Wednesday, June 21, 2023

Dara Tucker - All Right Now

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:25
Size: 102,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:30)  1. Come Rain or Come Shine
(3:20)  2. What Is This Thing Called Love
(4:14)  3. That's All
(3:46)  4. Route 66
(3:03)  5. There Will Never Be Another You
(0:27)  6. Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight
(5:26)  7. Lush Life
(2:43)  8. Someday My Prince Will Come
(2:40)  9. Avalon
(3:45) 10. Time After Time
(3:11) 11. On the Street Where You Live
(3:50) 12. Don't Get Around Much Anymore
(0:35) 13. P.S. I Love You
(2:48) 14. Just a Closer Walk With Thee

Dara Tucker was born into a musical family. The product of a music minister father, and a songstress mother, she began singing in her Tulsa, Oklahoma church at age 5. By age 8 she was playing simple melodies on the piano and soon began accompanying her brothers and sisters at performances. Throughout her college years, Tucker continued to hone her skills as a vocalist and musician. After obtaining a degree in International Business and German studies, she worked for a time in the corporate language-training field, eventually relocating to Interlaken, Switzerland to study German. It was there that Tucker began to write the first of her very personal songs. “I found something within myself that I didn’t realize was there music’s ability to ensure my spiritual and emotional survival. No one can ever take that away from me,” says Tucker.

Since moving to Nashville, TN to pursue music fulltime, Tucker has begun to establish herself as a strong presence in Nashville’s burgeoning jazz scene. Displaying a love for standards and swing that belies her years, Tucker’s reverence for the Great American Songbook can be felt in her sensitive delivery of these timeless songs. She performs regularly at Sambuca Restaurant in Nashville, Tennessee and has also been featured at F. Scott’s Restaurant and Jazz Bar in the Green Hills district of Nashville, in addition to The Basement, Bosco’s and The 12th South Taproom along with Nashville’s long-standing Jefferson Street Jazz and Blues Festival. Additionally, Dara has been featured in live performances on WPLN’s (National Public Radio-Nashville affiliate) “Live From Studio C” as well as at the Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame and Snug Harbor Jazz Club in New Orleans. http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/daratucker

All Right Now

Joe Farnsworth - In What Direction Are You Headed?

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:53
Size: 142,5 MB
Art: Front

( 7:13) 1. Terra Nova
( 9:29) 2. Filters
(10:33) 3. In What Direction Are You Headed
( 5:00) 4. Composition 4
( 7:24) 5. Anyone but You
( 6:44) 6. Safe Corners
( 5:31) 7. Bobby No Bags
( 9:55) 8. Someday We'll All Be Free

I have been listening to music accompanied by the esteemed drummer Joe Farnsworth for over 30 years, especially via a favorite ensemble, One For All. I know he is good, but how good wasn’t clear to me until now.

Farnsworth, who will be leading a band at the Jazz Showcase from May 11th through the 14th, has always been “a drummer’s drummer,” capable of providing stalwart support of most any ensemble.

Generally known for his “old school” pocket behind post-bop performers, Farnsworth’s new album In What Direction Are You Headed? Is a wily departure from his usual fare, involving a new generation of players while keeping a veteran rhythm core at the center, creating a plaiting of generations.

On In What Direction are some of the finest contemporary talents: featured guitarist Kurt Rosenwinkel, altoist Immanuel Wilkins (whose appearance at last year’s Jazz Festival was woefully undersold), and keyboardist Julius Rodriguez. At the bass helm is Robert Hurst, who has moved forward from his crucial Marsalis experience to become a respected support player.

The album’s title, and title cut, comes from an attempt to bridge those generations, a way for Farnsworth to indicate to his homies that he is not straying far away from his roots but wants to move forward to involve the top tier of current musicians steeped in multi-genre upbringings. Farnsworth first played the tune with the late, sorely-missed, pianist Harold Mabern at the Vanguard. Joe then asked Mabern’s son Michael (who provides an enjoyable conversation with Farnsworth as the liner notes) if he could use the tune on the new album as a way to establish a musical trope.

Rosenwinkel’s presence invigorates Farnsworth and provides a clear subtext to the proceedings: this is not your dad’s music, but we do remember your dad. The world-recognized guitarist gets three compositions here, and his guitar is definitely not representing another version of Grant Green.

And on Mabern’s “In What Direction Are You Headed?”, the bridge is built. Rodriguez opens with a funky Fender Rhodes riff that leads to a brightly-rendered melody from both Rosenwinkel and Wilkins, an arrangement that occurs frequently. As the two meander through the bars, the playing becomes more elastic, fushionesque. Rodriguez gets the first solo while Farnsworth sounds like Buddy Rich during his “trying to be cool in the 60’s” period (not meant to be pejorative). Wilkins lets loose with a postmodern squall before Rosenwinkel steps on the effect box to render a lovely, angular statement.

Farnsworth also has a solo opportunity (one of three in the selections) that builds on his first one, an eye-opening display during selection two, Rosenwinkel’s “Filters.”

Wilkins’ contribution “Composition 4” (placed, of course, fourth on the listing) is the quietest of the songs, showcasing the album’s juxtaposition of sax and guitar. Wilkins has the melodic lead, as Rosenwinkel adds shimmering comp atop Rodriguez’s folky acoustic fills.

Rodriguez’s “Anyone But You” is the bop tune that demonstrates the youths’ ability to travel quickly, with Rosenwinkel especially impressive with his McLaughlin-like display; Wilkins, likewise. Does Farnsworth keep up? Impressively, yes. And Rodriguez is impressive, too. Any questions about how the “new generation” can deal with the “old” are answered here.

The album opener “Terra Nova” and “Safe Corners,” both Rosenwinkel compositions, are reflective tone poems that suggest geographical influences. Both have slightly Latin touches and comparatively are more austere in arrangement while gorgeous as soundscapes.

On “Bobby Low Bags” Farnsworth gives Hurst a chance to shine, and the bassist relishes the moment in bluesland. Meanwhile, Wilkins displays his bop chops, something I wasn’t sure he could pull off. Rosenwinkel, with guitar effect applied, follows through with his rejoinder, while Rodriguez shares his own piano offering before Farnsworth finishes with a short solo. Here, again, sax and guitar coalesce as Hurst completes the tune.

The closer, Donnie Hathaway’s “Someday We’ll All Be Free,” is clearly symbolic, one more bridge to join sides. The soulful ballad gets an ornate, upper registered greeting from Wilkins while Rodriguez morphs Philly soul as Rosenwinkel carries forth with an effected solo that replaces Hathaway beautifully. You’d think Wilkins picked up a soprano for this one, but it’s just another way for him to demonstrate his facility, while Hurst carries the song with his own lyrical backup.

We’ve been treated with some great music in 2023 so far, but this album blew me away unexpected but welcomed, nonetheless. Joe Farnsworth, in excellent form, not only evinces his wide talent but also his wisdom, casting a vision for our jazz future that doesn’t eschew the genre’s blues roots while still advancing. In What Direction Are You Headed? Is both a good question and an essential album for the 21st Century. By Jeff Cebulski
https://www.chicagojazz.com/post/jazz-review-joe-farnsworth-in-what-direction

Personnel: Joe Farnsworth, drums; Immanuel Wilkins, alto sax; Kurt Rosenwinkel, guitar; Julius Rodriguez, piano and fender Rhodes; Robert Hurst, bass

In What Direction Are You Headed?

Tuesday, June 20, 2023

Billy Peterson And David Hazeltine - Next Door

Styles: Bop,Piano Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:20
Size: 122,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:54) 1. You Make Me Feel So Young
(7:15) 2. The Boy Next Door
(4:16) 3. Show Type Tune
(3:59) 4. Ruby My Dear/Pannonica
(5:12) 5. Tones For Joan's Bones
(7:37) 6. Clockwise
(3:37) 7. Dexterity/C.T.A.
(5:41) 8. Good Bait
(2:31) 9. Thanks Jim
(5:12) 10. Cedars Blues

Billy Peterson is one of the premier, most celebrated bass players in the world. His uncompromising talents as a performer have brought him widespread recognition, as well as his plenty credits as a composer, arranger and producer. So it is no surprise that the world-renowned bassist is quite often also compared with a chameleon, but not only as he can fill many positions, but also as he is at home in several genres of music weather it be rock, pop, R&B, soul, jazz, folk or country. Peterson´s contributions to the music scene are inestimable and his imagination and boundless enthusiasm behind the bass are singular and stunning. During his extensive musical career, the permanently in-demand bassist has worked with many internationally famous, acclaimed artists, among them Carlos Santana, Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Prince, Les Paul or Steve Miller, just to name a few.

Growing up in a household of professional musicians, his talent revealed itself early on while being introduced to a variety of instruments. Already at age 9, he began singing national commercial spots, which was only one of his countless early public musical endeavors. At age 14, Peterson had a live changing event when his mother, the late Jeanne Arland Peterson, taught him how to harmonize the old Irish lullaby, the “danny-boy”, which set Peterson on a quest for a much deeper harmonic understanding and helped him to arrange the orchestration for the 9th grade school band. In the mid-sixties he made his first experiences with the electric bass; this was also the time when Peterson first picked up the upright bass. Taking an interest in any instrument that crossed his path; Peterson studied simultaneously drums (with Elliot Fine of the Minnesota Symphony Orchestra) and keyboards (with Ernie Garvin from CBS radio Minneapolis, MN) while still in junior high school. These early influences were the foundation for what was to follow.

At just 16 years of age, Peterson joined The Righteous Brothers, during their peak period of success, on a summer tour in 1967. He also went on a tour with the prominent Lawrence Welk show All-Stars. Throughout his high school years, Peterson continued to play bass and drums in a variety of local orchestras, combos, R&B bands and big bands including bands of his father Willie Peterson, who was a prominent band-leader and Minnesotan jazz pianist. After graduation, Peterson started playing bass with Billy Wallace, pianist of trumpet-legend Clifford Brown, until 1973. The same year, he co-founded, with saxophonist Bob Rockwell, the acclaimed band Natural Life with which he recorded three albums for Celebration Records and went on several US tours from 1974 to 1978. During this time, Peterson was also among the first musicians to record on 3M's first, revolutionary digital tape machine.

It was in the mid 1970s, when the bassist´s pop career really began to flourish. In 1974, Peterson began to work with Leo Kottke, the great folk guitarist, becoming the bassist on Kottke's three albums for Capitol Records and Chrysalis. And on it went in 1975, when Peterson certainly made it to the top being the electric and upright bassist on Bob Dylan's legendary multi-platinum, Grammy winning album “Blood On The Tracks” for Columbia Records, whose internationally acclaimed single “Tangled up in Blue” topped the pop charts in 1975, and in 2000 it was ranked 49 on the “Top 100 Rock and Roll Songs ever recorded” by the Rolling Stone magazine´s December issue.

One year later, in 1976, he was invited to join the Gibson guitar staff; so Peterson went on to record and perform with guitar legends such as BB King, Johnny Smith, Les Paul, Lenny Breau, and Howard Roberts. In the late 70´s, Peterson first met, introduced by Prince´s producer David Rifkin, Ben Sidran, at the time keyboardist and producer of the Steve Miller Band and keyboardist of The Rolling Stones. This should become the beginning of an inspiring musical partnership that has remained strong till today.

The late 70s and early 80s were consumed with music from all genres and angles. In 1981, Peterson released his first solo album “Threshold of Surrender”. He continued to tour Europe with various artists and was also the in-house bassist for the famous “Sound 80” recording studio in Minneapolis, where Minneapolis´s most successful singers ever were recording at the time: Prince, Bob Dylan and Cynthia Johnson (the famous singer of the #1 hit Funkytown). During that time Peterson recorded many albums plus national radio and TV commercials; his performances ranged from solo bass to playing with a full symphony orchestra.

In 1986, Ben Sidran produced Steve Miller´s album “Born to be Blue” on Capitol Records with Peterson on bass. Shortly after Peterson became a full member of the Steve Miller Band, which he continued to be for the next 23 years. From 1987 to 2011 the Steve Miller Band toured mainly during the spring and summer months and Peterson played bass on the albums “Wide River”, “Steve Miller Band Box Set”, “Bingo!”, “Let Your Hair Down“, amongst others. During those years, he also continued to tour, mainly Europe and Japan, with Ben Sidran in the fall and winter months.

In 1990, Peterson joined the Go Jazz record label as an artist, producer and arranger, working on numerous recordings with artists such as pianist and vocalist Georgie Fame, guitarist Phil Upchurch or saxophonist Lee Konitz. It also was time for a reunion with Leo Kottke; so Peterson wrote a composition for a project called “Mid Air”. Shortly after, Prince, at the time also known as “The Artist”, contacted Peterson to create a string arrangement for his band the New Power Generation with Rosie Gaines as lead vocals. So Peterson came up with a soulful orchestral re-harmonization of Bryan Adams's hit “Everything I Do I Do It For You”. Peterson´s original compositions, arrangements and re-harmonizations have been featured on many major record labels. No wonder that in the mid 2000´s he got the call to compose and arrange for Donny Osmond to perform for the Queen of England in Edinburgh, Scotland.

At the 1993 Earthquake Relief concert in San Francisco he performed with Carlos Santana and Neil Young. He played with folk singer and songwriter Pete Seeger on “Well May the World Go”, a record which he also produced. A long-lasting collaboration with Minnesota jazz legend Irv Williams started in the early ´90s, since then Peterson has been the upright bassist on over 7 albums of the now 94-year-old saxophonist. Peterson's love for jazz encouraged him to help some fellow artists to open a jazz club. In 1996, the famous Artist Quarter opened its doors in St. Paul, Minnesota, becoming Peterson's “home base” while not on tour, where he joined local and visiting musicians until its closing in 2013.

Peterson became the musical director for the international independent production company Megabien Entertainment in 2003, through which he is involved in various events, international artist recordings and TV productions. In 2004, he served as the musical director for the three-part Legends Rock TV show (www.legends-rock.com) with guest artists Billy Preston, Sam Moore and Tony Joe White, produced by Megabien Entertainment in the south of France. His filmography includes also the 2008 video documentary “Steve Miller Band: Live from Chicago”. Further, in 2012 he served as the co-host of the Funkytown TV documentary (www.funkytown.us) along with host Cynthia Johnson, which showcases the Twin Cities´ finest artists and musicians.

Apart from several television appearances, the 21-century has also been consumed with involvements on numerous albums, among them “American Made World Played” of Les Paul (2005), “Let's Stay Here” of Oleta Adams (2009) or the Steve Miller Band albums “Bingo” (2010) and “Let Your Hair Down” (2011). In 2012, Peterson made the album “I´ve Been Ringing You” together with drummer Dave King and pianist Bill Carrothers, which received large national recognition; the trio´s debut album was named “Record of the Year” in the New York City Jazz Record (formerly All About Jazz), got a 4.5 stars (out of 5) review in Downbeat, a review in the New York Times and JazzTimes within “minutes” after its release, amongst other significant reviews and recognitions.

Peterson, as a member of the famous Minneapolis family of musicians “The Peterson Family” (www.thepetersonfamily.info), has been inducted into the Mid-American Music Hall of Fame in 2008.
By Monika Hurka https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/billy-peterson

Next Door

Jon Faddis - Remembrances

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:14
Size: 154,5 MB
Art: Front

(7:06)  1. Sophisticated Lady
(6:06)  2. Laura
(7:23)  3. Speak Like a Child
(5:54)  4. Footprints
(5:58)  5. Naima
(6:35)  6. Johnny Bug
(6:47)  7. La Rosa Y El Sauce
(7:05)  8. In Your Own Sweet Way
(7:38)  9. Riverside Park
(6:38) 10. Goodbye

Jon Faddis speaks for himself on Remembrances. For many years critics thought of him as a Dizzy Gillespie clone. As director of The Carnegie Hall Jazz Orchestra he earned the distinction of being his own man. Carlos Franzetti, who arranged and conducted Portraits of Cuba (a Grammy winner for Paquito D’Rivera) uses his ingenious mastery again with Faddis. This disc is a well a conceived program of standards, both from the Great American Songbook and standards written by world class musicians. Franzetti chose instrumentation that is unique for a jazz group. The sidemen on this album are all excellent musicians in their own right. Here, you have Paquito D’Rivera playing soprano, tenor sax and the clarinet. His soprano solo on "In Your Own Sweet Way" is unmistakable, but still embraces the theme of the disc and enhances the music. Other instrumentation chosen for the group include bassoon, French horn, oboe, English horn, in addition to the sax section, rhythm section, and trombone. "Sophisticated Lady," "Laura," and the closer, "Goodbye," are all presented in a fresh way for a new generation. 

Faddis eschews high harmonics, rather embraces a relaxed manner that celebrates the ballads without disturbing their origins. "Footprints," "Naima," La Rosa Y El Sauce," and Franzetti’s own composition "Riverside Park," are all done with thought and conviction. Remembrances has "classic" potential and is sure to appeal to even the discerning jazz listener. Chesky recorded this CD at St. Peter’s Episcopal Church in New York City and it is yet another example of their commitment to harmonic perfection.
By Arthur C. Bourassa https://www.allaboutjazz.com/remembrances-jon-faddis-chesky-records-review-by-arthur-c-bourassa.php


Personnel: Jon Faddis - Trumpet, Flugelhorn, Paquito D'Rivera - Clarinet, Sax (Soprano), Sax (Tenor), Soprano (Vocal), Bill Easley - Clarinet, Sax (Tenor), George Young - Flute, Sax (Alto), John Clark - French Horn, Lawrence Feldman - Flute, Sax (Alto), Kenneth Hitchcock - Clarinet (Bass), Sax (Baritone), Dale Kleps - Flute, Sax (Alto), Clarence Penn - Drums, Jim Pugh - Euphonium, Trombone (Alto), Trombone (Tenor), Tenor Trombone, Stewart Rose - French Horn, Roger Rosenberg - Bassoon, Clarinet (Bass), Sax (Baritone), Peter Washington - Bass, David Hazeltine - Piano.

Remembrances

The Double Six Of Paris - Les Double Six

Styles: Vocal, Jazz, Bop
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:58
Size: 76,6 MB
Art: Front

(2:25)  1. Tickle Toes
(3:22)  2. Early Autumn
(2:39)  3. Sweets
(4:14)  4. Naima
(2:39)  5. Westwood Walk
(2:59)  6. A Night in Tunisia
(3:01)  7. A Ballad
(2:52)  8. Scrapplefromtheapple
(2:57)  9. Bolplicity
(3:08) 10. Moanin'
(2:40) 11. Fascinating Rhythm

French group formed by Mimi Perrin in 1959. Perrin was leader and main arranger; she added lyrics to jazz selections. The name was derived from practice of superimposing two separate recordings, leaving impression there were 12 singers. The group enjoyed some notoriety with sessions featuring backing from American guest stars like Quincy Jones, Benny Bailey, Dizzy Gillespie and Jerome Richardson. Perrin led second vesion of the group in 1965; when she became ill, Jef Gilson tried to hold band together, but they split in 1966. https://www.allmusic.com/artist/les-double-six-mn0001699710/biography


Personnel: Bass – Michel Gaudry, Pierre Michelot; Bongos – Jean-Pierre Drouet; Drums – Christian Garros, Daniel Humair; Guitar – Paul Piguihem; Piano – Georges Arvanitas, René Urtreger; Vibraphone – Eddy Louiss; Vocals – Christiane Legrand, Claudine Barge, Eddy Louise, Jean-Claude Briodin, Jeannine " Mimi " Perrin, Robert Smart, Ward Swingle

Les Double Six

Somi - The Lagos Music Salon

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:31
Size: 194,1 MB
Art: Front

(1:25)  1. First Kiss: Eko Oni Baje
(3:22)  2. Love Juju #1
(3:55)  3. Lady Revisited (feat. Angelique Kidjo)
(5:18)  4. Ankara Sundays
(4:04)  5. Ginger Me Slowly
(4:28)  6. When Rivers Cry (feat. Common)
(4:31)  7. Brown Round Things
(0:53)  8. The Story of Monkey
(4:07)  9. Akobi: First Born S(u)n
(5:51) 10. Two Dollar Day
(4:47) 11. Still Your Girl
(3:32) 12. Four.One.Nine
(2:11) 13. Love Nwantinti (feat. In His Image)
(6:36) 14. Four African Women
(1:17) 15. Hearts & Swag
(4:21) 16. Love Juju #2
(4:21) 17. Last Song
(3:23) 18. Shine Your Eye

To most people, the junction of New York and Lagos, Nigeria may not seem like a natural place for an album to take shape. Somi, thankfully, thought otherwise. This worldly and well-traveled vocalist makes it seem like the most natural of meeting points on The Lagos Music Salon. Somi's music has always been informed by African, R&B and soul influences, but an eighteen month stay in Lagos helped her dig deeper into the African cultural soil than she ever had before. The resultant album, powerful, cool, vibrant, sly and lively all at once, could be considered the latest and most developed strain of "New African Jazz" that she's produced yet: that's a term Somi herself coined to describe her music a while back, but it fits this one like a glove.

The music and the stories Somi tells often seem to counter each other in color and emotion, a striking separation that makes the whole Lagos Music Salon experience all the more powerful. Sultry settings and strong messages share space as Somi smoothly sings of somebody whose two dollar salary won't cover the trip home because of the outrageous fuel costs in Nigeria ("Two-Dollar Day"); jubilant music creates a cushion for Somi and guest vocalist Angelique Kidjo as they give due to Fela Kuti while simultaneously delivering a message of female empowerment ("Lady Revisited"); and a bass groove sets the stage as the lady in charge gives a nod to Nina Simone's "Four Women," singing of four different horrors that befall African women ("Four African Women"). Whether singing of dead serious topics like these or riffing on more benign matters, Somi is beguiling. While the album itself speaks to African topics and ideals, a New York river of talent runs through it all.

Drummer Otis Brown III creates solid rhythmic platforms and occasionally channels his inner Tony Allen ("Lady Revisited"); pianist Toru Dodo is spellbinding, whether shimmering, firmly putting his two hands to good use, or delivering poignant accompaniment in an intimate trio setting with Somi and guest trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire ("Brown Round Things"); guitarist Liberty Ellman manages to channel the African spirit in his every gesture; and bassist Michael Olatuja is a grounding and grooving presence. Together, with Somi out front, they create music that resonates on an emotional level. By Dan Bilawsky
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-lagos-music-salon-somi-okeh-review-by-dan-bilawsky.php


Personnel: Somi: vocals; Toru Dodo: piano; Michael Olatuja: bass; Keith Witty: drum programming, double bass; Liberty Ellman: guitar; Otis Brown III: drums; Abraham Lanlate: talking drum; Cobhams Asuquo: percussion, drum programming, vocals; Alicia Olatuja: vocals; Angelique Kidjo: vocals (3); Cochemea Gastelum: saxophone; Ayanda Clarke: percussion; Conrad Harris: violin; Pauline Kim Harris: violin; Caleb Burhans: viola; Peter Sachon: cello; Re Olunuga: vocals; Karibi Fubara: vocals; Michael Boyd: drum programming; Common: vocals (6); Sheldon Thwaites: drums, percussion; Sula Kalski- Caines: vocals; Neema Lazzaroni: vocals; Ambrose Akinmusire: trumpet (7); Wura Samba: percussion; Priscilla Nzimiro: vocals; Christophe Panzani: flute; Olaitan Dada: vocals; Chima Eluwa-Henshaw: vocals; Uzo Enemanna: vocals.

The Lagos Music Salon

Monday, June 19, 2023

Illinois Jacquet - Go Power

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1966
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:12
Size: 145,2 MB
Art: Front

(7:54) 1. On A Clear Day
(6:50) 2. Illinois Jacquet Flies Again
(5:59) 3. Robbin's Nest
(5:40) 4. Watermelon Man
(6:12) 5. I Want A Little Girl
(5:08) 6. Pamela's Blues
(5:13) 7. Jan
(4:13) 8. Satin Doll(Bonus Track)
(2:21) 9. Ydeen-O (Bonus Track)
(3:07) 10. How Now? (Bonus Track)
(2:28) 11. Frantic Fanny (Bonus Track)
(3:01) 12. Stella by Starlight(Bonus Track)

Tenor-saxophonist Illinois Jacquet teams up with organist Milt Buckner and drummer Alan Dawson for this live LP that has not yet been reissued on CD. The distinctive tenor roars through "Illinois Jacquet Flies Again" and "On A Clear Day," sounds warm on "Robbin's Nest" and "I Want A Little Girl" and is heard throughout in prime form. Buckner's heavy organ sound takes a bit of getting used to (this set would have been much better if he had been on piano) but he does push Jacquet to some fiery playing. By Scott Yanow
https://www.allmusic.com/album/go-power%21-mw0000366197

Personnel: Illinois Jacquet - tenor saxophone; Milt Buckner - organ; Alan Dawson - drums

Go Power

The Tonight Show Band with Doc Severinsen Vol. I

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 1986
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:51
Size: 102,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:51) 1. Begin the Beguine
(3:26) 2. King Porter Stomp
(4:12) 3. How Long Has This Been Going On
(2:54) 4. One O'Clock Jump
(2:48) 5. Tippin' In
(3:02) 6. Shawnee
(1:21) 7. Johnny's Theme (The Tonight Show Theme)
(3:47) 8. Skyliner
(3:50) 9. Flying Home
(3:58) 10. Bye Bye Blues
(3:12) 11. I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
(3:22) 12. Sax Alley
(4:01) 13. Don't Be That Way

The Tonight Show Band gained fame during Johnny Carson's tenure as host of the perennially popular late-night TV program. Not only did the band gain air time with its playing, but it was a foil for Carson's jokes. The role of collective straight man did not in any way hinder the ensemble from being an exciting champion of dynamic big-band swing.

The chairs are filled with veterans of topflight big bands and studio work as well. Performers like John Audino, Bill Perkins, Gil Falco, and Conte Candoli anchor the band's sections while Ed Shaughnessy's relentless drums drive the outfit. And they are playing well-conceived charts by such arrangers as Bill Holman, Tommy Newsom, and Dick Lieb. Most of the tunes on this session are familiar big-band barnburners and feature the high-voltage trumpet of leader Doc Severinsen.
https://www.amazon.ca/Tonight-Show-Band-Vol/dp/B00000DHK0

The Tonight Show Band With Doc Severinsen

Robin McKelle - Impressions of Ella

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:35
Size: 112,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:19) 1. Old Devil Moon
(2:49) 2. My One and Only
(5:51) 3. Lush Life
(2:50) 4. How High the Moon
(4:17) 5. I Won't Dance
(4:40) 6. Embraceable You
(7:01) 7. Do Nothing Til You Hear from Me
(4:37) 8. Robbin's Nest
(3:49) 9. Taking a Chance on Love
(4:46) 10. April in Paris
(3:31) 11. Soon

Versatile US vocalist ROBIN McKELLE is maybe best known in the UK for her still marvellous song, ‘Fairytale Ending’. It first appeared on her ‘Soul Flower’ album and when it was released as a stand alone 7” vinyl single on Expansion it became something of a modern soul favourite. That was back in 2012 and since then Robin has released lots more music across all kinds of genres more soul (remember ‘Heart Of Memphis?), country and Americana amongst them but for her brand new long player Ms McKelle returns to where she started in the business jazz. Her first forays into the world of recording were with jazz albums and now she returns to that genre though with a very particular focus. As the above title suggests, Robin’s new record is an unashamed tribute to the art of Ella Fitgerald… a singer whom Robin has often cited as her greatest influence.

Ms McKelle says: “The concept of the music of Ella came about because she was my first introduction to vocal jazz. I learned so much from her singing the style of her swing feel and her singing resonates [with] me.” Consequently, Robin has chosen 11 songs forever associated with Ella and to help her deliver her “impressions” she’s helped out by a stellar trio Kenny Washington on drums, bassist Peter Washington, and NEA Jazz Master Kenny Barron on piano. McKelle again: “I wasn’t intimidated to make music with them, but [their] résumés were like, ‘Wow!’ [Am I] going to be good enough? Are we going to connect? The exciting thing was having the opportunity to sing over them as a trio; that was such a huge joy.” And joy is evident right through the album. Singer and band gel and deliver with an optimism that only comes from players who just love to make the music they love.

The repertoire consists of plenty of well-known jazz standards (most given their definitive reading by Ms Fitzgerald). So enjoy 21st century takes on favourites like ‘Old Devil Moon’, ‘Lush Life’, ‘Taking A Chance On Love’ and ‘April In Paris’ but also listen up to new takes on lesser known items like the gentle ‘Soon’ and an obscure 1947 song, ‘Robbins Nest’. How could Robin McKelle ignore that one? And what a splendid job she makes of it full on scat in the best Ella Fitzgerald fashion.

Indeed throughout the album, Robin’s not overawed by the material or the iconic status of the singer she’s paying homage to. What an odyssey she’s been on since the late 1990s! ‘Impressions of Ella’ is Robin McKelle’s coming of age album. Her years of performing and recording now bear a generous, mature fruit. https://www.soulandjazzandfunk.com/reviews/robin-mckelle-impressions-of-ella-believe-naive/

Impressions of Ella

Friday, June 16, 2023

Michele Calgaro - Full Score

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:59
Size: 146,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:25) 1. Short Wave
(5:21) 2. Blizzard
(6:56) 3. Letter To Evans
(5:15) 4. Full Score
(8:51) 5. Souvenirs
(9:42) 6. Live Score
(8:39) 7. Steppin' Zone
(5:45) 8. One For Hall
(6:07) 9. Querida
(1:53) 10. Arise

Michele Calgaro is very active both in teaching and performing, but a little less in recording, especially as a leader. But when he releases a new album, he always does it because he has something new and interesting to say. It took five years to bring back to the studio the quintet that gave us the excellent «Progressions» (2011, Caligola), and we had to wait four more to enjoy the result of this recording session, to which were added other four tunes recorded last year with a different rhythm section, this time a Russian one.

By his side there still are the energetic trumpeter Alex Sipiagin here composer of two songs too and the skilful saxophonist Robert Bonisiolo, both precious and tested adventure companions who, together with Michele, are also the only musicians who appear in all the nine tracks (Arise, the tenth, is a short and delicate guitar solo). «Full Score» is a deep and sincere record, varied and extremely coherent at the same time. If the start with Short Wave is burning to say the least, the atmosphere turns softer and rarefied in Letter to Evans, dedicated to Bill Evans; another successful tribute is paid to Jim Hall with One for Hall.

Michele Calgaro said about his work: “My writing almost always comes from interior aesthetics and stories, conceived for improvisation: a delicate balance, a stimulus for a collective story that also allows the expression of each identity, where the actions of interpretation and impromptu are the true substance of the songs… The luck of being able to walk these paths together with extraordinary musicians, who manage to naturally combine intensity and relaxation, is a priceless value added, and being able to impress some of these moments in a record makes the results of this surprising creative process repeatable and shareable to me…”.https://caligolarecords.bandcamp.com/album/full-score

Personnel: Michele Calgaro (guitars) on all tracks; Alex Sipiagin (trumpet, flugelhorn), Robert Bonisolo (tenor sax) on tracks 1–9; Lorenzo Calgaro (double bass), Mauro Beggio (drums) on tracks 1–5; Makar Novikov (double bass), Sasha Mashin (drums) on tracks 6–9.

Full Score

Antonio Zambrini, Jesper Bodilsen, Martin Maretti Andersen - Incontro

Styles: Contemporary Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:54
Size: 114,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:48) 1. Incontro
(6:01) 2. Helping Hand
(4:39) 3. Long Ago and Far Away
(5:40) 4. Pat
(7:15) 5. Bolero de Sata
(5:32) 6. Lawns
(4:28) 7. Amaciado
(6:37) 8. Waiting
(5:50) 9. Romania

Jazz pianist and composer from Milan, Zambrini, has drawn the attention of critics and musicians, especially with his “songs,” published his several trios and quartet recordings, as well as reprised and played by various musicians in the jazz area. Trumpeter and composer Ron Horton had Zambrini guest in his Cd “It’s a gadget world,” recorded in New York in 2006, including some of Zambrini’s songs. Pianist Stefano Bollani opens with a tune by Zambrini, his solo album produced by ECM, the famous label in Germany, issued in 2006. Mr. Lee Konitz recorded a series of Zambrini’s tunes in a sequence of three CDs they realized together for the label “Philology” in 2008.

English pianist John Law dedicated to Zambrini’s music his cd “The moment” in 2002. Zambrini was a guest in several broadcastings by National Radio and he was for 7 years partner of Cineteca Italiana, Milan, improvising live piano soundtracks of silent movies.

More recent projects are regarding young guitarist Filippo Cosentino, with an out coming cd along with Jesper Bodilsen and Andrea Marcelli, a new trio with bass player Paolino Dalla Porta and French drummer Manhu Roche, a cd entitled "Dois Lugares," with the great Samba composer and performer Moacyr Luz. Several concerts in the last two years with this "Dois Lugares " project, led by Italian vocalist Francesca Ajmar and with Moacyr Luz himself, who wrote most of the music for this project.

Also, about Brasil, a long collaboration with the choir director from Sao Paulo, Martinho L. Galati De Olivera, Kept Zambrini through several concerts, finally in Sao Paulo in 2014, playing with some great names of that scene's music like Teco Cardoso, Lea Frerie, and Fabiana Cozza. https://www.antoniozambrini.com/album

Among others, Zambrini performed with Lee Konitz, Mark Murphy, William Parker, Tiziana Ghiglioni, Enrico Rava, Ron Horton, Nenna Frenlone, Hamid Drake, Claudio Fasoli, Tiziano Tononi, Ben Allison, Gabriele Mirabassi, Kyle Gregory, Rita Marcotulli, Javier Girotto, Eliot Zigmund, Jesper Bodilsen, Maria Pia De Vito, Pietro Tonolo, Manhu Roche, Paolino Dalla Porta, Andrea Marcelli, Fabrizio Bosso.

Incontro

Gretchen Parlato & Lionel Loueke - Lean In

Styles: Vocal, Guitar
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:51
Size: 94,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:58) 1. Akwê
(5:03) 2. I Miss You
(4:27) 3. If I Knew (feat. Burniss Travis & Mark Guiliana)
(1:19) 4. Okagbé Interlude
(4:54) 5. Astronauta
(0:57) 6. Mi Wa Sé Interlude (feat. Marley Guiliana, Burniss Travis, Mark Guiliana)
(4:47) 7. Muse
(3:53) 8. Nonvignon
(4:49) 9. Lean in (feat. Mark Guiliana)
(4:16) 10. Painful Joy
(1:12) 11. Dù Wé Interlude (feat. Burniss Travis & Mark Guiliana)
(4:30) 12. Walking After You

With a voice as sweet and cool as a spring breeze, Gretchen Parlato would sound at home in any cozy jazz club from Paris to Sao Paulo. The sound of Lionel Loueke's voice and guitar is at least 60 percent rhythm, with his plucking and crooning having an innate percussive pulse running through it. Two decades of collaboration and close friendship are on display with Parlato and Loueke's first full duo-recording; Lean In shows the breadth of their globe-spanning interests and dazzling versatility, but most important is the heartfelt warmth through every moment.

The closeness is on display from the first minute, where the duo weave a catchy lead melody and begin scatting their way through the opener in flighty but clearly honed unison. They continue swooping and dipping up and down the scales through pop covers and eloquent originals alike. Loueke's guitar lines and vocal pops make the sound feel as full as that of a whole band already, but a delightfully simpatico rhythm section fills things out that much more in some well-chosen spots, percolating through wandering interludes and fetchingly slinky funk grooves alike.

The group makes a sunny whirl across practically the whole globe, bridging Benin with Brazil and singing in languages from three continents. Parlato's croon stays dreamy and appealing, even when singing of lost loves and ended relationships. Loueke coasts in step with equally fluid melodicism and unreserved cheer. It's a work all about connection, discovery and the simple joy of exploring together. By Geno Thackara https://www.allaboutjazz.com/lean-in-gretchen-parlato-edition-records

Personnel: Gretchen Parlato: voice / vocals; Lionel Loueke: guitar, acoustic.

Additional Instrumentation: Burniss Travis: bass; Mark Guiliana: drums.

Lean In

Dr. John - The Montreux Years

Styles: Jazz Funk, Soul
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:53
Size: 181,7 MB
Art: Front

( 3:35) 1. Professor Longhair Boogie (Live at Casino Montreux 1986)
( 4:52) 2. You Ain't Such a Much (Live at Casino Montreux 1986)
( 3:30) 3. Sick and Tired (Live at Casino Montreux 1986)
( 4:11) 4. Stack-a-Lee (Live at Casino Montreux 1986)
( 3:51) 5. Accentuate the Positive (Live at Auditorium Stravinski 2007)
( 4:04) 6. Right Place Wrong Time (Live at Auditorium Stravinski 2004)
( 4:53) 7. Rain (Live at Auditorium Stravinski 2007)
(10:34) 8. Going Back to New Orleans (Live at Auditorium Stravinski 1993)
( 4:01) 9. Makin' Whoopee (Live at Auditorium Stravinski 1995)
( 7:18) 10. Big Chief (Live at Miles Davis Hall 2011)
( 7:35) 11. In a Sentimental Mood / Mississippi Mud / Happy Hard Times (Medley) (Live at Miles Davis Hall 2012)
( 8:34) 12. Love for Sale (Live at Auditorium Stravinski 2007)
( 6:07) 13. Let the Good Times Roll (Live at Auditorium Stravinski 1995)
( 5:41) 14. Good Night Irene (Live at Casino Montreux 1986)

New Orleans is considered the birthplace of jazz. In the late 1800s, the city was a melting pot of different cultures, including African, European, and Caribbean. This cultural diversity had a profound impact on the music of the city. The new sounds of Dixieland and ragtime became the foundation in the evolution of jazz. Artists such as Buddy Bolden, King Oliver, Louis Armstrong, Sidney Bechet and Jelly Roll Morton became the leaders of this new music.

It was the pianists who later became the heart and soul of the New Orleans style of music, combining many different aspects and genres into an increasingly diverse jazz gumbo soup. Pianists like Fats Domino, Allen Toussaint, Professor Longhair and James Booker continued that evolution. However, no musician epitomizes all the styles present in the history of New Orleans music like Dr. John (Mac Rebennack). Dr. John: The Montreux Years is a remarkable testament to both the breadth and talent he was able to convey, especially in a live setting. The 14 tracks on the album (recorded between 1986 and 2012) are a cumulative masterclass that showcases his diversity of style, all the while staying true to the essence of the New Orleans DNA evident in his playing and singing.

The album starts with four tracks from 1986 with Dr. John performing solo. First up is the instrumental boogie-woogie/barrelhouse piano of "Professor Longhair Boogie." This is followed by the bluesy piano and vocals of "You Ain't Such A Much" and the Fats Domino hit "Sick and Tired," also done as a boogie-woogie. The traditional "Stack-A-Lee" is also done in barrelhouse style and closes the solo mini-set.

The remaining songs are a potpourri of styles and ensembles backing the good doctor. There are old pop standards like "Accentuate the Positive" and "Love for Sale" The latter arrangement might be the most interesting one on the record. It starts with a bluesy bass line and wailing tenor sax before Dr. John comes in to somehow fit the melody over that backdrop. Toward the end of the song, he and guest Jon Cleary, lay down a talking, singing lyric over the bass vamping underneath. It is a great example of Dr. John's ability to adapt his style to any setting. As he remarks to the crowd after the song ends, "That ain't the way Cole Porter composed it, but it's damn sure the way we do it."

"Makin' Whoopie" and "Let The Good Times Roll" are from 1995 and are given stellar big-band arrangements. "Right Place, Wrong Time" from 2004 is here with a similar arrangement to the original. "Rain" is the ballad of the set. Lovingly played and sung, the song is reminiscent of Leon Russell's "A Song For You."

"Big Chief" from 2012 (see the YouTube video below) features Trombone Shorty and is the quintessential New Orleans stomp. Once again paying homage to the song's composer Professor Longhair, Dr. John showcases his piano skills in this joyful performance.

It is a solo rendition of the medley "In a Sentimental Mood/Mississippi Mud/Happy Hard Times" from 2011 that may be the most impressive track on the album. In its seven and a half minutes, he explores the history of New Orleans-style piano. The playing is simple but deep. It is subtle but expressive. It is not flashy but is profound.

A solo performance from 1986, Lead Belly's folk standard "Goodnight Irene," closes the album as it began. Dedicated to James Booker, it is a rollicking boogie-woogie stomper.

Lovingly curated by the Montreux Jazz Festival and overseen by founder Claude Nobs' partner, Thierry Amsallem, this is the tenth installment of The Montreux Years series. The whole album is a wonderful live compilation that shows the many facets of musicianship that made Dr. John the iconic figure he remains.By Dave Linn
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/dr-john-the-montreux-years-dr-john-bmg

Personnel: Dr. John: piano.

Additional Instrumentation: Dr. John: vocals; Dr. John: organ (6, 10), keyboards, guitar (10, 11); Jon Cleary: keyboards, vocals (11); Ronnie Cuber: baritone saxophone (8, 9, 13); tenor saxophone: Alvin "Red" Tyler (9, 13); saxophone: Derek Huston (11); saxophone: Eric Traub (8); trombone: Trombone Shorty (10); trombone: Sarah Morrow (11); trumpet: Charlie Miller (8, 9, 13); Bobby Broom: guitar (9, 13); Cranston Clements: guitar (8); John Fohl: guitar (5-7, 10, 11, 12); David Barard: bass (5-13); Herman "Roscoe" Ernest III: drums (5, 6, 9, 12); Fred Staehle: drums (8); Shannon Powell: drums (10); Raymond Weber: drums (11); percussion: Smiley Ricks (8, 9, 13).

The Montreux Years

Thursday, June 15, 2023

Billy Childs, Buster Williams, Carl Allen - Skim Coat

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:58
Size: 123.5 MB
Styles: Mainstream jazz, Piano jazz
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[4:02] 1. Surrey With The Fringe On Top
[5:49] 2. The Winds Of Change
[6:35] 3. You Don't Know What Love Is
[5:44] 4. Every Time We Say Good-Bye
[6:44] 5. Skim Coat
[7:28] 6. Heroes
[7:52] 7. Love Dance
[5:19] 8. Deja
[4:21] 9. Deceptacon

Skim Coat brings together three highly compatible players: Billy Childs (piano), Buster Williams (bass) and Carl Allen (drums). It’s a thoughtful but accessible modern jazz album—the perfect accompaniment to a pot of coffee and the Sunday newspaper. Metropolitan Records owner Stan Chovnick recruited this trio on the strength of its performance at a 1998 jazz educators conference in New York. A year later the educators were still buzzing about the band's appearance in the Big Apple, and it's easy to hear why. These three players share a special chemistry.

Childs’playing is often compared to Herbie Hancock’s, but the L.A. native has been carving out his own niche for some time now. He's a monster pianist, and his two songs here are high points on the album. Williams is an assertive bassist who’s played with Hancock, Sonny Stitt, Kenny Barron, Sarah Vaughan and dozens more. The veteran bassist contributes three diverse tunes to Skim Coat. Can't forget Allen, an experienced drummer in the Art Blakey mold who lends plenty of texture to these nine tracks. The trio creates a sense of unfolding emotion on these tunes, four of which are covers. "Surrey With the Fringe on Top" and Childs’ "The Winds of Change" are very different tracks, but each follows a similar pattern: Childs establishes the melodic theme before plunging into a spirited bop segment, which segues into a crisp response from Williams. Allen pushes a strong undercurrent before Childs restates the theme. "Surrey" is recognizable but bop-oriented, with a hint of Bud Powell.

"You Don’t Know What Love Is" is given a heady post-bop treatment. The title track is a skittery number with varying tempos and unexpected turns. The trio plays it straight on Cole Porter's "Every Time We Say Goodbye," a gorgeous slow waltz. Bass solos seldom thrill me, but Buster Williams delivers a real beauty here, and all of his solos on Skim Coat are intense but direct. Williams' composition "Deja" is a radiant reverie, and the CD closes with his fast bop ramble "Deceptacon."

Childs impresses throughout. He communicates the comfortable essence of each melody before escorting the listener to different stimulating places. Childs is a piano man to watch closely in the 2000s. As a soundtrack for meditative relaxation, Skim Coat is hard to beat. This is substantive mainstream jazz delivered from the heart. ~Ed Kopp

Skim Coat

Oscar Castro-Neves - Playful Heart

Styles: Vocal And Guitar Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:43
Size: 128,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:02)  1. Waters Of March
(2:52)  2. Groovin' High/Whispering
(3:48)  3. Watch What Happens
(3:46)  4. My Foolish Heart
(4:29)  5. Manha De Carnaval/Prelude #3
(4:23)  6. Four Brothers
(4:43)  7. The Fool On The Hill
(3:17)  8. Lorry's Swing/Autumn Leaves
(4:38)  9. Send In The Clowns
(4:00) 10. Everything Happens To Me
(4:48) 11. Twenty Year Love Affair
(5:32) 12. Wave
(6:21) 13. Caruso

The beloved Brazilian guitar legend's resumé is so chock-full of varied musical experiences  jazz, pop, film scoring, ten years with Sergio Mendes that his brilliant solo efforts can't help but include informal homages to different eras of his life. He starts out here getting straight to the heart of the matter, paying tribute to his fellow countryman Antonio Carlos Jobim with a self-contained plucky guitar/vocal duet of "Waters of March," which includes spirited scat passages. He moves into samba mode for a lively medley of Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker tunes, "Groovin' High/Whispering," deferring to Toots Thielemans' always engaging harmonica for melody as he harmonizes gently; then they switch roles. His other medley is a wilder, more percussive mix of a standard and an original, "Lorry's Swing/Autumn Leaves." 

Mixing modes, tempos, and moods, he mines standards ("Watch What Happens," "My Foolish Heart") and Brazilian classics (more by Jobim and Luiz Bonfá), and offers a dreamy take on "The Fool on the Hill," the Beatles song that Mendes made a famous cover of. No matter the rhythm pattern, outside percussion influence, or ensemble contribution (Don Grusin and Gary Meek make notable contributions), the soul of each tune is Castro-Neves' precise, melodic strings. From the diversity of this disc, it's clear he has a lot of beautiful memories to play with. ~ Jonathan Widran  http://www.allmusic.com/album/playful-heart-mw0000323776

Personnel : Oscar Castro-Neves (vocals, keyboards, guitar, bass); Gary Meek (winds); Toots Thielemans (harmonica); Don Grusin (piano); Calos Del Rosario (bass, drums, percussion); Charlie Bisharat.

Tony Kofi - Future Passed

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:59
Size: 150,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:20)  1. The Journey
(4:55)  2. Suibokuga
(5:17)  3. Zambia
(4:22)  4. A Song For Pappa Jack
(6:34)  5. As We Speak
(7:47)  6. Blue Pavel
(5:29)  7. The Eternal Thinker
(7:04)  8. Jubilation (For Boo)
(9:45)  9. Brotherhood
(3:14) 10. April The 13th
(4:40) 11. This Dream Of Mine (For MJ)
(1:27) 12. We Out

Though its nuances may not be readily apparent online, the back and front sleeve art for Future Passed, London saxophonist and ex-Tomorrow's Warrior Tony Kofi's second album as leader, is reminiscent of the time-travelling cover of Curtis Counce's 1958 recalibration of hard bop, Exploring The Future. There are no astronauts on Kofi's sleeve, true, but the retro TV console, its 1960s design inspired by NASA space helmets, and the deep space panorama surrounding it, suggest a similar restlessness with present time and space. There are musical parallels, too: both albums grow out of, but are not constrained by, the hard bop codifications of the late 1950s. But while Exploring The Future was an attempt to fast-forward out of the era, Future Passed is concerned with recapturing its passion and hard driving swing. The album is an authentic recreation of the neon-lit soul-jazz of the period, flickering with glimpses of Jimmy Smith, Cannonball Adderley, Lee Morgan and Hank Mobley, and co-starring the full fat B3 Hammond of Anders Olinder, a young Swede who belies his professorial appearance by playing like he cut his teeth backing up Willis "Gator" Jackson in tent shows. All of the tunes are Kofi originals, distinctive but deep in the tradition.

Greasy and hard swinging, as far retro as ever can be, it's the real deal. But that's only part of the album's appeal, for the eloquence of Kofi's playing be it ecstatic, meditative, funky, pretty or sorrowful can take the music beyond genre, into the timeless verities of the jazz continuum. The band is dynamite, too. Along with Olinders, who crackles and burns from start to finish, Kofi has assembled a formidable team of young London lions, including fellow ex-Tomorrow's Warriors Robert Fordjour on drums, happy most of the time to stay out of the spotlight and drive the engine, and guest trumpeter Byron Wallen, who steps forward magnificently on the boppish "The Journey" and with elegaic tenderness on Kofi's memorial to his father, "A Song For Pappa Jack." In his own, less spectacular and more rootical way, Kofi is as important and to-be-treasured a player and composer as his contemporaries who are pushing back the boundaries via electronica, through-composition and infusions of rap, folk, world musics, minimalism, whatever. ~ Chris May https://www.allaboutjazz.com/future-passed-tony-kofi-specific-jazz-review-by-chris-may.php

Personnel: Tony Kofi: alto, soprano, baritone saxophones; Anders Olinder: B3 Hammond Organ; Robert Fordjour: drums; Byron Wallen: trumpet (1,3,4); Cameron Pierre: guitar (5,8-10); Donald Gamble: percussion (3,8).

Future Passed

Ute Lemper - Time Traveler

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:50
Size: 94,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:06) 1. Time Traveler
(4:40) 2. In My Flame
(3:58) 3. Moving On
(4:36) 4. Magical Stone
(4:53) 5. At the Reservoir
(4:09) 6. Little Face - the Sequel
(3:45) 7. Man with No Face
(3:23) 8. Envie D'Amour
(3:29) 9. Cry in the Dark
(3:46) 10. The Gift

With Time Traveler Ute Lemper accomplishes the unusual feat that, for listeners, the 23 years which lie between the individual songs aren't obvious at all. The present in the past and the past in the present merge as if by osmosis. With her new album, Ute Lemper emancipates herself musically from all categories. Depending on socialization and personal preferences one can hear these songs as pop, rock, jazz, soul or chanson, all of these at once, or simply just as Ute Lemper.

She is no longer ready to live up to any expectations, but rather draws inspiration from songs that she herself enjoys listening to. This includes references to artists and bands like Hiatus Kaiyote, John Legend, Joni Mitchell, Sarah McLachlan, Annie Lennox, Erykah Badu or Robert Glasper but without attempting to copy any of them. All songs are one hundred percent Ute Lemper. In some pieces she takes risks in terms of production and sound, initially luring the listener onto a completely wrong path, such as in the title track; in others she conceals small surprising details in the production, putting the songs, herself and not least of all the auditory perception to the test over and over again.

Time Traveler is a very personal album, but its message extends far beyond Ute's own life experience. With Time Traveler, Ute Lemper has given a wonderful gift to herself. And yet, first and foremost, it is an album that functions like a signpost. In the unsparing self-honesty with which, in a most accessible way, Ute Lemper reflects on her life, it's possible for most listeners to find themselves as well. Also available is Ute Lemper's fantastic tribute to Marlene Dietrich Ute Lemper - Rendezvous With Marlene SKU. By Editorial Review https://www.amazon.com/Time-Traveler-Ute-Lemper/dp/B0BYPM51LS

Time Traveler

Tuesday, June 13, 2023

Roxy Coss - Disparate Parts

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:51
Size: 238,0 MB
Art: Front

(1:09) 1. February (Take 3)
(6:35) 2. Part I: The Body
(6:02) 3. Part II: The Mind
(4:42) 4. Part III: The Heart
(6:19) 5. Part IV: The Spirit
(1:06) 6. February (Take 5)
(5:56) 7. Disparate Parts
(7:26) 8. Ely, MN
(1:17) 9. February (Take 1)
(6:34) 10. Mabes
(5:50) 11. Sunburn
(1:41) 12. February (Take 4)
(5:48) 13. Warm One
(1:21) 14. February (Take 2)

Let's just get thing one out into the open right away: Disparate Parts has plenty of balls to spare.

Saxophonist Roxy Coss' acute, teasingly biting tone and rich, no boundaries disposition to composing and jamming has placed her high in the generational echelon of new and challenging players. She willingly and unapologetically blends and blurs the lines to suit any and all missives, and the fourteen fireballs heard loud and clear on Disparate Parts broach nothing less. Commandeering the same team of trusted cohorts that broke sharply into view on 2018's impactful The Future Is Female (Posi-Tone) and 2019's fiercely defining Quintet (Outside In) guitarist Alex Wintz, pianist/keyboardist Miki Yamanaka, bassist Rick Rosato and drummer Jimmy Macbride hold no bars as they charge headlong into the ever cresting Disparate Parts.

Coss, seven months pregnant and ready to rumble with the best of them at recording time, opens the set briskly with "February (Take 3)," only to enter a vaguer formlessness which serves as the launch pad for the explosive "The Body." Hitting hard and often, the track crunches like classic grunge only to give way to a succession of romping, bandstand hand-offs. But Coss and company quickly pull the rug out, as Wintz blasts into a feverish slicing solo. It is startling! It is exhilarating! It is the great noise of young humans breaking from the folly of their warring elders who have locked them down for two whole years.

"The Mind" swirls into consciousness as if working its own equilibrium from the monumental track before it. With her Rhodes geared to overdrive, Yamanaka carries the tune like Chick Corea, like Herbie Hancock, like Joe Zawinul in grand fusion fervor. Coss telegraphs over Yamanaka's insistence as Macbride and Rosato drive and drive and drive. "The Heart" and "The Spirit," the last two entries to Coss's conceived suite, culminate in yet another singular Wintz solo as Coss implores or her soprano and the rhythm section washes over it all.

The full-on, hard bop animated title track finds Coss's strident solo serving to blow clear the way for Wintz's fleet fingered filigree and even shimmering Rhodes work by Yamanaka, who seems particularly charged up on this set. But truth be told and with such stunning evidence as Wintz's prosaic "Ely, MN," Yamanaka's "Sunburn," where Wintz and Coss are absolutely heroic in their playing and 3/4 timed tribute to Harold Mabern, "Mabes," and Macbride's reflexive, "Warm One" that can be said for one and all, which makes Disparate Parts as complete and forceful a statement as it can humanly be. By Mike Jurkovic https://www.allaboutjazz.com/disparate-parts-roxy-coss-outside-in-music

Personnel: Roxy Coss: saxophone, tenor; Alex Wintz: guitar; Miki Yamanaka: piano; Rick Rosato: bass, acoustic; Jimmy Macbride: drums.

Disparate Parts

Tony Kofi Quartet - Silent Truth

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:24
Size: 124,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:27)  1. Giants
(4:11)  2. Dante
(4:54)  3. Cicada
(5:16)  4. First Breath
(6:50)  5. If I Spoke My Mind
(6:49)  6. Oont
(5:00)  7. Unremoved
(7:30)  8. Inner Truth
(3:19)  9. Disharmony
(5:04) 10. Bishop's Move

Saxophonist Tony Kofi is that increasingly rare thing on the British jazz scene, a player who didn't spend three years "learning" the music at an academic institution, but who discovered it, and developed his gift for it, mostly on the bandstand. True, Kofi did once spend a year at Berklee College of Music on a full scholarship, but the bulk of his learning curve came earlier, in workshops and on gigs in his hometown, Nottingham, and later, in the real-world finishing schools of the London-based Jazz Warriors and Tomorrow's Warriors. As he tells it, Kofi came to the alto saxophone, his main instrument, via a near miracle. Having left school, he was working as an apprentice carpenter on a building site. One day, he fell three floors through the empty shell of the building. He should have died, but didn't and on the way down his mind flashed on a brilliantly illuminated alto. Kofi knew that, if he survived, the alto was his destiny. The Silent Truth is Kofi's third album as leader, following Plays Monk (All Is Know) (Specific Jazz, 2004), which featured the same quartet on a set of Thelonious Monk compositions, and Future Passed (Specific Jazz, 2006), a brilliant, irresistible celebration of late 1950s/early 1960s saxophone/organ groove combos. This time, Kofi's urgent, testifying alto played in a heavily vocalized style peopled by the likes of Charlie Parker, Lou Donaldson, Cannonball Adderley, Earl Bostic and Dudu Pukwana is featured on a set of band originals generally, but not exclusively, inspired by the more visceral end of the hard bop of the 1960s. The exceptions are pianist Jonathan Gee's acerbic "Disharmony" and lovely Pat Metheny-esque ballad "Cicada," and bassist Ben Hazleton's pretty "Oont," on which Kofi plays soprano. Most of the tempos are up, as established with the swinging funk of Kofi's opening "Giants," in which his riffing, multi-tracked horns trade hard-driving fours with drummer Winston Clifford. But even when the pace is more measured, as on "Cicada," "Oont" and the intimate, after-hours vibe of Kofi's "First Breath," it feels like everything could boil over at a moment's notice. Kofi solos with his trademark soulful lyricism, and gives plenty of solo time to the outstanding Gee, here most frequently in Horace Silver/Bobby Timmons/Les McCann sanctified funk mode. If the parameters, as on Kofi's previous albums, are mostly retro, the impact of the music is again wholly of today. Kofi deals not so much with the past as with the eternal truths of jazz music swing, in-the-moment lyricism, the lust for life and he continues to find compelling ways to express them. His albums are heartfelt, unpretentious explosions of joy, and precisely what the doctor ordered. ~ Chris May https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-silent-truth-tony-kofi-specific-jazz-review-by-chris-may.php

Personnel: Tony Kofi: alto, soprano and baritone saxophones; Jonathan Gee: piano; Ben Hazleton: double-bass; Winston Clifford: drums.

Silent Truth

Mike Clark - Mike Clark Plays Herbie Hancock

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:14
Size: 106,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:18) 1. Toys
(7:10) 2. Speak Like A Child
(4:01) 3. Dual Force
(7:17) 4. Dolphin Dance
(5:24) 5. Sorcerer
(5:31) 6. Chan's Song Never Said
(5:55) 7. Empty Pockets
(3:34) 8. Actual Proof

The music of Herbie Hancock has affected the lives of generations of jazz performers. Like many of these musicians, it was the opportunity to play with the great pianist/composer that introduced the great drummer Mike Clark to the jazz world at large. To show his appreciation, Clark presents a selection of his favorite Hancock pieces performed with a trio on his new recording, Mike Clark Plays Herbie Hancock.

Mike Clark was a burgeoning professional drummer in the Bay Area during the late 1960s. He regularly played post-bop gigs with Woody Shaw and Bobby Hutcherson, but it was in organ trios and funky gigs with his friend, bassist Paul Jackson, that really cemented Clark’s standing on the scene.

At the time, Hancock’s ground-breaking, electric Mwandishi ensemble broke up due to financial constraints. Hancock began to regroup a smaller, funkier ensemble and hired Jackson. Hancock initially had Harvey Mason for the drum chair, but his work constraints wouldn’t allow him to join. Jackson recommended Clark for the group and the Headhunters were born.

Clark’s tenure with Hancock and the Headhunters broke the drummer into the jazz consciousness and allowed him to do some revolutionary things on his instrument. Eventually, the pull of acoustic jazz playing was too much for Clark to deny and he settled in New York City and joined its incredible jazz scene. Clark remains indebted to Hancock for opening the door to a wider audience. Hancock also introduced Clark to the study of Buddhism.

Though he was known for his association with some of Hancock’s funkiest music, it was the sophisticated contemporary sounds of Hancock’s 1960s Blue Note recordings that Clark appreciated most. Clark knew that if he recorded any of his former boss’s music, it would be these pieces that he would love to take on.

Once Clark decided he wanted to go for the project, he knew just the musicians he would incorporate in a trio. Bassist Leon Lee Dorsey and pianist Jon Davis have been longtime collaborators, open to any stylistic challenge and, mostly importantly, they always swing. It just so happened that Dorsey had studio time available at Manhattan Sky Studio in New York City at the beginning of June 2022, where the trio convened and recorded a program of Hancock tunes in one or two takes, apiece.

The pieces the trio selected for the recording were pared down from a longer list of pieces they considered. Interestingly, the majority of the pieces come from Hancock’s mid to late 1960s releases on Blue Note, the outliers being “Empty Pockets” from 1962 and Buster Williams’s “Dual Force (Firewater)” from Hancock’s The Prisoner.

The recording begins with a stately version of “Toys,” Davis taking a sweeping approach on the classic from Hancock’s 1968 album, Speak Like a Child, that Clark has been playing since he was a teenager. From the same album, “Speak Like a Child,” is a gorgeously insistent piece that seems to play itself. Buster Williams’s grooving “Dual Force” provides a fantastic harmonic bed for the trio to explore. Davis’s brave suggestion to perform the highly played chestnut “Dolphin Dance” as a ballad stimulated the trio into a unique and wonderful performance.

Hancock’s “The Sorcerer” was another piece that Clark just had to play on the recording because of its sophisticated, harmonic approach. Composed for the 1980 movie Round Midnight, Stevie Wonder and Hancock’s “Chan Song” is reborn with a shuffle arrangement at the suggestion of Davis, harking back to Clark’s days of playing with blues legends during a period in Texas. The original Takin’ Off version of “Empty Pockets” remains a Clark favorite and he finds himself swinging like his hero, Billy Higgins, on the trio’s updated take. The recording concludes with “Actual Proof,” a piece that Clark provided the original drum beat on for Thrust. Here the trio takes another approach, stripping the piece down, making it more conceptual and angular.

The singular experience that Mike Clark received playing with Herbie Hancock does not outweigh the influence of the legendary pianist’s compositional gifts to Clark’s musical world. The great drummer chose to honor Hancock by playing pieces that continue to inspire him on his new Mike Clark Plays Herbie Hancock.

Personnel: Mike Clark - drums; Jon Davis - piano; Leon Lee Dorsey - bass

Mike Clark Plays Herbie Hancock