Sunday, April 2, 2023

Harold Vick - Steppin' Out!

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1963
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:25
Size: 84,1 MB
Art: Front

(7:29) 1. Our Miss Brooks
(6:12) 2. Trimmed In Blue
(4:42) 3. Laura
(6:28) 4. Dotty's Dream
(5:41) 5. Vicksville
(5:51) 6. Steppin' Out

This soul-jazz outing by tenor saxophonist Harold Vick (his recording debut as a leader) casts him in a role that was often occupied by Stanley Turrentine. Vick, with a quintet that also includes trumpeter Blue Mitchell, guitarist Grant Green, organist John Patton, and drummer Ben Dixon, performs four blues, a slightly trickier original (five of the six songs are his), plus the ballad "Laura" on this CD reissue.

There are no real surprises, but no disappointments either on what would be Harold Vick's only chance to lead a Blue Note date. At 27, he was already a fine player.
https://www.allmusic.com/album/steppin-out%21-mw0001986414

Personnel: Harold Vick - tenor saxophone; Blue Mitchell - trumpet; John Patton - organ; Grant Green - guitar; Ben Dixon - drums

Steppin' Out!

Paul Horn - The Jazz Years

Styles: Flute And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:31
Size: 183,7 MB
Art: Front

( 3:01)  1. Benny's Buns
(11:52)  2. Mirage for Miles
( 3:42)  3. Fun Time
( 3:22)  4. Love and Hate
( 4:07)  5. Moer or Less
(12:04)  6. Abstraction
( 4:02)  7. Caesar and Cleopatra Theme
( 5:18)  8. My Funny Valentine
( 4:38)  9. Count Your Change
( 4:06) 10. Short Politicain
( 2:48) 11. Lazy Afternoon
( 3:57) 12. Antony and Cleopatra Theme
( 3:26) 13. Just Because We're Kids
( 4:51) 14. Cleopatra's Palace Music
( 3:40) 15. Without a Song
( 4:29) 16. Yazz Per Favore

When one evaluates Paul Horn's career, it is as if he were two people, pre- and post-1967. In his early days, Horn was an excellent cool-toned altoist and flutist, while later he became a new age flutist whose music is often best used as background music for meditation. Horn started on piano when he was four and switched to alto at the age of 12. After a stint with the Sauter-Finegan Orchestra on tenor, Horn was Buddy Collette's replacement with the popular Chico Hamilton Quintet (1956-1958), playing alto, flute, and clarinet. He became a studio musician in Los Angeles, but also found time during 1957-1966 to record cool jazz albums for Dot (later reissued on Impulse), World Pacific, Hi Fi Jazz, Columbia, and RCA, and he participated in a memorable live session with Cal Tjader in 1959. In addition, in 1964, Horn recorded one of the first Jazz Masses, utilizing an orchestra arranged by Lalo Schifrin. In 1967, the second part of Paul Horn's career began; he studied transcendental meditation in India and became a teacher. The following year, he recorded unaccompanied flute solos at the Taj Mahal (where he enjoyed interacting with the echoes), and went on to record in the Great Pyramid, tour China (1979) and the Soviet Union, record using the sounds of killer whales as "accompaniment," and found his own label Golden Flute. ~ Scott Yanow https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/the-jazz-years-selected-pieces-1961-1963/49491612

Personnel: Flute, Flute [Bass Flute], Khene – Paul Horn;  Flute, Flute [Alto Flute], Alto Saxophone – Paul Horn;   Bass – Chuck Israels, Jimmy Bond, Vic Gaskin;  Drums – Colin Bailey, Milt Turner; Piano – Paul Moer, Victor Feldmans: 4, 7, 12, 14); Vibraphone [Vibes] – Emil Richards

The Jazz Years - Selected Pieces 1961~1963

Eldar Djangirov - Release

Styles: Pianao Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:22
Size: 121,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:22) 1. Release
(1:48) 2. Monday Night
(1:50) 3. Stealth
(2:35) 4. Giant Steps
(1:56) 5. Cassette
(1:46) 6. Tea Break
(2:30) 7. Drip
(0:58) 8. Sail (Interlude 1)
(1:43) 9. Open Water
(2:33) 10. On Green Dolphin Street
(2:14) 11. Pause
(1:38) 12. Biking
(0:40) 13. Piano Beat (Interlude 2)
(4:10) 14. Drifting
(1:45) 15. Restless
(1:21) 16. Hypervigilance
(2:35) 17. New Year
(0:50) 18. Load (Interlude 3)
(2:22) 19. Longing
(2:35) 20. Climb
(2:25) 21. Brooding
(2:53) 22. Desolate
(2:17) 23. Hiatus
(3:27) 24. Days Pass (Bonus Vocal)

The New York Times described the New York based pianist Eldar Djangirov as "a blend of musical intelligence, organizational savvy, enthusiasm and prowess that was all the more impressive for seeming so casual… an ebullient impressionist." Dr. Billy Taylor said, "Eldar Djangirov's playing shows brilliancy, complexity, and discipline... he's serious about his music, he's thoughtful about what he does.” Jazz Times said, “Maybe he made a pact with Lucifer to be the greatest pianist ever." Praised as “a genius beyond most young people I've heard” by Dave Brubeck. Downbeat magazine stated that "his command of his instrument is beyond staggering."

When Eldar Djangirov (pronounced john-'gear-ov) was signed to Sony Classical at the age of 17, the young pianist from Kansas City was already well known for his prodigious pyrotechnics and precocious knowledge of the bebop tradition. Along the way, he's had the good fortune to meet and work with the masters including Dr. Billy Taylor, Marian McPartland, Dave Brubeck, Michael Brecker, Wynton Marsalis, Joshua Redman, Nicholas Payton, Harvey Mason, Ron Carter, Pat Martino and many others. Through these opportunities and other wonderful musical experiences, Eldar continues to explore new frontiers through composing and performing, enabling him to ultimately to realize his own musical vision.

Born on January 28, 1987, Eldar came to the U.S. from the former Soviet Union when he was ten. Among his first performances were in his hometown of Kansas City, as well as The Interlochen Center for the Arts in Michigan. He quickly then moved up the ranks and was featured on the NPR Marian McPartland’s Piano Jazz show at the age of twelve. He released two albums independently. Eldar signed with Sony and recorded his major label self-titled debut featuring the great bassist, John Patitucci, and Michael Brecker on tenor sax. He followed up with the critically acclaimed "Live at the Blue Note" with guest appearances by Roy Hargrove and Chris Botti in 2006. Eldar was nominated for a Grammy in 2008 for his album "Re-imagination."

Eldar has appeared at numerous major jazz festivals including Tokyo Jazz Festival, Lionel Hampton Jazz Festival, Java Jazz Festival, Vienna Jazz Festival, Monterey Jazz Festival, and San Francisco Jazz Festival and has toured extensively throughout North America, Europe and Asia. He has performed at venues ranging from the Hollywood Bowl to Carnegie Hall and has played at the most notable jazz venues across the world. Eldar has been seen on national TV including the 2000 and 2008 Grammy Awards, Late Night with Conan O’Brien, CBS Saturday Early Show, and Jimmy Kimmel Live.

In addition, he has also played with world renowned symphony orchestras such as NHK Symphony Orchestra, Russian National Orchestra, and San Diego Symphony Orchestra. He has 4 critically acclaimed trio albums including the most recent "Virtue" featuring his trio Armando Gola (bass) and Ludwig Afonso (drums) as well as guest appearances by Joshua Redman and Nicholas Payton. "With the release of Virtue, Eldar may have sealed his role in future jazz history" (Bill Meredith, Jazziz).

Eldar's current album and first solo piano album entitled "Three Stories" has already garnered rave reviews. "This is certainly jazz piano, but it's the kind that belongs in a recital hall... Djangirov gets to the heart of every song" (Dan Bilawsky, All About Jazz); "Something special goes on here… In Djangirov's hands, the piano is a dramatic personage" (Karl Stark, Philadelphia Inquirer); "Djangirov's playing is, simply, flawless" (Jeff Tamarkin, All Music Guide)
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/eldar-djangirov

Release

Saturday, April 1, 2023

Anne Ducros - Ella...My Dear

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 42:40
Size: 97.7 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[2:42] 1. It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
[5:51] 2. Laura
[3:44] 3. Save Your Love For Me
[4:57] 4. Stardust
[3:09] 5. Lullaby Of Birdland (Feat. Dany Brillant)
[2:38] 6. Ella… My Dear
[5:39] 7. Come Rain Come Shine
[5:31] 8. Bewitched
[4:14] 9. Fascinating Gershwin
[4:11] 10. Dindi

Native of the Pas de Calais, Anne Ducros began her classic training (musical and vocal) within the conservatoire of Boulogne Sur mer with Lyne Durian. Then at the same time she is studying law at the University of Lille, she completes and refines her vocal mastery thanks to the education of Yuri Anoff and Maddy Mespley. Afterward she has a practice of baroque music within training course at the University and investigates Couperin, Rameau or Bach’s music.

Introduced to the vocal jazz from 1986, she sets up her first quartet of jazz with which she gains various international competitions (Price for better soloist and first vocaliste in the festival of jazz of Dunkerque; First price of soloist and vocalist in the festival of jazz of Vienne in 1989). This growing recognition will stimulates her of an inexhaustible will to sing always more by accumulating concerts in France and specially by publishing her first album of vocal jazz, "Don't you take a chance" at JTB in 1989.

Ella... My Dear

Stan Getz - Apasionado

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:41
Size: 116,7 MB
Art: Front

(8:06) 1. Apasionado
(7:06) 2. Coba
(6:07) 3. Waltz For Stan
(4:15) 4. Espanõla
(5:26) 5. Madrugada
(4:59) 6. Amorous Cat
(9:00) 7. Midnight Ride
(5:39) 8. Lonely Lady

In the liner notes to this album, Stan Getz comments about how producer Herb Alpert showed him aspects of recording he had never experienced before. In this case, it's how to over-produce without overwhelming a lead soloist, as Alpert loads up this date with synthesizer players, electric instruments, and effects as a backdrop for the ultra-cool tenor of Getz. While not going overboard, it would have been nice to hear this music without the caramel-thick arrangements, leaving just Getz and a rhythm section to play sans the unnecessary sugarcoating.

Initially released about a year before Getz passed away, the end result is a lazy and far too sweet group of pieces that muck up romance in a smothering fashion. Where string arrangements can sound beautiful, the sleepy synths on "Waltz for Stan" and echoplexed sax during "Madrugada" and especially the nine-minute ambling "Midnight Ride" are not just a trifle overbearing. Eddie del Barrio's "Coba" fares better in a fusion-on-the-rock-side mode mixed with Brazilian tropicalia, while the title track utilizes an acoustic big band mixed with synths and electric piano in a ballad-to-light-samba-to-heavy-beats sauce.

"Española" starts with an out of tune electric bass guitar followed by some clichéd electric guitar from Michael Landau, while "Amorous Cat" reflects its title in a light funk rhythm. Some very good players are included, like drummer Jeff Porcaro (Toto), percussionist Paulinho Da Costa, acoustic guitarist Oscar Castro-Neves, and keyboardist Kenny Barron, with George Bohanon and Oscar Brashear in the big-band horn section. Otherwise, this recording is far from essential music made by Stan Getz, more suitable for mood music elevator wallpaper than a substantive listening experience. By Michael G. Nastos
https://www.allmusic.com/album/apasionado-mw0000655019

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone – Stan Getz; Bass – Jimmy Johnson ; Drums – Jeff Porcaro; Electric Guitar – Michael Landau; Oscar Castro Neves; Piano – Kenny Barron; Saxophone – William Green; Synthesizer, Electric Piano – Mike Lang; Trombone – George Bohanon, Reginald Young; Trumpet – Noland Smith Jr., Oscar Brashear, Rick Baptist; Tuba – Tom Johnson

Apasionado

Paul Horn - Brazilian Images

Styles: Brazilian Jazz,  World Fusion
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:02
Size: 124,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:48)  1. Streets of São Paulo
(5:48)  2. Parque do Flamengo (Flamingo Park)
(6:40)  3. Vida Noturna (Night Life)
(4:07)  4. Ana
(5:22)  5. Som do Rio (The Sound Of Rio)
(6:06)  6. Brazilian Images
(5:37)  7. Amazônia
(5:02)  8. Funky Town
(6:17)  9. Mulher Solitária (Lonely Woman)
(3:10) 10. Sambinha (Little Samba)

A magnificent collaboration with guitarist Andre Geraissati and percussionists Airto Moreira and Joao Parabyba creates this lush and intimate musical experience from the ultimate world musicain, Paul Horn. Paul Horn is the ultimate world musician, a sound traveler without peer.

By 1989, when Paul Horn recorded Brazilian Images, people were beginning to realize that he was no longer ahead of his time. In the 1960’s Horn began a quixotic musical journey that opened a whole world of places and people to him. He spent the 1970s and 80s playing in some of the worlds great sacred spaces, and collaborating with musicians from many traditions. As far back as the 60s he unwittingly anticipated the ‘World Music’ and ‘New Age’ trends; during the next two decades, he helped to define them. By the time he made this album at the dawn of yet another decade, the times had pretty well caught up to him.

“I love Brazil,’ says Horn, “even as a child. When I first had the opportunity to go there in 1970, I knew why. The atmosphere is charged with music, dance, sunshine and beautiful women. Paradise. It is also a country of paradoxes. From some of the worst slums of the world, the Favelas, comes the happiest music in the world, the samba. On a tour of Brazil in 1990 with guitarist Andre Geraissati, “I found the gentler side of Brazil through his writing and the unique voices he uses. We recorded this album in Sao Paulo at the completion of our tour.” His Brazilian music is among his most beautiful; and Brazilian Images, a collaboration with guitarist Andre Geraissati and percussionists Airto Moreira and Joao Parabyba, is music of unusual lushness and intimacy. http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/paulhorn6

Personnel: Paul Horn (flute, alto flute, bansuri, soprano saxophone); André Geraissati (guitar); Joao Parahyba, Airto Moreira (percussion).

Brazilian Images

Claire Martin, Scott Dunn & Royal Philharmonic Orchestra - I Watch You Sleep

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:04
Size: 167,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:30) 1. I Watch You Sleep
(5:37) 2. Autumn in New York
(4:25) 3. It's Only a Paper Moon
(3:34) 4. For Ev'ry Man There's a Woman / It Was Written in the Stars
(5:35) 5. Round About
(4:32) 6. I'll Always Leave the Door a Little Open
(4:59) 7. I Wish I'd Met You
(5:13) 8. Don't Play Games with Love
(4:30) 9. Goodbye for Now
(3:27) 10. Early to Bed
(4:06) 11. I Never Went Away
(2:53) 12. Let's Go and Live in the Country
(4:24) 13. Not Exactly Paris
(3:59) 14. My Ship
(4:01) 15. I Wonder What Became of Me
(5:13) 16. It Was Written in the Stars

A flawless song list comprising Richard Rodney Bennett originals plus some of his favourite standards, stunning arrangements by conductor Scott Dunn, plus the unfailingly mellifluous vocals of Claire Martin, combine to produce an extraordinarily beautiful tribute to Bennett which marks the tenth anniversary of his death.

Whether it's the majestic sound of the RPO strings in the Bennett/Siegel opener ’I Watch You Sleep’ – an utterly gorgeous song in the hands of Bennett's great friends and erstwhile musical partners Martin and Dunn which, aside from Shirley Horn's exquisite version on her 1988 trio album, Softly, has been covered remarkably infrequently the iridescent vibraphone which introduces a deluxe arrangement of Vernon Duke's ‘Autumn in New York’ with its vivid imagery of “glittering crowds and shimmering clouds in canyons of steel”; the clarion call of Ryan Quigley's flugel in ‘Round About’ (another overlooked gem from the team of Duke and lyricist Ogden Nash which seems to hover atmospherically in the air); or the adroit splicing together of a brace of Harold Arlen/Leo Robin songs,

‘ For Ev’ry Man There's a Woman/It Was Written In The Stars’, penned for the 1948 US film noir Casbah, the 16-track album presents an incredibly touching statement from the heart. Whether navigating through the elegiac orchestral textures of ‘I Never Went Away’ or intimate duo and trio versions of ‘I Wonder What Became Of Me’ and ‘I Wish I’d Met You’, Martin's enormous gifts as a storyteller have never sounded more potent.
https://www.jazzwise.com/review/scott-dunn-with-claire-martin-and-the-royal-philharmonic-orchestra-i-watch-you-sleep-scott-dunn-celebrates-richard-rodney-bennett

Personnel: Claire Martin - vocals; Rob Barron - piano; Matt Skelton - drums; Jeremy Brown - double bass; Ryan Quigley - flugelhorn; Scott Dunn - conductor, arranger, piano on tracks 15&16; and with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.

I Watch You Sleep

Friday, March 31, 2023

Anne Ducros - Either Way : From Marilyn To Ella

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 74:28
Size: 170.5 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[3:37] 1. You'd Be Surprised
[4:54] 2. My Heart Belongs To Daddy
[5:22] 3. Summertime
[7:06] 4. Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most
[3:58] 5. Either Way
[4:24] 6. But Not For Me
[3:53] 7. You'd Be So Nice To Come To
[4:22] 8. A Fine Romance
[5:10] 9. Thou Swell
[3:53] 10. I Wanne Be Loved By You
[5:49] 11. I'm Through With Love
[6:04] 12. Diamonds Are The Girl's Best Friends
[5:19] 13. Laura
[6:57] 14. Dindi
[3:33] 15. It Don't Mean A Thing (If You Ain't Got That Swing)

You may think you have heard the songs from the Great American Songbook more than enough times so that you have no desire to hear them again. Think again. You haven't heard them like you'll hear them on Either Way: From Marilyn to Ella, the new album from French jazz singer Anne Ducros. That she makes these hoary standards her own doesn't come close to doing justice to what she does with them. She transforms them, and more important, her transformations are absolutely killer.

She takes the original song and pushes its musical possibilities as far as they will go. This is a singer who colors outside the lines. Her vocals are a perfect demonstration of what a jazz singer should be doing. Many jazz singers are content to interpret; Anne Ducros creates. In a sense, what she does with a song parallels what her deconstructionist countryman Jacques Derrida does with literature. The original song becomes a remembered shadow that marks just how far she's taken its ideas.

All this wouldn't make much difference if the lady couldn't sing. No problem, this is a lady with the chops to make her music work. If her performances don't quite make you forget the originals, they sure give them a run for their money.

Recording information: New Art Recording Studio, Milano, IT (01/11/2013-01/25/2013); Orfena Studio, Bruxelles, Bel (01/11/2013-01/25/2013); New Art Recording Studio, Milano, IT (05/19/2013); Orfena Studio, Bruxelles, Bel (05/19/2013).

Anne Ducros (vocals); Maxime Blesin (guitar, percussion); Benoit de Mesmay (piano); Nicolas Gilles (double bass, electric bass); Bruno Castellucci (drums).

Either Way : From Marilyn To Ella

London Brew - London Brew

Styles: Jazz Contemporary
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 88:19
Size: 206,1 MB
Art: Front

(23:34) 1. London Brew
(15:48) 2. London Brew Pt 2.- Trainlines
( 7:27) 3. Miles Chases New Voodoo In The Church
( 8:55) 4. Nu Sha Ni Sha Nu Oss Ra
( 6:54) 5. It’s One Of These
( 2:50) 6. Bassics
( 9:52) 7. Mor Ning Prayers
(12:57) 8. Raven Flies Low

Concord Jazz has announced London Brew, a new album inspired by Miles Davis’ Bitches Brew. Due out March 31, it was recorded at Paul Epworth’s the Church Studios in London by a dozen of contemporary UK jazz musicians, including Nubya Garcia, Shabaka Hutchings, Tom Skinner, and more. Check out the trailer and first single, “Miles Chases New Voodoo in the Church,” below.

The group, also called London Brew, was assembled by producer and guitarist Martin Terefe and executive producer Bruce Lampcov to perform a concert celebrating the 50th anniversary of Bitches Brew; when it was canceled due to the pandemic, they summoned the musicians to the Church in December 2020 to create an improvisatory work inspired by the album. The group was rounded out by Benji B, Raven Bush, Theon Cross, Tom Herbert, Nikolaj Torp Larsen, Dave Okumu, Nick Ramm, and Dan See.
https://pitchfork.com/news/nubya-garcia-shabaka-hutchings-tom-skinner-and-more-announce-miles-davis-tribute-london-brew/

London Brew

Stan Kenton - Solo: Stan Kenton Without His Orchestra

Styles: Hard Bop
Year: 1974
File: MP3@128K/s
Time: 40:47
Size: 38,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:02) 1. Theme to the West
(3:29) 2. Eager Beaver
(5:12) 3. Theme for Sunday
(2:58) 4. Reflection
(4:52) 5. Guess Where I Used To Work _ Blues
(4:23) 6. Concerto to End All Concertos
(2:47) 7. Sunset Tower
(4:18) 8. Interlude
(1:39) 9. Lush Waltz
(7:02) 10. Self Portrait

Stanley Newcomb Kenton (December 15, 1911 - August 25, 1979) led a highly innovative, influential, and often controversial American jazz orchestra. In later years he was widely active as an educator.

Stan Kenton was born in Wichita, Kansas, and raised first in Colorado and then in California. He learned piano as a child, and while still a teenager toured with various bands. In June 1941 he formed his own band, which developed into one of the best-known West Coast ensembles of the Forties.

Kenton's musical aggregations were decidedly “orchestras.” Sometimes consisting of two dozen or more musicians at once, they produced an unmistakable Kenton sound--as recognizable as that of the bands of Glenn Miller, Duke Ellington, or Count Basie. So large an orchestra was able to produce a tremendous, at times overpowering, volume in the dance and concert halls of the land; among musical conservatives it developed a reputation for playing strange-sounding pieces much too loudly, and indeed one comical MC introduced Stan Kenton as “Cant Standit.”

A Kenton specialty was Afro-Cuban rhythm, as exported to North America by such bandleaders as Machito (whose brass and reed sound, in turn, began to show the influence of Kenton). Translated into the Kenton idiom, however, the Latin rhythms might be scored for a full panoply of percussion instruments: tympani, bongos, conga, timbales, claves, and maracas. This component of Kenton's work may be heard on the 1947 recording “Machito” and on the album Cuban Fire, still in print after more than fifty years of ceaseless change in popular music.

Many of Kenton's band arrangements were written by Kenton himself, as well as other composers and arrangers such as Gene Roland, Pete Rugolo, W. A. Mathieu, Johnny Richards, Lennie Niehaus, Gerry Mulligan, Hank Levy, Bill Russo, Dee Barton, Bill Holman, Shorty Rogers, Ken Hanna, and Bob Graettinger (ref. his formidable but fascinating “City of Glass”). The music, which could be intensely dissonant, made use of powerful brass sections and unconventional saxophone voicings that showed Kenton's love of experimenting, reflected in the names he gave his ensembles: “Innovations Orchestra,” “Neophonic Orchestra,” and “Mellophonium Orchestra.” Kenton's theme song from the early days to the last was called, significantly, “Artistry in Rhythm.” It was owing in part to Kenton's ambitious musical nomenclature that many critics dismissed his work as mannered and pretentious. But apart from recording a few dance-band albums (Kenton's men could play standards beautifully), he avoided compromising his idea of jazz to please either critics or public.

Kenton played in the 1930s in the dance bands of Vido Musso and Gus Arnheim, but he was born to be a leader. In 1941 he formed his first orchestra, which later was named after his theme song “Artistry in Rhythm.” A decent Earl Hines-influenced pianist, Kenton was much more important in the early days as an arranger and inspiration for his loyal sidemen. Although there were no major names in his first band (bassist Howard Rumsey and trumpeter Chico Alvarez come the closest), Kenton spent the summer of 1941 playing regularly before a very appreciative audience at the Rendezvous Ballroom in Balboa Beach, CA. Influenced by Jimmie Lunceford (who, like Kenton, enjoyed high-note trumpeters and thick-toned tenors), the Stan Kenton Orchestra struggled a bit after its initial success. Its Decca recordings were not big sellers and a stint as Bob Hope's backup radio band was an unhappy experience; Les Brown permanently took Kenton's place.

By late 1943 with a Capitol contract, a popular record in “Eager Beaver,” and growing recognition, the Stan Kenton Orchestra was gradually catching on. Its soloists during the war years included Art Pepper, briefly Stan Getz, altoist Boots Mussulli, and singer Anita O'Day. By 1945 the band had evolved quite a bit. Pete Rugolo became the chief arranger (extending Kenton's ideas), Bob Cooper and Vido Musso offered very different tenor styles, and June Christy was Kenton's new singer; her popular hits (including “Tampico” and “Across the Alley From the Alamo”) made it possible for Kenton to finance his more ambitious projects. Calling his music “progressive jazz,” Kenton sought to lead a concert orchestra as opposed to a dance band at a time when most big bands were starting to break up. By 1947 Kai Winding was greatly influencing the sound of Kenton's trombonists, the trumpet section included such screamers as Buddy Childers, Ray Wetzel, and Al Porcino, Jack Costanzo's bongos were bringing Latin rhythms into Kenton's sound, and a riotous version of “The Peanut Vendor” contrasted with the somber “Elegy for Alto.” Kenton had succeeded in forming a radical and very original band that gained its own audience.

In 1949 Kenton took a year off. In 1950 he put together his most advanced band, the 39-piece Innovations in Modern Music Orchestra that included 16 strings, a woodwind section, and two French horns. Its music ranged from the unique and very dense modern classical charts of Bob Graettinger to works that somehow swung despite the weight. Such major players as Maynard Ferguson (whose high-note acrobatics set new standards), Shorty Rogers, Milt Bernhart, John Graas, Art Pepper, Bud Shank, Bob Cooper, Laurindo Almeida, Shelly Manne, and June Christy were part of this remarkable project, but from a commercial standpoint, it was really impossible. Kenton managed two tours during 1950-1951 but soon reverted to his usual 19-piece lineup. Then quite unexpectedly, Kenton went through a swinging period. The charts of such arrangers as Shorty Rogers, Gerry Mulligan, Lennie Niehaus, Marty Paich, Johnny Richards, and particularly Bill Holman and Bill Russo began to dominate the repertoire. Such talented players (in addition to the ones already named) as Lee Konitz, Conte Candoli, Sal Salvador, Stan Levey, Frank Rosolino, Richie Kamuca, Zoot Sims, Sam Noto, Bill Perkins, Charlie Mariano, Mel Lewis, Pete Candoli, Lucky Thompson, Carl Fontana, Pepper Adams, and Jack Sheldon made strong contributions. The music was never predictable and could get quite bombastic, but it managed to swing while still keeping the Kenton sound.

Critics of Kenton have not limited their attacks to his music only. In 1956, when the band returned from its European trip, the Critics Poll in Down Beat reflected victories by Negroes in virtually every category. The Kenton band was playing in Ontario, Canada, at the time, and Stan dispatched a telegram which brought near apoplexy to critic Leonard Feather.

The telegram lamented “a new minority, white jazz musicians,” and stated Kenton's “complete and total disgust [with the] literary geniuses of jazz.” Feather, alone of all the critics, took up his cudgel to answer and attack Kenton. In the October 3, 1956, issue he wrote an open letter which distorted Kenton's words, and in the heat of anger (though he claimed it was sorrow) he questioned Kenton's racial views, his alleged disparagement of Negro leaders like Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Dizzy Gillespie. Feather inferred that Kenton's failure to win the Critics Poll was the major reason for the complaint; that there had been a prejudice for many years and now it had to be expressed; that Kenton had not hired enough Negro musicians over the years.

All points except the last were based on conjecture, and events preceding and following Feather's complaint have shown how ridiculous they were. The latter point was based on a poor or prejudiced memory of the writer, for in noting the presence of only a handful of Negroes in Kenton's band he overlooked at least five times as many others who have played with or been aided by Kenton. (The night that Kenton sent the telegram there were two Negroes playing in the trombone section.) Not least among these would be Charlie Parker and, particularly, Art Tatum, who was given more exposure on a Kenton sponsored tour than he ever received elsewhere.Feather's weak memory tore his thesis to threads.

In reality, every musician who has ever played with Kenton will tell you that he has been a staunch defender of the Negro's place in jazz and that he has fought just as violently against the Crow-Jim concept of some Negroes that jazz is their music alone. As critic Ralph J. Gleason wrote, also in Down Beat, Feather's verdict was passed on Kenton “...without, unfortunately, any public statement from the only musicians really in a position to know.” Again, unfortunately, it took critic Feather four years to realise his error, for it was not until August, 1960, that he took stock and tried to clear the scene.Kenton later was asked if Feather had apologised for his article before the jazz world in Down Beat. The answer was: “Yes: I think it was on the back page of the Pittsburg Inquirer.” Kenton was pointing to the irony that Feather had created a great tempest, and no matter how apologetic the critic would be he had created great ill-feeling, and there is still much of that prejudice-in-reverse by Negro musicians toward Stan. Nearly three years before this, in the December 16, 1953, issue of Down Beat, critic Nat Hentoff had written that “...Stan is as free from prejudice of any kind as any man I know.”

Kenton's last successful experiment was his mellophonium band of 1960-1963. Despite the difficulties in keeping the four mellophoniums (which formed their own separate section) in tune, this particular Kenton orchestra had its exciting moments. However from 1963 on, the flavor of the Kenton big band began to change. Rather than using talented soloists, Kenton emphasized relatively inexpensive youth at the cost of originality. While the arrangements (including those of Hank Levy) continued to be quite challenging, after Gabe Baltazar's “graduation” in 1965, there were few new important Kenton alumni (other than Peter Erskine and Tim Hagans). For many of the young players, touring with Kenton would be the high point of their careers rather than just an important early step. Kenton Plays Wagner (1964) was an important project, but by then the bandleader's attention was on jazz education. By conducting a countless number of clinics and making his charts available to college and high-school stage bands, Kenton insured that there would be many bands that sounded like his, and the inverse result was that his own young orchestra sounded like a professional college band! Kenton continued leading and touring with his big band up until his death in 1979.
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/stan-kenton

Solo: Stan Kenton Without His Orchestra

Johnny Britt - After We Play

Styles: Vocal And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:32
Size: 130,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:32) 1. Ain't Nothin' But The Funk (Feat. Tom Browne)
(4:56) 2. After We Play (Feat. Peter White)
(4:58) 3. Butterflies (Feat. Will Downing)
(4:06) 4. Summer Love (Feat. Gerald Albright & Kashan)
(4:34) 5. Ocean Waves (Feat. Blair Bryant)
(4:16) 6. Walk On By
(4:19) 7. Hold On Be Strong (Feat. Ricky Peterson)
(4:25) 8. Let's Do This (Feat. Nils)
(3:19) 9. Goin' Out Of My Head (Feat. Little Anthony & George Benson)
(3:37) 10. Love Paradise
(5:04) 11. Midnight
(4:31) 12. More Love
(3:48) 13. Love Paradise (Bonus Flugelhorn Version)

LOS ANGELES (20 March 2023): In response to an interviewer’s question, legendary jazz trumpeter Miles Davis said, “I’ll tell you after I play.” That philosophy struck a note with urban-jazz trumpeter-vocalist Johnny Britt, who titled his fifth album “After We Play,” that dropped on Friday (March 17) on J-Jams Records. Britt wrote ten new songs and produced the thirteen tracks on which he plays with an array of luminaries. The collection starts off on top as the title cut featuring guitar star Peter White recently went No. 1 on two national singles charts.

The recent Presidential Lifetime Achievement Award recipient will launch his multi-genre album at two Los Angeles-area record release concerts: March 26 at The Venice West and April 6 at the Catalina Jazz Club.

Simultaneous to the instrumental single “After We Play” summitting the Mediabase and Smooth Jazz Network charts, Britt’s vocal ballad with Will Downing, “Butterflies,” entered the top 50 on the R&B singles chart and is soaring skywards.

Two years in the making, Britt describes “After We Play” as “an album of feelings, emotions, thoughts and imagination. I wrote, produced and performed every song from within. Every song was birthed out of a deep sense of love, compassion and sincerity. I love singing and I love playing the trumpet. That’s what you’ll hear when you listen to the album, which came together wonderfully.”

According to Britt, the title song, a sultry midtempo flugelhorn and guitar duet captured in this video, sets up the entire album. There are many marquee moments to embrace from the album, including a dreamy version of “Goin’ Out of My Head” that finds Britt in the company of greats. He croons the song with Rock & Roll Hall of Famer Little Anthony who sang the original version with The Imperials with whom Britt has been singing as first tenor since 2012. Gracing the tune with cool electric jazz guitar is ten-time Grammy winner George Benson.

The album opens with the twin trumpet powered “Ain’t Nothin But The Funk” spotlighting the horns of Britt and Tom Browne. Nine-time Grammy nominee Gerald Albright thumps his bass on “Summer Love,” an affair heated by Kashan’s mid-cut rap. “Ocean Waves” washes over like a sensual caress, thanks to Britt’s sultry voice and muted trumpet along with sinewy bass and Piccolo bass work from Blair Bryant. The album’s second remake is a haunting take on the Bacharach & David classic “Walk On By,” given an ethereal treatment on which Britt handles all the vocals and instrumentation except for drums. Ricky Peterson adds piano, organ and strings accoutrements to illumine the positive affirmation that is “Hold On Be Strong.” Billboard hitmaker Nils teams with Britt for “Let’s Do This,” an empowering horn and guitar instrumental that bodes to become a chart topper. “Love Paradise” is a heavenly slice of the best of Britt: a funky R&B groove, a splash of contemporary jazz nuance, and a vibrant pop hook. Nils reappears on “Midnight,” but it’s Britt’s flugelhorn that shines brightest. The seductive “More Love” is an amorous late-night mood setter. “After We Play” closes with an instrumental version of “Love Paradise.”

Britt will soon share his story in the autobiography “The Soloist.” He grew up “an inner-city kid” in Cleveland where he was in a band while in junior high school with a young drummer named Arsenio Hall. The multi-instrumentalist studied abroad at the prestigious Conservatoire de Versailles under the tutelage of Roger Delmotte, first trumpeter of the Paris Opera. After returning Stateside, The Temptations’ Otis Williams made Britt the youngest musical director ever for the iconic Motown Records vocal group. That led to Britt coproducing the music for the Emmy-winning miniseries “The Temptations.”

After the move to Los Angeles, Britt landed his own Motown record deal in 1995 for his group Impromp2, which recorded four albums. Always desiring to be a soloist, Britt finally made it happen in 2012 by releasing his debut album, “Feels So Good.”

“I loved singing in groups, but deep in my heart, I always wanted to stand alone in the spotlight in front of that microphone just me, my voice and my trumpet,” said Britt.

In addition to his solo catalogue, Britt has written three No. 1 Billboard hits for saxophonist Boney James as well as songs for Peabo Bryson, Rick Braun, Euge Groove, Paul Brown, Jeff Golub, Jessy J and The Temptations. He played trumpet on the big screen in Academy Award-winner “La La Land” and was hired by two-time Oscars and four-time Grammy winner Hans Zimmer to be the trumpet soloist for the Oscar nominated “Hidden Figures.”
https://news.theurbanmusicscene.com/2023/03/johnny-britt-releases-new-album-after-we-play/

After We Play

Thursday, March 30, 2023

Sally Night - London By Night

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 43:26
Size: 99.4 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[3:21] 1. The Tender Trap
[3:24] 2. Same Old Dream
[4:06] 3. To Love And Be Loved
[4:24] 4. Everybody Loves Somebody Sometime
[4:47] 5. If Love Is Good To Me
[2:45] 6. I'll Get By
[3:45] 7. Look Of Love
[2:44] 8. Nevertheless
[2:50] 9. Something Wonderful Happens
[3:59] 10. Talk To Me
[2:57] 11. Mean To Me
[4:18] 12. London By Night

You only have to read the consistently excellent critics that Sally Night receives for her recordings and live performances, to understand what a talented international artist she is. Her unique and captivating performances which blend cool jazz, swing, blues and smooth R&B are enriched by her original song writing style with catchy lyrics and irresistible melodies and grooves.

Whilst Sally Night's debut album "Phases of Love" pays tribute to a repertoire of well known & beautiful standards, her New 2nd Album “London by Night” explores a remarkable selection of popular but forgotten songs from the 30’s, 40’s & 50’s. One time hit recordings for well known artists Sarah Vaughan, Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin & others and written for film scores and Broadway musicals by some of the greatest Jazz composers and lyricists of that time, these tunes have now been cleverly updated, re-arranged and interpreted by Sally Night.

Upbeat, humorous, charming and sensitive this album is a “Must” for every music lover...

London By Night

Charles Mingus, John La Porta - Jazzical Moods

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:41
Size: 113.7 MB
Styles: Bop, Piano jazz
Year: 1954/1995
Art: Front

[ 8:05] 1. What Is This Thing Called Love
[ 3:15] 2. Stormy Weather
[10:08] 3. Minor Intrusion
[ 4:12] 4. Abstractions
[ 6:36] 5. Thrice Upon A Theme
[ 8:46] 6. Four Hands
[ 8:34] 7. The Spur Of The Moment Echonitus

Bass, Piano, Leader, Liner Notes – Charles Mingus; Cello – Jackson Wiley (tracks: 1 to 5); Clarinet, Alto Saxophone – John LaPorta; Drums – Clem DeRosa; Tenor Saxophone, Baritone Saxophone – Teo Macero; Trumpet – Thad Jones (tracks: 1 to 5). Recorded in New York City; December 1954.

Originally recorded for Period Records in 1954, this fairly obscure early Charles Mingus session is a collaboration with composer John LaPorta, who is heard on clarinet and alto saxophone. It's a fascinating effort that shows Mingus' awareness of both modern European classical composition and cool jazz. The set includes a mix of Mingus and LaPorta originals, plus freshly arranged standards like "What Is This Thing Called Love" and "Stormy Weather." Also on hand are the great trumpeter Thad Jones and saxophonist/producer Teo Macero. The album features Mingus' debut on piano. ~AMG

Jazzical Moods

Anne Ducros - Brother? Brother!

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:47
Size: 118,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:07)  1. What's Going On (feat. Olivier Ker Ourio & Paolo Censi)
(4:44)  2. Fragile (feat. Giulio Visibelli)
(3:48) 3. La Bicyclette (feat. Giuseppe Emmanuele & Franz Minuta)
(3:56) 4. You Are So Beautiful (feat. Giuseppe Privitera)
(3:36)  5. Samba Saravah
(4:48)  6. On Broadway
(4:05)  7. Knocks Me Off My Feet
(5:30)  8. At Last (feat. Lionel Belmondo)
(3:50)  9. Déshabillez-Moi (feat. Olivier Ker Ourio & Mimmo Gaglio)
(6:20) 10. Petals (feat. Mimmo Gaglio)

This new discography project "Brother Brother" Anne Ducros wanted it grandiose and flamboyant. Wonderfully arranged for it by the immense Italian musician Giuseppe Emmanuele and for a symphonic orchestra where brilliant virtuosos of the classical music and musicians of the best big bands of jazz. Anne revisits in her own way and with the elegance that is known to him a repertoire mixing cult songs and great standards of jazz. Sting, Stevie Wonder, Joe Cocker, the great French and American jazz voices Juliette Gréco is a part of the history of vocal music that is honored here, pop icons, soul, , Yves Montant, Etta James ... A real advocacy for joie de vivre and fraternity, "Brother Brother!" Sketches a wink to the great Marvin Gaye and her "What's going on" and a beautiful tribute from Anne to her brother Recently disappeared.

Brother? Brother!

Jennie Smith, Diana Trask - Love Among The Young

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 1960
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:58
Size: 170,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:11)  1. Love Among The Young
(1:59)  2. Cross Your Heart
(3:39)  3. Impossible
(2:14)  4. A Fine Romance
(2:45)  5. A Very Special Love
(2:11)  6. Teacher, Teacher
(3:04)  7. While We’re Young
(2:16)  8. 's Wonderful
(3:32)  9. Young And Foolish
(2:06) 10. There Will Never Be Another You
(4:25) 11. Take Me In Your Arms
(2:25) 12. All I Do Is Dream Of You
(2:53) 13. Hello Young Lovers
(3:51) 14. It Might As Well Be Spring
(4:31) 15. Little Girl Blue
(2:18) 16. The Gipsy In My Soul
(2:52) 17. Let’s Fall In Love
(4:29) 18. My Funny Valentine
(1:59) 19. I Hear Music
(4:22) 20. Spring Never Comes
(3:38) 21. By Myself
(2:03) 22. Let’s Face The Music And Dance
(3:57) 23. Spring Is Here
(3:07) 24. Temptation

Love Among the Young
Jennie, barely twenty years old, already had the poise and elegance of an experienced artist. She could show off not only a voice with feeling, but an ability to interpret a song with warmth and lively emotion. On this album she takes a dozen numbers and presents them in a sweet and unaffected way. She sings brilliantly and memorably of love among young people, accompanied in a most satisfactory fashion by the Ray Ellis orchestra.

Diana Trask
This album was the exciting introduction to the amazing talent of the beautiful Australian singer and TV star Diana Trask. Her arrival in the States in 1959 took the scene by storm. Listen, and you are sure to enjoy the many gifts of this lovely young singer… https://www.freshsoundrecords.com/jennie-smith-diana-trask-albums/46722-love-among-the-young-diana-trask-2-lp-on-1-cd.html

Thank you Flyingfinger!

Leo Sidran - What's Trending

Styles: Jazz Pop
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:11
Size: 113,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:31) 1. What's Trending
(3:26) 2. Keep It Wild
(3:58) 3. When The Mask Comes Off
(4:13) 4. It's Alright
(3:07) 5. Everybody's Faking
(3:34) 6. Crazy People
(3:16) 7. Hanging By A Thread
(4:03) 8. There Was A Fire
(4:47) 9. 1982
(3:31) 10. Spin
(4:12) 11. Nobody Kisses Anymore
(3:27) 12. After Summer's Gone
(4:00) 13. Sleepwalking

What's Trending is Leo Sidran’s eighth solo record. In many ways it picks up where his celebrated 2021 release The Art Of Conversation left off. If The Art was a “hymn to empathy” (El Pais, Spain) and “a treasure chest of intimate and introspective portraits of family life during the pandemic” (West Coast Soul, Germany), this latest release is a hip, deeply personal exploration of how music can make life more livable in difficult times
.
He does it with easy humor, great grooves and a vocal delivery - direct, approachable, conversational that leaves the impression he is singing only to you, telling your story while he tells his own. Being a multi-instrumentalist (he plays most of the instruments on the record) gives him the advantage of crafting songs of detailed yet lush subtlety. They are small universes that explore ideas of identity, history, social discourse, and the richness of every-day life. He draws from jazz, r&b, lofi hiphop, singer-songwriter and even pop, yet always lands on his own two feet. His songs, as pop musician Steve Miller once said, “stand and deliver”.

The title track “What’s Trending” was inspired by Leo’s 11 year-old daughter, Sol, who he says “is the ultimate trend follower, always showing me some new meme, dance or internet phenomenon, and always armed with the phrase ‘look at this, it’s trending.’” The irony of today’s trend becoming tomorrow’s fad is not lost on Leo. And Sol, who appears on the track as well as a handful of others on the record, sings with a maturity that belies her youth. Leo himself began recording professionally when he was in his teens (Steve Miller recorded four of his songs when Leo was only 15), so there is something of a sense of continuity coursing through the project.

That continuity is there in the song “There Was A Fire” which features both Leo’s daughter and his father, jazz musician Ben Sidran. In fact “There Was A Fire” is inspired by the elder Sidran’s book of the same name, which explored the Jewish contribution to popular music in America. The title is based on a legend of Jewish origin from the 18th century about the importance of remembering who you are and where you came from.

And where Sidran comes from is a place of great music and great musicians. As on his previous projects, here he counts on the collaboration of a select handful of friends as featured guests, including Janis Siegel (of the Manhattan Transfer), Louis Cato (bandleader of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert), Jon Lampley (of The Huntertones), Jake Sherman, Lauren Henderson, and Michael Leonhart (of Steely Dan) among others. And once again, almost all of the collaborators on the project have also been guests on Sidran’s celebrated podcast The Third Story.

Some of the songs on What’s Trending respond to the turmoil of modern life, in one moment hopeful (“It’s Alright”) in another humbled (“Hanging By A Thread”), in yet another introspective (“Sleepwalking”), and finally celebratory (“When The Mask Comes Off”). “Keep It Wild”, “Nobody Kisses Anymore” and “After Summer’s Gone” all channel Sidran’s devotion to classic love songs. We hear it in “Nobody Kisses Anymore” when he laments: “Nobody takes the time to write, nobody’s using punctuation”, a nod to the slippery slope of informality in modern life.

“Everybody’s Faking”, “Crazy People”, and “Spin” likewise explore the place of truth, or lack thereof, in today’s world, while “1982,” is a nostalgic look-back, constructed using only the titles of popular songs released during that year. Huey Lewis, Michael McDonald, Toto, The Police, Hall and Oates, Stevie Wonder, Steve Miller - the iconic artists of Leo’s childhood - all come through clearly in the music.

As Leo Sidran proves, the exploration of ‘what’s trending’ doesn’t have to simply be a jaundiced look at today’s social circus. It can be fun, funny, warm, wishful and downright inspirational, just like the songs he produces.
https://leosidran.bandcamp.com/album/whats-trending

Personnel: Leo Sidran: drums, percussion, bass, guitars, keyboards, piano. vibraphone, lead and backing vocals; Louis Cato: guitar and scat solo 4; Max Darmon: bass 6; Mark Dover: clarinet solo 8; Joy Dragland: vocals 2, 5, 6; Angela Faith: vocals 4; Ben Flocks: saxophone solo 3; Michael Hearst: theremin, saw, strings, effects 7; Lauren Henderson: vocal 11; Peter Hess: woodwinds 8; Jon Lampley: brass 6; Michael Leonhart: trumpet, 1 Orlando LeFleming: acoustic bass; Jake Sherman: harmonica solo 11; Janis Siegel: vocals 4; Ben Sidran: vocal 8; Sol Sidran: vocals 1, 4, 7; Zelta Sils: ghost vocal 7; John Sneider: trumpets 8; Rich Stein: percussion 5, 7, 13; Michael Thurber: bass & vocal 3; Nina Zeitlin: vocals 8, 9, 10

What's Trending

Wednesday, March 29, 2023

Kenny Barron - Festival Jazz Sous Les Pommiers

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 83:32
Size: 192,4 MB
Art: Front

( 9:50) 1. New-York Attitude
(12:36) 2. How Deep is The Ocean
(11:20) 3. Night Fall
( 7:06) 4. Memories of You
(11:02) 5. Bud Like
(11:21) 6. Skylark
(14:02) 7. Calypso Calypso
( 6:12) 8. Cook’s Bay

Kenny Barron's unmatched ability to mesmerize audiences with his elegant playing, sensitive melodies and infectious rhythms is what inspired "The Los Angeles Times" to name him "one of the top jazz pianists in the world" and "Jazz Weekly" to call him "The most lyrical piano player of our time."

Philadelphia is the birthplace of many great musicians, including one of the undisputed masters of the jazz piano: Kenny Barron. Kenny was born in 1943 and while a teenager, started playing professionally with Mel Melvin's orchestra. This local band also featured Barron's brother Bill, the late tenor saxophonist. At age 19, Kenny moved to New York City and was hired by James Moody after the tenor saxophonist heard him play at the Five Spot.

He joined Dizzy Gillespie's band in 1962, where he developed an appreciation for Latin and Caribbean rhythms. After five years with Dizzy, Barron played with Freddie Hubbard, Stanley Turrentine, Milt Jackson, and Buddy Rich. In 1971 he joined Yusef Lateef's band. It is Lateef who Kenny credits as a key influence in his art for improvisation. In 1973 Kenny joined the faculty at Rutgers University as professor of music. He held this tenure until 2000, mentoring many of today's young talents including David Sanchez, Terence Blanchard, and Regina Bell. In 1974 he recorded his first album as a leader for the Muse label, entitled "Sunset To Dawn." This was to be the first of over 40 recordings (and still counting!) as a leader.

Throughout the 1980's, Kenny collaborated with the great tenor saxophonist Stan Getz, touring with his quartet and recording several albums, one of which was nominated for a Grammy ("People Time") Also during the 80's, he co-founded the quartet "Sphere," along with Buster Williams, Ben Riley and Charlie Rouse. This band focused on the music of Thelonious Monk and original compositions inspired by him. Sphere recorded several outstanding projects for the Polygram label, among them "Four For All" and "Bird Songs." After the death of Charlie Rouse, the band took a 15-year hiatus and reunited, replacing Rouse with alto saxophonist Gary Bartz. This reformation made its debut recording for Verve Records in 1998.

Kenny Barron's own recordings for Verve have earned him five Grammy nominations, most recently for "Spirit Song" in 2000. Prior Grammy nominations went to "Sambao," "Night and the City" (a duet recording with Charlie Haden) and "Wanton Spirit" (a trio recording with Roy Haynes and Haden.) It is important to note that these three recordings each received double-Grammy nominations (for album AND solo performance.) Barron consistently wins the jazz critics and readers polls, including Downbeat, JazzTimes and Jazziz magazines. He has been named Best Pianist by the Jazz Journalists Association every year since 1997 and was as a finalist in the prestigious 2001 Jazz Par International Jazz Award.

Throughout his career, Kenny Barron has been the pianist of choice for some of jazz's greatest musicians. Now at age 58, whether he is playing solo, with his Trio or his newest ensemble, "Brazilia" (a quintet featuring some of Brazil's greatest musicians), Kenny Barron is now recognized the world over as a master of performance and composition.https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/kenny-barron

Personnel: Kenny Barron, piano; Kigashi Kitagawa, bass; Johnathan Blake, drums

Festival Jazz Sous Les Pommiers

Anne Ducros - Purple Songs

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:53
Size: 126,1 MB
Art: Front

(6:40)  1. A timeless place (The Peacocks)
(6:31)  2. Ode to Billie Joe
(4:14)  3. Dreamer Alone
(4:39)  4. In the wee small hours of the morning
(2:58)  5. Softly as in a morning sunrise
(7:33)  6. You must believe in spring
(4:29)  7. Who "R.U." (Saint-Eustache)
(3:19)  8. Sea Lady
(6:31)  9. Lush Life
(3:50) 10. Aovoatt (Trio Type Tune)
(4:06) 11. Send in the clowns

Native of the Pas de Calais, Anne Ducros began her classic training (musical and vocal) within the conservatoire of Boulogne Sur mer with Lyne Durian. Then at the same time she is studying law at the University of Lille, she completes and refines her vocal mastery thanks to the education of Yuri Anoff and Maddy Mespley. Afterward she has a practice of baroque music within training course at the University and investigates Couperin, Rameau or Bach's music.  Introduced to the vocal jazz from 1986. She sets up her first quartet of jazz with which she gains various international competitions (Price for better soloist and first vocaliste in the festival of jazz of Dunkerque; First price of soloist and vocalist in the festival of jazz of Vienne in 1989). This growing recognition will stimulates her of an inexhaustible will to sing always more by accumulating concerts in France and specially by publishing her first album of vocal jazz, "Don't you take a chance" at JTB in 1989.After this first recording was realized, she returns on the road by multiplying the tours, the festivals (Nice, Montreaux, Nantes, Barcelone, Ismir, Montreal.) and the musical meetings (Michel Petrucciani, Didier Lockwood, Michel Legrand, Ray Brown, Ted Curson, Jacky Terrasson, Eric Lelann, Stefano Di Batista.). This artistic fulfilment couples with an increasing educational investment. During years 1992-1993, she teaches the vocal jazz at the ARPEJ in Paris and since 1994 she is the manager of Prelude, first school of vocal jazz in Paris. Besides her teacher's implication, she animates clinics and master-classes all over the world (Aix, Le Havre, Chicago, Calvi, Bruxelles.).

In 1995 Anne Ducros participates in the recording of Friday 14 with Lugi TRUSSARDI and puts her voice on some tracks of this album, published by ELABETH. Surrounded with Gordon beck, Sal la Rocca, Bruno Castellucci and Didier Lockwood, Anne Ducros records "Purple Songs", published in 2001 by DREYFUS JAZZ. Further this album, the singer is awarded by the Academy of the Jazz, and she receives the Price Billie Holiday, in december 2001. This new award will not be the last one, because there in April 2002, the "Django d'Or/ Victoires de la musique" awards her with the price of the artist vocal of the year. In 2003 her third album, "Close your eyes" (DREYFUS JAZZ) and once more she wins the Vocal Artist of the year of the Victoires de la Musique Jazz awards. In this album she's surrounded by talented musicians, string orchestra, and prestigious special guests such as the harmonicist Toots Thielemans and the flute player Benoit Fromanger. Joy, rhythmic flexibility and melody characterize this recording. With her hot voice, Anne Ducros revisits some jazz standards and pop songs as Stevie Wonder's "Lately" or Beatles's "Black Bird". She also interprets with elegance some French Songs: "L'eau a la bouche" of Serge Gainsbourg and "Clopin Clopan" of Pierre Dudan.

In September 2005 her forth album comes out by DREYFUS JAZZ: it marks the height of her artistic career. The project called "piano, piano" is based upon the meeting of Anne's wonderful voice and some of the greatest today's piano players. She sings some of the most beautiful jazz standards surrounded by prestigious piano players as Chick Corea, , Jacky Terrasson, Enrico Pieranunzi and Rene Urtreger and her quintet (Benoit de Mesmay, piano and Fender Rodes, Sal La Rocca, double bass, Karl Jannuska/Manhu Roche, drums, Bob Franceschini, sax). This album is immediately a great public and critic success.

After establishing momentum with her US debut, "PIANO, piano," and expanding her audience remarkably with several concert apperances in New York City (including Lincoln Center and an SRO performance at the 2007 IAJE conference), the gorgeous French diva Anna Ducros is back with her new offering, "Urban Tribe." The disc unites her with major players on the NY scene - Ada Rovatti on Sax, Essiet Essiet on bass and Bruce Cox on drums and also the one of the best french piano player Olivier Hutman . Highlights include her bold intepretation of Beatles' "Sexy Sadie," and an assortment of delicious standards and love songs such as "You and the Night and the Music," "Easy To Love" and the Otis Redding classic, "Dock of the Bay." http://www.mymusicbase.ru/PPB/ppb33/Bio_3323.htm

Purple Songs

Wayne Shorter - Footprints - Live

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:31
Size: 146,4 MB
Art: Front

( 5:32) 1. Sanctuary
( 8:28) 2. Masquelero
( 7:59) 3. Valse Triste
( 5:01) 4. Go
( 9:29) 5. Aung San Suu Kyi
( 7:55) 6. Footprints
( 8:28) 7. Atlantis
(10:36) 8. Ju Ju

Could saxophonist Wayne Shorter have known that the songs he wrote and recorded back in the '60s would be fresher than ever over 30 years later? Of course not, but he cranks them out on his new disc Footprints Live! with confident, fresh, Scope-tinged breath. Perhaps the jazz icon didn't realize how timeless his tunes would be, but he knew he'd never lose his cool.

Last year Shorter put together a group of fine musicians pianist Danilo Perez, bassist John Patitucci, and drummer Brian Blade a group that resulted in Shorter's first-ever live recording. Give Footprints Live!a spin and get a taste of the juicy, ripe fruit of this acoustic quartet. Fearless leaps toward the next sonic apex keep the players in unconflicting paths to a metaphysical freedom. Blade can feel it and he's not afraid to express it with frequent whoops and "whoas," and percussive outbursts.

But Footprints Live!isn't all jubilance and joy. Shorter gets real solemn sometimes, in that soft, beau-tiful way he lets the notes linger like incense smoke in the sweet air. And the way Perez shimmers around the sax sounds, on moments like the end of "Footprints," is forlorn gorgeousness redefined. The creativity and spontaneous spirit of the group recalls the Miles Davis Quintet that Shorter played with in the late '60s. Polyphonic confluence on songs like "Masquelero" and "JuJu" level into sultry, gaze-inducing rhythms.

These songs are sensual in ways that only the taste buds would know. Shorter and Perez’ interplay is like seltzer clear and effervescent. Patitucci's dynamite bass solos ascend into sheer exuberance. With a naked, flung into the wind way, these musicians express themselves completely, and their unrestrained nature creates constant inspiration. Each moment on Footprints Live! seems new, and the genre known as jazz rejuvenates itself once again. This review first appeared in the June 2002 issue of All About Jazz. By Celeste Sunderland https://www.allaboutjazz.com/footprints-live-wayne-shorter-verve-music-group-review-by-celeste-sunderland

Personnel: Wayne Shorter: tenor and soprano saxophones; Danilo Perez: piano; John Patitucci: bass; Brian Blade: drums

Footprints - Live

Lina Nyberg & Bohuslän Big Band - The World´s A Stage

Styles: Vocal, Big Band
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:17
Size: 127,1 MB
Art: Front

( 4:45) 1. Prelude To A Dance
( 4:31) 2. The Dance
(12:19) 3. A Walk In The Park
( 4:51) 4. Royal Rumble
( 4:59) 5. I Apologize
( 7:24) 6. Enough
( 9:38) 7. A Wonderful Morning
( 6:45) 8. Close

Lina Nyberg is one of Sweden’s most creative and innovative jazz singers and contemporary composers. For more than 20 years she has been attracting consistent and widespread attention, mainly in Scandinavia, but also in many other parts of the world.

Lina Nyberg was born in Stockholm, Sweden in 1970 and raised in an artistic home, both parents being artists/illustrators. After gratuating from the Royal College of Music in Stockholm in 1993 she released her first CD Close (Prophone records). A duo recording with late jazz pianist Esbjörn Svensson. An instant success and Swedish jazz classic.

As a solo artist she has been releasing 23 albums and tours the world with her band since 15 years Lina Nyberg Band: Cecilia Persson piano, David Stackenäs guitar, Josef Kallerdahl bass, Peter Danemo drums. She has received awards as Lars Gullin prize, She was honored with the Swedish Royal Academy of music Jazz prize 2016, and was selected to be a member in 2020.

As a composer she has writing works on commission from big bands, string quartets other chamber settings and symphony orchestras. She is the composer of the Swedish Radio music channel P2 signature. One of her most recent work is the album trilogy with works for big band Sirenades 2014, for stringquartet Aerials 2016 and for symphony orchestra Terrestrial 2017

The trilogy confirmed her as one of the most exciting composers in Scandinavia right now connecting the rhythmic and harmonic parts of her European jazz background with a contemporary classical language. In 2020 the album “the Clouds” was released with her new all star constellation, Lina Nyberg Tentet. In 2021 she reconnected with the quintet for the album Anniverse (Hoob records) and 2022 her collaboration and commissioned work with Bohuslän big band "the World's a Stage" marks her 30th anniversary as a recording artist. Swedish Jazz Grammy 1995 Swedish Jazzmusician of the year 2011 (Swedish Radio), Lars Gullin Award 2014, Album of the year (Gyllene skivan) 2017, Jan Johansson Award 2021, among others.
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/lina-nyberg

The World´s A Stage