturing automobiles. He blew tenor with Lionel Hampton for a while and served in the U.S. Army from 1951 to 1953, including a spell in Korea. Resuming his routine at the Bluebird, he developed his stamina while working with Miles Davis, Sonny Stitt, and Wardell Gray, whose influence he always acknowledged. Adams worked in a group led by guitarist Kenny Burrell, then recorded with alto saxophonist Lennie Niehaus.

His most memorable session of 1955 was with bassist Paul Chambers and emerging tenor John Coltrane. Moving to New York in January 1956, he recorded with Kenny Clarke, Curtis Fuller, and Quincy Jones. Pepper toured with Stan Kenton and Maynard Ferguson and while on the West Coast he jammed with Howard Rumsey's Lighthouse All-Stars. During 1957 Adams made records with harmonica ace Toots Thielemans; pianists Hank Jones and Ahmad Kharab Salim; trumpeters Shorty Rogers and Lee Morgan; and saxophonists Dave Pell, John Coltrane, Frank Wess, Coleman Hawkins, Hank Mobley, and Shafi Hadi (later reissued with the complete Debut recordings of Charles Mingus).

In 1958 Adams worked with Benny Goodman, Johnny Griffin, Chet Baker, Manny Albam, Gene Ammons, and Donald Byrd, with whom he would co-lead a band and cut quite a number of albums over the years. In 1959 Pepper put out an LP with trombonist Jimmy Knepper and led a group that was recorded live at the Five Spot. He supported Art Pepper and Sonny Red on their album Two Altos and sat in on Philly Joe Jones' Showcase. Adams helped solidify the orchestra that appeared with Thelonious Monk at Town Hall and served as a sort of living furnace among trombonist Jimmy Knepper and saxophonists Jackie McLean, John Handy, and Booker Ervin during the session that resulted in Blues and Roots, the album that virtually defines the artistic legacy of Charles Mingus.

He began the 1960s by recording with multi-instrumentalist Herbie Mann, pianist Herbie Hancock, vibraphonist Lionel Hampton, saxophonist Jimmy Forrest, and trumpeters Howard McGhee and Freddie Hubbard. He also recorded with pianists Duke Pearson and Red Garland, helped saxophonist Pony Poindexter cut his first album, and appeared live with Mingus at New York's Town Hall and Birdland. In 1963 Pepper Adams Plays Charlie Mingus was co-produced by Mingus and vibraphonist Teddy Charles. Other collaborations from this period include Ben Webster's See You at the Fair, Oliver Nelson's More Blues and the Abstract Truth, and dates led by pianist Joe Zawinul and saxophonist Stanley Turrentine.

In 1966 Thad Jones and Pepper Adams co-led the album Mean What You Say. This coincided with the first of the Monday night performances at the Village Vanguard by the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Big Band, an 18-piece unit that would stay together for ten years. Throughout the late '60s Pepper Adams performed with trumpeter Blue Mitchell, with Dizzy Gillespie at the Vanguard, behind organist Jimmy Smith on Stay Loose...Jimmy Smith Sings Again, and on various albums by saxophonists Lou Donaldson, Hank Crawford, Zoot Sims, Houston Person, and Roland Kirk. He closed out the decade by sitting in with bassist Richard Davis, with guitarist George Benson on the album Giblet Gravy, and in a large band behind Mose Allison on the LP Hello There, Universe. Pepper Adams showed up on several Blue Note sessions presided over by Elvin Jones from 1969 to 1973, on two albums with soul-jazz organist Johnny "Hammond" Smith, and with composer and multi-instrumentalist David Amram on various projects that materialized throughout the 1970s.

Adams demonstrated terrific adaptability as he assisted Felix Cavaliere and the Rascals with their jazz-rock crossover Peaceful World and even signed on with comedian Martin Mull, appearing on his 1974 album, Normal, where he lent ballast to a tidy big-band arrangement of "Flexible" with Phil Bodner, Thad Jones, Jimmy Knepper, and Joe Farrell. Further engagements during the 1970s (including tours of the U.K. and Europe) involved pianists Arif Mardin, Ben Sidran, and Mickey Tucker; guitarist Eric Gale; saxophonist Grover Washington, Jr.; and Lalo Schifrin's disco album Black Widow. A return to jazzier turf came about on Nick Brignola's Baritone Madness, on sessions with pianist Walter Bishop, Jr., and on Charles Mingus' last albums Me, Myself an Eye and Something Like a Bird in 1978. Pepper's Urban Dreams came out in 1981, ushering in what would be his last five years of artistic productivity. He assisted with Teo Macero's Impressions of Charles Mingus and recorded with pianist Bess Bonnier, guitarist Peter Leitch, pianists Hank Jones and Hod O'Brien, and trumpeter Kenny Wheeler. Pepper's last recording, The Adams Effect, brought him together with saxophonist Frank Foster and a rhythm section of Tommy Flanagan, Ron Carter, and Billy Hart. A lifelong tobacco addict, Pepper Adams died of lung cancer in Brooklyn, NY, on September 10, 1986. By arwulf arwulf https://www.iheart.com/artist/pepper-adams-43860/

Any Day Now - Where or When

Emmet Cohen - Uptown in Orbit

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:55
Size: 131,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:11) 1. Finger Buster
(8:13) 2. Uptown In Orbit
(5:36) 3. My Love Will Come Again
(7:05) 4. Spillin' The Tea
(7:13) 5. Li'l Darlin'
(5:23) 6. The Loneliest
(1:19) 7. Uptown In Orbit (Reprise)
(7:18) 8. Distant Hallow
(3:46) 9. Mosaic
(3:03) 10. Venus De Milo
(3:43) 11. Braggin' In Brass

Emmet Cohen’s time has come. Since his debut Mack Avenue release, "Future Stride," Cohen has toured the world consistently bringing the joy of music to people in need during a global pandemic all while hosting weekly livestream concerts from his home in Harlem, NY. These livestreams provided a sense of community and a home to the displaced musicians of New York, reminiscent of the 1920s rent parties.

On "Uptown in Orbit," his sophomore release for Mack Avenue, Cohen brings the tradition of jazz to the forefront while providing the modern twist needed for the current times. Featured on this release is trumpeter/educator Sean Jones, saxophonist Patrick Bartley, bassist Russell Hall and drummer Kyle Poole. https://emmetcohen.bandcamp.com/album/uptown-in-orbit

Personnel: Emmet Cohen — piano (all tracks); Russell Hall — acoustic bass (all tracks);Kyle Poole — drums (all tracks); Patrick Bartley — alto sax (2, 3, 6, 7, 8); Sean Jones — trumpet (2, 3, 6, 7, 8)

Uptown in Orbit

Nathan Davis - If

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1976
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:52
Size: 97,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:53)  1. Stick Buddy
(5:06)  2. If
(4:38)  3. Bahia
(6:30)  4. African Boogie
(5:25)  5. Tragic Magic
(6:22)  6. A Thought for Cannon
(3:26)  7. New Orleans
(5:29)  8. Mr. Jive by Five

The debut release on Nathan Davis' own Tomorrow International label, If remains the funkiest, hardest-driving of the saxophonist's LPs; some distance removed from his previous MPS and Polydor dates, the record boasts a streamlined approach that perfectly serves its relentless grooves: every note and beat means something, and each speaks volumes. Moving deftly from alto to tenor to soprano to flute and back again, Davis' restless energy galvanizes compositions like "Stick Buddy," "New Orleans," and "African Boogie," serving as a fiery counterpoint to Abraham Laboriel's pummeling basslines and Dave Palmer's deeply soulful drum breaks -- his playing possesses a sense of urgency and immediacy often missing from the jazz-funk aesthetic, and it transforms If into one of the finest recordings of its kind. ~ Jason Ankeny http://www.allmusic.com/album/if-mw0001448092

Personnel:  Nathan Davis - Alto Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Clarinet, Bass Clarinet, Flute [Alto]; Abraham Laboriel – Bass; Dave Palamar – Drums; George Caldwell - Piano, Electric Piano.

If

Sunday, January 29, 2023

Matt Dusk - Sinatra

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:52
Size: 71,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:26) 1. Fly Me To The Moon
(3:29) 2. I've Got You Under My Skin
(1:56) 3. Too Marvelous For Words
(3:01) 4. I Only Have Eyes For You
(2:41) 5. Summer Wind
(4:21) 6. Luck Be A Lady
(2:53) 7. Come Fly With Me
(2:36) 8. Lady Is A Tramp
(2:56) 9. You Make Me Feel So Young
(4:29) 10. My Way

Go big or go home. That might’ve been Matt Dusk’s mantra as he contemplated the making of his second album, Back in Town.. With impeccable taste to match his formidable talent, Dusk knows that style and sophistication•in everything from song selections and studio choices•are important factors that contribute to successful recordings.

The Toronto-born Matt Dusk will join Patrizio Buanne on his North American AEG Live tour this spring, which coincides with the Decca release of Dusk’s Back in Town on April 3rd. The 27-year-old crooner already had a sensational major-label debut under his belt with 2004’s Two Shots, which was partially recorded at London’s famous Abbey Road Studios with a 42-piece string section from the prestigious Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.

With Back in Town Dusk pulled out all the stops. He recorded much of the album in Los Angeles, at the fabled Capitol Studio in Studio A•where the walls have resonated with the voices of singers such as Frank Sinatra, Bobby Darin and Ella Fitzgerald. Then, as if that magical setting wasn’t enough, several renowned arrangers including Patrick Williams and Sammy Nestico were brought in to provide original arrangements for classic numbers like “More” and “As Time Goes By.” On top of that, the legendary Al Schmitt, winner of this year’s Lifetime Achievement Award at the Grammy Awards, recorded and mixed all of the album’s big band tracks.

“I wanted this album to have the best of everything,” explains Dusk, who produced Back in Town with Terry Sawchuk. “We approached it like it’s our last big record, with the best arrangers, best musicians and best studios. We didn’t want there to be any regrets or excuses in the future!”

Indeed, Back in Town has all the ingredients to catapult the Juno Award nominated singer well into the pop stratosphere: timeless songs, stylish arrangements, cutting-edge production and powerhouse vocals. Quite simply, Dusk has never sounded better, and it’s the album’s combination of classic and original songs that has clearly brought out the best in him. Along with big-band material, drawn from the American Songbook, Back in Town features such contemporary pop numbers as the inspirational “All About Me” and the forceful title track. Both were given the chart-topping treatment from Chris Lord-Alge; one of the world’s best mixing engineers with credits ranging from Madonna to Green Day.

“Chris has a way of finding these frequencies that make your speakers blow up,” says Dusk. “But his mother was a jazz singer, so he understands that genre too. After I heard Chris’ first mix I was like, ‘Oh my God, this is huge.’ I knew immediately that he’d found the sound both Terry and I were looking for that was radio compatible.”

Several tracks on Back in Town, including “Learnin’ The Blues,” “As Time Goes By” and “The Best is Yet to Come,” are songs associated with Frank Sinatra, but Dusk was adamant about putting a fresh spin on that material. “I didn’t want to perform stock arrangements of those songs,” he says, “…like the classic Nelson Riddle and Billy May charts used for Sinatra. Been there, done that… so why not try something new? I won’t deny that I’m a fan of Sinatra and that I definitely learned from him, but I want to put my own stamp on this genre.”

Working with a full big-band orchestra and strings, plus arrangements from Williams, Nestico and Vince Mendoza, Dusk and Sawchuk took those songs in new directions, from the Latin tinge of “More” to the playful phrasing of “As Time Goes By.” Similarly, “Who’s Got the Action,” once popularized by Dean Martin, gets the big, brassy treatment, while “Get Me to the Church On Time” and “On the Street Where You Live,” two of Dusk’s favorites from My Fair Lady, are nicely updated. Dusk says Nestico’s arrangement for “Get Me to the Church On Time,” in particular, blew him away. “Sammy, who’s best known for his work with Count Basie, sent over his chart with a big yellow post-it note on it saying, ‘This is one of my best charts•please don’t change a thing,’” recalls Dusk. “I was like ‘you’ve got to be kidding•I wouldn’t touch it.’ It was that good.”

Meanwhile, Dusk was able to bring some first-hand experience to “Get Me to the Church On Time”•not that he’s married. “I used to sing at a ton of weddings,” says Dusk, who studied at Toronto’s famed St. Michael’s Choir School before attending the city’s York University taking master classes with Oscar Peterson in the jazz program. “I’d get invited to all the stags and see how the grooms were hell bent on sowing their wild oats and having their last hurrah. So I can totally relate to that scene.”

Although he refrains from divulging many details, Dusk’s personal life has helped to shape both Back in Town and its predecessor. “The songs on Two Shots were more on the sad side because I was going through a rough time at that point in my life,” he explains. “Most of the songs were about lost love and self discovery. On this album, it’s the exact opposite. The majority of these songs are more about finding love, being happy and laughing, because the pendulum’s definitely swingin’ the other way.”

Swinging is one way to describe Back in Town, which puts Dusk firmly back in the pack of young crooners like Michael Bublé and Dusk’s label mate Jamie Cullum. “We’ve all got our own approaches to this genre,” says Dusk, about his colleagues. “Me? I’m not here to change the world. You could say my goal is to bring jazz a little more into the mainstream. But basically, at the end of the day, all I really want to do is entertain people.” With the big, bold and defiantly upbeat Back in Town, Dusk is doing just that. https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/matt-dusk

Sinatra

Benny Golson - One Day, Forever

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:35
Size: 144,1 MB
Art: Front

( 5:08) 1. One Day, Forever
( 6:18) 2. Blue Walk
( 7:54) 3. Killer Joe
( 6:59) 4. Are You Real?
( 4:46) 5. Sad To Say
( 9:18) 6. Out Of The Past
( 4:13) 7. Blues Alley
( 7:36) 8. Along Came Betty
(10:20) 9. On Gossamer Wings

Benny Golson’s latest Arkadia release, One Day, Forever, arose from a taping of some of Golson’s previous band members from the Jazztet: Art Farmer and Curtis Fuller. At the end of a European tour, they were so rushed they that they didn’t record long enough to fill an entire CD. Arkadia owner Bob Karcy kept the tape in the can, and he and Golson kept that recording in mind, in the intervening five years, during which Farmer passed. After Golson wrote some new original music, it was agreed that the tapes from the “Whisper Not 40 Years Of Benny Golson” European tour would finally be heard by the public.

The result is a CD in three mentalities, all of which are contained by Golson’s imagination: the famous sextet sound that produced numbers like “Killer Joe,” a string orchestra backing Shirley Horn as she sings the words to Golson’s new music, and a piano piece introducing Golson’s first classical composition. While not consistent in theme, One Day, Forever does reveal in startling contrast the creative curiosity of Benny Golson.

Joined by Geoff Keezer, Dwayne Burno and Joe Farnsworth, the Jazzteters recall the longevity of Golson’s contributions to the jazz vocabulary. Not confined just to the famous Jazztet works, the group entertained European audiences with some of Golson’s compositions for Art Blakey, like “Along Came Betty” and “Are You Real?”

Golson and Farmer never worked together again, although they remained close friends, so much so that Golson wrote “One Day, Forever” as a reminiscence of Farmer’s wife, who passed a few years before he did. As Horn sings it, sadly and tentatively with lots of space as always, “One Day, Forever” could allude to the abstract concept of loss of intimacy which, of course, it does. By broadening the idea, Golson has expanded the sense of aloneness to apply to anyone who experiences loss. “Sad To Say,” again, is, well, sad, and the cellos reinforce the sense of guardedness and hurt. The melancholy of Golson’s new music has found a perfect outlet in the delicacy and woundedness of Shirley Horn’s style.

The surprise, even for those who expect it, is Lara Downes’ ten-minute premier of Golson’s piano étude, which would be expected in a recital hall rather than on a jazz CD. Certainly, one could say that One Day, Forever contains something for everyone.

The interesting aspect of the CD, though, is the darkening of Golson’s musical interests, with their melancholy themes and their veering away from the brightness, bustling energy and optimism that marked his work in the fifties.By AAJ Staff https://www.allaboutjazz.com/one-day-forever-benny-golson-arkadia-jazz-review-by-aaj-staff

Personnel: Benny Golson, tenor sax; Shirley Horn, vocals; Art Farmer, trumpet; Curtis Fuller, trombone; Mulgrew Miller, Geoff Keezer, Lara Downes, piano; Ron Carter, Dwayne Burno, bass; Carl Allen, Joe Farnsworth, drums.

One Day, Forever

Dick Haymes - No More Little White Lies

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 28:27
Size: 65,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:13) 1. Little White Lies
(2:32) 2. It's A Grand Night For Singing
(2:45) 3. You'll Never Know
(2:45) 4. Love Letters
(3:05) 5. How Blue The Night
(2:32) 6. It's Magic
(2:41) 7. I'll Get By
(2:41) 8. Put Your Arms Around Me, Honey
(3:03) 9. The More I See You
(3:05) 10. 'Till The End Of Time

There was a time when no one would have left Dick Haymes (1918-1980) out of the top class of his contemporaries such as Frank Sinatra and Perry Como. But now the Argentine-born baritone is known only to those ardent fans and music historians who still claim him as one of the most talented popular singers of the twentieth century.

He worked with several great bandleaders, including Benny Goodman and Tommy Dorsey, before beginning a solo career that vaulted him to Hollywood stardom. In 1944, he worked with Twentieth Century-Fox, headlining such hit musicals as Billy Rose's Diamond Horseshoe and State Fair. Popular recordings such as "Little White Lies," "The More I See You," "How Blue the Night," "For You, For Me, For Evermore," "Speak Low," and "Another Night Like This," made him a top draw at the box office.

In the 1950s, when television took over the media landscape and the appeal of musicals declined, Haymes's career suffered. Despite efforts in the 1970s, he never re-established success. In The Life of Dick Haymes: No More Little White Lies, Ruth Prigozy uses over forty personal interviews with singers, musicians, composers, arrangers, and Haymes's family members. She searches archival recordings of The Dick Haymes Show, films, recordings, music studies, and histories to present a full portrait of this complicated man.

Prigozy chronicles Haymes's childhood, his rise in the 1940s, his decline into alcoholism, his multiple marriages among them to such leading stars as Rita Hayworth and Joanne Dru and divorces, and the minor resurgence of his career in Europe during the last years of his life. By Ruth Prigozy https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/326018

No More Little White Lies

Claude Diallo & Bruno Spoerri - Situation: Live

Styles: Piano And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:42
Size: 164,7 MB
Art: Front

(7:34) 1. Goodbye Blanche Neige
(8:52) 2. All The Things You Are
(5:52) 3. I Remember Jsl
(7:39) 4. Two Deaf Lice
(9:44) 5. One Last Prayer For You
(7:33) 6. When Will The Blues Leave
(7:26) 7. Body And Soul
(7:46) 8. Next Life
(9:14) 9. Generations Blues

Internationally acclaimed jazz pianist Claude Diallo travels around the globe to play his music which entices a cosmopolitan audience. With his trio Claude Diallo Situation he released several albums, won various awards and performed at different jazz festivals and venues in Europe, America and Asia.

His early love to Jazz happened through the music of Oscar Peterson and after intense studies at Berklee College of Music in Boston and the Aaron Copland School of Music in New York, Claude Diallo launched his career in the city that never sleeps and stayed there for 11 years, collaborating with the best musicians in his field.

With his motto: Traveling with Music, he started touring outside of his native Switzerland at the age of 20 and through his curiosity, admiration and passion towards other cultures, he built a worldwide network, which is still growing.

Claude Diallo demonstrates a thorough understanding of the jazz piano tradition, but is also strikingly original clearly, someone with a unique voice and sensibility. His compositions are very involved and take the listener on an incredible imaginative journey. ~ David Berkman (pianist and composer) https://claudediallo.com/biography/

Personnel: Claude Diallo - piano; Bruno Spoerri - saxophones; Luques Curtis - bass; Tupac Mantilla - percussion and drums

Situation: Live

Friday, January 27, 2023

Oscar Peterson Trio - On a Clear Day: Live in Zurich, 1971

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:46
Size: 144,5 MB
Art: Front

( 7:33) 1. The Lamp Is Low
( 7:00) 2. Younger Than Springtime
( 6:15) 3. On A Clear Day
(10:28) 4. Young And Foolish/a Time For Love
( 8:10) 5. Soft Winds
( 8:57) 6. Mack The Knife
( 7:38) 7. Where Do I Go From Here?
( 6:42) 8. On The Trail

Pianist Oscar Peterson had some year in 1971. He recorded Oscar Peterson in London (in March), In Tune with the Singers Unlimited (in July), Reunion Blues with the Milt Jackson Quartet (in July), In Concert (in July) and Great Connection (in October). What all of these albums have in common is they were recorded in Europe. Now we can add a sixth On a Clear Day: Live in Zurich 1971 (Mack Avenue) recorded on November 24, 1971 at Zurich's Kongresshaus, a complex of meeting spaces on Lake Zurich that includes the historic Tonhalle Zürich concert hall.

Accompanying Peterson in Zurich and on his entire six-week European tour were bassist Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen and drummer Louis Hayes. Previously unreleased, the music on the new album was recorded originally for a single broadcast on Radio Zurich. After airing, the tape went up on a shelf where it remained until now.

The songs performed are The Lamp Is Low, Younger Than Springtime, On a Clear Day, Young and Foolish / A Time for Love, Soft Winds, Mack the Knife, Where Do I Go From Here? and On the Trail.

Peterson's playing here ranges from terrific to sensational. While the early tracks lean toward pensive and rollicking (The Lamp Is Low, Younger Than Springtime, Young and Foolish and Soft Winds), his keyboard attack virtually explodes on On a Clear Day and the last three tracks Mack the Knife, Where Do I Go From Here? and On the Trail. The drive and speed with which Peterson plays and his cascades of flawless improvisation is hair-raising. [Poster above for a concert on the same tour three days later in Geneva, Switzerland]

Mack the Knife is perhaps the show-stopper. You won't know what he's playing until 4:05, which must have been quite a surprise for an audience wondering what his lengthy introduction was building toward. A sharp ear can pick out where it's heading, but he did a wonderful job of disguising his intention. Another high point are Peterson's chords on Younger Than Springtime. An exhilarating album and a terrific find. We have Kelly Peterson, Oscar's wife and the album's producer, to thank. Oscar Peterson died in 2007 at age 82; Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen died in 2005 at age 58. By JAZZWAX BY MARC MYERS https://www.allaboutjazz.com/news/oscar-peterson-live-in-zurich-1971/

Personnel: Piano – Oscar Peterson; Bass – Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen; Drums – Louis Hayes

On a Clear Day: The Oscar Peterson Trio - Live in Zurich, 1971

Nicki Leighton-Thomas - One Good Scandal

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:13
Size: 109,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:48) 1. Semi Detached
(4:13) 2. One Good Scandal
(4:01) 3. Overture To Corrupt And Deprave
(4:22) 4. Did We Have Any Fun
(3:43) 5. The Secret Of Silence
(1:59) 6. It's Only A Movie
(5:07) 7. Hyde Side Blues
(4:26) 8. Depravity
(3:48) 9. This Little Love Of Ours
(4:10) 10. Don't Fall In Love With Me
(2:39) 11. The Girl You Can't Forget
(3:51) 12. Stranger

Personnel: Nicki Leighton-Thomas (vocals); Simon Wallace (piano; Alec Dankworth (bass); Rod Youngs, Mike Pickering & Roy Dodds (drums); Dave O’Higgins (saxophones); Paul Stacey (guitar); Steve Waterman (trumpet); Gary Hammond (percussion)

A long time coming but here we have the follow up to Nicki’s excellent Forbidden Games released in 2001, and it does not disappoint. Once again, Nicki focusses on the music of Fran Landesman and Simon Wallace with devastatingly impressive results.

Incredibly Nicki has managed to assemble all the musicians from the original album to record One Good Scandal, with the intervening years finding that all have developed further as musicians and yet retained the freshness and enthusiasm that was so appealing on Forbidden Games.

Fran Landesman and Simon Wallace collaborated on hundreds of songs together, and this presents another issue of which is just which ones do you choose? All in all, Nicki’s songs choices are impeccable.

The opening number ‘Semi Detached’ is a real swinger, with some excellent tenor playing from O’Higgins that frames Nicki’s vocals superbly. This is also true of the title track, taken at a gentle tempo the saxophonist is again totally in tune with the singer and the song.

Nicki Leighton-Thomas now has enough experience to handle the darker side of Landesman’s lyrics, as evidenced on ‘Depravity’ in partnership this time with Steve Waterman’s resigned and melancholy trumpet.

Nicki’s vocals embrace Landesman’s lyrics with pathos, joy, sorrow and resignation, and even a little optimism and levity on ‘This Little Love Of Ours’, with the music provided by on this occasion by Tommy Wolf and performed with just the rhythm section.

Trimming down the line up is a neat trick that Nicki repeats on a couple of delightful duets. The first is ‘It’s Only A Movie’ that feature words and music by Landesman with guitarist Paul Stacey. Stacey made a major contribution to the earlier record, and it is a real pleasure to hear their work further in such an intimate setting.

The other duet is with Wallace on piano on a song that was in fact written for the singer by Landesman, ‘The Girl You Can’t Forget (Nicki)’. Incredibly after singing the title song and ‘Depravity’, Nicki delivers the lyrics with an innocence and touch of naivety that is spellbinding.

From beginning to end the album is a triumph, and dare I say it that Nicki Leighton-Thomas sings with a maturity that is rare. There is total conviction in everything she sings, and this total belief in the song makes this a compelling listen. By Nick Lea https://jazzviews.net/nicki-leighton-thomas-one-good-scandal/

One Good Scandal

Hermine Deurloo - Glass Fish

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:49
Size: 98,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:19)  1. Benny's Dream
(6:02)  2. Ode for Tomtem
(4:31)  3. Almost Always Never
(3:18)  4. Zombi Zui
(5:14)  5. Fleurette Africaine
(4:02)  6. Glass Fish
(3:44)  7. Mein Junges Leben Hat Ein End
(3:57)  8. Oktober In Oosterpark
(4:21)  9. Venice Cowboy's
(3:17) 10. Anna Virus

With five CDs under her belt, Hermine Deurloo teams up with Tony Overwater, Joshua Samson, and Jesse van Ruller on Glass Fish. Deurloo is an internationally known jazz chromatic harmonica player who has played with the Willem Breuker Kollectief, Toots Thielemans, John Engels, Candy Dulfer, and Al Jarreau, among others. The light percussive touch and transparency of the instruments on this album are anything but standard!~Editorial Reviews
http://www.amazon.com/Glass-Fish-Hermine-Deurloo/dp/B008QCBFDK

Personnel: Hermine Deurloo (harmonica), Tony Overwater (bass), Joshua Samson (percussion), and guest Jesse van Ruller (guitar).

Glass Fish

Ed Cherry Quartet - The Spirits Speak

Styles: Guitar Jazz, Straight-ahead/Mainstream 
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:41
Size: 135,0 MB
Art: Front

(7:36)  1. Little Girl, Big Girl
(5:46)  2. The Spirits Speak
(7:50)  3. Top Hat
(9:05)  4. Woo! / Sharock
(7:04)  5. Peace
(5:40)  6. Joe's Thing
(7:19)  7. Lennox Ave, 1 A.M.
(8:18)  8. Share a Life

It’s really a shame that so few jazz followers are aware of the talents of guitarist Ed Cherry. He’s been on the scene for quite some tine now, playing gigs with such name artists as Sam Rivers, Paquito D’Rivera, and Tim Hardin, not to mention the fourteen years he spent as a sideman with the legendary Dizzy Gillespie. The Spirits Speak is only the third set as a leader to be cut by the 47-year-old guitarist since Gillespie’s death in 1993. Unique too in the fact that it marks the first time that Cherry is leading an organ combo for his own purposes, let us not forget that he excels in this format as evidenced by two current Big John Patton discs featuring the guitarist (namely Minor Swing and This One’s for Ja, both for DIW/Disc Union). 

You won’t get an argument from anyone when it comes to the company that Cherry keeps. Organist Lonnie Smith and drummer Nasheet Waits hold down the fort, with saxophonist Joe Ford fronting things as a lead voice. There’s really little need for going into detail about individual tracks. With a large number of Cherry’s originals making up the program, the moods are varied and inspired. Inclined to make some sort of recommendation, a clear highlight has to be the electric twang of “Woo!/Sharrock,” where Cherry plays homage to the late Sonny Sharrock. Normally a mellower player with a single note style that recalls the approach of Grant Green, Cherry turns up the distortion on this one and rocks out. Vocalist Laird Jackson appears on a version of Horace Silver’s “Peace” and her own “Share a Life.” While she doesn’t embarrass herself, she also doesn’t necessarily present anything of any great significance to the proceedings. That reservation aside, Cherry adds yet another solid effort to his meager discography and makes another bid for wider recognition.~C.Andrew Hovan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-spirits-speak-ed-cherry-review-by-c-andrew-hovan.php

Personnel: Ed Cherry (guitar), Joe Ford (saxophones), Lonnie Smith (organ), Nasheet Waits (drums), Laird Jackson (vocals on 4 & 8 only)

The Spirits Speak