Thursday, March 9, 2023

Sant Andreu Jazz Band - Jazzing 12 Vol 2

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 94:19
Size: 217,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:48) 1. Easy Money
(5:12) 2. Wave
(6:24) 3. What's New
(4:55) 4. Baby, You've Got What It Takes
(2:56) 5. 'S Wonderlul
(8:08) 6. Recado Bossa Nova
(4:04) 7. Just You , Just Me
(5:12) 8. My One and Only Love
(5:08) 9. Stéphane
(2:46) 10. I Like Yo Hear It Sometimes
(3:36) 11. That's a Plenty
(6:25) 12. My Blue Heaven
(4:22) 13. Since You've Been Gone
(3:56) 14. Night and Day
(6:02) 15. From This Moment On
(4:41) 16. Feeling Good
(7:26) 17. Moanin'
(6:08) 18. Pyramid

A great party, yes, that is what the concert at the Palau de la Música was on December 10, 2021 as part of the Barcelona Jazz Festival. This concert is the one you have in your hands, on two CDs, because it was a musically generous concert, where we managed to bring together practically all the musicians who had gone through the project plus those who were part of it at that time.

In total, 64 musicians, plus regular guests: Ignasi Terraza, Josep Traver and Esteve Pi. It was really wonderful to be able to come together and make music again and recreate some of the most popular songs from all these years (plus 3 new songs that we had never recorded before). A jazz party in style, where it was exciting to hear the evolution of many of the musicians I hadn't heard for years. Many of them have their own projects and play an important role in the current jazz scene.

This recording is really very special, both emotionally and musically. In some of the songs we can practically hear two big bands playing at the same time, with two drummers, two bassists, two guitars, 10 saxophones, 6 or 7 trombones, 6 or 7 trumpets, choirs of more than 10 people, etc. It wasn't easy, but we made it possible. Because, as I already said back in 2009, in the first JAZZING: the Sant Andreu Jazz Band is a dream come true. And we are in 2022 (the year in which this 2021 recording appears) and we continue dreaming.
Translate By Google https://santandreujazzband.bandcamp.com/album/jazzing-12-vol-2

Jazzing 12

Gene Ammons & Sonny Stitt - Boss Tenors

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 79:49
Size: 184.8 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1961/2012
Art: Front

[4:22] 1. Red Sails In The Sunset
[5:13] 2. My Foolish Heart
[6:34] 3. Autumn Leaves
[6:31] 4. There Is No Greater Love
[3:19] 5. A Mess
[8:48] 6. Blues Up And Down
[2:37] 7. Headin' West
[4:38] 8. A Pair Of Red Pants
[4:17] 9. But Not For Me
[3:56] 10. New Blues Up And Down
[7:12] 11. The One Before This
[4:33] 12. We'll Be Together Again
[9:39] 13. Counter Clockwise
[3:54] 14. Time On My Hands
[4:11] 15. Autumn Leaves (Alternate Take)

This encounter between tenor saxophonist Gene Ammons and Sonny Stitt (who doubles on tenor and alto) is a true classic. Ammons and Stitt teamed together many times over a three-decade period, including co-leading a band during 1950-1952, but Boss Tenors is arguably their finest recording. Backed by pianist John Houston, bassist Buster Williams, and drummer George Brown, Ammons and Stitt battle it out on "There Is No Greater Love," Ammons' "The One Before This," "Autumn Leaves," "Blues Up and Down," and Stitt's "Counter Clockwise." This is competitive bebop at its best, with Stitt and Ammons proving to be equal matches. Essential music for all jazz collections. ~Scott Yanow

Boss Tenors

Shirley Jones - Richard Rodgers Songbook With Love

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:01
Size: 76,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:08) 1. Wish I Were In Love Again
(3:18) 2. It Never Entered My Mind
(3:00) 3. Isnt It Romantic
(4:29) 4. Spring Is Here
(3:14) 5. Where Or When
(2:47) 6. I Have Dreamed
(3:28) 7. Blue Moon
(4:15) 8. It Might As Well Be Spring
(2:05) 9. Falling In Love With Love
(4:14) 10. Bewitched

Named after child star Shirley Temple, Shirley Jones started singing at the age of six. She started formal training at the age of 12 and would dream of singing with her idol, Gordon MacRae. Upon graduating from high school, Shirley went to New York to audition for the casting director of Rodgers & Hammerstein. Taken by Shirley's beautifully trained voice, Shirley was signed as a nurse in the Broadway production of "South Pacific". Within a year, she would be in Hollywood to appear in her first film Oklahoma! (1955) as Laurey, the farm girl in love with cowboy Gordon MacRae. Oklahoma! (1955) would be filmed in CinemaScope and Todd-AO wide-screen and would take a year to shoot.

After that, Shirley returned to Broadway for the stage production of "Oklahoma!" before returning to Hollywood for Carousel (1956). But by this time, musicals were a dying art and she would have a few lean years. She would work on television in programs like Playhouse 90 (1956). With a screen image comparable to peaches-n-cream, Shirley wanted a darker role to change her image. In 1960, she would be cast as the vengeful prostitute in the Richard Brooks dramatic film Elmer Gantry (1960). With a brilliant performance against an equally brilliant Burt Lancaster, Shirley would win the Oscar for Supporting Actress. But the public wanted the good Shirley so she was cast as "Marion", the librarian, in the successful musical The Music Man (1962). Robert Preston had played the role on Broadway and his performance along with Shirley was magic.

Shirley would again work with little Ron Howard in The Courtship of Eddie's Father (1963). But the movies changed in the 60's and Shirley's image did not fit so she would see her movie career stop in 1965. There were always nightclubs, but Shirley would be remembered by another generation as "Shirley Partridge" in the television series The Partridge Family (1970). While the success of the show would do more for her stepson, teen idol David Cassidy, it would keep her name and face in the public view for the four years that the series ran. The show still plays in reruns. After the show ended, Shirley would spend the rest of the 70's in the land of television movies.

The television movie The Lives of Jenny Dolan (1975) would be made as a pilot for a series that was not picked up. In 1979, Shirley appeared in a comedy show called Shirley (1979), but the show lasted only one season. Shirley would appear infrequently in the 80's and in video's extolling fitness and beauty at the end of the decade.
https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0429250/bio?ref_=nm_ql_1#mini_bio

The Richard Rodgers Songbook With Love

Wednesday, March 8, 2023

Carol Sloane - Midnight Sun

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1983
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:22
Size: 132,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:06) 1. I'm Glad There Is You
(3:41) 2. They Can't Take That Away From Me
(4:32) 3. 'S Wonderful
(4:12) 4. But Not For Me
(3:51) 5. Honeysuckle Rose
(5:46) 6. Spring Is Here
(4:24) 7. Our Love Is Here To Say
(3:06) 8. Just In Time
(6:20) 9. Midnight Sun
(3:01) 10. It's All Right With Me
(4:39) 11. Lover Man
(3:54) 12. Teach Me Tonight
(2:19) 13. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
(4:26) 14. When I Fall In Love / Body And Soul

A fine, underrated jazz vocalist who got her start with Lambert, Hendricks & Ross

Carol Sloane started singing professionally when she was 14, and at 18, she toured Germany in a musical comedy. She was with the Les and Larry Elgart orchestra from 1958 to 1960, and, after appearing at a jazz festival in 1960, she was heard by Jon Hendricks, who later sent for her to sub for Annie Ross with Lambert, Hendricks and Ross. Sloane made a big impression at the 1961 Newport Jazz Festival and soon cut two records for Columbia. Unfortunately, her career never got going, and, except for a live set from 1964 released on Honey Dew, Sloane would not record again until 1977, instead working as a secretary in North Carolina and singing just now and then locally.

However,in the mid-'70s, she became more active again, caught on in Japan (where she began to record frequently), and her career finally got on more solid footing. Sloane's releases for Audiophile, Choice, Progressive, Contemporary, and, later, Concord feature a mature, bop-based singer with a sound of her own. Carol Sloane died on January 23, 2023 at a senior care facility in Stoneham, MA due to complications from a stoke she'd suffered two years earlier. She was 85 years of age.
https://www.jazzmusicarchives.com/artist/carol-sloane

Personnel: Carol Sloane / vocals; Roland Hanna / piano; Ken'ichi Yoshida / piano; George Mraz / bass

Midnight Sun

Dave Scott & Rich Perry - Nice Treatment

Styles: Trumpet And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:47
Size: 151,1 MB
Art: Front

(7:40) 1. Lotus Blossom
(9:11) 2. 50-21
(9:02) 3. Hangover Triangle
(6:23) 4. My Funny Valentine
(6:36) 5. Grooveyard
(9:25) 6. The Interloper
(8:35) 7. Never Let Me Go
(8:51) 8. Step Tempest

Brooklyn-based trumpeter/composer Dave Scott, has been one of the most consistently creative bandleaders recording on the SteepleChase jazz label in recent years. Here he teams up with pianist Jacob Sacks’ working trio with bassist Dave Ambrosio and drummer Vinnie Sperrazza. Rounding out the quintet is saxophonist Rich Perry, who will be a familiar name to anyone who has followed Dave Scott’s previous releases, or anyone who is very familiar with the New York jazz scene of the last 30 years.

Somewhat unusually for this team of heavyweight jazz composer/players, they chose to focus this release on jazz standards (some fairly obscure) rather than their original compositions. Some, like “My Funny Valentine,” or “Never Let Me Go” will be familiar even to those who don’t know many standards. Somewhat more obscure are tunes like Kenny Dorham’s “Lotus Blossom” or two Thad Jones tunes “50-21” and “The Interloper,” while two seldom-covered Herbie Nichols tunes are even more obscure.

The tunes are read fairly straight ahead with little in the way of arrangement and mostly serve as a jumping off point for the soloists who stick generally to the form of the tunes and the medium swing tempi of the tunes. Dave Scott’s signature jagged style of crosshatch playing gives interesting harmonic shading to the tunes, though he proves he can also be exceptionally lyrical on “Never Let Me Go” with an intensely intimate reading of the melody and a surprisingly straightforward melodic solo.

Rich Perry contrasts Dave Scott’s angular playing with a highly melodic style that is never too concerned with sticking closely to the harmony. Rather, he develops his ideas in interesting ways that manage to stick to the form of the tunes while giving the rhythm section plenty of fun melodic material to chew on.

Probably the most interesting soloist is Jacob Sacks. He seems to have absorbed the best aspects of Perry’s and Scott’s styles as he manages to both create strong, simple melodic ideas but expand on them with furious flurries of notes and rich, close harmony. “Crafty” is probably the best word to describe his playing as he manages to derive his playing from the jazz tradition, yet constantly surprise you with the directions he takes in his solos. His signature “clustered” harmonic concept also carries through in his excellent comping for the solos.

Ambrosio and Sperrazza are left largely to keep the form and the time, but they do so in an energetic and creative manner, responding to the soloists here and there. It’s certainly interesting to hear what these five exceptionally creative musicians can do within the confines of changes and mid-tempo swing, but as one might expect, the result is not as rewarding as hearing these musicians play their own music. A bit of time spent giving these tunes thoughtful or original arrangements would probably have yielded better results as well. Still, it’s worthwhile to hear what these sometimes “out” players can do when they stick to mostly “in.”
https://rateyourmusic.com/release/album/triotrio/nice-treatment/

Personnel: Dave Scott - trumpet; Rich Perry - tenor saxophone; Jacob Sacks - piano; David Ambrosio - bass; Vinnie Sperrazza - drums

Nice Treatment

Rosario Giuliani - Miserere

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:58
Size: 135,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:26) 1. Ut Queant Laxis
(6:09) 2. Magdalena degna da laudare
(5:11) 3. Canzon seconda a quattro
(4:16) 4. Agnus Dei
(5:11) 5. Miserere
(8:01) 6. Toccata e Prologo da Orfeo
(5:46) 7. Adagio
(6:18) 8. Inverno
(5:49) 9. Una furtiva lagrima
(6:45) 10. Il barbiere di Siviglia

"Miserere" is a sophisticated crossover project that has its roots in the most noble Italian musical heritage, in which the art of improvisation typical of the jazz language marries with the stylistic features of the past. A millennium of masterpieces drawn from the ancient Gregorian antiphonaries and medieval laudari, from the Renaissance counterpoint of the Roman and Venetian schools to the melodrama; a journey through time and in the Italian sound entirely interpreted by artists who have distinguished themselves for their ability to renew tradition.

The songs all have unpublished arrangements, specially prepared by Maestro Mario Corvini to enhance both the refined phrasing of Rosario Giuliani and the enveloping research timbres of the MAC Saxophone Quartet, one of the most appreciated quartets for their work of protection and innovation of the Italian school.Translate by Google https://www-ibs-it.translate.goog/miserere-cd-rosario-giuliani .

Miserere

Gene Ammons - Makes It Happen

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 28:34
Size: 65.4 MB
Styles: Soul jazz
Year: 1950/1967/2005
Art: Front

[2:45] 1. My Foolish Heart
[2:57] 2. Prelude To A Kiss
[2:41] 3. Goodbye
[2:50] 4. Can Anyone Explain
[3:06] 5. It's You Or No One
[2:33] 6. Pennies From Heaven
[2:45] 7. Happiness Is A Thing Called Joe
[2:56] 8. You Go To My Head
[3:08] 9. Once In A While
[2:48] 10. It's The Talk Of The Town

This 1967 Cadet release repackages the 1958 Chess date Soulful Saxophone, itself a session originally recorded in 1950 in the months prior to Gene Ammons' landmark stint with the Prestige label--and while the provocative cover suggests a collection of lush romantic ballads, Gene Ammons Makes It Happen is instead deep and dark, underscored by the tenorist's potently soulful sound. A melancholy reading of "My Foolish Heart" was Ammons' first hit and sets the tone for the remainder of the material, which boasts an affecting, late-night atmosphere--the music absolutely marinates in echo, transcending the waking world into the dreamscape. ~Jason Ankeny

Makes It Happen

Tuesday, March 7, 2023

Tim Hagans Quintet - Eternal Forge

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:14
Size: 147,9 MB
Art: Front

( 6:52) 1. Adam's Calendar
(14:12) 2. Not Yet
( 9:54) 3. Concord
(10:48) 4. Deva Uma
( 7:26) 5. Space Dozen
( 9:37) 6. That Is What Happens When You Leave The Door Open
( 5:22) 7. Stella By Starlight

Eternal Forge is a new digital release from Tim Hagans' European Quintet. It is available on Amazon in June 2019.

The Tim Hagans Quintet has performed extensively in Europe at jazz festivals, concert venues and jazz clubs. Tim Hagans writes: "Anders Mogensen, Carl Winther and Johnny Åman create a supremely burning and churning, swinging pulse. Their astounding ability to play the entire spectrum of dynamics keeps listeners in suspenseful anticipation.”

The music on this recording is intended to conjure for the listener the wondrous palette of human emotion, from jubilation of the life's joyous moments to the deep hope of the blues.

Space Dozen, Not Yet and That’s What Happens When You Leave The Door Open by Tim Hagans offer cosmic swing, contemplative groove and relentless action. Deva Uma and Adam’s Calendar by Carl Winther take us from introspective beauty to rhapsodic swing. Concord by the great trumpeter Jens Winther, imbues an adventurous forward motion which embodies the idea behind the release's title: Eternal Forge. These five musicians channel their collective energy and breath to propel them ever forward on the journey of creating exciting new music.
https://www.timhagans.com/news

Personnel: Tim Hagans - trumpet; Anders Mogensen - drums; Johnny Aman - bass; Carl Winther - piano; Marek Konarski tenor saxophone

Eternal Forge

Sant Andreu Jazz Band - Jazzing 12 vol 1

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 93:39
Size: 217,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:51) 1. Stardust
(5:06) 2. I Can’t Get Started
(4:27) 3. Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me
(5:18) 4. Willow Weep For Me
(3:03) 5. From This Moment On
(4:52) 6. All The Things You Are
(4:38) 7. Muskrat Ramble
(7:38) 8. Green Dolphin Street
(3:10) 9. It’s All Right With Me
(5:17) 10. Wave
(6:42) 11. Nobody Else But Me
(3:19) 12. Blue Skiesv (6:29) 13. Taking a Chance in Love
(3:58) 14. Georgia On My Mind
(2:59) 15. Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby
(5:32) 16. Na Baixa do Sapateiro
(5:08) 17. I’m Confessin'
(6:50) 18. Every Time We Say Goodbye
(4:12) 19. Lotus Blossom

Sant Andreu Jazz Band is a youth jazz band from Barcelona, featuring 7- to 20-year-olds. The bandleader is Joan Chamorro.

The band was founded in 2006 at Escola Municipal de Música de Sant Andreu. The band has performed at numerous concerts and festivals in Catalonia, and other regions of Spain as well as in neighbouring countries. They released their first live CD/DVD Jazzing: Live at Casa Fuster in 2009, featuring alongside established jazz musicians, the precocious 14-year-old, Andrea Motis among other young talents.

2010 was a breakthrough year for the band, with appearances at more than 20 festivals including Valls, Terrassa, Girona, Barcelona, Platja d'Aro, and venues like el Jamboree, Palau de la Música Catalana, JazzSi, Hotel Casa Fuster, featuring international performers like Dick Oatts, Ken Peplowski, Bobby Gordon, Perico Sambeat, Ignasi Terraza, Matthew Simon, and Esteve Pi. The band also released their second recording Jazzing vol.2.

In 2012 the film director Ramón Tort made the documentary A film about kids and music based on the band's work and efforts. The film was awarded best feature film at the Lights. Camera. Help. festival in Austin, Texas, US in 2013. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sant_Andreu_Jazz_Band

Jazzing 12 vol 1

Wycliffe Gordon - Dig This!!

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:14
Size: 156,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:02) 1. Dig This!!
(7:58) 2. Mahajual
(8:21) 3. Old Man Blooz Take 2
(7:24) 4. Limehouse Blues
(4:20) 5. The Beautiful Souls
(5:07) 6. Jookin' The Blooz
(7:32) 7. Lonnie's Lament
(5:23) 8. I can't Get Started
(5:22) 9. Cone's Tune
(2:52) 10. Blues Etude #2
(7:47) 11. Old Man Blooz Take 1

Wycliffe Gordon is a trombone player who knows his instrument from the primordial playing of Kid Ory and Honore Dutrey through giants like Jack Teagarden and J.J. Johnson up to and including today's best like Steve Turre. This ability is nowhere better illustrated than on this new CD covering music as classic as "Limehouse Blues" and "I Can't Get Started" and as new as the originals composed for this late 2002 recording date.

As a jazz historian/antiquarian, I admit that my taste runs to the familiarity of the standard chestnuts that greet me like an old friend even when dressed up in the latest style, yet there are still contemporary composer/arranger/players such as Wycliffe Gordon whose modern masterpieces could well qualify as tomorrow's classic staples. "Dig This" and "Old Man Blooz" (which appears here in two takes) are prime examples of the best of 21st century jazz standards in the making.

Again, given my taste for the early giants of this music, it's no surprise that leader/trombonist Gordon and guitarist Peter Bernstein are familiar names. Maybe this also accounts for the fact that I find the Hammond B-3 organist Sam Yahel a fascinating revelation. While too many of the "jazz electric organ" players I hear today are leaning on the bassist and/or drummer for rhythmic impetus, Yahel makes proper use of the Hammond's pedal board to underlay the bass line. Other players, tenor sax man Seamus Blake and drummer Bell Stewart, while not as startling on first listening as Yahel, fulfill their function in the ensemble.

Certain to cause comment and interest is Gordon's unaccompanied trombone solo, "Blues Etude #2." Gordon, like Anthony Braxton before him and Johann Sebastian Bach before him, has shown the power of an unaccompanied line supplying its own melody, harmony and rhythm.

Yet the track I'll keep returning to is Wycliffe Gordon's statement of "Limehouse Blues," which alternates between single and double time. In his distinctive arrangement of this hit tune of 1924 imported from the United Kingdom and defined in recordings by the Benny Goodman Sextet and by the Quintet of the Hot Club of France, Gordon has given new life to a classic which now becomes part of the contemporary repertoire.By Joe Klee. ttps://www.allaboutjazz.com/dig-this-wycliffe-gordon-criss-cross-review-by-joe-klee

Personnel: Wycliffe Gordon - Trombone; Peter Bernstein - Guitar; Seamus Blake - Tenor Sax; Bill Stewart - Drums; Sam Yahel - Hammond Organ.

Dig This!!

Gene Ammons - Nice An' Cool

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1961
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:56
Size: 91,8 MB
Art: Front

(7:10)  1. Till There Was You
(4:38)  2. Answer Me, My Love
(4:02)  3. Willow Weep for Me
(4:59)  4. Little Girl Blue
(7:43)  5. Something I Dreamed Last Night
(3:05)  6. Something Wonderful
(4:22)  7. I Remember You
(3:52)  8. Someone to Watch over Me

A 1961 set of standards heavy on the ballads, Nice 'n Cool is prime Gene Ammons. In front of a sympathetic piano-bass-drums trio (Richard Wyands, Doug Watkins, and the great J.C. Heard, respectively), Ammons' brilliantly soulful tenor saxophone really stretches out on the familiar melodies, but the relatively concise arrangements (all of the eight tracks are between three and eight minutes, with most hovering around the five-minute mark) don't allow him to wander too far afield as he occasionally does on less structured sessions. Nice 'n Cool is first and foremost a mood album, with the unity of sound more important than the individual performances, but Ammons particularly shines on the extended opener, a tender, restrained version of The Music Man's "Til There Was You" that sidesteps the mawkishness of many interpretations in favor of a dignified grace. The backing trio is excellent throughout, although Wyands' too-brief solo passages do make the listener wish that the pianist had been given more of a chance to shine. ~ Stewart Mason https://www.allmusic.com/album/nice-an-cool-mw0000868722      

Personnel:  Gene Ammons - tenor saxophone;  Richard Wyands - piano;  Doug Watkins - bass;  J.C. Heard - drums

Nice An' Cool

Monday, March 6, 2023

Oli Silk - 6

Styles: Smooth Jazz
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:09
Size: 124,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:01) 1. Just Can't Resist (feat. Vincent Ingala)
(4:47) 2. New Bounce
(4:34) 3. Call Patrice
(4:09) 4. U Bring Me Joy (feat. Elle Cato)
(3:56) 5. Meet Me In The Middle (feat. Chieli Minucci)
(3:44) 6. Out To Lunch
(3:57) 7. Hurry Up And Wait
(4:36) 8. Southern Hospitality
(4:40) 9. Slinky Malinki (feat. Jeff Kashiwa)
(5:54) 10. Steppin' Out (feat. Darren Rahn)
(4:21) 11. These Are The Good Old Days
(4:26) 12. Sanctuary St.

In 2006, Silk made his debut at the Catalina Island JazzTrax Festival, and later that year he was named Debut Artist of the Year by Smooth Jazz News magazine and Art Good's Jazztrax.com Also in that year, his song "Easy Does It" hit No. 19 on the Billboard Smooth Jazz chart.

In 2009 his song "Chill or Be Chilled" reached No. 3 on the Billboard Smooth Jazz chart, and No. 5 on the Top Smooth Jazz Songs 2009 chart.

In January 2014 Silk's song "At Your Service" (feat. Julian Vaughn) reached Number 1 on the Smooth Jazz chart.

Silk was nominated International Artist of the Year 2010 by the American Smooth Jazz Awards.https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Oli_Silk

6

Randy Brecker Plays Wlodek Pawlik Trio - Night in Calisia

Styles: Trumpet and Piano Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:40
Size: 146,4 MB
Art: Front

(10:54) 1. Night in Calisia
( 9:44) 2. Amber Road
(10:17) 3. Orienthology
(11:17) 4. Follow the Stars
(10:59) 5. Quarrel of the Roman Merchants
(10:26) 6. Forgotten Song

Multi-Grammy Award winner and jazz legend Randy is back and sounding ‘sweeter’ than ever with a heart-touching musical ‘celebration’, written and brought to life for Randy by the multi-talented Polish composer and trio leader, Wlodek Pawlik.

This recording is the result of a musical contribution to the celebration of the 1850th anniversary of Kalisz, the oldest city in Poland. The culmination took place in June of 2010 with a concert called ‘’Night in Calisia’’. The event was such a success the musicians decided to go into the studio to record the project nearly two years after the concert. The result is a heartwarming work of art The world premiere of a truly special project celebrating the city’s anniversary.
https://randybrecker.com/recordings/night-in-calisia/

Musicians: Randy Brecker - Trumpet; Wlodek Pawlik - Piano/Composer; Pawel Panta - Bass; Cezary Konrad - Drums

Night in Calisia

Hendrik Meurkens & Misha Tsiganov - Junity

Styles: Harmonica And Piano Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:07
Size: 144,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:17) 1. Blackbird
(4:07) 2. Luiza
(6:12) 3. Lady Bear's Lullaby
(4:47) 4. Junity
(4:15) 5. Norwegian Wood
(3:59) 6. Olena
(4:18) 7. Pent Up House
(4:48) 8. Ruby, My Dear
(4:00) 9. Menina na Janela
(5:03) 10. West Coast Blues
(4:40) 11. Scriabin
(6:45) 12. Close Enough For Love
(3:48) 13. Etude Op.2, No.1

Junity? No, that's not a misprint. Take "junto," the Brazilian word for together, and marry it with "unity"; that's how you get "junity," a hybridized term that accurately describes the relationship between harmonica master Hendrik Meurkens and pianist Misha Tsiganov.

These two men have been playing together for nearly a decade, appearing together on stages across the world and pleasing Meurkens albums like Samba To Go! (Zoho Music, 2009) and Celebrando (Zoho Music, 2012). Junity, a program containing seven harmonica-piano duo tracks and six quartet performances, highlights their simpatico relationship. This record is the first to focus in on the Meurkens-Tsiganov partnership, but it's not the first time these men have worked as a twosome. Over the years they've done a few duo tours in Russia, and the warm reception they received on those occasions likely contributed to the decision to make this type of record.

Both men seem to have eclectic taste(s), demonstrated in the song selections on this album. A pair of Lennon/McCartney classics ("Blackbird" and "Norwegian Wood"), a few jazz standards (Thelonious Monk's "Ruby, My Dear," Wes Montgomery's "West Coast Blues," and Sonny Rollins "Pent-Up House"), some Tsiganov-initiated nods to Russia ("Scriabin," "Etude Op. 2, No. 1" and "Lady Bear's Lullabye"), and Brazilian-based music all have a place at the table. And despite differences in origin, all of the material is tied together neatly.

Within the quartet program there are songs that fully integrate the four menMeurkens, Tsiganov, bassist Oleg Osenkov and drummer Willard Dyson and there are songs that still tend to zone in on the co-leaders, with Dyson and Osenkov gently coloring around them; "West Coast Blues" and "Pent-Up House" belong to the former category while "Close Enough For Love" belongs to the latter. The majority of the duo material is extremely lyrical, projecting a sense of longing. A notable exception is "Menina Na Janela," a sprightly Meurkens-penned choro that's all sunshine and cheer. Regardless of the mood, Junity does what it sets out do: it shines a light on the beautifully collaborative nature of the Meurkens-Tsiganov partnership. It's a match made in heaven. By Dan Bilawsky
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/junity-hendrik-meurkens-hms-review-by-dan-bilawsky

Personnel: Hendrik Meurkens: harmonica; Misha Tsiganov: piano; Oleg Osenkov: bass (1, 3, 5, 7, 10, 12); Willard Dyson: drums (1, 3, 5, 7, 10, 12).

Junity

Jim Snidero Feat. Kurt Rosenwinkel - Far Far Away

Styles: Saxophone And Piano Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:09
Size: 126,1 MB
Art: Front

(6:59) 1. Far Far Away
(7:38) 2. Infinity
(7:00) 3. It Might as Well Be Spring
(6:56) 4. Nowhere to Hide
(7:52) 5. Obsession
(5:16) 6. Pat
(4:45) 7. Search for Peace
(7:41) 8. Little Falls

Far Far Away brings us ever so close to the genius of Jim Snidero. An incandescent affair built upon the pillars of new partnership and continuing collaboration, it showcases a marked consistency in craftsmanship and inventiveness that leaves no doubt as to this artist's place in the jazz firmament. Of course, seasoned listeners need no reminders about his elevated status. The vaunted alto saxophonist has been delivering dynamic performances as a leader on record for the better part of four decades, winning critics over and gaining plenty of fans with that work. Snidero's Blue Afternoon (Criss Cross, 1989) was rightly tagged as a modern classic through its inclusion in The Penguin Jazz Guide: The History of the Music in the 1001 Best Albums; he turned plenty of heads playing atop his own arresting orchestral arrangements on Strings (Miles-tone, 2003/Savant, 2021), which received the highest "Le Choc" review from Jazz Magazine (France) and saw the music and its creator cited as "belonging to a very exclusive club (Fischer, Ogerman, Sauter) of great successes in the genre"; and at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, when gigging opportunities were risky and scarce, he found a way and triumphed with Live at the Deer Head Inn (Savant, 2021), earning serious admiration and a rare 5-star review in DownBeat Magazine.

Those offerings demonstrate an extraordinary level of artistic achievement over wide spans, as Snidero successfully charted his way through vastly different territories in his thirties, mid-forties and sixties. And with many dates in his enviable discography branching out into other areas a celebration of the organ combo on Tippin' (Savant, 2007), a look at modernistic flow in Stream of Consciousness (Savant, 2013), an intrepid immersion in Korean culture for Project-K (Savant, 2020) those highlights provide just a mere glimpse of his capabilities when in command. The portrait of Snidero truly broadens with every single entry in his catalog, and that obviously includes this landmark 25th recording.

On Far Far Away, legend meets legend for an incredible journey to the outer limits. Returning to the studio after his triumphs on the stage, the renowned altoist joins forces with inimitable guitar hero Kurt Rosenwinkel. It's a pairing that's as unlikely as it is intriguing, opening the doors of possibility for the saxophonist: "For me, Kurt is one of the great jazz figures of the 21st century. His concept of sound and phrasing are so original and compelling, yet his playing is firmly grounded in the tradition. Achieving that combination is no small feat. There's just so much there that I wanted to take advantage of as a composer."

Opting to write new material tailored to Rosenwinkel's cut, Snidero eyes the horizon and what lies beyond. And in bringing back the ace rhythm section from Live at the Deer Head Inn forward-thinking pianist Orrin Evans, in-demand bassist Peter Washington and sterling drummer Joe Farnsworth he acknowledges a winning combination of musicians while refocusing their efforts: "The live record was really all about the moment 'A token of hope, a prayer for the return of live gigs,' as London Jazz News so eloquently put it. It was just getting up there, relaxing and playing tunes that would hopefully bring some joy to folks during some difficult times. With the addition of Kurt, and the focus on originals now, this album is really quite different."

Illustrating that truth right out of the gate, Snidero sets a course to the stars for the title track. The first of many pieces to capitalize on Rosenwinkel's signature sonics, it spotlights both frontline members as euphoric soloists, highlights some significant chemistry in their matchup, and provides additional space for Evans and Farnsworth to shine. Dialing things back for the follow-up the cobalt-shaded "Infinity" the quintet plays toward straight-time seduction as it crests waves of its own creation. Reflecting the very nature of the Snidero-and-Rosenwinkel partnership, those opening numbers offer contrast while proving complementary. Switching gears with a subtly reharmonized look at Rodgers and Hammerstein's "It Might as Well Be Spring," the leader delights in the opportunity to bare his soul on one of his favorite ballads. The album's lone dip into the Great American Songbook, and one of the finest examples of Snidero's sound on record, it proves to be a model of class and sensitivity.

Returning to the realm of originals, the saxophonist delivers three consecutive winners from as many angles. The bounding "Nowhere to Hide," ripe with harmonic tension and conflicting extensions, brings piquancy to the center of the picture as Snidero's pointed lead, Rosenwinkel's liquid heat and Evans' down-the-middle designs each make strong impressions. Then "Obsession" arrives, taking shape around a simmering funk feel and serving as the only one of its kind on the playlist. Dynamic comping and interplay on the rhythm side help to create arched expressions within its well constructed framework, ultimately supporting and encouraging those at the fore. Closing this trifecta of new compositions with "Pat" a blues-based gem tapping into the spirit of the legendary Pat Martino everybody takes a moment to give due respect to a dearly departed jazz guitar icon and his enduring influence.

Adopting a reflective stance in the penultimate presentation, Snidero looks to the late McCoy Tyner's ever-relevant "Search for Peace." A breathtaking ballad that gives pause to admire both music and message, it's a perfect vehicle to accentuate the leader's tender side, Rosenwinkel's singing strings and Washington's purposeful pizzicato. Then it's back to new wonders with "Little Falls," a swinging sendoff that's right in everybody's wheelhouse. Washington's walking lines and Farnsworth's ride cymbal lay the groundwork as the group's core soloists captivate through the beauty of their ideas. Demonstrating clear direction, this exit piece, much like everything preceding it, speaks to Snidero's great attention to detail with this project: "I spent quite a bit of time thinking about the band's sound while writing how to layer certain elements such as timbre, harmony and range, to both blend and (sometimes) conflict, creating more depth. It's about putting it all together while being musical and projecting warmth. That's what I value most of all." Not surprisingly, that comes through in the wondrous mix on Far Far Away. By Dan Bilawsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/far-far-away

Personnel: Jim Snidero: saxophone, alto; Kurt Rosenwinkel: guitar; Orrin Evans: piano; Peter Washington: bass; Joe Farnsworth: drums.

Far Far Away

Sunday, March 5, 2023

Alex Sipiagin - Equilibrium

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:49
Size: 151,8 MB
Art: Front

( 7:28) 1. Mood 2
(10:58) 2. Equilibrium
( 7:29) 3. Evidence
( 9:02) 4. Sonhando Com O Meu Primeiro Amor
( 3:27) 5. Free 1
( 7:53) 6. High
( 7:26) 7. Good Morning
( 8:28) 8. Blues For Kids
( 3:34) 9. Free 2

Russian native Alex Sipiagin has been a first call trumpeter for several New York big bands for the past five years or so. A veteran of the Mingus Big Band, the Gil Evans Orchestra, and the Dave Holland Big Band, Sipiagin has been a favorite with critics but has yet to break though to the jazz public at large. Over the course of his three previous Criss Cross sides, the trumpeter has shown growth from a mainstream hard bop interpreter to an adventurous post bop progenitor.

Chock full of bristling improvisation, Equilibrium is arguably Sipiagin's best effort to date, and much of this is due to some fine writing no doubt influenced by Holland and a fantastic ensemble that includes saxophonist Chris Potter, pianist David Kikoski, and drummer Gene Jackson. Look no further than a run through Monk's "Evidence to hear that Sipiagin is not interested in run of the mill interpretations, but instead crafts arrangements and originals that are more about an elastic sense of time. Voicing the melody for two saxophones (Potter and David Binney) and his own muted trumpet, Sipiagin changes the rhythmic movement for a slightly off-kilter sound that suits the idiosyncratic nature of the piece to a tee.

Following the extroverted spirit of the opening "Mood 2, the title track, and the previously mentioned "Evidence, a dark and brooding "Sonhando Com O Meu Primeiro Amor by Brazilian heavyweight Toninho Horta finds Sipiagin at his lyrical best with a fat tone reminiscent of Freddie Hubbard. By contrast, the collective improvisation during two takes of "Free confirms that there are two sides to the trumpeter's personality and that he's not afraid to walk a musical tightrope without need for a safety net.

With a total being greater than the mere sum of its parts, Equilibrium serves as a complex and varied showcase for Alex Sipiagin and his top-notch crew of partners in crime. At the rate that he's going, there's no telling what even greater breakthroughs lie ahead for this forward-thinking musician. By C. Andrew Hovan
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/equilibrium-alex-sipiagin-criss-cross-review-by-c-andrew-hovan

Personnel: Alex Sipiagin (trumpet), Chris Potter (saxophones), David Binney (saxophones), David Kikoski (piano), Scott Colley (bass), Gene Jackson (drums)

Equilibrium

Royce Campbell - Roses & Wine

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:15
Size: 143,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:39) 1. Take A Train
(5:29) 2. Roses And Wine
(8:59) 3. Lover Guy
(5:56) 4. There's No Other You
(5:57) 5. G Jam Blues
(5:12) 6. All The Things
(7:51) 7. That's Not All
(5:34) 8. More Than Just Friends
(6:29) 9. Into Nowhere
(5:04) 10. D Jam Blues

Guitarist Royce Campbell has a liking for taking chord progressions from familiar standards and improvising new melodies with them. He thinks outside of the box while using material that comes from inside the box. He does so on his sophomore album Roses And Wine from Philology Records, opening with a rollicking jive-inspired tune “Take A Train” that conjures up the feeling of riding a steam locomotive across country. There is more to Campbell’s music than the melodic haikus of his guitar pizzicatos or andante strumming, for instance, the folksy-Hawaiian sizzle in the chord textures of the title track infuses a pacifying mood which features the bebop phrasing of Hod O’Brien’s piano keys. Also showcased on the recording are Pete Spaar and James King who share the bass duties.

Every track sounds like it is smiling at the listener thumping along the upbeat ruminations of the trio and the pliable chord coordinates of the melodic patterns. The smooth bluesy piping of “Lover Guy” pervades a sensual stroll in Campbell’s guitar riffs as the vigorous arcos of the bass in “There’s No Other You” are enhanced by add-ons of vaunting jetties in the piano phrases. The laid back chord expressions of “D. .Jam Blues” have a Louisiana sound that shifts into a cool bebop traction in “All The Things.” The leisurely gait of the piano keys in “That’s Not All” moves in harmony with the moonlight coloring of Campbell’s guitar chords as the comfy grooves of “More Than Just Friends” imbue the melody with a cheerful sprint. The bebop motifs strewn across “Into Nowhere:” and “D. Jam Blues” have a vintage Americana feel reminiscent to Chet Baker and props a happy tapping along the rhythmic beats.

Roses and Wine is feel good music from beginning to end and displays the trio’s ability to play like a well-oiled machine. Campbell has a lengthy recording history that includes working on tribute albums for Wes Montgomery and Henri Mancici, in addition to being a sideman on other artists records as well as making albums in his own right. The authenticity in Campbell’s playing breeds sunshine and joy in the seams of the transitional phrases and chord progressions making music that gravitates to going up the shafts. https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/royce-campbell-trio-roses-wine/

Personnel: Guitar, Composed By, Producer – Royce Campbell; Bass – James King (tracks: 2 to 4, 7 to 10), Pete Spaar (tracks: 1, 5, 6); Piano – Hod O'Brien

Roses & Wine

Thelonious Monk - The Complete London Collection (Vol 1), (Vol 2), (Vol 3)

Album: The Complete London Collection (Vol 1)

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:52
Size: 110,9 MB
Art: Front

(7:28)  1. Trinkle Tinkle (Take 3)
(2:23)  2. Crepuscule with Nellie (Take 2)
(5:52)  3. Darn That Dream
(4:08)  4. Little Rootie Tootie
(3:18)  5. Meet Me Tonight in Dreamland
(5:17)  6. Nice Work If You Can Get It
(5:13)  7. My Melancholy Baby
(3:30)  8. Jackieng
(7:16)  9. Loverman
(2:23) 10. Blue Sphere


Album: The Complete London Collection (Vol 2)

Time: 44:49
Size: 105,7 MB

(5:28)  1. Evidence [Take 2]
(6:28)  2. Misterioso
(2:25)  3. Crepuscule With Nellie [Take 4]
(7:47)  4. I Mean You
(3:46)  5. Criss Cross
(6:10)  6. Ruby My Dear
(4:47)  7. Nutty [Take 2]
(7:55)  8. Hackensack


Album: The Complete London Collection (Vol 3)

Time: 60:53
Size: 143,2 MB

(6:04)  1. Trinkle Tinkle (Take 2)
(5:19)  2. The Man I Love
(6:41)  3. Something In Blue
(1:15)  4. Introspection (Take 1)
(5:48)  5. Trinkle Tinkle (Take 1)
(2:21)  6. Crepuscule With Nellie (Take 3)
(4:18)  7. Nutty (Take 1)
(3:05)  8. Introspection (Take 3)
(9:04)  9. Hackensack (Take 1)
(7:14) 10. Evidence (Take 1)
(9:40) 11. Chordially (Improvisation)

This attractive box houses three previously released Black Lion CDs recorded at pianist/composer Thelonious Monk's final sessions as a leader; only a few dates with the Giants of Jazz were left in the future for Monk, who would soon retire altogether. Heard in unaccompanied piano solos and in a trio with bassist Al McKibbon and drummer Art Blakey, Monk is in surprisingly exuberant form, still very much at the peak of his powers. Although most of this music was last available in a "complete" Mosaic LP box set, there are actually three additional alternate takes included in the very enjoyable and somewhat definitive set. Highlights include "Little Rootie Tootie," "Meet Me Tonight in Dreamland," "Blue Sphere," "Criss Cross," "The Man I Love" and "Evidence," but all 29 selections are well worth hearing. This is essential music for all serious Thelonious Monk collections; the solo performances in particular are quite memorable.By Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-complete-london-collection-mw0000184702

Personnel: Piano – Thelonious Monk; Double Bass – Al McKibbon,  Drums – Art Blakey 


Miles Davis Quintet - Live At The Oriental Theatre 1966 (CD1) And (CD2)

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:08 (CD 1)
Size: 97,3 MB (CD 1)
Time: 48:38 (CD 2)
Size: 112,3 MB (CD 2)
Art: Front

(CD 1)

( 0:40) 1. Announcement
( 9:49) 2. Autumn Leaves
( 9:22) 3. Agitation
(10:31) 4. Stella By Starlight
(11:44) 5. Gingerbread Boy

(CD 2)
( 9:30) 1. The Theme
( 9:32) 2. All Blues
( 8:51) 3. Who Can I Turn To?
( 9:06) 4. So What
(11:38) 5. My Funny Valentine

This release contains a complete previously unissued concert by the 1966 Miles Davis Quintet. Recorded at the impressing Oriental Theatre in Portland shortly before it was demolished, it presents the only existing testimony of bassist Richard Davis playing with Miles. Among its many highlights are many great trumpet solos by Miles, including his only existing version of "Who Can I Turn To ?" a free jazzoriented So What, and a beautiful reading of My Funny Valentine.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/The-Oriental-Theatre-1966-2CD/dp/B004M3NKBC

Personnel: Miles Davis - tp; Wayne Shorter - ts; Herbie Hancock - p; Richard Davis - b; Tony Williams - d

Live At The Oriental Theatre 1966 (CD1)(CD2)

Friday, March 3, 2023

Wayne Shorter - High Life

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:14
Size: 122,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:24)  1. Children Of The Night
(7:30)  2. At The Fair
(5:12)  3. Maya
(5:35)  4. On The Milky Way Express
(6:20)  5. Pandora Awakened
(6:46)  6. Virgo Rising
(6:28)  7. High Life
(5:54)  8. Midnight In Califoria
(2:02)  9. Black Swan ( In Memory Of Susan Portlynn Romeo)

Wayne Shorter's debut for Verve was his first release as a leader in quite a long time and his most rewarding recording since the prime years of Weather Report, 15 years before. Shorter and keyboardist Rachel Z spent a year working on developing and orchestrating his ideas and the results are these nine originals. Although use was made of orchestral horns and strings, most of the backing in these often-dense ensembles is by a standard rhythm section (which includes Marcus Miller on electric bass and bass clarinet) and Rachel Z's synthesizers. The pieces set moods rather than state singable melodies, are not afraid to utilize electronic rhythms now and then in an unpredictable fashion, and are both intelligent and largely danceable. However, Shorter's playing (not only on soprano and tenor but a bit of alto and baritone) is always distinctive and he sounds very much as if he is pushing himself. In fact, his emotional statements and the complexity of the ensembles push this music way above virtually all of the so-called "contemporary jazz" (which is often merely a synonym for jazzy pop) into the idiom of creative music. It helps for listeners to have a liking for the sound of Weather Report (even though this group is not a copy), but even Shorter's older fans will find his playing here to be quite stimulating. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/high-life-mw0000645761

Personnel: Wayne Shorter (arranger, soprano, alto, tenor & baritone saxophones); Marcus Miller (conductor, bass clarinet, bass, programming); Jon Lewis, Rob McGregor (trumpet); Steven Holtman, Robert Payne (trombone); Daniel Kelley, Joseph Meyer, Brad Warnaar (French horn); Linda Muggeridge, Leslie Reed (English horn); Kazue McGregor, Annarenee Grizell, Sarah Weisz (flute); Joyce Kelley-Clark (oboe); Emily Bernstein, Ralph Williams (clarinet); Julie Feves, Michele Grego (contrabassoon); Bruce Dukov, Armen Garabedian, Suzie Katayama, Edith Markman, Sid Page, Michele Richards (violin); Robert Becker, Denyse Buffum, Ralph Fielding, Harry Shirinian, Evan Wilson (viola); Larry Corbett (cello); Rachel Z (piano, synthesizer); David Gilmore (guitar); Will Calhoun, Terry Lyne Carrington (drums); Lenny Castro, Airto Moreira, Munyungo Jackson, Kevin Ricard (percussion).

R.I.P.

Born: August 25, 1933, Newark, New Jersey, United States

Died: March 2, 2023


High Life